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Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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OKLAHOMA LEGENDS
Washita
Battlefield National Historic Site |
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The
cultural collision between pioneers and
Indians
reached its peak on the Great Plains during the decades before and after
the Civil War.
U.S. Government policy sought to separate tribes and settlers from each
other by establishing an
Indian
Territory (present-day
Oklahoma).
Some Plains tribes accepted life on reservations. Others, including the
Cheyenne,
Kiowa, and
Comanche,
did not. They continued to hunt and live on traditional lands outside the
Indian
Territory. At first, this choice produced little conflict. But
following the
Civil War, land-hungry settlers began penetrating the plains in
increasing numbers, encroaching upon tribal hunting grounds.
Indians
could no longer retreat beyond the reach of whites, and many chose to
defend their freedom and lands rather than submit to reservation life.
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The Battle of the Washita. |
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Events
leading to the
Battle of the Washita began with the
Sand Creek
Massacre of 1864. On November 29, troops under the command of
Colonel J.M. Chivington attacked and destroyed the
Cheyenne
camp of
Chief Black Kettle and Chief White Antelope on
Sand Creek,
40 miles from Fort Lyon,
Colorado
Territory.
Black
Kettle's band flew an American flag and a white flag, and
considered themselves at peace and under military protection. The
terrible slaughter caused a massive public outcry. In response, a
federal Peace Commission was created to convert Plains
Indians from their nomadic way of life and settle them on
reservations.
On the Southern
Plains, the work of the Commission culminated in the Medicine Lodge
Treaty of October 1867. Under treaty terms the
Arapahos,
Cheyennes,
Comanches,
Kiowas,
and Plains
Apaches were assigned to reservations in the
Indian
Territory. There they were supposed to receive permanent homes,
farms, agricultural implements, and annuities of food, blankets, and
clothing. The treaty was doomed to failure. Many tribal officials
refused to sign. Some who did sign had no authority to compel their
people to comply with such an agreement. War parties, mostly young men
violently opposed to reservation life, continued to raid white
settlements in
Kansas.
Major General Philip H. Sheridan, in command of the Department of
the
Missouri,
adopted a policy that "punishment must follow crime." In retaliation
for the
Kansas
raids, he planned to mount a winter campaign when
Indian horses would be weak and unfit for all but the most limited
service. The
Indians' only protection in winter was the isolation afforded by
brutal weather.
Black
Kettle and
Arapaho
Chief Big Mouth went to Fort Cobb in November 1868 to petition General
William B. Hazen for peace and protection. A respected leader of the
Southern
Cheyenne,
Black
Kettle had signed the Little Arkansas Treaty in 1865 and the
Medicine Lodge Treaty in 1867. Hazen told them that he could not allow
them to bring their people to Fort Cobb for protection because only
General Sheridan, his field commander, or
Lieutenant Colonel George Custer, had that authority.
Disappointed, the chiefs headed back to their people at the winter
encampments on the Washita River.
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Even as
Black Kettle and Big Mouth parlayed with General Hazen, the 7th
Cavalry established a forward base of operations at Camp Supply,
Indian
Territory as part of
Sheridan's winter campaign strategy. Under orders from
Sheridan,
Custer marched south on November 23 with about 800 troopers, traveling
through a foot of new snow. After four days travel the command reached the
Washita valley shortly after midnight on November 27, and silently took up
a position near an
Indian
encampment their scouts had discovered at a bend in the river.
Black Kettle,
who had just returned from Fort Cobb a few days before, had resisted the
entreaties of some of his people, including his wife, to move their camp
downriver closer to larger encampments of
Cheyennes,
Kiowas, and
Apaches
wintered there. He refused to believe that
Sheridan would order an attack without first offering an opportunity
for peace.
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Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Before dawn, the troopers
attacked the 51 lodges, killing a number of men, women, and children.
Custer reported about 100 killed, though
Indian
accounts claimed 11 warriors plus 19 women and children lost their lives.
More than 50
Cheyennes were captured, mainly women and children.
Custer's losses were light: 2 officers and 19 enlisted men killed.
Most of the
soldier casualties belonged to Major Joel Elliott's detachment, whose
eastward foray was overrun by
Cheyenne,
Arapaho, and
Kiowa warriors
coming to
Black Kettle's aid.
Chief Black
Kettle and his wife were killed in the attack.
Following
Sheridan's plan to cripple resistance,
Custer ordered the slaughter of the
Indian
pony and mule herd estimated at more than 800 animals. The lodges of
Black
Kettle's people, with all their winter supply of food and clothing,
were torched. Realizing now that many more
Indians
were threatening from the east,
Custer feigned an attack toward their downriver camps, and then
quickly retreated to Camp Supply with his hostages.
The engagement at the
Washita might have ended very differently if the larger encampments to the
east had been closer to
Black
Kettle's camp. As it happened, the impact of losing winter supplies,
plus the knowledge that cold weather no longer provided protection from
attack, convinced many bands to accept reservation life.
Today the battle site is
a National Historic Site run by the National Park Service. The Historic
Site preserves the location of the Southern
Cheyenne
village of Peace Chief
Black Kettle.
The Visitor’s Center is open daily from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., except for
Christmas and New Years Days. The overlook and trail, is open every day
from dawn until dusk. Park Rangers also staff the nearby
Black Kettle
Museum, which is open 9:00 to 5:00, Tuesday thru Saturdays, and closed on
state holidays.
The Washita Battlefield National Historic Site
is located near the town of
Cheyenne,
which is situated in western
Oklahoma
halfway between
Amarillo,
Texas
and
Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma
.
Cheyenne is
approximately 30 miles north of I-40 on Hwy 283 and approximately 20 miles
east of the
Texas
border.
Contact Information:
Washita
Battlefield National Historic Site
PO Box 890
426 E. Broadway
Cheyenne,
Oklahoma
73628
580-497-2742
Source: National Park
Service
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Trail at Washita Battlefield, courtesy the National Park Service.
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lodging right
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Native
American Photo Prints -
Vintage photographs of famous chiefs, heroes, and
Indian
life in the 19th century.
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