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 OLD
WEST LEGENDS
Indian Wars of the Frontier West |
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By Emerson Hough in 1918 |
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The
land between the
Missouri
and the Rockies, along the Great Plains and the high foothills, was
crossed over and forgotten by the men who were forging on into farther
countries in search of lands where fortune was swift and easy.
California,
Oregon ,
all the early farming and timbering lands of the distant Northwest --
these lay far beyond the Plains; and as we have noted, they were sought
for, even before gold was dreamed of upon the Pacific Slope.
So
here, somewhere between the
Missouri
and the Rockies, lay our last frontier, wavering, receding, advancing,
gaining and losing, changing a little more every decade -- and at last so
rapidly changed as to be outworn and abolished in one swift decade all its
own. |

Indian Camp in Dakota Territory,
1891,
Library of Congress.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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This unsettled land so long held in small
repute by the early Americans, was, as we have pointed out, the
buffalo range and the country of the Horse
Indians -- the Plains tribes who lived upon the buffalo. For a
long time it was this
Indian population which held back the white settlements of
Kansas,
Nebraska, the
Dakotas,
Montana,
Wyoming ,
Colorado.
But as men began to work farther and farther westward in search of
homes in
Oregon ,
or in quest of gold in
California
or
Idaho
or Montana,
the
Indian question came to be a serious one.
To the Army, soon after the
Civil War, fell the task of
exterminating, or at least evicting, the savage tribes over all this
unvalued and unknown Middle West. This was a process not altogether
simple. For a considerable time the
Indians themselves were able to offer very effective resistance to
the enterprise. They were accustomed to living upon that country, and
did not need to bring in their own supplies; hence the Army fought
them at a certain disadvantage. In sooth, the Army had to learn to
become half
Indian before it could fight the
Indians on anything like even terms. We seem not so much to have
coveted the lands in the first
Indian-fighting days; we
fought rather for the trails than for the soil. The
Indians themselves had lived there all their lives, had conquered
their environment, and were happy in it. They made a bitter fight; nor
are they to be blamed for doing so.
The greatest of our
Indian wars have taken place since our own
Civil War; and perhaps
the most notable of all the battles are those which were fought on the
old cow range -- in the land of our last frontier. We do not lack
abundant records of this time of our history. Soon after the
Civil War
the railroads began edging out into the plains. They brought, besides
many new settlers, an abundance of chroniclers and historians and
writers of hectic fiction or supposed fact. A multitude of books came
out at this time of our history, most of which were accepted as truth.
That was the time when we set up as
Wild
West
heroes rough skinclad hunters and so-called scouts, each of whom was
allowed to tell his own story and to have it accepted at par.
As a matter of fact, at about the time the
Army had succeeded in subduing the last of the
Indian tribes on the buffalo-range, the most of our
Wild
West
history, at least so far as concerned the boldest adventure, was a
thing of the past. It was easy to write of a past which every one now
was too new, too ignorant, or too busy critically to remember.
Even as early as 1866, Colonel Marcy, an
experienced army officer and
Indian-fighter, took the attitude of writing about a vanishing
phase of American life. In his Army "Life on the Border," he says:
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Brule War Party.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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"I have been persuaded by many friends that
the contents of the book which is herewith presented to the public are not
without value as records of a fast-vanishing age, and as truthful sketches
of men of various races whose memory will shortly depend only on romance,
unless some one who knew them shall undertake to leave outlines of their
peculiar characteristics.... I am persuaded that excuse may be found in
the simple fact that all these peoples of my description -- men,
conditions of life, races of aboriginal inhabitants and adventurous
hunters and pioneers -- are passing away.
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A few years more
and the prairie will be transformed into farms. The mountain ravines will
be the abodes of busy manufacturers, and the gigantic power of American
civilization will have taken possession of the land from the great river
of the
West
to the very shores of the Pacific.... The world is fast filling up. I
trust I am not in error when I venture to place some value, however small,
on everything which goes to form the truthful history of a condition of
men incident to the advances of civilization over the continent -- a
condition which forms peculiar types of character, breeds remarkable
developments of human nature -- a condition also which can hardly again
exist on this or any other continent, and which has, therefore, a special
value in the sum of human history."
Such words as the foregoing bespeak a large
and dignified point of view. No one who follows Marcy's pages can close
them with anything but respect and admiration. It is in books such as
this, then, that we may find something about the last stages of the
clearing of the frontier.
Even in Marcy's times the question of our
Government's
Indian
policy was a mooted one. He himself as an Army officer looked at the
matter philosophically, but his estimate of conditions was exact. Long ago
as he wrote, his conclusions were such as might have been given forty
years later.
"The limits of their accustomed range are
rapidly contracting, and their means of subsistence undergoing a
corresponding diminution. The white man is advancing with rapid strides
upon all sides of them, and they are forced to give way to his
encroachments. The time is not far distant when the buffalo will become
extinct, and they will then be compelled to adopt some other mode of life
than the chase for a subsistence.... No man will quietly submit to
starvation when food is within his reach, and if he cannot obtain it
honestly he will steal it or take it by force. If, therefore, we do not
induce them to engage in agricultural avocations we shall in a few years
have before us the alternative of exterminating them or fighting them
perpetually. That they are destined ultimately to extinction does not in
my mind admit of a doubt. For the reasons above mentioned it may at first
be necessary for our government to assert its authority over them by a
prompt and vigorous exercise of the military arm.... The tendency of the
policy I have indicated will be to assemble these people in communities
where they will be more readily controlled; and I predict from it the most
gratifying results."
Another well-informed army officer, Colonel Richard
Dodge, himself a hunter, a trailer, and a rider able to compete with the
savages in their own fields, penetrated to the heart of the
Indian
problem when he wrote:
"The conception of
Indian
character is almost impossible to a man who has passed the greater portion
of his life surrounded by the influences of a cultivated, refined, and
moral society.... The truth is simply too shocking, and the revolted mind
takes refuge in disbelief as the less painful horn of the dilemma. As a
first step toward an understanding of his character we must get at his
standpoint of morality. As a child he is not brought up....From the dawn
of intelligence his own will is his law. There is no right and no wrong to
him.... No dread of punishment restrains him from any act that boyish fun
or fury may prompt. No lessons inculcating the beauty and sure reward of
goodness or the hideousness and certain punishment of vice are ever wasted
on him. The men by whom he is surrounded, and to whom he looks as models
for his future life, are great and renowned just in proportion to their
ferocity, to the scalps they have taken, or the thefts they have
committed. His earliest boyish memory is probably a dance of rejoicing
over the scalps of strangers, all of whom he is taught to regard as
enemies. The lessons of his mother awaken only a desire to take his place
as soon as possible in fight and foray. The instruction of his father is
only such as is calculated to fit him best to act a prominent part in the
chase, in theft, and in murder.... Virtue, morality, generosity, honor,
are words not only absolutely without significance to him, but are not
accurately translatable, into any
Indian
language on the Plains."
Continued
Next Page |
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Indian Attack by Charles Marion
Russell |
Also See:
Battles of the Indian Wars
Frontier
Skirmishes between the Pioneers & the Indians
Indian Campaigns
Indian
Fighters
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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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