|
Date |
Name |
Description |
|
November 6, 1811
|
Battle of Tippecanoe
|
The Prophet, brother of Shawnee
Chief
Tecumseh, attacked Governor William Henry Harrison's force at dawn near
the Wabash and Tippecanoe Rivers in Indiana Territory. After
hand-to-hand combat, the natives fled. |
|
August 15, 1812
|
Fort Dearborn Massacre |
American settlers and soldiers are killed in
ambush near Fort Dearborn, at the present-day site of
Chicago,
Illinois.
|
|
January 22, 1813
|
Battle of Frenchtown |
Also known as the River Raisin Massacre, it was a severe defeat for the
Americans during the War of 1812, when they attempted to retake Detroit.
|
|
August 18, 1813 |
Dilbone Massacre |
Three settlers killed in Miami County, Ohio. |
|
August 30, 1813
|
Fort Mims Massacre
|
Following defeat at the Battle of Burnt
Corn, a band of Red Sticks sack Fort Mims, Alabama, killing 400
civilians and taking 250 scalps. This action precipitates the
Creek
War.
|
|
Sept 19 - Oct 21, 1813 |
Peoria War
|
Armed conflict between the U. S. Army and the Potawatomi and the
Kickapoo that took place in the Peoria County,
Illinois area. |
|
1814
|
Creek
War
|
Militiamen under Andrew Jackson broke the
power of Creek raiders in Georgia and Alabama after the Creek had
attacked Fort Mims and massacred settlers. They relinquished a vast land
tract. |
|
1816-18
|
First Seminole War |
The Seminole, defending runaway slaves and
their land in Florida, fought Andrew Jackson's force. Jackson failed to
subdue them, but forced Spain to relinquish the territory. |
|
Spring, 1817
|
Battle of Claremore Mound |
Cherokee
Indians wipe out Osage
Indians led
by Chief Clermont at Claremore Mound,
Indian Territory.
|
|
April 22, 1818
|
Chehaw Affair |
U.S. troops attack a non-hostile village
during the First Seminole War, killing an estimated 10 to 50 men, women
and children. |
|
June 2, 1823
|
Arikara War
|
Occurring near the
Missouri River in present
day
South Dakota,
Arikara warriors attacked a trapping expedition and the
U.S. Army retaliated. It was the first military conflict between
the United States and the western
Native
Americans. |
|
1827
|
Winnebago War
|
Also referred as the Le Fèvre
Indian War, this armed conflict took
place in Wisconsin between the Winnebagos and military forces.
Losses of lives were minimal, but the war was a precedent to the much
larger
Black Hawk War. |
|
1832
|
Black Hawk War
|
Occurring in northern
Illinois and
southwestern Wisconsin, it was the last native conflict in the area. Led
by Chief Black Hawk, the Sac and Fox tribes made an unsuccessful
attempt to move back to their homeland. |
|
May 20, 1832
|
Indian Creek Massacre |
Potawatomi
Indians, kidnap two girls
and kill fifteen men, women and children north of Ottawa,
Illinois.
|
|
August 1, 1832 |
Battle of Bad Axe |
Around 300
Indian men, women and children
are killed in Wisconsin by white soldiers. |
|
Spring, 1833
|
Cutthroat Gap Massacre |
Osage
Indians
wiped out a
Kiowa
Indian
village in
Indian Territory.
|
|
1835-42
|
Second Seminole War |
Under Chief Osceola, the Seminole resumed
fighting for their land in the Florida Everglades. Osceola was captured
and they were nearly eliminated. |
|
1836-1875
|
Comanche Wars
|
On the southern plains, primarily in the
Texas
Republic. The U.S. Military instituted official campaigns against the
Comanches in 1867. |
|
1836
|
Creek
War of 1836
|
Though most Creeks ad been forced to
Indian Territory, those that
remained rebelled when the state moved to abolish tribal governments and
extend state laws over the Creeks. |
|
May 19, 1836
|
Fort Parker Massacre |
Six men killed by a mixed
Indian group in
Limestone County,
Texas. |
|
1837
|
Osage Indian War |
A
number of skirmishes with the Osage
Indians in
Missouri. |
|
November 10, 1837 |
Battle of Stone Houses |
A
Texas Ranger Company pursued a band of raiding Kichai
Indians up the Brazos River, where they battled near the present day
city of Windthorst,
Texas.
|
|
October 5, 1838 |
Killough Massacre |
Indians massacre eighteen members and
relatives of the Killough family in
Texas. |
|
1839
|
Cherokee War
|
This war was a culmination of friction between
the Cherokee,
Kickapoo, and Shawnee
Indians and the white settlers in Northeast
Texas.
|
|
July, 1839 |
Battle of the Neches |
The principal engagement of the Cherokee War, the battle
culminated after the
Cherokee
refused to leave
Texas. |
|
1840 |
Great Raid of 1840 |
The largest raid ever mounted by
Native
Americans on white cities.
Following the Council House Fight,
Comanche War Chief Buffalo Hump
raised a huge war party and raided deep into white-settled areas of
Southeast
Texas. |
|
March 19, 1840 |
Council House Fight |
A
conflict between Republic of
Texas officials and a
Comanche peace
delegation in San Antonio,
Texas. When terms could not be agreed on, a
conflict erupted resulting in the death of 30
Comanche leaders who had
come to San Antonio under a flag of truce. |
|
August 11, 1840 |
Battle of Plum Creek |
The Penateka
Comanche
were so angry after the
Council House Fight,
they retaliated in the summer of 1840 by conducting multiple raids in
the Guadalupe Valley. The raids culminated in a battle between the
Indians and the
Texas
volunteer army along with the
Texas Rangers
near the present day city of Lockhart,
Texas. For
two days they battled and the Commanche were defeated. |
|
November 29, 1847
|
Whitman
Massacre
|
The murder of missionaries Dr Marcus
Whitman, Mrs Narcissa Whitman and twelve others at Walla Walla,
Washington by Cayuse and Umatilla
Indians, triggering the
Cayuse War.
|
|
June 17, 1848
|
Battle of Coon Creek
|
When a company of about 140 soldiers were on their way to left join
the
Santa Fe battalion in Chihuahua, Mexico,
they were attacked near the present town of Kinsley, Kansas by some 200
Comanche
and
Apache
Indians. |
|
1848–1855
|
Cayuse War
|
Occurring in
Oregon
Territory and
Washington
Territory, the conflict between the Cayuse and white settlers was
caused in part by the influx of disease, and
resulting in the
Whitman
Massacre and the Cayuse War. |
|
1849-63
|
Navajo
Conflicts
|
Persistent fighting between the
Navajo and the U.S.
Army in
Arizona and
New Mexico led to their expulsion and incarceration
on an inhospitable reservation far from their homelands. |
|
1850-1851
|
Mariposa War
|
Spawned by the flood of miners rushing onto
their lands after the California Gold Rush, some tribes fought back
including the
Paiute and the Yokuts. |
|
Spring, 1850
|
Bloody Island Massacre
|
The murder of up to 200 Pomo people on an
island near Upper Lake,
California by Nathaniel Lyon and his U. S. Army
detachment, in retaliation for the killing of two Clear Lake settlers
who had been abusing and murdering Pomo people. |
|
1851-1853
|
Utah Indian Wars |
Numerous skirmishes throughout
Utah which finally lead to the
Walker War. |
|
October 21, 1853
|
Gunnison Massacre
|
In Millard County, Utah, a band of
Ute
Indians
massacred Captain John W. Gunnison's Pacific Railroad Survey party of seven men. |
|
1853
|
Walker War
|
When the Mormons began to settle on the
hunting grounds of the
Ute
Indians of
Utah, they were at first friendly, then fought back. |
|
1854-90
|
Sioux Wars
|
As white settlers moved across the Mississippi into
Minnesota,
South Dakota, and
Wyoming, the
Sioux under
Sitting Bull and
Crazy Horse resisted to keep their hunting grounds. |
|
August 17, 1854 |
Kaibai Creek Massacre |
Forty-two Winnemem Wintu men, women and
children are killed by white settlers at Kaibai Creek,
California.
|
|
August 20, 1854
|
Ward Massacre
|
Eighteen of the 20 members of the Alexander
Ward party were killed by
Shoshoni
Indians while traveling on the Oregon
Trail in western Idaho. |