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                        Indian Fights & Fighters


[Illustration:

  THE LAST OF CUSTER

  _Drawing by E. L. Blumenschein_
]

                  AMERICAN FIGHTS AND FIGHTERS SERIES




                       Indian Fights and Fighters
                       THE SOLDIER AND THE SIOUX


                                    BY

                       CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY, LL.D.

 Author of “Colonial,” “Border,” and “Revolutionary” Fights and Fighters

[Illustration]

     Illustrated with Original Drawings by Remington, Schreyvogel,
          Blumenschein, Crawford, Elwell, Deming, and Zogbaum

 With Maps, Photographs, and Sketches from Life from Original Sources,
           many of which are now published for the first time

                                NEW YORK
                          THE McCLURE COMPANY
                                MCMVIII




                         _Copyright, 1904, by_
                        McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO.
                     _Published, December, 1904, N_

                           Second Impression.


           Copyright, 1904, by The Pearson Publishing Company

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                     To that most eminent and useful

                          CHURCHMAN AND CITIZEN

                    OZI WILLIAM WHITAKER, D.D., LL.D.

                          Bishop of Pennsylvania

 Whom I admire as a _CLERIC_, respect as a _MAN_, and love as a _FRIEND_

                                I dedicate

                         _This Story of the West_

                            He served so well




                                PREFACE


The writing of history requires three operations: (I) The collection of
facts; (II) The classification and arrangement of facts; (III) The
presentation and discussion of facts. I have collected the facts related
in this book from every source open to me. These sources may be divided
into two groups: (1) Published and (2) unpublished, matter. The
published matter includes (a) official records; (b) books, and (c)
magazine or other ephemeral articles. The unpublished matter includes
(a) letters and (b) verbal communications.

I have made use of all these sources of information in gathering the
facts. A list of some of the printed authorities consulted follows this
preface. In addition thereto, I beg to acknowledge written
communications from the following American Army officers, all now on the
retired list except Colonels Godfrey and Brainard and Captain
Livermore:—Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles; Major-General Robert P.
Hughes; Brigadier-Generals Henry B. Carrington, George A. Forsyth, Louis
H. Carpenter, Anson Mills, Charles A. Woodruff and Theo. F. Rodenbough;
Colonel Edward E. S. Godfrey, commanding the Ninth Cavalry; Colonel
David L. Brainard, Commissary of Subsistence; Lieutenant-Colonel Samuel
M. Horton; Captains Henry R. Lemly, Francis M. Gibson, Nathan S. Jarvis,
George E. Albee and R. L. Livermore, Tenth Cavalry; and the following
civilians: President E. Benjamin Andrews; Doctors T. E. Oertel and D. D.
Thompson; Messrs. W. Kent Thomas, Sigmund Schlesinger, Edward Esmonde,
Phineas Towne, W. R. E. Collins, Hugh M. Johnson, Herbert Myrick, R. J.
Smyth, William E. Morris, Nicholas E. Boyd, Theo. W. Goldin and Arthur
Chapman; Mrs. Guy V. Henry and Mrs. James Powell.

In addition to these letters I have gathered much information in
conversation with officers and others, not only recently but during many
years spent in the West, where I was a frequent guest at army posts, in
frontier towns, and at some of the Indian reservations. I knew many of
the participants in the stirring incidents and heard the fascinating
stories from their own lips.

The chapters of the Fort Phil Kearney series have been read and
corrected as to matters of fact by General Carrington and Colonel
Horton; those referring to the defense of Beecher’s Island, by General
Forsyth; those describing the relief of Forsyth and the fight on the
Beaver, by General Carpenter; those relating to the Little Big Horn
campaign, by General Woodruff and Colonel Godfrey, and the account of
the affair at Slim Buttes and the death of American Horse, by General
Mills. All of these gentlemen gave me interesting details, anecdotes,
etc., besides answering all my inquiries. Several of them put their
private papers at my disposal. To Colonel Godfrey I am especially
indebted for much interesting matter on the Little Big Horn campaign,
and to Captain Gibson for the use of his unprinted account of the Battle
of the Washita. The Office of the Secretary of War has been most kind in
answering questions and furnishing information not otherwise procurable.
Mr. W. H. Holmes, Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian
Institution, has decided all questions as to the proper spelling of
Indian names,[1] and has given me the Indian equivalents of the names of
prominent chiefs, as Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, etc.

Several of the papers following are original contributions especially
prepared for this book. The authors of these papers are indicated
hereafter. For all expressions of opinion, for all comments, notes and
inferences, not specifically attributed to somebody else, I alone am
responsible.

To all who have aided me to make this series authoritative and
definitive, my most grateful thanks are hereby heartily expressed.

I trust that in thus striving to preserve the records of those stirring
times I have done history and posterity a service. The majority of those
who fought on the plains have passed away. Many of the surviving
participants in the adventures described are growing old. In a short
time it would have been impossible to have secured the information here
presented unless some one else had gone about it as I have.

With intervals devoted to other duties, I have been over a year and a
half engaged in this congenial task. I have written literally hundreds
of letters, to learn, or to verify, a fact, an incident, or a
conclusion. It is interesting to call attention to the fact that
information has been freely and generously given to me from every source
whence I have asked it save three, one of which is noted in the
appendix.

The series of historical books of which this forms the fourth seems to
have won a permanent place for itself. The number of copies which found
a welcome last year was greater than the number of the year before,
although there was no new volume issued last fall to call renewed
attention to the series. These books are generally spoken of by the
title of the first published, “American Fights and Fighters.” It has
been deemed proper, therefore, to adopt that name, which is sufficiently
explicit and descriptive, as the generic name of the series. Hereafter
all the books that have appeared, and those that are yet to appear in
this series, will bear that general name, with the addition of a
distinctive subtitle in each instance. The covers of the earlier books,
accordingly, have been changed to read as follows:

          1. American Fights and Fighters, Colonial.
          2. American Fights and Fighters, Revolutionary—1812.
          3. American Fights and Fighters, Border.

As I have stated, it is my hope to continue this series of books until I
have covered all the wars that have been fought upon the American
Continent since Columbus’s day.

So far as the American people are concerned—save in the case of the
Mexican War—their struggles have generally been to establish a broader,
nobler conception of human freedom. I would not have any one gather from
this that our dealings with the Indian invariably have been
characterized by that honesty and honor which should be at the base of
every national undertaking—far from it! In this book, without growing
sentimental, I have endeavored to be fair to the Indians; as in previous
books, I have tried to deal justly by any and every enemy.[2] To be
honest and to be fair—these things are of prime importance in writing
history and in living life.

I am now at work on two other volumes, a book on “South American Fights
and Fighters” and a second volume of “Indian Fights and Fighters.” In
this proposed Indian book I shall take up the further struggles of the
United States with the Indians of the Northwest, notably Chief Joseph’s
splendid migration with his Nez-Percés, the dash of the Cheyennes for
freedom, Captain Jack and the Modoc War, the Ute War, the last outbreak
of the Sioux, and various other affairs in the Northwest. Thereafter I
contemplate a third book dealing with Arizona and the Apache.

I take this opportunity of asking every individual, soldier or civilian,
who participated in any of these campaigns or battles, who has any
material bearing upon them, and who is willing to allow me to look over
it, kindly to send it to me in care of the publishers of this book, as
soon as possible, as I expect to issue the next volume of the series
next fall. Any such material will be carefully preserved and returned by
express in good order, and due credit—also a copy of the book!—will be
given for any which may be of use to me in the next book, as in this
one.

It is getting late, as I said, to write the history of some of these
things, and I am actuated by an earnest desire to preserve the records
before it is too late. Who will help me? Since I began writing history I
have learned to disregard no authority, however humble, and to neglect
no source of information, however obscure it may appear to a casual
inspection. Therefore send me what you have or can prepare, and allow me
to judge of its value.

American people are usually more familiar with the story of other
peoples than with their own history. How often have I heard the charge
made that there is nothing romantic or interesting in American history.
I do not see how any one could read even the chapter headings of a book
like this and say a thing like that. Where are there more splendid
stories of dauntless heroism, of subtle strategy, of brilliant tactics,
of fierce fighting, than are contained in these pages? I may have told
them indifferently and may be the subject of just criticism therefor,
but the stories at least are there. They speak for themselves. I could
not spoil them if I tried. The facts ring like a trumpet-call to
American manhood, be it white, or red, or black.

                                                   CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY.

 Brooklyn, N. Y.,
       August 1, 1904.

-----

Footnote 1:

  Almost every author has a different way of spelling the names of the
  sub-tribes of the Siouan family.

Footnote 2:

  For instance:—Every time a body of troops engages in a fight with
  Indians and the troops are outnumbered, or caught at a disadvantage,
  and the battle is continued until the troops are slaughtered, such an
  affair is popularly called a “massacre”; as “The Fetterman Massacre,”
  “The Custer Massacre.” I believe this to be an unwarranted use of the
  term. Fetterman and Custer attacked the Indians and fought desperately
  until they and their men were all killed. I call that a “battle” not a
  “massacre.” When an Indian war party raided a settlement or
  overwhelmed a train, or murdered children and women, that, I think,
  was a “massacre”; but these two instances were not. Consequently, I
  have carefully refrained from making use of that term in this book,
  except where it is justifiable. The reader may not agree with me in
  this position, but I would like to ask if any one ever heard of the
  “Massacre of Thermopylæ”? The Greeks fought there until all, save one,
  were killed. The results there were exactly those of the Fetterman
  affair and the battle of the Little Big Horn, but I have yet to read
  in history that the Persians “massacred” the Greeks in that famous
  pass. What is sauce for the Persians is sauce for the Red Men as well.




                                PREFACE


It will be noticed that this book differs from others of the AMERICAN
FIGHTS AND FIGHTERS SERIES, and especially its immediate predecessor,
“Indian Fights and Fighters,” in that I am not the author of all or most
of it. In response to a request for contributions from participants in
the Modoc and Nez Percé wars, numerous papers were submitted, all of
such high value, not only from an historic but from a literary point of
view as well, that I had not the presumption to rewrite them myself—not
even the proverbial assurance of the historian would warrant that.

Therefore, I have contented myself with writing a general and
comprehensive account of each of the two wars considered, leaving to the
actors themselves the telling in full of the detailed story of the
splendid achievements in which they were making history. I can affirm,
therefore, that never before has there been included in a single volume
such a remarkable and interesting collection of personal experiences in
our Indian Wars as in this book.

And as I admire the doers of the deeds so, also, do I admire the tellers
of the tales. Their modesty, their restraint, their habit of relating
adventures which stir the blood and thrill the soul as a mere matter of
course,—“all in the day’s work”—enkindles my enthusiasm. And how
graphically these old soldiers wield their pens! What good story tellers
they are!

And what different sorts and conditions of men are here represented!
Major-generals and scouts, captains and sergeants, frontiersmen and
troopers, soldiers and civilians, to say nothing of an Indian chief and
a bishop, have all said their say in their own way. The reader will be
glad, I know, that I have permitted these men, like Paul, to speak for
themselves.

The whole book constitutes a trumpet call to American manhood, and
honor, and courage, and that I believe to be true of the whole series.

The Army of the United States is sometimes slandered. A case in point is
now in mind. The chief official of a city of no little prominence, who
is also an author and a publicist of national repute, has recently put
forth a bitter diatribe against our soldiers. Such a book as this
refutes these unfounded accusations. The Army is not perfect—neither is
the Church!—but not only man for man, but also as an organization it is
the equal of any, and the superior of most, of the armies of the world!
And I am sure that no one can get a much better training for the battle
of life that he gets in the peace loving, hard working, honor seeking,
duty following, never failing, hard fighting service of the United
States—on sea or shore. I have been in both, worn the Army and also the
Navy blue, and I know. We all deprecate the necessity for armies, but if
we must have them, let us thank God for an army like that of our beloved
country. I am glad to express this my deliberate and matured conviction,
begot of much study, wide observation, and ripe experience.

                                                   CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY.

 LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, CENTRE HARBOR,
     NEW HAMPSHIRE, _July, 1907_.




                                CONTENTS


                                   ❦

                                 PART I

                         PROTECTING THE FRONTIER

 CHAPTER                                                            PAGE

      I. THE POWDER RIVER EXPEDITION                                   3

     II. THE TRAGEDY OF FORT PHIL KEARNEY                             19

    III. THE THIRTY-TWO AGAINST THE THREE THOUSAND                    40

     IV. PERSONAL REMINISCENCES OF FORT PHIL KEARNEY AND THE
           WAGON-BOX FIGHT                                            59

      V. FORSYTH AND THE ROUGH RIDERS OF ’68                          72

     VI. THE JOURNEY OF THE SCOUTS AND THE RESCUE OF FORSYTH          97

    VII. A SCOUT’S STORY OF THE DEFENSE OF BEECHER’S ISLAND          113

   VIII. CARPENTER AND HIS BRUNETTES. THE FIGHT ON BEAVER CREEK      123

     IX. A FURTHER DISCUSSION OF THE BEAVER CREEK AFFAIR             136

      X. THE BATTLE OF THE WASHITA                                   146

     XI. CARR AND TALL BULL AT SUMMIT SPRINGS                        170


                                 PART II

                         THE WAR WITH THE SIOUX

      I. WITH CROOK’S ADVANCE                                        183

     II. EX-TROOPER TOWNE ON THE ROSEBUD FIGHT                       203

    III. THE GRIEVANCE OF RAIN-IN-THE-FACE                           209

     IV. THE LITTLE BIG HORN CAMPAIGN                                216

      V. THE LAST OF CUSTER                                          237

     VI. ONE OF THE LAST MEN TO SEE CUSTER ALIVE                     263

    VII. THE PERSONAL STORY OF RAIN-IN-THE-FACE                      279

   VIII. TWO INTERESTING AFFAIRS                                     293

     IX. THE FIRST SUCCESS                                           304

      X. A DECISIVE BLOW                                             312

     XI. MILES’ GREAT CAMPAIGNING                                    319

    XII. WHAT THEY ARE THERE FOR—A SKETCH OF GENERAL GUY V. HENRY,
           A TYPICAL AMERICAN SOLDIER                                339

                                    ❦


                               APPENDICES

 APPENDIX A—BEING A FURTHER DISCUSSION OF GENERAL CUSTER’S COURSE
   IN THE LITTLE BIG HORN CAMPAIGN                                   359

 APPENDIX B—FURTHER LIGHT ON THE CONDUCT OF MAJOR RENO               398

 INDEX                                                               407




                         LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

                                   ❦


                                DRAWINGS

                                                           FACING PAGE

 THE LAST OF CUSTER                                       _Frontispiece_

 LIEUTENANT GRUMMOND SACRIFICING HIMSELF TO COVER THE
   RETREAT                                                            36

 CHARGE OF RED CLOUD ON THE CORRAL AT PINEY ISLAND                    50

 “BOOTS AND SADDLES:” A START IN THE EARLY MORNING                    60

 ROMAN NOSE LEADING THE CHARGE AGAINST FORSYTH’S DEVOTED
   BAND                                                               86

 “SIMULTANEOUSLY WITH THEIR ARRIVAL A RATTLESNAKE MADE
   HIS APPEARANCE”                                                    98

 THE CRUCIAL MOMENT ON BEECHER’S ISLAND                              116

 THE CHIEF MEDICINE MAN AT BEAVER CREEK                              132

 THE DIFFICULT TASK OF THE HORSE-HOLDERS IN ACTION                   194

 THE CAPTURE OF RAIN-IN-THE-FACE                                     214

 RAIN-IN-THE-FACE                                                    280

 CHIEF TWO MOON OF THE NORTHERN CHEYENNES                            300

 MACKENZIE’S MEN IN DULL KNIFE’S VILLAGE                             316


                              PHOTOGRAPHS

                                                                  FACING
                                                                   PAGE

 GROUP OF FAMOUS WAR CHIEFS                                           10

               CROW KING, RED CLOUD, AMERICAN HORSE, GALL

 THE FORT PHIL KEARNEY FIGHTERS                                       20

   CAPT. W. J. FETTERMAN, LIEUT. G. W. GRUMMOND, CAPT. FREDK. H. BROWN
                           CAPT. JAMES POWELL

 BEECHER’S ISLAND FIGHTERS                                            72

   CAPT. LOUIS H. CARPENTER, MAJ. GEORGE A. FORSYTH, LIEUT. FREDK. H.
                      BEECHER, SCOUT JACK STILLWELL

 BEECHER’S ISLAND FIELD                                               80

 SOME OFFICERS OF THE SEVENTH CAVALRY IN THE WASHITA EXPEDITION      156

  MAJ. JOEL H. ELLIOTT, CAPT. JAMES M. BELL, CAPT. LOUIS McL. HAMILTON,
                           CAPT. J. W. BENTEEN

 GROUP OF DISTINGUISHED GENERAL OFFICERS                             174

 GEN. GEORGE CROOK, GEN. ELWELL S. OTIS, GEN. EUGENE A. CARR, GEN. HENRY
                              B. CARRINGTON

 GEN. GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER                                        220

 SOME OF CUSTER’S OFFICERS                                           238

   CAPT. MYLES MOYLAN, LIEUT. E. A. SMITH, MAJ. MARCUS A. RENO, CAPT.
                            EDWARD S. GODFREY

 SOME OF CUSTER’S TROOP COMMANDERS                                   248

  CAPT. THOMAS W. CUSTER, CAPT. GEORGE W. YATES, LIEUT. JAMES CALHOUN,
                          CAPT. MILES W. KEOGH

 OFFICERS OF THE SEVENTH CAVALRY                                     258

  LIEUT. H. M. HARRINGTON, LIEUT. J. E. PORTER, LIEUT. W. VAN W. RILEY,
   ADJ. W. W. COOK, LIEUT. J. STURGIS, LIEUT. J. J. CRITTENDEN, LIEUT.
                  DONALD McINTOSH, LIEUT. BENJ. HODGSON

 SITTING BULL                                                        268

 SOME FAMOUS INDIAN FIGHTERS                                         326

    GEN. JOHN GIBBON, GEN. WESLEY MERRITT, GEN. NELSON A. MILES, GEN.
                             ALFRED H. TERRY

 GROUP OF DISTINGUISHED INDIAN FIGHTERS                              340

 COL. RANALD S. MACKENZIE, CAPT. ANSON MILLS, GEN. GUY V. HENRY, F. CODY
                             (BUFFALO BILL)




                             MAPS AND PLANS


                                   ❦

                                                                    PAGE

 FORT PHIL KEARNEY                                                    16

 THE FETTERMAN MASSACRE                                               27

 STOCKADE AT FORT PHIL KEARNEY                                        33

 THE WAGON-BOX CORRAL ON PINEY ISLAND                                 45

 PLAN OF MAGAZINE AT FORT PHIL KEARNEY                                63

 MAP OF FORSYTH’S DEFENSE OF BEECHER’S ISLAND                         79

 MAP OF MARCHES TO RELIEVE COLONEL FORSYTH AND TO ESCORT GENERAL
   CARR                                                              103

 POSITIONS OF WAGONS AND SOLDIERS IN BEAVER CREEK FIGHT              130

 BATTLE OF THE ROSEBUD                                               197

 MAP OF CUSTER’S DEFEAT ON THE LITTLE BIG HORN                       230

 MAP ILLUSTRATING THE ROUTE OF THE THREE BATTALIONS AT THE LITTLE
   BIG HORN                                                          234

 PLAN OF RENO’S DEFENSE ON THE BLUFF                                 247

 KEY TO MAP OF CUSTER BATTLE-FIELD                                   287




                              BIBLIOGRAPHY


     I. The official reports of the Secretary of War, with accompanying
          documents, very kindly lent to me by the United States
          Government.

    II. Different numbers of the following magazines and journals:
          Harper’s Weekly; The Century; Scribner’s Monthly; The
          Chatauquan; McClure’s Magazine; Outdoor Life; Journal of the
          United States Cavalry Association; Journal of the Military
          Service Institution.

   III. Files of various contemporary newspapers, notably the Chicago
          Times and the New York Herald.

    IV. Various General Histories.

     V. AB-SA-RA-KA, by General and Mrs. Henry B. Carrington, U. S. A.
          J. B. Lippincott Co. Philadelphia. 1890.

    VI. ADVENTURES OF BUFFALO BILL, By Col. William F. Cody. Harper &
          Brothers. New York. 1904.

   VII. ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES, THE, by Gen. Theo. F. Rodenbough, U.
          S. A., and Maj. Wm. L. Haskin, U. S. A. Maynard, Merrill & Co.
          New York. 1896.

  VIII. ARMY SACRIFICES, by Col. James B. Fry, U. S. A. D. Van Nostrand.
          New York. 1879.

    IX. BOOTS AND SADDLES, by Elizabeth B. Custer. Harper & Brothers.
          New York. 1902.

     X. CAMPAIGNING WITH CROOK, by Captain Charles King, U. S. A. Harper
          & Brothers. New York. 1902.

    XI. CAMPAIGNS OF GENERAL CUSTER IN THE NORTHWEST, by Judson Eliott
          Walker. Jenkins & Thomas. New York. 1881.

   XII. DEEDS OF VALOR, Compiled by W. F. Beyer and O. F. Keydel.
          Perrien-Keydel Co. Detroit, Mich. 1901.

  XIII. FOLLOWING THE GUIDON, by Elizabeth B. Custer. Harper & Brothers.
          New York. 1901.

   XIV. LIFE OF GENERAL G. A. CUSTER, by Captain Frederick Whittaker.
          Sheldon & Co. New York. 1876.

    XV. MY LIFE ON THE PLAINS, OR PERSONAL EXPERIENCES WITH INDIANS, by
          General G. A. Custer, U. S. A. Sheldon & Co. New York. 1876.

   XVI. ON THE BORDER WITH CROOK, by Captain John G. Bourke, U. S. A.
          Charles Scribner’s Sons. New York. 1892.

  XVII. OUR WILD INDIANS, by Col. Richard I. Dodge, U. S. A. A. D.
          Worthington & Co. Hartford. 1890.

 XVIII. PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF GENERAL NELSON A. MILES. The Werner
          Co. Chicago. 1897.

   XIX. SABRE AND BAYONET, by Gen. Theo. F. Rodenbough, U. S. A. G. W.
          Dillingham Co. New York. 1897.

    XX. STORY OF THE SOLDIER, THE, by General George A. Forsyth, U. S.
          A. D. Appleton & Co. New York. 1900.

   XXI. STORY OF THE WILD WEST AND CAMP FIRE CHATS, by W. F. Cody.
          (Buffalo Bill.) Historical Publishing Co. Philadelphia. 1888.

  XXII. TENTING ON THE PLAINS, by Elizabeth B. Custer. Harper &
          Brothers. New York. 1895.

 XXIII. THRILLING DAYS IN ARMY LIFE, by Gen. George A. Forsyth, U. S. A.
          Harper & Brothers. New York. 1902.

  XXIV. TWENTY YEARS AMONG OUR HOSTILE INDIANS, by J. Lee Humfreville
          (late Captain of United States Cavalry). Hunter & Co. New
          York. 1903.

   XXV. UNITED STATES IN OUR OWN TIME, THE, by E. Benjamin Andrews.
          Charles Scribner’s Sons. New York. 1903.

  XXVI. WAR PATH AND BIVOUAC, by John F. Finerty. M. A. Donohue & Co.
          Chicago. 1890.




                                 PART I
                        Protecting the Frontier




                              CHAPTER ONE
                      The Powder River Expedition


                     I. The Field and the Fighters

Since the United States began to be there never was such a post as Fort
Philip Kearney, commonly called Fort Phil Kearney.[3] From its
establishment, in 1866, to its abandonment, some two years later, it was
practically in a state of siege. I do not mean that it was beleaguered
by the Indians in any formal, persistent investment, but it was so
constantly and so closely observed by war parties, hidden in the
adjacent woods and the mountain passes, that there was little safety
outside its stockade for anything less than a company of infantry or a
troop of cavalry; and not always, as we shall see, for those.

Rarely in the history of the Indian wars of the United States have the
Indians, no matter how preponderant in force, conducted a regular siege,
Pontiac’s investment of Detroit being almost unique in that particular.
But they literally surrounded Fort Phil Kearney at all times. Nothing
escaped their observation, and no opportunity to harass and to cut off
detached parties of the garrison, to stampede the herds, or to attack
the wagon trains, was allowed to pass by. Not a stick of timber could be
cut, not an acre of grass mowed, except under heavy guard. Herds of beef
cattle, the horses for the cavalry and mounted infantry, the mules for
the supply wagons, could not graze, even under the walls of the fort,
without protection. The country teemed with game. Hunting parties were
absolutely forbidden. To take a stroll outside the stockade on a summer
evening was to invite death, or worse if the stroller happened to be a
woman. There was no certainty about the attacks, except an assurance
that one was always due at any given moment. As old James Bridger, a
veteran plainsman and fur trader, a scout whose fame is scarcely less
than that of Kit Carson, and the confidential companion adviser of
Carrington in 1866, was wont to say to him: “Whar you don’t see no
Injuns thar they’re sartin to be thickest.”

Taking at random two average months in the two different years during
which the post was maintained, one in the summer, another in the fall, I
find that there were fifteen separate and distinct attacks in one and
twenty in the other. In many of these, in most, in fact, one or more men
were killed and a greater number wounded. Not a wagon train bound for
Montana could pass up the Bozeman trail, which ran under the walls of
the fort, and for the protection of which it had been established,
without being attacked again and again. Only the most watchful prudence,
the most skilful management, and the most determined valor, prevented
the annihilation of successive parties of emigrants seeking the new and
inviting land.

The war with the Indians was about the ownership of territory, as most
of our Indian wars have been. Indeed, that statement is true of most of
the wars of the world. The strong have ever sought to take from the
weak. The westward-moving tide of civilization had at last pressed back
from the Missouri and the Mississippi the Sioux and their allies, the
Cheyennes, the largest and most famous of the several great groups of
Indians who have disputed the advance of the white man since the days of
Columbus, saving perhaps the Creeks and the Iroquois.

The vast expanse of territory west of the hundredth meridian, extending
from the Red River to the British Columbia boundary line, was at the
time practically devoid of white settlements, except at Denver and Salt
Lake, until the Montana towns were reached in the northwest.[4] It is a
great sweep of land which comprises every variety of climate and soil.
The huge Big Horn Mountains severed that immense domain. The Sweet Water
Country and all east of the Wind River Range, including South Pass and
the region west of the great bend of the North Platte, had its prairies
and fertile valleys. Just north of the Big Horn Mountain Range, which
took in the territory which formed the most direct route to Central
Montana, and the occupation of which was the real objective of
Carrington’s expedition in the spring of 1866, was the most precious
section, controlled by tribes jealous of any intrusion by the whites.

All along the Yellowstone and its tributaries, in spite of the frequent
“_Mauvaises Terres_,” or “bad lands,” of apparent volcanic origin, the
whole country was threaded with clear streams from the Big Horn Range.
The valleys of these were luxuriant in their natural products and their
promise. Enormous herds of buffalo roamed the plains, affording the
Indian nearly everything required for his support. The mountains
abounded with bear, deer and other game in great variety. The many
rivers which traversed the territory teemed with fish, the valleys which
they watered were abundantly fertile for the growing of the few crops
which the Indian found necessary for his support. The land was desirable
naturally and attracted the attention of the settlers.

It cannot be gainsaid that the Indians enjoyed a quasi-legal title to
this land. But if a comparatively small group of nomadic and savage
tribes insists upon reserving a great body of land for a mere hunting
ground, using as a game preserve that which, in a civilized region,
would easily support a great agricultural and urban population of
industrious citizens seeking relief from the crowded and confined
conditions of older communities, what are you going to do about it?
Experience has shown that in spite of treaties, purchases and other
peaceful means of obtaining it, there is always bound to be a contest
about that land. The rights of savagery have been compelled to yield to
the demands of civilization, ethics to the contrary notwithstanding. And
it will always be so, sad though it may seem to many.

The close of the Civil War threw many soldiers out of employment. After
four years of active campaigning they could not settle down to the
humdrum life of village and country again. With a natural spirit of
restlessness they gathered their families, loaded their few household
belongings into wagons, and in parties of varying sizes made their way
westward. Railroads began to push iron feelers across the territory.
Engineers and road builders, as well as emigrants, demanded the
protection of the government. At first most of the settlers merely
wished to pass through the country and settle in the fair lands upon the
other side, but the fertility and beauty that met their eyes on every
hand irresistibly invited settlement on the journey.

At that time there were four great routes of transcontinental travel in
use: southward over the famous Santa Fé trail; westward over the Kansas
trail to Denver; westward on the Oregon trail through Nebraska and Salt
Lake City to California and Oregon; northwestward on the Bozeman trail
through Wyoming to Montana. The Union Pacific road was building along
the Oregon trail, the Kansas Pacific along the Kansas trail to Denver,
while the great Santa Fé system was not yet dreamed of.

The railroads being in operation for short distances, the only method of
transportation was in the huge Conestoga wagon, or prairie schooner
which, with its canvas top raking upward fore and aft over a capacious
wagon box, looked not unlike the hull of the boat from which it took its
name. These wagons were drawn by four or six mules—sometimes by oxen,
known as “bull teams”—and, stores there being none, carried everything
that a settler was apt to need in the new land, including the
indispensable wife and children.

I am concerned in this article only with the Bozeman or Montana trail.

Early in 1866 Government Commissioners at Fort Laramie, Nebraska, were
negotiating a treaty with the Sioux and Northern Cheyennes to secure the
right of way for emigrants through that territory which, by the
Harney-Sanborne treaty, had been conceded to them in 1865. Red Cloud, an
Oglala Sioux, the foremost of the young warriors, led the objectors to
the treaty, even to the point of fighting, and opposed the more
conservative chiefs who deprecated war as eventually fatal to all their
territorial claims. During this council, to anticipate later events,
Carrington, then approaching with troops, arrived in advance,
dismounted, and was introduced to the members of the council. Red Cloud,
noticing his shoulder straps, hotly denounced him as the “White Eagle”
who had come to steal the road before the Indian said yes or no. In full
view of the mass of Indians who occupied the parade ground he sprang
from the platform under the shelter of pine boughs, struck his tepees
and went on the war-path. A telegram by Carrington advising suspension
of his march until the council came to some agreement was negatived, and
although Sunday he pushed forward nine miles beyond the fort before
sunset.

One stipulation upon which the United States insisted was the
establishment of military posts to guard the trail, without which it was
felt the treaty would amount to nothing. The Brulé Sioux, under the lead
of Spotted Tail, Standing Elk and others, favored the concession, and
ever after remained faithful to the whites. The older chiefs of other
Sioux bands, in spite of Red Cloud’s defection and departure, remained
in council for some days and, although sullen in manner and noisy in
protests, finally accepted valuable gifts and indemnities and so far
satisfied the Commission that they despatched special messengers to
notify the District Commander that “satisfactory treaties had been made
with the tribes represented at Laramie and that its route was safe.”
Emigrant trains were also pushed forward with their assurance that an
ample force of regulars had gone up the country to ensure their safety.
The sequel will appear later.


              II. General Carrington’s Romantic Expedition

Pursuant to the plan, Brigadier-General Henry B. Carrington, Colonel of
the Eighteenth Regular Infantry, was ordered with the second battalion
of his regiment, about to become the Twenty-seventh Regular Infantry, to
establish, organize and take command of what was known as the Mountain
District. The Mountain District at that time had but one post in it,
Fort Reno, one hundred and sixty miles from Fort Laramie. Carrington was
directed to march to Fort Reno, move it forty miles westward, garrison
it, and then, with the balance of his command, establish another post on
the Bozeman trail, between the Big Horn Mountains and the Powder River,
so as to command that valley much frequented by Indians; and, lastly, to
establish two other posts, one on the Big Horn, the other on the
Yellowstone, for the further protection of the trail.

General Carrington was a graduate of Yale College. He had been a
teacher, an engineer and scientist, a lawyer and man of affairs, a
student of military matters as well as Adjutant-General of Ohio for
several years prior to the outbreak of the Civil War. At the beginning
of that struggle he promptly moved one battery and several regiments of
Ohio Militia into West Virginia to take part in the Battle of Phillipi
before the State Volunteers could be mustered into the United States
service. Without his solicitation, on May 14th, 1861, he had been
appointed Colonel of the Eighteenth United States Infantry, promoted
Brigadier-General November 29th, 1863, and had rendered valuable and
important services during the war. He was a high-minded Christian
gentleman, a soldier of large experience and proven courage, an
administrator of vigor and capacity, and, as his subsequent career has
shown, a man of fine literary talents.[5] No better choice could have
been made for the expedition.

After many delays, due principally to difficulties in securing
transportation, a little army of seven hundred men, accompanied by four
pieces of artillery, two hundred and twenty-six wagons, and a few
ambulances containing the wives and children of several of the officers,
set forth from old Fort Kearney, Nebraska, on the 19th of May, 1866.
About two hundred of the men were veterans, the rest raw recruits. They
were armed with old-fashioned Springfield, muzzle-loading muskets, save
a few who had the new Spencer breech-loading carbine, a weapon of rather
short trajectory, but a great improvement on the old army musket from
the rapidity of fire which it permitted. A portion of the command was
mounted from the discarded horses of a cavalry regiment going east to be
mustered out. They were not trained horsemen, however, and at first were
rather indifferent mounted infantrymen.

Among the soldiers were artificers and mechanics of every description.
The government had provided appliances needed for building forts,
including tools, doors, sash, glass, nails, stoves, steel, iron, mowers,
reapers, scythes, and two steam sawmills. The officers were in the main
a fine body of men, most of whom had learned their soldiering in the
Civil War.

[Illustration:

  _Copyright by D. F. Barry_
]

              CROW KING                       AMERICAN HORSE[6]
              RED CLOUD                             GALL

                       GROUP OF FAMOUS WAR CHIEFS

It seems incredible to think that women should accompany such an
expedition, but no grave anticipations of trouble with the Indians were
felt by any persons in authority at that time. The Sioux and Cheyennes
had consented to the opening of the road, and though they demurred to
the forts, they had not absolutely refused the treaty when the
government insisted upon it. The expedition was not conceived or planned
for war. It was supposed to be a peaceable expedition. In fact, General
Sherman, who visited Fort Kearney before the troops began to march,
personally advised the ladies to accompany the expedition as very
attractive in its object and wholly peaceful. Had the authorities known
what was to happen, a force three times as great would scarcely have
been thought adequate for the purpose. But even had there been a full
knowledge of the dangers incurred, the army women would have gone with
their husbands.

History records no greater instances of romantic devotion than those
exhibited by the army wife. She stands peculiar among American women
to-day in that particular. The army woman in a hostile country risked
much more than the men. Her fate when captured was terrible beyond
description—one long agony of horror and shame until death put an end to
it. I have talked with army officers of large experience and have read
what others have said, and the universal testimony is that no woman who
was ever captured by the plains Indians west of the Missouri was spared.
It was commonly agreed among the officers and men of regiments
accompanied by women—and fully understood by the women as well—that in
the last extremity the women were to be shot by their own friends,
rather than to be allowed to fall into the hands of the savages; but no
such apprehension attended this march.

The army woman’s knowledge of the peril in the usual border warfare was
not an imaginary one, either. As we may read in letters and books
written by army wives, it was brought home to them directly again and
again. After every campaign poor, wretched women of stranded and robbed
emigrant trains or devastated settlements were brought into the various
camps, to whom these army women ministered with loving care, and from
whom they heard frightful and sickening details that froze the blood;
yet the army wife herself never faltered in her devotion, never failed
in her willingness to follow wherever her husband was sent. And, save
for the actual campaigning in the field, the army wife was
everywhere—sometimes there, too.

In this particular expedition there were several little children, from
some of whom I have gleaned details and happenings. One of these lads,
while at Fort Kearney before the march, became so expert with the bow
and arrow in target shooting with young Pawnee Indians near the fort,
that he challenged General Sherman to shoot over the flagstaff. The
youngster accomplished it by lying upon his back with feet braced
against the bow, and the general squarely withdrew from the contest,
declining to follow the boy’s ingenious artifice.

The march was necessarily a slow one and the distance great—some six
hundred miles—so that it was not until the twenty-eighth of June they
reached Fort Reno. There they were menaced by the Indians for the first
time and every endeavor was made to stampede their herds. The officers
and men were fast becoming undeceived as to the character of their
expedition. To abandon Fort Reno, or to remove it, was not practicable.
Carrington ordered it re-stockaded and put in thorough repair,
garrisoned it from his command, and with the balance, something over
five hundred, advanced farther into the unknown land on the 9th of July.
On the 13th of July, 1866, he established his camp on the banks of the
Big Piney Creek, an affluent of the Powder River, about four miles from
the superb Big Horn Range, with snow-capped Cloud Peak towering nine
thousand feet into the heavens, close at hand. A few days later, on a
little, flower-decked, grass-covered plateau, bare of trees, which
fortunately happened to be just the size to contain the fort he proposed
to erect, and which sloped abruptly away in every direction, forming a
natural glacis, he began building the stockade.


                    III. The Outpost of Civilization

The plateau lay between two branches of the Piney. To the eastward of
the smaller branch rose a high hill called Pilot Hill. West of it was
another ridge which they named Sullivant Hills. Southwest of Sullivant
Hills was a high ridge called Lodge Trail Ridge, the main branch of the
Piney Creek flowing between them, so that the water supply was at the
eastern or “Water Gate” of the fort. The Bozeman trail passed westward,
under Pilot Hill in front of the fort, crossing the Big Piney as it
neared Sullivant Hills, and then, circling around Lodge Trail Ridge for
easier ascent, advanced northward, twice crossing Peno Creek and its
branches, before that stream joined Goose Creek, a tributary to Tongue
River, one of the chief forks of the Yellowstone. The first branch of
the Peno was five miles from the fort, and the second twelve miles
farther, where the garrison had to cut hay, but the branch nearer the
fort was especially associated with the events of December 21st, as well
as with the fight of the sixth of the same month.

The spot was delightful. Adjacent to the fort were broad stretches of
fertile, brilliantly flowered, grassy, river and mountain creek valleys.
The mountains and hills were covered with pines. Game there was in
plenty; water was clear and abundant. Wood, while not immediately at
hand, else the place would not have been practicable of defense without
tremendous labor in clearing it, was conveniently adjacent.

General Carrington marked out the walls of the fort, after a survey of
the surrounding country as far as Tongue River, set up his sawmills, one
of them of forty horse-power, capable of cutting logs thirty inches in
diameter, established a logging camp on Piney Island, seven miles
distant, with no intervening hills to surmount, which made
transportation easy, and began the erection of the fort. Picket posts
were established upon Pilot and Sullivant Hills, which overlooked
approaches both from the east and the road to the mountains. Three times
Indians attempted to dislodge these pickets, once at night; but
case-shot exploding over them, and each time causing loss of men or
ponies, ended similar visitations.

The most careful watchfulness was necessary at all hours of the day and
night. The wood trains to fetch logs to the sawmills went out heavily
guarded. There was fighting all the time. Casualties among the men were
by no means rare. At first it was difficult to keep men within the
limits of the camp; but stragglers who failed to return, and some who
had been cut off, scalped and left for dead, but who had crawled back to
die, convinced every one of the wisdom of the commanding officer’s
repeated orders and cautions.[7]

To chronicle the constant succession of petty skirmishes would be
wearisome; yet they often resulted in torture and loss of life on the
part of the soldiers, although the Indians in most instances suffered
the more severely. One single incident may be taken as illustrative of
the life of the garrison.

One afternoon, early in October, the picket reported that the wood train
was attacked to the west, and shortly after signalled the approach of a
small party of soldiers from the east. Detachments were sent from the
post in both directions. It proved to be not a reinforcement of troops
or ammunition supplies, but two ambulances with two contract surgeons
and an escort of eight men, besides Bailey, the guide, and Lieutenant
Grummond, who had just been appointed to the Eighteenth Infantry, and
his young bride. As they approached the main gate, accompanied by the
mounted men who had been sent out to meet them, they were halted to give
passage to an army wagon from the opposite direction. It was escorted by
a guard from a wood train, and brought in the scalped, naked, dead body
of one of their comrades, a strange welcome, indeed, to the young wife,
who, upon leaving Laramie, had been assured of a beautiful ride through
fertile valleys without danger, and sadder yet in its sequel two months
later.

[Illustration: FORT PHILIP KEARNEY]

Meanwhile the work of erecting the fort was continued. It was a
rectangle, six hundred by eight hundred feet, inclosed by a formidable
stockade of heavy pine logs standing eight feet high, with a continuous
banquette, and flaring loopholes at every fourth log. There were
enfilading blockhouses on the diagonal corners, with portholes for the
cannon, and quarters for officers and men, with other necessary
buildings. The commanding officer’s quarters was a two-story building of
framed lumber, surmounted by a watch-tower. The officers’ and men’s
quarters were built of logs. The warehouses, four in number, eighty feet
by twenty-four, were framed.

East of the fort proper was a corral of slightly less area, surrounded
by a rough palisade of cottonwood logs, which inclosed the wood train,
hay, and miscellaneous supplies. Everything—stockade, houses, stables,
in all their details, blacksmith shops, teamsters’ quarters, and so
on—was planned by Carrington himself.[8]

The main fort inclosed a handsome parade ground, in the center of which
arose the tall flagstaff planned and erected by a ship carpenter in the
regiment. From it, on the 31st of October, with great ceremony and much
rejoicing, the first garrison flag that ever floated over the land was
unfurled. The work was by no means completed as it appears on the map,
but it was inclosed, and there were enough buildings ready to house the
actual garrison present, although the fort was planned for a thousand
men, repeatedly promised but not furnished, while all the time both
cavalry and the First Battalion of the Eighteenth were held within the
peaceful limits of Fort Laramie’s control.

Early in August Captain Kinney, with two companions, had been sent
ninety miles to the northward to establish the second post on the Big
Horn, which was called Fort C. F. Smith, and was very much smaller and
less important than Fort Phil Kearney. The third projected post was not
established. There were not enough men to garrison the three already in
the field, much less to build a fourth.

-----

Footnote 3:

  Although the general for whom this fort was named spelled his name
  Kearny, the name of the fort is written as above in all official
  documents I have examined.

Footnote 4:

  The country is roughly comprehended by the boundary lines between
  which Mountain Standard, or 105th meridian, Time, prevails.

Footnote 5:

  Among his literary works he is best known for his “Washington, the
  Soldier,” and his “Battles of the American Revolution,” which is the
  standard work of the kind. In a personal interview he told me he read
  some portion of the Bible in the original Greek and Hebrew every day
  for years. Not many army officers can say that, and very few
  civilians, either.

Footnote 6:

  Killed at Slim Buttes

Footnote 7:

  Just when the alarms were most frequent a messenger came to the
  headquarters, announcing that a train en route from Fort Laramie, with
  special messengers from that post, was corralled by Indians, and
  demanded immediate help. An entire company of infantry in wagons, with
  a mountain howitzer and several rounds of grape-shot, was hastened to
  their relief. It proved to be a train with mail from the Laramie
  Commission announcing the consummation of a “satisfactory treaty of
  peace with all the Indians of the Northwest,” and assuring the
  District Commander of the fact. The messenger was brought in in
  safety, and peace lasted until his message was delivered. So much was
  gained—that the messenger did not lose his scalp en route.

Footnote 8:

  General W. B. Hazen, upon inspection of this post’s stockade,
  pronounced it “the best he had ever seen, except one built by the
  Hudson Bay Company, in British America.”




                              CHAPTER TWO
                    The Tragedy of Fort Phil Kearney


                       I. How the Fighting Began

To summarize the first six months of fighting, from the first of August
to the close of the year, the Indians killed one hundred and fifty-four
persons, including soldiers and citizens, wounded twenty more, and
captured nearly seven hundred animals—cattle, mules, and horses. There
were fifty-one demonstrations in force in front of the fort, and they
attacked every train that passed over the trail.

As the fort was still far from completion, the logging operations were
continued until mid-winter. On every day the weather permitted, a
heavily guarded train of wood-cutters was sent down to Piney Island, or
to the heavier timber beyond, where a blockhouse protected the choppers.
This train was frequently attacked. Eternal vigilance was the price of
life. Scarcely a day passed without the lookout on Pilot Hill signalling
Indians approaching, or the lookout on Sullivant Hills reporting that
the wood train was corralled and attacked. On such occasions a strong
detachment would be mounted and sent out to drive away the Indians and
bring in the wood train—an operation which was invariably successful,
although sometimes attended with loss.

Hostile demonstrations were met by prompt forays or pursuits, as
circumstances permitted; and on one occasion the general pursued a band
that ran off a herd nearly to Tongue River; but flashing mirrors
betrayed Indian attempts to gain his rear, and a return was ordered,
abandoning the stolen stock.

One expedition is characteristic of many. On the afternoon of December
6th the lookout on Sullivant Hills signalled that the wood train was
attacked, and Captain (Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel) Fetterman, the senior
captain present, was detailed with a squad of forty mounted men,
including fifteen cavalrymen under Lieutenants Bingham and Grummond,
with Sergeant Bowers of the infantry, a veteran of the Civil War, to
relieve the wood train and drive the Indians toward the Peno Valley,
while Carrington himself, with about a score of mounted infantrymen,
would sweep around the north side of Lodge Trail Ridge and intercept
them.

The Indians gave way before Fetterman’s advance, hoping to lure the
troops into an ambush, but at a favorable spot they made a stand. The
fighting there was so fierce that the cavalry, which by a singular
circumstance was without its officers, gave way and retreated headlong
across the valley toward the ridge. The mounted infantry stood its
ground, and under Fetterman’s intrepid leadership was making a brave
fight against overwhelming odds, the number of Indians present being
estimated at more than three hundred. It would have gone hard with them,
however, had not Carrington and the first six of his detachment suddenly
swept around a small hill or divide and taken the Indians in reverse.
The general had been forced to advance under fire, and meeting the
fugitive cavalry, ordered them to fall in behind his own detachment. He
was filled with anxiety as to the course of the fight on the other side
of the ridge.

[Illustration]

      CAPT. W. J. FETTERMAN[9]            CAPT. FREDK. H. BROWN[9]
      LIEUT. G. W. GRUMMOND[9]               CAPT. JAMES POWELL

                      THE FORT PHIL KEARNEY FIGHTERS

 _For portrait of General Carrington, see illustration opposite page 174_

  Carrington, in his official report,[10] says: “But six men turned
  the point with me, one a young bugler of the Second Cavalry, who
  told me that Lieutenant Bingham had gone down the road around the
  hill to my right. This seemed impossible, as he belonged to
  Fetterman’s command. I sounded the recall on his report, but in
  vain. One of my men fell and his horse on him. The principal chief
  operating during the day attempted to secure his scalp, but
  dismounting, with one man to hold the horses and reserving fire, I
  succeeded in saving the man and holding the position until joined by
  Fetterman twenty minutes later. The cavalry that had abandoned him
  had not followed me, though the distance was short; but the Indians,
  circling round and yelling, nearly one hundred in number, with one
  saddle emptied by a single shot fired by myself, did not venture to
  close in.”

The rear detachment and Fetterman soon joined, and by the efforts of the
combined parties the Indians were compelled to flight. It was a close
call for all, but Lieutenants Grummond and Bingham were yet unaccounted
for. Search was instantly made for these two officers and the infantry
sergeant, who had become separated from their command while chasing some
scattered Indians. One of the officers, Lieutenant Bingham, was dead.
Lieutenant Grummond, after a hand-to-hand fight, was closely pressed by
mounted Indians and was barely rescued. Sergeant Bowers had been
fearfully wounded and scalped, although he was still alive, but died
immediately.[11] He had killed three Indians before he had been
overborne. The cavalrymen, mostly recruits, were deeply ashamed of their
defection, which was partly due to the incaution of their officers in
leaving them to pursue a few Indians, and they were burning with a
desire to retrieve their reputation, which they bravely did with their
lives some two weeks later.

The casualties in the little command were two killed, five wounded. A
messenger was sent to the fort for an ambulance, and the command retired
in good order without further sight of the Indians. Lieutenant Bingham
was not the first officer killed; for, five months before, Lieutenant
Daniels, riding ahead of a small party of soldiers escorting several
officers and the wife of Lieutenant Wands from Fort Laramie, had been
killed in full view of the party. He had been horribly tortured with a
stake before he died, and the savages put on his clothing and danced on
the prairie just out of range, in front of the party, which was too
small to do more than stand on the defensive. Lieutenant Grummond’s wife
was in the fort during the fighting on the sixth of December, and her
joy at her husband’s safe return can be imagined.

On the eighth of December President Andrew Johnson congratulated
Congress that treaties had been made at Fort Laramie, and that _all was
peace in the Northwest_!

On the 19th of December, in this peaceful territory, the wood train was
again attacked in force. Carrington promptly sent out a detachment under
Captain Powell with instructions to relieve the wood train, give it his
support, and return with it, but not to pursue threatening Indians, for
experience had shown that the Indians were constantly increasing in
numbers and growing bolder with every attack. Powell efficiently
performed his task. The Indians were driven off, and, although he was
tempted to pursue them, he was too good a soldier to disobey orders, so
he led his men back in safety to the fort.

By this time all warehouses were finished, and it was estimated that one
large wood train would supply logs enough for the completion of the
hospital, which alone needed attention.

Impressed by Powell’s report, Carrington himself accompanied the
augmented train on the 20th, built a bridge across to Piney Island to
facilitate quick hauling, and returned to the fort to make ready for one
more trip only. No Indians appeared in sight on that date. Already
several hundred large logs had been collected for winter’s firewood,
besides the slabs saved at the sawmill.

It cannot be denied that there was much dissatisfaction among some of
the officers at Carrington’s prudent policy. They had the popular idea
that one white man, especially if he were a soldier, was good for a
dozen Indians; and although fifteen hundred lodges of Indians were known
to be encamped on the Powder River, and there were probably between five
and six thousand braves in the vicinity, they were constantly suggesting
expeditions of all sorts with their scanty force. Some of them,
including Fetterman and Brown, “offered with eighty men to ride through
the whole Sioux Nation!” While the mettle of the Sioux Nation had not
yet been fairly tried by these men, Carrington was wise enough to
perceive that such folly meant inevitable destruction, and his consent
was sternly refused.

The total force available at the fort, including prisoners, teamsters,
citizens and employees, was about three hundred and fifty—barely enough
to hold the fort, should the Indians make an attack upon it. Besides
which, details were constantly needed to carry despatches, to deliver
the mail, to get supplies, to succor emigrant trains, and so on. The
force was woefully inadequate, and the number of officers had been
depleted by detachment and other causes until there were but six left.

Ammunition was running low. There were at one time only forty rounds per
man available. Repeated requests and appeals, both by letter and
telegram, for reinforcements and supplies, and especially for modern and
serviceable weapons, had met with little consideration. The officials in
the far East hugged their treaty, and refused to believe that a state of
war existed; and, if it did exist, were disposed to censure the
commanding officer for provoking it. In several instances presents given
in the treaty at Fort Laramie were found on the persons of visiting
Indians, and one captured Indian pony was heavily loaded with original
packages of those presents.

Carrington had done nothing to provoke war, but had simply carried out
General Sherman’s written instructions, sent him as late as August, to
“avoid a general war, until the army could be reorganized and
increased;” but he defended himself and command stoutly when attacked.
Some of the officers, therefore, covertly sneering at the caution of the
commander, were burning for an opportunity to distinguish themselves on
this account, and had practically determined to make or take one at the
first chance. Fetterman and Brown, unfortunately, were the chief of
these malcontents.


              II. The Annihilation of Fetterman’s Command

On the 21st of December, the ground being free from snow, the air clear
and cold, the lookout on Sullivant Hills signalled about eleven o’clock
in the morning that the wood train had been corralled, and was again
attacked in force about a mile and a half from the fort. A relief party
of forty-nine men from the Eighteenth Infantry, with twenty-seven
troopers from the Second Cavalry, a detachment from which, nearly all
recruits and chiefly armed with muskets as their carbines had not
reached Laramie, had joined the post some months before, was at once
ordered out.

The command was first given to Captain Powell, with Lieutenant Grummond
in charge of the cavalry. Grummond had a wife in delicate health at the
post, and he was cautioned by the officers to take care not to be led
into a trap, although his experience on the 6th, when he had so narrowly
escaped death, was, it would seem, the best warning he could have had.
This body of men was the best armed party at the post, a few of those
designated carrying the Spencer repeating carbines. Each company had
been directed to keep forty rounds per man on hand for immediate use in
any emergency, besides extra boxes always kept in company quarters. The
men had been exercised in firing recently and some of the ammunition had
been expended, although they still had an abundant supply for the
purposes of the expedition. Carrington personally inspected the men
before they left, and rejected those who were not amply provided.

The situation of the wood train was critical, and the party was
assembled with the greatest despatch. Just as they were about to start,
Captain Fetterman, who had had less experience in the country and in
Indian fighting than the other officers, for he had joined the regiment
some time after the fort had been built and expected assignment to
command Fort C. F. Smith, begged for the command of the expedition,
pleading his senior captaincy as justification for his request.
Carrington reluctantly acceded to his plea, which indeed he could
scarcely have refused, and placed him in charge, giving him strict and
positive instructions to “relieve the wood train, drive back the
Indians, _but on no account to pursue the Indians beyond Lodge Trail
Ridge_,” and that so soon as he had performed this duty he was to return
immediately to the fort.

Captain Fetterman, as has been said, had frequently expressed his
contempt for the Indians, although his fight on December 6th had
slightly modified his opinions. Carrington, knowing his views, was
particular and specific in his orders. So necessary did he think the
caution that he repeated it to Lieutenant Grummond, who, with the
cavalry, followed the infantry out of the gate, the infantry, having
less preparation to make, getting away first. These orders were
delivered in a loud voice and were audible to many persons—women,
officers, and men in the fort. The general went so far as to hasten to
the gate after the cavalry had left the fort, and from the sentry
platform or banquette overlooking it, called out after them again,
emphatically directing them “on no account to pursue the Indians across
Lodge Trail Ridge.”

The duty devolved upon Captain Fetterman was exactly that which Captain
Powell had performed so satisfactorily a few days before. With Captain
Fetterman went Captain Brown, with two citizens, frontiersmen and
hunters, as volunteers. These two civilians, Wheatley and Fisher, were
both armed with the new breech-loading rapid-fire Henry rifle, with
which they were anxious to experiment on the hostiles. Wheatley left a
wife and children in the fort.

[Illustration: THE FETTERMAN MASSACRE Dec. 21, 1866.]

Captain Frederick Brown, a veteran of the Civil War, had just been
promoted, had received orders detaching him from the command, and was
simply waiting a favorable opportunity to leave. He was a man of the
most undaunted courage. His position as quartermaster had kept him on
the watch for Indians all the time, and he announced on the day before
the battle that he “must have one chance at the Indians before he left.”
It is believed, however, that his impetuous counsel, due to his good
luck in many a brush with assailing parties, which he had several times
pursued almost alone, largely precipitated the final disaster.

The total force, therefore, including officers and citizens, under
Fetterman’s command, was eighty-one—just the number with which he had
agreed to ride through the whole Sioux Nation. No one in the command
seems to have had the least idea that any force of Indians, however
great, could overcome it.

Captain Fetterman, instead of leading his men direct to the wood train
on the south side of Sullivant Hills, double-quicked toward the Peno
Valley on to the north side. Perhaps he hoped that he could take the
Indians in reverse and exterminate them between his own troops and the
guard of the wood train—which all told comprised some ninety men—when he
rounded the western end of the hills. This movement was noticed from the
fort; but, as it involved no disobedience of orders, and as it might be
considered a good tactical manœuver, no apprehension was felt on account
of it.

The Indians surrounding the wood train were well served by their scouts,
and when they found that Fetterman’s force was advancing on the other
side of the hill, they immediately withdrew from the wood train, which
presently broke corral and made its way to the Piney, some seven miles
northwest of the fort, unmolested. As Fetterman’s troops disappeared
down the valley, a number of Indians were observed along the Piney in
front of the fort. A spherical case-shot from a howitzer in the fort
exploded in their midst, and they vanished. The Indians were much afraid
of the “gun that shoots twice,” as they called it.

At that time it was discovered that no doctor had gone with the
relieving party, so Acting-Assistant Surgeon Hines, with an escort of
four men, was sent out with orders to join Fetterman. The doctor
hastened away, but returned soon after with the information that the
wood train had gone on, and that when he attempted to cross the valley
of the Peno to join Fetterman’s men he found it full of Indians, who
were swarming about Lodge Trail Ridge, and that no sign of Fetterman was
observed. Despite his orders, he must have gone over the ridge.

The alarm caused in the fort by this news was deepened by the sound of
firing at twelve o’clock. Six shots in rapid succession were counted,
and immediately after heavy firing was heard from over Lodge Trail
Ridge, five miles away, which continued with such fierceness as to
indicate a pitched battle. Carrington instantly despatched Captain Ten
Eyck with the rest of the infantry, in all about fifty-four men,
directing him to join Fetterman’s command, then return with them to the
fort. The men went forward on the run. A little later forty additional
men were sent after Ten Eyck. Carrington at once surmised that Fetterman
had disobeyed orders, either wittingly or carried away by the ardor of
the pursuit, and was now heavily engaged with the Indians on the far
side of the ridge.

Counting Fetterman’s detachment, the guards of the wood train, and Ten
Eyck’s detachments, the garrison of the fort was now reduced to a very
small number. The place, with its considerable extent, might now be
attacked at any time. Carrington at once released all prisoners from the
guard-house, armed the quartermaster’s employees, the citizens, and
mustered altogether a force of only one hundred and nineteen men to
defend the post.[12] Although every preparation for a desperate defense
had been made, there were not enough men to man the walls.

The general and his remaining officers then repaired to the observatory
tower, field glasses in hand, and in apprehension of what fearful
catastrophe they scarcely allowed themselves to imagine. The women and
children, especially those who had husbands and fathers with the first
detachment, were almost crazed with terror.

Presently Sample, the general’s own orderly, who had been sent with Ten
Eyck, was seen galloping furiously down the opposite hill. He had the
best horse in the command (one of the general’s), and he covered the
distance between Lodge Trail Ridge and the fort with amazing swiftness.
He dashed up to headquarters with a message from Ten Eyck, stating that
“the valley on the other side of the ridge is filled with Indians, who
are threatening him. The firing has stopped. He sees no sign of Captain
Fetterman’s command. He wants a howitzer sent out to him.”

The following note was sent to Captain Ten Eyck:

“Forty well-armed men, with three thousand rounds, ambulances, stores,
etc., left before your courier came in. You must unite with Fetterman.
Fire slowly, and keep men in hand. You would have saved two miles toward
the scene of action if you had taken Lodge Trail Ridge. I order the wood
train in, which will give fifty men to spare.”

No gun could be sent him. Since all the horses were already in the
field, it would have required men to haul it. No more could be spared,
and not a man with him could cut a fuse or handle the piece anyway. The
guns were especially needed at the fort to protect women and children.

Late in the afternoon Ten Eyck’s party returned to the fort with
terrible tidings of appalling disaster. In the wagons with his command
were the bodies of forty-nine of Fetterman’s men; the remaining
thirty-two were not at that time accounted for. Ten Eyck very properly
stood upon the defensive on the hill and refused to go down into the
valley in spite of the insults and shouts of the Indians, who numbered
upward of two thousand warriors, until they finally withdrew. After
waiting a sufficient time, he marched carefully and cautiously toward
Peno Valley and to the bare lower ridge over which the road ran.

There he came across evidences of a great battle. On the end of the
ridge, nearest the fort, in a space about six feet square, inclosed by
some huge rocks, making a sort of a rough shelter, he found the bodies
of the forty-nine men whom he had brought back. After their ammunition
had been spent, they had been stripped, shot full of arrows, hacked to
pieces, scalped, and mutilated in a horrible manner. There were no
evidences of a very severe struggle right there. Few cartridge shells
lay on the ground. Of these men, only four besides the two officers had
been killed by bullets. The rest had been killed by arrows, hatchets, or
spears. They had evidently been tortured to death.

Brown and Fetterman were found lying side by side, each with a bullet
wound in the left temple. Their heads were burned and filled with powder
around the wounds. Seeing that all was lost, they had evidently
stood-face to face, and each had shot the other dead with his revolver.
They had both sworn to die rather than be taken alive by the Indians,
and in the last extremity they had carried out their vows. Lieutenant
Grummond, who had so narrowly escaped on the 6th of December, was not
yet accounted for, but there was little hope that he had escaped again.


                   III. Carrington’s Stern Resolution

The night was one of wild anxiety. Nearly one-fourth of the efficient
force of the fort had been wiped out. Mirror signals were flashed from
the hills during the day, and fires here and there in the night
indicated that the savages had not left the vicinity. The guards were
doubled, every man slept with his clothing on, his weapons close at
hand. In every barrack a noncommissioned officer and two men kept watch
throughout the night. Carrington and the remaining officers did not
sleep at all. They fully expected the fort to be attacked. The state of
the women and children can be imagined, although all gossip and rumor
were expressly prohibited by the commander.

[Illustration: STOCKADE]

The next day was bitterly cold. The sky was overcast and lowering, with
indications of a tremendous storm. The Indians were not accustomed to
active operations under such conditions, and there was no sign of them
about. Carrington determined to go out to ascertain the fate of his
missing men. Although all the remaining officers assembled at his
quarters advised him not to undertake it, lest the savages, flushed with
victory, should attempt another attack, Carrington quietly excused his
officers, told the adjutant to remain with him, and the bugle instantly
disclosed his purpose in spite of dissenting protests. He rightly judged
that the moral effect of the battle would be greatly enhanced, in the
eyes of the Indians, if the bodies were not recovered. Besides, to set
at rest all doubts it was necessary to determine the fate of the balance
of his command. His own wife, as appears from her narrative,[13]
approved his action and nerved herself to meet the possible fate
involved, while Mrs. Grummond was the chief protestant that, as her
husband was undoubtedly dead, there should be no similar disaster
invited by another expedition.

In the afternoon, with a heavily armed force of eighty men, Carrington
went in person to the scene of battle. The following order was left with
the officer of the day: “Fire the usual sunset gun, running a white lamp
to masthead. If the Indians appear fire three guns from the
twelve-pounder at minute intervals, and, later, substitute a red lantern
for the white.” Pickets were left on two commanding ridges, as signal
observers, as the command moved forward. The women and children were
placed in the magazine, a building well adapted for defense, which had
been stocked with water, crackers, etc., for an emergency, with an
officer pledged not to allow the women to be taken alive, if the General
did not return and the Indians overcame the stockade.

Passing the place where the greatest slaughter had occurred, the men
marched cautiously along the trail. Bodies were strung along the road
clear to the western end farthest from the fort. Here they found
Lieutenant Grummond. There were evidences of a desperate struggle about
his body. Behind a little pile of rock, making a natural fortification,
were the two civilians who had been armed with the modern Henry rifle.
By the side of one fifty shells were counted, and nearly as many by the
side of the other brave frontiersman. Behind such cover as they could
obtain nearby lay the bodies of the oldest and most experienced soldiers
in Fetterman’s command.

In front of them they found no less than sixty great gouts of blood on
the ground and grass, and a number of dead ponies, showing where the
bullets of the defenders had reached their marks,[14] and in every
direction were signs of the fiercest kind of hand-to-hand fighting.
Ghastly and mutilated remains, stripped naked, shot full of
arrows—Wheatley with no less than one hundred and five in him, scalped,
lay before them.

Brown rode to the death of both a little Indian “calico” pony which he
had given to the general’s boys when they started from Fort Leavenworth,
in November, 1865, and the body of the horse was found in the low ground
at the west slope of the ridge, showing that the fight began there,
before they could reach high ground.[15] At ten o’clock at night, on the
return, the white lamp at masthead told its welcome story of a garrison
still intact.

Fetterman had disobeyed orders. Whether deliberately or not, cannot be
told. He had relieved the wood train, and instead of returning to the
post, had pursued the Indians over the ridge into Peno Valley, then
along the trail, and into a cunningly contrived ambush. His men had
evidently fought on the road until their ammunition gave out, and then
had either been ordered to retreat to the fort, or had retreated of
their own motion—probably the latter. All the dead cavalry horses’ heads
were turned toward the fort, by the way. Fetterman and Brown, men of
unquestioned courage, must have been swept along with their flying men.
There may have been a little reserve on the rocks on which they hoped to
rally their disorganized, panic-stricken troops, fleeing before a horde
of yelling, blood-intoxicated warriors. I imagine them vainly
protesting, imploring, begging their men to make a stand. I feel sure
they fought until the last. But these are only surmises; what really
happened, God alone knows.

The judgment of the veteran soldiers and the frontiersmen, who knew that
to retreat was to be annihilated, had caused a few to hold their ground
and fight until they were without ammunition; then with gun-stocks,
swords, bayonets, whatever came to hand, they battled until they were
cut down. Grummond had stayed with them, perhaps honorably sacrificing
himself in a vain endeavor to cover the retreat of the rest of his
command. The Indian loss was very heavy, but could not exactly be
determined.

[Illustration:

  _Copyright, 1902, by Charles Schreyvogel_

  LIEUTENANT GRUMMOND SACRIFICING HIMSELF TO COVER THE RETREAT

  _Drawing by Charles Schreyvogel_
]


                   IV. The Reward of a Brave Soldier

Such was the melancholy fate of Fetterman and his men. The post was
isolated, the weather frightful. A courier was at once despatched to
Fort Laramie, but such means of communication was necessarily slow, and
it was not until Christmas morning that the world was apprised of the
fatal story. In spite of the reports that had been made and fatuously
believed, that peace had obtained in that land, it was now known that
war was everywhere prevalent. The shock of horror with which the
terrible news was received was greater even than that attendant upon the
story of the disastrous battle of the Little Big Horn, ten years later.
People had got used to such things then; this news came like a bolt from
the blue.

Although Carrington had conducted himself in every way as a brave,
prudent, skilful, capable soldier, although his services merited reward,
not censure, and demanded praise, not blame, the people and the
authorities required a scapegoat. He was instantly relieved from command
by General Cooke, upon a private telegram from Laramie, never published,
before the receipt of his own official report, and was ordered to change
his regimental headquarters to the little frontier post at Fort Caspar,
where two companies of his first battalion, just become the new
Eighteenth, were stationed, while four companies of the same battalion,
under his lieutenant-colonel, were ordered to the relief of Fort Phil
Kearney.

The weather had become severe and the snow was banked to the top of the
stockade. The mercury was in the bulb. Guards were changed half-hourly.
Men and women dressed in furs made from wolfskins taken from the
hundreds of wolves which infested the outside butcher-field at night,
and which were poisoned by the men for their fur. Upon the day fixed
precisely for the march, as the new arrivals needed every roof during a
snow-storm which soon became a blizzard, Carrington, his wife and
children, his staff and their families, including Mrs. Grummond,
escorting the remains of her husband to Tennessee, and the regimental
band, with its women and children, began that February “change of
headquarters.” They narrowly escaped freezing to death. More than
one-half of the sixty-five in the party were frosted, and three
amputations, with one death, were the immediate result of the foolish
and cruel order.

It was not until some time after that a mixed commission of soldiers and
civilians, which thoroughly investigated Carrington’s conduct, having
before them all his books and records from the inception of the
expedition until its tragic close, acquitted him of all blame of any
sort, and awarded him due praise for his successful conduct of the whole
campaign. His course was also the subject of inquiry before a purely
military court, all of them his juniors in rank, which also reported
favorably. General Sherman expressly stated that “Colonel Carrington’s
report, to his personal knowledge, was fully sustained,” but by some
unaccountable oversight or intent, the report was suppressed and never
published, thereby doing lasting injustice to a brave and faithful
soldier.

At the same time the government established the sub-post between Laramie
and Fort Reno, so earnestly recommended by Carrington, in October,
calling it Fort Fetterman, in honor of the unfortunate officer who fell
in battle on the 21st of December.

Perhaps it ill becomes us to censure the dead, but the whole unfortunate
affair arose from a direct disobedience of orders on the part of
Fetterman and his men. They paid the penalty for their lapse with their
lives; and so far, at least, they made what atonement they could. A year
later opportunity was given the soldiers at Phil Kearney to exact a
dreadful revenge from Red Cloud and his Sioux for the slaughter of their
brave comrades.

-----

Footnote 9:

  Killed on Lodge Trail Ridge

Footnote 10:

  Published by the United States Senate in 1887.

Footnote 11:

  At the burial of Sergeant Bowers, Captain Brown, who had known him
  during the Civil War, pinned his Army of the Cumberland badge upon his
  breast, and this was found when the remains were reinterred in 1878.

Footnote 12:

  PHIL KEARNEY GARRISON, at date of massacre, from “Post Returns”:—

                Wood Party, besides teamsters     55 men
                Fetterman’s Party (two citizens)  81 men
                Ten Eyck’s Party (relieving)      94 men
                Helpless in hospital               7 men
                Roll-call, of present, all told  119 men
                     Total officers and men      356 men

  Ninety rifles worn out by use on horseback. Citizen employees used
  their private arms.

  Information furnished by General H. B. Carrington.

Footnote 13:

  “AB-SA-RA-KA, Land of Massacre,” by Mrs. Carrington, of which Oliver
  Wendell Holmes wrote to General Carrington as follows: “What an
  interesting record is that of Mrs. Carrington! I cannot read such a
  story of devotion and endurance in the midst of privations and danger,
  without feeling how little most of us know of what life can be when
  all the human energies are called out by great enterprises and
  emergencies.”

Footnote 14:

  The Indians, where possible, remove the bodies of their slain. They
  did during this campaign, as few dead Indians ever came into
  possession of the troops.

Footnote 15:

  Once, while loading the bodies in the wagons, a nervous sergeant
  mistook one of the pickets for Indians in the rear, and gave the
  alarm. His detail was sharply ordered by the general to “leave their
  ammunition and get back to the fort as best they could, if they were
  afraid; for no armed man would be allowed to leave until the last body
  was rescued.”




                             CHAPTER THREE
               The Thirty-two Against the Three Thousand


                I. The Improvised Corral on Piney Island

Red cloud, who had been one of the subchiefs of the Sioux, gained so
much prestige by the defeat and slaughter of Fetterman’s men that he
became at once the leading war chief of the nation.[16] The angry
braves, flushed with conquest and eager for blood, hastened to enroll
themselves by thousands in his band.

Fort Phil Kearney had been in a state of siege before: it was more
closely invested now than ever. Contrary to their usual avoidance of the
war-path in cold weather, throughout the long and bitter winter there
was no intermittence to the watchfulness of the Indians. The garrison
was constantly in arms. Attacks of all sorts were made with increasing
frequency. The letters from the soldiers which got through to the East
adequately describe their sense of the dire peril which menaced them.
“_This may be my last letter_” is a frequent phrase. Travel on the trail
was abandoned. As soon as possible in the spring, reinforcements were
hurried up and the fort was completed, but the same state of affairs
continued right along without intermission.

With the advance of summer Red Cloud gathered his warriors and
determined upon a direct attack upon the fort itself. He was tired of
skirmishing, stampeding stock, cutting off stragglers, etc. He wanted
war, real war, and he got it! If, or when, he captured the fort, he
would advance upon the other two forts in succession and so clear the
country, once and for all, of the detested invaders, whose soldierly
qualities he seems to have held in contempt. For the campaign he
proposed he assembled no fewer than three thousand warriors, the flower
of the Sioux Nation. Probably half of them were armed with firearms,
Winchester rifles, Spencer repeating carbines, or old army muskets,
including those that had been captured from Fetterman’s party. Under
cover of frequent skirmishes, which prevented much scouting on the part
of the troops, Red Cloud gathered his warriors undiscovered and
unmolested, and prepared to attack about the first of August, 1867.

The limits of the military reservation had been fixed at
Washington—without adequate knowledge of the ground and in disregard of
General Carrington’s request and protests—so as to exclude the timber
land of Piney Island, from which the post had been built, and from which
the nearest and most available wood supply must be obtained. The post
had been completed, but immense supplies of wood would be required for
fuel during the long and severe winter. This was to be cut and delivered
at the fort by a civilian outfit which had entered upon a contract with
the government for the purpose. One of the stipulations of the contract
was that the woodmen should be guarded and protected by the soldiers.

Wood-cutting began on the 31st of July, 1867, and Captain and
Brevet-Major James Powell, commanding “C” Company, of the twenty-seventh
Infantry, which was formerly a battalion of the Eighteenth a part of the
command which had built the fort, and to which Fetterman and his men had
belonged, was detailed with his company to guard the contractor’s party.
Captain Powell had enlisted in the army in 1848 as a private soldier.
The Civil War had given him a commission in the regular service, and in
its course he had been twice brevetted for conspicuous gallantry, once
at Chickamauga and the second time during the Atlanta campaign, in which
he had been desperately wounded. He had had some experience in Indian
fighting before and since he came to the post, and had distinguished
himself in several skirmishes, notably in the relief of the wood train,
a few days before Fetterman’s rashness and disobedience precipitated the
awful disaster.

Arriving at Piney Island, some seven miles from the post, Powell found
that the contractor had divided his men into two parties. One had its
headquarters on a bare, treeless, and comparatively level plain, perhaps
one thousand yards across, which was surrounded by low hills backed by
mountains farther away. This was an admirable place to graze the herds
of mules required to haul the wagons. As will be seen, it could also be
turned into a highly defensive position. The other camp was in the thick
of the pine wood, about a mile away across the creek, at the foot of the
mountain. This division of labor necessitated a division of force, which
was a misfortune, but which could not be avoided.

Powell sent twelve men under a noncommissioned officer to guard the camp
in the wood, and detailed thirteen men with another noncommissioned
officer to escort the wood trains to and from the fort. With the
remaining twenty-six men and his lieutenant, John C. Jenness, he
established headquarters on the plain in the open.

The wagons used by the wood-cutters were furnished by the
quartermaster’s department. In transporting the cordwood, the woodmen
made use of the running gears only, the wagon bodies having been
deposited in the clearing. In order to preserve their contents and to
afford as much protection as possible to their occupants in case of
Indian attacks, the quartermaster’s department was in the habit of
lining the wagon beds with boiler iron; and, to give their occupants an
opportunity to fight from concealment, loopholes were cut in the sides.
Almost every authority who has written of the fight has concluded that
the particular wagon beds in question were so lined. This is a mistaken
though natural conclusion. In a letter to an old comrade who wrote an
account of the subsequent action,[17] Powell makes no mention of any
iron lining, and it is certain that the wagons were not lined, but were
just the ordinary wooden wagon beds.[18]

There were fourteen of these wagon bodies. Powell arranged them in the
form of a wide oval. At the highest point of the plain, which happened
to be in the center, this corral was made. The wagon beds were deep, and
afforded ample concealment for any one lying in them. I sometimes wonder
why Powell did not stand these beds on their sides instead of their
bottoms, making a higher and stouter inclosure, the bottoms being
heavier than the sides; but it is clear that he did not. There were
plenty of tools, including a number of augers, in the camp, and with
these Powell’s men made a number of loopholes about a foot from the
ground, in the outward sides of the wagons.

At the ends of the oval, where the configuration of the ground made it
most vulnerable for attack, especially by mounted men, two wagons
complete—that is, with bodies and running gears—were placed a short
distance from the little corral. This would break the force of a charge,
and the defenders could fire at the attacking party underneath the
bodies and through the wheels. The spaces between the wagon bodies were
filled with logs and sacks of grain, backed by everything available that
would turn a bullet. The supplies for the soldiers and wood party were
contained in this corral.

[Illustration:

  The Wagon-Box Corral on Piney Island
]

Instead of the old Springfield muzzle-loading musket, with which the
troops mainly had been armed up to this time, Powell’s men were provided
with the new Allen modification of the Springfield breech-loading rifle.
He had enough rifles for his men and for all the civilian employees, and
a large number of new Colt revolvers, with plenty of ammunition for all.
The new rifle had never been used by the troops in combat with the
Indians, and the latter were entirely ignorant of its tremendous range
and power and the wonderful rapidity of fire which it permitted. They
learned much about it in the next day or two, however. A quantity of
clothing and blankets was issued to the troops at the fort on the first
of August, and supplies for Powell’s men were sent down to him.


                    II. The Wild Charge of the Sioux

Having matured his plans, Red Cloud determined to begin his attack on
Fort Phil Kearney by annihilating the little detachment guarding the
train.[19] Parties of Indians had been observed in the vicinity for
several days, but no attack had been made since Powell’s arrival until
the second of August, when, about nine o’clock in the morning,[20] a
party of some two hundred Indians endeavored to stampede the herd of
mules. The herders, who were all armed, stood their ground and succeeded
for the time being in beating back the attack. While they were hotly
engaged with the dismounted force, sixty mounted Indians succeeded in
getting into the herd and running it off. At the same time five hundred
other Indians attacked the wood train at the other camp.

The affair was not quite a surprise, for the approach of the Indians had
been detected and signalled from the corral on the island a few moments
before. In the face of so overwhelming a force the soldiers and
civilians at the wood train immediately retreated, abandoning the train
and the camp. Here four of the lumbermen were killed. The retreat,
however, was an orderly one, and they kept back the Indians by a
well-directed fire.

Meanwhile the herders, seeing the stampede of the mules, made an effort
to join the party retreating from the wood train. The Indians endeavored
to intercept them and cut them off. Powell, however, with a portion of
his force, leaving the post in command of Lieutenant Jenness,
immediately dashed across the prairie and attacked the savages in the
rear. They turned at once, abandoning the pursuit of the herders, and
fell upon Powell, who in his turn retreated without loss to the corral.
His prompt and bold sortie had saved the herders, for they were enabled
to effect a junction with the retreating train men and their guards and
the soldiers and civilians, and eventually gained the fort, although not
without hard fighting and some loss. One thing that helped them to get
away from the Indians was that the savages stopped to pillage the camp
and burn it and the train. Another thing was the presence of Powell’s
command, which they could not leave in the rear. After driving away the
others and completing the destruction of the camp, they turned their
attention to Powell’s corral.

Some of the clothing that had been received the day before had not been
unpacked or distributed, so it was used to strengthen the weak places in
the corral. Powell’s men lay down in the wagon beds before the
loopholes; blankets were thrown over the tops of the beds to screen the
defenders from observation and in the hope of perhaps saving them from
the ill effects of the plunging arrow fire, and everything was got
ready. Everybody had plenty of ammunition.

Some of the men who were not good shots were told off to do nothing but
load rifles, of which there were so many that each man had two or three
beside him, one man making use of no less than eight. Four civilians
succeeded in joining the party in the corral—a welcome addition, indeed,
bringing the total number up to thirty-two officers and men. Among this
quartet was an old frontiersman who had spent most of his life hunting
in the Indian country, and who had been in innumerable fights, renowned
for his expertness in the use of the rifle—a dead-shot. This was the man
to whom the eight guns were allotted. Powell, rifle in hand, stationed
himself at one end of the corral; Jenness, similarly armed, was posted
at the other, each officer watching one of the openings covered by the
complete wagons, which were loaded with supplies so they could not be
run off easily by hand.

While all these preparations were being rapidly made, although without
confusion or alarm, the surrounding country was filling with a countless
multitude of Indians. It was impossible at the time to estimate the
number of them, although it was ascertained that more than three
thousand warriors were present and engaged. Red Cloud himself was in
command, and with him were the great chiefs of the great tribes of the
Sioux, who were all represented—Unkpapas, Miniconjous, Oglalas, Brulés,
and Sans Arcs, besides hundreds of Cheyennes.

So confident of success were they that, contrary to their ordinary
practices, they had brought with them their women and children to assist
in carrying back the plunder. These, massed out of range on the farthest
hills, constituted an audience for the terrible drama about to be played
in the amphitheater beneath them.

We can well imagine the thoughts of that little band of thirty-two,
surrounded by a force that outnumbered them one hundred to one. Their
minds must have gone back to that winter day, some seven months before,
when twice their number had gone down to defeat and destruction under
the attack of two-thirds of their present foemen. It is probable that
not one of them ever expected to escape alive. The chances that they
could successfully withstand an attack from so overwhelming a number of
foes of such extraordinary bravery were of the smallest. But not a man
flinched, not a man faltered. They looked to their weapons, settled
themselves comfortably in the wagon beds, thought of Fetterman and their
comrades, and prayed that the attack might begin and begin at once.
There were no heroics, no speeches made. Powell quietly remarked that
they had to fight for their lives now, which was patent to all; and he
directed that no man, for any reason, should open fire until he gave the
order.

Some little time was spent by the Indians in making preparations, and
then a force of about five hundred Indians, magnificently mounted on the
best war ponies and armed with rifles, carbines, or muskets, detached
themselves from the main body and started toward the little corral lying
like a black dot on the open plain. They intended to ride over the
soldiers and end the battle with one swift blow. Slowly at first, but
gradually increasing their pace until their ponies were on a dead run,
they dashed gallantly toward the corral, while the main body of the
savages, at some distance in their rear, prepared to take advantage of
any opening that might be made in the defenses. It was a brilliant
charge, splendidly delivered.

Such was the discipline of Powell’s men that not a shot was fired as the
Indians, yelling and whooping madly, came rushing on. There was
something terribly ominous about the absolute silence of that little
fortification. The galloping men were within one hundred yards now, now
fifty. At that instant Powell spoke to his men. The inclosure was
sheeted with flame. Out of the smoke and fire a rain of bullets was
poured upon the astonished savages. The firing was not as usual—one
volley, then another, and then silence; but it was a steady, persistent,
continued stream, which mowed them down in scores. The advance was
thrown into confusion, checked but not halted, its impetus being too
great; and then the force divided and swept around the corral, looking
for a weak spot for a possible entrance. At the same moment a furious
fire was poured into it by the warriors, whose position on their horses’
backs gave them sufficient elevation to enable them to fire over the
wagon beds upon the garrison. Then they circled about the corral in a
mad gallop, seeking some undefended point upon which to concentrate and
break through, but in vain. The little inclosure was literally ringed in
fire. Nothing could stand against it. So close were they that one bullet
sometimes pierced two Indians.[21]

[Illustration:

  CHARGE OF RED CLOUD ON THE CORRAL AT PINEY ISLAND

  _Drawing by R. Farrington Elwell_
]

Having lost terribly, and having failed to make any impression whatever,
the Indians broke and gave way. They rushed pell-mell from the spot in
frantic confusion till they got out of range of the deadly storm that
swept the plain. All around the corral lay dead and dying Indians,
mingled with killed and wounded horses kicking and screaming with pain,
the Indians stoically enduring all their sufferings and making no
outcry. In front of the corral, where the first force of the charge had
been spent, horses and men were stretched out as if they had been cut
down by a gigantic mowing-machine. The defenders of the corral had
suffered in their turn. Lieutenant Jenness, brave and earnest in
defense, had exposed himself to give a necessary command and had
received a bullet in his brain. One of the private soldiers had been
killed and two severely wounded. The thirty-two had been reduced to
twenty-eight. At that rate, since there were so few to suffer, the end
appeared inevitable. The spirit of the little band, however, remained
undaunted. Fortunately for them, the Indians had met with so terrible a
repulse that all they thought of for the time being was to get out of
range. The vicinity of the corral was thus at once abandoned.


                    III. Red Cloud’s Baptism of Fire

Red Cloud determined, after consultation with the other chiefs, upon
another plan which gave greater promise of success. Seven hundred
Indians, armed with rifles or muskets and followed by a number carrying
bows and arrows, were told off to prepare themselves as a skirmishing
party. Their preparations were simple, and consisted of denuding
themselves of every vestige of clothing, including their war shirts and
war bonnets. These men were directed to creep forward, taking advantage
of every depression, ravine, or other cover, until they were within
range of the corral, which they were to overwhelm by gun and arrow fire.
Supporting them, and intended to constitute the main attack, were the
whole remaining body of the Indians, numbering upward of two thousand
warriors.

With the wonderful skill of which they were masters, the skirmishing
party approached near to the corral and began to fire upon it. Here and
there, when a savage incautiously exposed himself, he was shot by one of
the defenders; but in the main the people of the corral kept silent
under this terrible fusillade of bullets and arrows. The tops of the
wagon sides were literally torn to pieces; the heavy blankets were
filled with arrows which, falling from a distance, did no damage. The
fire of the Indians was rapid and continuous. The bullets crashed into
the wood just over the heads of the prostrate men, sounding like
cracking thunder; yet not one man in the wagon beds was hurt. Arguing,
perhaps from the silence in the corral, that the defenders had been
overwhelmed and that the time for the grand attack had arrived, signal
was given for the main body of the Indians to charge.

They were led by the nephew of Red Cloud, a superb young chieftain, who
was ambitious of succeeding in due course to the leadership now held by
his uncle. Chanting their fierce war songs, they came, on arranged in a
great semicircle. Splendid, stalwart braves, the flower of the nation,
they were magnificently arrayed in all the varied and highly-colored
fighting panoply of the Sioux. Great war bonnets streamed from the heads
of the chiefs, many of whom wore gorgeous war shirts; the painted bodies
of others made dashes of rich color against the green grass of the
clearing and the dark pines of the hills and mountains behind. Most of
them carried on their left arms painted targets or shields of buffalo
hide, stout enough to turn a musket shot unless fairly hit.

Under a fire of redoubled intensity from their skirmishers they broke
into a charge. Again they advanced in the face of a terrible silence.
Again at the appointed moment the order rang out. Again the fearful
discharge swept them away in scores. Powell’s own rifle brought down the
dauntless young chief in the lead. Others sprang to the fore when he
fell and gallantly led on their men. Undaunted, they came on and on, in
spite of a slaughter such as no living Indian had experienced or heard
of. The Indians could account for the continuous fire only by supposing
that the corral contained a greater number of defenders than its area
would indicate it capable of receiving. So, in the hope that the
infernal fire would slacken, they pressed home the attack until they
were almost at the wagon beds. Back on the hills Red Cloud and the
veteran chiefs, with the women and children, watched the progress of the
battle with eager intensity and marked with painful apprehension the
slaughter of their bold warriors.

The situation was terribly critical. If they came on a few feet farther
the rifles would be useless, and the little party of twenty-eight would
have to fight hand-to-hand without reloading. In that event the end
would be certain; but just before the Indians reached the corral, they
broke and gave way. So close had they come that some of the troopers in
their excitement actually rose to their knees and threw the augers with
which the loopholes had been made, and other missiles, in the faces of
the Indians. Others, however, kept up the fire, which was indeed more
than mortal humanity could stand.

What relief filled the minds of the defenders, when they saw the great
force which had come on so gallantly reeling back over the plains in
frantic desire to get to cover, can easily be imagined. Yet such was the
courage, the desperation of these Indians, in spite of repulse after
repulse and a slaughter awful to contemplate, that they made no less
than six several and distinct charges in three hours upon that devoted
band. After the first attack made by the men on horseback, not a single
casualty occurred among the defenders of the corral. It was afternoon
before the Sioux got enough.

The Indians could not account for this sustained and frightful fire
which came from the little fort, except by attributing it to magic. “The
white man must have made bad medicine,” they said afterwards, before
they learned the secret of the long-range, breech-loading firearm, “to
make the guns fire themselves without stopping.” Indeed, such had been
the rapidity of the fire that many of the gun-barrels became so hot that
they were rendered useless. To this day the Indians refer to that battle
as “the bad medicine fight of the white man.”

The ground around the corral was ringed with Indian slain. They were
piled up in heaps closer by, and scattered all over the grass farther
away. Nothing is more disgraceful in the eyes of an Indian chieftain or
his men than to permit the dead bodies of those killed in action to fall
into the hands of the enemy. Red Cloud recognizing the complete
frustration of his hopes of overwhelming Fort Phil Kearney and sweeping
the invaders out of the land at that time, now only wished to get his
dead away and retreat. In order to do so he threw forward his
skirmishers again, who once more poured a heavy fire on the corral.

This seemed to Powell and his exhausted men the precursor of a final
attack, which they feared would be the end of them. Indeed Powell, in
his report, says that another attack would have been successful. From
the heat and the frightful strain of the long period of steady fighting,
the men were in a critical condition. The ammunition, inexhaustible as
it had seemed, was running low; many of the rifles were useless. They
still preserved, however, their calm, unbroken front to the foe, and
made a slow, deliberate, careful reply to the firing that was poured
upon them.

Red Cloud, however, had no thought of again attacking. He only wanted to
get away. Under cover of his skirmishers he succeeded in carrying off
most of the dead, the wounded who were able to crawl getting away
themselves. A warrior, protecting himself as well as he could with the
stout buffalo-hide shield he carried, would creep forward, attach the
end of a long lariat to the foot of a dead man, and then rapidly
retreating he would pull the body away. All the while the hills and
mountains resounded with the death chants of the old men and women.

At the close of these operations a shell burst in the midst of the
Indian skirmishers, and through the trees off to the left the weary
defenders saw the blue uniforms of approaching soldiers, who a moment
afterwards debouched in the open.

An astonishing sight met the eyes of the relief party. Clouds of Indians
covered the plain. The little corral was still spitting fire and smoke
into the encircling mass. They had got there in time then. Without
hesitation the troops deployed and came forward on the run. Their cheers
were met by welcoming shouts from Powell and his heroic comrades.

The herders, woodsmen, and guards who had escaped from their camp in the
morning, had reached the fort at last with the news of Powell’s imminent
danger. Major Smith, with one hundred men and a howitzer, was at once
despatched to his support. No one dreamed that the force of Indians was
so great, or perhaps more men would have been sent, although the number
at the fort was still insufficient to permit of the detachment of a very
large party. It was now three o’clock in the afternoon. The Indians,
disheartened and dismayed by their fearful repulse, sullenly retreated
before the advance of the charging soldiers. There was a splendid
opportunity presented to them to wipe out Smith’s command with their
overwhelming force, for they could have attacked him in the open; but
they had had enough for that day, and the opportunity was not embraced.

Major Smith realized instantly that the proper thing for him to do, in
the face of such great odds, was to get Powell’s men and return with all
speed. Carrying the bodies of the dead and wounded, the little band of
defenders joined the rescuers and returned to the fort, leaving the
barren honors of the field to the Indians, Awho occupied it on the heels
of the retiring soldiers.[22]


                IV. After the Battle. The Scout’s Story

Powell modestly estimated he had killed sixty-seven Indians and wounded
one hundred and twenty. Most of his men declared the Indian loss to have
been between three and four hundred, but it was not until a year after
the battle that the real facts were ascertained from the Indians
themselves. The loss in killed and wounded in the engagement, on the
part of the Indians, was _one thousand one hundred and thirty-seven_. In
other words, each of the defenders had accounted for at least thirty-six
of the Indians. Amply, indeed, had the little band avenged the death of
their comrades under Fetterman.

As Colonel Dodge justly says, the account reads like a story of
Cortes.[23] At first sight it appears to be incredible. In explanation
of it, the following account, which Colonel Dodge has preserved of a
subsequent conversation between the frontiersman to whom the eight guns
were allotted and the department commander is of deep interest:—

  “How many Indians were in the attack?” asked the General.

  “Wall, Gin’r’ll, I can’t say fer sartin, but I think thar wur nigh
  onto three thousand uv ’em.”

  “How many were killed and wounded?”

  “Wall, Gin’r’ll, I can’t say fer sartin, but I think thar wur nigh
  onto a thousand uv ’em hit.”

  “How many did you kill?”

  “Wall, Gin’r’ll, I can’t say; but gi’me a dead rest, I kin hit a
  dollar at fifty yards every time, and I fired with a dead rest at
  more’n fifty of them varmints inside of fifty yards.”

  “For Heaven’s sake, how many times did you fire?” exclaimed the
  astonished General.

  “Wall, Gin’r’ll, I can’t say, but I kept eight guns pretty well het
  up for more’n three hours.”

On this occasion Powell received his third brevet for heroism and
distinguished conduct on the field.

The next fall a new treaty was made with the Indians, and the post which
had been the scene alike of heartbreaking disaster and defeat and of
triumph unprecedented, was abandoned to them. The troops were withdrawn.
The Indians at once burned it to the ground. It was never reoccupied,
and to-day is remembered simply because of its association with the
first and, with one exception, the most notable of our Indian defeats in
the west, and with the most remarkable and overwhelming victory that was
ever won by soldiers over their gallant red foemen on the same ground.

At this writing (September, 1903) the once mighty Red Cloud, now in his
eighty-ninth year, is nearing his end, and already various claimants for
the now practically empty honor of the Head-Chieftainship of the Sioux
have arisen, the two most prominent candidates being young Red Cloud and
the son of old Sitting Bull.


                                  NOTE

Since the first publication of this article I have received the
following letter, which, as it tends to confirm what seems incredible,
the terrible Indian loss, I quote in full:

  DEAR MR. BRADY:

  Although I am much nearer three score than fifty, I still enjoy
  historical romance and facts, and I have, I think, read most of your
  writings. I have just read your last article and it recalls a
  conversation with Red Cloud twenty years ago.

  He was with my dear old friend, “Adirondack Murray” and, I think, J.
  Amory Knox and myself. He, Murray and Knox had been photographed in
  a group. In reminiscing in regard to the Piney Island battle, he
  said he went in with over three thousand braves and lost over half.
  Murray asked him if he meant over fifteen hundred had been killed
  then, and he said:

  “I lost them. They never fought again.”

  He knew Murray, Knox and myself wielded the pen sometimes but that
  we never used private talks. I tell you the above for your personal
  satisfaction. Sincerely,

                                                  W. R. E. COLLINS,
                                        1438 Broad—Exchange, New York.

  3–22-’04.

-----

Footnote 16:

  Mahapiya-luta, Red Cloud, was one of the most famous of the great
  Sioux Nation. He was a fierce and ruthless warrior, but withal a man
  of his word. After the abandonment of Fort Phil Kearney he
  participated in no important actions with the soldiers, although he
  was elected head chief of the Sioux. In the war of 1876 his camp was
  surprised by General Mackenzie before he had an opportunity to go on
  the war-path. His men were disarmed, and with him were detained in the
  reservation. It was a fortunate thing for the army.

  Recently the old chief was asked to tell the story of his most
  thrilling adventure. It was a tale of one man against seven, and the
  old man’s dim eyes grew bright and his wrinkled face lighted up with a
  strange light as he told it. A well-known warrior was jealous of Red
  Cloud, and, together with six of his followers, waylaid the young
  brave in a lonely spot.

  Two of them were armed with rifles, the rest carried only bows and
  arrows, while Red Cloud had a Winchester. At the first fire Red Cloud
  fell with a bullet in his thigh, but from where he lay he contrived to
  kill every one of his assailants.

  The skill and courage he displayed on that occasion won for him many
  admiring followers, and as war after war with the whites broke out and
  he won fresh laurels his followers increased in numbers. He joined the
  various secret societies, passed through the terrible agony of the sun
  dance, and when, in 1866, the chiefs of the tribe signed a “peace
  paper,” he stood out for and declared war. The fighting men flocked to
  his standard, and when the awful massacre in which he played so
  conspicuous a part occurred, he was proclaimed Chief of all the Sioux.

  All the prestige he lost at Piney Island he regained upon the
  abandonment of the forts by the government, a most impolitic and
  unfortunate move.

Footnote 17:

  General Rodenbough, in “Sabre and Bayonet.”

Footnote 18:

  This statement is corroborated by private letter from a veteran
  soldier in the United States Army, who is one of the few survivors of
  the battle. Surgeon Horton, who was at the post from its establishment
  until it was abandoned, also says that the wagon beds were of ordinary
  boards, without lining or other protection.

Footnote 19:

  On the same day an attack was made in force on Fort C. F. Smith, on
  the Big Horn.

Footnote 20:

  Powell’s official report says nine, although a private letter written
  some time later makes the hour seven. It isn’t material, anyway: there
  was ample time for all the fighting both sides cared for before the
  day was ended.

Footnote 21:

  “I know that my husband never expected to come out of that fight
  alive. He has told me that during the fight the Indians came up so
  close to the corral, that one shot would pass through the Indian in
  advance and kill or wound the one behind. My husband claimed the honor
  of killing Red Cloud’s nephew.”—Letter from Mrs. Annie Powell to me.
  Surgeon Horton states that the men told him on their return to the
  fort that the Indians were crowded so closely together that the
  conical bullets from their muskets killed four or five Indians in line
  behind one another. The Indians came up in solid masses on every side.

Footnote 22:

  Dr. Horton writes me that when Powell’s men reached the post they were
  literally crazed with excitement and the nervous strain of the fight.
  The health of many of them was completely broken. Powell himself never
  fully recovered from the strain of that awful day, his wife informs
  me.

Footnote 23:

  “Our Wild Indians,” by Colonel R. I. Dodge, U. S. A. Mrs. Powell, in a
  letter to me, also vouches for the anecdote quoted.




                              CHAPTER FOUR
  Personal Reminiscences of Fort Phil Kearney and the Wagon-Box Fight

                        By Mr. R. J. Smyth.[24]


                                              “Cherokee, Ia., 6–27–1904.

As I was a member of the Carrington Powder River Expedition of 1866, I
take the liberty of sending you a short sketch of happenings about Fort
Phil Kearney. Being actively engaged with others for some two years in
making the history of that place, I think that the account may be of
interest.

I left Fort Leavenworth early in the spring of 1866. At Fort Kearney,
Nebraska, we found Col. Carrington and a part of his command, consisting
of several companies of the Eighteenth Regular Infantry. Early in April
we received some recruits for said command, and in a short time started
on what at that time was called the Carrington Powder River Expedition.
We followed the overland trail (sometimes called the Salt Lake trail) up
the south side of the South Platte River to Julesberg, crossed the river
there, then crossed the divide to the North Platte. From here we went to
Fort Laramie. From this point we marched west to Mussa ranch, crossed
Horse Creek, and followed the Bozeman trail. This was a new road, and a
short cut to Montana. After following this trail fifteen miles we struck
the North Platte at Bridger’s Ferry. We crossed here in a ferryboat—a
large flat boat attached to a large cable rope stretched across the
river.

We followed the North Platte River up on the right side to a point
opposite to the present site of Fort Fetterman. At this point we left
the river and struck across the country, crossing Sand Creek and several
other small creeks, among which I now remember the North, South, and
Middle Cheyennes. They were then merely the dry beds of what would be
quite large rivers at the time of the melting of the snow in the
mountains. At a point twenty-two miles east of the Powder River we
struck the head of the Dry Fork of the Powder River and followed it down
to the river.

There on the west side we found Fort Reno, established by General Conner
in ’65 and garrisoned by a few “galvanized soldiers.” The garrison had
been greatly reduced by desertions during the winter, the soldiers
making for Montana. “Galvanized soldiers” was a name given to captured
Rebel soldiers who enlisted in the Union Army to do frontier duty in
order to get out of prison, and incidentally to draw pay from Uncle Sam.
We laid over here for a few days, and on the fourth of July the Indians
stampeded the stock of Al. Leighton, the sutler. The colonel made a
detail of soldiers and citizens to go out after the Indians and recover
the stock if possible.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of The Century Co._

  “BOOTS AND SADDLES:” A START IN THE EARLY MORNING

  _Drawing by Frederic Remington_
]

It was indeed a laughable sight to see the soldiers trying to ride mules
that were not broken to ride—and the soldiers knew about as much about
riding as the mules did. We followed the Indians to the Pumpkin Buttes
and I am free to say for myself that I was very glad that we did not
find them. Had we got in touch with them we would have had the smallest
kind of a show to save our hair. The soldiers being mounted on green
mules, and being armed with the old Springfield musket, and that
strapped on their backs, a very few Indians could have stampeded the
mules and, in fact, the soldiers as well.

We, the citizens, had made arrangements that if the Indians attacked us
we would stick together and fight it out the best that we could. Jim
Bridger, our guide, was with this party. He was an old timer in the
mountains. I had two years experience in the mountains and plains prior
to this time; the rest of the citizens were good men. We returned to the
fort safely but did not recover any of the stock.

A day or two later we left the fort. The first day’s march was a very
hard one, thirty-six miles to Crazy Woman’s Fork. This creek was a very
fine one, clear, cool, and very rapid. The command was badly demoralized
by this long, hot, and dry march, no water between that point and Fort
Reno. The soldiers had been paid off a day or two before, many had been
drunk, many more thoughtless, and did not provide for water in spite of
orders. I saw five dollars paid for a canteen of water on this march. On
our arrival at Crazy Woman’s Fort, the commanding officer detailed a
guard to keep the soldiers from jumping into the creek and drinking too
much water.

We laid over here two days, to repair wagons and bring in the
stragglers. Had the Indians been on hand, they could have cleaned up
many of the soldiers at this time. From this creek west to the Big Horn
the country is very fine; plenty of wood, water, and grass; in fact, a
paradise. We traveled west to the forks of the Pineys. The big and
little Pineys fork near where we made our camp, sixty-five miles west of
the Powder River.

On the twenty-fourth day of July we moved to the place where we
established Fort Phil Kearney. The grasshoppers were so thick in the air
that day that they nearly obscured the sun from sight.[25] In fact, it
did not look bigger than a silver dollar. The fort was built about as
you have described it, and from the day that we established it until I
left there, in November, ’67, the Indians were very much in evidence and
plenty of fighting nearly all that time.

I was a teamster on this expedition, driving an ambulance team. Made
several trips to Fort Laramie and to Fort C. F. Smith on the Big Horn.
This latter Fort was established by Carrington a short time after the
establishment of Fort Phil Kearney, and was a two-company post.

I was with the hay-making party down the Big Piney during a part of the
summer of ’66. During one of our trips to the hay field, we were
accompanied by a man who represented _Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly_
as an artist. This man rode with me a part of the way. He intended to do
some sketching near there but I advised him to stay with our outfit.
However, he insisted on stopping by the way. On our return we found him
dead, a cross cut on his breast, which indicated that they thought him a
coward who would not fight. He wore long, black hair and his head had
been completely skinned. Probably it was the work of a band of young
Cheyenne bucks; they could cut the scalps into many pieces and thereby
make a big show in camp. Was very sorry for this man; he appeared to be
a perfect gentleman. His thought was, that if the Indians found him they
would not hurt him, as he intended to show them his drawings, and also
explain to them that he was not armed.

[Illustration: Plan of Magazine at Fort Phil Kearney (now Wyoming)]

Later on the Indians got so thick that we had to abandon this hay-making
business. The day that we broke camp we had a great deal of fighting
with the Indians. I remember a soldier named Pate Smith who borrowed a
revolver from me that day. This man was mounted. He rode too far ahead
of the outfit, the Indians cut him off. Later we heard from the Crows
that the Sioux caught him, skinned him alive. This man was an old
volunteer soldier, but what show has a man with the old-fashioned
Springfield musket? One shot and you are done.

I was at the Fort at the time of the Phil Kearney massacre and went down
with the reinforcements to that sad scene. Our men were all down when we
got there, and cut up in the most brutal manner, such as only a red
brute would do. We buried them a little east of the fort. They fought a
good fight, but were surprised and overpowered. As we approached the
scene of action the country was black with Indians to the west.

The officers were clearly to blame for this slaughter; they disobeyed
the colonel’s orders, which were to guard the wood train to the fort,
and not to engage the Indians unless attacked by them. At a point about
two miles west of the fort they left the wood train; crossed the Big
Piney Creek; got nearly to the Peno Creek, and were ambushed by about
three thousand Indians, and the entire command killed. This band of
Indians included all of the different tribes of the Sioux, also
Cheyennes, Blackfeet, Arapahoes, and some young renegade Crow bucks. I
knew this latter statement to be true, from the fact that one member of
Company C, Second Cavalry, had stolen a revolver from me some time
before and it was with him in this fight. It was taken from his body by
the Indians. Next spring a young Crow came to the fort. I saw the gun
under his blanket and took it away from him. If he was in camp on the
Big Horn with his people, he could not have got this gun on this field
of slaughter. I had been wounded about six weeks prior to this fight and
had not reported for duty, but on call for volunteers to reinforce the
Fetterman party, reported for duty and went with the command to the
scene of the massacre.

You are in error in stating that there was no communication with the
outside world during this winter. I made one trip with my ambulance to
Fort Laramie. We had an escort of ten cavalry soldiers. We made, I
think, three trips after this without an escort, using pack mules, the
party consisting of two packers and the mail-carrier, Van Volsey, a very
fine man and a brave one, too. Last trip up I saw Indian signs in the
dry forks of the Powder River, consisting of the remains of a camp fire,
not entirely burned out, and some Indian traps lying around it. I
refused to make another trip without an escort. On our arrival at the
fort we reported the facts, and demanded an escort for the next trip.
But owing to the fact that the stock was in such poor condition on
account of the scarcity of food, they could not furnish one mounted.

They persuaded me to take one more trip with Van Volsey, which I
foolishly consented to do. On the first day out I got snow blind and on
our arrival at Fort Reno requested him to get a substitute in my place.
He refused to do so and insisted that I accompany him to Fort Laramie,
but after being on the road a short time, my eyes played out entirely. I
had to return to the fort and there secured another man to take my
place. They made the trip down all right and returning were accompanied
by two or three soldiers, who were going to join their commands. They
had got nearly to the head of the dry fork of the Powder River when the
Indians killed the entire party. We found the bones of the men and mules
and some of the mail sacks. We buried the men’s remains there.

During the summer of ’67 life was one continual round of fighting. We
lost a great many men, but damaged the Sioux much more than during the
previous year. The soldiers had better guns, and were far better Indian
fighters. They had learned that it was safer to keep their faces to the
Indians, than, as during the previous year, their backs. When you run
from an Indian you are his meat.

On the day of the wagon-box fight, accompanied by my partner, I left the
fort before daylight. We went to the foot-hills to get some deer. A
short time after daylight we discovered a lot of Indian smoke signals on
the hills, and decided that we had better get back to the fort. In
making our way back we followed the Little Piney down for some distance,
and found that the country was full of Indians. We then struck out for
the wood train. The Indians had got between us and it. We then went to
the wagon-box corral, and got there none too soon.

Your description of the corral is correct as I remember it to be. Its
location is about right, except that it was not on an island. I never
heard of Little Piney Island, and I do not believe such an island
existed there at that time.[26] The wagon boxes were of the ordinary
government boxes. They were set off from the wagons, as the wagons were
in corral. The intervals between were packed with logs, bales of
blankets, clothing, sacks of corn, etc. As to the wagon boxes being
lined with iron, you are right. They were not. Up to that time, and
during my time on the plains, I never saw wagon boxes so lined. The
wagon box that I was detailed to fight in had no such protection, but we
had gunny sacks of corn placed on edge two deep on the inside of the
box, with a two inch auger hole at the point where the four sacks came
together. This made good protection for the body when lying down. As
stated in your article, the tops of the wagon boxes were literally torn
to pieces with the bullets fired at us by the Indians. Without this
protection the fight would not have lasted very long.

There was a surplus of ammunition and guns. I had two Spencer carbines,
and two revolvers (six-shot army Colt’s). During the first charge I
emptied the carbines and the revolvers less two shots (reserved for
myself in case of a show down). The balance of our men must have fired
as many shots as I did. The soldier that was in the box with me had a
needle gun and a Spencer; also one or two revolvers. And he kept them
busy while he lived. This man was an infantry soldier—do not remember
his company. He was shot through the head, dying in about two hours
after being shot.

Lieutenant Jenness had just cautioned me not to expose my person, and to
hold my fire until I was sure of getting an Indian at each shot. He had
moved a few feet from my box when he was shot through the head. I think
he died instantly. He was a grand, good man, and a fearless officer. I
told him to keep under cover. He stated he was compelled to expose
himself in order to look after his men.

I got a slight wound in my left hand; a bullet came in through my
porthole, which I thought was close shooting for a Sioux.

This fight lasted about four hours, and was very hot from the start. I
had been in several Indian fights prior to this time, but never saw the
Indians make such a determined effort to clean us up before. They should
have killed the entire party. They certainly had force enough to ride
over us, but our fire was so steady and severe that they could not stand
the punishment.

Our men stood the strain well, held their fire until the bullets would
count. In fact, shooting into such a mass of Indians as charged on us
the first time, it would be nearly impossible for many bullets to go
astray. In all my experience in fighting Indians prior to this time, I
never saw them stand punishment so well as they did at this time; they
certainly brought all their sand with them. In charging on our little
corral they rode up very close to the wagon boxes, and here is where
they failed. Had they pushed home on the first charge, the fight would
not have lasted ten minutes after they got over the corral.

Many dead and wounded Indians lay within a few feet of the wagon boxes.
The wounded Indians did not live long after the charge was over. They
would watch and try to get a bullet in on some of our men. We had to
kill them for self-protection. Anyway, it was evening up the Fetterman
deal. They never showed mercy to a wounded white man, and should not
expect any different treatment. I had a canteen of water when the fight
commenced, and used most of it to cool my guns.

You state that all of our loss occurred at time of the first charge.
This is an error, as the man in my box was shot after he had been
fighting nearly an hour. I think that his name was Boyle. Up to the time
that he was shot he certainly filled the bill and did his duty, dying
with his face to the foe as a soldier should.

I do not try to estimate the number of the Indians, but, as my partner
said, “The woods were full of them.” This was the largest gathering of
Indians that I ever saw, and the hardest fighting lot that I ever
encountered.

When the reinforcements came in sight we took on a new lease of life,
and when they dropped a shell over the Indians we knew that the fight
was won. Indians will not stand artillery fire. They call it the “wagon
gun.” The reinforcements came just in time. One hour more of such
fighting would have exhausted our men and ammunition.

As to the Indians carrying off all their dead and wounded, here you are
again mistaken, as many of our men carried away with them scalps, etc.,
taken from the bodies of the dead Indians near the corral.[27] The
Indians certainly hauled off all their dead and wounded that they could,
but did not expose themselves very much in order to get the dead ones
near the corral.

On arrival of reinforcements we immediately retreated to the fort.
Captain Powell was the right man to command under such trying
circumstances. No better or braver man ever held a lieutenant’s
commission than Jenness. As to the Indian loss, I think you have
overestimated it. We thought that we had killed and wounded some more
than four hundred. However, you may be right in your estimates. We had
the opportunity to clean up that number, and we certainly did our best
to do so.

After the massacre of ’66 (Dec.) we received reinforcements, as I now
remember, four companies of infantry and two companies, L and M, of the
2d Cav. This large additional force, stationed at a four-company fort,
and only provisioned for four companies, caused a great deal of
suffering during the winter, resulting in much sickness and many deaths
from scurvy. Nearly all of us were suffering from this disease. I have
never fully recovered from the effect of it.

Colonel Carrington was severely censured by the War Department and many
others for the Fort Phil Kearney massacre, and, I think, unjustly. Had
Col. Fetterman and Capt. Brown and the other officers in command obeyed
his orders, the massacre would not have occurred, not, at least, at this
time.

Fetterman and Brown were dare-devil fighters, always anxious for a
fight, and took this opportunity to get into one. Capt. Brown, on his
“calico” pony, was a familiar figure around this fort—the boys called
him “Baldy.” The Indians were very anxious to kill Brown; he was a thorn
in their sides. While we to some extent lay the blame of the massacre on
Brown and Fetterman, to be honest, we were nearly all partly to blame.
We were always harping at the colonel to send a large force out and
fight the Indians, but he always insisted on a conservative course. We
all thought up to that time that one hundred good men could walk through
the entire Sioux Nation. This massacre demonstrated that in a fight in
the open the Sioux should not have over five to one of us.

I was well posted in regard to the Carrington Powder River Expedition of
1866 and the history of Fort Phil Kearney from the date of establishment
to Nov., 1867, and acquainted with all of the officers and many of the
soldiers and citizens. I probably would not have written this little
statement of actual history were it not for the fact that in your
article you stated that you got some of the record from the only living
member of the celebrated wagon-box fight. I am still in the flesh and
will pull down the scale at two hundred pounds. In all probability there
are others alive, as we all were young men at that time.

The history of the three forts established in 1865 and 1866, well
written, would make interesting history, as almost every day was full of
stirring events. Quite a number of the citizens in that country at this
time were discharged volunteer soldiers and some rebel soldiers also. As
a rule, they were hard nuts for the Indians to crack. It was noticeable
that they would not take chances fighting citizens that they would take
with the soldiers.

After leaving Fort Phil Kearney I went to Cheyenne and followed the
Union Pacific R. R. to the finish. Was at Promontory Point in Utah when
the Union Pacific and Central Pacific R. Rs. connected; this was one of
the mile-stones in the history of the West, and practically solved the
Indian problem. The Indians fought hard for this territory. It was the
best hunting ground that they had left. There were many half-breeds
among them, and they were daring and shifty fighters.

                                        Respectfully yours,
                                                            R. J. SMYTH”

-----

Footnote 24:

  The serial publication of these articles brought me many letters
  filled with corrections, suggestions, and other material, written by
  participants in the events described. Among them all none is more
  graphic and more interesting than this from Mr. Smyth, formerly
  Teamster with Carrington, which I count it a privilege to insert in
  this book in his own words.—C. T. B.

Footnote 25:

  I have observed similar visitations in other parts of the West years
  ago.—C. T. B.

Footnote 26:

  General Carrington’s map on page 27 shows the island. Mr. Smyth’s
  recollection is in error here.—C. T. B.

Footnote 27:

  Surgeon Horton writes me that the “soldiers brought back to the fort
  the head of an Indian for a scientific study of Indian skulls!” He
  afterwards sent it to Washington. He also states that there were a
  number of dead bodies too near the corral for the Indians to get them
  during the action. When he and other officers visited the place the
  next day, after the withdrawal of the Indians, there were no dead
  bodies to be found, not even the headless one.—C. T. B.




                              CHAPTER FIVE
                  Forsyth and the Rough Riders of ’68


                    I. The Original “Rough Riders.”

No one will question the sweeping assertion that the grittiest band of
American fighters that history tells us of was that which defended the
Alamo. They surpassed by one Leonidas and his Spartans; for the Greeks
had a messenger of defeat, the men of the Alamo had none. But close on
the heels of the gallant Travis and his dauntless comrades came “Sandy”
Forsyth’s original “Rough Riders,” who immortalized themselves by their
terrific fight on Beecher’s Island on the Arickaree Fork of the
Republican River, in Eastern Colorado, in the fall of 1868.

The contagion of the successful Indian attacks on Fort Phil Kearney had
spread all over the Central West. The Kansas Pacific was then building
to Denver, and its advance was furiously resisted by the Indians. As
early as 1866, at a council held at Fort Ellsworth, Roman Nose, head
chief of the Cheyennes, made a speech full of insolent defiance.

[Illustration]

      CAPT. LOUIS H. CARPENTER          LIEUT. FREDK. H. BEECHER[29]
       MAJ. GEORGE A. FORSYTH               SCOUT JACK STILLWELL

                       BEECHER’S ISLAND FIGHTERS

            _All contemporary portraits except Stillwell’s_

“This is the first time,” said the gigantic warrior, who was six feet
three and magnificently proportioned,[28] “that I have ever shaken the
white man’s hand in friendship. If the railway is continued I shall be
his enemy forever.”

There was no stopping the railway. Its progress was as irresistible as
the movement of civilization itself. The Indians went on the war-path.
The Cheyennes were led by their two principal chiefs, Black Kettle being
the second. We shall see subsequently how Custer accounted for Black
Kettle. This story deals with the adventures of Roman Nose.

As fighters these Indians are entitled to every admiration. As marauders
they merit nothing but censure. The Indians of the early days of the
nation, when Pennsylvania and New York were border states, and across
the Alleghenies lay the frontier, were cruel enough, as the chronicle of
the times abundantly testify; but they were angels of light compared
with the Sioux and Cheyennes, the Kiowas, Arapahoes and Comanches, and
these in turn were almost admirable beside the Apache. The first-named
group were as cruel as they knew how to be, and they did not lack
knowledge, either. The Apaches were more ingenious and devilish in their
practices than the others. The Sioux and the Cheyennes were brutal with
the brutality of a wild bull or a grizzly bear. To that same kind of
brutality the Apaches added the malignity of a wildcat and the subtlety
of a snake. The men of the first group would stand out and fight in the
open to gain their ends, although they did not prefer to. They were
soldiers and warriors as well as torturers. The Apache was a lurking
skulker, but, when cornered, a magnificent fighter also.[30] General
Crook calls him “the tiger of the human species.” However, from the
point of detestableness there wasn’t much to choose between them.

Perhaps we ought not to blame the Indians for acting just as our
ancestors of, say the Stone Age, acted in all probability. And when you
put modern weapons and modern whisky in the hands of the Stone Age men
you need not be surprised at the consequences. The Indian question is a
terrible one any way you take it. It cannot be denied they have been
treated abominably by the United States, and that they have good cause
for resentment; but the situation has been so peculiar that strife has
been inevitable.

As patriots defending their country, they are not without certain
definite claims to our respect. Recognizing the right of the aborigines
to the soil, the government has yet arbitrarily abrogated that right at
pleasure. At times the Indians have been regarded as independent
nations, with which all differences were to be settled by treaty as
between equals; and again, as a body of subjects whose affairs could be
and would be administered willy-nilly by the United States. Such
vacillations are certain to result in trouble, especially as, needless
to say, the Indians invariably considered themselves as much independent
nations as England and France might consider themselves, in dealing with
the United States or with one another. And the Indians naturally claimed
and insisted that the territory where their fathers had roamed for
centuries belonged solely and wholly to them. They admitted no
suzerainty of any sort, either. And they held the petty force the
government put in the field in supreme contempt until they learned by
bitter experience the illimitable power of the United States.

To settle such a growing question in a word, offhand, as it were, is, of
course, impossible, nor does the settlement lie within the province of
these articles; but it may be said that if the United States had
definitely decided upon one policy or the other, and had then
concentrated all its strength upon the problem; if it had realized the
character of the people with whom it was dealing, and had made such
display of its force as would have rendered it apparent, to the keenest
as well as to the most stupid and besotted of the Indians, that
resistance was entirely futile, things might have been different. But it
is the solemn truth that never, in any of the Indian wars west of the
Missouri, has there been a force of soldiers in the field adequate to
deal with the question. The blood of thousands of soldiers and
settlers—men, women, and children—might have been spared had this fact
been realized and acted upon.

The Cheyennes swept through western Kansas like a devastating storm. In
one month they cut off, killed, or captured eighty-four different
settlers, including their wives and children. They swept the country
bare. Again and again the different gangs of builders were wiped out,
but the railroad went on. General Sheridan finally took the field in
person, as usual with an inadequate force at his disposal. One of his
aides-de-camp was a young cavalry officer named George Alexander
Forsyth, commonly known to his friends as “Sandy” Forsyth. He had
entered the volunteer army in 1861 as a private of dragoons in a Chicago
company. A mere boy, he had come out a brigadier-general. In the
permanent establishment he was a major in the Ninth Cavalry. Sheridan
knew him. He was one of the two officers who made that magnificent ride
with the great commander that saved the day at Winchester, and it was
due to his suggestion that Sheridan rode down the readjusted lines
before they made the return advance which decided the fate of the
battle. During all that mad gallop and hard fighting young Forsyth rode
with the General. To-day he is the only survivor of that ride.

Forsyth was a fighter all through, and he wanted to get into the field
in command of some of the troops operating directly on the Indians in
the campaign under consideration. No officer was willing to surrender
his command to Forsyth on the eve of active operations, and there was no
way, apparently, by which he could do anything until Sheridan acceded to
his importunities by authorizing him to raise a company of scouts for
the campaign. He was directed, if he could do so, to enlist fifty men,
who, as there was no provision for the employment of scouts or civilian
auxiliaries, were of necessity carried on the payrolls as
quartermasters’ employees for the magnificent sum of one dollar per day.
They were to provide their own horses, but were allowed thirty cents a
day for the use of them, and the horses were to be paid for by the
government if they were “expended” during the campaign. They were
equipped with saddle, bridle, haversack, canteen, blanket, knife, tin
cup, Spencer repeating rifle, good for seven shots without reloading,
six in the magazine, one in the barrel, and a heavy Colt’s army
revolver. There were no tents or other similar conveniences, and four
mules constituted the baggage train. The force was intended to be
strictly mobile, and it was. Each man carried on his person one hundred
and forty rounds of ammunition for his rifle and thirty rounds for his
revolver. The four mules carried the medical supplies and four thousand
rounds of extra ammunition. Each officer and man took seven days’
rations. What he could not carry on his person was loaded on the pack
mules; scanty rations they were, too.

As soon as it was known that the troop was to be organized, Forsyth was
overwhelmed with applications from men who wished to join it. He had the
pick of the frontier to select from. He chose thirty men at Fort Harker
and the remaining twenty from Fort Hayes. Undoubtedly they were the best
men in the West for the purpose. To assist him, Lieutenant Frederick H.
Beecher, of the Third Infantry, was detailed as second in command.
Beecher was a young officer with a record. He had displayed peculiar
heroism at the great battle of Gettysburg, where he had been so badly
wounded that he was lame for the balance of his life. He was a nephew of
the great Henry Ward Beecher and a worthy representative of the
distinguished family whose name he bore. The surgeon of the party was
Dr. John H. Mooers, a highly-trained physician, who had come to the West
in a spirit of restless adventure. He had settled at Hayes City and was
familiar with the frontier. The guide of the party was Sharp Grover, one
of the remarkable plainsmen of the time, regarded as the best scout in
the government service. The first-sergeant was W. H. H. McCall, formerly
brigadier-general, United States Volunteers. McCall, in command of a
Pennsylvania regiment, had been promoted for conspicuous gallantry on
the field, when John B. Gordon made his magnificent dash out of
Petersburg and attacked Fort Steadman.

The personnel of the troop was about equally divided between hunters and
trappers and veterans of the Civil War, nearly all of whom had held
commissions in either the Union or Confederate Army, for the command
included men from both sides of Mason and Dixon’s line. It was a
hard-bitten, unruly group of fighters. Forsyth was just the man for
them. While he did not attempt to enforce the discipline of the Regular
Army, he kept them regularly in hand. He took just five days to get his
men and start on the march. They left Fort Wallace, the temporary
terminus of the Kansas Pacific Railroad, in response to a telegram from
Sheridan that the Indians were in force in the vicinity, and scouted the
country for some six days, finally striking the Indian trail, which grew
larger and better defined as they pursued it. Although it was evident
that the Indians they were chasing greatly outnumbered them, they had
come out for a fight and wanted one, so they pressed on. They got one,
too.[31]


                        II. The Island of Death

On the evening of the fifteenth of September, hot on the trail, now like
a well-beaten road, they rode through a depression or a ravine, which
gave entrance into a valley some two miles wide and about the same
length. Through this valley ran a little river, the Arickaree. They
encamped on the south bank of the river about four o’clock in the
afternoon. The horses and men were weary with hard riding. Grazing was
good. They were within striking distance of the Indians now. Forsyth
believed there were too many of them to run away from such a small body
as his troop of scouts. He was right. The Indians had retreated as far
as they intended to.

[Illustration:

  MAP OF FORSYTH’S DEFENSE OF BEECHER’S ISLAND, ARIKAREE RIVER, COLORADO

  (_Drawn by the author from rough sketches and maps furnished by
    General Forsyth_)

  Explanation of Map: A. Forsyth’s camp before attack. B. Rifle-pits on
    island. C. Low, unoccupied land on island with solitary cottonwood
    at end. D. Indian charge led by Roman Nose and Medicine Man. EE. Low
    banks fringed with trees. FF. Dry sandy bed of the river. HH. Indian
    riflemen on the banks. KK. Indian women and children on bluffs, half
    a mile from river. L. Ground sloping gently to river. M. Level
    grassy plain to bluffs.
]

The river bed, which was bordered by wild plums, willows and alders, ran
through the middle of the valley. The bed of the river was about one
hundred and forty yards wide. In the middle of it was an island about
twenty yards wide and sixty yards long. The gravelly upper end of the
island, which rose about two feet above the water level, was covered
with a thick growth of stunted bushes, principally alders and willows;
at the lower end, which sloped to the water’s edge, there rose a
solitary cottonwood tree. There had been little rain for some time, and
this river bed for the greater part of its width was dry and hard.[32]
For a space of four or five yards on either side of the island there was
water, not over a foot deep, languidly washing the gravelled shores.
When the river bed was full the island probably was overflowed. Such
islands form from time to time, and are washed away as quickly as they
develop. The banks of the river bed on either side commanded the island.

The simple preparations for the camp of that body of men were soon made.
As night fell they rolled themselves in their blankets, with the
exception of the sentries, and went to sleep with the careless
indifference of veterans under such circumstances.

[Illustration:

  BEECHER’S ISLAND FIELD

  The battle took place just about where the cattle are standing in the
    river. The shifting current has obliterated the Island.
]

Forsyth, however, as became a captain, was not so careless or so
reckless as his men. They were alone in the heart of the Indian country,
in close proximity to an overwhelming force, and liable to attack at any
moment. He knew that their movements had been observed by the Indians
during the past few days. Therefore the young commander was on the alert
throughout the night, visiting the outposts from time to time to see
that careful watch was kept.

Just as the first streaks of dawn began to “lace the severing clouds,”
he happened to be standing by the sentry farthest from the camp.
Silhouetted against the sky-line they saw the feathered head of an
Indian. For Forsyth to fire at him was the work of an instant. At the
same time a party which had crept nearer to the picket line unobserved
dashed boldly at the horses, and resorting to the usual devices with
bells, horns, hideous yells, and waving buffalo robes, attempted to
stampede the herd.

Men like those scouts under such circumstances slept with their boots
on. The first shot called them into instant action. They ran
instinctively to the picket line. A sharp fire, and the Indians were
driven off at once. Only the pack mules got away. No pursuit was
attempted, of course. Orders were given for the men to saddle their
horses and stand by them. In a few moments the command was drawn up in
line, each man standing by his horse’s head, bridle reins through his
left arm, his rifle grasped in his right hand—ready! Scarcely had the
company been thus assembled when Grover caught Forsyth’s arm and pointed
down the valley.

“My God!” he cried, “look at the Injuns!”

In front of them, on the right of them, in the rear of them, the hills
and valleys on both sides of the river seemed suddenly to be alive with
Indians. It was as quick a transformation from a scene of peaceful quiet
to a valley filled with an armed force as the whistle of Roderick Dhu
had effected in the Scottish glen.

The way to the left, by which they had entered the valley, was still
open. Forsyth could have made a running fight for it and dashed for the
gorge through which he had entered the valley. There were, apparently,
no Indians barring the way in that direction. But Forsyth realized
instantly that for him to retreat would mean the destruction of his
command, that the Indians had in all probability purposely left him that
way of escape, and if he tried it he would be ambushed in the defile and
slain. That was just what they wanted him to do, it was evident. That
was why he did not attempt it. He was cornered, but he was not beaten,
and he did not think he could be. Besides, he had come for that fight,
and that fight he was bound to have.

Whatever he was to do he must do quickly. There was no place to which he
could go save the island. That was not much of a place at best, but it
was the one strategic point presented by the situation. Pouring a heavy
fire into the Indians, Forsyth directed his men to take possession of
the island under cover of the smoke. In the movement everything had to
be abandoned, including the medical stores and rations, but the precious
ammunition—that must be secured at all hazards. Protected by a squad of
expert riflemen on the river bank, who presently joined them, the scouts
reached the island in safety, tied their horses to the bushes around the
edge of it, and in the intervals of fighting set to work digging
rifle-pits covering an ellipse twenty by forty yards, one pit for each
man, with which to defend the upper and higher part of the island They
had nothing to dig with except tin cups, tin plates, and their bowie
knives, but they dug like men. There was no lingering or hesitation
about it.

The chief of the Indian force, which was made up of Northern Cheyennes,
Oglala and Brulé Sioux, with a few Arapahoes and a number of Dog
Soldiers, was the famous Roman Nose, an enemy to be feared indeed. He
was filled with disgust and indignation at the failure of his men to
occupy the island, the strategic importance of which he at once
detected. It is believed that orders to seize the island had been given,
but for some reason they had not been obeyed; and to this oversight or
failure was due the ultimate safety of Forsyth’s men. It was not safe to
neglect the smallest point in fighting with a soldier like Forsyth.

With more military skill than they had ever displayed before, the
Indians deliberately made preparations for battle. The force at the
disposal of Roman Nose was something less than one thousand warriors.
They were accompanied by their squaws and children. The latter took
position on the bluffs on the east bank of the river, just out of range,
where they could see the whole affair. Like the ladies of the ancient
tournaments, they were eager to witness the fighting and welcome the
victors, who, for they never doubted the outcome, were certain to be
their own.

Roman Nose next lined the banks of the river on both sides with
dismounted riflemen, skilfully using such concealment as the ground
afforded. The banks were slightly higher than the island, and the
Indians had a plunging fire upon the little party. The riflemen on the
banks opened fire at once. A storm of bullets was poured upon the
devoted band on the island. The scouts, husbanding their ammunition,
slowly and deliberately replied, endeavoring, with signal success, to
make every shot tell. As one man said, they reckoned “every ca’tridge
was wuth at least one Injun.” The horses of the troop, having no
protection, received the brunt of the first fire. They fell rapidly, and
their carcasses rising in front of the rifle-pits afforded added
protection to the soldiers. There must have been a renegade white man
among the savages, for in a lull of the firing the men on the island
heard a voice announce in perfect English, “There goes the last of their
horses, anyway.” Besides this, from time to time, the notes of an
artillery bugle were heard from the shore. The casualties had not been
serious while the horses stood, but as soon as they were all down the
men began to suffer.[33]

During this time Forsyth had been walking about in the little circle of
defenders encouraging his men. He was met on all sides with insistent
demands that he lie down and take cover, and, the firing becoming
hotter, he at last complied. The rifle-pit which Surgeon Mooers had made
was a little wider than that of the other men, and as it was a good
place from which to direct the fighting, at the doctor’s suggestion some
of the scouts scooped it out to make it a little larger, and Forsyth lay
down by him.

The fire of the Indians had been increasing. Several scouts were killed,
more mortally wounded, and some slightly wounded. Doctor Mooers was hit
in the forehead and mortally wounded. He lingered for three days, saying
but one intelligent word during the whole period. Although he was blind
and speechless, his motions sometimes indicated that he knew where he
was. He would frequently reach out his foot and touch Forsyth. A bullet
struck Forsyth in the right thigh, and glancing upwards bedded itself in
the flesh, causing excruciating pain. He suffered exquisite anguish, but
his present sufferings were just beginning, for a second bullet struck
him in the leg, between the knee and ankle, and smashed the bone, and a
third glanced across his forehead, slightly fracturing his skull and
giving him a splitting headache, although he had no time to attend to it
then.


                  III. The Charge of the Five Hundred

During all this time Roman Nose and his horsemen had withdrawn around
the bend up the river, which screened them from the island. At this
juncture they appeared in full force, trotting up the bed of the river
in open order in eight ranks of about sixty front. Ahead of them, on a
magnificent chestnut horse, trotted Roman Nose. The warriors were
hideously painted, and all were naked except for moccasins and cartridge
belts. Eagle feathers were stuck in their long hair, and many of them
wore gorgeous feather war bonnets. They sat their horses without saddles
or stirrups, some of them having lariats twisted around the horses’
bellies like a surcingle. Roman Nose wore a magnificent war bonnet of
feathers streaming behind him in the wind and surmounted by two
buffalo-horns; around his waist he had tied an officer’s brilliant
scarlet silk sash, which had been presented to him at the Fort Ellsworth
conference. The sunlight illumined the bronze body of the savage
Hercules, exhibiting the magnificent proportions of the man. Those who
followed him were in every way worthy of their leader.

As the Indian cavalry appeared around the bend to the music of that
bugle, the fire upon the island from the banks redoubled in intensity.
Forsyth instantly divined that Roman Nose was about to attempt to ride
him down. He also realized that, so soon as the horses were upon him,
the rifle fire from the bank would of necessity be stopped. His order to
his men was to cease firing, therefore; to load the magazines of their
rifles, charge their revolvers, and wait until he gave the order to
fire. The rifles of the dead and those of the party too severely wounded
to use them were distributed among those scouts yet unharmed. Some of
the wounded insisted upon fighting. Forsyth propped himself up in his
rifle-pit, his back and shoulders resting against the pile of earth, his
rifle and revolver in hand. He could see his own men, and also the
Indians coming up the river.

Presently, shouting their war songs, at a wild pealed whoop from their
chief, the Indian horsemen broke into a gallop, Roman Nose leading the
advance, shaking his heavy Spencer rifle—captured, possibly, from
Fetterman’s men—in the air as if it had been a reed. There was a last
burst of rifle fire from the banks, and the rattle of musketry was
displaced by the war songs of the Indians and the yells of the squaws
and children on the slopes of the hills. As the smoke drifted away on
that sunny September morning, they saw the Indians almost upon them. In
spite of his terrible wounds the heroic Forsyth was thoroughly in
command. Waiting until the tactical moment when the Indians were but
fifty yards away and coming at a terrific speed, he raised himself on
his hands to a sitting position and cried, “Now!”

[Illustration:

  _Copyright, 1900, by Charles Schreyvogel_

  ROMAN NOSE LEADING THE CHARGE AGAINST FORSYTH’S DEVOTED BAND

  _Drawing by Charles Schreyvogel_
]

The men rose to their knees, brought their guns to their shoulders, and
poured a volley right into the face of the furious advance. An instant
later, with another cartridge in the barrel they delivered a second
volley. Horses and men went down in every direction; but, like the
magnificent warriors they were, the Indians closed up and came sweeping
down. The third volley was poured into them. Still they came. The war
songs had ceased by this time, but in undaunted spirit, still pealing
his war cry above the crashing of the bullets, at the head of his band,
with his magnificent determination unshaken, Roman Nose led such a ride
as no Indian ever attempted before or since. And still those quiet, cool
men continued to pump bullets into the horde. At the fourth volley the
medicine man on the left of the line and the second in command went
down. The Indians hesitated at this reverse, but swinging his rifle high
in the air in battle frenzy, the great war chief rallied them, and they
once more advanced. The fifth volley staggered them still more. Great
gaps were opened in their ranks. Horses and men fell dead, but the
impetus was so great, and the courage and example of their leader so
splendid, that the survivors came on unchecked. The sixth volley did the
work. Just as he was about to leap on the island, Roman Nose and his
horse were both shot to pieces. The force of the charge, however, was so
great that the line was not yet entirely broken. The horsemen were
within a few feet of the scouts, when the seventh volley was poured into
their very faces. As a gigantic wave meets a sharply jutting rock and is
parted, falling harmlessly on either side of it, so was that charge
divided, the Indians swinging themselves to the sides of their horses as
they swept down the length of the island.

The scouts sprang to their feet at this juncture, and almost at contact
range jammed their revolver shots at the disorganized masses. The
Indians fled precipitately to the banks on either side, and the yelling
of the war chants of the squaws and children changed into wails of
anguish and despair, as they marked the death of Roman Nose and the
horrible slaughter of his followers.

It was a most magnificent charge, and one which for splendid daring and
reckless heroism would have done credit to the best troops of any nation
in the world. And magnificently had it been met. Powell’s defense of the
corral on Piney Island was a remarkable achievement, but it was not to
be compared to the fighting of these scouts on the little open,
unprotected heap of sand and gravel in the Arickaree.

As soon as the Indian horsemen withdrew, baffled and furious, a rifle
fire opened once more from the banks. Lieutenant Beecher, who had
heroically performed his part in the defense, crawled over to Forsyth
and said:

“I have my death wound, General. I am shot in the side and dying.”

He said the words quietly and simply, as if his communication was
utterly commonplace, then stretched himself out by his wounded
commander, lying, like Steerforth, with his face upon his arm.

“No, Beecher, no,” said Forsyth, out of his own anguish; “it can not be
as bad as that.”

“Yes,” said the young officer, “good-night.”

There was nothing to be done for him. Forsyth heard him whisper a word
or two of his mother, and then delirium supervened. By evening he was
dead. In memory of the brave young officer, they called the place where
he had died Beecher’s Island.

At two o’clock in the afternoon a second charge of horse was assayed in
much the same way as the first had been delivered; but there was no
longer a great war chief in command, and this time the Indians broke at
one hundred yards from the island. At six o’clock at night they made a
final attempt. The whole party, horse and foot, in a solid mass rushed
from all sides upon the island. They came forward, yelling and firing,
but they were met with so severe a fire from the rifle-pits that,
although some of them actually reached the foot of the island, they
could not maintain their position, and were driven back with frightful
loss. The men on the island deliberately picked off Indian after Indian
as they came, so that the dry river bed ran with blood. The place was a
very hell to the Indians. They withdrew at last, baffled, crushed,
beaten.

With nightfall the men on the island could take account of the
situation. Two officers and four men were dead or dying, one officer and
eight men were so severely wounded that their condition was critical.
Eight men were less severely wounded, making twenty-three casualties out
of fifty-one officers and men.[34] There were no rations, but thank God
there was an abundance of water. They could get it easily by digging in
the sandy surface of the island. They could subsist, if necessary, on
strips of meat cut from the bodies of the horses. The most serious lack
was of medical attention. The doctor lying unconscious, the wounded were
forced to get along with the unskilled care of their comrades, and with
water, and rags torn from clothing for dressings. Little could be done
for them. The day had been frightfully hot, but, fortunately, a heavy
rain fell in the night, which somewhat refreshed them. The rifle-pits
were deepened and made continuous by piling saddles and equipments, and
by further digging in the interspaces.

One of the curious Indian superstitions, which has often served the
white man against whom he has fought to good purpose, is that when a man
is killed in the dark he must pass all eternity in darkness.
Consequently, he rarely ever attacks at night. Forsyth’s party felt
reasonably secure from any further attack, therefore, notwithstanding
which they kept watch.


                      IV. The Siege of the Island

As soon as darkness settled down volunteers were called for to carry the
news of their predicament to Fort Wallace, one hundred miles away. Every
man able to travel offered himself for the perilous journey. Forsyth
selected Trudeau and Stillwell. Trudeau was a veteran hunter, Stillwell
a youngster only nineteen years of age, although he already gave promise
of the fame as a scout which he afterwards acquired. To them he gave the
only map he possessed. They were to ask the commander of Fort Wallace to
come to his assistance. As soon as the two brave scouts had left, every
one realized that a long wait would be entailed upon the little band,
if, indeed, it was not overwhelmed meanwhile, before any relieving force
could reach the island. And there were grave doubts as to whether, in
any event, Trudeau and Stillwell could get through the Indians. It was
not a pleasant night they spent, therefore, although they were busy
strengthening the defenses, and nobody got any sleep.

Early the next morning the Indians again made their appearance. They had
hoped that Forsyth and his men would have endeavored to retreat during
the night, in which event they would have followed the trail and
speedily annihilated the whole command. But Forsyth was too good a
soldier to leave the position he had chosen. During the fighting of the
day before he had asked Grover his opinion as to whether the Indians
could deliver any more formidable attack than the one which had resulted
in the death of Roman Nose, and Grover, who had had large experience,
assured him that they had done the best they could, and indeed better
than he or any other scout had ever seen or heard of in any Indian
warfare. Forsyth was satisfied, therefore, that they could maintain the
position, at least until they starved.

The Indians were quickly apprised, by a volley which killed at least one
man, that the defenders of the island were still there. The place was
closely invested, and although the Indians made several attempts to
approach it under a white flag, they were forced back by the accurate
fire of the scouts, and compelled to keep their distance. It was very
hot. The sufferings of the wounded were something frightful. The Indians
were having troubles of their own, too. All night and all day the
defenders could hear the beating of the tom-toms or drums and the
mournful death songs and wails of the women over the bodies of the
slain, all but three of whom had been removed during the night.[35]
These three were lying so near the rifle-pits that the Indians did not
dare to approach near enough to get them. The three dead men had
actually gained the shore of the island before they had been killed.

The command on the island had plenty to eat, such as it was. There was
horse and mule meat in abundance. They ate it raw, when they got hungry
enough. Water was plentiful. All they had to do was to dig the
rifle-pits a little deeper, and it came forth in great quantities. It
was weary waiting, but there was nothing else to do. They dared not
relax their vigilance a moment. The next night, the second, Forsyth
despatched two more scouts, fearing the first two might not have got
through, thus seeking to “make assurance double sure.” This pair was not
so successful as the first. They came back about three o’clock in the
morning, having been unable to pass the Indians, for every outlet was
heavily guarded.

The third day the Indian women and children were observed withdrawing
from the vicinity. This cheered the men greatly, as it was a sign that
the Indians intended to abandon the siege. The warriors still remained,
however, and any incautious exposure was a signal for a volley. That
night two more men were despatched with an urgent appeal, and these two
succeeded in getting through. They bore this message:

                                                      “Sept. 19, 1868.

  To COLONEL BANKHEAD, or Commanding Officer,
    Fort Wallace:

  I sent you two messengers on the night of the 17th inst., informing
  you of my critical condition. I tried to send two more last night,
  but they did not succeed in passing the Indian pickets, and
  returned. If the others have not arrived, then hasten at once to my
  assistance. I have eight badly wounded and ten slightly wounded men
  to take in.... Lieutenant Beecher is dead, and Acting Assistant
  Surgeon Mooers probably cannot live the night out. He was hit in the
  head Thursday, and has spoken but one rational word since. I am
  wounded in two places—in the right thigh, and my left leg is broken
  below the knee....

  I am on a little island, and have still plenty of ammunition left.
  We are living on mule and horse meat, and are entirely out of
  rations. If it was not for so many wounded, I would come in, and
  take the chances of whipping them if attacked. They are evidently
  sick of their bargain.... I can hold out for six days longer if
  absolutely necessary, but please lose no time.

  P.S.—My surgeon having been mortally wounded, none of my wounded
  have had their wounds dressed yet, so please bring out a surgeon
  with you.”

The fourth day passed like the preceding, the squaws all gone, the
Indians still watchful. The wound in Forsyth’s leg had become
excruciatingly painful, and he begged some of the men to cut out the
bullet. But they discovered that it had lodged near the femoral artery,
and fearful lest they should cut the artery and the young commander
should bleed to death, they positively refused. In desperation, Forsyth
cut it out himself. He had his razor in his saddle bags and, while two
men pressed the flesh back, he performed the operation successfully, to
his immediate relief.

The fifth day the mule and horse meat became putrid and therefore unfit
to eat. An unlucky coyote wandered over to the island, however, and one
of the men was fortunate enough to shoot him. Small though he was, he
was a welcome addition to their larder, for he was fresh. There was but
little skirmishing on the fifth day, and the place appeared to be
deserted. Forsyth had half a dozen of his men raise him on a blanket
above the level of the rifle beds so that he might survey the scene
himself. Not all the Indians were gone, for a sudden fusillade burst out
from the bank. One of the men let go the corner of the blanket which he
held while the others were easing Forsyth down, and he fell upon his
wounded leg with so much force that the bone protruded through the
flesh. He records that he used some severe language to that scout.

On the sixth day Forsyth assembled his men about him, and told them that
those who were well enough to leave the island would better do so and
make for Fort Wallace; that it was more than possible that none of the
messengers had succeeded in getting through; that the men had stood by
him heroically, and that they would all starve to death where they were
unless relief should come; and that they were entitled to a chance for
their lives. He believed the Indians, who had at last disappeared, had
received such a severe lesson that they would not attack again, and that
if the men were circumspect they could get through to Fort Wallace in
safety. The wounded, including himself, must be left to take care of
themselves and take the chances of escape from the island.

The proposition was received in surprised silence for a few moments, and
then there was a simultaneous shout of refusal from every man: “Never!
We’ll stand by you.” McCall, the first sergeant and Forsyth’s right-hand
man since Beecher had been killed, shouted out emphatically: “We’ve
fought together, and, by Heaven, if need be, we’ll die together.”

They could not carry the wounded; they would not abandon them. Remember
these men were not regular soldiers. They were simply a company of
scouts, more or less loosely bound together, but, as McCall had pointed
out, they were tied to one another by something stronger than
discipline. Not a man left the island, although it would have been easy
for the unwounded to do so, and possibly they might have escaped in
safety.

For two more days they stood it out. There was no fighting during this
time, but the presence of an Indian vedette indicated that they were
under observation. They gathered some wild plums and made some jelly for
the wounded; but no game came their way, and there was little for them
to do but draw in their belts a little tighter and go hungry, or,
better, go hungrier. On the morning of the ninth day, one of the men on
watch suddenly sprang to his feet, shouting:

“There are moving men on the hills.” Everybody who could stand was up in
an instant, and Grover, the keen-eyed scout, shouted triumphantly:

“By the God above us, there’s an ambulance!” They were rescued at last.

                  *       *       *       *       *

NOTE.—The serial publication of this article called forth another
version of this affair, differing from it in some non-essential
features, which was written by Mr. Herbert Myrick, and published
serially. Mr. Myrick accounts for the “mysterious voice” which the
scouts heard saying in English, “There goes the last of their horses
anyway,” by disclosing the interesting fact that there were two renegade
white men among the Indians. One of them was called “Nibsi” or “Black
Jack,” a notorious desperado, who was afterwards hung for murder. The
other was Jack Clybor, once a trooper of the Seventh Cavalry. Having
been shot and left for dead in an engagement, the Indians captured him,
nursed him back to life, adopted him, and named him “Comanche.” He was a
singular compound of good and evil, and became as notorious for his good
deeds as for his bad acts. Mr. Myrick has been collecting a mass of
unknown and unpublished Western material for many years, which when
published will undoubtedly clear up many mysteries, throw light upon
many disputed questions, and prove of the deepest interest as well.

-----

Footnote 28:

  General Fry, in his valuable book, “Army Sacrifices,” now
  unfortunately out of print and scarce, thus graphically describes him:
  “A veritable man of war, the shock of battle and scenes of carnage and
  cruelty were as of the breath of his nostrils; about thirty years of
  age, standing six feet three inches high, he towered giant-like above
  his companions. A grand head with strongly marked features, lighted by
  a pair of fierce black eyes; a large mouth with thin lips, through
  which gleamed rows of strong, white teeth; a Roman nose with dilated
  nostrils like those of a thoroughbred horse, first attracted
  attention, while a broad chest, with symmetrical limbs on which the
  muscles under the bronze of his skin stood out like twisted wire, were
  some of the points of this splendid animal. Clad in buckskin leggings
  and moccasins elaborately embroidered with beads and feathers, with a
  single eagle feather in his scalp-lock, and with that rarest of robes,
  a white buffalo, beautifully tanned and soft as cashmere, thrown over
  his naked shoulders, he stood forth, the war chief of the Cheyennes.”

Footnote 29:

  Killed on the Island

Footnote 30:

  Charles F. Lummis refers to the Apaches as among the most ferocious
  and most successful warriors in history.

Footnote 31:

  The reason a large body of men had not been detailed for the pursuit
  was that the greater the number the slower the movement would have
  been, and the Indians could and would have kept out of the way with
  ease. If the Indians were laying a trap for Forsyth, he was tempting
  them to stop and fight.

Footnote 32:

  In dry seasons I have often seen Western river beds half a mile wide
  absolutely devoid of water. In the wet season these same beds would be
  roaring torrents from bank to bank.

Footnote 33:

  As the Indians surrounded the island and the fire came in from all
  quarters, the men had to dig the earth for protection in rear as well
  as in front, and the rifle-pits were, in fact, hollows scooped out of
  the ground just long enough for a man to lie in.

Footnote 34:

  Two of the scouts had been left behind, at Fort Wallace, because of
  illness.

Footnote 35:

  The reason why an Indian will sacrifice everything to remove the body
  of one of his tribe or kin who has been killed, is to prevent the
  taking of his scalp. The religious belief of the Indians is that a man
  who is scalped cannot enter the happy hunting grounds, but is doomed
  to wander in outer darkness forever. For that reason he always scalps
  his enemy, so that when he himself reaches the happy hunting grounds
  he will not be bothered by a lot of enemies whom he has met and
  overcome during his lifetime. Naturally, it was a point of honor for
  him to get the bodies of his friends away, so that they might not be
  debarred from the Indian Heaven in the hereafter. Sometimes, however,
  the Indian did not scalp the body of a particularly brave man, for
  this reason: It is his belief that if he kills a man in battle and
  does not scalp him, that man will be his slave or servant in the happy
  hunting grounds, and although the victim still possesses capacities
  for mischief, the Indian sometimes risks all in the future glory that
  will come to him from holding in slavery a brave man, or a noted
  warrior, as a spiritual witness to his prowess. It is stated that the
  Indians never scalp the bodies of negroes and suicides. “Buffalo
  soldier heap bad medicine,” is their universal testimony when asked
  why they do not scalp negro troopers whom they have killed or
  captured. Perhaps they cannot scalp a woolly, kinky-haired black
  soldier, and that is the reason it is “bad medicine.” Suicide is “bad
  medicine,” too, for some unexplained reason.




                              CHAPTER SIX
          The Journey of the Scouts and the Rescue of Forsyth


                    I. The Adventures of the Scouts

Trudeau and Stillwell, the first pair of scouts despatched by Forsyth
with the story of his desperate situation on Beecher’s Island, left
their commander about midnight on the evening of the first day of the
attack. The Indians had withdrawn from the immediate vicinity of the
river and were resting quietly in the camps on either side, although
there were a number of warriors watching the island. The men bade a
hasty good-by to their comrades, received their captain’s final
instructions, and with beating hearts stole away on their desperate
errand.

They neglected no precaution that experience could dictate. They even
took off their boots, tied them together by the straps, slung them
around their necks, and walked backward down the bed of the river in
their stocking feet, so that, if the Indians by any chance stumbled upon
their trail the next morning, it would appear to have been made by
moccasined feet and perhaps escape attention, especially as the tracks
would point toward the island instead of away from it. Further to
disguise themselves, they wrapped themselves in blankets, which they
endeavored to wear as the Indians did.

They proceeded with the most fearsome caution. Such was the
circumspection with which they moved and the care necessary because of
the watchfulness of the foe, who might be heard from time to time moving
about on the banks, that by daylight they had progressed but two miles.
During most of the time after leaving the river bed they had crawled on
their hands and knees. Before sunrise they were forced to seek such
concealment as they could find in a washout, a dry ravine, within sight
and sound of the Indian camps. Providence certainly protected them, for
if any of the Indians had happened to wander in their direction there
was nothing to prevent their discovery; and if the savages had stumbled
upon their hiding-place it would have been all up with them. Death by
torture would have been inevitable if they were taken alive, and the
only way to prevent that would be suicide. They had determined upon
that. They had pledged each other to fight until the last cartridge, and
to save that for themselves. They had nothing to eat and nothing to
drink. The sun beat down upon them fiercely all the long day. After
their experience of the one before, it was a day calculated to break
down the strongest of men. They bore up under the strain, however, as
best they could, and when darkness came they started out once more.

[Illustration:

  “SIMULTANEOUSLY WITH THEIR ARRIVAL A RATTLESNAKE MADE HIS APPEARANCE”

  _Drawing by Will Crawford_
]

This night there was no necessity for so much caution and they made
better progress, although they saw and successfully avoided several
parties of Indians. When the day broke they were forced to conceal
themselves again. The country was covered with wandering war parties,
and it was not yet safe to travel by daylight. This day they hid
themselves under the high banks of a river. Again they were fortunate in
remaining unobserved, although several times bands of warriors passed
near them. They traveled all the third night, making great progress.
Morning found them on an open plain with no place to hide in but a
buffalo wallow—a dry alkali mud-hole which had been much frequented in
the wet season by buffalo—which afforded scanty cover at best.

During this day a large party of scouting Indians halted within one
hundred feet of the wallow. Simultaneously with their arrival a
wandering rattlesnake made his appearance in front of the two scouts,
who were hugging the earth and expecting every minute to be discovered.
The rattlesnake in his way was as deadly as the Indians. The scouts
could have killed him easily had it not been for the proximity of the
Cheyennes. To make the slightest movement would call attention to their
hiding-place. Indeed, the sinister rattle of the venomous snake before
he struck would probably attract the notice of the alert Indians.
Between the savage reptile and the savage men the scouts were in a
frightful predicament, which young Stillwell, a lad of amazing
resourcefulness, instantly and effectually solved. He was chewing
tobacco at the time, and as the snake drew near him and made ready to
strike, he completely routed him by spitting tobacco juice in his mouth
and eyes and all over his head. The rattlesnake fled; he could not stand
such a dose. The Indians presently moved on, having noticed nothing, and
so ended perhaps the most terrible half hour the two men had ever
experienced.

They started early on the evening of the fourth night, and this time
made remarkable progress. Toward morning, however, Trudeau all but broke
down. The brunt of the whole adventure thereupon fell on Stillwell. He
encouraged his older companion, helped him along as best he could, and
finally, late at night, they reached Fort Wallace and told their tale.
Instantly all was excitement in the post. Captain and Brevet
Lieutenant-Colonel Louis H. Carpenter, with seventy men of Troop H, of
the Tenth Cavalry (a negro regiment), with Lieutenants Banzhaf and
Orleman, Doctor Fitzgerald and seventeen scouts, with thirteen wagons
and an ambulance, had been sent out from the post the day before with
orders to make a camp on the Denver road, about sixty miles from the
fort. From there he was to scout in every direction, keep off the
Indians, and protect trains.

At eleven o’clock at night a courier was despatched to Carpenter with
the following order:

                                  “Headquarters, Fort Wallace, Kansas,
                                    September 22, 1868, 11:00 P.M.

  Brevet Lieut.-Colonel L. H. CARPENTER, 10th U. S. Cavalry. On Scout.

  Colonel:

  The Commanding Officer directs you to proceed at once to a point on
  the “Dry Fork of the Republican,” about seventy-five or eighty miles
  north, northwest from this point, thirty or forty miles west by a
  little south from the forks of the Republic, with all possible
  despatch.

  Two scouts from Colonel Forsyth’s command arrived here this evening
  and bring word that he (Forsyth) was attacked on the morning of
  Thursday last by an overwhelming force of Indians (700), who killed
  all the animals, broke Colonel Forsyth’s left leg with a rifle ball,
  severely wounding him in the groin, wounded Doctor Mooers in the
  head, and wounded Lieutenant Beecher in several places. His back is
  supposed to be broken. Two men of the command were killed and
  eighteen or twenty wounded.

  The men bringing the word crawled on hands and knees two miles, and
  then traveled only by night on account of the Indians, whom they saw
  daily.

  Forsyth’s men were intrenched in the dry bed of the creek with a
  well in the trench, but had only horse-flesh to eat and only sixty
  rounds of ammunition.

  General Sheridan orders that the greatest despatch be used and every
  means employed to succor Forsyth at once. Colonel Bradley with six
  companies is now supposed by General Sheridan to be at the forks of
  the Republic.

  Colonel Bankhead will leave here in one hour with one hundred men
  and two mountain howitzers.

  Bring all your scouts with you.

  Order Doctor Fitzgerald at once to this post, to replace Doctor
  Turner, who accompanies Colonel Bankhead for the purpose of dressing
  the wounded of Forsyth’s party.

  I am, Colonel, very respectfully your obedient servant,

                                                   HUGH JOHNSON,
                                                 Acting Post Adjutant.

  1st Lieutenant 5th Infantry.”

One hour afterward Bankhead himself, with one hundred men and two
howitzers and the surgeon, started for the relief of Forsyth. With
Bankhead went the undaunted Stillwell as guide. Trudeau had suffered so
much during the perilous journey that he was unable to accompany the
relief party, and he soon afterward died from the hardships and
excitement of the horrible days he had passed through.


                       II. The Rescue of Forsyth

Carpenter had bivouacked on the evening of the 22d of September at
Cheyenne Wells, about thirty-five miles from Fort Wallace. He had broken
camp early in the morning and had marched some ten miles, when, from a
high point on a divide he had reached, which permitted a full view of
the Rocky Mountains from Pike’s to Long’s Peaks, he observed a horseman
galloping frantically toward them. He was the courier despatched by
Colonel Bankhead. Carpenter was a splendid soldier. He had received no
less than four brevets for gallantry during the Civil War. He had been
on Sheridan’s staff with Forsyth, and the two were bosom friends. No
task could have been more congenial to him than this attempt at rescue.

He communicated the situation of their white comrades to his black
troopers, and their officers crowded close about him. The orders were
received with exultant cheers. The regiment had been raised since the
war, and had not yet had a chance to prove its mettle. There were no
veterans among them, and Carpenter and the other officers had been
obliged to build the regiment from the ground up. Now was an opportunity
to show what they could do. Carpenter had been trained to obey orders to
the letter. In this instance he determined to disobey the command
regarding Doctor Fitzgerald. It appeared to him that Bankhead had little
hope that he (Carpenter) would find Forsyth, for he had sent him no
guide; but Carpenter perceived that if he did find Forsyth—and he
intended to find him—the conditions would be such that the services of a
physician would be vitally necessary. He therefore retained the doctor.
He also retained the wagon train, having no other way of carrying
necessary supplies. For one reason, if he had detached a guard for the
train, it would have weakened his force so greatly as to have made it
inadequate to the enterprise. The mules were strong and fresh, and he
decided to keep the wagons with him. The pace was to be a fast one, and
he instructed the wagon masters that, if any of the mule teams gave out,
they should be shot and, if necessary, the wagon should be abandoned.

[Illustration:

  Map of Marches to Relieve Colonel Forsyth and to Escort General Carr,
    Drawn by General Carpenter
]

There was no one in his command, he found, who had ever been in that
territory. Indeed, it is probable that, save Forsyth’s men, no white men
had ever penetrated that section of the country before. The map that
Carpenter had was very defective. He studied over the matter a few
moments, and then led his command toward the place where he supposed
Forsyth to be. They advanced at a fast trot, with intervals of walking,
and when they camped at night near some water holes they had covered
nearly forty-five miles. The mules, under the indefatigable and profane
stimulus of their drivers, had kept up with the rest. As soon as it was
dawn the next day they started once more, and, after a twenty-mile ride,
arrived at the dry bed of a river.

Whether this was the fork of the Republican, on which Forsyth was
besieged, no one could tell. It happens that the Republican has three
forks—a north fork, the Arickaree, and the south or dry fork. Carpenter
was afraid to leave the fork he had found without satisfying himself
that Forsyth was not there, so he concluded to scout up the river for
some fifteen or eighteen miles. Finding nothing, he then turned
northward again until he came to a stream flowing through a wide,
grass-covered valley surrounded by high hills. As they entered the
valley they came across a very large, fresh Indian trail. The scouts
estimated that at least two thousand ponies had passed along the trail
within a few hours. Various other signs showed a large village had moved
down the trail.

They had traveled over forty miles this second day, and were
apprehensive that the Indians, being so close to them, might attack
them. It was nearly evening. A spot well adapted for defense was chosen
near the water, the wagons were corralled, and preparations made for a
stout resistance in case of an attack. While the men were making camp,
Carpenter with a small escort rode to the top of one of the high hills
bordering the valley. He could see for miles, but discovered no Indians
nor any other living object in any direction. In front of them, however,
on the top of another hill, were a number of scaffolds, each one bearing
a human body. The Cheyenne method of burial was instantly recognized. A
nearer look developed that the scaffolds had been recently erected. Five
of them were examined, and in each case the body contained was that of a
Cheyenne warrior, who had been killed by a gunshot wound. This was proof
positive that they were some of the Indians who had been fighting
against Forsyth.

While this was going on, one of the troopers noticed something white in
a ravine on the opposite side of the valley. They galloped over to it,
and found it to be an elaborate and beautiful tepee or wigwam, made out
of freshly tanned white buffalo skins. The colonel dismounted, opened
the tepee, and entered. There, upon a brush heap, lay a human figure
wrapped in buffalo robes. When the robes were taken away the body of a
splendid specimen of Indian manhood was disclosed. “He lay like a
warrior taking his rest, with his martial cloak around him.” His stern
and royal look, the iron majesty of his features, even though composed
in death, revealed at once a native chieftain. In his breast was a
great, gaping wound, which had pierced his heart. He lay in his
war-gear, with his weapons and other personal property close at hand.

After the examination they recovered him and left him undisturbed. Then
they went back to the camp. The corral was watchfully guarded during the
night, but no one appeared to molest them. It was decided to follow the
Indian trail at daylight, as it would probably lead to the site of
Forsyth’s fight. Early the next morning, while they were packing up,
they saw some horsemen coming over the hills to the south of them. They
were white men, led by a scout named Donovan. Two more men had been
despatched by Forsyth from the island on the third night of the siege,
and being unobserved by the Indians, they had made their way to Fort
Wallace. When they arrived there they found that Colonel Bankhead had
already gone; whereupon Donovan had assembled five bold spirits and had
immediately started out on the return journey. Fortunately for
Carpenter, Donovan had struck the latter’s trail, and had followed it to
the camp.

Carpenter thereupon took thirty of his best mounted troopers and the
ambulance loaded with hardtack, coffee, and bacon, and set out on a
gallop in the direction in which they supposed the island lay. Banzhaf
was left in command of the rest, with orders to come on as fast as he
could.

Carpenter went forward at a rapid gallop, and after traveling eighteen
miles, while it was yet early in the morning, came to a spur of land
from which he had a view of the surrounding country for miles. As he
checked his horse on the brink, he saw to the right of him a valley
through which meandered a narrow silver stream.

In the center of the valley there was an island. From it rose a solitary
cottonwood. Men could be seen moving about the place. Donovan recognized
it instantly. The horses of the detachment were put to a run, and the
whole party galloped down the valley toward the island. The scouts
swarmed across the river with cries of joy, and welcomed the soldiers.
The faithful mules dragged the ambulance close behind. There was food
for everybody. Carpenter was struck with the wolfish look on the faces
of the hungry men as they crowded around the ambulance. Later one of
them brought him a piece of mule or horse meat which was to have been
served for dinner that day, if the rescuers had not appeared. Carpenter
could not endure even the odor of it.

Galloping across the river bed, the first to enter the rifle-pits on the
island was Carpenter. There, on the ground before him, lay Forsyth. And
what do you suppose he was doing? He was reading a novel! Some one had
found, in an empty saddle-bag, an old copy of _Oliver Twist_. Forsyth
was afraid to trust himself. He was fearful that he would break down. He
did not dare look at Carpenter or express his feelings. Therefore he
made a pretense of being absorbed in his book.

The black cavalry had arrived in the very nick of time. Forsyth was in a
burning fever. Blood-poisoning had set in, and his wounds were in a
frightful condition. Another day and it would have been too late.
Everything was gone from him but his indomitable resolution. Many others
were in like circumstances. It was well that Carpenter had brought his
surgeon with him, for his services were sadly needed. The men were taken
off the island, moved half a mile away from the terrible stench arising
from the dead animals; the wagon train came up, camps were made, the
dead were buried on the island they had immortalized with their valor,
and everything possible done for the comfort of the living by their
negro comrades.

The doctor wanted to amputate Forsyth’s leg, but he protested, so that
the amputation was not performed, and the leg was finally saved to its
owner. One of the scouts, named Farley, however, was so desperately
wounded that amputation had to be resorted to. The doctor performed the
operation, assisted by Carpenter. A military commander in the field has
to do a great many things.

The next day Bankhead made his appearance with his detachment. He had
marched to the forks of the river and followed the Arickaree fork to the
place. He was accompanied by two troops of the Second Cavalry, picked up
on the way. He did not find fault with Carpenter for his disobedience in
retaining Doctor Fitzgerald. On the contrary, such was his delight at
the rescue that he fairly hugged his gallant subordinate.

As soon as it was possible, the survivors were taken back to Fort
Wallace. Forsyth and the more severely wounded were carried in the
ambulance. It took four days to reach the fort. Their progress was one
long torture, in spite of every care that could be bestowed upon them.
There was no road, and while the drivers chose the best spots on the
prairie, there was, nevertheless, an awful amount of jolting and
bumping.

Forsyth was brevetted a brigadier-general in the Regular Army for his
conduct in this action. This was some compensation for two years of
subsequent suffering until his wounds finally healed.


                       III. The End of Roman Nose

On the way back the men stopped at the white tepee in the lonely valley.
Grover and McCall rode over to the spot with the officers and examined
the body of the chieftain. They instantly identified him as Roman Nose.
With a touch of sentiment unusual in frontiersmen they respected his
grave, and for the sake of his valor allowed him to sleep on
undisturbed. His arms and equipments, however, were considered
legitimate spoils of war, and were taken from him. It was a sad end,
indeed, to all his splendid courage and glorious defiance of his white
foemen.

The loss of the Indians in the several attacks was never definitely
ascertained. They admitted to seventy-five killed outright and over two
hundred seriously wounded, but it is certain that their total losses
were much greater. The fighting was of the closest and fiercest
description, and the Indians were under the fire of one of the most
expert bodies of marksmen on the plains at half pistol-shot distance in
the unique and celebrated battle. The whole action is almost
unparalleled in the history of our Indian wars, both for the thrilling
and gallant cavalry charge of the Indians and the desperate valor of
Forsyth and his scouts.


                  IV. A Few Words About Forsyth’s Men

The heroism and pluck of the men in the fight had been quite up to the
mark set by their captain. A man named Farley had fought through the
action with a severe bullet wound in the shoulder, which he never
mentioned until nightfall; his father was mortally wounded, but he lay
on his side and fought through the whole of the long first day until he
died. Another man named Harrington was struck in the forehead by an
arrow. He pulled out the shaft, but the head remained imbedded in the
bone. An Indian bullet struck him a glancing blow in the forehead and
neatly extricated the arrow—rough surgery, to be sure, but it served.
Harrington tied a rag around his head, and kept his place during the
whole three days of fighting.

When they first reached the island one of the men cried out, “Don’t
let’s stay here and be shot down like dogs! Will any man try for the
opposite bank with me?” Forsyth, revolver in hand, stopped that effort
by threatening to shoot any man who attempted to leave the island. In
all the party there was but one coward. In looks and demeanor he was the
most promising of the company—a splendid specimen of manhood apparently.
To everybody’s surprise, after one shot he hugged the earth in his
rifle-pit and positively refused to do anything, in spite of orders,
pleadings, jeers, and curses. He left the troop immediately on its
arrival at Fort Wallace.

_Per contra_, one of the bravest, where all but one were heroes, was a
little, eighteen-year old Jewish boy, who had begged to be enlisted and
allowed to go along. He had been the butt of the command, yet he proved
himself a very paladin of courage and efficiency when the fighting
began.[36]

One of the last acts of the recent Congress was the setting apart of one
hundred and twenty acres of land in Yuma County, Colorado, as a national
park. This reservation forever preserves Forsyth’s battlefield and the
vicinity from settlement. On the edge of the river bank, on what was
once Beecher’s Island, which the shifting river has now joined to the
bank, is a wooden monument to Beecher and the other scouts who were
buried somewhere in those shifting sands.[37]

The few survivors of the battle have formed themselves into an
association which holds an annual reunion on the battlefield. Soon there
will be none of them left. Would it not be a graceful act for some one
who honors courage, manliness, and devotion to duty to erect a more
enduring monument to the memory of Beecher and his comrades than the
perishable wooden shaft which now inadequately serves to call attention
to their sacrifice and their valor?

                  *       *       *       *       *

NOTE.—The following interesting communication slightly modifies one of
the statements in the above article. It certainly shows prompt decision
upon the part of Lieutenant Johnson, who was left in command of the post
after Bankhead’s departure.

                            Great Barrington, Mass., August 5th, 1904.

  Dr. Brady says “Donovan had assembled five _bold spirits_, and had
  immediately started out on the return journey.” As a matter of fact,
  Donovan did no such thing. The departure of General Bankhead’s
  relief column stripped the garrison of Fort Wallace to seven
  enlisted men, took away the last horse, and placed me in command.
  Forsyth’s second note, brought by Donovan, fell into my hands. It
  was telegraphed in full to General Sheridan, who ordered me to spare
  no expense of men, money, and horses to hasten relief to Forsyth. By
  the promise of $100 each, four citizens of the neighboring town of
  Pond Creek were induced to seek the Carpenter command. Donovan I
  persuaded to guide them, promising him $100 in addition to his pay
  as a scout. This party started at daylight, on government mules,
  rode all day, all night, and found Carpenter’s command on the south
  fork of the Republican River, about ten miles southeast of the scene
  of the fight. Guided by these men, Carpenter pushed out, and Forsyth
  and his men were relieved some hours in advance of the arrival of
  the other relief commands.

  The country from Fort Wallace to Arickaree Fork I passed over the
  following December, in an unsuccessful endeavor to secure the bodies
  of those killed in the fight. We surprised a village of Indians at
  the scene of the fight, fought them off, and found the body of one
  of the scouts, but Lieutenant Beecher’s and Dr. Mooers’ graves were
  empty. Yours very truly,

                                           HUGH M. JOHNSON,
                                   Late Lieutenant 5th U. S. Infantry.

-----

Footnote 36:

  In General Fry’s entertaining story of “Army Sacrifices,” the
  following little poem about him appears:

                 “When the foe charged on the breastworks
                   With the madness of despair,
                 And the bravest souls were tested,
                   The little Jew was there.

                 “When the weary dozed on duty,
                   Or the wounded needed care,
                 When another shot was called for,
                   The little Jew was there.

                 With the festering dead around them,
                   Shedding poison in the air,
                 When the crippled chieftain ordered,
                   The little Jew was there.”

Footnote 37:

  “To-day cattle stand knee-deep in the Arickaree. The water no longer
  ripples around the island, as the shifting sands have filled the
  channel to the south. But if one digs under the cottonwoods he can
  find bullets, cartridges, and knives. And near at hand is the simple
  white shaft that tells where Beecher and Roman Nose, typifying all
  that is brave in white man and red, forgot all enmity in the last
  sleep that knows no dreams of racial hatred.” I cut this from a
  newspaper the other day. How well written, frequently, are the
  modestly unsigned articles in the daily press!




                             CHAPTER SEVEN
           A Scout’s Story of the Defense of Beecher’s Island


By great good fortune I am permitted to insert here a private letter to
me from Mr. Sigmund Schlesinger, the Jewish boy referred to in Chapter
Six, which, as it contains an original account of the defense of
Beecher’s Island from the standpoint of one of the participants, is an
unique document in our Western historical records:—C.T.B.

                  *       *       *       *       *

For several days we had been following an Indian trail so broad that it
looked like a wagon-road. Those in our command experienced in Indian
warfare told us that we must be on the track of an Indian village on the
move, with a large herd of horses. Evidently they knew that we were
behind them, and seemed to be in a hurry to get away, for we found camp
utensils, tent-poles, etc., which had been dropped and no time taken to
pick them up. Among other things we saw fresh antelope meat, quarters,
etc., and although our rations were nearly, if not all, gone, except
some coffee and very little “sow-belly,” we did not dare eat the
Indians’ remnants.

The night of Sept. 16th, before the attack next morning, Scout Culver,
who was killed next day, pointed out to a few of us some torch-lights
upon the hills that were being swung like signals. I knew that something
“would be doing” soon, but, like a novice, I was as if on an anxious
seat, under a strain of anticipation, expecting something strange and
dangerous. The next thing that I now recall was that I was awakened just
before daylight by a single cry, “Indians!” so loud and menacing that
when I jumped up from the ground I was bewildered and felt as if I
wanted to ward off a blow, coming from I knew not where, for it was
still quite dark. That cry I will never forget. Soon I perceived a
commotion among our horses and mules. The Indians, about a dozen, tried
to stampede them. I could see in the dawning light the outlines of a
white horse in the distance, and from the noise I realized that they
were driving some of our stock before them. Later, in the daylight we
could recognize some of our ponies on a neighboring hill in the
possession of the Indians.

As soon as we crossed from the north bank of the river to the island,
just before the attack, we tied our horses and pack mules to shrubs as
best we could. During the day a mule with a partial pack on his back got
loose and wandered around the vicinity of my pit. He had several arrows
sticking in his body and seemed wounded otherwise, which caused him to
rear and pitch to such an extent that Jim Lane, my neighbor, and I,
decided to kill him. After shooting him he fell and lay between us, and
served us the double purpose of food and barricade.

My horse was securely tethered to the underbrush on the island, and
later that day I saw the poor beast rearing and plunging in a death
struggle, having been shot and killed like the rest of our horses and
mules. He also furnished me with several meals during the siege, even
after he began to putrefy. There was little to choose between horse and
mule meat under such circumstances—both were abominable.

When day broke that Tuesday, the seventeenth of September, 1868, we saw
our pickets riding toward camp as fast as their horses could carry them,
excitedly yelling: “Indians! Indians!” As I looked up the valley toward
the west I beheld the grandest, wildest sight—such as few mortals are
permitted to see and live to tell about. Many hundreds of Indians in
full war paraphernalia, riding their splendid war ponies, rushed toward
us _en masse_. Some were galloping in one direction, others cantering in
another, their lances topped with many-colored streamers, the fantastic
Indian costumes lending an awful charm to the whole. About this time
those among us who had any had boiled some coffee and were preparing to
cross over to the island.

I will frankly admit that I was awed and scared. I felt as if I wanted
to run somewhere, but every avenue of escape was blocked. Look where I
might I perceived nothing but danger, which increased my agitation; so I
naturally turned to Colonel Forsyth as a protector, as a young chick
espying the hawk in the air flutters toward the mother wing. Under such
conditions of strain some things engrave themselves vividly upon your
mind, while others are entirely forgotten. I remember that distinctly as
in my trepidation I instinctively kept close to the colonel. I was
reassured by his remarkable self-possession and coolness. While stirring
every one to activity round us, he consulted with Lieutenant Beecher and
the guide, Sharp Grover, giving directions here, advice there, until
most of the command had crossed; then he crossed himself and posted the
men, telling them where to take up their different positions. Meantime
the Indians were coming closer. I was just behind the colonel when the
first shot from the enemy came flying seemingly over our heads. I heard
him say, smilingly, “Thank you,” but immediately afterward he ordered
every one of us to lie flat upon the ground, while he, still directing,
kept on his feet, walking around among us, leading his horse. The shots
began coming thicker, and many of us yelled to him to lie down also. How
long after this I do not know, but I heard the colonel cry out that he
was shot, and I saw him clutch his leg and get down in a sitting
position.

I was lying alongside of Lou McLaughlin; some tall weeds obscured my
vision, so I asked Lou to crouch lower and I rolled over him to the
other side and was there kept busy with my carbine, for the Indians were
onto us. They were circling around while others were shooting. Very soon
I heard Lou growl and mutter. I looked at him and saw that he was hit, a
bullet coming from the direction where I was lying struck his gun-sight
and glanced into his breast. He told me what had happened, but I could
give him no attention, for there seemed lots of work to do before us.
But later, after the repulse of the attack, I looked at Lou and was
surprised to see him lying in a wallow. In his pain he had torn up the
grass and dug his hands into the sand. In answer to my question whether
he was hurt bad, he told me not bad, and advised me to dig into the sand
and make a hole, as it would be a protection.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of Chas. Scribner’s Sons_

  THE CRUCIAL MOMENT ON BEECHER’S ISLAND

  _Drawing by R. F. Zogbaum_
]

I am not sure at this time, but I am now under the impression that I
told Colonel Forsyth of this; and from that time on we began to dig with
our hands or whatever we could use, and kick with our heels and toes in
the sand, and some of us soon had holes dug deep enough to protect the
chest, at least.

Time seemed out of our calculations. I heard some one call, “What time
is it?” An answer came, “Three o’clock.” I had thought it was about ten
A.M. We had nothing to eat or drink all day and, strange to say, I was
not hungry, which may have been the reason why I thought it was still
early. Word was passed that Lieutenant Beecher and Scouts Wilson and
Culver were killed, Colonel Forsyth wounded again, also Doctor Mooers
shot in the head and others hurt whose names I do not now remember.

We fought steadily all day. After dark the Indians withdrew; then nature
began to assert itself. I got hungry; there was nothing to eat in the
camp that I knew of, except some wild plums that I had gathered the day
before, which were in my saddle-bags, still on the body of my horse. I
got out of my hole, creeping on hands and knees toward where I knew the
poor animal lay. As I felt my way in the darkness I touched something
cold, and upon examination found that it was Wilson’s dead hand. He lay
where he fell; it was a most horrible feeling. The shivers ran up and
down my back, but I got to my horse at last, and tugging, I finally
secured the bag and my plums. I also found in it a piece of bacon, the
size of two fingers, which I reserved for a last emergency, and was
still in possession of that rusty piece of fat when relief came.

On my way back to my hole I passed one where Doctor Mooers lay wounded,
moaning piteously. I put a plum in his mouth, and I saw it between his
teeth next morning. He died on the night of the 19th. All our wounded
were very cheerful, and to look at Colonel Forsyth and talk to him as he
lay there helpless, no outsider would have suspected that he was
crippled. We used to gather round him in his pit and hold conversation,
not like men in a desperate situation, but like neighbors talking over a
common cause.

Colonel Forsyth was the right man in command of such a heterogeneous
company. Like the least among us, he attended to his own horse when in
camp, and many times have I seen him gather buffalo chips to supply the
mess fuel. While he was our commander in practice he was our friend, and
as such we respected him, followed and obeyed him.

On about the fifth day, as the Indians began leaving us, we began to
walk about and look around. About fifteen or twenty feet from my pit I
noticed a few of our men calling to the rest of us. I ran to the place,
and there, against the edge of the island, I saw three dead Indians.
Their friends evidently could not reach them to carry them off, which
explained to us the persistent fighting in this direction. When I got
there the Indians were being stripped of their equipments, scalps, etc.
One of them was shot in the head and his hair was clotted with blood. I
took hold of one of his braids and applied my knife to the skin above
the ear to secure the scalp, but my hand coming in contact with the
blood, I dropped the hair in disgust.

Old Jim Lane saw my hesitation, and taking up the braid, said to me: “My
boy, does it make you sick?” Then inserting the point of the knife under
the skin, he cut around, took up the other braid, and jerked the scalp
from the head. I had been about three years in that country and four
years in America, and life on the plains under such hardships as I had
undergone hardens the sensibility, yet I was not quite ripe for such a
cutting affray, even with a dead Indian.

After this we were not molested, but devoted our time to looking around
for something to eat besides the rotten horse and mule meat, which we
boiled several times in water and powder, not to get it soft, but to
boil out the stench as much as possible. We found some cactus fruit, and
killed a coyote, of which the brains and a rib were my portion. Aside
from this we had nothing but horse and mule during the siege, which soon
told on our bowels; but in spite of all this, I do not remember a
despondent man in our crowd.

One morning, being the ninth since we were attacked, I was lying outside
of my pit, having done some guard duty during the night; I was half
dozing and dreaming of home and a good meal. I felt so homesick and so
hungry when I heard some one call attention to something moving on the
hill.

I was all attention at once. Soon I heard again “I think that’s Doctor
Fitzgerald’s greyhound.” Whoever it might be, we would welcome. We would
even have been pleased to have the Indians attack us again, in hopes of
killing one of their horses for fresh meat; but it was soon evident that
help was coming, and when I fully realized this fact, enfeebled as I
was, I jumped up and joined in a lunatics’ dance that was in progress
all around us. Those on the hill must have seen us, for there was a rush
of horsemen down the hill toward us, followed by one or two ambulance
wagons.

They were as eager to reach us as we were to greet them, and as I ran
uphill I noticed a soldier on a white horse coming full tilt. The
momentum carried him past me, but in passing I grabbed his saddle-bag
and was taken off my feet, but it would have taken more than one horse
to drag me from my hold. I suspected some eatables in there, and as soon
as he could stop, without dismounting he assisted me to open that bag.
With both hands I dived in, and with each hand I clutched some hardtack,
but only one hand could reach my mouth; my other was in the grip of one
of our men, who ravenously snatched the “tacks.” We ate, cried, laughed,
and ate, all in a breath.

As soon as possible we put our dead in the ground. Those that died at
one end of the island were cared for by those in that vicinity, and
others in their vicinity, so that one part of the island was not aware
of the location of the corpses of the other part; at least I did not
know where the bodies lay of those killed on the eastern end of the
island. So one time, as I walked around among the pits, I noticed
something red and round sticking out of the sand, like a half-buried red
berry. I kicked it, but by so doing it was not dislodged; I kicked
again, but to no result. I then looked closer and discovered that it was
the nose of a dead man. I called others to my assistance, and we fixed
matters so that no desecration was possible again.

Our mortally wounded were made as comfortable as possible before they
died. I assisted at such ministrations given to Lieutenant Beecher. We
removed his boots, coat, etc., and, of course, these things were not
replaced on the body after he was dead, but lay around unnoticed. My
shoes were quite badly worn, especially after being used for digging in
the sand, so when relief came and we were preparing to leave the island,
I put on his shoes, which were just about my size, and wore them even
after I got back to New York City, leaving my old shoes in their stead
on the island.

At one of our “sittings” around Colonel Forsyth in his pit, the incident
of killing the coyote was discussed, and plans were suggested for the
killing of more of them. Along with others, I also suggested a scheme,
but it was ridiculed, and I soon retired to my pit, which was near
enough to the colonel’s, so that I could hear what was said there. One
of the men remaining was saying uncomplimentary things about me, when
the colonel silenced him, telling him that I was but a boy unused to
such things and that, under the circumstances, I was doing better than
some of the older men. Colonel Forsyth is unconscious of the fact that I
am very grateful to him for his kindness to that strange “boy” among
those strangers, and that I still hope some day that I may have the
opportunity to show my appreciation.

Jack Stillwell and I were the only boys in the company, and naturally
gravitated toward each other. We were friends as soon as we met and
chums before we knew each other’s names. When the colonel asked for
volunteers to go to Fort Wallace for help, Jack was among the first to
announce himself. I wanted to go with him, but the colonel gave no heed
to my request; even Jack discouraged me, for he knew I was too
inexperienced. After Colonel Carpenter came to our relief Jack was not
with him, which made me and others feel very uneasy. The day after
Colonel Carpenter’s arrival we saw the mounted sentinel that had been
posted by Colonel Carpenter on a high eminence in the hills about three
miles from the island, signaling that a body of men was approaching,
which created a flutter of excitement, but there was a strong sensation
of security, mingled with a sense of dependence upon our black rescuers
permeating our emaciated party, after being cooped up, so to say, for so
long a period in dread and suspense. At least that was my sensation. I
remember watching that vedette, horse and rider turning around and
around, being the only moving object in that dim distance, indicating to
the anxious watchers that either friend or foe was in the vicinity. As
he showed no inclination to leave his post, it was soon evident he had
no fear of the approaching column, and that friends were coming. Not
long after a few horsemen were seen coming around the bend of the river
bed, and among them was my friend Jack Stillwell. Nearly all of us ran
to meet the party. Soon Jack jumped from his horse, and in his joy to
see so many of us alive again, he permitted his tears free flow down his
good honest cheeks. I kept up correspondence with him all these years
past. Last year he died.[38] He was a big-hearted, jovial fellow, brave
to a fault.

-----

Footnote 38:

  Stillwell studied law, and ultimately became a judge in Texas. He was
  a friend of Generals Miles and Custer—also of “Wild Bill” Hickok,
  “Texas Jack” Omohundro, and other famous figures on the frontier; and
  when he died, a couple of years ago, he was the subject of glowing
  tributes from high and low alike.—C. T. B.




                             CHAPTER EIGHT
    Carpenter and His “Brunettes.”[39]<br>The Fight on Beaver Creek


Carpenter had performed a very commendable thing in his march of over
one hundred miles in two days for the relief of Forsyth. And it is
marvelous that he had been able to find him in that vast expanse of
country. He received high praise for it, which he fully deserved; but
the battle which, with his black comrades, he fought three weeks later,
elicited still more praise. The fight was one of the prettiest and most
typical of any in our Indian campaigns; and I am fortunate in being able
to give it in General Carpenter’s own words, written especially for this
book, the notes appended being my own contribution.—C. T. B.

                  *       *       *       *       *

While on the forced march to relieve the party of scouts with Colonel
George A. Forsyth, surrounded by Indians on the Arickaree fork of the
Republican River, the troops under my command discovered a large trail
of the Indians who had been engaged in that fight on the south fork of
the Republican.

The scouts discovered that this trail left the valley of the stream a
short distance below and struck across country in the direction of the
Beaver Creek. After the relief of Forsyth, on my return to Fort Wallace
with the survivors and wounded, a report was made to General Sheridan,
then to the east of Fort Hayes, Kansas, of the probable whereabouts of
the Indians; and the Fifth Cavalry, which had just arrived from the East
by rail, was disembarked between Hayes and Wallace and ordered to move
north under Major Royall, and strike the savages, if possible, on the
Beaver. A day or two after the Fifth had left, Brevet-Major-General
Eugene A. Carr reported for duty to General Sheridan. Carr had been a
general officer of volunteers during the Civil War with an excellent
record, and now reverted to his rank in the regulars of Major in the
Fifth Cavalry.

Sheridan was anxious to have Carr join his regiment because of his
experience with Indians and his general reputation, and therefore sent
him to Fort Wallace with orders to have the two troops of cavalry there
go under my command and escort Carr and overtake the Fifth, if possible,
to enable him to join his regiment. The troops consisting of Troops H
and I, Tenth Cavalry, were officered by myself and Captain Graham,
Lieutenants Banzhaf, Amick, and Orleman, and were soon in readiness for
the duty required. We had returned from the relief of Forsyth Oct. 1st,
and we started with Carr at ten A.M. Oct. 14th.

I concluded to march north so as to strike the Beaver as soon as
possible, and then to follow down that creek with the expectation of
finding the Fifth Cavalry or of striking its trail. On the 15th I
reached the Beaver at about one P.M., and after proceeding some miles
down, went into bivouac. As we expected, we found a very large Indian
trail about two weeks old, over which over two thousand head of ponies
had been ridden or driven, going in the same direction.

The next day we continued our journey down the stream, finding plenty of
water, a fine bottom covered with grass and timber, and still observing
the Indian trail, which ran to a point about twenty miles east from the
place where we first struck the Beaver. At this locality the signs
showed that the Indians had encamped for the night. The ground was
covered for acres with old fire-places, pieces of wood, and the manure
of ponies; and a little distance off we found a dead Cheyenne, wrapped
in his robes, lying upon a scaffolding in a tree, a protection against
ravenous wolves. The trail then struck south toward Short Nose Creek,
the Indian name for a stream about twenty miles south of the Beaver. We
continued our course, however, on the Beaver, until we made about thirty
miles, and then stopped for the night.

As there was no pack outfit at Wallace, I was compelled to take wagons
to carry our supplies, and had eleven with me. The mules, dragging heavy
loads over rough country, were made to trot in order to keep up with the
cavalry column. We had now moved down the Beaver about forty-five miles
without finding anything about the Fifth, and it began to look as if
something had taken the regiment in another direction.

The next morning I sent Lieutenant Amick and ten men well mounted with
Sharp Grover, the famous scout, with orders to proceed as quickly as
possible across country to the Short Nose to look for signs of the Fifth
Cavalry and to keep a sharp lookout for Indians.

Grover, who, it will be remembered, had been with Forsyth, afterward
joined my command. He had married a Sioux woman and had lived for years
with the Indians before the outbreak of hostilities. He could speak
their language and knew their ways and customs, and was perfectly
trained in reading signs. It was interesting to see how he could read
what the tracks meant, as if they had been books. He could tell how long
since the tracks were made, whether they were made by horses or ponies,
shod or unshod, how many were ridden, how many were driven, whether it
was a war party or a party changing camp. If Indians stopped for the
night he could tell how many men or squaws were in the party, to what
tribe they belonged, from the shape of their moccasins, and many more
details. Like most of his ilk, Grover drank heavily on occasion. When
the Indians went on the war-path Grover could not stay longer with the
Sioux, as his life was not safe, and he entered the government employ,
where he rendered heroic and invaluable services. Later he was killed in
a row at Pond City, near Fort Wallace.

Amick and his party soon disappeared over the hills to our right and we
kept on down the stream, the general course of which was to the
northeast. I began to feel certain that the Fifth Cavalry had never
reached the Beaver, and that we would probably be attacked by the
Indians if this was the case. Under these circumstances I felt that it
would be wise to be cautious and on the lookout against surprise. The
road we passed over was very rough and the stream in most places ran
through deep-cut banks several feet high, with very few places suitable
for crossing.

As night came on a place was selected for a camp in a bend of the creek
where the wagons could be placed across, giving room inside to graze the
animals without fear of a stampede from howling savages. Amick returned
just before night, having scouted some miles beyond the Short Nose
without discovering any trace of the Fifth Cavalry. Grover told me that
as they passed across the divide between the Beaver and the Short Nose
he came across a single Indian pony track. This track was coming from a
direction to our rear, and showed that the pony was going at a rapid
gallop. Grover inferred from this that it was probably an Indian hunter
returning homeward who had most likely crossed our trail behind us,
discovered our presence in the country, and was riding as fast as
possible to carry the news to the Indian camps somewhere to our front
and not far off.

After a council over the situation General Carr came to the conclusion,
after having traveled some sixty miles down the Beaver without finding
the Fifth, that the regiment had never reached that stream and that
therefore he would give it up and start on our return in the morning.
About seven A.M. on the next day, Oct. 15th, Captain Graham expressed a
wish to make a scout for a short distance to the front, and rode forward
with two men. The command was ordered saddled up and everything made in
readiness to move. In view of the fact that the south side of the creek
was hilly and difficult and offered opportunities for ambuscades, I
determined to go back by the north side, which was comparatively open.
The afternoon before I had sent Lieutenant Orleman with a detachment to
dig down the sides of the creek and prepare a practicable passage for
the wagons and troops.

Graham had hardly ridden a thousand yards when twenty-five Indians
suddenly dashed over the hill to his rear, with the evident intention of
cutting him off. They were almost upon Graham before he discerned them,
but he instantly struck spurs into his horse and dashed for the creek,
the Indians firing a volley at short range upon the party. One of the
bullets passed through Graham’s hat, another through his coat, and a
third through his leggings without wounding him. One of the horses was
shot through the shoulder and fell. His rider succeeded in getting into
the creek and behind the bank along with the other soldiers, and they
commenced firing upon the Indians. Graham’s girth burst as his horse
sprang away at the first fire, but as his saddle gave way he seized his
horse’s mane and dragged himself forward on the animal. He then dashed
the horse over the bank of the creek, about ten feet to the bottom. He
fell from his horse in this jump, but the horse, fortunately, ran in our
direction.[40]

By this time I started out thirty men under Lieutenants Amick and
Orleman to cover the retreat of Graham’s men. As they charged toward the
hill the savages rushed from the creek to avoid being cut off, and were
hotly pursued by our men. Judging that the presence of these Indians
indicated that a large party could not be far off, I thought it best to
be prudent and sent a trumpeter to overtake Amick and tell him to
discontinue the pursuit and fall back slowly to camp. Without further
delay I now broke up the camp, crossed the creek with wagons and troops,
and, having dismounted the men, deployed them as riflemen to cover the
retreat of Amick.

In a few minutes the absent party made its appearance on the hills, with
bodies of Indians, numbering at least a hundred, skirmishing on our
flank and rear. They slowly fell back toward the creek, and when within
range the dismounted men on the banks opened fire on the advancing
savages, and under cover of this Amick crossed and joined the command,
while the Indians kept at a respectful distance.

The wagons were now placed in double column so as to make everything as
compact as possible.[41] H Troop was assigned on the flanks and advance,
deployed in open order. Troop I covered the rear in the same manner,
with one platoon under Graham as a reserve. These arrangements being
completed, we moved steadily up the creek bottom. As soon as this
movement commenced, a large body of Indians made their appearance and
charged toward us, taking advantage of ravines, trees, and bluffs to
fire from the south side of the creek. Some of the balls were well aimed
and came close.

I soon saw that if we continued down the creek bottom the enemy would
harass us immensely under cover of the timber and banks, and therefore
changed our course so as to leave the valley and take the higher ground
or divide. The Indians followed, showing about two hundred strong, and
acted boldly in their attacks on the rear and flanks. The men and
officers behaved very coolly, facing toward the enemy and driving them
back without stopping the progress of the column.

[Illustration:

  Position of Wagons and Soldiers in Beaver Creek Fight

  _T_, _Troopers Surrounding Wagons_; _H_, _Horses Inside the Inclosure_

  Drawn by General Carpenter
]

At one point we passed near a deep ravine, and the enemy, quick to
observe cover of any kind, occupied it with quite a number of warriors
and opened up a serious fire. The reserve platoon under Graham charged
at the place as we were passing and, arriving at the edge of the ravine,
poured in a volley at close range on the savages. A number must have
been hurt and the Indians certainly lost no time in getting out of their
position. Afterward they were more cautious in occupying ground too
close to us. The flankers, under Banzhaf and Orleman, also repulsed the
Indians on several occasions.

One Indian carried a red flag with some white device upon it, and by his
movements the whole force seemed more or less governed. They were all
stripped to the waists, and were decorated by various ornaments hanging
from their heads and their shields, quivers, and bridles, so as to
glisten and shine in the sun at every turn of the ponies. Up to this
time five Indians were known to be killed at various points and quite a
number wounded.

At one P.M. the enemy seemed to stop the fight and apparently withdrew,
and I supposed that I had seen the last of them; but half an hour
afterward, hearing an exclamation, I looked back and saw the Indians
appearing again on the hills to our rear. On they came, one body after
another coming in sight until it was estimated by all present that at
least six hundred warriors were in view. Emboldened by their number they
rushed forward, directing themselves toward our front, flanks and rear,
making things look rather serious. I soon saw that we could not continue
the march and meet this force, but that we must select a position and
make a stand.

In the first attack in the morning I had offered the command to General
Carr, as the senior officer present, but he declined it, stating that he
considered himself simply as a passenger to be escorted, and I therefore
continued to direct the operations.[42]

I looked around and saw a small knoll or rise a short distance to the
front, from which the ground fell in every direction, and this point was
immediately selected. The teamsters were directed to take the trot, aim
for this place, and on arrival at the knoll immediately to form a
circular corral, half a circle on either side, with the mules facing
inward, affording a shelter within and something of a fortification. As
soon as we increased our pace the Indians evidently thought we were
running from them, and sent up a yell which made shivers run down the
backs of some of our recruits. We kept on, however, at a fast gait, and
the moment we struck the highest ground, the wagons were corralled with
six wagons one side, five wagons on the other, and the troops were
rushed inside at a gallop and dismounted. The horses were tied together
inside the corral with some men to watch them, and the rest were formed
outside the corral in open order.[43] This was done in about two minutes
and then the advance of the Indians was upon us.

[Illustration:

  THE CHIEF MEDICINE MAN AT BEAVER CREEK

  _Drawing by Will Crawford_
]

A fire commenced from our seven-shooter Spencers which sounded like the
fire of a line of infantry. The Indians charged up around the wagons,
firing rapidly and seriously wounded some of the men, but in a very
short time they were driven back in wild disorder, leaving the ground
covered with ponies, arms, and some bodies. Three dead warriors lay
within fifty feet of the wagons. One man who was killed here was carried
off by his comrades.

The chief Medicine Man, on a fine looking horse, rode out in front of
our line about two hundred yards off, after the retreat of the Indians,
to try to show that his medicine was good and the white man’s bullets
could not hurt him. I directed several men near me to aim carefully at
him. They fired and the Medicine Man went down, accompanied by a howl
from the more distant Indians. After the repulse the men rushed forward
from the wagons, seized and hauled in ten bodies of the Indians. The
savages, disheartened and surprised at this reception, withdrew out of
gunshot and assembled, apparently for council.[44]

The men carried corn sacks and made breastworks near the wagons and we
waited, expecting a renewal of the attack, for about an hour, when it
became evident that some of the Indians were withdrawing. The day was
very warm, we had been engaged about eight hours, and in the hot sun men
and animals were suffering very much from thirst. I made up my mind to
move for water, and keeping the wagons in double column, the horses
inside and the men dismounted on the outside, we marched for the Beaver.
A large party of Indians followed up to where their dead comrades lay
and set up a mournful howl over their remains. Their loss in this fight,
added to what they had suffered the month before in the conflict with
Forsyth, must have had a sobering effect.

We now proceeded to the creek without further interference, and
selecting a wide bottom encamped for the night, preparing some
rifle-pits to cover our outlying pickets and to enable them to receive
the enemy if an attack were made in the morning. We heard them around us
all night imitating coyotes, but they did not find a weak place and
refrained from molesting us. The next morning the Indians were gone and
we marched by the shortest route to Fort Wallace, arriving there on the
21st.

On our return journey we passed through Sheridan City, a frontier town
located at the then terminus of the Kansas Division of the Union Pacific
R. R. It was full of taverns, saloons, gambling houses and dens, and of
a rather tough lot of citizens and desperadoes. These people and others
crowded into the streets when we passed through, and when they saw the
troopers and their horses decorated with the spoils from the Indians
whose dead bodies we had captured, they knew that we had been in a
successful fight and they gave us a perfect ovation.

The savages suffered a considerable loss, but we escaped with a few men
wounded (some of them seriously) and none killed. General Carr found the
Fifth Cavalry had returned to the railroad, and through mistake they
never reached the Beaver. He took command of the regiment, marched again
and pursued the Indians over the Platte River, and followed them on a
long campaign.

                  *       *       *       *       *

This was one of the smartest and most successful Indian fights on
record. Carpenter’s tactics throughout had been admirable. General Carr
was much surprised and pleased at the conduct of these black troopers,
and on his return to Fort Wallace telegraphed to General Sheridan that
“the officers and troops behaved admirably.” General Sheridan published
a general order highly commending the commander, the officers and the
men for this brilliant and gallant affair. Carpenter was brevetted
colonel in the Regular Army (his fifth brevet), and afterward received a
medal of honor for this fight and the relief of Forsyth. Well did he
deserve them both.—C. T. B.

-----

Footnote 39:

  Negro troops were often so styled by their white comrades in the
  service.—C. T. B.

Footnote 40:

  Luckily for Graham, just as he fell from his horse Amick’s men charged
  the Indians, who thereupon retreated. One of the troopers caught the
  horse and held him until the captain came running up. Carpenter’s
  prompt action in instantly throwing Amick’s detachment on the savages
  undoubtedly saved the lives of Graham and his men. As it was, it was a
  fearfully narrow escape for them.—C. T. B.

Footnote 41:

  Six wagons on one side, five on the other.—L.H.C.

Footnote 42:

  General Carr, while he used a rifle efficiently during the whole of
  the action, did not interfere with Carpenter’s arrangements; with rare
  self-restraint he refrained even from offering suggestions. Although
  he showed plenty of nerve and was entirely calm and collected
  throughout the hot affair, he is reported to have said after the fight
  that he thought he was in the tightest box in which he was ever caught
  in his life, and that there was nothing left for them all to do but to
  sell their lives as dearly as possible. He had never served on the
  plains with negro troopers before, and had no knowledge as to how they
  would behave against Indians—nobody had, for that matter.—C. T. B.

Footnote 43:

  When there are many wagons, the corral is formed with the wagons close
  together, axles touching, tongues and mules inward; but in this case
  they had to form an open corral with about twenty feet between the
  wagons. The horses, to the number of one hundred—the troops being
  reduced to that number by illness, hard work, and other causes—were
  forced inside the wagons in columns of four, each set of fours being
  tied together, with horse-holders detailed to look after them. The
  duty of the horse-holders was most important. They had always to be on
  watch to prevent a stampede. If the troops had been deprived of their
  horses on that open knoll their position would have been hopeless
  indeed. The dismounted men were formed in front and rear and on both
  sides of the corral, as Indian attacks must be expected from every
  direction. The plan made by General Carpenter explains the situation
  perfectly.—C. T. B.

Footnote 44:

  Just after the first repulse of the Indians, Graham went to General
  Carr very improperly (he had no business to communicate with him
  except through Carpenter, his immediate commanding officer), and
  suggested that he order the wagons abandoned, the teamsters mounted on
  the mules, and the whole party to retreat in that fashion as fast as
  possible. Carr, of course, referred the matter to Carpenter, who
  promptly refused to sanction any such manœuver. To leave the wagons,
  which afforded some protection on the hill, would be to enable six or
  seven hundred Indians to surround the hundred troopers in his command
  and invite annihilation. Carpenter assured Carr that as he had
  defeated the Indians once, he was certain that he could do it again.
  Carr wisely persisted in his determination not to interfere, and
  Graham had his suggestion decisively negatived by Carpenter. Graham
  deserved reprobation for his unmilitary action, _as well as for his
  foolish suggestion_.—C.T.B.




                              CHAPTER NINE
            A Further Discussion of the Beaver Creek Affair


When General Carpenter’s account of the fight on the Beaver Creek was
published serially, General Carr took exception to it in a public letter
to the editor of the periodical in which it appeared. I am permitted by
the editor to make extracts from this letter, which, with my own comment
and General Carpenter’s rejoinder, appear as follows:


                       I. General Carr’s Account

I do not think that General Sheridan sent orders for my escort to go
under command of Colonel Carpenter. I know that, after waiting with
General Sheridan at Fort Hayes for several days, he ordered me to go to
Fort Wallace, take an escort and go to find Royall, who had not been
heard from as expected.

While we were going over the “rough hills” Colonel Carpenter, and
perhaps some of the others, came up and remonstrated with me for
marching the command so hard; said they could not be responsible for its
effect on the horses, and when I insisted, asked me to take command and
be responsible. I said, “All right, I will take command; but you must
attend to the details. I will not appoint an adjutant and take the
office work” (detailing guards, stable duties, etc., etc.).

I had with me an officer of my regiment, Captain Kane, Fifth Cavalry,
and now wish I had appointed him adjutant and taken formal command.

Finding that the stream (Beaver Creek) was persistently hugging the
south side of the valley, on which we were traveling, creating bluffs
and ravines over which it was difficult to move the wagons, I determined
to cross to the north side, where the valley consisted of a gentle and
smooth slope.

I selected the camp in an “ox bow” bend of the creek, putting the tents
and wagons across the entrance, the guard at the bow and the animals
inside, selected a place for crossing, and ordered the banks to be cut
down to the bed of the creek, so that the wagons and animals could
cross.

In the Indian country I always had my commands up and under arms before
daylight, which is the most dangerous time; and next morning we were up,
had breakfast, the tents struck and the wagons packed, and were standing
’round the camp fire when Amick called out “Indians!”

I had intended to move camp across the creek and get fresh grass. Graham
had started on his trip, following a narrow path between the bluff and
the river bank. He was riding a fine horse called “Red Eye,” which had a
very deep chest and thin barrel. As he told me afterward, his saddle
began to slip back, but he waited to get down to fix it till he should
reach a more open place ahead at the mouth of a ravine, when _bang,
bang!_ came some shots. His horse dodged and jumped down the bank into
the creek, slipping the saddle farther back and kicking it clear, while
Graham landed on the shoulders of the horse and from there on the bed of
the creek. He turned back with his gun toward the bank, which protected
him while he fired, till I sent Lieutenant Amick with some skirmishers,
who covered his retreat. His two men jumped their horses down into and
up out of the creek and fell back, and when we got the men all in I
moved the command up to and over the crossing I had prepared and out to
the open slope on the north side of the valley. As we had not found
Royall but had found the Indians, or, rather, they had found us, it was
of no use to go farther down the Beaver, and I determined to move toward
home.

The Indians kept coming out from those bluffs, crossing the creek and
following us, and I arranged the wagons in two columns, with Carpenter’s
company in front and on the flanks, and Graham’s company in rear, where
I was also.

Some of the Indians got on our flanks as skirmishers, a few in front and
more in rear, while the main body got into two columns, about like the
two halves of a regiment in columns of four, marching steadily and
gradually, closing on us by increasing their gait. I estimated them at
seven hundred warriors; we had about one hundred colored soldiers. Their
chiefs were marching between the heads of their columns; they had a flag
and a bugle. I sent word to Carpenter to turn more toward the higher
ground, away from the timber along the creek, which Indians were using
for cover. Pretty soon he began to trot, and I had to send Captain Kane
to him with orders to go slower, for fear of a stampede. I was in the
rear near Graham’s troop. He was one of the bravest men I ever saw. He
would amuse himself with the Indians by concealing men in hollows,
taking away their horses till Indians came up for them to shoot at, then
charging up with their horses, mounting and bringing them off. Most of
the men were cool, but I saw one man loading and firing when the Indians
were a mile away. I called to him to stop, but he paid no attention,
seemed to be dazed, and I had to go up and lay my hand on him before he
obeyed my order. As the Indians got closer, one of the men dismounted to
shoot. When he tried to remount, his horse got scared and edged away
from him, and I rode up on the off-side, got hold of the rein, and let
his horse come against mine. Then he put his foot in the stirrup, made a
leap and got his leg over, when we both cantered off—just in time. He
lost his cap, and we lost a dog which was playing about between us and
the Indians, interested in the shooting till he got near enough to them
to be killed. These were our only losses.

As the main body of the Indians got closer and increased their gait to
the charge, the leading wagons turned toward each other and stopped. The
others turned their mules inside of those in front of them, lapping onto
and tying to the wagons, forming a corral in shape of a flat-iron, and
the horsemen rode inside, dismounted, tied their horses, and began to
fire at the Indians who were thronging around us. One Indian, on a
clay-bank pony and wearing a red blanket, with no arms, rode ’round and
’round us within fifty or one hundred yards, and seemed to bear a
charmed life. I shot at him several times, and Grover said he also shot
at him till he began to think the Indian had strong medicine which
protected him—Grover was a squaw man and had imbibed some of their
superstitions. He was shooting a Sharp’s carbine, and, taking it down to
reload, happened to notice that he had the sight set for five hundred
yards and had been shooting over the Indian’s head.

I had a Spencer carbine which had been sent me by the company for trial.
With it I shot down an Indian, who fell and lay within thirty yards of
the corral. He was not dead, and I afterward talked with him through
Grover. He said his name was Little Crow, and mentioned the name of his
father, whom Grover said he knew. He was young—about eighteen. I asked
him why they attacked us. He said because we came on their creek. He
told where their camp was, so that one week from that day, which was
Sunday, October 18th, 1868, I found them with my own regiment, the
Fifth, had a fight lasting two days and two nights, and drove them out
of Kansas.

While the fight was going on our soldiers showed great bravery. While
inside the wagon corral they would rush from one side to the other,
wherever the Indians appeared, so as to fire at them. Their officers did
not seem to keep them in their places, and, after it was over, I
reprimanded them for not commanding their men. After the Indians were
repulsed we went around and rearranged the wagons, got out sacks,
cracker-boxes, etc., fixed breastworks in anticipation of another
attack, and then sat down and ate our lunch.

It was two o’clock. Our soldiers wanted to scalp the dead Indians, of
whom about ten were lying too near the corral for their friends to carry
off. We prevented this till, while we were going around the corral
rearranging, the soldiers got the chance to scalp them. Two were lying
wounded when two soldiers approached them; one drew his bow and sent an
arrow through the thighs of one of the men. The arrow passed through the
fleshy part of one thigh and entered the other and stopped against the
bone. It had to be cut in two to extract it. Years after, at Fort
Leavenworth, a first sergeant showed me an arrow-head with the point
marred, and said he was that man.

The other wounded Indian had a pistol, and shot the other soldier in the
calf of his leg. These were the only men we had hurt. It was then that
there was some talk of abandoning the wagons and going direct for the
railroad. With the wagons, we had, of course, to go by routes over which
wheeled vehicles could travel. I do not recall whether Captain Graham
advocated this, but there would have been no impropriety in his stating
his views to me. Any officer can talk to his commander, and I had been
giving orders from time to time directly to him and his men. We sat
there eating our lunch and talking with each other and the wounded
Indian who lay in front of us, when he made a motion with his hand back
toward me. I asked Grover what he meant. He said, “He wants you to go
away; says his heart is bad.” This pleased me very much. I had been
watching the Indians, who had fallen back to some rising ground nearly a
mile off. They were moving about, pow-wowing, and, I supposed, preparing
for a new attack. They seemed to be diminishing in numbers, but I
thought they were trying to get around to some place where they would
have a better chance at us. I really did not expect to get out of that
fix. If those Indians had had sufficient resolution, being seven to one,
they ought to have used us up. When the wounded Indian made this motion,
I took it to mean that he knew they were giving up. He could see them as
well as we could, and knew better what they were doing. I suppose that
those who remained were the friends of the dead, waiting for us to go.

I gave orders to reload the wagons and move out. Some of the Indians
followed us for several miles, but did not again attack.

Colonel Carpenter did not offer the command to me at the first attack in
the morning, nor did I decline it. I was exercising the command all the
time. One of the articles of war provides that “when troops join and do
duty together the highest in rank of the line of the army shall command
the whole, and give the orders needful for the service,” and I could not
have avoided the responsibility.

The foregoing narrative shows that I was not a “passive spectator,” nor
did I “refrain from advice or suggestion,” nor from giving orders as
required.

I, no doubt, said that I was a guest, and did not interfere
unnecessarily; but my long experience on the plains and with Indians
rendered it incumbent on me to exercise my judgment.

                                                   EUGENE A. CARR,
                       Brevet Major-General and Congressional Medallist.

                  *       *       *       *       *

With reference to this letter from General Carr I beg to point out:

That General Carr in his letter practically admits in two places that he
was not in command. First, when he writes of Captain Kane, “I wish I had
appointed him adjutant and taken formal command.” Second, when he
writes: “I, no doubt, said that I was a guest, and did not interfere
unnecessarily.”

I do not see, therefore, that there is really any serious discrepancy
between the account of General Carpenter and that of General Carr. I
presume, if there is, I am more to blame than any one for the note to
which General Carr takes exception. The original wording of that note
was, possibly, not happy, and probably conveyed more than I intended. I
did not suppose that any one thought that General Carr sat around and
twiddled his thumbs while the fighting was going on. I have made changes
in the note, which appears in this book in its amended form.

It must not be forgotten that General Carpenter received his medal of
honor in part for this fight, and he certainly would not have received
it had he not been in command.

Here follows a communication from General Carpenter on the subject. This
discussion, I think, settles the matter in a way which I trust will be
satisfactory to the friends of both of these distinguished officers.


                     II. General Carpenter’s Reply

I was very much surprised in reading General Carr’s contention that he
was in command of the troops who constituted his escort to enable him to
join the Fifth Cavalry, and who were in the action on the Beaver in
October, 1868. The account I wrote is from my recollection, and from
letters written home at the time, and I repeated what I thought there
was no question about, and had no desire to ignore General Carr or any
one concerned.

The two troops of the Tenth Cavalry, a portion of the garrison at Fort
Wallace, under my command as the senior officer, were ordered to act as
escort for General Carr, then Major, Fifth Cavalry.

I am quite positive that General Carr was offered the command by me,
knowing him to be senior, and that he declined it. Many officers have
been escorted by troops without taking command of the escort although of
senior rank. As the troops were to escort this officer, of course he was
consulted about the direction of the march, the time for camping, and
concerning many other details of greater or less importance, but he
never took formal command. If he did not, then, it would be manifestly
improper for him to issue orders directly to subordinate officers or
men. The officers and men were mentioned in General Orders by General
Sheridan in 1868 for their gallantry and bravery in this action, and it
is stated that they were escorting General Carr.

Thirty-five years have passed since the affair, and I never heard of any
question about who commanded the troops engaged. This length of time
naturally accounts for some difference of memory, and no two narratives
may be expected altogether to agree. As mentioned before, Carr was
consulted frequently during the expedition and his wishes were carried
out, as was proper under the circumstances.

Some of the details mentioned by General Carr I do not remember, but I
certainly regarded myself as being in command of the troops during the
fight and gave directions as I have stated in accordance with my
recollection, and selected the ground on which the wagons were corralled
and the Indians repulsed.

I do not know of any officers being reprimanded, but when we returned to
Fort Wallace we were informed that General Carr had reported to General
Sheridan that “the officers and men had behaved admirably,”

I inclose a copy of General Field Orders, No. 4, Headquarters Department
of the Missouri, dated October 27, 1868, issued by order of General
Sheridan to commend the conduct of the troops engaged in the combat on
the Beaver, October 18, 1868:

                        Headquarters Department of the Missouri.
                    In the Field, Fort Hays, Kansas, October 27, 1868.

  General Field Orders, No. 4.

  The attention of the officers and soldiers of this department is
  called to the engagement with hostile Indians on Beaver Creek,
  Kansas, October 18, 1868, in which a detachment of cavalry
  (escorting Brevet Major-Gen’l E. A. Carr, Major, Fifth Cavalry to
  his Regiment) under the command of Brevet Lieut.-Col. Louis H.
  Carpenter, Captain, Tenth Cavalry, consisting of Companies I, Tenth
  Cavalry, under Capt. George W. Graham and 1st Lieut.-Major J. Amick,
  and H, Tenth Cavalry, under 1st Lieut. Charles Banzhaf and 2d Lieut.
  Louis H. Orleman, engaged about five hundred (500) Indians for
  several hours, inflicting a loss on the savages of ten (10) killed
  and many wounded, losing three (3) enlisted men wounded.

  The major-general commanding desires to tender his thanks for the
  gallantry and bravery displayed by this small command against so
  large a body of Indians.

  By command of Major-General Sheridan.

                                             J. SCHUYLER CROSBY,
                                           Brevet Lieut.-Col. A. D. C.
                                               A. A. A. General.

It is expressly stated that the detachment of cavalry (escorting Brevet
Major-General Eugene A. Carr, Major, Fifth Cavalry, to his regiment) was
“_under the command of Brevet Lieut.-Col. Louis H. Carpenter, Captain,
Tenth Cavalry_.”

The records show, further, that Brevet Lieut.-Col. Louis H. Carpenter
was brevetted colonel for gallant and meritorious conduct in the
engagement with Indians on Beaver Creek, Kansas, October 18, 1868. This
appointment was made on the recommendation of General Sheridan, and was
undoubtedly conferred on this officer as being in command of the troops
during the fight. Others behaved gallantly and their conduct deserved
recognition, but this was the only brevet given at the time.

                                                     LOUIS H. CARPENTER.




                              CHAPTER TEN
                       The Battle of the Washita


                I. Custer and the Famous Seventh Cavalry

A fighter of fighters and a soldier of soldiers was that _beau sabreur_
of the American Army, George Armstrong Custer, “Old Curly” to his men,
“The White Chief with the Yellow Hair,” or, more briefly, “Long Hair” to
the Indians. From Bull Run to Appomattox his career was fairly meteoric.
Second lieutenant in the Army of the Potomac at twenty-one, fresh from
West Point, a brigadier-general at twenty-three, a major-general at
twenty-four, and commander of the third cavalry division, which, in the
six months preceding the downfall of the Confederacy, had taken one
hundred and eleven guns, sixty-five battle-flags, and over ten thousand
prisoners of war, without losing a flag or gun, and without a failure to
capture whatever it went for—such was his record.[45]

I have heard my father tell of the impression made by the dashing young
soldier whose spirited horse ran away on Pennsylvania Avenue at the
Grand Review in Washington, in spite of the efforts of his rider—a
peerless horseman—to restrain him. Custer’s hat fell off, his long,
yellow curls floated back in the wind, making a dashing and romantic
picture. He was a man of superb physique and magnificent strength. I saw
him when I was a boy, and I have never forgotten him. His devoted wife,
in one of the three charming books in which she has told the deathless
romance of their married life on the frontier, relates how, on one
occasion, riding by her side, with his left arm he lifted her out of the
saddle high in the air, held her there for a moment or two, then gently
replaced her on her horse. No fatigue was too great for him to surmount,
no duty, however arduous, ever caused him to give back.[46]

Reams have been written about his unfortunate campaign upon the Little
Big Horn, in which he went down to such awful destruction, but little is
known of some of the exploits of his early career on the plains. After
the war, more fortunate than most of the younger general officers who
were forced to content themselves with captaincies or less, General
Custer was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of the new Seventh Regular
Cavalry, a regiment which was born with him, lived with him, and a large
part of which died with him.

The officers of the regiment were a set of unusual men. Custer himself
was allowed considerable voice in the selection of them, and such a body
of officers had been rarely assembled in one command. Most of the
troopers were not at first of the high grade to which they afterward
attained. The best men, in the ranks at least, at the close of the Civil
War, had had enough of fighting. They wanted to get back to civil life
once more. Not frequently it was only the inferior soldiers who could be
induced to re-enlist from the volunteer into the regular regiments which
were being organized or reorganized.

There were in the ranks, however, a leaven of veterans who were soldiers
from love as well as from habit. With these as a nucleus, Custer and his
officers, by a judicious weeding out and a rigorous course of
discipline, soon gathered a body of troopers than which there were none
finer in the service of the United States, nor, in fact, in any other
service. Owing to the fact that the colonel, a distinguished general
officer in the war, was on detached service commanding a department, the
regiment was practically continuously under the command of Custer until
his death in 1876.

The duty that devolved upon it was the protection of the settlers in
Kansas. The job was no sinecure. In the last half of the year 1868
statistics, which do not pretend to be comprehensive, for they are only
facts reported officially to the headquarters of the Department of the
Missouri, show one hundred and fifty-seven people killed, fifty-seven
wounded, including forty-one scalped, fourteen women outraged and
murdered, one man, four women and twenty-four children taken into
captivity, one thousand six hundred and twenty-seven horses, mules and
cattle stolen, twenty-four ranches or settlements destroyed, eleven
stage coaches attacked, and four wagon trains annihilated. This with a
total loss to the Indians of eleven killed and one wounded. Truly there
was a reign of blood upon that frontier. Every man murdered was also
frightfully and disgustingly mutilated. This record takes no account of
soldiers who were killed.

In one instance ten troopers under Lieutenant Kidder, of the Second
Cavalry, with a message for Custer’s command, then in the field, were
overtaken and slaughtered to a man after a desperate defense. When
Custer came upon the scene of battle the bodies were so mutilated that
it was impossible to tell one from the other. The only distinguishing
mark upon any one of them was a shirt neckband made of a material of a
peculiar marking, which was yet a common article of wearing apparel at
that time. It was by this shirt collar that the body of Lieutenant
Kidder was subsequently identified by his mother and taken East for
burial.

As usual, there was strife between the Indian agents and the army. There
always has been, there always will be. The agents invariably declared
that there was peace in the land and sought to embarrass the army in its
efforts to protect the frontier. Popular indignation, however, at last
forced the government to act, and the campaign was long and arduous
during the latter part of the summer of 1868.

The success of the soldiers was not pronounced at first. The extent of
territory was great, the force available small, the Indians exceedingly
mobile, and the troopers had as yet scarcely learned the rules of the
game, so that it was a matter of extreme difficulty to get at any
considerable body of Indians and inflict a crushing blow. As we have
seen, General Forsyth’s command barely escaped annihilation in the great
battle of the Arickaree. Matters dragged on, however, with nothing
decisive happening until the summer and fall had slipped away and winter
was at hand. The Indians rarely did any fighting in the winter. It was
difficult and dangerous for horsemen to move on the exposed prairies in
the winter season, and hitherto fighting had been abandoned with the
advent of the cold. The Indians, during the winter, naturally tended
southward, seeking a less severe climate if it might be had, and from
November to April had been considered a closed season.


                     II. The March in the Blizzard

General Sheridan, however, who had command of the department, determined
to inaugurate a winter campaign in the hope that the Indians, who would
naturally congregate in large villages in secluded spots sheltered by
trees along the river banks, might be rounded up and defeated
decisively. The force at his disposal for these projected operations
consisted of eleven troops of the Seventh Cavalry, four companies of
infantry, and the Nineteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, a regiment of
settlers and old soldiers which had been organized for the campaign.

The expedition was under command of Sheridan himself. The rendezvous was
at Camp Supply, in the Indian Territory, about one hundred miles south
of Fort Dodge, Kansas. No Indians—in any considerable body, that is—had
been seen by any of the scouts sent out, and no outrages were reported.
It was evident that the hostiles were lying snugly concealed somewhere
for the winter season. Sheridan determined to detach Custer and his
regiment from the command and send them scouting farther southward,
while with the rest of the force, so soon as it should be in condition
to march, he himself would explore the country in other directions.

Custer received his orders on the 22d of November, late at night.
Reveillé was sounded at four o’clock on the twenty-third. The
thermometer was below zero. There was a foot of snow upon the ground,
and it was still coming down furiously when Custer reported to Sheridan
that he was ready to move.

“What do you think of this?” asked Sheridan, alluding to the weather.

“It’s all right,” answered Custer, cheerfully; “we can move. The Indians
can’t.”

There was a hasty breakfast, coffee and hardtack, each trooper standing
by the head of his horse, and the column moved off. The undaunted band
of the regiment, surely made up of the most heroic and hardy musicians
that ever tooted horn or thumped sheepskin, in gallant style played them
out and into the terrible blizzard then raging, with the old marching
tune “The Girl I Left Behind Me,” which was more fancy than truth, for
there were no “girls” with that expedition, save one hard-featured old
campaigner, red-headed at that, who went along as the commanding
officer’s cook at her own earnest request.

No one can realize the force of a blizzard on the plains who has not, as
I have, experienced it. The guides almost immediately declared
themselves unable to lead the regiment. Every cavalry officer in the
field carries a pocket compass. Custer knew where he wanted to go. With
his own compass to show the way he led the regiment forward. The men
stumbled on through the awful snow and hurricane until two o’clock, when
they were stopped on the bank of Wolf Creek, fifteen miles from the
starting point. First caring for the exhausted horses, they made camp,
and as the wagons came up fires were soon burning, meals were prepared,
and some of the effects of the deadly cold were dissipated.

The next morning, November 24th, they marched down Wolf Creek. The snow
had stopped falling, but the temperature stood at seven degrees below
zero. The 25th they continued the march. Many another commander would
have been stopped by the fearful weather; but Custer was known as a man
who would press on as long as the mules could draw the wagons, and when
they could not he would abandon the wagons and live off the mules. He
kept on. On the twenty-sixth, Thanksgiving Day, arriving at the north
bank of the Canadian River, he despatched Major Elliott, the second in
command of the regiment, with three troops on a scouting expedition up
the river, which he proposed to cross with the balance of his men. There
was no Thanksgiving dinner awaiting them, and the remembrance of the
holiday spent under happier circumstances but aggravated their present
condition.

The river was frozen, but not sufficiently so to bear the regiment. They
had to break through the ice and find a ford in the icy water, and it
was after eleven o’clock in the morning before the whole command
succeeded in passing to the south side. Scarcely had they done so when
they noticed a horseman galloping at full speed toward them on the other
side. As soon as he came near they recognized him as Scout Corbin, one
of Elliott’s guides. He brought the startling news that Elliott had come
upon the trail of an Indian war party, at least one hundred and fifty
strong, and not twenty-four hours old, which led to the south side of
the river. The scout was given a fresh horse and ordered to return to
Elliott, who was directed to follow the trail cautiously until eight
o’clock at night, at which time he was to halt and wait for Custer, who
would leave the wagon train and follow him immediately.

Calling the officers to him, Custer briefly gave his orders for the
advance. The wagon train was to be left under the care of an officer and
eighty men. Each trooper was to take one day’s rations of coffee and
hardtack and one hundred rounds of ammunition upon his person, together
with a little forage for his horse, and the regiment was to push on at
the highest possible speed to join Elliott.

When it came to designate an officer to remain with the train, the
detail fell upon Captain Louis McLane Hamilton, whose turn it was to act
as officer of the day in camp. This young man bore two historic names.
McLane was the second in command of Light Horse Harry Lee’s famous
cavalry in the Revolution, and he was the grandson of the great
Alexander Hamilton. He demurred bitterly to being left in the rear in
command of the train under such circumstances. There was no help for it,
however, until Custer finally informed him that if he could get any one
to take his detail he could go.

It was discovered upon inquiry that one of the officers of the regiment
had become almost helpless from snow blindness, the glare of the ice and
snow being something terrible, especially upon an open prairie such as
they were then traversing. This officer was entirely unfit for active
campaigning, but such was his zeal to go forward that he concealed his
ailment until Hamilton’s scrutiny brought it forth. To him, therefore,
was committed the charge of the wagon train, much against his wish, and
Hamilton was allowed to go at the head of his troop.


                       III. The Trail in the Snow

It had grown somewhat warmer during the day. The top crust of the snow
became soft, and the horses sank through it to their knees. There was no
road or trail, of course, but the command advanced straight across the
open prairie toward the point where Corbin had indicated that Elliott
had picked up the trail. The several troops were successively placed in
the advance for the fatiguing and arduous labor of breaking up the road.
There was every desire to spare the horses, but they were nevertheless
urged to the last limit to overtake Elliott. Under such circumstances it
was problematical whether they would find him alive; for the Indians,
who were believed to be in great force, might discover him, ambush him,
attack him, and wipe him out as Fetterman had been annihilated, or as
Forsyth had been overwhelmed.

During the afternoon Custer and his command struck Elliott’s trail, but
it was not until nine o’clock at night that they overtook him. They
found him encamped on the banks of a little stream and thoroughly
concealed in the timber. With relief the regiment halted, and taking
advantage of the deep ravine through which the creek ran, they managed
to build a few fires, which, being well screened, were invisible a short
distance away. Over the fires the men made coffee, which, with the
hardtack, constituted their only meal since morning—a Thanksgiving
dinner indeed.

Elliott had followed the trail, which was still well defined, until
eight o’clock, and then had halted in accordance with the orders of
Custer, and had waited for his commander. A hasty council was held and
some were for taking up the advance at once. But it was pointed out that
the moon would rise in one hour and by waiting they would have the
benefit of the moonlight in following the Indian trail. Besides, the
short rest would do the command good. Saddles were taken off, the horses
rubbed down and sparingly fed from the scanty supply of forage. At ten
the march was once more resumed in this order:

First of all, riding some distance ahead of the main body, were two
Osage Indian scouts. One of these was Little Beaver, who was chief of a
small band of Indian auxiliaries which had volunteered for the campaign.
Next to them came other Indians, several famous frontiersmen, California
Joe and Scout Corbin, and a hideous half Negro, half Indian interpreter
whose name was Romero, but whom the soldiers facetiously dubbed Romeo,
because he was so ugly; then General Custer and his staff, and then,
some distance in rear, the successive troops of the regiment in a column
of fours. About three miles from their camping place Little Beaver came
back to Custer in considerable agitation and declared that he smelled
fire. Nobody else smelled anything, but at his insistence the command
was halted, and he and one of his men went forward with Custer and one
or two of the scouts until they had gone a mile from the halting place.

Sure enough, after surmounting a little hill, they saw ahead of them and
some distance away the embers of a fire. The advance party halted.
Little Beaver and the other Indians snaked their course over the ground,
taking advantage of every cover to learn what they could. With beating
hearts the general and the others watched them. Would they stumble upon
the foemen then and there? They waited, concealed beneath the hillock,
until Little Beaver returned to tell them that the fire had evidently
been kindled by the boys guarding the herds of ponies during the day. At
any rate it had almost gone out, no one was there, and the way was safe
for the present, although the main camp was probably not far distant.

Orders were sent back to the regiment to advance but to keep its present
distance behind Custer and the scouts. The command proceeded with the
utmost caution, with an excitement in their veins at the stealthy
approach with its possible consequences which made them almost
insensible to the frightful cold. About half after twelve o’clock on the
morning of the twenty-seventh, Custer saw the leading Indian suddenly
sink down behind a hill and wave his hand quickly backward. The whole
party dismounted, and the commanding officer with one of his scouts
crawled to the hill where the Indian lay. Whispering a word or two,
Little Beaver pointed straight in front of him.

Half a mile away a huge black blotch was tremulously moving on the snow
in the moonlight. Experienced eyes recognized a herd of ponies. Where
the ponies were there were the Indians also. Custer watched the scene
for a moment, and upon the still air—the wind had died and the night
though bitter cold was intensely quiet—he heard the sound of a bell,
evidently tied to the neck of the leader of the herd. Dogs barked, and
as they waited they marked the thin, shrill cry of a little child. It
was an Indian camp beyond peradventure. Beyond it, among the bare and
leafless trees, gleamed in the moonlight the ice-bound shores of a
half-frozen river—the Washita.

The general, as tender-hearted a man as ever lived, and as kindly for
all his fights, tells us how strangely that infant’s cry heard on that
bitter winter night moved him, appealed to him. It filled his mind with
natural regret that war had to be waged and an attack delivered upon a
camp in which there were women and children; but the stern necessities
of the case permitted no other course.

[Illustration:

  _Copyright by D. F. Barry_
]

      MAJ. JOEL H. ELLIOTT[47]          CAPT. LOUIS McL. HAMILTON[47]
         CAPT. JAMES M. BELL                 CAPT. J. W. BENTEEN

     SOME OFFICERS OF THE SEVENTH CAVALRY IN THE WASHITA EXPEDITION

The band of Indians under his gaze was that of Black Kettle,[48] Head
Chief of the Cheyennes since the death of Roman Nose, one of the most
ferocious and brutal of the Plains Indians. The blood of scores was upon
his hands and upon the hands of his followers as well. Torture, infamy,
treachery, shame beyond estimation, had stained that band. Even then in
the camp there were helpless captives, poor women whose fate cannot be
described or dwelt upon.

When Custer had satisfied himself at last that he had found the camp for
which he had been searching—which appeared to be a very large one from
the number of lodges which they thought they could make out in the
distance—leaving the scouts to observe the Indians, he tramped back
through the snow to the command, and by messengers summoned the officers
about him. Taking off their sabers for the moment, so that their
clanking would not betray them, the officers crept to the crest of the
hill and made themselves as familiar with the situation as they could by
such inspection.

There Custer gave them their final orders. The regiment was divided into
four squadrons; Major Elliott, with three troops, G, H, and M, was
ordered to circle cautiously to the left and get in the rear of the
Indian camp. Captain Thompson, with troops B and F, was directed to make
a long detour to the right and join Elliott. Captain Myers, with troops
E and I, was commanded to move a shorter distance to the right and take
position on the left of Thompson, while Custer himself, with the four
remaining troops—Captain Hamilton commanding one squadron, comprising
troops A and C, Captain West, another, of troops D and K, with the
Osages and scouts and forty sharp-shooters under Adjutant Cook—was to
approach the village from the point where they then stood.

Not a sound was to be made, not a shot fired, not a signal given. The
attack would be delivered at dawn. When they heard the bugler sounding
the charge in the still air of the morning they were to rush in
immediately. In order not to impede their movements the men were
directed to remove their overcoats and leave them in care of the guard
in the rear before the attack was delivered. Then, after hearty
handshakes and whispered salutations, the officers assembled their
several squadrons and silently started out upon the long detours
necessary to enable them to reach their designated positions.

The Indian village was located in the valley of a small river in the
Indian Territory, an affluent of the Canadian called the Washita. It was
in a deep depression, below the surrounding country, and was well
sheltered by trees on the banks of the stream, here easily fordable. By
the time all preparations had been made in Custer’s own detachment it
still wanted some four hours to dawn. The troops with Custer had nothing
to do but wait where they were, and a weary, freezing wait it was. So
insistent was the general that there should be no noise that he refused
to allow the men even to beat their breasts to keep up circulation, or
to stamp their feet to ward off the numbing cold. Conversation was
forbidden. They were dealing with a warrior who was the most watchful of
foemen, with men who could detect an enemy, as the Osage had the fire a
mile away, seemingly by instinct. They must take every precaution. The
men dismounted and stood uncomplainingly by the side of their horses.
Some of them wrapped themselves in their overcoats, and attaching their
bridle reins to their wrists, lay down on the ground and actually went
to sleep.

About an hour before dawn Custer despatched the last squadron under
Captain Myers, who had but a short distance to go, and then, as the
first pale grayness of the morning began to steal over the eastern hills
and mingle with the moonlight, he gave orders to call the troops to
attention. The first sergeants went through the ranks and by a touch of
the hand woke the sleeping men. Stiff and numb with the cold, they
staggered to their feet, took off their overcoats, left them under the
care of a small guard, and mounted their horses. Their sabers had been
left behind and they were armed with revolvers and Spencer carbines. The
officers quickly formed up their troops and with whispered words placed
themselves at the head.

The troops were deployed in line, Hamilton’s squadron to the right,
West’s to the left. Cook’s sharp-shooters were about forty yards in
advance of the left, dismounted, their horses being left with the guard.
Some distance in front of all the rest rode Custer. Following him was
his bugler. Next to the bugler was the indomitable regimental band. The
orders were, in Hamilton’s last words, “Now men, keep cool; fire low,
and not too rapidly.”

The Osages had been somewhat doubtful as to the issue of the attack.
They had made medicine, war-painted themselves and arrayed themselves
for battle, but with a great deal of trepidation. They expected the
white soldiers would be beaten, and they reasoned that in that case
their allies would endeavor to purchase their own salvation by
surrendering the Osages to the vengeance of their enemies. They
determined to take such a position as would enable them to be governed
by circumstances in their movements—so they could either fight or fly.
They knew the reverence with which the soldiers regarded their flag.
Never having been in action with the white man, they concluded that the
flag would be kept in a place of safety and if they stood religiously
close to the banner they would be in a good position to attack or
retreat as circumstances required. Consequently, they rallied on the
flag. For once the red man’s reasoning led him into trouble, for, as it
happened, and as it was to be expected, the flag was in the thick of the
fight, and, to give them credit, after they saw their mistake and saw no
means of rectifying it, the Osages fought as bravely and as efficiently
as the rest.

The command went silently down the hill, making for the center of the
valley and the trees where lay the Indian camp. The excitement of the
situation was intense. Nobody knew just what he was about to encounter.
No one could tell whether the other troops had succeeded in getting
within supporting distance or not. But Custer knew his officers, and he,
rightly in this instance—alas, that it might not have been so in other
cases!—depended upon them. Nearer and nearer the line approached the
village. Clearer and clearer came the light from the pale sky. Little,
hazy clouds of smoke floated above the tepees under the trees, but aside
from that there was yet no evidence of life among them.

However cautiously it was conducted the advance of such a body of men
over the snow made a great deal of noise. They had come so near the camp
that they could not hope to remain undiscovered another moment. At the
instant Custer was about to give the signal a rifle shot was heard on
the other side of the camp. At first it was thought to be an accidental
discharge from one of the other attacking parties. It was afterward
learned that shot was fired by Black Kettle himself, who had heard the
noise of the advancing troops, for every squadron had reached its
appointed place, and practically at the same time they commenced their
advance upon the devoted town. So soon as the crack of the rifle broke
upon the still air the bugle sounded the charge.

With the first notes Custer turned to the band. Each trumpeter had his
trumpet to his lips, each drummer his drum-sticks in the air.

“Play!” he shouted, and for the first time in action the stirring notes
of the tune now peculiar to the Seventh Cavalry as its battle
music—“Garry Owen”—broke on the air. Three answering bugle calls rang
out from the different squadrons on all sides of the village. The
cavalry charged, the dismounted soldiers advanced on the run. They all
cheered.


                     IV. The Attack in the Morning

The village was strung along the banks of the creek and the troopers
fell upon it like a storm. The Indians, completely surprised,
nevertheless did not lose a moment. They poured out of the lodges, and
seeking the shelter of the trees or standing knee-deep in the icy water
of the river, with the banks acting as rifle-pits, returned the fire of
the white men. A few of them succeeded in breaking away, but most of
them had to fight where they were, and right well they fought.

Brave Captain Hamilton, who had sought the detail with such zeal, was
shot from his horse and instantly killed. Captain Barnitz received a
wound through the breast under his heart. Here and there others fell.

Strict orders had been given to spare the women and children. Most of
the squaws and children remained hidden in the tepees. Others took part
in the defense. The various troops scattered throughout the village and
the fighting was hand-to-hand of a most vigorous character. Captain
Benteen, galloping forward, was approached by an Indian boy about
fourteen years of age on horseback. The boy was armed with a revolver.
As the captain drew near he called out to the lad that his life would be
safe if he would throw away his weapon. Fearing he could not understand
him he made peace signs to him. For reply the boy leveled his weapon and
shot at the captain. The bullet missed him. The Indian fired a second
time and the bullet cut through the sleeve of Benteen’s coat. The
captain was still making signs of amity and friendship when the boy
fired a third time and hit his horse. As he raised the pistol to fire a
fourth time the officer was forced to shoot him dead.

One squaw seized a little white boy, a captive, and broke for the river.
She got into hiding in some underbrush where she might have remained
unmolested, but such was her malignity that she busied herself by taking
pot-shots at the galloping troops with her revolver. They captured her
when her revolver was empty and then discovered that she had been
fighting them in spite of a broken leg.

The Indians rallied in certain places favorable for defense. In their
desperation seventeen braves threw themselves into a little depression
in the ground and refused to surrender, fighting until all were killed.
In a ravine running from the river thirty-eight made a heroic defense
until they were all shot. In all, one hundred and three were killed,
including Black Kettle, the chief.

The furious fighting had lasted one hour. The village was now in
possession of the troops. A number of officers and men had been wounded
and a temporary hospital was established in the middle of the village.
Details were sent through the lodges to rout out the squaws and
children, and a roll-call was ordered.

Custer was dismayed to find that Major Elliott and fourteen men,
including Sergeant-Major Kennedy and three corporals, were missing.
Where they had gone to no one at first could imagine. Finally a trooper
stated that a number of Indians had escaped in the gap between Elliott
and Thompson, and that he had seen Elliott with a few troopers break
away in pursuit of them. An order was given for a troop to search for
them, but before it could get away Indians were perceived in a heavy
force on the bluffs directly in front of the command. Custer had
succeeded in killing practically the whole of Black Kettle’s band, and
as the Indians who had escaped had been forced to run for their lives,
naked as they came from the lodges, he could not understand the
appearance, just out of range of his men, of this portentous and
constantly increasing force arrayed in full war panoply.

Inquiry among the captives disclosed the fact that the valley had been
chosen as the winter headquarters for the principal bands of the Kiowas,
Arapahoes, Cheyennes, “Dog Soldiers,”[49] Comanches, and even a
wandering band of Apaches. There were at least two thousand warriors in
this assemblage. At that moment the men who had been guarding the
overcoats and the lead horses came running in saying that they had been
driven off by a heavy force of Indians. The situation was indeed
critical.

Something had to be done at once. Custer dismounted his men, threw them
out in a half circle about the camp, and prepared for battle. The
Indians did not delay in delivering it. Led by Little Raven, an
Arapahoe, and Satanta,[50] a famous Kiowa, and Black Kettle’s successor,
Little Rock, they at once attacked. A fierce battle was on and Custer’s
ammunition was running low. The troops were now fighting for their
lives. They had not expected anything of this kind. Fortunately, at this
critical juncture a four-mule wagon came dashing through the Indian
line. The Indians, being occupied in fighting, did not observe it until
it was right upon them. Driving the wagon was Major Bell, the
quartermaster, from the train. With him was a small escort. He had
loaded the wagon with ammunition and galloped toward the sound of the
fighting. With the fresh supplies, therefore, the troops at last made a
bold charge which drove the Indians headlong down the valley, during
which Little Rock, striving to rally his braves, was killed.

Custer now set fire to the lodges, totally destroying them and their
contents. What to do with the ponies of the herd which had been captured
in spite of the efforts of the squaws to run off with them, was a
problem. It was impossible, under the circumstances, to drive them back
to the camp. To turn them loose would have allowed them to fall into the
hands of other Indians for use in future warfare. They had to be shot.
It was a most unpleasant and repulsive duty for the soldiers, but there
was no alternative. The whole herd was slaughtered. It took an hour and
a half to kill them, and those engaged in the work said they had never
done anything so harrowing and distressing.

By this time it was late in the afternoon. The Indians from the other
villages, finding they were pursued but a short distance, had
reassembled and once more prepared for attack. It was necessary for
Custer to retreat at once. He put every available man on horseback,
threw out skirmishing parties, the colors were brought up, the
indefatigable band started playing, and the party advanced gaily up the
valley toward the Indians. As he hoped and planned, they immediately
reasoned that he would not advance with such confidence against such an
overwhelming force, unless he was supported by heavy reinforcements to
his command. After a short resistance they broke and fled.

It was night by this time, and Custer lost no time in getting out of the
valley. The weather was still frightfully cold, and his men were without
their overcoats, for they had, of course, not recovered them, and were
almost perishing. They got back in safety, however, to Camp Supply,
having accomplished the object of their expedition in dealing a decisive
blow to the Indians. More than that, they had shown the Indians, who
trusted for immunity to the season, that winter and summer were alike to
the American soldier.

The Indian loss was one hundred and three killed in the village,
including Black Kettle; an unknown number, believed to be large, killed
and wounded during the all-day fighting, including Little Rock; the
capture of fifty-three squaws and children; eight hundred and
seventy-five ponies, eleven hundred and twenty-three buffalo robes and
skins; the destruction of over five hundred pounds of powder and one
thousand pounds of lead; four thousand arrows, seven hundred pounds of
tobacco, besides rifles, pistols, saddle-bows, lariats, immense
quantities of dried beef, and other winter provisions; in short, the
complete destruction of the village and the annihilation of the band.

The losses of the regiment in the engagements were one officer and
fourteen men missing (Elliott and his party), one officer and five men
killed, three officers and eleven men wounded. General Sheridan called
the affair the most complete and satisfactory battle ever waged against
the Indians to that time.

Custer had marched through that blizzard and over the snow-clad plains
to victory. His stealthy approach, the skill with which he had
surrounded the village, the strength with which the attack had been
delivered, and the battle which he had fought with the unexpected Indian
force, the ruse by which he had extricated himself, and, last but not
least, Bell’s gallant dash with the ammunition wagon, were all given the
highest praise. And well they merited it.

One or two incidents of the battle are worthy of especial mention. When
the troops obtained possession of the village, they found the dead body
of a white woman. The fact that she still had some vestige of civilized
clothing upon her, quite new, proved that she had been but recently
captured. She had been shot dead by the Indians at the moment of attack
to prevent her rescue; and there was also the body of a little white
child, who had been killed by those who had him in charge, lest he
should be returned to his family again.

The squaws, of course, were in great terror. They thought they would be
instantly put to death when they were routed from their tepees. Black
Kettle’s sister, Mah-wis-sa, who seemed to be the leading woman of the
village, made a long oration to Custer, telling him that she was a good
Indian, and that she had tried to restrain Black Kettle in his nefarious
career—which was all a lie, of course. She wound up by bringing the
comeliest of the young Indian maidens to Custer, and, after solemnly
placing the hand of the girl in that of the General, mumbled some kind
of a gibberish over the two. The General observed Romeo standing near
with a broad grin upon his face, and asked him what Mah-wis-sa was
doing. He was told that she was marrying him to the beauty of the tribe
to propitiate him. That marriage did not stand.


                   V. The Fate of Elliott and his Men

The fate of Elliott’s detachment remained a mystery. His comrades hoped
that he had escaped, but as the days passed and he did not return to the
regiment, and as nothing was heard from him, they abandoned hope in
despair. This was not, by any means, the end of the winter campaigning;
and some time after, Custer and his men, this time heavily reinforced,
again marched up the valley of the Washita. A short distance from the
place where Black Kettle’s band had been annihilated they found the
remains of Elliott and his men. The evidence of the field and what was
afterward learned from Indian captives told the sad story.

Pursuing the fleeing Indians, Elliott and his party suddenly ran into
the midst of a horde of braves coming down the valley to help Black
Kettle and the men who had been engaged with Custer. To fly was
impossible. They dismounted from their horses, formed themselves in a
semicircle a few feet in diameter, stood back to back, as it were, and
fought until they died. There were evidences of a terrible conflict all
around them. Right dearly had they sold their lives.

The last survivor of that gallant little band had been Sergeant-Major
Kennedy, the finest soldier in the regiment. He was not wounded, it
appeared, but had expended all his ammunition for both rifle and
revolver. Being an officer, he wore a sword. Seeing him, as they
supposed, helpless, the Indians resolved to take him alive for the
purpose of torturing him. There was not a soldier who knew of the habits
of the Indians who would not chose death to captivity any time. The
brave Kennedy stood alone in the midst of the bodies of his comrades,
fronting death, sword in hand. I like to think of the courage of that
heroic man in the midst of that savage, ravening assemblage.

With wily treachery the Indians made peace signs, and walked toward him
with hands outstretched, saying: “How, How!” Kennedy, who knew the true
value of such proceedings, waited until the chief of the band approached
him nearly, then thrust his sword up to the hilt into the Indian’s
breast. When they found Kennedy’s body he had been pierced by no less
than twenty bullets. The other troopers had received one or two bullet
wounds each. They were all stripped, scalped, and mutilated.[51]

There was a great outcry when this battle became known, and Custer was
accused of slaughtering helpless, inoffensive, gentle Indians! Unmerited
obloquy was heaped upon him, but those who lived near enough to feel the
effects of the Red Scourge realized that he had done for the settlers
the best thing that could be done. People who knew, and his superior
officers, not only sustained but commended him.

Custer again, in command of a much larger force, surprised a more
populous village later in this same winter. It was completely in his
power. He could have wiped it from the face of the earth, although it
contained a force of Indians nearly equal to his own; but he stayed his
hand, and said he would spare the savages if they would deliver to him
two wretched women, one a young bride, the other a young girl, whom they
held in captivity and for whose deliverance the campaign had been
undertaken. By masterly skill Custer captured Satanta the Infamous, and
held him until the captives were given up. With the expedition was the
brother of one of the captives. Custer tells, in his simple, terse
manner, with what feelings that whole army watched the poor women
brought into camp, and how the boy, the last of his family, stood
trembling by the general’s side until he recognized, in one of the
wrecks of humanity which the Indians handed over, the sister whom he was
seeking.[52] The red-headed cook, referred to above, was with the army
again, and proved herself, in her rude way, an angel of mercy and
tenderness to these, her wretched sisters.

-----

Footnote 45:

  This statement has been called in question. The facts are taken from
  Custer’s farewell order to his division, April 19, 1865, as published
  in Captain Frederick Whittaker’s “Complete Life of General George A.
  Custer,” Sheldon & Co., New York, 1876. There is no possible doubt as
  to the correctness of the statement.

Footnote 46:

  It is interesting, in view of his great services to his country, to
  learn that the first American ancestor of the Custer family was a
  Hessian officer who was captured at Saratoga in 1777.

Footnote 47:

  Killed in the Battle

Footnote 48:

  Mo-ke-ta-va-ta.—Letter from Mr. W. H. Holmes, Chief of the Bureau of
  American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution.

Footnote 49:

  Dog Soldiers were bands of especially ruthless Indians who could not
  brook even tribal restraint. They included members of different tribes
  and were unusually formidable. Possibly they got their name from a
  perversion of Cheyennes, _i.e._ Chiens-dogs. Another account describes
  them as a sort of mercenary police at the service of a chief of a
  tribe, with which he enforced his commands upon the recalcitrant and
  generally kept order. In any case they were men of exceptional courage
  and bravery.

Footnote 50:

  A corruption of Set-t’á-iñt-e, “White Bear.”—Letter from Mr. W. H.
  Holmes, Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian
  Institution.

Footnote 51:

  “Our Wild Indians,” Colonel Richard I. Dodge, U.S.A.

Footnote 52:

  “... and at the last the brief reference to that episode when he
  (Custer) let glory of battle go, to save two white women!

  “Has any one told you that the long line of soldiers and officers
  drawn up to witness the return of the two captives wept like women,
  and were not ashamed when the poor creatures came into the lines? Will
  you not write that story up some day, Dr. Brady? I will give you some
  addresses of officers who were eye-witnesses. They cannot seem to put
  such a picture before the public, but they do talk well.”—Private
  letter to me from the wife of an officer present on the occasion
  noted.




                             CHAPTER ELEVEN
                  Carr and Tall Bull at Summit Springs


                      I. A Brilliant Little Fight

General Eugene A. Carr, in command of the Fifth Cavalry, did some
brilliant skirmishing and fighting in 1868–9 western Kansas and
Colorado. His most notable exploit was the surprise of Tall Bull’s camp.
Next to Black Kettle, Tall Bull was probably the most vicious and
diabolical of the Indian raiders in these two states.

Carr, with five troops of the Fifth Cavalry and with W. F. Cody (Buffalo
Bill) as chief guide, learning where Tall Bull’s camp was, marched one
hundred and fifty miles in four days in pursuit of him. Halting when he
believed he had reached the vicinity of the camp, he sent Buffalo Bill
with some of his Pawnee Indian auxiliaries to find out exactly where the
Indians were located.

Cody, having discovered the location of the village, returned to General
Carr and advised him to take a wider detour, keeping his forces
concealed among the hills, so that he could approach the Indians from
the north, a direction from which they would not be expecting attack,
and whence they might be the more easily surprised. The advice was
followed, the command made its encircling march without detection, and
formed up in line of troops, each troop two abreast, in the ravines
about twelve hundred yards from the village.

They were between the Indians and the Platte River. The camp was located
at Summit Springs, Colorado. Every preparation having been made, Carr
ordered the bugler to sound the charge. The man was so excited that he
was unable to produce a note. Twice Carr gave the command. Finally,
Quartermaster Hayes snatched the bugle from the agitated musician and
sounded the charge himself, and the whole regiment rushed out into the
open.

The Indians made for their ponies and advanced to meet the charge. The
rush of the soldiers was too threatening, however. After a hasty fire
they broke and fled on their horses, the whole party, soldiers and
Indian scouts, following after at full speed through the village. The
attack was a complete success. Fifty-two Indians were killed, two
hundred and seventy-four horses and one hundred and forty-five mules
were captured. The soldiers had one man wounded, with no other
casualties.

In the camp were found the bodies of two unfortunate white women, who
had been captured. Swift as had been the dash of the soldiers, the
Indians had taken time to brain one of the women with a war-club, while
the second was shot in the breast and left for dead. She was given every
possible attention by the soldiers, who took her back to Fort Sedgwick,
and her life was eventually spared. Her sufferings and treatment had
been beyond description. Fifteen hundred dollars in money—in gold,
silver, and greenbacks—strange to say, had been found in the camp. This
sum the soldiers, by permission of the general, donated to the poor
woman, as an expression of their sympathy for her.

According to some accounts, Tall Bull, who was chief of the camp, and
one of the head chiefs of the Sioux, was killed in this attack. Buffalo
Bill tells another story.[53] The day after the fight the various
companies of the Fifth Cavalry—which had remained in the camp all the
ensuing day and night, at the insistence of the plucky commander, in
spite of the pleas of some of the officers, who, fearing an attack in
force, suggested retiring immediately—separated in order the more
effectively to pursue the flying Indians. Several days after the
surprise the detachment for which Cody was guide was attacked by several
hundred Indians. The soldiers fought them off, killing a number. The
chief of this party was believed by Cody to be Tall Bull.

Buffalo Bill crept through a ravine for several hundred feet, unobserved
by the Indians, until he reached an opening whence he had the savages in
range. Watching his opportunity as the Indians were careering wildly
over the prairie, he drew a bead on the chief and shot him dead. Whether
that was Tall Bull or not, one fact is clear—that he was killed either
then or before, for he was certainly dead thereafter.

When the troops were following the Indian trails on the march to Summit
Springs, at every place where the Indians had camped they found marks of
white women’s shoes. It was this knowledge that gave additional
determination and fire to their magnificent attack.

General Carr deservedly gained great reputation for his dash and daring.

                  *       *       *       *       *

Here I include a letter describing this battle from the standpoint of a
soldier, which is a most interesting contribution to the story of the
affair:


              II. Account of the Battle of Summit Springs

   Written by J. E. Welch to his comrade, Colonel Henry O. Clark, of
                              Vermont.[54]

The next spring, 1869, I heard that General Eugene A. Carr, commanding a
detachment of the Fifth U. S. Cavalry, was organizing an expedition to
go after a large band of Indians (Sioux and Cheyennes) who had been
raiding and murdering through Colorado, New Mexico, and Kansas. Some
other fellows and myself went to Fort McPherson and offered our services
as volunteers to serve without pay. The general could not accept our
services, but he said we could go along and act with the scouts—so along
we went.

The expedition consisted of about four hundred cavalry, one hundred and
fifty Pawnee scouts, under Colonel Frank North, and about twenty
civilians. Buffalo Bill was the guide. He struck out for the Republican
River, and the first night after we got there the hostiles tried to
stampede our horses; they came near accomplishing their object, too, but
they only succeeded in wounding a teamster and killing a mule. Next day
we found the trail of their main body and followed it, but soon found
that we could not gain an inch on them; we kept on, however, until we
came to a place where the trail divided. The trail to the right was very
plain, while the one to the left was scattered and so dim it was evident
to the most inexperienced man in the command that the trail they
intended us to follow was the one to the right. So General Carr detached
two troops of cavalry and some Indians, under Major Royall, caused them
to make as big a show as possible and take the decoy trail, while the
main body was kept back in a low place for a day in order that any
hostile scouts who might be watching us would think the whole command
had gone on the decoy trail. Next day we started on the dim trail, and
before night we became satisfied that we were on the trail of the main
body of the hostiles. Major Royall followed the decoy trail until it
scattered, then turning the head of his column to the left he
intercepted and rejoined the command. We now found that we were gaining
on the game we were after. They evidently thought they had fooled us,
and were taking their time.

On the tenth of July we marched sixty-five miles, passing three of their
camps. On the eleventh we were on the march before daylight. The trail
was hot, the Indians making for the Platte. Every one knew that if they
succeeded in crossing the river the game was up. By noon we had marched
thirty-five miles, at which time Buffalo Bill, who had been far in
advance of the command all day, was seen approaching as fast as his
tired horse could come. As soon as he reached the column he called for a
fresh horse, and while transferring his saddle told General Carr that he
had encountered two bucks who were hunting and that the Indian camp was
about twelve miles ahead.

[Illustration]

          GEN. GEORGE CROOK                  GEN. EUGENE A. CARR
         GEN. ELWELL S. OTIS              GEN. HENRY B. CARRINGTON

                GROUP OF DISTINGUISHED GENERAL OFFICERS

The general, knowing the bucks who had been run off by Cody would make
every effort to reach their camp ahead of us in order to give the alarm,
gave the command “Trot.” Both horses and men seemed to brighten up, and
we put real estate behind us at a rapid rate. When within a mile of the
hostile camp a halt was called to let the Pawnees unsaddle, as they
flatly refused to go into action with saddles on their horses. They
began daubing their faces with paint and throwing off their clothing.
They were made to retain enough of the latter to enable us to
distinguish them from the hostiles. After this short delay we moved
forward at a sharp trot, and in a few moments we were looking down at
“Tall Bull’s” camp in a small valley below us. In a moment the camp was
alive with Indians running in every direction.

General Carr, taking in the situation at a glance, gave utterance to a
few words of command, winding up his remarks with the order, given loud
and clear and sharp:

“Charge!”

Every horse leaped forward at the word, and in a twinkling we were among
them and the fight was on. It did not last long. There was rapid firing
for about five minutes, when all was over except an occasional shot as
some fellow would find an Indian who had failed to secure a horse and
escape.

The result of the fight was about as following: no white men killed,
four or five horses killed, about one hundred and eighty-eight dead
Indians, forty of whom were squaws and children;[55] one hundred and
five lodges captured, many rifles, five tons of dried buffalo meat baled
for winter use, a very ample supply of ammunition, consisting of powder,
lead, etc., and a greater number and variety of brass kettles than I
ever saw before.

Of their live stock we captured five hundred and sixty head of ponies
and mules.

To pursue those who had fled was out of the question, our horses being
too badly done up. As we charged the camp, we saw a white woman run from
among the Indians, one of whom fired at her as she ran. We shouted to
her to lie down, which she did, our horses leaping over her without a
hoof touching her. She was wounded in her side, but not fatally. Almost
at the same moment we saw an Indian seize another white woman by the
hair and brain her with a tomahawk. Some of us rode straight for that
Indian, and there was not a bone left in his dead carcass that was not
broken by a bullet. I dismounted in the midst of the hubbub to see if I
could help the woman, but the poor creature was dead. (She had the
appearance of being far gone in pregnancy.) I mounted my horse again
with a very good stomach for a fight.

After firing a few shots, I happened to see a Red mounted on a large
paint pony making off by himself, and driving four fine mules ahead of
him. I gave chase and gained on him rapidly, which he soon perceived,
dropping his mules and doing the best he could to get away. But it was
no use. “Sam,” my horse, was Kentucky bred, and walked right up on him.
When I was within seventy-five or one hundred yards of him he wheeled
his horse and fired, the bullet passing through the calf of my leg and
into my horse. The Indian threw his gun away and rode at me like a man,
discharging arrows as he came. The third arrow split my left ear right
up to my head. It was then my turn, and I shot him through the head.
This Indian’s name was “Pretty Bear.” He was chief of a band of
Cheyennes. The Pawnees knew him and were anxious to secure his scalp,
which I was glad to give them as I soon became disgusted with the
ghastly trophy. “Pretty Bear” had on his person the badge of a Royal
Arch Mason, with West Springfield, Ill., engraved on it. I sent the
badge to the postmaster at Springfield with a statement as to how it
came into my possession. “Pretty Bear” had five or six scalps on the
trail of his shield, one of which was that of a woman. The hair was
brown, very long, and silken.

“Tall Bull,” the Sioux chief, was killed by Lieutenant Mason, who rode
up to him and shot him through the heart with a derringer. After I had
taken the scalp of “Pretty Bear” I found that Sam was shot through the
bowels. I unsaddled him and turned him loose to die, but he followed me
like a dog and would put his head against me and push, groaning like a
person. I was forced to shoot him to end his misery. I had to try two or
three times before I could do it. At first to save my life I could not
do it. He kept looking at me with his great brown eyes. When I did fire
he never knew what hurt him. He was a splendid horse, and could do his
mile in 1.57.

My wounds being slight, I rustled around and soon managed to catch a
small mule, which I mounted bareback, intending to scout around a
little. I did not carry out my intention, however. The brevet horse ran
into the middle of the Indian camp, threw me into a big black mud-hole,
my boot was full of blood, my ear had bled all over one side of me, so
that when I crawled out of that mud-hole I was just too sweet for
anything. By this time the fight was over. A friend of mine, Bill
Steele, went with me to the spring that ran into the mud-hole, where he
washed me as well as he could, bandaged my leg, sewed my ear together
with an awl and some linen thread. He made a good job of it, and I was
all right except that my leg was a little sore and stiff.

After the fight we found we had one hundred and seventeen prisoners,
four squaws, and fifteen children. They were turned over to the Pawnees.
The Pawnees did not fight well. They skulked and killed the women and
children. I have never seen Indians face the music like white men. We
camped where we were that night. Men were coming into camp all night. In
fact, they did not reach the scene of action until about ten o’clock
next day. They were fellows who had been left along the trail by reason
of their horses giving out.

Our first duty next day was to bury the poor woman they had so foully
murdered the day before. Not having a coffin, we wrapped her in a
buffalo robe. General Carr read the funeral service and the cavalry
sounded the funeral dirge, and as the soft, mournful notes died away
many a cheek was wet that had long been a stranger to tears. The other
woman was found to be all right with the exception of a wound in the
side. She was a German, unable to speak English. Both of the women had
been beaten and outraged in every conceivable manner. Their condition
was pitiful beyond any power of mine to portray.

The Indian camp and everything pertaining thereto was destroyed, after
which we took up our line of march for Fort Sedgwick, where we arrived
in due time without any mishap.

I think it just as impossible to make a civilized man of the Indian as
it would be to make a shepherd dog of a wolf, or a manly man of a dude.
They do not in my opinion possess a single trait that elevates a man
above a brute. They are treacherous, cowardly, and ungrateful, Cooper to
the contrary notwithstanding. I knew a Greek in Arizona who came to the
country with camels for the government. After the camels died he married
an Apache squaw, learned the language, and was employed by the United
States government as an interpreter. This man told me that in the Apache
dialect there was no word, or combination of words, whereby they could
convey the idea that we do by using the word _Gratitude_. What do you
think of that?

Well, old man, I have been writing half the night, and have only got as
far as the 11th of July ’69. I am discouraged, and right here I quit you
like a steer in the road. How long am I to wait for that picture? I am
curious to see how much of a change old dad Time has wrought in you. He
has played h—l with me.

                                                As ever,
                                                            J. E. WELCH.

P. S. The photo has come. I could have known you anywhere. You have
changed a little—for the better, I think.

                                                                J. E. W.

-----

Footnote 53:

  I have written several times to General Carr, asking information as to
  this and other points, but have not received any.—C. T. B.

Footnote 54:

  This letter, which is dated Edith, Coke County, Texas; June 16, 1891,
  was furnished me for publication by Dr. T. E. Oertel. I am informed
  that the writer has since died.—C. T. B.

Footnote 55:

  These figures, which are evidently from memory, are certainly in
  error.—C. T. B.




                                Part II
                         The War With the Sioux




                              CHAPTER ONE
                          With Crook’s Advance


                      I. The Cause of the Fighting

Late in 1876 the government determined that thereafter all Indians in
the Northwest must live on the reservations. For a long time the
Interior Department, to which the management of Indian affairs was
committed, had been trying in vain by peaceable means to induce them to
do this. The Indians were at last definitely informed that if they did
not come into the reservation by the first of January, 1876, and stay
there, the task of compelling them to do so would be turned over to the
War Department. They did not come in; on the contrary, many of those on
the reservations left them for the field; and thus the war began.

The principal adviser and most influential head man among the Sioux
Nation and its allied tribe, the Cheyennes, was Sitting Bull,[56] an
Unkpapa chief and a great medicine man. He does not seem to have been
much of a fighter. The Indians said he had a big head but a little
heart, and they esteemed him something of a coward; in spite of this,
his influence over the chiefs and the Indians was paramount, and
remained so until his death.

Perhaps he lacked the physical courage which is necessary in fighting,
but he must have had abundant moral courage, for he was the most
implacable enemy and the most dangerous—because of his ability, which
was so great as to overcome the Indians’ contempt for his lack of
personal courage—that the United States had ever had among the Indians.
He was a strategist, a tactician—everything but a fighter. However, his
lack of fighting qualities was not serious, for he gathered around him a
dauntless array of war chiefs, the first among them being Crazy Horse,
an Oglala, a skilful and indomitable, as well as a brave and ferocious,
leader.

The Sioux country was encircled by forts and agencies. The Missouri
River inclosed it on the east and north. On the south were the military
posts along the line of the Union Pacific Railroad. To the west were the
mountains. Sitting Bull and his followers took position in the valleys
of the Big Horn near the sources of the Powder River, right at the
center of the encircling forts and agencies. It was a situation whence
they could move directly upon the enemy in any direction as necessity
required.

For years unscrupulous and mercenary traders had supplied the savages
with high-grade firearms in spite of government protests. The Indians
were better armed than the soldiers, and possessed ammunition in plenty.
Their numbers in the field have been estimated at from twelve hundred to
six thousand warriors, with their wives and children. Those who have
studied the war from the Indian point of view have put the number at the
lower figure; nearly every one else at from three thousand up. Whatever
the facts, there were enough of them to give the United States Army the
busiest time that it had enjoyed since the Civil War.

Three expeditions were planned for the winter, which were to be launched
upon the Indians simultaneously. One, under General Gibbon, was to come
eastward from western Montana; another, under General Crook, was to
advance northward from southern Nebraska; and the third, under Custer,
was to strike westward from Fort Lincoln. It was believed that any one
of the three, each of which comprised more than a thousand men, would be
strong enough to defeat the Indians, the only problem being to catch
them or corner them.

The well-known disinclination of Indians to fight pitched battles is a
factor which enters largely into every campaign. Somehow or other, the
Indians in this campaign did not seem to be so disinclined that way. One
cannot but admire the skill with which they manœuvered and the courage
with which they fought. Putting aside all questions of their cruelty and
brutality—and what else could be expected from them?—they were patriots
fighting for the possession of their native land. Bravely they fought,
and well. They were fully apprised of the movements of the troops, and
resolved to attack them in severalty and beat them in detail. We shall
see how completely they did so, and with what brilliant success they
battled, until they were run down, worn out, scattered, killed, or
captured.


                     II. Reynolds’ Abortive Attempt

The weather was something frightful. Indeed, all through the ensuing
spring it was unprecedentedly inclement. Neither Custer’s expedition nor
Gibbon’s got away in winter. Crook did advance, and first came in touch
with the enemy with results not altogether satisfactory. General Joseph
J. Reynolds, with ten troops from the Second and Third Cavalry,
surprised and took possession of Crazy Horse’s village, on the Powder
River, on the morning of March 17, 1876. The troops had partially
destroyed the village while under a severe fire from the Indians who had
rallied on bluffs and hills round about it, when Reynolds abandoned the
position and retreated. He was, of course, pursued by the Indians, grown
bolder than before, if possible, as they saw the reluctant soldiers
giving up their hard-won prize.

So precipitate was Reynolds’ withdrawal, in fact, that the bodies of
several troopers who had been shot in the action were abandoned to the
malignity of the savages, and there was a persistent whisper, which will
not down, to the effect that one wounded man was also left behind.

As to this, an army officer of high rank personally stated to me that
Reynolds was in such a state of excitement, as the afternoon wore away
and Crook did not join him in the village, that he finally peremptorily
ordered the troops to mount and go away, in spite of the fact that the
work of destruction was not complete. This was bad enough, but my
informant solemnly asserted that Reynolds, in spite of plea and even
remonstrance, compelled him to leave behind a wounded trooper, who must
necessarily have been tortured by the Indians so soon as they reoccupied
the village. Captain Bourke has gone on record in his “On the Border
with Crook,” expressing his belief in the truth of this charge, which
forever stains the name of the commander of the expedition. The whole
affair was a disgrace to the army, and many of the officers of the
command, capable and brave men, felt it keenly. They chafed for a chance
to show their qualities, which they had later on.

The cold was intense, the temperature dropping to thirty degrees below
zero. The soldiers suffered greatly in the retreat. The Indians, who
seemed impervious to cold, pursued them and succeeded in recapturing
their pony herd of some seven hundred head, which Reynolds was
endeavoring to bring away with him. Crook, bringing up the infantry and
wagons, was furious when he met the retreating cavalry and heard its
story.

There were a number of courts-martial subsequently, but little came of
them, and the matter was finally allowed to drop upon the retirement or
resignation of some of the officers chiefly concerned. It was a
disgraceful affair, and all the honors rested with Crazy Horse. The
Indians were greatly encouraged. The loss of the troops was four men
killed and six wounded, and sixty-six men badly frozen or otherwise
incapacitated by the cold.


                   III. The March to the Tongue River

After the ignominious outcome of Reynolds’ attack upon the village of
Crazy Horse, the various expeditions noted spent the greater part of the
spring in preparing for the grand advance of the converging columns
which were to inclose the recalcitrant Indians in a cordon of soldiers,
force them back on the reservations, and thus, it was sincerely hoped,
end the war. It will be necessary to follow the movements of the several
columns separately. As that of Crook first came in contact with the
Indians, its history will be first discussed.

The reorganized command for the campaign, which assembled at Fort
Fetterman, Wyoming, included fifteen troops of cavalry—about nine
hundred men—ten of the Third, under command of Colonel Evans, and five
of the Second, under Major Noyes, the whole being under the command of
Colonel William B. Royall, of the Third.[57] There were also three
companies of the Ninth Infantry and two of the Fourth, a total of three
hundred men, under the command of Colonel Chambers.

There was an abundance of transportation, a long wagon train, and an
invaluable pack train. The troops were generously provided with
everything necessary for the hard work before them. It was the largest,
and it was believed to be the most efficient, force which had ever been
sent against the Indians in the West.

Crook, an officer of large experience, especially in Indian fighting,
assumed personal command of the expedition on the 28th of May, 1876. On
the 29th the march began. The objects of the campaign were the villages
of Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, which were believed to be somewhere on
the Rosebud River. The topography of that country is well known now, but
then it was more or less of a terra incognita—rather more than less, by
the way. Certainly, this was true after the Tongue River was reached.
The advance was made at first up the Bozeman trail, past Fort Reno, and
over the battle-fields around the ruins of abandoned and destroyed Fort
Phil Kearney, which were objects of much interest to the soldiers.

On the 9th of June the army encamped on the south side of the Tongue
River, near the point where that stream intersects the Montana boundary
line. Crazy Horse[58] had been fully advised by disaffected Indians at
the agencies and military posts, as well as by his own daring scouts, of
all these preparations that were being made to overwhelm him. He had
sent to Crook a specific warning not to cross the Tongue River, and
declared his intent to attack him immediately he reached that stream. To
prove that his threat was no idle boast, he mustered his warriors, and
at half after six o’clock on the evening of the 9th, from the high
bluffs on the other side, opened fire upon the camp.

Through a fortunate mistake the Indians directed their fire to the tents
of the camp, imagining that they would be full of men. They happened to
be empty. The Sioux soon got the range, and the camp was swept with
bullets. They ripped open mess chests, shattered the sides of the
wagons, destroyed the baggage, killed a few horses, but did little
damage to the men.[59]

The Third Cavalry was divided into three battalions, one of four, and
two of three troops each. Captain Mills commanded the first battalion,
Captain Henry the second, Captain Van Vliet the third. Crook acted
promptly. He sent forward three companies of his infantry, deploying
them as skirmishers, to line the river bank and open fire on the Indians
in plain view on the bluff on the other side. At the same time he
ordered Captain Mills to take his battalion across the river and charge
the enemy. The Sioux were already unsettled by the accurate fire of the
infantry with their long-range rifles, and as Mills’ battalion deployed,
dashed through the water and at the steep bluffs on the other side, they
broke and fled, having suffered little or no loss, and not having
inflicted much more.


                         IV. The Flying Column

The skirmish was simply a grim earnest of the determined purpose of the
Indian chief. No pursuit was attempted at that time. Negotiations had
been entered into between the Crows, who were the hereditary enemies of
the Sioux, and the Shoshones, with a view to securing a body of Indian
auxiliaries to the troops, whose services would be invaluable for
scouting. Persuaded thereto by Frank Gruard,[60] a celebrated scout,
something less than two hundred Crows, with eighty odd Shoshones, joined
the army on the 15th of June.

To pursue Indians while incumbered with infantry and a wagon train was
well nigh a hopeless task. Crook determined to park the wagons and
baggage, leave them under the command of Major Furey, the quartermaster,
strip his command to the lightest marching order, and make a dash for
the Rosebud River and the Indian country. One hundred infantrymen,
protesting most vehemently against their orders, to their credit, be it
said, were detailed to remain with the train. Two hundred others, who
professed to have some skill in riding, were mounted on the mules of the
wagon train to accompany the cavalry.

The morning of the 15th was spent in accustoming the infantrymen to the
mules and the mules to the infantrymen. The cavalrymen and the Indian
allies enjoyed the circus which ensued when the mules were bridled and
saddled for the first time, and mounted by men who had never before
straddled anything more formidable than a fence rail. It took the whole
morning before the infantrymen and the mules learned to get along with
each other, even in a half-hearted way.

At five A.M., on the 16th, the force, numbering a little less than
eleven hundred men, with two hundred and fifty Indian auxiliaries,
crossed the Tongue River and marched to the Rosebud.[61] They bivouacked
that night on the banks of the Rosebud, on a level depression surrounded
by low bluffs on all sides, forming a sort of natural amphitheater, on
the top of which the pickets were stationed. Each man carried four days’
rations of hardtack, coffee, and bacon in his saddle-bags and one
hundred rounds of ammunition upon his person. The pack train was limited
to two mules carrying the medical supplies. There being little to do at
the wagon camp on Goose Creek, a number of mule packers, led by a
veteran, Tom Moore, accompanied the expedition to help the foot soldiers
to manage their mules, and incidentally to take part in the fighting.
There were no tents, of course, and but one blanket (a single blanket at
that) for each man. This blanket barely kept off the heavy dew, and the
night was a thoroughly uncomfortable one.

At three A.M. on the 17th of June reveillé was sounded. After breakfast
and the care of the horses and mules, six o’clock found the troops on
the march down the Rosebud. At eight o’clock they halted and unsaddled
their animals to give them a nibble of grass and a little rest,
preparatory to a farther advance later on, while the Crows and Shoshones
were sent on ahead to scout. The place in which they had stopped was an
amphitheater, like their camp ground of the night before, a rolling bit
of boggy prairie, inclosed on all sides by bluffs, every point being
within rifle shot of the center. Through this amphitheater ran the
Rosebud River, here a mere creek, its general direction being from west
to east. Toward the east side of the amphitheater the creek was diverted
to the left, the northeastward, and plunged into a gloomy and forbidding
cañon, called the Dead Cañon of the Rosebud. The course of the river was
marked by a rank undergrowth of grass, small trees, etc.

Mills’ battalion of the Third Cavalry halted on the south bank of the
creek. In rear of Mills was Noyes’ battalion of the Second Cavalry.
Across the creek were Henry’s and Van Vliet’s battalions of the Third
Cavalry, the mounted infantrymen, and the small pack train with the
packers. Crook desired to keep his movements secret, but it had been
impossible to restrain the impetuosity of the Indian auxiliaries the day
before. They had come across a herd of buffalo and had made great
slaughter of the helpless animals, killing one hundred and fifty of
them, for which they had no use at all. It is certain that so able a
general as Crazy Horse had scouts watching Crook all the time, and would
have discovered his advance in any event; but with all the noise made by
the Indians in the buffalo hunt, there was no possibility of a surprise.
As a matter of fact, it was Crazy Horse who began the game. Crook was
ready for him.


                      V. The Battle of the Rosebud

About half after eight o’clock in the morning, the resting soldiers were
called to attention by the sound of shots from the bluffs in front of
them, over which their allies had disappeared. It was at first supposed
that these friendly Indians had run across another herd of buffalo, but
a few moments told the practised troopers that the firing was the
beginning of a battle rather than that of a hunt. At the same time the
Indian auxiliaries came galloping back to the main body at full speed,
yelling:

“Sioux, Sioux! Heap Sioux!”

Without waiting for orders, the troopers saddled their horses and fell
in. They got ready none too soon, for right on the heels of the fleeing
Crows and Shoshones came the Sioux. In front of them to the right, the
left, the low bluffs inclosing the plain, were ringed with Indians in
full war-gear. As one observer described it to me, they looked like
swarms of blackbirds, there were so many of them and in such rapid
motion. They kept coming and coming into view, and as they dashed up to
the brink of the hills upon their war ponies they opened a long-range
fire upon the soldiers, which from the distance did little damage. There
were at least a thousand of them in plain sight. How many others there
might be, no one could tell. It was a safe guess that those in sight
constituted but a small part of the force.

It is said that there were at least six thousand warriors that day under
the command of Crazy Horse, but that most of them were not engaged.
Crazy Horse had planned an ambush for General Crook, and he had hoped to
defeat him by luring the soldiers into it, or by separating the army
into small detachments and overwhelming them in detail. His plans were
well devised, and came very near being successful. That they did not
succeed is probably due more to the acts of the Indians themselves than
because of the wariness of the soldiers.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of The Century Co._

  THE DIFFICULT TASK OF THE HORSE-HOLDERS IN ACTION

  _Drawing by Frederic Remington_
]

Crook acted at once. Sending his staff officers to rally the Crows and
Shoshones, he directed them to circle to the right and left, and make
ready to fall on the flanks of the Indians. Mills, who had behaved so
gallantly at the Tongue River, was ordered to charge the Indians
straight up the valley to the bluff to the northward, the front. Two
troops of Van Vliet’s squadron were rushed off to the southward, the
rear, to seize a commanding position to prevent the Indians from
circling around in that direction and getting in Crook’s rear. The
infantry and part of the Second Cavalry were dismounted, and thrown
forward as skirmishers around the foot of the bluffs. Royall took
Henry’s battalion, with Van Vliet’s remaining troop, one of Mills’
troops which he detached while the battalion was on the gallop, and
another of Noyes’ troops, and charged the Indians on the left.

Mills’ charge was most gallantly delivered. The soldiers struggled
through the bog, raced across the bottom land for about eight hundred
yards, and scrambled up the bluffs in twenty minutes, finding
themselves, when they reached the top, within fifty paces of the Sioux.
There was no time to use carbines. Firing revolvers, the battalion
rushed at the Indians. The savages fired ineffectively, gave way, and
fled instantly to higher ground six hundred yards further on, where they
opened fire. In their excitement they shot badly. Mills dismounted his
battalion, deployed them as skirmishers, rushed the second ridge and
cleared it, the Indians sullenly retiring before him, and again opened
fire on the troops, to which the cavalrymen made effective reply. The
Sioux galloped rapidly to and fro, yelling and firing from their horses,
kicking up clouds of dust, but doing little harm.

Royall, Henry, and Van Vliet had a similar success on the left, where
the ground was much more open and unfavorable for defense, although the
Indians were massed more heavily in that quarter than before Mills.

Meanwhile the Crows and Shoshones had fallen upon the flanks of the
Sioux, but not very effectively. Every one in the field except a small
reserve was now hotly engaged. The pressure on Mills became stronger,
but he drove the Indians from him by another gallant attack. Thereafter
he was reinforced by Noyes’ battalion. The front of his line was finally
partially cleared by this last dash. The Indians who had been attacking
him thereupon left him, and joined the others before Royall and Henry.

Crook now withdrew Mills’ command from the battlefield, and Mills was
ordered to take his three troops down the Dead Cañon of the Rosebud and
attack the villages which it was believed the Indians were defending.
Mills’ movements were supported by the five troops of the Second Cavalry
under Noyes. Crook promised to follow up the movement, and support it
with the remaining cavalry and infantry. We will follow this movement
later.

Mills’ place in the line was occupied by Tom Moore and his packers and
some other auxiliaries from the camp, and a smart fire was kept up in
that direction. On the left the firing was fast and furious. The Indians
from the front cleared by Mills joined their associates on the left, and
again and again attacked Royall, Henry, and Van Vliet, who had joined
the other two, with the most determined courage. Charge and counter
charge were made over that portion of the field. Now the troops gave way
before the Indian advance, now the soldiers were rallied and hurled back
the Indians, now the Indians retreated before some desperate
countercharge. So went the varying fortunes of the hour. The number of
savages increased with every passing moment. To the eyes of the
astonished soldiers they seemed to spring from the ground. If one fell
in the line, a dozen were ready to take his place.

[Illustration: BATTLE OF THE ROSEBUD]

In one of the charges Captain Henry was shot through the face and
frightfully wounded. The troopers had dismounted, but the officers
remained mounted. Henry reeled in his saddle as the bullet pierced both
his cheek bones and tore out the whole front of his face below the eyes.
Although, as an eye-witness has it, he was spitting blood by the
handful, he continued on the battle line. The situation of Royall’s wing
of Crook’s army was precarious. Henry’s battalion held the extreme left
flank. It was his duty to remain there. Vroom’s troop L, of the Third
Cavalry, had become separated from the main body during the battle, and
was caught ahead of the line and surrounded by Indians, in imminent
danger of annihilation. Crook had ordered Royall to bring his men back
to their horses, in order to mount them and prepare for a general
charge. The Indians took this movement for a retreat, and came dashing
after the retrograding troopers. Only the cool courage of Royall and
Henry, and the magnificent way in which they handled their forces when
they went forward to the rescue, prevented the annihilation of Vroom’s
troops.

It was in the midst of this operation that Henry received his fearful
wound and stayed on the line.[62] Presently he fell from his horse. As
he did so, the soldiers, dismayed by his fall, began to give back before
the Sioux. The impetuous Indians charged over the place where Henry lay.
Fortunately, he was not struck by the hoofs of the galloping horses. His
men rallied and rushed to his rescue. Old Chief Washakie and his
Shoshones at this period of the fighting displayed splendid courage. The
fight actually raged over the body of Captain Henry until the Indians
were driven off, and Henry was rescued from what would otherwise have
been certain death. After this fierce struggle, part breaking through
the line and part turning the flank, the Indians galloped down the
valley between the river and the troops, and finally disappeared on the
other side of the Dead Cañon, their retreat accelerated by the movement
of Mills toward the village. The fighting had lasted a little more than
two hours.


                   VI. Mills’ Advance down the Cañon

Meanwhile Mills and his men, in a column of twos, trotted down the
gloomy depths of the Dead Cañon, the rocky walls of which, towering on
either side, would have afforded abundant cover for Indian riflemen.
Before entering the cañon, they had cleared the mouth of it of a body of
Sioux by a smart charge, and they were thereafter unmolested. They
advanced rapidly but with caution, although what they could have done if
attacked it is hard to see, and how caution would have saved them it is
difficult to tell. They had their orders to go through the cañon and
attack the village. There was nothing to do but obey. Sending them
forward was a mistake which might have resulted in a terrible disaster,
although nobody believed that then. The soldiers had not yet realized
what fighters these Indians were. The Custer disaster was still to come,
and no one imagined that so large a body as that commanded by Mills and
Noyes could be defeated. If Crook had followed with his whole force, the
troops under his command would have been annihilated; it is probable
that not one of them would have come out of that cañon.

When Crook began to prepare to follow Mills with the rest of his force,
he discovered that he had a much larger number of wounded than he had
thought possible, and the doctors protested against their being left
with a feeble guard while Crook with the best of the force went up the
cañon. The protest was justified by the situation. Besides, the attack
on Royall and Henry had not yet ceased. Crook reflected, concluded that
he could not leave the field, and that Mills’ force was too weak for the
work assigned it. The general thereupon despatched Captain Nickerson, of
his staff, attended by a single orderly, at the imminent peril of their
lives, with orders to ride after Mills and tell him to leave the cañon,
defile to the left, and rejoin him at once. Crook hoped that Mills, on
his return to the field, might succeed in getting in the rear of any
Indians who might be lurking in the hills before Royall’s shattered
line.

So rapid had been Mills’ movements, that Nickerson, although going at
the full speed of his horse, did not overtake him until he had
penetrated some seven miles down the cañon. Fortunately for all
concerned, the command had halted where a cross cañon made an opening
toward the west, and on that side the cañon was so broken and so sloping
that it could be scaled by the troopers. Firing was heard to the front,
and the Indians were detected massing to attack Mills’ detachment. A
halt had been ordered for the purpose of making final preparations for
the attack.

“Mills,” said Nickerson, as he came galloping up, “Royall has been badly
handled—there are many wounded. Henry is severely hurt, and Vroom’s
troop is all cut up. The General orders that you and Noyes defile by
your left flank out of this cañon and return to the field at once. He
cannot move out to support you and the rest on account of the wounded.”

Never was order more unwelcome. The officers at the head of the column
urged Mills to go on. The Indian village was in sight. Crook could not
have known how near they were, or he would not have recalled them.
Mills, however, was a thorough soldier. In his mind orders were to be
obeyed, and he silenced the objectors and advisers, and did as he was
directed, although with great disappointment and reluctance. Never was
obedience better justified. General Mills admits now that, had he
disobeyed Crook, his command would have been annihilated.

The cañon was the mouth of Crazy Horse’s trap. A short distance farther
on, it ended in a great dam covered with broken logs, making a dangerous
abattis. Here the main body of the Indians had been massed. Here they
expected, seeing the confident advance of the eight troops of cavalry up
the cañon, to fall upon them and kill them all, which they might easily
have done. Nickerson got there just in time.

Mills instantly turned to the left and led his troops up the broken wall
of the cañon to the high ground on the farther side; fortunately, he had
been overtaken at about the very point where the ascent was practicable
for troops. Presently the detachment rejoined the main body, their
progress being unmolested.

There were ten soldiers killed and twenty-seven seriously wounded,
besides a great number of slightly wounded. Most of the casualties were
in Royall’s command, Vroom’s troop having lost heavily while it was in
such peril.

Crook camped for the night on the battle-field. The dead were buried,
the wounded looked after temporarily, and the next morning the soldiers
withdrew. They went back to their camp at Goose Creek and stayed there.
The battle was in one sense a victory for the white soldiers, in that
they drove the Indians from the field, forcing them back at least five
miles. In another, and a larger and more definite sense, it was a
decided victory for Crazy Horse. He had fought Crook to a standstill. He
had forced him back to his base of supplies. He had stopped the farther
progress of that expedition. He had protected his villages and had
withdrawn his army in good order.

If Mills’ command had not been recalled, it is certain that it would
have been annihilated. As it was, the Indians had done remarkably well.
Crazy Horse, free from further apprehension of pursuit by Crook for the
present, had leisure to turn his attention to the other two expeditions,
which there is no doubt he was well aware had been launched against him.

While technically it was perhaps a drawn battle, as a feat of arms the
battle of the Rosebud must go down to the credit of the Indians. It was
more like a pitched battle than any that had been fought west of the
Missouri heretofore. The individual officers and soldiers of the army
did splendidly; so did the Indians. Mills had displayed commendable dash
and daring in all his charges. Royall, Henry and Van Vliet, and Chambers
with the infantry, had fought skilfully and bravely against an
overwhelming force. Crook’s dispositions were good on the field, and
were well carried out by his subordinates. The same may be said of Crazy
Horse, his subchiefs, and their warriors.

Crook had nearly exhausted his ammunition in the hard fighting, the
larger part of his supplies had been expended, and he had a number of
very seriously wounded on his hands. There was not one chance in a
thousand that he could catch the Indians now. There was nothing left for
him to do but go back to the main camp, send his wounded back to Fort
Fetterman for treatment, order up more supplies and more troops, and
await a favorable opportunity to attack again.

To anticipate events, it may be noted that, owing to the disaster to
Terry’s column, Crook did not advance until August.

-----

Footnote 56:

  Tatá ^nka I yotá ^nka, according to a letter from Mr. W. H. Holmes,
  Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution.

Footnote 57:

  General King, in his fascinating book, “Campaigning with Crook,” has
  preserved a characteristic anecdote of Royall, which I venture to
  quote as illustrating the way they have in the army, and as throwing
  some light on the temperament of the peppery old fighter:

  “A story is going the rounds about Royall that does us all good, even
  in that dismal weather. A day or two before, so it was told, Royall
  ordered one of his battalion commanders to ‘put that battalion in camp
  on the other side of the river, facing east.’ A prominent and
  well-known characteristic of the subordinate officer referred to was a
  tendency to split hairs, discuss orders, and, in fine, to make trouble
  where there was a ghost of a chance of so doing unpunished. Presently
  the colonel saw that his instructions were not being carried out, and,
  not being in a mood for indirect action, he put spurs to his horse,
  dashed through the stream, and reined up alongside the victim with:

  “’Didn’t I order you, sir, to put your battalion in camp along the
  river, facing east?’

  “’Yes, sir; but this ain’t a river. It’s only a creek.’

  “’Creek be d—d, sir! It’s a river—a river from this time forth, _by
  order_, sir. Now do as I tell you!’

  “There was no further delay.”

Footnote 58:

  “Crazy Horse was the personification of savage ferocity; though
  comparatively a young man, he was of a most restless and adventurous
  disposition, and had arrived at great renown among the warriors, even
  before he was twenty-six years of age. In fact, he had become the war
  chief of the southern Sioux and the recognized leader of the hostile
  Oglalas.”—“Personal Recollections of General Nelson A. Miles, U. S.
  A.”

Footnote 59:

  One bullet smashed the pipe of a small camp stove in Captain Mills’
  tent. When the Eastern papers learned the interesting fact that Mills’
  stovepipe had been smashed, that gallant officer was severely
  censured, and much ridicule was heaped upon him, under the impression
  that he wore a “stovepipe” hat in action. By the way, when Captain
  Broke, of the British frigate _Shannon_, boarded the American frigate
  _Chesapeake_, Captain Lawrence, in the War of 1812, he wore just such
  a hat!

Footnote 60:

  “Frank Gruard, a native of the Sandwich Islands, was for some years a
  mail rider in northern Montana, and was there captured by the forces
  of ‘Crazy Horse’; his dark skin and general appearance gave his
  captors the impression that Frank was a native Indian, whom they had
  recaptured from the whites; consequently, they did not kill him, but
  kept him a prisoner until he could recover what they believed to be
  his native tongue—the Sioux. Frank remained several years in the
  household of the great chief ‘Crazy Horse,’ whom he knew very well, as
  well as his medicine man, the since renowned ‘Sitting Bull.’ Gruard
  was one of the most remarkable woodsmen I have ever met; no Indian
  could surpass him in his intimate acquaintance with all that pertained
  to the topography, animal life, and other particulars of the great
  region between the head of the Piney, the first affluent of the Powder
  on the west, up to and beyond the Yellowstone on the north; no
  question could be asked him that he could not answer at once and
  correctly. His bravery and fidelity were never questioned; he never
  flinched under fire, and never growled at privation.”—“On the Border
  with Crook,” Captain John G. Bourke.

Footnote 61:

  So called from the quantity of wild roses which grew along its banks
  in season.

Footnote 62:

  For a sketch of General Henry and an account of his experiences in
  this battle and elsewhere, see the last chapter of this book.




                              CHAPTER TWO
                 Ex-Trooper Towne on the Rosebud Fight


I am afraid that any attempt on my part to comply with your request will
be a very feeble attempt to describe to you the Battle of the Rosebud,
which took place on June 17th, 1876. There are many men living who
participated in that battle who can describe more fully and more
comprehensively than I the details of that day. However, I will do my
best.

On the 16th day of June, 1876, General Crook with his command was camped
on the Tongue River awaiting the arrival of three hundred Crow and
Shoshone Indians to be used as scouts, under Frank Gruard, a noted scout
of the Indian country, it being Crook’s intention thoroughly to scout
the whole country from the Powder and Tongue Rivers north to the
Yellowstone, and to co-operate with the other columns in the field under
Custer, Terry, and Gibbon.

At about five P.M. on the afternoon of June 16th the three hundred
scouts came into our camp, and shortly afterward General Crook gave
orders to the command to prepare for a night march. Extra ammunition and
extra rations were issued, and at about eight P.M. we broke camp and
mounted into the saddle to commence our march into the Indian country,
which was overrun by the Oglalas, Brulés, Unkpapas, and Miniconjous, the
four most powerful tribes of Sioux Indians on the plains, for it is to
be remembered that the whole Sioux Nation had left their reservations
and was then on the war-path.

General Crook had, on the morning of the 16th, sent out scouts to find
and report any Indian signs that might be found. Numerous signs were
found which indicated that a large party of Indians had recently passed
that way going in a northerly direction, with the evident intention of
joining those from the Brulé agency on the Yellowstone. It was General
Crook’s purpose to cut them off. Thus the forced march of the night of
the 16th.[63]

After a long and tiresome journey of all night, about seven A.M. of the
17th Indians were seen on the hills to our front and left who were
evidently watching our movements. It was reported to General Crook by
the scouts that we had gotten into a country that was completely alive
with hostile Indians and that we were near an immense Indian camp.

General Crook at about 7.30 A.M. went into camp with the intention of
making another night march and, if possible, overtake their camp the
next day. As we had been in the saddle all night, men and horses needed
a few hours rest.

After going into camp we unsaddled and put our horses to graze, but
first hobbling them to prevent any stampede that might be attempted.
While we were putting our horses to graze the whole range of hills in
our front became literally alive with Indians, and at the same time the
Crow and Shoshone Indians with us commenced their warlike preparations
by daubing themselves with war paint and riding their ponies in a circle
one behind the other, and at the same time singing their war songs.

After riding in this manner a short while, the circle broke and the
whole group of Indian scouts charged up the hill toward their enemies.
It is a well known fact that the Sioux and Crow Indians were enemies
toward each other at that time. I have seen the Crow Indians shoot
buffalo and let them lie where they fell, not even undertaking to remove
the hide, because, they would say, “Sioux Buffalo no good,” which
indicated that as the Sioux Indians were their enemies, so were the
buffalo found in the Sioux country their enemies also. Everything in the
Sioux country was an enemy to the Crow Indian.

While our Indians were making their charge upon the Sioux, General Crook
gave orders to saddle up, for well he knew that a battle was on hand.
After we had saddled and formed in line, my troop, F, Third Cavalry,[64]
was placed on the left flank of the command, and it with two other
troops were detailed as skirmishers and were ordered to make a flank
movement to our left and gain the hills, where we dismounted, leaving
each fourth trooper to hold the horses. We then formed the skirmish line
on foot, which was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Royall.

At this time I witnessed a most daring act by a bugler by the name of
Snow, who was carrying a despatch from General Crook to Colonel Royall.
General Crook was stationed on one of the hills to our right, near the
center of the line,[65] where he could view all that was taking place.
Wishing to send an order to Colonel Royall, he directed his orderly,
Bugler Snow, to carry it with all haste. The most direct route was down
a steep hill and across a level plain and then up another hill, where
Colonel Royall was. All chances of reaching there alive were against
him.

When I saw him he was coming as fast as his horse could carry him, while
two Indians were after him with the intention of capturing him. Seeing
that they could not capture him, they finished the game by shooting at
him, and proved their good marksmanship as poor Snow fell from his
horse, shot through both arms, but he delivered his orders all right.

After remaining on the skirmish line for perhaps two hours, we were
ordered to fall back and remount our horses to take a new position (our
horses were held in check in a ravine), as it was impossible to hold our
present position against such overwhelming odds. I must say that I never
saw so great a body of Indians in one place as I saw at that time, and I
have seen a great many Indians in my time. It seemed that if one Indian
was shot five were there to take his place. If we had remained in our
first position we would all have been killed, and I consider that we
retreated in the right time.

I had not gone more than one third of the distance from our position to
where the horses were when I overtook three other soldiers of my own
troop carrying a sergeant by the name of Marshall, who had been shot
through the face. I knew that time was precious and none to lose. I
could not give them the cold shoulder by passing them without giving a
helping hand. Glancing back, I saw the hostiles coming over the hill. I
said to the others, “Quick, here they come!”

At that instant my comrades, to save themselves, dropped the wounded
sergeant and hastened to their horses. The sergeant, seeing that I was
the only one left, said:

“Save yourself if you can, because I am dying. Don’t stay with me.” I
replied:

“Dave, old boy, I am going to stay right here with you and will not
desert you.”

Grasping him with all my strength, I carried my comrade until it was
useless to carry him any farther, for he was dead. I then laid him down
and left him and hurried to get away.

I don’t think that I had gone more than ten yards when I was surrounded
by about twenty or more of the most murderous looking Indians I ever
saw. You can talk of seeing devils; here they were in full form, painted
in the most terrifying manner, some with their war bonnets adorned with
horns of steers and buffalo. It was enough to strike terror to anyone’s
heart.

I knew that my time had come, I knew that I would be taken prisoner. I
fought, but it was fighting against terrible odds. There I was down in
that ravine, alone and in the midst of a lot of murderous savages.

Taking my carbine from me and throwing a lariat over my head and
tightening it about my feet, I was helpless. This was all done in an
instant, while I struggled and fought in vain, until I was struck on the
head with something which rendered me unconscious and caused me to fall.
As I went down a bullet struck me in the body.

I think that when the bullet struck me I regained my consciousness,
because I realized I was being dragged at a lively pace over the ground
by a pony at the other end of the lariat. It was, I think, the intention
of the Indians either to drag me to death at the heels of the pony or
after getting me away to torture me in some other manner.

They captured one other comrade of mine by the name of Bennett, of L
Troop, Third Cavalry, and completely cut him in pieces. His remains were
buried in a grain sack.

After I was dragged in this manner for some distance, my captors were
charged by one of the troops of cavalry, and to save themselves from
capture abandoned me and made their escape. Thus was I enabled to regain
my liberty.

I was immediately sent to the field hospital, and three days later I,
with eighteen other wounded men, was sent to the post hospital at Fort
Fetterman. You ask in your letter did I get a medal of honor for trying
to get my sergeant away. I am very sorry to say that I did not, although
I do think that even at this late day had I some one who would speak a
good word in my behalf I think that my case would be taken up and that I
might get one.[66]

I receive a very small pension for the wound received in this Indian
battle, and that is all my recompense.

Hoping that this narrative of my experience in the Battle of the Rosebud
may be of interest, I have the honor to remain,

                                          Yours sincerely,
                                                          PHINEAS TOWNE.

 St. Louis, Mo.

-----

Footnote 63:

  Trooper Towne is in error here; there was no night march, according to
  Captain Bourke. See his “On the Border with Crook.” See also “War Path
  and Bivouac,” by Finerty.—C. T. B.

Footnote 64:

  This troop was commanded by Lieutenant Reynolds, and was in Henry’s
  battalion.—C. T. B.

Footnote 65:

  Crook was right in the fighting; his horse was shot under him.—C. T.
  B.

Footnote 66:

  The official records show that Marshall was killed and Towne wounded
  in the battle. If this account falls under the eye of any one in
  authority, I trust an investigation may be made, and that the medal
  may be awarded, if it has been earned.—C. T. B.




                             CHAPTER THREE
                   The Grievance of Rain-in-the-Face


                 I. The Yellowstone Expedition of 1873

Having thus disposed of the most formidable column, Crook’s, in so
summary and so effective a manner, the Indians under their able
leadership turned their attention to Custer and Gibbon.

Before the Little Big Horn campaign is discussed, however, in order the
better to understand the most terribly dramatic episode in the most
disastrous of our Indian battles, it will be necessary to go back a
little and take up the thread of the discourse later.

The country watered by the Yellowstone and its affluents, traversed by
the Black Hills and other ranges of mountains, and protected by the
almost impassable Bad Lands in Dakota, had been up to 1873 practically a
terra incognita. However, the Northern Pacific Railroad was even then
surveying a route across it. Gold had been discovered, and miners and
settlers were crowding in. The Indians, since the treaty of 1868, which
had resulted in the abandonment of Fort Phil Kearney and the other
posts, had been ugly in mood and troublesome in action. They welcomed
neither railroad nor men.

An expedition of some seventeen hundred men under General Stanley was
sent into the country in 1873. Custer and the Seventh Cavalry formed a
large part of the command. There were no guides. The country, especially
in the Bad Lands, was a terrible one to cross, and Custer volunteered to
take two troops of cavalry and ride some miles ahead of the main body
every day to mark a road. Custer possessed a faculty for this sort of
work which was simply marvelous. He was a born pathfinder, better even
than Frémont.

On the 4th of August he left camp at five o’clock in the morning with
the troops of Moylan and Tom Custer, eighty-six men, five officers, and
a favorite Arikara scout, called Bloody Knife. At ten A.M., reaching the
crest of some bluffs along the river bank, they saw spread before them a
beautiful village, through which the river gently meandered between the
tree-clad banks. They advanced two miles up the valley, and made camp
under the trees for a noonday rest. They had come at a smart pace and
were far ahead of the main column, which was out of sight in the rear.
The passage through the valley was easy, and there was no necessity for
them to press on. The weather was hot. After picketing the horses,
partaking of their noonday meal and posting sentries, officers and men
threw themselves on the grass and fell asleep.

At one o’clock the sentry on the edge of the timber gave the alarm. A
small party of Indians was approaching, in the hope of stampeding the
horses. All Indian attacks begin that way. After the horses are
stampeded the soldiers have to fight where they are, and, as the Indians
are mounted, the dismounted troopers are at a disadvantage. Custer was
on his feet in an instant, shouting:

“Run to your horses, men!”

The troopers were no less alert. Before the Indians could stampede the
horses, each man had reached his animal and led him back into the
timber. A few shots drove off the little party of savages, the horses
were saddled, and the men moved out. As they did so, six mounted Indians
appeared on the crest of a little hill. Custer led the way toward them.
They retreated slowly, keeping just out of range. In this manner they
drew the soldiers some two miles up the valley.

Finally, in the hope of getting near to them, Custer took twenty men,
with his brother and Lieutenant Varnum in command, and rode out some two
hundred yards ahead of the remainder under Captain Moylan, who were
directed to keep that distance in rear of the advance. Custer,
accompanied only by an orderly, rode about the same distance ahead of
the advance, making peace signs to the six Indians whom they had
pursued. As he approached nearer to them, their pace slackened and they
suddenly stopped.

To the left of the soldiers was a thick wood. It occurred to Custer that
Indians might be concealed therein, and he sent his orderly back to the
advance to caution them to be on their guard. Scarcely had the orderly
reached the advance when the Indians they had been pursuing turned and
came at full gallop toward Custer, now alone in the valley. At the same
instant, with a terrific war whoop, three or four hundred splendidly
mounted Sioux burst out from the trees on the left.

Custer was riding a magnificent thoroughbred. In a second he was racing
for his life toward the advance-guard. The Indians had two objects in
view. They wanted to intercept Custer and also cut off the advance party
from Moylan’s men, who were coming up at a gallop. Only the speed of
Custer’s horse saved his life. As he galloped toward them, he shouted to
Tom Custer to dismount his men. He was not heard in the confusion, but
young Custer knew exactly what to do. While five men held the horses,
the other fifteen threw themselves on the ground. On came the Indians
after Custer. As soon as they were within easy range, the dismounted men
blazed away right in their faces. The troopers were armed with
breech-loaders, and the first volley was succeeded by a second. Several
of the savages were hit and many of their horses. They reeled, swerved,
and Custer rejoined his men. A few moments after, Moylan came up with
the main body.

Custer now dismounted most of his men, and keeping a bold front to the
Indians, retreated in the timber, fighting hard all the way. Reaching
the river, they made good their defense. The Indians tried all their
devices to get them out. They set fire to the grass, but it was green
and did not burn readily. All their efforts to dislodge the troopers
failed, and late in the afternoon a heavy squadron came up on the gallop
from the main body under Stanley and put them to flight. It was a sharp
affair, and the Indians suffered severely.

The only losses to the expedition on that day were two civilians: Doctor
Honzinger, a fat old German, who was the veterinarian of the regiment,
and Mr. Baliran, the sutler. They were both quiet, inoffensive,
peaceable men, very much liked, especially the doctor. They were amateur
naturalists, and frequently wandered away from the main body on
botanizing excursions. They had done so that morning, following Custer’s
advance, and the Indians had fallen upon them and murdered them. It was
the discovery of the remains of these two men which had caused General
Stanley to despatch the cavalry to the relief of the advance.

Bitter was the anger of the officers and men over this murder of unarmed
non-combatants, and deep and abiding was their thirst for vengeance on
the Indians who perpetrated it.


                  II. The Capture of Rain-in-the-Face

The next year, 1874, the Seventh Cavalry being stationed at Fort Abraham
Lincoln, near Bismarck, on the upper Missouri, word was brought to
Custer by a scout that a famous Sioux, called by the picturesque name of
Rain-in-the-Face, was at Standing Rock Agency, some twenty miles away,
boasting that he had killed Doctor Honzinger and Mr. Baliran.
Rain-in-the-Face was already a renowned warrior, of more than ordinary
courage. That he should have left the hostiles under Sitting Bull to
come to the agency was a thing implying peculiar bravery; and that he
should there openly boast of the murder was even more extraordinary.
Custer immediately determined upon his capture, although to effect it
would be a matter of difficulty and danger.

The agency was filled with Indians waiting for the issue of rations;
and, though they were on a peaceable errand, they were always unruly,
insubordinate, and on the alert. Captain Yates and Captain Tom Custer,
with one hundred troopers, were detailed to make the arrest. The arrival
of one hundred men at the agency instantly excited the suspicion of the
Indians. To divert it from the real object, Captain Yates ostentatiously
detached a lieutenant with fifty men to ride to some villages ten miles
away in quest of certain Indians who had some time before raided a
settlement and run off some stock, killing the herders. With the
remainder he purposed to wait for the return of the detachment.
Meanwhile it was learned from a scout that Rain-in-the-Face was in the
sutler’s store.

Tom Custer, with five picked men, was ordered to enter the store and
make the arrest. The store was full of Indians. The weather was very
cold, and the Indians kept their blankets well around their faces. It
was impossible to tell one from another. Tom Custer had received a good
description of Rain-in-the-Face, however, but it availed him nothing
under the circumstances. He and his men, therefore, mingled freely with
the Indians from time to time, making small purchases of the sutler to
divert suspicion as they lounged about the store. They deceived the
savages entirely, in spite of their watchful scrutiny and suspicion. At
last one Indian dropped his blanket and stepped to the counter, either
to speak to the trader or to make a purchase.

It was Rain-in-the-Face. Custer recognized him immediately. Stepping
behind him, he threw his arms about him and seized him in an iron grasp.
The Indian, who had observed the movement too late, attempted to fire
his Winchester; but Custer was too quick for him. The five troopers
sprang to the side of their captain, disarmed Rain-in-the-Face, and
presented their guns to the astonished and infuriated Indians. The room
was filled with seething excitement in a moment. The Indians surged
toward the troopers, and perhaps would have made short work of them, had
not Captain Yates at this juncture entered the room with a detail of his
men.

[Illustration:

  THE CAPTURE OF RAIN-IN-THE-FACE

  _Drawing by E. W. Demian_
]

Rain-in-the-Face, a magnificent specimen of Indian manhood, had ceased
to struggle the moment he was convinced that it was unavailing. He was
led outside, securely bound and mounted on a horse. The troopers were
assembled, and in spite of threats and menaces by the Indians, who did
not venture to attack, they started back to Fort Lincoln with their
prisoner.

Messengers were sped in every direction to the different bands of
Indians to mass a force to release Rain-in-the-Face, who was a man of
such importance, being the brother of Iron Horse, one of the principal
chiefs of the Unkpapas, that no price was counted too great to secure
his liberty; indeed, before starting, they had offered Yates two
warriors in exchange for him. The rapidity with which the troops moved
was such that the prisoner was safely imprisoned at Fort Lincoln before
anything could be done.

Rain-in-the-Face stubbornly refused to say anything for a day or two,
but finally made full confession that he had shot Mr. Baliran and
wounded Doctor Honzinger, who had fallen from his horse, whereupon he
had crushed his head with stones. He was put in the guard-house
preparatory to being tried for murder, and kept there in spite of the
efforts to release him that were made by many prominent Indians. In the
same guard-house were some civilians who had been caught stealing grain.
One bitterly cold night, during a raging blizzard, the civilians, with
some outside assistance, succeeded in making their escape.
Rain-in-the-Face took advantage of the opportunity and left also. He
joined the hostiles under Sitting Bull, and sent back word that he
intended to have his revenge on the Custers for the treatment he had
received.




                              CHAPTER FOUR
                      The Little Big Horn Campaign


                      I. Custer Loses His Command

To return to the spring of 1876. When the column which Custer was to
have commanded moved out, Custer led his own regiment, while
Major-General Alfred H. Terry was in personal command of the column. I
give the reason in the words of General George A. Forsyth in a recent
letter to me:

“For some reason Custer, one of the most splendid soldiers that ever
lived, hated General Belknap, the Secretary of War. He was a good hater,
too. When General Belknap was imprisoned and undergoing trial Custer
wrote that he knew of certain things regarding the appointment of
post-traders on the upper Missouri River, which things the prosecution
thought were what they needed to insure conviction. As a matter of fact,
Custer did not know anything. He had heard disappointed men who had
failed to get said post-traderships curse Belknap and say that they knew
Belknap had sold the traderships to the appointees. It was not so.
Belknap had given these appointments to certain able Iowa politicians
for their friends, in order to secure their influence in the next
campaign for United States Senator from Iowa, as he had determined to
try for a senatorship from his state, viz., Iowa.

“It was entirely within his own right to make these appointments and
there was really nothing wrong in doing so. Of course the disappointed
applicants were furious, and especially certain men who had served with
Belknap during the Civil War and who thought they had a claim on him.
They could not tell lies fast enough about Belknap and especially to
Custer, who was thoroughly honest and believed what they said. This was
what Custer thought he knew.

“Custer was summoned to Washington of course. When he was questioned by
the House Committee of prosecution it was apparent that he did not know
anything. His evidence was all hearsay and not worth a tinker’s dam. The
President—General Grant—was indignant at Custer’s statements regarding
Belknap, which turned out to be all hearsay.... The President directed
General Sherman not to permit Custer to take the field against Sitting
Bull—undoubtedly to punish him.

“You will recall that Belknap was—in a sort of Scotch verdict way, ‘Not
proven, my lord’—acquitted. It was only upon the strong, insistent and
urgent request of General Sheridan to General Sherman—the then
Commanding General of the Army—that the President finally said that if
General Sheridan regarded Custer’s services of great importance in the
campaign, Sherman might authorize Sheridan to permit him to join his
regiment and serve under General Terry, who was appointed to command the
expedition. Sherman wired Sheridan what the President said, and Sheridan
at once applied for Custer as in his opinion ‘necessary.’[67]

“I was in Europe at the time of the Custer disaster, and on my return to
General Sheridan’s headquarters I saw all the correspondence in the
case.”

                  *       *       *       *       *

Therefore, instead of commanding the column, Custer was placed under
Terry, who was to command Gibbon’s column as well, when the junction had
been made between the two. On the 17th of May the command left Fort
Lincoln. The seriousness of the situation was felt as never before in an
Indian campaign. It was realized that no child’s play was before the
troops, and it was with unusual gravity that the regiment marched away.
Mrs. Custer tells how General Terry ordered the force to parade through
Fort Lincoln to reassure the women and children left behind by the sight
of its formidable appearance.

The best part of the expedition was the Seventh Cavalry, six hundred
strong, with Custer at its head. The band played “Garry Owen,” the
famous battle tune of the Washita, as they marched away. They halted on
the prairie afterward, and an opportunity was given to the officers and
men to say good-by to the dear ones to be left behind; then, to the
music of “The Girl I Left Behind Me,” they started on that campaign from
which half of them never came back.

They reached the Powder River without mishap, and were there joined by
General Gibbon, who reported his command encamped along the Yellowstone,
near the mouth of the Big Horn. Major Reno, of the Seventh Cavalry, with
six troops had been sent on a scouting expedition to the southward, and
had discovered a big Indian trail leading westward toward the Big Horn
country. On the 17th of June Reno’s men had been within forty miles of
the place where Crook was fighting his fierce battle, although, of
course, they knew nothing of it at this time. On the 22d Custer was
ordered to take his regiment with fifteen days’ rations and march down
the Rosebud, thoroughly examining the country en route until he struck
the Indian trail reported by Reno.


                    II. Did Custer Obey His Orders?

And now we come to the most important question of this remarkable
campaign. On the one hand, General Terry has been severely censured for
its dire failure; the death of Custer and the escape of the Indians have
been laid at his door. On the other hand, it has been urged that Custer
disobeyed his orders, broke up Terry’s plan of campaign, and by his
insubordination brought about a terrible disaster and let slip the
opportunity for administering a crushing defeat to the Indians, which
probably would have ended the war and prevented a deplorable loss of
life, to say nothing of prestige and treasure. Both officers had, and
still have, their partizans, and the matter has been thoroughly threshed
out.

As between Custer and Terry, I profess absolute impartiality, although,
if I have any natural bias, it is toward Custer, whose previous career,
as I have investigated it, appeals to me more than Terry’s,
distinguished as were the latter’s services. I have studied the
situation carefully, examining all the evidence published by both sides,
and very reluctantly, in spite of my liking for poor Custer, I am
compelled to admit that he did disobey his orders; that his action did
break up a most promising plan, which, it is highly probable, would have
resulted in a decisive battle with the Indians and the termination of
the war; and that he, and he alone, must be held responsible for the
subsequent disaster.

General Terry’s order to Custer, which follows, is entirely clear and
explicit:

                               Camp at Mouth of Rosebud River, M. T.,
                                                       June 22d, 1876.

  Lieutenant-Colonel Custer, 7th Cavalry. Colonel:

  The Brigadier-General Commanding directs that, as soon as your
  regiment can be made ready for the march, you will proceed up the
  Rosebud in pursuit of the Indians whose trail was discovered by
  Major Reno a few days since. It is, of course, impossible to give
  you any definite instructions in regard to this movement, and were
  it not impossible to do so, the Department Commander places too much
  confidence in your zeal, energy, and ability to wish to impose upon
  you precise orders which might hamper your action when nearly in
  contact with the enemy. He will, however, indicate to you his own
  views of what your action should be, and he desires that you should
  conform to them, unless you should see sufficient reasons for
  departing from them. He thinks that you should proceed up the
  Rosebud until you ascertain definitely the direction in which the
  trail above spoken of leads. Should it be found (as it appears
  almost certain that it will be found) to turn toward the Little
  Horn,[68] he thinks that you should still proceed southward, perhaps
  as far as the head-waters of the Tongue, and then turn toward the
  Little Horn, feeling constantly, however, to your left, so as to
  preclude the possibility of the escape of the Indians to the south
  or southeast by passing around your left flank. The column of
  Colonel Gibbon is now in motion for the mouth of the Big Horn. As
  soon as it reaches that point it will cross the Yellowstone and move
  up at least as far as the forks of the Big and Little Horns. Of
  course its future movements must be controlled by circumstances, as
  they arise, but it is hoped that the Indians, if upon the Little
  Horn, may be so nearly inclosed by the two columns that their escape
  will be impossible.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of The Century Co._

  GEN. GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER

  Killed with half his regiment at the Little Big Horn
]

  The Department Commander desires that on your way up the Rosebud you
  should thoroughly examine the upper part of Tullock’s Creek, and
  that you should endeavor to send a scout through to Colonel Gibbon’s
  column, with information of the result of your examination. The
  lower part of this Creek will be examined by a detachment from
  Colonel Gibbon’s command. The supply steamer will be pushed up the
  Big Horn as far as the forks if the river is found to be navigable
  for that distance, and the Department Commander, who will accompany
  the command of Colonel Gibbon, desires you to report to him there
  not later than the expiration of the time for which your troops are
  rationed, unless in the meantime you receive further orders.

                Very respectfully your obedient servant,

                                                      E. W. SMITH,
                                                Captain 18th Infantry,

  Acting Assistant Adjutant General.

Custer was directed to march southward until he struck the trail Reno
had discovered. If, as Terry supposed, it led across the Rosebud, he was
not to follow it westward to the Little Big Horn, or until he met the
Indians, but he was to turn to the southward until he struck the
head-waters of the Tongue River. If he found no Indians there, he was to
swing northward down the valley of the Little Big Horn, toward the spot
where Terry supposed the Indians to be, and where, in reality, they
were. Meanwhile Gibbon was to come up the Little Big Horn from the north
toward the same spot. In the general plan of the campaign, Crook and his
force were supposed to prevent the Indians from moving south—which they
did, by the way. Custer was to keep them from going east, and, as he
advanced, was “to feel to his left” to preclude all possibility of their
slipping between him and Crook, while Gibbon was to keep them from going
off to the north. The Indians would have no direction open to them for
flight except westward, and in that case the troops hoped to overtake
them in a difficult country, inclosed by mountains and rivers.

Terry, although he was not an experienced Indian fighter, had divined
the position of the Indians with remarkable accuracy, and he fully
expected to find them on the Little Big Horn. If Custer had followed
Terry’s orders, he would have reached the Indians on the day that
Gibbon’s men, as we shall see, rescued Reno. After the disaster Terry
magnanimously strove at first to conceal from the public the fact that
Custer had disobeyed his orders. Custer had paid the penalty for his
disobedience with his life, and Terry was willing to bear the odium of
the defeat and failure. His self-sacrifice was noble and characteristic;
but a mistake, caused by the carelessness of General Sherman, coupled
with the enterprise of a brilliant newspaper reporter, who posed as a
regularly accredited government messenger, defeated Terry’s intent, and
instead of the first report, which made no allusion to the disobedience
of orders, being made public,[69] a second report, which told the whole
story, and which was intended for the authorities alone, was given to
the press and immediately spread broadcast. The first report soon turned
up, and Terry thereafter was made the victim of unmerited obloquy by
Custer’s partizans, who said that the absence of any mention in the
original report of any disobedience on the part of Custer, and the
alleged failure to allude to the plan of campaign which Custer had
frustrated, was evidence that no importance was attached to the plan by
Terry or any one until after the failure and consequent popular
indignation. Terry’s answer to this was a noble silence, to save
Custer’s reputation. The living assumed the responsibility to protect
the fame of the dead—honor to him!

General Gibbon also has gone on record in a letter to Terry regarding
the situation:

  “So great was my fear that Custer’s zeal would carry him forward too
  rapidly, that the last thing I said to him when bidding him good-by
  after his regiment had filed past you when starting on his march
  was, ‘Now, Custer, don’t be greedy, but wait for us.’ He replied
  gaily as, with a wave of his hand, he dashed off to follow his
  regiment, ‘No, I will not.’ Poor fellow! Knowing what we do now, and
  what an effect a fresh Indian trail seemed to have had upon him,
  _perhaps we were expecting too much to anticipate a forbearance on
  his part which would have rendered coöperation of the two columns
  practicable_.[70]

  “Except so far as to draw profit from past experience, it is perhaps
  useless to speculate as to what would have been the result had your
  plan, as originally agreed upon, been carried out. But I cannot help
  reflecting that in that case my column, supposing the Indian camp to
  have remained where it was when Custer struck it, would have been
  the first to reach it; that with our infantry and Gatling guns we
  should have been able to take care of ourselves, even though
  numbering only about two-thirds of Custer’s force; and that with six
  hundred cavalry in the neighborhood, led as only Custer could lead
  it, the result to the Indians would have been very different from
  what it was.”

With regard to Gibbon’s generous suggestion that Custer was suddenly
carried away by the opportunity presented, the testimony of the late
General Ludlow is interesting. According to him, Custer stated on the
8th of May, in St. Paul, Minnesota, that he intended, at the first
chance he got in the campaign, to “cut loose from (and make his
operations independent of) General Terry during the summer;” that he had
“got away from Stanley and would be able to swung clear of Terry.”[71]

It is difficult, nay, it is impossible, therefore, to acquit Custer of a
deliberate purpose to campaign on his own account so soon as he could
get away from General Terry. The sentence of Terry’s orders commencing:
“It is, of course, impossible to give you any definite instructions,”
etc., and expressing confidence in his zeal and energy, and Terry’s
unwillingness to hamper him with precise directions, when nearly in
contact with the enemy, did not warrant Custer in disobeying his orders.
_It was only to govern his conduct when he should be in contact with the
enemy_, in which case, of course, he would have to be the sole judge of
what was best to be done. His conduct in that case will be considered
later. In any event it has no bearing on the question of disobedience,
for the crux is here: had Custer obeyed orders, he would not have come
in contact with the enemy when and where he did. The conditions would
have differed greatly.

Every student of military matters knows that the words used, “He desires
that you should conform to them (his own views) unless,” etc., convey a
direct, positive command.[72]

The abstract question of disobedience of orders is one that has often
been discussed. It is impossible to maintain the position that an
officer should never, under any circumstances, disobey his orders.
Circumstances sometimes compel him to do so. But when an officer
commanding troops which are supposed to act in coöperation with other
troops receives orders to carry out a certain specified detail of a
stated general plan, and in the exercise of his own discretion concludes
to disobey his orders and do something other than what he was directed
to do, he takes upon himself the onus of success or failure, not merely
of his own immediate manœuver, but of the whole general plan. If the
plan miscarries through his disobedience, whatever may have been his
motives, woe be unto him! If by his disobedience he brings about the end
at which the original plan aimed, the defeat of the enemy, that is
another proposition. The event has then justified his disobedience.

Every soldier understands that reasons for disobedience must be so
clear, so convincing, and so unexpected, that he is warranted in taking
so prodigious a risk. Disregarding for the moment, for the sake of
argument, General Ludlow’s testimony as to preconceived and deliberate
intent on Custer’s part to disobey, supposing Custer’s disobedience to
have been caused by some exigency or crisis, we may ask ourselves what
were the reasons that caused him entirely to disregard Terry’s plan and
so to manœuver as to bring himself directly in touch with the Indians in
the shortest possible time, without attempting either to examine
Tullock’s Creek[73] or to incline to the southward—“feel with his left”?
These reasons—if any there were—can never be known, owing to Custer’s
death. It can only be said that no satisfactory reasons appear which
justify Custer’s action.

The best that can be urged in defense of Custer is contained in the
following paragraph taken from Colonel Godfrey’s _Century_ article.[74]

“Had Custer continued his march southward—that is, left the Indian
trail—the Indians would have known of our movements on the 25th and a
battle would have been fought very near the same field on which Crook
had been attacked and forced back only a week before; the Indians would
never have remained in camp and allowed a concentration of the several
columns to attack them. If they escaped without punishment or battle,
Custer would undoubtedly have been blamed.”

It may be pointed out with due reverence to Colonel Godfrey—whom I
consider one of the ablest officers in the United States Army, by the
way—that it is hard to see how Custer could have been blamed for obeying
his orders, and that it is by no means certain that the Indians would
have discovered Custer’s column. Indeed, his previous success in
concealing his movements and surprising the Indians (witness the Washita
campaign) leads me to believe that he could have carried out his orders
without observation. If Gibbon had struck the Indians first and had held
them in play Custer could have annihilated them. General Fry’s comments
in the _Century_ (appended to Colonel Godfrey’s article) on Custer’s
action are entirely wrong.

As to what would have happened if Custer had been successful, it is more
or less idle to speculate. Certainly, if he had overwhelmingly defeated
the Indians, I do not think he would have been court-martialed; but if
he had been in Reno’s place and had been besieged with heavy loss, then
I feel certain that Terry would have been in duty bound to prefer
charges against him. All this is beside the main question, however, and
it is now time to return to the history of the expedition.

Terry offered Custer four troops of the Second Cavalry and two Gatling
guns, which were refused. Custer said that any force that was too big
for the Seventh Cavalry alone to deal with would be too big for the
Seventh Cavalry plus the four troops, and urged that the guns would
hamper and harass his movements. Terry, who elected to go with Gibbon’s
infantry column, agreed with him.

Neither Terry nor Custer nor any one expected to meet more than one
thousand warriors. They had no knowledge whatever of the large numbers
of the so-called peaceable Indians, for whom rations had been regularly
issued, who had broken away from the agencies and joined the hostiles.
They did not know of Crook’s defeat, and the great effect it had in
inducing wavering bucks to give their allegiance to the brave men on the
war-path. It will, perhaps, be fair to estimate the number of Indian
warriors in the field at a mean between the white and Indian accounts,
which range from twelve hundred on the one hand to three thousand on the
other. To be on the safe side, I shall call it at least two
thousand.[75] Whatever their number, there were enough of them.

In their way they were two thousand of the fiercest and most desperate
fighters on the face of the globe. While they were undisciplined,
untrained, and not entirely amenable to one will, as were the soldiers,
they were, nevertheless, a fearfully formidable force. Their common
hatred of the white man gave them sufficient coherence to form a rude
but effective organization. They were led by experienced chiefs and were
used to fighting. From 1868, after the close of the treaty by which the
frontier posts were abandoned and the country restored to the Sioux and
the Cheyennes, to 1876, no less than two hundred distinct fights, like
that described in the account of the Yellowstone expedition, had
occurred between the soldiers and the Indians. They were now to be tried
in a real battle, and, as we shall see, they were not found wanting;
for, in the end, all the honors of the campaign rested with them.


                        III. Custer’s Expedition

The Seventh Cavalry left the camp at the mouth of the Powder River at
twelve o’clock noon, on the 22d of June, 1876. Generals Terry, Gibbon,
and Custer reviewed it as it marched away. With the column were fifty
Arikara (“Rees”) Indian auxiliaries, a few Crows, and a number of white
scouts and newspaper correspondents. At four o’clock, after they had
progressed twelve miles, the march was halted, and that evening the
officers were summoned to Custer’s headquarters, and marching
instructions were given them. No bugle-calls were to be sounded. The
march was to be made with the greatest possible rapidity; every officer
was to look carefully to his men and horses. Squadron and battalion
formations were abandoned; each troop commander was to report to Custer
in person.

Custer was usually very uncommunicative. Ordinarily, he kept his plans
to himself until the time to strike arrived. On this occasion, however,
he announced his purpose, which was to follow the trail until they found
the Indians, and then “go for them.” He was not “carried away” by
anything, and this declaration is further evidence of his deliberate
purpose. His manner, at all times blunt and peremptory, not to say
brusque, was now entirely changed. He was usually full of cheerfulness
and confidence. There appeared to be a marked absence of both qualities
in this instance. Officers have recorded that he seemed worried and
depressed. It may be that he was feeling the displeasure of Grant, which
his imprudent conduct had brought about. Perhaps the serious character
of the risk he was taking by his independent move weighed upon him. If
he succeeded, he would regain all he had lost in the censure. If he
failed—well, he would not anticipate that. It was enough to give a man
serious thoughts. His letters to his wife seem as cheerful and confident
as ever, but, perhaps, he may have affected that for her sake. At any
rate, the testimony as to his mental condition is unequivocal.

However he may have felt, he acted with his usual energy. Starting at
five on the morning of the 23d, the regiment went into camp at five in
the afternoon, having covered thirty-three miles over an execrable
marching country—the “Bad Lands.” On the 24th they marched twenty-eight
miles over an even worse territory. Indian signs were abundant. Hundreds
of Indians evidently had passed. As no one could tell how near they were
to the hostiles, after supper on the 24th fires were put out and the men
were allowed to sleep until half after eleven, while the officers and
scouts examined the trail. It was reported to Custer that it led
straight across the divide separating the Rosebud and the Little Big
Horn. At half after eleven the men were routed out and marched ten miles
toward the crest of the Little Big Horn Mountains, which they reached at
two o’clock in the morning of Sunday, the 25th. A further halt was made,
and at eight o’clock the advance was taken up once more.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of the Century Co._

  MAP OF CUSTER’S DEFEAT ON THE LITTLE BIG HORN

  _Movements of Battalions plotted from data furnished by Col. Edward S.
    Godfrey_
]

They marched ten miles farther, and concealed themselves in a large
ravine near the divide and about sixteen miles from the little Big Horn,
about half after ten in the morning. Smoke was seen trembling in the air
by the scouts in the crow’s nest on the top of the divide, and there
were other evidences of Indians down the valley of the Little Big Horn.
It is believed that Custer intended to remain in hiding during the day,
and deliver his attack on the next morning. Unfortunately, however, his
trail had been crossed by the Indians. A box of hard bread had fallen
from one of the pack-mules during the night march. When its loss was
discovered, a squad of men had been sent back for it. They found an
Indian trying to open it. He made his escape, and would undoubtedly
alarm the villages they were approaching.

And now we come to another problem. As the result of his disobedience he
was now practically in contact with the enemy, although he should not
have been. Being in contact, however, what was he to do? There were no
orders to govern him now. He was thrown on his own resources—just what
he wanted, and what he had schemed and planned for. How was he to deal
with his self-created opportunity?

Believing, as he and every one else did, that the Indian force did not
greatly outnumber his own, an attack was entirely feasible. Should he
deliver that attack, or should he wait to be attacked? The advantage is
usually with the attacking party in Indian warfare. Should he seize or
yield that? Suppose he decided not to attack the Indians, and they moved
away and escaped? Would he not be censured for allowing them to get
away, since he had got in touch with them?

Suppose—remote contingency—he were not entirely successful in his attack
on the Indians? Gibbon must be somewhere in the vicinity. A day or two
would probably bring him to the rescue. Could he not fight a waiting
battle, if necessary, until the other column arrived on the field? Was
it not absolutely incumbent upon him to embrace the opportunity
presented to him? He had what he believed to be the finest regiment of
cavalry in the service. He had tried it, tested it, on many fields; he
knew, or thought he knew, the temper of his officers and men. He decided
to attack. Indeed, there was nothing else for him to do. Fight he must.
In the opinion of distinguished military critics who have expressed
themselves upon the point, from General Sheridan down, he was justified
in his decision. In that opinion I concur. And there is no evidence that
he ever contemplated doing anything else. He had arranged matters to
bring about the opportunity, and he had no hesitation in embracing it.
Evidently, he had absolutely no premonition of defeat or disaster.

A little before noon he communicated his intention to his officers and
men. He divided his regiment into three battalions. To Major Marcus A.
Reno,[76] an officer with no experience in Indian fighting, he gave
Troops A, G, and M; to Captain Benteen, a veteran and successful Indian
fighter, Troops D, H, and K; Captain McDougall, with Troop B, was
ordered to bring up the mule train and take it in charge; Custer himself
took the five remaining troops, C, E, F, I, and L.

They left the ravine, and about noon crossed the divide which separated
them from Little Big Horn Valley. Benteen was ordered to swing over to
the left and search the country thoroughly in that direction, driving
any hostiles he might come across into the village and preventing any
escape of the Indians to the southward and westward. Reno was to follow
a small creek, sometimes called Reno’s Creek, to its junction with the
Little Big Horn and strike the head of the village, supposed to be
there. Custer’s movements would be determined subsequently, although for
the present he followed Reno. McDougall came last, following their trail
with the slow-moving train, which dropped rapidly to the rear as the
others proceeded at a smart pace. Benteen at once moved off to the
westward, while Reno, followed by Custer, started down toward the valley
of the Little Big Horn.

This river is a rapid mountain stream of clear, cold water, with a
pebbly bottom, from twenty to forty yards wide. The depth of the water
varies from two to five feet. While it is very tortuous, the general
direction of the stream is northward to the Big Horn, which flows into
the Yellowstone. The valley, from half a mile to a mile in width, is
bordered by the bare bluffs. Along the river in places are thick clumps
of trees. The Indian camp, the end of which they could see as they
crossed the divide, was strung along the valley for several miles.

[Illustration: Map to illustrate the route of the three battalions at
the Little Big Horn]

Reno’s advance down the creek took him near to the east bank of river.
Custer had followed him, slightly on his right flank. When Reno
discovered the head of the village in the valley, he crossed the creek
to Custer and reported what he had seen. Custer directed him to cross
the river, move down the valley, and attack in force, informing him that
he would be “supported” by Custer’s battalion. Reno accordingly put his
battalion to a fast trot in columns of four, crossed the Little Big Horn
River beyond the mouth of the creek, and proceeded onward for perhaps
half a mile. Then he threw his troops in line, reaching from the river
to the bluffs on the left, with the Arikara scouts on the left flank,
and galloped down the valley for a mile farther.[77]

Reno stated subsequently that he believed that Custer intended to keep
behind him all the time; and he fully expected, should he come in
contact with Indians, that Custer would be on hand to join in the
attack. Custer, however, had not continued down the creek or crossed the
river with Reno, but had swung off to the high bluffs on the right bank
of the creek, east of the river. Reno mistook the purport of Custer’s
statement. In order to support an attack, it is not necessary to get
behind it. A flank attack or a demonstration in force, from some other
direction, frequently may be the best method of supporting an attack.
Custer’s plan was entirely simple. Reno was to attack the end of the
village. Benteen was to sweep around and fall on the left of it, Custer
on the right. The tactics in the main were those which had been used so
successfully in the Battle of the Washita (q.v.), and were much in vogue
among our Indian fighters during the Indian wars.

Dividing forces in the face of an enemy to make several simultaneous
attacks is dangerous, because it is almost impossible to secure a proper
coöperation between the attacking units. A skilful general will
concentrate his force upon the separately approaching and more or less
isolated units and beat them in detail. Washington’s tactics at
Germantown were similar to those of Custer; and his force, which would
have swept the British from the field if his plans had been carried out,
was beaten in detail for lack of coördination in the separate attacks.
Some of Napoleon’s most brilliant battles were fought when he occupied
interior lines and by successive attacks broke up converging columns.

Still, the Indians were not believed to be veteran tacticians, although
everybody underestimated their qualities. They were extremely liable to
panic. A sudden attack or a surprise almost always disorganized them and
threw them into confusion. Under the peculiar circumstances, I think
there is little question that Custer’s tactics were entirely sound and
well considered, although this conclusion is often disputed. Where
Custer made a mistake appears to be in his failure to take greater
precautions that the attacks should be delivered simultaneously. He had
a much longer distance to go than Reno and over a much worse country
before he could attack, and he was not at all sure as to where Benteen
was or when he could join. Nevertheless, the chances of success were
many, the chances of failure few, and I have no doubt that Custer would
have been successful had there not been a woeful lack of conduct on the
part of his principal subordinate.

-----

Footnote 67:

  It was General Terry’s urgent representations which were the
  main-springs of Sheridan’s action.—C. T. B.

Footnote 68:

  At the time this was written, it was not generally understood that the
  full Indian appellation of this stream was Little Big Horn.—C. T. B.

Footnote 69:

  It was delayed in transmission, owing to the cutting of the telegraph
  wires by the Indians.

Footnote 70:

  Italics mine.—C. T. B.

Footnote 71:

  Journal of the Military Service Institution in the United States, Vol.
  XVIII., No. LXXIX.: “The Campaign Against the Sioux in 1876,” by
  Major-General Robert P. Hughes, U. S. A.

Footnote 72:

  In Terry’s report to the Secretary of War, under date of November 21,
  1876, he gives his own understanding of his orders, which is fully
  warranted, in the following paragraph:

  “At a conference which took place on the 21st between Colonel Gibbon,
  Lieutenant-Colonel Custer, and myself, I communicated to them the plan
  of operations which I had decided to adopt. It was that Colonel
  Gibbon’s column should cross the Yellowstone near the mouth of the
  Little Big Horn, and thence up that stream, with the expectation that
  it would arrive at that point by the 26th; that Lieutenant-Colonel
  Custer with the whole of the Seventh Cavalry should proceed up the
  Rosebud until he should ascertain the direction in which the trail
  discovered by Major Reno led; that if it led to the Little Big Horn it
  should not be followed, but that Lieutenant-Colonel Custer should keep
  still further to the south before turning toward that river, in order
  to intercept the Indians should they attempt to pass around to his
  left, and in order, by a longer march, to give time for Colonel
  Gibbon’s column to come up.”

Footnote 73:

  I have not discussed the Tullock’s Creek matter. It is not material,
  except that the failure to examine it and to send a scout to
  Gibbon—some of Gibbon’s men had been detailed with Custer for the
  purpose—with a report, was simply a further disobedience, and is,
  perhaps, a confirmation of Custer’s deliberate purpose.

Footnote 74:

  _Century Magazine_, Vol. XLIII., No. 3: “Custer’s Last Battle,” by
  Colonel E. S. Godfrey, U. S. A.

Footnote 75:

  Personally, I believe there were many more.

Footnote 76:

  As the conduct of Major Reno was so decisive in the subsequent
  fighting, and since, upon his conduct as a pivot, the fortunes of the
  day turned, it is well to say something of his record, which I have
  compiled from official sources.

  He was graduated from West Point in 1857, and was immediately
  appointed to the First Dragoons, and had risen to a captaincy in the
  First Cavalry at the outbreak of the Civil War. His career during the
  war was one of distinction. He was brevetted major, March 17, 1863,
  for gallant and meritorious services at Kelly’s Ford, and
  lieutenant-colonel for gallant and meritorious services at the Battle
  of Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864. On January 1, 1865, he was appointed
  colonel of the Twelfth Pennsylvania Volunteer Cavalry, and was
  brevetted brigadier-general of Volunteers at the close of the war.
  Here is a brave and honorable record. Would that it might never have
  been tarnished!

  He joined the Seventh Cavalry December 19, 1869, as major. He had had
  no Indian service prior to that time, and his services up to the
  present campaign comprised a three months’ scouting expedition in
  Colorado in the summer of 1870. In 1879, upon his own application, a
  court of inquiry was convened for the purpose of investigating his
  conduct at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. It was the opinion of
  the court that no further proceedings were necessary in the case. One
  sentence of the record is significant: “The conduct of the officers
  throughout was excellent, and while subordinates in some instances did
  more for the safety of the command by brilliant displays of courage
  than did Major Reno, there was nothing in his conduct which requires
  animadversion from this court.”

  His relations with General Custer had not been friendly; so inimical
  were they, in fact, that Custer was begged, before starting on the
  fatal campaign, not to intrust the command of any supporting movement
  to Reno. Custer refused to allow any such personal considerations to
  prevent Reno receiving the command to which his rank entitled him.

  In 1880 Major Reno was found guilty, by a general court-martial, of
  conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman. While in an intoxicated
  condition he had engaged in a brawl in a public billiard saloon, in
  which he assaulted another officer, destroyed property, and otherwise
  conducted himself disgracefully. The court sentenced him to be
  dismissed from the military service of the United States. The sentence
  was approved by President Hayes, and Major Reno ceased to be an
  officer of the Army in April, 1880.

  It is painful to call attention to these facts, especially as Major
  Reno has since died; but the name and fame of a greater than he have
  been assailed for his misconduct, and in defense of Custer it is
  absolutely necessary that Reno’s character and services should be
  thoroughly understood. For a further discussion of Major Reno’s
  conduct, see Appendix B.

Footnote 77:

  Sure proof that the horses were not, as is sometimes urged, utterly
  worn out by the hard marching.




                              CHAPTER FIVE
                           The Last of Custer


                I. Reno’s Failure at the Little Big Horn

It will be necessary, in order clearly to comprehend the complicated
little battle, to treat each of the three operations separately, and
then see how they were related to one another.

As Reno’s men trotted down the valley, they saw, some distance ahead of
them and to the right across the river on a line of high bluffs, Custer
attended by his staff. The general waved his hat at them encouragingly,
and disappeared over the brow of the hill. That glimpse of Custer,
standing on that hill with outstretched arm gallantly waving his
troopers on to battle, was the last any one of his comrades in the
valley had of him in life; and it is certain that Reno must have
realized then that Custer was not following him, and that he was
expected to attack in his front alone.

However, Reno, having drawn near to the village, deployed his
skirmishers, and slowly advanced down the valley. In a few moments they
were hotly engaged with a constantly growing force of Indians.

Now, one thing about the battle that followed is the utter unreliability
of the Indian reports of their movements. It is alleged that fear of
punishment made them and keeps them reticent and uncommunicative.
Different Indians tell different stories. Most of these stories disagree
in their essential details, and it is impossible to reconcile them. It
may be that the faculties of the Indians are not sufficiently alert to
enable them to recall the general plan of the battle, or at least to
relate it, although they knew well enough how to fight it at the time.
Their accounts are haphazard to the last degree. Some say that they knew
nothing of the advent of the troops until Reno’s men deployed in the
valley. At any rate, they had sufficient time, on account of his
dilatory and hesitating advance, to assemble in heavy force. Reno had
less than one hundred and fifty men with him. Even if Dr. Eastman’s
estimate,[78] that the Indians numbered but twelve hundred warriors, be
true, they still outnumbered Reno, although, owing to the fact that the
villages were strung along the river for several miles, only a portion
of them were at first engaged with the troops. Flushed with their
previous victory over Crook a short time before, these Indians now fell
upon Reno like a storm.

[Illustration]

         CAPT. MYLES MOYLAN                  MAJ. MARCUS A. RENO
       LIEUT. A. E. SMITH[79]              CAPT. EDWARD S. GODFREY

                       SOME OF CUSTER’S OFFICERS

Reno’s line extended clear across the valley, which was quite narrow
where the battle was joined, the right flank protected by the river, the
left by the bluffs. Recovering from their alleged panic, possibly
because of the feeble advance of the soldiers, the Indians rallied, and
with wonderful generalship massed their attack on the left flank, which
was most unfortunately held by the Arikara scouts. No Arikara that ever
lived was a match for the Sioux or the Cheyennes. The Rees, as these
Indian auxiliaries were called, broke and fled incontinently. They never
stopped until they reached the supply camp on the Powder River, miles
away. At the same time the horses of two troopers in the command ran
away with them, and plunged straight into the Indian lines with their
riders. Their fate was plain.

As the Ree scouts broke, the Indians turned Reno’s left flank. The
troopers gave way at once. There was no reserve which could be thrown
upon the Indians until the line was restored. The whole force was
slammed back, like a door, into the timber on the bank of the river.

Here Reno made a serious mistake. After rallying his men, he ordered
them to dismount. Cavalry may be dismounted for defense, but sound
judgment and military usage demand that for an attack, especially upon
an Indian village of that kind, they should charge upon horseback. As
one veteran cavalryman has written me, “I never could understand why
Reno did not charge desperately on the Indians in front of him. His
dismounting his men was against all sound military judgment. ‘Audacity,
always audacity,’ is the motto for a cavalryman.”[80] Had Reno been
governed by this principle and charged, as he should have done, the
result would have been different.[81]

The position was instantly surrounded by yelling Indians galloping madly
to and fro, firing upon the troops. So far, Reno had lost but one
wounded and the two who had galloped into the Indian line. His second
position was admirable for defense. Sheltered by the trees, with his
flanks and rear protected by the river, he could have held the place
indefinitely. However, he had not been detailed to defend or hold any
position, but to make a swift, dashing attack. Yet, after a few moments
of the feeblest kind of advance, he found himself thrown on the
defensive. Such a result would break up the most promising plan. It
certainly broke up Custer’s. In spite of the defection of the Rees, a
vigorous countercharge down the valley would have extricated Reno and
might have saved Custer.

It is a painful thing to accuse an army officer of misconduct; yet I
have taken the opinion of a number of army officers on the subject, and
every one of them considers Reno culpable in a high degree. One at least
has not hesitated to make known his opinion in the most public way. I am
loath to believe that Major Reno was a coward, but he certainly lost his
head; and when he lost his head, he lost Custer. His indecision was
pitiful. Although he had suffered practically no loss and had no reason
to be unduly alarmed, he was in a state of painful uncertainty as to
what he should do next. The soldier, like the woman, who hesitates in an
emergency which demands instant decision, is lost.

How long the troops stayed under the trees by the river bank cannot be
determined accurately. Some have testified that it was a few moments,
others an hour. Personally I think it was a few moments, which fear and
apprehension lengthened to an impossible period. There had as yet been
no panic, and under a different officer there would have been none; but
it is on record that Reno at last gave an order for the men to mount and
retreat to the bluffs. Before he could be obeyed, he countermanded this
order. Then the order was repeated, but in such a way that nobody save
those immediately around him heard it, because of the din of the battle
then raging in a sort of aimless way all along the line, and no attempt
was made to obey it. It was then repeated for the third time. Finally,
as those farther away saw those nearest the flurried commander mounting
and evidently preparing to leave, the orders were gradually communicated
throughout the battalion, and nearly the whole mass got ready to leave.
Eventually they broke out of the timber in a disorderly column of fours,
striving to return to the ford which they had crossed when they had
entered the valley.

Reno calls this a charge, and he led it. He was so excited that, after
firing his pistols at the Indians who came valiantly after the fleeing
soldiers, he threw them away.[82] The pressure of the Indians upon the
right of the men inclined them to the left, away from the ford. In fact,
they were swept into a confused mass and driven toward the river. All
semblance of organization was lost in the mad rush for safety. The
troops had degenerated into a mob.

The Indians pressed closely upon them, firing into the huddle almost
without resistance. Evidently in their excitement the Indians fired
high, or the troops would have been annihilated. The Indians supposed,
of course, that they now had the troops corralled between them and the
river, and that all they needed to do was to drive them into it. Chief
Gall, who with Crazy Horse and Crow King was principally responsible for
the Indian manœuvers, seeing the retreat of Reno to the river, summoned
a large body of warriors, left the field and crossed the river farther
down, intending to sweep down upon the other side and attack Reno’s men
as they struggled up the steep bank in case any of them succeeded in
crossing. This was, as it turned out, a fortunate move for the Indians.

Meanwhile, Reno’s men providentially found a pony trail which indicated
a ford of the river. On the other side the trail led into a
funnel-shaped amphitheater, surrounded by high, slippery bluffs. Into
this _cul-de-sac_ the whole fleeing body plunged, the Indians pressing
the rear hard. The men jumped their horses from the bank into the water,
and finding that the trail stopped at the bluff on the other side,
actually urged them up the steep slopes of the hill.

There is no denying that they were panic-stricken. Although some of the
veterans opened fire upon the savages, the bulk of the troopers did
nothing but run. Dr. DeWolf was one of the coolest among those present.
He stopped his horse deliberately, and fired at the Indians until he was
shot dead. Lieutenant MacIntosh, striving to rally his men, was shot
just as they left the timber. Lieutenant Hodgson, reaching the river
bank, had his horse shot. In his agony the animal stumbled into the
river and fell dead. The same bullet which killed the horse broke
Hodgson’s leg. He cried for help, and Sergeant Criswell rode over to
where he lay. Hodgson took hold of the sergeant’s stirrup, and under a
heavy fire was dragged out on the bank, which he had scarcely reached
before a second bullet struck him in the head, killing him instantly.
Criswell was swept on by his men, but so soon as he could he rode back
under a furious fire and brought off the body, as well as all the
ammunition in the saddle-bags on several dead horses. He received a
medal of honor for his courage.

If Gall had completed his projected movements, Reno’s men would have
been annihilated then and there. As it was, they reached the top of the
bluffs without further molestation. They had lost three officers and
twenty-nine men and scouts killed; seven men were badly wounded, and one
officer, Lieutenant DeRudio, and fifteen men were missing.[83] These had
been left behind in the confusion of Reno’s “charge.”

It was now somewhere between half after one and two o’clock in the
afternoon, and during the fighting Reno was joined by Benteen’s
battalion. The Indians kept up a desultory fire on the position, but
they seemed to have diminished in numbers. Reno occupied the next hour
in reorganizing his force, getting the men into their accustomed troops,
and taking account of casualties.


                      II. With Benteen’s Battalion

In accordance with his orders, Benteen had moved off to the westward. He
speedily became involved in almost impassable country, full of deep
ravines, in which progress was slow and difficult. Water was very scarce
in the country over which the regiment had marched until it reached the
valley of the Big Horn. What water they had found that morning was so
alkaline that the horses and mules, although they had been nearly a day
without water, would not drink it. The horses were naturally tired,
having marched over fifty miles since the morning of the day before, and
the terrible up-and-down hill work exhausted them still more, although
they were by no means played out. No Indians were seen by Benteen, and
the condition of the country was such that it was evident there were
none before him.

He turned to the right, therefore, and struck into the valley of the Big
Horn, just ahead of McDougall and the pack train, intending to cross the
river and attack the village or join Reno, as the case might be. He had
just watered his horses at a little brook following out a morass, when a
sergeant from Custer’s battalion passed by on a gallop, with a message
for the supply train to come at once. As the trooper raced along the
line he shouted exultantly, “We’ve got ’em, boys!” Benteen’s men took
this to mean that Custer had captured the village. A few moments after,
Trumpeter Martini galloped up with a message from Custer to Benteen,
signed by Cook, the adjutant, which read as follows:

“Benteen. Come on. Big village. Be quick. Bring packs.

“P. S. Bring packs.”

The need for the spare ammunition with the pack-train was apparently so
urgent that in his hurry Cook repeated the last two words. At the same
time the sound of distant firing was heard in the valley. Making ready
for instant action, Benteen led his troopers forward at a gallop down
the valley. Tired though the animals were, they responded nobly to the
demands of their riders, and the whole party swept across the hills in
the direction whence the trumpeter had come until they overlooked the
valley. Every one supposed that Custer had entered the valley and was
driving the Indians before him. That he expected to have a big fight on
his hands was indicated by the reiteration of his request that the
pack-train should be rushed forward, evidently to bring the reserve
ammunition.

The valley was filled with dust and smoke; the day was frightfully hot
and dry. Bodies of men could be distinguished galloping up and down.
Benteen would, perhaps, have crossed the river and charged down the
valley had his attention not been called to a body of men in blue on the
bluff on the same side of the river to the right. They were, assuredly,
hotly engaged, but there were also evidences of fierce fighting far down
the valley. What was happening? What should he do? At this junction one
of the Crow scouts—these Indians had not fled with the cowardly Rees,
but remained with the command, fighting bravely—came up driving a small
bunch of captured ponies, and he indicated that the principal battle was
on the bluff. Benteen accordingly galloped around the bend of the river,
and joined the demoralized Reno without opposition.

It is interesting to speculate what might have happened if Benteen had
crossed the river and had charged down the valley. In that case, if Reno
had recrossed the river and again attacked, the day might still have
been won, but in all probability Reno would not have recrossed and
Benteen would have been annihilated. At any rate, Benteen did the only
thing possible when Reno’s whereabouts and need were made known to him
by the scout.

Reno had lost his hat in his famous “charge,” and had his head tied up
in a handkerchief. He was much excited, and apparently had no idea as to
what he should do next. The officers of his battalion made no bones
about admitting to the newcomers that they had been badly beaten and
were in a critical condition. None of them could tell anything about
Custer.


                     III. The Battle on the Bluffs

Benteen’s men were ordered to divide their ammunition with Reno’s. A
line of skirmishers was thrown out around the bluffs, and an effort to
get water from the river was made, the supply in the canteens having
been long ago exhausted. The Indian fire prevented this. There was, of
course, not a drop of water on the bluffs, and the wounded suffered
greatly, to say nothing of the thirsty men. The officers collected in
groups on the edge of the bluffs overlooking the field, and discussed
the question. They were not molested by the Indians at this time.

The general impression was that Custer had made the mistake of his life
in not taking the whole regiment in together. Possibly Reno’s men took
that view because they had been so badly mauled themselves. The valley
had been filled with Indians, but, about three o’clock or a little
after, most of them galloped down the river and were soon out of sight.
The river banks were still lined with Indians under cover, who kept up a
smart fire on Reno’s men if they attempted to descend the bluffs and
approach the water; but the main force had evidently withdrawn.

Firing was heard far away to the northward. It was heavy and continuous.
There could be but one explanation of it. Custer’s detachment had at
last met the Indians and was engaged. This should surely have been a
stimulus to Reno. Custer was fighting; Reno was not menaced—what should
he do? Later in the afternoon two heavy volleys in rapid succession were
remarked. This was so unusual under the circumstances that it was
finally felt to be a signal from Custer. He must surely be in grave
peril, then, and calling for help. How, in the name of all that was
soldierly, could such an appeal be neglected? Many and anxious were the
questions the officers and men put among themselves as to why Reno did
not do something. It was felt by everybody that Custer was in grave
jeopardy, and that Reno should move at once. He had about three hundred
men under his command, one-half of whom had not been engaged.

[Illustration: PLAN OF RENO’S DEFENCE ON THE BLUFF.]

Captain Weir, of D Troop, on the right of Reno’s command, having cleared
away the Indians in front of him, at last boldly took matters in his own
hands. After pleading again and again for permission,[84] he started
alone without it toward the sound of the firing to see what he could.
Lieutenant Edgerly, his second, supposed that he had received orders to
advance, and he accordingly put the troop in motion. Weir was on the
bluff, Edgerly lower down in a small ravine. The Indians moved to attack
Edgerly, when Weir signaled him to lead his men up the bluff, which he
did without loss. The troop, unsupported and in defiance of Reno’s
orders, advanced to the point where Custer had been last seen to wave
his hat, and there stopped. The men could overlook the ridges and
valleys beyond them for a great distance.

A mile and a half or two miles away they could see, through the defiles
in the ridges, great clouds of mounted Indians. Reports of rifles
indicated that the battle, whatever it was, was still being waged. It
was impossible for Weir and Edgerly to do anything with their single
troop. Although they were not seriously attacked in their bold advance,
Reno at first made no movement to support them.

[Illustration]

        CAPT. THOS. W. CUSTER               LIEUT. JAMES CALHOUN
        CAPT. GEORGE W. YATES               CAPT. MILES W. KEOGH

                   SOME OF CUSTER’S TROOP COMMANDERS

               All killed with him at the Little Big Horn

At half after four Captain McDougall and the pack train joined Reno.
They had not been molested in any way. At last, about five o’clock, Reno
yielded to the urgent and repeated representations of the angry
officers, and marched along the ridge to the position Weir and Edgerly
had reached. He came up to this point at half after five. The firing on
the bluffs far ahead was practically over. The Indians could still be
seen and some shooting was going on, but there did not appear to be a
battle raging. They learned afterward that it was the Indians shooting
into the bodies of the dead.

It was evident to every one that whatever might have been done earlier
in the afternoon, there was no use in advancing now. Indeed, the Indians
came sweeping back in great force in front of Reno, and at once attacked
him. There was nothing for him to do but retreat to the most defensible
position he could find, and endeavor to hold his ground. Custer and his
men, if they still survived, must be left to face as best they could
whatever fate had in store for them. Reno accordingly retreated to the
place on the bluff whence he had just come. Lieutenant Godfrey, of K
Troop, the rear guard, without orders deployed and dismounted his men,
and, ably seconded by his junior, Lieutenant Luther R. Hare, by hard
fighting kept off the Indians till the retreat was safely made by the
rest, whom he and his troopers succeeded in joining. It was well that he
did this, for his coolness and courage saved the command.

There was a little depression back of a ridge, which afforded some cover
for the horses and pack train. During the retreat an incident occurred
worthy of mention. One of the pack mules, loaded with precious
ammunition, broke away and galloped toward the Indian line. Sergeant
Hanley, of C Troop, sprang to his horse and raced after it. Officers and
men called to him to come back, but knowing how priceless was the
ammunition, he persisted in his course. He succeeded in heading off the
animal, which turned and ran parallel to the Indian line, along which he
galloped under a perfect shower of bullets, none of which, fortunately,
touched him. He captured the mule, and brought it back with the
ammunition intact. For this exploit he received a medal of honor.

The men took position around the ridge, across the depression and on a
hill to the right, so as to protect the packs and the field hospital
from all sides except on the river side, where the height of the bluffs
and the distance prevented any Indian attack from that direction.
Benteen’s Troop H was placed on the right. They were on top of the break
of the ridge and were without cover, the ridges being entirely bare of
trees. Farther off, to the right, Benteen’s position was commanded by
higher ridges. At first the brunt of the fighting fell on the left, but
the Indians soon surrounded the position and the engagement became
general. The men threw themselves on the ground, and dug rifle-pits with
their knives, tin pans—anything they could get. The fighting soon became
severe, but gradually slackened as darkness approached, and stopped at
about nine o’clock at night. The village in the valley was the scene of
triumphant revel that night, and the shouting of the Indians could
plainly be heard on the bluffs.

The early part of the night was full of wild confusion, but before long
the soldiers recovered their equanimity and set to work strengthening
their position. They were now completely surrounded; but most of them
were under cover except Benteen’s men, whose position, as has been
stated, was overlooked by higher ridges within easy range. At two A.M.,
contrary to their usual habit, the Indians opened fire, but no attack
was made. The next morning the battle began again in grim earnest.

The Indians pressed the party closer and closer. Benteen’s exposed line
suffered more than any other position. That experienced fighter saw that
the Indians were massing in front of him, evidently intending to deliver
a charge. If it fell upon his single troop it would not be possible to
withstand it, and the whole force on the hill would be taken in reverse
and annihilated. His men had nearly exhausted their ammunition, several
had been killed, and there were a number of wounded to be attended to.

Ordering Lieutenant Gibson to hold the line at all hazards, Benteen ran
to Reno, explained the situation, and begged for a reinforcement. After
much urging he succeeded in getting Troop M, Captain French, sent over
to the hill. Then he entreated Reno to allow the two troops to charge.
Reno hesitated. Benteen urged him again and again, pointing out that if
something were not done immediately, the position would be rushed and
the command wiped out. At last he wrung a reluctant permission from
Reno. He ran back to his position on the hill, and not a moment too soon
formed his men up for the charge, putting himself at their head.

“All ready now, men!” he cried gallantly. “Now’s your time! Give ’em
hell! Hip! Hip! Here we go!”

The Indians had also given the word to charge, but Benteen was too quick
for them. Leading his men with splendid bravery, revolver in hand, he
rushed at the Indians. There was a brief hand-to-hand mêlée and the
Indians broke and fled. Reno, seeing the effect of Benteen’s gallant
dash, actually led out a portion of his command on the other side of the
hill and drove back the Indians in that direction. Benteen’s magnificent
courage had saved the day for the present.

The fire having slackened somewhat about eleven o’clock in the morning,
volunteers were called to get water for the command, especially for the
wounded. The Indians swept the banks of the river with their fire, and
the attempt was hazardous to a degree. Nineteen men offered their
services. Four of the best marksmen—Geiger, Windolph, Voit, and
Mechling, of Troop H—were detailed to cover the others by taking an
exposed position on the brink of the bluffs overlooking the river, as
near as they could get to it. The other fifteen, one of whom has told me
about the attempt, carrying canteens and camp-kettles, but without arms,
crawled down through the bushes and ravines to the open space on the
bank of the river, and then, covered by the rapid fire of the four men
stationed above them, dashed for the stream. The Indians, who were
execrable shots, opened a heavy fire upon them, but the men succeeded in
filling the vessels they had brought, and though many of these vessels
were hit and some of the men wounded, none of them was killed. A scanty
supply of water it was, but it was a godsend. These nineteen also
received medals of honor.

At three o’clock in the afternoon the firing, which had been maintained
intermittently since noon, finally stopped, and later the men on the
hill saw the Indians withdrawing from the valley. They set fire to the
grass to screen their movements, but about seven o’clock in the evening
they were distinctly seen moving out with all their possessions toward
the mountains of the Big Horn. Eighteen troopers had been killed on the
hill, and fifty-two wounded.


                         IV. The Last of Custer

Now let us turn to Custer.

Nobody knows exactly what he did. The testimony of the field is not
clear, and the statements of the Indians are contradictory. Dr. Eastman,
an educated Sioux, has investigated the subject among many of his
people, and arrives at one conclusion; Colonel Godfrey, one of the troop
commanders who was with Benteen, and who has subsequently examined the
field in company with Benteen and other officers, taking the testimony
of Chief Gall, holds another. According to Eastman, whose account agrees
with the popular understanding, Custer attempted to ford the river at a
place now called Reno’s Creek,[85] and fall on what he supposed to be
the rear of the village, but which was really the middle of the upper
half, and was driven back to the hills, where the final tragedy took
place.

Godfrey, on the contrary, says that Custer, from the point where he was
last seen by Reno’s men, had a view of the village for several miles,
although not for its whole length; that he must have been confident that
he had it below him then, and that he made a wide detour in order to
fall on the rear of the village. It was from this point that he sent the
hurry-up message to Benteen. When at last, having gone far enough, as he
thought, to take the village in the rear, or what he supposed was the
rear, he turned toward the river, and was at once met by the Indians in
great force.

It was probably about half after two in the afternoon. Reno had been
forced back and driven across the river. Chief Gall, it will be
recalled, had taken a large body of men across the river to intercept
Reno on the other side. Before he could move down to the right for this
purpose, Custer’s men suddenly appeared on the hills. Custer’s
manœuvering had been fine, and his appearance was a complete surprise,
which at first greatly alarmed the Indians. Gall, however, did not lose
his head. Rightly judging that Reno was temporarily eliminated from the
game, he at once determined to attack Custer. He sent word of the
situation to Crazy Horse, who was pressing Reno. Leaving just enough
warriors to make a demonstration before the demoralized Reno, Crazy
Horse galloped headlong down the valley, followed by his men and joined
by others from the far end of the village, who had as yet taken no part
in the fighting. They too crossed the river at the point where a deep
ravine concealed their movements and enabled them to obtain a position
on Custer’s right flank. A similar ravine enabled Gall to menace the
left flank. The Indians were in sufficient force completely to surround
Custer. In the twinkling of an eye he found himself attacked in front
and on both sides. Instead of advancing, he was forced to defend himself
against an overwhelming attack. The troops were dismounted, horses moved
to the rear, and Custer’s men occupied the ridges.

Calhoun’s troop was posted on the left, followed by those of Keogh,
Smith, and Yates, with Tom Custer’s on the extreme right. The last three
troops happened to have the best defensive position upon the highest
hill. With them was Custer. The Indians attacked at once. Riding at full
gallop along the front of the line on their ponies, they poured a heavy
fire from their long-range rifles upon the soldiers, to which the latter
made a brave, steady, but not very effective reply with their inferior
carbines. Keogh’s and Calhoun’s horses were stampeded at the first fire.

The force menacing them was so great that Custer dared not leave his
position on the hills. To retreat was hopeless, to advance impossible.
They must stand on the defensive and pray that the advance of Reno’s
command up the valley, which they probably hoped that Benteen would
reinforce, would compel the withdrawal of the Indians from their front.
They fought on, therefore, coolly and resolutely, husbanding their
ammunition and endeavoring to make every shot tell on their galloping,
yelling foemen. They were, I imagine, by no means without ultimate hope
of victory. The Indians in their accounts speak of the cool, deliberate
courage of numbers of the officers and men, whom they singled out for
their bravery.

Yet the troopers suffered great loss as the afternoon wore on. Their
ammunition began to run low, and the contracting, whirling circle of
Indians drove them closer and closer together. The remaining horses of
the other three troops were at last stampeded, and with them went all of
the reserve ammunition. The situation had evidently become so serious
that Custer, in the vain hope that Reno would understand his peril at
last, fired the two volleys which have been referred to. It appears at
this time that he must have endeavored to send a message to Reno, for
the body of a solitary soldier, Sergeant Butler, was found after the
battle at a point half way between Custer’s and Reno’s commands. A
little heap of cartridges lay near his body, evidencing that he had sold
his life dearly. The Indians were acute enough—so they say, and probably
with truth—to pick out the officers with Custer, and the mortality among
them was fearful. It was evident to all on the hill, as the afternoon
drew toward its close, that they were doomed. It was hardly possible
that a counterattack by Reno would save them now, and there were no
evidences whatever that he was anywhere in the vicinity.

“Where, in God’s name,” they must have asked themselves in their
despair, “can Reno be?”

One of the Crow scouts has said—although his account is generally
disbelieved—that he went at last to Custer, as yet unharmed, and told
him that he thought he could get him away, and that Custer, of course,
refused to leave the field. The Crow altered his appearance by draping a
blanket about him so as to look as much like a Sioux as possible, and in
the confusion of the fight got away safely.[86] He was the only human
survivor of the field.[87] What occurred after is a matter of
conjecture, based upon the contradictory and inadequate testimony of the
Indians themselves.

Gall and Crazy Horse now determined to end the affair. Massing their
warriors in the ravine, they fell on both flanks at the same time that
Crow King and Rain-in-the-Face led a direct charge against the front of
the thinned and weakened line. They swept over the little band of men,
probably now out of ammunition, in a red wave of destruction. There was
a fierce hand-to-hand struggle with clubbed guns, war-clubs, and
tomahawks, and all was over. Some twenty or thirty men, without their
officers, who had probably all been killed where they stood, for their
bodies were found grouped around that of Custer on the highest hill,
endeavored to break through on the right. They were slaughtered to a man
before they reached the river. A few scattered bodies, here and there in
different parts of the field, indicated that separate men had made
futile dashes for freedom. But the bulk of the command was found just
where it had fought, with _the troopers in line, their officers in
position_! They had been beaten and killed. Not an officer or man lived
to tell the story, but they had not been disgraced.

There, the second day afterward, Terry, with Gibbon, having relieved
Reno’s men, found them on the hills which they had immortalized by their
desperate valor. They had been stripped and most of them mutilated.
Custer’s body was shot in two places, in the side and in the temple. It
was not scalped or mutilated. Colonel Dodge, an authority on Indian
customs, declares that if Custer’s body was neither scalped nor
mutilated, he is convinced that the general committed suicide. None of
the officers with whom I have communicated who inspected the body is
willing to indorse this statement; on the contrary. Therefore, I am sure
Colonel Dodge must be in error. The Indians give no particular
information as to Custer’s death. All that is known is that his body was
there with those of his brave men.

With Custer in that fight perished many gallant souls. His brother,
Captain Tom Custer, was the only man in the United States Army who held
two medals for capturing two flags with his own hands in the Civil War.
Rain-in-the-Face had accomplished his terrible revenge, for after the
battle he had cut open the breast of the brave young soldier and had
eaten his heart. Calhoun, of L Troop, was Custer’s brother-in-law. With
him was young Crittenden, a lieutenant of infantry, who had sought an
assignment with Custer for this campaign. Smith was the captain of E,
the Gray Horse Troop. At the storming of Fort Fisher, after two
color-bearers had been killed, he had led his regiment to the attack,
colors in hand. His shoulder had been smashed by a musket ball in that
attack. He could never afterward put on his coat without assistance.
With him was young Sturgis. Yates, a veteran of the Civil War, was
captain of F, the Bandbox Troop; and with him was Riley, the youngest
lieutenant there. Keogh, of I Troop, the oldest soldier of them all, and
not the least brave, had been an officer of the Papal Zouaves in early
life. He had a gallant record in the Civil War, too. With him was
Porter, and with the others who had done their parts were Cook, the
adjutant, and Lord, the doctor.

Others worthy of note fell on that fatal field: Mark Kellogg, a
newspaper correspondent; Charlie Reynolds, the famous scout; Boston
Custer, the General’s brother, who was civilian forage-master of the
regiment, and Autie Reed, the General’s nephew—a mere boy, who wanted to
see something of life in the West and who had welcomed with joy his
opportunity to make the campaign. Well, he saw it, poor fellow! Indeed,
the Custer family was almost wiped out on that fatal Sunday.

Premonitions of disaster, such as loving women may feel, were in the air
that afternoon. Back at Fort Abraham Lincoln, the devoted wife tells how
the women of the garrison assembled in her quarters in an agony of
apprehension. There were words of prayer. Some one at the piano started
“Nearer My God to Thee,” and the women tried to sing it, but they could
not finish it. It was not until the 5th of July that they received the
news that at that very hour their loved ones were dying on the hill.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of The Century Co._
]

       LIEUT. H. M.        ADJ. W. W. COOK[88]        LIEUT. J. J.
      HARRINGTON[88]                                 CRITTENDEN[89]

 LIEUT. J. E. PORTER[88]  LIEUT. J. STURGIS[88]      LIEUT. DONALD
                                                      McINTOSH[90]

     LIEUT. W. VAN W.                           LIEUT. BENJ. HODGSON[90]
        RILEY[88]

                    OFFICERS OF THE SEVENTH CAVALRY

                   All killed at the Little Big Horn


                          V. After the Battle

On the morning of the 27th of June Terry and Gibbon rescued Reno. The
next day the surviving troops of the regiment, with some individuals
from the other command, marched to the scene of Custer’s defeat to
identify and bury the dead. The bodies upon the dry grass had all been
stripped and left, white and ghastly save for the red stains of wounds.
The bodies of Doctor Lord, Lieutenants Porter, Harrington, and Sturgis,
with those of a number of men, were not recovered. What became of them
is not known to this day. They may have been captured alive and taken by
the Indians to the village, and there tortured to death and their bodies
disposed of. This, however, is unlikely. The Indians positively deny
that they took any prisoners, and it is probable that they did not.
There are quicksands near the bed of the Little Big Horn, and possibly
those bodies were engulfed in them. But all this is only surmise. No one
can tell anything about it, except that they were undeniably killed. And
we may be certain they died as brave men should.

They buried two hundred and twelve bodies on the hill, and the total
losses of the regiment in the two days of fighting were two hundred and
sixty-five killed and fifty-two wounded—over fifty per cent. The losses
of the Indians were never ascertained. They did not, however, begin to
equal those of the soldiers. It is grossly unfair to speak of the battle
as the “Custer Massacre,” as is often done. Custer attacked the Indians,
and they fought him until all the white men were killed. There was no
massacre about it.

The cause of the disaster must, first of all, be laid to Custer’s
disobedience of orders. In spite of that, however, I think it is
probable that he might have won the battle, or at least made good his
defense until relieved by Terry and Gibbon, although sustaining heavy
loss, had it not been for three happenings. The first was the vastly
greater number of Indians in the field than any one expected to
encounter. The next, and to me this is absolutely decisive, was Reno’s
failure to press his attack. If he had gone in with the dashing
gallantry which was expected of him, while it is certain that he could
not alone have whipped the Indians, yet he could have so disorganized
them as to have maintained his position in the valley in the midst of
the village without the greatest difficulty, until Custer could fall
upon the rear of those attacking him, and Benteen, with the pack train,
could reinforce them both. The Indians say that they were demoralized
for the time being by Reno’s sudden appearance, and that the squaws were
packing up getting ready for flight when the weakness of Reno’s advance
encouraged them to try to overwhelm him. Custer had a right to expect
that Reno would do his duty as a soldier and take a bold course—which
was, as usual, the only safe course.

Colonel Godfrey, in his account, suggests still a third cause. The
carbines of the troopers did not work well. When they became clogged and
dirty from rapid firing, the ejectors would not throw out the shells,
and the men frequently had to stop and pick out the shells with a knife.
The chambers of the carbines at that time were cylindrical, and the
easily accumulated dirt on the cartridges clogged them so that the
ejectors would not work properly. The chambers were afterward made
conical, with good results. The Indians had no such trouble. Their
weapons were newer and better than those of the soldiers. If the
indifferent weapons of the troopers failed them, their annihilation in
any event would have been certain.[91]

I have censured Custer somewhat severely in this article, and it is a
pleasure to me to close it with a quotation from Captain Whittaker’s
life of his old commander. In this quotation Lawrence Barrett, the
eminent actor, who was an old and intimate friend of Custer, has
summarized the character of the brave captain in exquisitely apposite
language; and, in his words, I say good-by to the gallant soldier whose
errors were atoned for by an heroic death in the high places of the
field:

“His career may be thus briefly given: He was born in obscurity; he rose
to eminence; denied social advantages in his youth, his untiring
industry supplied them; the obstacles to his advancement became the
steppingstones to his fortunes; free to choose for good or evil, he
chose rightly; truth was his striking characteristic ... his acts found
his severest critic in his own breast; he was a good son, a good
brother, a good and affectionate husband, a Christian soldier, a
steadfast friend. Entering the army a cadet in early youth, he became a
general while still on the threshold of manhood; with ability undenied,
with valor proved on many a hard-fought field, he acquired the affection
of the nation; and he died in action at the age of thirty-seven, died as
he would have wished to die, no lingering disease preying upon that iron
frame. At the head of his command, the messenger of death awaited him;
from the field of battle where he had so often ‘directed the storm,’ his
gallant spirit took its flight. Cut off from aid, abandoned in the midst
of incredible odds ... the noble Custer fell, bequeathing to the nation
his sword; to his comrades an example; to his friends a memory, and to
his beloved a Hero’s name.”

                  *       *       *       *       *

NOTE.—The question concerning Custer’s conduct is so important a one
that I have included in Appendix A the opinions, pro and con, of several
officers with whom I have corresponded; and in which I have indicated
some other sources of information by which the reader may settle the
debatable question for himself.

-----

Footnote 78:

  Charles A. Eastman, M. D., a full-blooded Sioux, a graduate of
  Dartmouth and the Boston University School of Medicine, who has
  published an interesting account of the battle from his investigations
  among the Sioux. See _The Chautauquan_, Vol. XXXI., No. 4, July, 1900.

Footnote 79:

  Killed with Custer at the Little Big Horn

Footnote 80:

  General G. A. Forsyth.

Footnote 81:

  The unanimous testimony of the Indians who have discussed the battle
  subsequently is that they were panic-stricken by Reno’s approach, and
  would have fled if his attack had been pressed home. This is about the
  only statement upon which the Indians all agree.

Footnote 82:

  This statement is elsewhere denied.

Footnote 83:

  DeRudio and one other man joined the command on the night of June
  26th; the others succeeded in crossing the river to Reno’s position
  late in the afternoon.

Footnote 84:

  “The splendid officers of the Seventh, who had followed Custer so
  faithfully, begged Major Reno to let them try to join the general.
  They cried like women, they swore, they showed their contempt of that
  coward, but the discipline of their lives as soldiers prevented them
  disobeying until it was too late. You know Colonel Weir and Lieutenant
  Edgerly tried.”—Private letter to me from the wife of an officer who
  was killed in the battle.

Footnote 85:

  Not the Reno’s Creek referred to above, down which Reno marched to the
  Little Big Horn. This Reno’s Creek may be seen in the largest map
  between Reno’s final position and the Custer Hill, where the general’s
  battalion was overwhelmed.

Footnote 86:

  It is believed that this man, who was named Curley, secreted himself
  in a ravine, before the fighting began, and stole away at nightfall.

Footnote 87:

  Captain Keogh’s horse “Comanche,” badly wounded, was found on the
  field the second day after the battle. His life was saved, and for
  many years he was the particular pet of the regiment.

Footnote 88:

  Killed with Custer.

Footnote 89:

  20th Infantry, attached to Custer’s command. Killed.

Footnote 90:

  Killed with Reno.

Footnote 91:

  It is possible that if Custer had kept the regiment together, he would
  have won the battle; but this is by no means certain, and authorities
  differ. I think he would have been forced eventually on the defensive.




                              CHAPTER SIX
                One of the Last Men to See Custer Alive


Mr. Theodore W. Goldin, of Janesville, Wisconsin, formerly a trooper of
the Seventh Cavalry, now Chairman of the Republican State Central
Committee of Wisconsin, was the last, or perhaps the next to the last,
man to see Custer alive. He has prepared an account of his personal
experiences in the battle, which is one of the most interesting of the
contributions that have been made to this volume. His description of the
death of Hodgson is splendidly dramatic, as is his story of the brief
conversations between Custer and Keogh, Reno and Weir, and Benteen and
Wallace.

What a magnificent picture is that presented by Hodgson, determined to
retreat no longer, facing about, drawing his revolver, and dying at
last, face to the foe, weapon in hand! Mr. Goldin contradicts the
popular impression, as repeated by Colonel Godfrey and others, that Reno
threw away his pistols in his “charge.”

                                     Milwaukee, Wis., August 11, 1904.

  My Dear Sir:—

  I am in receipt of your letters of July 28th and August 2d, asking
  me for a few reminiscences of personal experiences and touching on
  my acquaintance and knowledge of Gen. Custer and his last fight.

  The years that have elapsed since that stirring event may have
  somewhat dimmed my recollections, and the time at my disposal at
  this time is so very limited, that what I may say must, of
  necessity, be somewhat fragmentary. Your articles on this subject,
  as well as the entire series, have been read with great interest,
  and I am very much pleased to know they are to be published in book
  form.

  In reply to your request, I will say that I had known Gen. Custer
  from the time I joined the regiment in 1873 up to the time of his
  tragic death, and had campaigned with him and with the regiment with
  the exception of the year 1875, when the troop to which I was
  attached was stationed in the South.

  Early in the spring of ’76, we received word that an expedition was
  being organized against the Sioux, and that three large columns were
  to take the field, and a few weeks later our marching orders came,
  and our battalion changed station from near Shreveport, La., to Fort
  Lincoln, D. T.

  At the time of our arrival Gen. Custer was in Washington before some
  investigating committee, and only joined the regiment a few days
  before our column took the field, he having been ordered under
  arrest at Chicago while en-route from Washington.

  I will not take the time or space to touch on our march from Fort
  Lincoln to the Yellowstone, which we struck near the mouth of the
  Powder River. Here we remained a few days while outfitting our pack
  train, as it had been determined that we would abandon our wagons
  here and establish a supply camp. Maj. Reno had left us a few days
  before on a scout, expecting to rejoin us near the mouth of the
  Tongue River on June 17th.

  After arranging to leave our wagon train and some dismounted
  recruits and the regimental band at the Powder River, we moved camp
  to the mouth of the Tongue, where we lay on the 17th of June, the
  day on which Gen. Crook had his big fight with the Indians on the
  Rosebud. During the day we watched every distant dust cloud that
  whirled across the river bottom, hoping that it meant the approach
  of Maj. Reno’s command, but as nothing was heard from him, we broke
  camp on the morning of the 18th and moved up the valley, where we
  effected a junction with Reno soon after noon. During the previous
  days we could not help but note the fact that Gen. Custer seemed
  moody and discontented, and, entirely different from his usual
  habit, appeared nervous and excited to some extent.

  When Reno came in with his report he became a changed man. His
  old-time energy and snap were made apparent by the manner in which
  he hustled the command into marching order and took the trail for
  the Rosebud, where Gen. Terry on our supply steamer the “Far West”
  had already preceded us in the hope of striking the command of Gen.
  Gibbon, who was known to be somewhere in that vicinity. Our march
  was prolonged far into the night, but we finally struck the
  Yellowstone and went into camp, assured that if the steamer was
  below us we were bound to intercept it.

  The following morning we were in the saddle early, and soon after
  noon we sighted the wagon train of Gen. Gibbon’s command moving
  slowly up the river and a few moments later the “Far West” steamed
  into sight. Couriers were sent out to advise them of the fact that
  Reno had discovered the trail of a considerable body of Indians, and
  in a short time we were in camp near the mouth of the Rosebud and a
  council of war was held at which we understood that Reno’s report
  was discussed in detail.

  The following day arrangements were made for a vigorous campaign. A
  final council was held on the steamer on the night of the 21st, as I
  now recollect it, at which time Gen. Custer received his final
  orders, substantially as you have stated them. At this council, and
  just about the time it was breaking up, the question was asked Gen.
  Gibbon as to what time he could reach the mouth of the Little Big
  Horn River, and he replied,

  “Not before noon of the 26th.”

  At this conference it was reported that Custer had been offered the
  battalion of the Second Cavalry and the artillery which had been
  brought up on the steamer, but declined both, claiming that he knew
  his command so well that he preferred to trust himself with them
  alone, and that he feared the artillery might delay his march when
  nearly in presence of the enemy. Many of the officers and men felt
  that it was but a part of a preconceived scheme to secure an
  independent command, such as he had been used to having for years,
  but be that as it may his request was granted.

  On the afternoon of June 22d we passed in review before Gen. Terry
  and Gen. Gibbon, and soon struck the trail described by Maj. Reno.
  From that time until Reno struck the Indian village we did not
  deviate from it except when it became necessary to find a
  satisfactory camping ground. No attempt was made to scout the
  country as we had been directed to do, nor was any attempt made to
  send a courier across to Gen. Gibbon, although a man named Herndon,
  a scout, had been attached to our command for that purpose.

  Our marches were long and our movements very rapid until the night
  of the 24th, when we moved off the trail some distance and
  apparently settled down for the night. But this was only a ruse to
  mislead the Indians, as we had received orders not to unpack our
  saddles and to be prepared for a night march.

  From the hour we left the Rosebud Gen. Custer acted in many respects
  like another man, his old-time restless energy had returned, and he
  seemed to think of nothing but to reach and strike the Indians. In
  this connection it might be well to say that the trail we were
  following led from the direction of the Missouri River and
  indicated, according to the estimate of Bloody Knife and some of our
  Crow scouts, a band of from a thousand to twelve hundred Indians,
  whom we afterward learned came from the Missouri River agencies and
  consisted almost entirely of warriors.

  About eleven o’clock we received word to saddle up and lead into
  line. In the meantime a scouting party of Crows and Rees, with some
  of our officers, Lieut. Varnum and, I think, Lieut. Hare, had pushed
  on ahead of us to scout the trail across the divide and seek to
  locate the Indians if possible. Leaving our bivouac, we again struck
  the trail and pushed forward, seeking to cross the divide and get
  into the shelter of the foot-hills along the Little Big Horn before
  daybreak the following morning. Owing to the roughness of the
  country and the difficulty in scouting the trail, we were unable to
  do this, and daybreak found us in a ravine at the foot of a range of
  high bluffs, just how far from the river we did not know.

  Some time during the night it was said Gen. Custer had pushed ahead
  and joined the scouts, and that just after daybreak they told him
  they had located the village in the valley of the Little Big Horn,
  but Gen. Custer replied that he did not believe them. In the
  meantime it became apparent that our presence in the country was
  known, as, during the night a box of ammunition[92] had been lost
  and a detachment sent back to recover it came across some Indians
  trying to open the box. On this being reported to Gen. Custer, he
  seemed to decide on an immediate advance.

  In the talk, just about the time the division was made in the
  command, Mitch Bowyer, a half-breed Crow interpreter, said to Gen.
  Custer that he would find more Indians in that valley than he could
  handle with his command. Custer replied that if he (Bowyer) was
  afraid to go he could stay behind. Bowyer replied that he was not
  afraid to go wherever Custer did, or something to that effect, but
  that if they went in there neither of them would come out alive.

  Just before the advance was made I was detailed by Lieut. McIntosh
  to report to Gen. Custer for duty as orderly, and at once did so.
  The general directed me to ride with Lieut. Cook, our regimental
  adjutant, and perform any duties he might assign to me.

[Illustration:

  _Copyright by D. F. Barry_

  SITTING BULL

  Chief Medicine Man of the Sioux Nation
]

  During our brief halt the men had thrown themselves on the ground
  and were most of them asleep, while the horses were grazing among
  the sage brush. Gen. Custer ordered the advance, saying that the
  company in each battalion first ready should have the right of the
  line, and in a few minutes we were all in the saddle. During the
  halt it had been ordered that Benteen with his battalion should move
  off to the left, scouting the country in that direction, driving
  before him any Indians he might discover, and sending word to the
  command of anything he might find. Reno was to follow the trail,
  while Gen. Custer with the five troops under him struck off to the
  right, leaving McDougall with the pack train to follow as best he
  could.

  We immediately took up the line of march in accordance with these
  orders, and after probably a half hour’s hard ride the impassibility
  of some of the hills and ravines forced the column under Gen. Custer
  to veer off to the left and we soon came up with the command of Maj.
  Reno, which was pushing ahead on the trail as fast as the roughness
  of the ascent would permit. After a hard climb we reached the top of
  the ridge, where we saw before us a rolling plateau sloping off
  toward the foot-hills of the river, which was perhaps some five or
  six miles away.

  As our command dashed over the divide we could see Reno some
  distance in front of us, moving rapidly down the trail, while
  several miles to our left was the command of Col. Benteen, scouting
  the bluffs as he had been ordered. For some distance we followed the
  general course of Reno’s advance, but were some distance in his rear
  and to his right.

  To those of us who were near him it seemed that Custer was chafing
  at the apparent slowness of our advance, as he would at times dash
  ahead of the column and then rein in and await our approach and
  again off he would go. Just about this time we discovered a huge
  dust cloud moving down the river valley, but could not determine the
  nature of it. As soon as this was discovered Custer rode over toward
  the river accompanied only by his orderly trumpeter, and stopped for
  a moment on the top of a high pinnacle, where we saw him wave his
  hat, apparently in salutation to some one in the distance, and then
  come dashing back toward the head of the column which was headed by
  Capt. Keogh and “I” Troop, veterans of a dozen fights. With his eyes
  snapping in his excitement, Custer rode up to Keogh and said,
  somewhat excitedly:

  “Keogh, those Indians are running. If we can keep them at it we can
  afford to sacrifice half the horses in the command.”

  Calmly as though on dress parade, Keogh turned in his saddle and
  looked back at the long line of eager, bronzed, bearded faces, and
  turned to Custer with the remark:

  “General, we will do all that man and horse can do.”

  A moment later the bugles blared out the charge, the first bugle
  note we had heard since leaving the Rosebud, and away we thundered
  northward down the river, two or three times seeking to find a place
  where we could work down into the valley below us, but without
  success.

  After perhaps the third unsuccessful trial, Gen. Custer talked
  hurriedly with Capt. Cook for a moment, and Cook pulled out his pad
  and dashed off a line or two, which he folded up, at the same time
  calling for an orderly. I happened to be the first one to reach him,
  and he handed me the paper with the order.

  “Deliver that to Maj. Reno, remain with him until we effect a
  junction, then report to me at once,” and he was gone.

  An instant later the rear of the column dashed past me and was lost
  to sight in the ravines. For an instant I looked after them, and
  then realizing that I was in a dangerous country and alone, I lost
  no time in heading in the direction of Reno’s command, which I was
  able to locate by the dust cloud that hovered over them.
  Fortunately, I was not molested to any great extent. A few
  long-range shots were fired at me, which only served to accelerate
  my speed and materially added to my desire to be among friends.

  A ride of some five or six miles and I overtook Reno just as he was
  dismounting to fight on foot. I delivered my dispatch, the contents
  of which I did not know. Reno glanced at it somewhat hurriedly and
  stuck it in his pocket. About this time the Ree scouts stampeded
  and, as we afterward learned, did not recover their sand until they
  reached the Powder River and the shelter of the wagon train. It soon
  became apparent that the Indians were passing our flank and coming
  in behind us, and we were forced to face about and endeavor to repel
  their advances until we could get our horses into the timber, in
  which attempt several horses were shot and two or three stampeded.
  Soon after this we retired into the timber, where we had better
  protection and resumed the fight. Sheltered by the timber and the
  river bank, we were able to make a much better defense for a short
  time.

  Soon after this we noticed that Capt. Moylan was mounting his troop
  and Lieut. Wallace, who stood near me on the skirmish line, called
  to Capt. French, who was commanding the center company, and asked
  what the orders were. French replied that he hadn’t received any but
  would try and find out, and in a few minutes he called to us saying
  he understood they were going to charge, that he had not received
  any orders, but we might as well mount and support them.

  We were ordered to get to our horses, and while doing this we found
  that some fifteen of our men were dismounted either because of the
  shooting or stampeding of their horses. Lieut. McIntosh had lost his
  horse and took one belonging to a trooper named McCormick, who gave
  him up with the remark that we were all dead anyway, and he might as
  well die dismounted as mounted. Swinging into the saddle, we moved
  out of the timber and to our surprise discovered that instead of
  “charging the Indians” Reno was executing a masterly charge on the
  bluffs on the opposite side of the river.

  As soon as the Indians discovered this, they massed on our flanks
  and opened a heavy fire on the retreating column. Fortunately, they
  were poor marksmen mounted, and our loss was comparatively small at
  this stage of the stampede, for that is what it was.

  It is reported that Reno became so excited that he emptied his
  revolver at the Indians and then threw the weapon from him. I happen
  to know this was not so, as the revolver is now in the possession of
  Gen. Benteen or his family, or was a few years ago.

  During the progress of this retreat I was riding on the left of our
  column and near the timber, and when almost in sight of the river my
  horse fell, throwing me into a bunch of sage brush, but without
  doing me serious injury save to exterior cuticle. As I scrambled to
  my feet Lieut. Wallace passed me, shouting for me to run for the
  timber as my horse was killed. I did not stop to verify his report,
  but took his advice, striking only one or two high places between
  where the horse fell and the timber, which I presently reached.

  From where I was concealed I could see our men force their horses
  into the river and urge them across the boulder-strewn stream. I saw
  Lieut. Hodgson’s horse leap into the stream and saw him struggling
  as though wounded, I saw the lieutenant disengage himself from the
  stirrups and grab the stirrup strap of a passing trooper and with
  that aid make his way across the stream. No sooner had he reached
  the bank than it became apparent he had been wounded, but he
  pluckily held on, and the trooper seemed to be trying to help him up
  behind him on the saddle, but without daring to stop his horse. An
  instant later Hodgson seemed to be hit again, for he lost his hold,
  fell to the ground, staggered to his feet and sought to reach
  another comrade who reined in to aid him, and just as it seemed that
  he was saved I saw the second trooper throw up his arms, reel in the
  saddle and fall heavily to the ground. Hodgson started to make his
  way toward the ravine up which the command was disappearing, he
  staggered forward a few steps, stumbled, struggled to his feet
  again, only to fall once more. He apparently decided that further
  effort to retreat was useless, as I saw him turn and face the
  Indians, draw his revolver and open fire. An instant later three or
  four shots rang out from my side of the river, and I saw Hodgson
  reel and fall and I knew it was all over.

  In the meantime our men had succeeded in crossing the river and made
  their way up a neighboring ravine, all save those who had met their
  fate at the ford, which was one of the worst along the river for
  many rods. Left alone, I began to wonder what my own fate was likely
  to be, but I was not observed and therefore not molested, the
  Indians being busy stripping and mutilating the bodies of our dead
  along the banks of the stream.

  About this time I could hear sounds of heavy firing down the river,
  and made up my mind that Custer was engaging the Indians, and from
  the momentary glimpses I had of the village I felt that he was as
  badly outnumbered as we were. Most of the Indians in our front
  melted away and I could see them lashing their ponies as they
  hurried to join their friends at the lower end of the village.

  About this time I saw the scout, Herndon, some little distance from
  me, making his way toward the river, and called to him, and we were
  soon together. He told me that the fifteen dismounted men of our
  outfit had made their way to a point in the timber about a couple of
  hundred yards from where we were, but that in order to get nearer
  the river they had to cross an open space and every time they tried
  it the Indians fired on them. Before leaving us the Indians had set
  the river bottom on fire, evidently with a design of concealing
  their movements, or of smoking or roasting out our wounded. This
  smoke proved to be our salvation, as under its cover we made our way
  to the river, forded it with some difficulty, and stumbled on to one
  of our Crow scouts, who pointed out to us the location of the
  command, which we soon joined.

  We found that Benteen and his battalion had reached it and that
  nothing was known of the location of Custer and his command. We
  reported what we had heard and seen, and just about this time some
  one discovered a white flag waving from a point in the river bottom
  near where Herndon and myself had been concealed. Lieut. Hare, at
  the risk of his life, crept down to a point of bluffs overlooking
  the valley, and after considerable signaling satisfied the party we
  were friends and they made their way across the river and soon
  joined us, proving to be the dismounted men who had been left to
  their fate when Reno made his retreat.

  I omitted to state that when we started on our retreat Lieut.
  McIntosh, mounted on McCormick’s horse, was several rods in front of
  me and I noticed that in some way his lariat had become loosened and
  was dragging on the ground, the picket pin striking sage brush and
  other obstacles, and rendering his immediate vicinity very
  dangerous. Several of the men sought to call his attention to it,
  but evidently he did not hear them. A moment after this I saw his
  horse go down, but whether he was shot or not I do not know. All I
  could see as I passed was that the lieutenant was lying where he
  fell, and was either dead or stunned, probably dead, as we found him
  in the same place the day after the Indians left us.

  As we were standing on the bluffs looking down into the valley I
  heard some loud talk near me, and turning in that direction, I heard
  Capt. Weir say:

  “Well, by G—d, if you won’t go, I will, and if we ever live to get
  out of here some one will suffer for this.”

  He strode away, and a few moments later I saw “D” Troop mount up and
  move down the valley in the direction of the distant firing.
  Apparently without orders, the entire command followed them in no
  sort of military order with the exception of the two troops under
  Benteen and Godfrey. In this way we pushed down the valley some
  distance, when we discovered Weir and his troop falling back before
  a largely superior body of Indians.

  Hastily forming a line, we held back the advancing horde until Weir
  and his command had passed our lines and formed some distance in our
  rear, where, with the support of some of our men who were near them,
  they formed a line and opened fire, permitting us to fall back and
  re-form again in their rear. In this way we fell back some little
  distance, when Col. Benteen, who seemed to be the leader in our
  section of the field, spoke to Lieut. Wallace, saying:

  “Wallace, there is no use falling back any further. Form your troop,
  your right resting here, and we will make a stand.”

  Wallace grinned and said,

  “I haven’t any troop, only two men.”

  Benteen laughed grimly and answered,

  “Form yourself and your two there, and I will tell you more about it
  when I find out myself.”

  That was the nucleus of our line of defense. Others soon joined us
  and we sheltered ourselves behind sage brush and hurriedly heaped
  piles of dirt and opened fire, keeping the Indians at a respectable
  distance until darkness came to our relief. During the night we
  changed our position a trifle, located our corral and hospital, and
  put in the night intrenching ourselves as best we could. At daybreak
  the fight opened again and continued without intermission until
  about three in the afternoon, when to our surprise the Indians began
  to take down their tepees, pack their travois, and in a few hours
  were moving up the river valley, a great mass of ponies, travois and
  Indians, unfortunately just out of rifle range.

  Twice during the afternoon volunteer parties had gone for water,
  each time being fired upon by the Indians, but it was only on the
  second trip that any one was hit. Poor Madden, of “K” Troop, was the
  unfortunate, his leg being shattered three times between the ankle
  and the knee. We carried him back to the hospital, where his leg was
  amputated that night.

  On the following day Gen. Terry and Gen. Gibbon came to our relief,
  and through them we received the first authentic information as to
  the fate of our comrades of the other battalion. On the 28th, after
  having transported our wounded across the river, we visited the
  scene of the battle and buried such of Custer’s men as we found.
  Aside from General Custer, we found hardly a body on the field that
  had not been mutilated in some manner or another, but as I recollect
  now, we found no marks of mutilation on our dead leader.

  In the space at my disposal it is not possible to deal in incidents
  of the fight or go into detailed descriptions. In fact, those have
  been well covered in your article already.

  Since the fight I have discussed it with many officers of the army,
  and others who have had experience on the frontier, and the general
  opinion seemed to be that there were two, possibly three, main
  causes for this disaster.

  First: A division of the command into practically four separate
  columns while still some fifteen miles from the battle-field, and
  without accurate knowledge as to the exact location or approximate
  strength of the enemy, and the separation of those columns so that
  at a critical period of the fight no two of them were in supporting
  distance of one another.

  Second: The fact that Custer came into the presence of the enemy
  practically twenty-four hours ahead of time.

  Third: The loss of the horses and with them much of the surplus
  ammunition of Custer’s command.

  This subject has been so often discussed by men much abler than
  myself that I will not attempt it here.

  My experiences with Gen. Custer always led me to look upon him as
  somewhat recklessly brave, disposed to take chances without fully
  considering the odds against him.

  I have always felt that one possible reason for the course he
  followed, in the face of the orders he received, might be attributed
  to the fact that he was feeling keenly the apparent disgrace of the
  treatment accorded him by the President, and that he thought that by
  a brilliant dash and a decided victory, similar to his Washita
  fight, he might redeem himself and once more stand before the people
  as a leader and an Indian fighter second to none. Whatever may have
  been his motive, we must all admit that he made a most gallant fight
  and gave his life at the side of the comrades who had ridden with
  him to victory in many a previous battle.

                                        Very truly yours,
                                                      THEO. W. GOLDIN.

-----

Footnote 92:

  Mr. Goldin’s recollection is in error, according to Colonel Godfrey,
  who is positive that the box contained hard bread. However, the
  difference is not material—it was a box, anyway!—C. T. B.




                             CHAPTER SEVEN
                 The Personal Story of Rain-in-the-Face

                                   BY
                             W. Kent Thomas

NOTE.—It is rare, indeed, to get the Indian side of a story in so clear,
so connected, and so dramatic a form as is the following account of the
Battle of the Little Big Horn from one who played a great part in it and
in the events that led up to it. This is a unique document in our
records, and is inserted here by kind permission of Mr. Thomas. It
originally appeared in _Outdoor Life_, Vol. XI., No. 3, for March, 1903.
Its accuracy and fidelity to fact are so attested as to be beyond
question.—C. T. B.


The writer saw much of the “Custer Indians” at the World’s Fair and
afterward at Coney Island, and had a good chance to know some of them
well. The following leaves from a diary kept at that time show how the
Indians regarded the Custer fight; they considered that the white men
were simply outgeneraled by Sitting Bull:

                                   Coney Island, N. Y., Aug. 12, 1894.

  Rain-in-the-Face (Itiomagaju) hobbled into the tent to-night, as
  McFadden and I were discussing the events of the day, and seating
  himself, unbidden, with true Indian stoicism, he grunted out that
  one word of all words so dear to a Lakota, “Minnewaukan!” which,
  literally translated, means “Water of God,” but which by usage has
  been interpreted as “fire-water.” Since the other Indians were all
  away from camp on a visit to their friends, the Oglalas at Buffalo
  Bill’s camp, I decided to yield for once to Rain’s oft-repeated
  demand, which had been hitherto as regularly denied.

  He took my flask, and with a guttural “How!” drained it at one gulp,
  without straining a muscle of his face. “Ugh! good! like Rain’s
  heart,” he remarked, as he handed the empty bottle to “Mac” with a
  self-satisfied look. Then, after a long pause, he joined in our
  hearty laughter, and added: “Wechasa Chischina (Little Man, as he
  always calls me) good! Potoshasha (Red Beard, his name for McFadden)
  good! Minnewaukan good! All heap good!”

  “Something’s come over the old man,” laughed Mac. “His heart’s good
  to-night. Suppose we take advantage of it, as the boys are all over
  at the Oglala tepees, and get Rain to turn his heart inside out.
  Here, give me my hat and I’ll get the flask refilled and bring back
  Harry with me to interpret.” Off he went like a shot, leaving me to
  entertain Rain as best I could with my small knowledge of the Sioux
  lingo and signs.

  McFadden soon returned, bringing Harry McLaughlin, our interpreter.
  It didn’t take long to get Rain started; after he had had another
  pull at the flask, he said:

[Illustration:

  RAIN-IN-THE-FACE

  _From a sketch from life made in 1894 by Edward Esmonde_
]

  “If you want a story, I will tell a true one. It’s about myself. I
  was a bad man and dangerous to fool with before I had to walk with
  crutches. My heart’s good now, but it was all the time bad when I
  was a fighter and a hunter. The maidens admired me, but the bucks
  were afraid of me. I would rather fight than eat. The long swords
  (soldiers) trembled when they knew I was near, and the Rees and
  Crows always felt of their hair every morning to see if their scalps
  were still on when Rain was near by.”

  Here Harry headed him off, for it’s natural for an Indian to boast,
  and if any one will listen he will sing his own praises for hours at
  a stretch.

  “Yes, we know you were a bad man and a fighter from ’way back,” said
  Harry, “but we want to hear about the time Tom Custer made you take
  water. If you were such a brave man, how did it happen that a little
  man like Tom Custer got the best of you?”

  This had the desired effect, and Rain winced under such a reflection
  on his bravery, for he measured forty-six inches around his chest,
  stood five feet nine inches, and weighed about 195 pounds at that
  time, while Captain Tom Custer was under the average weight and
  height.

  With great deliberation and much gesticulation, Rain told his
  version of the incident in question, and much to our surprise he
  continued on and related his version of the “Custer Massacre.”

  Now, since nearly all the officers in the Regular Army, as well as
  all the agents of the Interior Department, have failed to get him
  even to speak of this fight (their trying, coaxing, and threatening
  for years has been in vain), and since Rain gets the credit of being
  the slayer of Custer, and has been immortalized in verse by
  Longfellow, it was a pleasant surprise to have this unexpected
  revelation. I am writing it down as nearly like McLaughlin
  interpreted it as I can.

  “Two years before the big fight,” he said, “Gall and Sitting Bull
  had their camp at Standing Rock. All were hostiles. They were
  Unkpapa Sioux and fighters who never feared an enemy any more than a
  buffalo calf. The Yanktonais (friendly Indians) were coffee coolers
  (cowards) and hung around the agency which was at Lincoln then (Fort
  Abraham Lincoln on the upper Missouri now). We used to have great
  times in the hostile camp, dancing, running races, shooting and
  playing games. Buffalo and deer were plenty, and we had many ponies.
  I was a great fellow with the girls. They used to tease me to get me
  mad—when I got mad I knew no reason, I wanted to fight. One night a
  girl dared me to go up to Fort Lincoln and kill a white man. I told
  her it was too risky, as the long swords always kept watch. Besides,
  the Rees (another tribe of Indians, employed by the government as
  scouts) had their lodges on the hill back of the fort. The
  wood-choppers were camped between the fort and the river. She said:

  “’A brave man fears nothing. If you are a coward, don’t go. I’ll ask
  some other young man who isn’t afraid, if he hasn’t danced in the
  Sun Dance.’ (This was a torture dance in which Rain-in-the-Face
  subsequently underwent the most horrible self-torture ever
  inflicted.[93])

  “The other girls laughed, but the young men who heard it didn’t.
  They feared me. I would have killed them for laughing. I went to my
  lodge and painted sapa (black, the color used when they go on the
  war-path), took my gun, my bow, my pony. Sitting Bull had forbidden
  any one to leave camp without his permission. I skipped off under
  cover of darkness and went up to Lincoln (forty-five miles north,
  opposite the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota). I hung around
  for two days, watching for a chance to shoot a long sword. I had
  plenty of chances to kill a Ree squaw, plenty to kill a
  wood-chopper, but I wanted to carry back the brass buttons of a long
  sword to the girl who laughed at me. I did so, and she sewed them on
  her shawl. One morning I saw the sutler (store keeper) and a horse
  medicine man (U. S. Veterinary Surgeon Hontzinger) go out to a
  spring; Long Yellow Hair (General Custer) and his men were riding
  back about 100 yards. I rushed up and shot the sutler and brained
  the horse medicine man with my war club; then I shot them full of
  arrows and cut off some buttons. Long Yellow Hair heard the shot and
  his troop charged back. I didn’t have time to scalp the men I got. I
  jumped on my pony and yelled at them to catch me. They chased me to
  the Cannon Ball (a small river twenty-five miles south). Charlie
  Reynolds (a scout) knew me and told Long Yellow Hair who did this
  brave deed.

  “Next winter I went to the agency store at Standing Rock. I drew no
  rations—I hadn’t signed the paper. (All the Indians who signed a
  peace treaty and consented to live on the reservation, under
  military orders, were furnished with rations by the government twice
  a month. The hostiles had to live by hunting.) Istokscha (One Arm,
  the Hon. H. S. Parkin) was running the store then. I wasn’t afraid
  of any of them. Little Hair (Capt. Tom Custer) had thirty long
  swords there. He slipped up behind me like a squaw, when my back was
  turned. They all piled on me at once; they threw me in a sick wagon
  (ambulance) and held me down till they got me to the guard-room at
  Lincoln.

  “I was treated like a squaw, not a chief. They put me in a room,
  chained me, gave me only one blanket. The snow blew through the
  cracks and on to me all winter. It was cold. Once Little Hair let me
  out and the long swords told me to run. I knew they wanted to shoot
  me in the back. I told Little Hair that I would get away some time;
  I wasn’t ready then; when I did, I would cut his heart out and eat
  it. I was chained to a white man. One night we got away. They fired
  at us, but we ran and hid on the bank of Hart river in the brush.
  The white man cut the chains with a knife (a file). They caught him
  next day.

  “I rejoined Sitting Bull and Gall. They were afraid to come and get
  me there. I sent Little Hair a picture, on a piece of buffalo skin,
  of a bloody heart. He knew I didn’t forget my vow. The next time I
  saw Little Hair, ugh! I got his heart. I have said all.”

And, Indian-like, he stopped.

We all knew that the greater part of this was true, since it tallied
with the government account of the death of the sutler and Surgeon
Hontzinger. But we wanted to hear how he took Tom Custer’s heart.
McFadden, who is quite an artist as well as an actor of note, had made
an imaginary sketch of “Custer’s Last Charge.” He got it and handed it
to Rain, saying:

“Does that look anything like the fight?”

Rain studied it a long time, and then burst out laughing.

“No,” he said, “this picture is a lie. These long swords have
swords—they never fought us with swords, but with guns and revolvers.
These men are on ponies—they fought us on foot, and every fourth man
held the others’ horses. That’s always their way of fighting. We tie
ourselves onto our ponies and fight in a circle. These people are not
dressed as we dress in a fight. They look like agency Indians—we strip
naked and have ourselves and our ponies painted. This picture gives us
bows and arrows. We were better armed than the long swords. Their guns
wouldn’t shoot but once—the thing wouldn’t throw out the empty cartridge
shells. (In this he was historically correct, as dozens of guns were
picked up on the battle-field by General Gibbon’s command two days after
with the shells still sticking in them, showing that the ejector
wouldn’t work.) When we found they could not shoot we saved our bullets
by knocking the long swords over with our war clubs—it was just like
killing sheep. Some of them got on their knees and begged; we spared
none—ugh! This picture is like all the white man’s pictures of Indians,
a lie. I will show you how it looked.”

Then turning it over, he pulled out a stump of a lead pencil from his
pouch and drew a large shape of a letter S, turned sideways.[94] “Here,”
said he, “is the Little Big Horn river; we had our lodges along the
banks in the shape of a bent bow.”

“How many lodges did you have?” asked Harry.

“Oh, many, many times ten. We were like blades of grass. (It is
estimated that there were between four and six thousand Indians, hence
there must have been at least a thousand lodges.)

“Sitting Bull had made big medicine way off on a hill. He came in with
it; he had it in a bag on a coup-stick. He made a big speech and said
that Waukontonka (the Great Spirit) has come to him riding on an eagle.
Waukontonka had told him that the long swords were coming, but the
Indians would wipe them off the face of the earth. His speech made our
hearts glad. Next day our runners came in and told us the long swords
were coming. Sitting Bull had the squaws put up empty death lodges along
the bend of the river to fool the Ree scouts when they came up and
looked down over the bluffs. The brush and the bend hid our lodges. Then
Sitting Bull went away to make more medicine and didn’t come back till
the fight was over.

“Gall was head chief; Crazy Horse led the Cheyennes; Goose the Bannocks.
I was not a head chief—my brother Iron Horn was—but I had a band of the
worst Unkpapas; all of them had killed more enemies than they had
fingers and toes. When the long swords came, we knew their ponies were
tired out; we knew they were fooled by the death lodges. They thought we
were but a handful.

[Illustration:

  Key to map of Custer battle-field. Drawn on back of buckskin coat by
    Rain-in-the-Face for Edward Esmonde. Said to be the only map of the
    battle-field ever made by an Indian.

  _A_, _Camp of the Indians_; _B_, _Reno’s Skirmish Line_; _C_, _Timber
    Where Reno’s Horses Were_; _D_, _Reno’s Retreat_; _E_, _Reno Joined
    Benteen_; _F_, _Custer’s Trail_; _G_, _Custer’s First Stand_; _H_,
    _Squaws and Children Crossed River_; _I_, _Where Squaws Went Into
    Camp After Re-crossing River_; _J_, _Where Last Stand Was Made and
    Custer Was Killed_.
]

“We knew they made a mistake when they separated. Gall took most of the
Indians up the river to come in between them and cut them off. When we
saw the Ree scouts had stayed back with Long Yellow Hair, we were glad.
We saw them trotting along, and let them come in over the bluffs. Some
of our young men went up the gully which they had crossed and cut them
off from behind.

“Then we showed our line in front, and the long swords charged. They
reeled under our fire and started to fall back. Our young men behind
them opened fire. Then we saw some officers talking and pointing. Don’t
know who they were, for they all looked alike. I didn’t see Long Yellow
Hair then or afterward. We heard the Rees singing their death song—they
knew we had them. All dismounted, and every fourth man held the others’
ponies. Then we closed all around them. We rushed like a wave does at
the sand out there (the ocean beach) and shot the pony holders and
stampeded the ponies by waving our blankets in their faces. Our squaws
caught them, for they were tired out.

“I had sung the war song, I had smelt the powder smoke. My heart was
bad—I was like one that has no mind. I rushed in and took their flag; my
pony fell dead as I took it. I cut the thong that bound me. I jumped up
and brained the long sword flag-man with my war club, and ran back to
our line with the flag.

“The long sword’s blood and brains splashed in my face. It felt hot, and
blood ran in my mouth. I could taste it. I was mad. I got a fresh pony
and rushed back, shooting, cutting, and slashing. This pony was shot,
and I got another.

“This time I saw Little Hair. I remembered my vow. I was crazy; I feared
nothing. I knew nothing would hurt me, for I had my white weasel-tail
charm on.[95] (He wears the charm to this day.) I don’t know how many I
killed trying to get at him. He knew me. I laughed at him and yelled at
him. I saw his mouth move, but there was so much noise I couldn’t hear
his voice. He was afraid. When I got near enough I shot him with my
revolver. My gun was gone, I don’t know where. I leaped from my pony and
cut out his heart and bit a piece out of it and spit it in his face. I
got back on my pony and rode off shaking it. I was satisfied and sick of
fighting; I didn’t scalp him.

“I didn’t go back on the field after that. The squaws came up afterward
and killed the wounded, cut their boot legs off for moccasin soles, and
took their money, watches, and rings. They cut their fingers off to get
them quicker. They hunted for Long Yellow Hair to scalp him, but could
not find him. He didn’t wear his fort clothes (uniform), his hair had
been cut off, and the Indians didn’t know him. (This corroborates what
Mrs. Custer says about her husband’s having his long yellow curls cut at
St. Paul some weeks before he was killed.)

“That night we had a big feast and the scalp dance. Then Sitting Bull
came up and made another speech. He said: ‘I told you how it would be. I
made great medicine. My medicine warmed your hearts and made you brave.’

“He talked a long time. All the Indians gave him the credit of winning
the fight because his medicine won it. But he wasn’t in the fight. Gall
got mad at Sitting Bull that night. Gall said: ‘We did the fighting, you
only made medicine.’ It would have been the same anyway. Their hearts
were bad toward each other after that, always.

“After that fight we could have killed all the others on the hill
(Reno’s command) but for the quarrel between Gall and Sitting Bull. Both
wanted to be head chief. Some of the Indians said Gall was right and
went with him. Some said Sitting Bull was. I didn’t care, I was my own
chief and had my bad young men; we would not obey either of them unless
we wanted to, and they feared us.

“I was sick of fighting—I had had enough. I wanted to dance. We heard
more long swords were coming with wheel guns (artillery, Gatlings). We
moved camp north. They followed many days till we crossed the line. I
stayed over there till Sitting Bull came back, and I came back with him.
That’s all there is to tell. I never told it to white men before.”

When he had finished, I said to him: “Rain, if you didn’t kill Long
Yellow Hair, who did?”

“I don’t know. No one knows. It was like running in the dark.”

“Well,” asked Mac, “why was it Long Yellow Hair wasn’t scalped, when
every one else was? Did you consider him too brave to be scalped?”

“No, no one is too brave to be scalped; that wouldn’t make any
difference. The squaws wondered afterward why they couldn’t find him. He
must have laid under some other dead bodies. I didn’t know, till I heard
it long afterward from the whites, that he wasn’t scalped.”

“How many Indians were killed in the fight?”

“I don’t remember, but about ten and four or ten and six.”

“How about Curley, the Crow scout, who claims to have escaped?” asked
Mac.

“Ugh! I know Curley. He is a liar. He never was in the fight. His pony
stumbled and broke something. He stayed behind to fix it. When he heard
the firing, he ran off like a whipped dog. One long sword escaped,
though; his pony ran off with him and went past our lodges. They told me
about it at Chicago. I saw the man there, and I remembered hearing the
squaws tell about it after the fight.”

Rain-in-the-Face (Itiomagaju) is about sixty years of age now, and is
the only chief that survives to tell the tale of the Custer fight. Gall
and Sitting Bull have both gone to hunt the white buffalo long since.
Rain can write his name in English. I taught him to do it at the World’s
Fair in order to sell Longfellow’s poem, entitled “The Revenge of
Rain-in-the-Face.” He doesn’t know the significance of it after he
writes it. His knowledge of English is confined to about thirty words,
but he can’t say them so any one can understand him, though he can
understand almost anything that is said in English. Like all other
Indians, his gratitude is for favors to come and not for favors already
shown. He is utterly heartless and unprincipled, physically brave but
morally a coward. His redeeming feature lies in the fact that you can
depend upon any promise he makes, but it takes a world of patience to
get him to promise anything. Even at the age of sixty he is still a
Hercules. In form and face he is the most pronounced type of the ideal
Fenimore Cooper, dime novel Indian in America.

-----

Footnote 93:

  The Sun Dance is that ceremonial performance in which the young Sioux
  aspirant gives that final proof of endurance and courage which
  entitles him to the _toga virilis_ of a full-fledged warrior. One
  feature of it is the suspension in air of the candidate by a rawhide
  rope passed through slits cut in the breast, or elsewhere, until the
  flesh tears and he falls to the ground. If he faints, falters, or
  fails, or even gives way momentarily to his anguish during the period
  of suspension, he is damned forever after, and is called and treated
  as a squaw for the rest of his miserable life.

  Rain-in-the-Face was lucky when he was so tied up. The tendons gave
  way easily, and he was released after so short a suspension that it
  was felt he had not fairly won his spurs. Sitting Bull, the chief
  medicine man, decided that the test was unsatisfactory.
  Rain-in-the-Face thereupon defied Sitting Bull to do his worst,
  declaring there was no test which could wring a murmur of pain from
  his lips.

  Sitting Bull was equal to the occasion. He cut deep slits in the back
  over the kidneys—the hollows remaining were big enough almost to take
  in a closed fist years after—and passed the rawhide rope through them.
  For two days the young Indian hung suspended, taunting his torturers,
  jeering at them, defying them to do their worst, while singing his war
  songs and boasting of his deeds. The tough flesh muscles and tendons
  would not tear loose, although he kicked and struggled violently to
  get free. Finally, Sitting Bull, satisfied that Rain-in-the-Face’s
  courage and endurance were above proof, ordered buffalo skulls to be
  tied to his legs, and the added weight with some more vigorous kicking
  enabled the Indian stoic to break free. It was one of the most
  wonderful exhibitions of stoicism, endurance, and courage ever
  witnessed among the Sioux, where these qualities were not infrequent.
  Rain-in-the-Face had passed the test. No one thereafter questioned his
  courage. He was an approved warrior, indeed. It was while suspended
  thus that he boasted of the murder of Dr. Hontzinger, and was
  overheard by Charlie Reynolds, the scout, who told Custer and the
  regiment.

  Mr. Edward Esmonde, a companion of Mr. Thomas during the season he had
  Rain-in-the-Face and his fellows at the World’s Fair in Chicago and
  afterward at Coney Island in his charge, gave me the information in
  this note.—C. T. B.

Footnote 94:

  Rain-in-the-Face afterward drew a picture or map of the battle of the
  Little Big Horn, on the back of a handsome buckskin hunting-shirt. A
  cut of this picture appears on the following page. It is believed to
  be the only map of the battle drawn by one of the Indian participants
  therein.—C. T. B.

Footnote 95:

  Notwithstanding his “white weasel-tail charm,” Rain-in-the-Face was
  wounded in this battle. A bullet pierced his right leg above the knee.
  Among the plunder which fell to him after the action was over was a
  razor taken from the person of some dead soldier. With this razor the
  wounded man essayed some home-made surgery. First he cut deeply into
  the front of his leg, but failed to reach the bullet. Then he reached
  around to the back of his leg and chopped recklessly into the flesh
  from that quarter. He got the bullet, also several tendons, and
  narrowly missed cutting the artery and bleeding to death. He was lame
  and had to walk on crutches all his life thereafter.

                                              —Statement of Mr. Esmonde.

  Colonel Godfrey, in his _Century_ article, relates a similar instance
  of courage and endurance on the part of one of his troopers:

  “Among the wounded was Saddler ‘Mike Madden,’ of my troop, whom I
  promoted to be sergeant on the field for gallantry. Madden was very
  fond of his grog. His long abstinence had given him a famous thirst.
  It was necessary to amputate his leg, which was done without
  administering any anæsthetic; but after the amputation, the surgeon
  gave him a good stiff drink of brandy. Madden eagerly gulped it down,
  and his eyes fairly danced as he smacked his lips and said:

  “’M-eh, doctor, cut off my other leg.’”—C. T. B.




                             CHAPTER EIGHT
                        Two Interesting Affairs


                     I. The Fight on the War Bonnet

Before entering upon a detailed description of the larger events of the
campaign after the Battle of the Rosebud and Little Big Horn, two
smaller affairs are worthy of mention. One, though nothing but a
skirmish, was of great importance in determining the final result. The
other well illustrates something of the adventurous life and perilous
duty of a soldier in Indian warfare.

On Saturday, July 15, 1876, the Fifth Cavalry, under General Wesley
Merritt, was marching toward Fort Laramie, under orders to join Crook.
At noon word was received from the agency that a body of Cheyennes,
numbering, perhaps, one thousand warriors, who had heretofore remained
quiet on the reservation at the Red Cloud Agency, on the White River,
South Dakota—the Pine Ridge Agency—was about to break away and join the
Indians in the field. Their minds had been inflamed by the story of
Crook’s defeat and the account of the disaster to the Seventh Cavalry.
They thought they saw unlimited opportunities for plunder, scalp-taking,
and successful fighting—therefore they decided to go on the war-path
without delay. There were not troops enough near the agency to prevent
this action, which was entirely unsuspected anyway.

The orders for Merritt to join Crook were imperative; but, in view of
this news, the general decided to disregard them for the present. He
realized that he could perform no better service than heading off this
body of Cheyennes, and either defeating and scattering them or, better
still, forcing them back to the agency.

The trail they would have to take would cross a creek in the extreme
southeast corner of South Dakota, called the War Bonnet,[96] some
eighty-five miles, by the only practicable route, from where the Fifth
Cavalry then was. The Indians were a much shorter distance from it.
Merritt would have had to march around, practically, three sides of a
square, owing to the configuration of the country, to reach that point,
which was the best place for miles around, within the knowledge of W. F.
Cody (Buffalo Bill), his chief scout, to intercept the flying Cheyennes.

Merritt did not hesitate an instant after learning the news. He put his
command in motion immediately, and by a forced march of thirty-one
hours, got to the crossing in good time. There was no evidence that the
Cheyennes had passed. The troopers concealed themselves in ravines under
the bluff’s, and waited for the Indians.

Early on the morning of July 17th, the pickets, commanded by Lieutenant
Charles King,[97] observed the approach of the Indians. At about the
same time Merritt’s wagon train, under Lieutenant Hall, with two hundred
infantrymen spoiling for a fight, concealed in the wagons as a guard,
was observed toiling along, some four miles to the southwest, in an
endeavor to reach the rendezvous on the War Bonnet. The regiment
remained carefully concealed, and the Indians, in high glee, thought
they had the train at their mercy.

So soon as he sighted the Cheyennes, Lieutenant Hall despatched two
troopers of his small cavalry escort ahead to the crossing to apprise
Merritt that the Indians were at hand. An advance party of Cheyennes,
superbly mounted and led by a gorgeous young chief, determined to
intercept these troopers, who were ignorant of their peril. The two
soldiers came down one trail which led through a ravine, the Indians
came up another which led through another ravine. The troopers and the
Cheyennes were hidden from each other, but both were in plain view of
the picket on the hill. The two trails joined at the foot of the hill.
The plain back of the wagon-train was black—or red, rather—with Indians
coming up rapidly, although they were not yet near enough to attack.

Merritt and one or two other officers, with Buffalo Bill and a few of
his scouts and several troopers, joined King on the hill. The main body
of the Indians was too far away to attack, so the little advance party
determined to wait until the Cheyennes, who were endeavoring to cut off
the two soldiers, were close at hand and then fall upon them. Everybody
withdrew from the crest of the hill except Lieutenant King, who was to
give the signal, when the party below should sally around it and fall on
the Cheyennes.

King, who has described the situation with masterly skill in his
“Campaigning with Crook,” flattened himself out on the brow of the hill,
with nothing showing but the top of his hatless head and his field
glass, and watched the soldiers rapidly galloping up one trail and the
Indians more rapidly rushing down the other. He waited until the Indians
had almost reached the junction. Then he gave the signal. Merritt’s
escort and Cody’s scouts raced around the base of the hill, and dashed
slap into the faces of the astonished Cheyennes. Two Indian saddles were
emptied in the twinkling of an eye. Such was the impetus of their charge
that the Indians scarcely had time to rein in their steeds before the
white men were upon them.

Buffalo Bill shot the leader of the war party, a famous young chief
named Yellow Hand, through the leg. The bullet also pierced the heart of
the pony Yellow Hand was riding. Both crashed to the earth. In spite of
his pain, Yellow Hand dragged himself to his feet and fired at the
scout, killing his horse. The two, not twenty paces apart, exchanged
shots the next instant. The Indian missed, but Buffalo Bill sent a
bullet through Yellow Hand’s breast. The Indian reeled, but before he
fell Cody leaped upon him and drove his knife into his gallant enemy’s
heart. Yellow Hand was a dead Indian when he struck the ground. “Jerking
the war bonnet off,” he says, “I scientifically scalped him in about
five seconds.”[98]

Yellow Hand had recognized Buffalo Bill, and had virtually challenged
him to this duel. “The first scalp for Custer!” shouted Cody, waving his
trophy in the air.

Some of the other Indians had now come within range. They opened fire
upon the little party; the bullets zipped around them in every
direction, one narrowly grazing General Merritt. They nicked a horse
here and there, but, as usual, their marksmanship was execrable.

As the little party charged the Indians, Merritt had directed King to
order the rest of the regiment to advance. In the midst of the firing,
the splendid troops of the dandy Fifth came bursting through the ravines
and over the hills, making for the Cheyennes on the gallop. At the same
time Lieutenant Hall’s infantrymen scrambled out of their wagons and
sent a few volleys at the Cheyennes at long range. A more astonished
body of Indians the United States has probably never contained. They
hadn’t the slightest idea that there was a soldier within five hundred
miles, except those in the wagon train which they had expected to
capture. They had anticipated no trouble whatever in joining Sitting
Bull, and now they found themselves suddenly face to face with one of
the finest cavalry regiments in the service. What were they to do? They
hadn’t much time to decide, for the cavalry were after them at full
gallop. They turned and fled incontinently. They stood not on the order
of their going, but went at once.

If they could get back to the reservation, they would be free from
attack. They fled at the highest possible speed of their horses,
throwing aside everything they possessed, save their guns and
ammunition, in their frantic desire to get away. For thirty miles
Merritt and his men pursued them with the best will in the world to come
up with them; but the horses of the soldiers were more or less tired
from their long march of the day before, and the Indians, lightly
equipped and on fresh horses, finally succeeded in escaping. By
nightfall the whole party was back on the reservation. Thereafter care
was taken that they found no further opportunity to go on the war-path.

The coöperation of this splendid body of Indians with that under the
command of Crazy Horse might possibly have turned the scale in some of
the hotly contested battles, and Merritt’s promptness was greatly
commended by the authorities. Buffalo Bill received the chief glory of
the little adventure from his dramatic duel with Yellow Hand, in full
view of soldiers and Indians.


                          II. The Sibley Scout

The other event is known in army records as The Sibley Scout. While
General Crook was waiting for reinforcements and additional supplies at
his camp on Goose Creek, near the Tongue River, he decided to send out a
scouting party to see what had become of his friend, Crazy Horse, who
had handled him so severely at the Rosebud a few weeks before.

Lieutenant Frederick W. Sibley, of E Troop, of the Third Cavalry, an
enterprising but cool-headed young officer, was given command of
twenty-five picked men from the regiment. With him went scouts Frank
Gruard and Baptiste Pourier, commonly known as “Big Bat,” to distinguish
him from another scout, Baptiste, a smaller man. To the party also were
attached John Becker, mule packer, and the indefatigable Finerty, the
war correspondent of the Chicago _Times_, making a total of thirty men.

Each man carried one hundred rounds of ammunition on his person, and a
few days’ rations in his saddle-bags. They started on the 6th of July.
On the 7th they had reached the Rosebud, some fifty miles away from
Crook’s camp. There they came across the Indians. Gruard and Pourier
observed them from the top of a hill, behind which the rest of the
expedition halted. There were hundreds of them, apparently, and the
scouts rejoined the command immediately. To take the back track was
impossible. Therefore, they struck westward over the mountains, leading
their horses. The Indians, marching slowly southward, soon came upon the
trail of the party, and followed it at some distance. Urged by the
imminence of their peril, the men, led by the unerring Gruard, who was
familiar with all the ramifications of the Big Horn Range, since he had
often hunted there during his captivity with the Sioux, did some rapid
mountain climbing, and finally thought they had escaped pursuit,
especially as no one could ride up the trail up which they had climbed,
and these Indians were poor trailers when on foot. Having progressed
some five miles over terrific trails, they halted in a little glade
under the shade of some trees, unsaddled their horses, made coffee, and
ate dinner. Feeling themselves safe from pursuit, they rested for
several hours, and it was not until late in the afternoon that they took
up their march again.

The going here was easier than before, and they could mount their horses
once more. Presently they trotted into a level, thickly wooded valley.
The trail led along the right side of the mountain, which was broken and
rugged. There were woods to the left and in front of them, and high
rocks and open timber on the right. John Becker, who brought up the
rear, suddenly alarmed everybody by the shout of “Indians, Indians!”

The next instant the timber and boulders to the right were alive with a
war party of Sioux and Cheyennes, not two hundred yards away—not the
same party they had seen in the valley, by the way. So soon as the
Indians appeared they opened fire. Again their shooting was bad. Not a
trooper was hurt, although a number of horses were hit, some seriously.
Sibley acted with prompt decision. A word with Gruard determined him in
his course. Under a spattering fire from the Indians, the party turned
to the left and raced for the thick timber as fast as they could go.
They threw themselves to the ground in a semi-circular line so soon as
they reached the woods, tied their horses to the trees back of them, and
taking advantage of fallen logs and boulders as a breastwork, opened
fire upon the Indians, who, on their part, sought concealment and
commenced firing in earnest. The soldiers were well protected in the
forest, however, and although the Indians killed many of the horses,
they did not hit any of the troopers.

The party was now overwhelmingly outnumbered. There were already several
hundred Indians engaged. Their leader was a magnificent young Cheyenne
chief, dressed in a suit of white buckskin. It was afterward learned
that his name was White Antelope. Gruard was recognized by the Indians,
who were desirous of taking him alive. After firing for perhaps half an
hour, White Antelope led the Indians on foot in a direct charge on the
woods.

Sibley ordered his men to hold their fire until they could make every
shot tell. They mowed the advancing Indians down in scores. White
Antelope was seen to leap into the air and fall. He had been pierced, it
was afterward learned, by several bullets, and started for the happy
hunting grounds then and there. The charge was handsomely repulsed, and
the Indians retired in confusion, although still keeping up a severe
fire.

[Illustration:

  CHIEF TWO MOON OF THE NORTHERN CHEYENNES

  Allies of the Sioux at Little Big Horn

  _Painted from life by F. A. Burbank_
]

It was evident to every one that the Indians would hold the soldiers in
play until they were joined by other war parties—indeed, their numbers
were increased already—when Sibley’s detachment would be surrounded and
exterminated. Gruard, therefore, proposed abandoning the horses—most of
them had been killed anyway—and that the whole party should steal away
through the timber and endeavor to escape over the mountains on foot.
Firing two or three volleys and then keeping up a scattering fire for a
short time to make the Indians think they were on the alert, the
troopers, exercising the greatest caution, one by one crawled through
the underbrush until they were hidden by the forest trees. Then
everybody got up on his feet and ran like mad.

Gruard, whose instincts as a guide were of the highest order, led them
over magnificent mountains, through gloomy cañons, past overhanging
cliffs, along impossible trails on the sides of tremendous precipices,
one of which stretched for several hundred feet below them and three
hundred feet above them, almost sheer. Not being mountaineers, they
would have been utterly unable to have followed the scout had it not
been for the Red Terror that lurked behind. They had succeeded in
getting, perhaps, a mile away from and some distance above the valley,
when they heard several heavy volleys, followed by a series of wild
yells, which apprised them that the Indians had at last rushed their
camp. They were so confident of escape now that they actually burst into
roars of laughter at the thought of the Indian disappointment when the
attackers found their victims had decamped. Those Indians were not
accustomed to hunt on foot. An Indian off a horse is about as awkward as
a sailor on one. The pursuit was soon abandoned, and the soldiers left
to follow their course unmolested. Theirs had been a lucky escape.
Without Gruard, they had all been killed.

The day was frightfully hot. The fast going caused by the exigencies of
the occasion and the desperate nature of the climbing increased their
discomfort. The men threw away everything in the way of superfluous
clothing which would impede their progress or tire them in their hurry,
save their weapons and ammunition. They camped that night, or halted,
rather, for there was nothing with which to camp, on the crest of the
range. It turned very cold, a terrible storm arose, and they suffered
severely. They had nothing to eat; their provisions had been in their
saddle-bags, and they had not dared to take them in their attempt to
escape, lest the suspicions of the Indians should be excited by their
efforts.

The next day, the 9th of July, they started down the mountain. Gruard’s
instincts were not at fault. He led them to the foot-hills overlooking
Crook’s main camp far away. In order to reach the plain they had to
cross a rapid mountain brook, the water of which came almost up to their
necks. Two men who could not swim and who were in a very nervous
condition from their exciting adventures, stubbornly refused to try to
cross the stream, even with the assistance of their comrades. They chose
rather to hide themselves where they were, and begged that help might be
sent back to them. The rest of the party managed to cross and started
for the camp, still about fifteen miles distant. They were met in the
evening by a scouting party of soldiers, who brought them back to camp.

Their clothing and shoes were torn to ribbons, and they were greatly
exhausted from the terrible strains and hardships to which they had been
subjected. That they escaped at all was a miracle, due to the coolness
of young Sibley and the marvelous skill of Gruard. A detachment went
back for the two men who had remained behind and brought them back to
the camp.

Lieutenant Sibley reported to General Crook that he had found the
Indians, but whether that statement is accurate is a question. It would,
perhaps, be more truthful to say that the Indians had found him. Sibley
and Gruard were highly complimented by Crook; and Mr. Finerty, who had
displayed great courage, wrote a graphic account of it, from which this
brief sketch has been abridged.

-----

Footnote 96:

  The frontiersmen translate this to “Hat Creek”; and that is the name
  it bears to-day—more’s the pity!

Footnote 97:

  Afterward brigadier-general of volunteers in the Spanish-American War,
  and the author of many fascinating romances of army life.

Footnote 98:

  “The Adventures of Buffalo Bill.” By Colonel William F. Cody. Harper &
  Brothers, 1904.




                              CHAPTER NINE
                           The First Success


                   I. Crook and Mills at Slim Buttes

After the defeat of General Custer, and the successful retreat of the
Sioux and Cheyennes from the Little Big Horn, the government hurried
reinforcements into the field, and ordered Crook and Terry to press the
pursuit of the Indians with the greatest vigor. It was not, however,
until nearly a year after the disaster on the Little Big Horn that the
Sioux war was concluded, and it was not until after the Indians had met
with several crushing defeats and had been pursued until they were
utterly exhausted that peace was declared.

The greatest individual factor in bringing about this much desired
result was General George Crook, a celebrated cavalryman during the
Civil War, and a more celebrated Indian fighter after its close. With
unwearied tenacity and vigor he pursued the savages, striking them
through his subordinates whenever and wherever they could be found. The
terrible persistence with which he urged his faint, starving, foot-sore,
tattered soldiers along the trail, to which he clung with a resolution
and determination that nothing could shake, entitles him to the respect
and admiration of his countrymen—a respect and admiration, by the way,
which was fully accorded him by his gallant and equally desperate foes.

After Crook, the men who brought about the result were, first and
foremost, Nelson A. Miles—singularly enough not a cavalryman, but the
Colonel of the Fifth Infantry; and, next to him, Colonel Ranald S.
Mackenzie, of the Fourth Cavalry, and Captain Anson Mills, of the Third,
whom we have already noted doing gallant service at the Battle of the
Rosebud. Miles had been ordered into the field to reinforce Terry’s
shattered and depleted column.

After much marching and scouting, the columns of Terry and Crook
combined; but Terry’s forces were in bad condition, and his command was
soon withdrawn from the field. What was left of the Seventh Cavalry was
sent back to Fort Lincoln, whence they had started out with such bright
hopes a few months before. Gibbon’s command was returned to Montana,
where it had been made up, on account of the threatening aspect of
things in that quarter, and Terry retired from active campaigning to
resume command of his department. Miles, as we shall see, was sent to
the Yellowstone.

Crook was left alone in the active pursuit. Space and time are lacking
to describe the details of the wonderful marches he made on the trails
of the Indians—now under burning suns, which parched the ground until it
was as bare as the palm of a hand; again through torrents of drenching
rains, which succeeded the fierce heat; and, finally, through the snows
and cold of a winter of unexampled severity. During the summer there was
no forage for the horses of the cavalry nor for the very small pack
train, and rations for the men became shorter and shorter. Finally,
early in September, the supply of provisions was reduced to two and a
half days’ rations. Crook calculated that they could march two weeks on
that amount.

They supplemented the rations by living on horse and mule meat and a few
wild onions which they could gather from time to time in spots which had
escaped the universal baking of the summer. At last the command
literally reached the end of its resources. The Indians were in bad
condition, too, but their situation was not nearly so desperate as was
that of Crook and his men. The Indians were worn out and exhausted by
the energetic and relentless pursuit which had been hurled after them by
the indomitable commander, but they still had plenty to eat, and they
had managed to keep ahead of him, and to avoid various scouting columns.

On the 7th of September, 1876, Crook realized that his men had reached
the limit of their endurance, and that forage and food must be procured
or they would all die in the wilderness. The Indians had swept the
country bare of game, and the sun had swept it clean of fodder. One
hundred and fifty of the best men—that is, those who showed the fewest
signs of the hardships they had undergone—with the best horses and the
last of the mules, were formed into an advance party under Captain Anson
Mills, of the Third Cavalry. Mills had instructions to push on to
Deadwood City, one of the new towns in the Black Hills, to get
provisions, “Any kind of provisions, for God’s sake!” which he could
bring back to the rest of the army, now in a destitute condition.

Mills was not expected to hunt for, or to fight, Indians—primarily, that
is. He was to go for food in order to keep the army from starving; but
as he marched southward, his scouts discovered a large village of forty
or fifty lodges at a place called Slim Buttes, in the northwest corner
of South Dakota. The tepees had been pitched on a little rising from the
banks of a small stream called Rabbit Creek. The place was inclosed on
three sides by a series of tall cliffs, whose broken sides seemed here
and there to have been cut in half-formed terraces, making the ascent
easy. Little ravines and small cañons ran through the buttes, gradually
ascending until they met the plateau on top.

Mills instantly determined to attack the camp—a wise and soldierly
action on his part. He made his dispositions with care. Reaching the
vicinity of the camp, he halted in a deep gorge on the night of
September 8, and prepared for battle early the next morning. The night
was dark, cold, and very rainy, and the tired men suffered greatly.
Marching out at dawn, Mills succeeded at daybreak in surprising the
camp, which proved to be that of a band of Sioux led by American Horse,
one of the most prominent chiefs. Leaving Lieutenant Bubb with the pack
train and the lead horses, Mills directed Lieutenant Schwatka, afterward
so well known from his Arctic explorations, to charge directly into the
village with twenty-five mounted men. The remainder of his force he
dismounted and divided into two parties, under Lieutenants Von Luettwitz
and Crawford, respectively, with orders to move on the camp from
different sides.

The attack was a complete success. The village was taken with but little
loss. Some of the Sioux were killed and others captured, but most
escaped through the ravines to the plateau surrounding the valley. One
heroic but unfortunate little band, consisting of American Horse and
four warriors, with fifteen women and children, was driven into one of
the cañons which ended in a cave. One or two of the soldiers had been
wounded in the attack. Lieutenant Von Luettwitz, who had fought all
through the Franco-Austrian War in Italy, and who was a veteran of the
Civil War, was shot in the knee and so badly wounded that his leg had to
be amputated on the field.

Being now in complete command of the village, the pack train was ordered
up and the captured village was examined. To the joy of Mills and his
soldiers, an immense quantity of provisions, in the shape of meat,
forage, and other stores, was discovered.

There still remained the little band of savages in the ravine to be
dealt with. A detachment was ordered to drive them out. The Indians had
been busy making rifle-pits, and as the soldiers advanced to storm the
cave, they were met with a rapid and well-directed fire. Two of them
were shot dead and others wounded.[99] The Indian position appeared to
be impregnable. An interpreter crept near enough under cover to make
himself heard, and asked their surrender. They replied to his command
with taunts and jeers. They incautiously informed him, however, that
Crazy Horse with his warriors was in the vicinity, and on being apprised
of their situation by some of the fugitives, he would undoubtedly come
to their rescue. Crazy Horse could have made short work of Mills and his
hundred and fifty. Meanwhile the survivors of the village, which had
contained a hundred warriors, formed an extended line on the buttes and
opened fire on the soldiers.

Mills acted promptly. He despatched a courier to Crook on the best horse
in the command, to report the situation and ask him for reinforcements
at once. Incidentally, he mentioned that a great quantity of provisions
had been found. Then he made preparations to hold the place, and at the
same time to prosecute his attack against the cave, all the time keeping
up a smart fight with the men on the buttes. So soon as Crook received
the message, he started forward, intending to take with him a select
body of men; but the whole army, spoiling for a fight and hungry for a
square meal, insisted on going along. They made a forced march, and
reached Mills about half after eleven in the morning.

Crook immediately proceeded to dislodge the Indians in the cave. The men
were led forward under a galling fire, to which the general, in spite of
the entreaties of his staff, exposed himself with indifference. When
they got in a position to command the cave, Crook, willing to spare his
brave foemen, again asked them to surrender. His request was met by a
decided negative. The men opened fire, and searched every cranny and
recess of the cave with a storm of bullets. Gruard, one of the scouts,
taking advantage of cover, crept to the very mouth of the cave, remained
there unobserved, watched his opportunity, seized a squaw who
incautiously exposed herself, and with her as a shield dashed forward
and shot one of the warriors, escaping in safety himself.


                    II. The Death of American Horse

After two hours of firing, the death-chants of the squaws induced Crook
to order a cessation for another parley. This time his request that the
Indians surrender met with some response; for the squaws and children,
to the number of thirteen, came reluctantly forth on his positive
assurance that they would be protected. The braves refused to give up.
They were confident that Crazy Horse would succor them. The engagement
at once began again, but after it had lasted some little time the fire
of the Indians ceased.

The offer of mercy was made a fourth time. A young Indian stepped out
and received additional assurance that no harm should come if they
surrendered. He went back into the cave and presently reappeared with
another young warrior, supporting between them the tall, splendid figure
of brave old American Horse. He had been shot through the bowels, and
his intestines protruded from the wound. He was suffering frightful
agony, and was biting hard upon a piece of wood to control himself. He
handed his gun to Crook and gave up the contest. The surgeons with the
command did everything they possibly could for him, but his wound was
beyond human skill. That night, surrounded by his wives and children, he
died, as stoically and as bravely as he had lived.

Inside the cave the rocky walls were cut and scored by the rain of
bullets which had been poured into it, and lying on the floor were the
bodies of the two Indian warriors, together with a woman and a child,
who had been killed. The soldiers had not known, until the squaws came
out, that there were any women or children there. The little band had
sold their lives dearly. Even the women had used guns, and had displayed
all the bravery and courage of the Sioux.

Too late Crazy Horse, with some six hundred warriors, appeared on the
scene. Imagining he had only to deal with Mills’ small force, he
galloped gallantly forward to the attack at about five o’clock. He was
greatly astonished at the number of antagonists developed thereby. He
retired to the top of the buttes, and the soldiers in gallant style
dashed after him. They scaled the cliffs, finally gaining the level
plateau. Crazy Horse made one or two attempts to break through the line,
but it was impossible, and seeing himself greatly outnumbered, he wisely
retired, having sustained some loss.

The battle was one of the most picturesque ever fought in the West.
Crook and his officers stood in the camp, the center of a vast
amphitheater ringed with fire, up the sides of which the soldiers
steadily climbed to get at the Indians, silhouetted in all their war
finery against the sky. The loss of life on either side was not great,
but the capture of the village and the provisions which had been
accumulated for the winter was a serious one.

In the camp were discovered many articles that had belonged to the
Seventh Cavalry—a guidon, money, one of Captain Keogh’s gauntlets,
marked with his name, orderly books, saddles, etc. Among other things,
were letters written by officers and soldiers to friends in the East,
some of them still sealed and ready for mailing. They must have come
like voices from the dead when they reached those to whom they had been
written.

-----

Footnote 99:

  One of the scouts killed in this battle was a great admirer of Buffalo
  Bill, whose manners, methods, and appearance he aped as well as he
  could. He rejoiced in an unfortunate sobriquet, which was received in
  this wise: General Sheridan, seeking Buffalo Bill to lead a hunting
  expedition on one occasion, was met by this swaggerer, with the remark
  that Buffalo Bill was gone away, and when Buffalo Bill was gone he was
  Buffalo Bill himself. “The h—l you are!” said Sheridan contemptuously.
  “Buffalo Chip, you mean!” The poor braggart never got away from the
  name of “Buffalo Chip Charlie.” He was a brave man for all his vanity,
  and the soldiers were sorry enough for their mockery when they buried
  him that night at the foot of the buttes, where he had fallen in the
  attack on the cave.




                              CHAPTER TEN
                            A Decisive Blow


                      I. Mackenzie’s Winter Battle

Crook now gave over the pursuit, and returned to Fort Fetterman to
organize a winter campaign. This expedition was one of the best equipped
that ever started on an Indian campaign. It contained all arms of the
service, with an abundance of everything necessary to success. To follow
its marches to the Big Horn Range would reveal little of interest; but
late in November it was learned, from a captured Cheyenne, that the
principal Cheyenne village was located in a cañon through which flowed
one of the main sources of Crazy Woman’s Fork of the Powder River.
Colonel Ranald S. Mackenzie was ordered, with the Indian scouts and ten
troops of cavalry from the Second, Fourth, and Fifth regiments, to find
and destroy the village.

The Cheyennes were not so numerous as the Sioux, and the greater number
of their allies has sometimes caused people to minimize the quality of
the Cheyennes; but no braver, more magnificent fighters ever lived than
this same tribe. They had some of the Homeric qualities of the ancient
Greeks. I believe it will generally be admitted that they were the
finest of the Plains Indians. They were foemen worthy Mackenzie’s or
anybody else’s steel. The battle which ensued was in some respects one
of the most terrible in Western history, and in its results exemplified,
as few others have done, the horrible character of the war. It was,
perhaps, as great a contribution to the downfall of the Sioux as any
single incident that occurred.

Mackenzie’s men left the main encampment on the 23d of November. The
ground was covered with snow. The weather was arctic in its severity.
The scouts and friendly Indians—Pawnees, Crows, Shoshones, the
hereditary enemies of the Cheyennes, including certain Cheyennes also
who had entered the service of the United States[100]—had located the
camp in Willow Creek Cañon. Some of the Indians had kept the camp under
observation while Mackenzie brought up his troops. He had seven hundred
and fifty cavalrymen and three hundred and fifty Indians. Halting at the
mouth of the cañon, which he reached on the night of the 24th, he
resolved to await the still hours before the break of day the next
morning before delivering his attack.

The cañon was a gloomy gorge in the Big Horn Mountains. A swift,
ice-bound river rushed over the rocks between precipitous walls, which
soared into the sky for perhaps a thousand feet on either side.
Numberless icy brooks poured their contents into the main stream through
lateral cañons scarcely less forbidding in their appearance than the
main one, and which made the trail of the creek almost impossible. Here
and there the cañon widened, and in one of these open places the
Cheyennes, under the leadership of Dull Knife, had pitched their camp.
They fondly believed the place impregnable—as, indeed, with careful
guarding it would have been. The greatest precaution was taken by
Mackenzie to prevent his men from making any noise. They stood in ranks
by their horses in the snow in that polar cold, waiting for the order
for the advance. Presently the moon rose, flooding the recesses of the
ravine with silvery light, which sparkled with dazzling brilliancy upon
patches of snow here and there on the dark walls.

Mackenzie, calculating that day would be breaking just about the time he
would reach the camp from his present position, at last gave order to
take up the march. With what relief the benumbed troopers sprang to
their saddles and urged their shivering horses forward, can scarcely be
imagined by dwellers in peaceful lands around warm firesides. As they
struggled up the cañon they could hear the sound of dancing and revelry
in the Indian camp, faintly blown back to them by the night wind. They
learned afterward that the Cheyennes had just returned from a successful
raid on the Shoshones, and that the dance was in celebration of an
important victory they had gained. They halted again, therefore, until
all was silence, before they once more advanced. Day was beginning to
break as they reached the village.

The sleeping Indians in the camp had not the slightest suspicion that
the enemy was within a hundred miles. The troops, cheering and shouting,
burst upon them like a winter storm. Indians, when not apprehensive of
attack, invariably sleep naked. The Cheyennes had just time to seize
rifles and cartridge belts, while the women caught hasty blankets about
the children, when the soldiers were upon them. Indeed, so quick and
sudden was the attack that some of the warriors could not get out of the
tepees. With their knives they slashed the wigwams, and from these
openings fired upon the soldiers as they galloped through the village.
Many were shot dead where a few moments before they had slept in peace.

Most of the pony herd was captured, and the village in a short time was
in possession of Mackenzie. The Cheyennes, though overwhelmed, were
undismayed. They had retreated headlong up the cañon, but were soon
rallied by their subchiefs. Dull Knife, their leader, was found in the
village with half a dozen bullets in him. He had fought gallantly in the
open until he died.

Presently the Indians came swarming back along the side of the cañon.
They occupied points of vantage, and, naked though they were in the
frightful weather, with the thermometer ranging from ten to twenty
degrees below zero during this campaign, they opened fire upon their
opponents. Unless they could be dislodged, Mackenzie’s position was
untenable. He sent his Shoshone and other Indian scouts, who, animated
with bitter hatred of the Cheyennes, were eager to obey his commands, to
the summits of the cliffs to clear the Indians from them.

Meanwhile he directed Lieutenant John A. McKinney, with his troop, to
charge and drive the Indians from a rocky eminence where they were
concentrating and from which they were pouring a hot fire upon the
soldiers. McKinney’s charge was entirely successful, for he drove the
Cheyennes back until he was stopped by a ravine. Wheeling his men, he
attempted to find a crossing, when he was fired upon by a flanking party
of Indians and instantly killed, being hit no less than six times. Six
of his troopers were wounded, and a number of horses were shot. The
troop was thrown into confusion, and some of the men started to retreat.
Mackenzie, observing the situation, immediately ordered Captain John M.
Hamilton and Major G. A. Gordon to charge to the rescue. The charge was
gallantly made and stubbornly resisted.

The fighting was hand to hand, of the fiercest description; and the
Cheyennes, while keeping the rest of Mackenzie’s forces engaged, began
concentrating on these two troops, which had been joined by Captain
Davis, with his men. There was no reserve; the cavalry were all in, and
this detachment might have been wiped out had it not been for the
success of the Shoshones and other Indians, who cleared the key to the
position on the summit of the plateau above the cañon, and then came to
the assistance of the sorely beset soldiers. Twenty Cheyennes were
killed here and several of the soldiers.

Relieved in a measure by these two movements, although not altogether,
for the Cheyennes with their superior knowledge of the topography of the
country could not be entirely dislodged from their position, and kept up
a fierce fire upon the soldiers all day long, to which he could make
little reply, Mackenzie sent back word to Crook of his success, and
meanwhile began the destruction of the village. All the winter supplies
for over a thousand Indians were there. The Cheyennes were a forehanded,
prosperous tribe of Indians, as Indians go, and the property destroyed
was enormous.


                  II. The Sufferings of the Cheyennes

What must have been the despair of the surprised warriors, with their
women and children, naked, shivering in the hills, as they saw their
belongings consumed by the flames! It was simply impossible for them to
maintain their position during the night. They had to move away or die
of cold. As it was, twelve little Indian babies froze to death that
awful night. Many of the older men and women were kept alive only by
having their hands and feet, and in the case of the children, their
whole bodies, thrust into the warm bodies of the few ponies not captured
by the soldiers, which had been disemboweled for the purpose.

[Illustration:

  _Courtesy of The Century Co._

  MACKENZIE’S MEN IN DULL KNIFE’S VILLAGE

  _Drawing by Frederic Remington_
]

There was no fighting on the 26th. The Cheyennes took up a strong
position six miles farther up the cañon, from which Mackenzie could not
dislodge them, and on the 27th he started on his return to the camp.
Crook, who made a forced march night and day, with Colonel Dodge and the
infantry, who came forward with astonishing speed in spite of storm and
cold, met Mackenzie retiring just after he left the cañon, and the whole
army returned to the encampment.

The subsequent sufferings of the Indians were frightful. Naturally, they
repaired to Crazy Horse, expecting that he would succor them, feed them,
and clothe them. The Sioux and the Cheyennes had been warm friends and
allies, and had fought together on many a field. Had they come in their
prosperity, Crazy Horse would have given them a warm welcome. As it was,
he had little with which to support his own band during the winter,
owing to Crook’s pursuit of him, and with short-sighted, yet
natural—from an Indian point of view—policy, he refused to receive these
Cheyennes, or to share anything with them.

Exasperated beyond measure by their treatment by the Sioux, and swearing
eternal vengeance upon Crazy Horse, the wretched band struggled into the
nearest agency and surrendered, and in the following spring moved out
with the soldiers against Crazy Horse and his men.

It is appalling to think of that night attack in that awful weather upon
that sleeping camp—to read of those wretched women and children,
wandering naked in that bitter cold; to learn of those little ones
frozen to death; of the old men and women abandoned by the road to
die—yet there is another side to the picture, scarcely less horrible.

In this Indian camp also were found many relics of the Custer battle. So
far as that is in question, I may say that I consider that action to
have been a fair and square stand-up fight, in which one side was
defeated and its members all died fighting.[101] Naturally, the Indians
despoiled the slain for trophies. White soldiers have done the same when
conditions have been reversed, as has been noted in the preceding
chapters of this book. Of course, the Indians mutilated the dead and
tortured the living, but some instances of both practices are found
among white men, and we cannot judge the Indian by our standards,
anyway.

But in the camp there were other evidences of savage ferocity, from
which the soul shrinks in horror, and which showed that these Indians
were among the most cruel and ruthless on the continent, and that they
were only getting what they had given. Two instances will suffice. The
troops took from the body of a dead warrior an unique necklace of human
forefingers, which had been displayed with pride upon his barbaric
breast;[102] and a bag was found which contained the right hands of
twelve little Shoshone babies and children, which had been recently cut
from little arms to give some ruthless warrior a ghastly trophy.

-----

Footnote 100:

  It is a singular thing to note the looseness of the tie with which the
  members of the various tribes were bound. Frequently we find bands of
  the same tribe fighting for and against the United States on the same
  field. One of the most fruitful causes of the success of our arms has
  been this willingness on the part of the Indians to fight against
  their own people, of which the government has been quick to avail
  itself.

Footnote 101:

  See Preface for discussion of the term “Massacre.”

Footnote 102:

  A picture of a similar necklace may be seen in Captain J. Lee
  Humfreville’s interesting book, “Twenty Years Among Our Hostile
  Indians.”




                             CHAPTER ELEVEN
                        Miles’ Great Campaigning


           I. Miles and His Foot Cavalry Defeat Sitting Bull

Now let us turn to Miles and his men.

General Miles was ordered to march his command up the Yellowstone to the
mouth of the Tongue River, and establish a temporary post or cantonment
there for the winter. He was an officer in whom great confidence was
reposed, and from whom much was to be expected. He had as brilliant a
record in the Civil War as Custer, and had practically fought one
decisive battle in the closing campaign on his own responsibility, with
splendidly successful results. He was a natural-born soldier, and he
never showed his talents to better advantage than in the operations
which followed. His career before and after this period is still fresh
in the minds of a grateful people.

While Crook and his men were hammering away in one portion of the field,
Miles was doing splendid service in the other. The original intention
had been to place under his command some fifteen hundred men, but the
force he really received amounted only to about five hundred. With these
he was not expected to do more than maintain his position, and acquire
such information as he could in preparing for the spring and summer
campaign of the following year. That was not, from his point of view, a
satisfactory program.

Veteran Indian fighters in the Northwest informed him that it would be
useless to try to reach the Indians in the winter; but Miles was not
that kind of a soldier. If the Indians could live in tepees in that
season, he saw no reason why white soldiers should not move against them
in spite of the weather. He had one of the finest regiments of infantry
in the service—the Fifth. Based upon the report of courts-martial,
discipline, etc., no regiment surpassed or even equaled its record.
Miles himself proved to be the most successful commander against Indians
that the war produced, and his success was not due to what envious
people called good luck. It was well merited and thoroughly earned.

The government, upon the representations of Sheridan and Sherman, which
were based upon Miles’ previous successful fighting with the
Southwestern Indians, allowed the young colonel everything he asked for.
If his troops were not completely equipped for the work in which their
commander designed to employ them, it would be his fault. With wise
forethought, he provided the soldiers as if for an arctic expedition.
They cut up blankets for underwear. They were furnished with fur boots
and the heaviest kind of leggings and overshoes. Every man had a buffalo
overcoat and a woolen or fur mask to go over his face under his fur cap.
Their hands were protected by fur gloves. It was well for them that they
were thus provided, for the winter of 1876–7 was one of the most severe
that had ever visited that section of the country. The mercury
frequently froze in the thermometer, and on one occasion a temperature
of sixty degrees below zero was recorded by the spirit thermometer.

Busying themselves during the late fall, which was, in effect, winter,
in the erection of the cantonment on the Tongue and Yellowstone, the
first important touch they got with the Indians was on the 18th of
October, when Lieutenant-Colonel Elwell S. Otis, commanding a battalion
of four companies of the Twenty-third Infantry, escorting a wagon-load
of supplies from Glendive, Montana, to the cantonment, was attacked by a
large force of hostiles. The attack was not delivered with any great
degree of force at first, but it grew in power until the troops had to
corral the train. The soldiers had a hard fight to keep the animals from
being stampeded and the train captured. Having beaten off the Indians,
the train advanced, fighting, until Clear Creek was reached. During a
temporary cessation of the attacks a messenger rode out from the Indian
lines, waving a paper, which he left upon a hill in line with the
advance of the train. When it was picked up, Colonel Otis found it to be
an imperious message—probably written by some half-breed—from the chief
whom he had been fighting. It ran as follows:

  “Yellowstone.

  “I want to know what you are doing traveling on this road. You scare
  all the buffalo away. I want to hunt in this place. I want you to
  turn back from here. If you don’t, I’ll fight you again. I want you
  to leave what you have got here, and turn back from here.

                                                 I am your friend,
                                                         SITTING BULL.

  “I mean all the rations you have got and some powder. Wish you would
  write me as soon as you can.”

I consider this document unique in the history of Indian warfare, and it
well illustrates not only the spirit, but the naïveté of the great
chief. Otis despatched a scout to Sitting Bull with the information that
he intended to take the train through to the cantonment in spite of all
the Indians on earth, and if Sitting Bull wanted to have a fight, he
(Otis) would be glad to accommodate him at any time and on any terms.
The train thereupon moved out, and the Indians promptly recommenced the
fight. But the engagement was soon terminated by a flag of truce. A
messenger appeared, who stated that the Indians were tired and hungry
and wanted to treat for peace. Otis asked Sitting Bull to come into his
lines, but that wily old chief refused, although he sent three chiefs to
represent him.

Otis had no authority to treat for peace or anything else, but he gave
the Indians a small quantity of hardtack and a couple of sides of bacon,
and advised them to go to the Tongue River and communicate with General
Miles. The train then moved on, and after following a short distance,
with threatening movements, the Indians withdrew.

On the same night Otis fell in with Miles and his whole force. Miles,
being alarmed for Otis’ safety, had marched out to meet him. The train
was sent down to the cantonment, and the troops, numbering three hundred
and ninety-eight, with one gun, started out in pursuit of Sitting Bull.
They overtook him on the 21st of October at Cedar Creek. With Sitting
Bull were Gall and other celebrated chiefs, and one thousand warriors of
the Miniconjous, San Arcs, Brulés, and Unkpapas, together with their
wives and children, in all over three thousand Indians. Crazy Horse,
with the Oglalas and Two Moon’s band of the Northern Cheyennes, were not
with Sitting Bull, while Dull Knife’s band, as we have seen, had gone to
Wyoming for the winter.

The reason for this separation is obvious. They could better support the
hardships of the winter, more easily find shelter, and with less
difficulty escape from the pursuing soldiers, if they were broken up in
smaller parties.

Sitting Bull asked Miles for an interview, which was arranged. He was
attended by a subchief and six warriors, Miles by an aide and six
troopers. The meeting took place between the lines, all parties being on
horseback.

Sitting Bull wanted peace on the old basis. The Indians demanded
permission to retain their arms, with liberty to hunt and roam at will
over the plains and through the mountains, with no responsibility to any
one, while the government required them to surrender their arms and come
into the agencies. The demands were irreconcilable therefore. The
interview was an interesting one, and although it began calmly enough,
it grew exciting toward the end.

Sitting Bull, whom Miles describes as a fine, powerful, intelligent,
determined looking man, was evidently full of bitter and persistent
animosity toward the white race. He said no Indian that ever lived loved
the white man, and that no white man that ever lived loved the Indian;
that God Almighty had made him an Indian, but He didn’t make him an
Agency Indian, and he didn’t intend to be one.

The manner of the famous chief had been cold, but dignified and
courteous. As the conversation progressed, he became angry—so enraged,
in fact, that in Miles’ words “he finally gave an exhibition of wild
frenzy. His whole manner seemed more like that of a wild beast than a
human being. His face assumed a furious expression. His jaws were
tightly closed, his lips were compressed, and you could see his eyes
glisten with the fire of savage hatred.”[103]

One cannot help admiring the picture presented by the splendid, if
ferocious, savage. I have no doubt that General Miles himself admired
him.

At the height of the conference a young warrior stole out from the
Indian lines and slipped a carbine under Sitting Bull’s blanket. He was
followed by several other Indians to the number of a dozen, who joined
the band, evidently meditating treachery. Miles, who, with his aide, was
armed with revolver only, promptly required these new auxiliaries to
retire, else the conference would be terminated immediately. His demand
was reluctantly obeyed. After some further talk, a second meeting was
appointed for the morrow, and the conference broke up.

During the night Miles moved his command in position to be able to
intercept the movement of the Indians the next day. There was another
interview with the picturesque and imperious savage, whose conditions of
peace were found to be absolutely impossible, since they involved the
abandonment of all the military posts, the withdrawal of all settlers,
garrisons, etc., from the country. He wanted everything and would give
nothing. He spoke like a conqueror, and he looked like one, although his
subsequent actions were not in keeping with the part. Miles, seeing the
futility of further discussion, peremptorily broke up the conference. He
told Sitting Bull that he would take no advantage of the flag of truce,
but that he would give him just fifteen minutes to get back to his
people to prepare for fighting. Shouting defiance, the chiefs rode back
to the Indian lines.

There was “mounting in hot haste” surely, and hurried preparations were
made for immediate battle on both sides. Watch in hand, Miles checked
off the minutes, and exactly at the time appointed he ordered an
advance. The Indians set fire to the dry grass, which was not yet
covered with snow, and the battle was joined amid clouds of flame and
smoke. Although outnumbered nearly three to one, the attack of the
soldiers was pressed home so relentlessly that the Indians were driven
back from their camp, which fell into the possession of Miles.

The Sioux were not beaten, however, for the discomfited warriors rallied
a force to protect their flying women and children, under the leadership
of Gall and others, Sitting Bull not being as much of a fighter as a
talker. They were led to the attack again and again by their intrepid
chiefs. On one occasion, so impetuous was their gallantry that the
troops were forced to form square to repel their wild charges. Before
the battle was over—and it continued into the next day—the Indians had
been driven headlong for over forty miles.

They had suffered a serious loss in warriors, but a greater in the
destruction of their camp equipage, winter supplies, and other property.
Two thousand of them came in on the third day and surrendered, under
promises of good treatment. Several hundred broke into small parties and
scattered. Miles’ little force was too small to be divided to form a
guard for the Indians who had been captured; and besides, he had other
things to do, so he detained a number of the principal chiefs as
hostages, and exacted promises from the rest that they would surrender
at the Spotted Tail or Red Cloud Agency—a promise which, by the way, the
great majority of them kept. Sitting Bull, Gall, and about four hundred
others refused to surrender, and made for the boundary line, escaping
pursuit for the time being.

This was the first and most serious defection from the Indian
Confederacy. It was followed by others. In a subsequent campaign, in the
depth of winter, a battalion under Lieutenant Baldwin struck Sitting
Bull’s depleted and starving camp on two separate occasions, inflicting
further loss upon that implacable chieftain.[104]


       II. Miles’ Crushing Defeat of Crazy Horse at Wolf Mountain

Late in December Miles, having practically eliminated Sitting Bull from
the game, moved out against Crazy Horse. He had with him five companies
of the Fifth Infantry and two of the Twenty-second, in all four hundred
and thirty-six officers and men and two Napoleon guns. These guns were
fitted with canvas wagon-tops, and were so disguised as exactly to
resemble the supply wagons of the train. The men left the cantonment on
the 29th of December, 1876. It had been learned that Crazy Horse was in
the valley of the Tongue River, south of the Yellowstone. There were
sharp skirmishes on the first and third of January between the advance
and war parties of Indians, who were moving gradually up the Tongue
toward the mountains. On the evening of the 7th of January, 1877, a
young warrior and a woman were captured, belonging to those Cheyennes
who were still with Crazy Horse and the Unkpapas, and were related to
some of the principal members of the band. From them much was learned of
the situation of the Indian position.

[Illustration:

  _From the collection of J. Robert Coster_
]

          GEN. JOHN GIBBON                  GEN. NELSON A. MILES
         GEN. WESLEY MERRITT                GEN. ALFRED H. TERRY

                      SOME FAMOUS INDIAN FIGHTERS

The next morning, the weather being bitterly cold, the men moved out to
attack the Indian camp. Crazy Horse’s warriors numbered between eight
and nine hundred. He had posted his men on the cliffs surmounting a
valley in the Wolf Mountains, a spur of the Big Horn Range, not far from
Crook’s battle-ground on the Rosebud. The troops entered the valley in
full view of the Indians occupying the heights. The position was well
chosen; for in order to make the attack, the soldiers would have to
climb straight up the walls to get at the Indians, who were enabled, by
the configuration of the ground and by their numbers, almost to surround
the soldiers. One reason why Crazy Horse was willing to fight was
because of his great desire to get possession of the Indians recently
captured.

Seeing that Crazy Horse was willing to accept battle, Miles made his
preparations deliberately. The troops, out of range of the Indians,
calmly had breakfast and made their camp secure. Having done everything
at his leisure, Miles moved out to the attack.

The Sioux were plainly visible on the cliffs. They could be seen shaking
their fists and brandishing their rifles as the soldiers slowly advanced
through the deep snow which covered the ground. The Indians seemed
absolutely confident that Miles was marching into a trap, that when he
got into the cañon he would be unable to scale the slopes, and they
would have him at their mercy. There was no ambush about it. The whole
thing was open and plain. They had chosen their position and had invited
the soldiers to make at them. There was, indeed, no other way for Miles
to get to them, so cunningly had they taken advantage of the ground,
except the way which lay open before them. As the troops drew nearer,
the gestures of defiance and contempt were accompanied by yells and
jeers. Among the things they shouted in their confident assurance of
success were these significant words:

“You have had your last breakfast!”

Indeed, the grim prophecy did not seem unlikely of fulfilment.

It might have been supposed that men, encumbered as were the soldiers
with their heavy, winter clothing, could never have scaled those
heights, especially in the face of such opposition as the redoubtable
warriors of Crazy Horse would offer. If they did not succeed in clearing
the cliffs of the Indians, they would probably be shot down in scores in
the valley. They would then be forced to retreat to their train, if any
of them were left alive to do so, and stand a siege; and as they were
three or four hundred miles from any possible relieving force, and in
the depth of a Dakota winter, that would mean a speedy annihilation. It
was a serious risk to take, but no battle was ever won without taking
risks, and the nice art of the soldier consists in knowing what risks to
take and when to take them. Not the least of Miles’ claims to admiration
as a commander was his determination, under all circumstances, to fight
then and there.

Undaunted by the threatening prospect and unmoved by the savage shouts
and jeers, although some of the scouts who knew the Sioux language
retorted in kind, the troops deployed, and at as rapid a pace as they
could manage, started for the hills. The artillery was exposed and
unlimbered, and the shells thrown into the Indian position caused great
surprise and consternation. The key to the position was a high elevation
upon the left. The Indians who held it were led by Big Crow, the chief
medicine man. As the battle began he exposed himself freely between the
lines, dressed in a magnificent Indian war shirt and bonnet, running up
and down and yelling like a fiend.

Miles massed a little column against Big Crow and the warriors defending
the eminence. At the same time he ordered a general escalade of the
cliff along the whole line. Under a heavy fire, which, however, like
most plunging fires down the sides of mountains or slopes, did but
little damage, the troops slowly toiled up the icy, snow-covered
bluffs.[105] Led by Major Casey and Captains McDonald and Baldwin, the
charge was delivered with the utmost resolution. It was not a dash. No
men, encumbered as were those soldiers, could move rapidly up icy
cliffs, covered, wherever the sharpness of the acclivity permitted, with
from one to three feet of snow. It was rather a slow, dogged, determined
crawl, with a stop every few moments to fire at some Indian silhouetted
above them on the gray sky-line of that winter morning.

The fighting for the high cliff on the left of the line was spirited and
desperate. Finally, the men came to a hand-to-hand struggle. The Indians
clung tenaciously to the post until Big Crow was shot, when the soldiers
succeeded in dislodging them. This bluff commanded the lines. It was
occupied by the troops, who poured an enfilading fire upon the army of
Crazy Horse. The Indian position, therefore, became untenable, and
fighting sullenly and stubbornly, they withdrew in good order, though
closely pursued by the troops. In the latter part of the advance snow
began to fall, and before the battle was closed the combatants were
fighting in the midst of a blinding storm. Miles says that the moment at
which the Indians turned their backs and began the retreat was one in
which he felt relief scarcely to be expressed, so desperate had been the
fighting, so difficult the ascent, and so doubtful the result.

The Indians were pursued for some distance, and a large portion of their
camp equipage, with supplies, was captured. On the whole, they had
suffered a most disheartening and disorganizing defeat. Their ammunition
was about gone, their confederates in other tribes had been captured,
the main body of the redoubtable Cheyennes had been crushed and were
starving, the Unkpapas, the Miniconjous, the Sans Arcs, and the Brulés
had surrendered. The game was up. There was nothing for Crazy Horse and
the exhausted remnant which remained faithful to him to do but to
surrender, which they accordingly did in the early spring.


                III. The Capture of Lame Deer’s Village

There remained, then, in the field practically but one band of sixty
lodges,[106] under Lame Deer and Iron Star, who refused positively to
surrender. The indefatigable and brilliantly successful Miles pursued
this band, overtook it, surprised it one morning in May, captured the
village, dispersed the greater portion of the Indians, and succeeded in
isolating and surrounding Lame Deer and Iron Star, with half a dozen
principal warriors. Miles was very desirous of taking them alive. He
advanced with some of his officers toward the desperate little body of
Indians who had been cut off from the fleeing mass of savages, making
peace signs and crying peace words.

The Indians were tremendously excited and remained on guard, but
committed no act of hostility. Miles rode up, and leaning over the
saddle, extended his hand to Lame Deer. The intrepid chieftain, who was
quivering with emotion under his Indian stoicism, grasped the general’s
hand and clung to it tightly. Iron Star took Baldwin’s hand. The other
Indians came forward, reluctantly, with hands extended, and all was
going well.

At this juncture one of the white scouts, not knowing what was going on,
dashed up to the group, and possibly under a misapprehension that the
life of the commanding officer was threatened, covered Lame Deer with
his rifle. The Indian, probably thinking that he was to be killed in any
event, resolved to die fighting. Miles strove to hold him and to
reassure him, but by a powerful wrench he freed himself, lifting his
rifle as he did so, and pointing it straight at the general.

Miles had been in many battles, but he was never nearer death than at
that moment. His quickness and resource did not desert him. Just as the
Indian’s finger pressed the trigger he dug his spurs into his horse and
swung the animal aside in a powerful swerve. Lame Deer’s bullet, which
missed him by a hair’s breadth, struck one of the escort and instantly
killed him. Iron Star also drew away from Baldwin and raised his rifle,
as the other Indian had done. None of them were so quick, however, as
Lame Deer had been. The soldiers closing in had seen Lame Deer’s motion,
and before any further damage was done by the Indians they were
overwhelmed by a rapid fire, which stretched them all dead upon the
ground. The fighting had been short, but exceedingly sharp. The troops
lost four killed and seven wounded, the Sioux fourteen killed and a
large number wounded. The band was completely broken up, and most of the
Indians surrendered soon after.[107]

Of all the Indians who had borne prominent parts in this greatest of our
Indian wars with the savage tribes, there remained at large only the
indomitable Sitting Bull, and he had escaped capture because, with a
wretched band of starving but resolute followers, he succeeded in
crossing the British Columbia boundary line.

Crook’s persistence, Mills’ bold stroke, Mackenzie’s desperate dash up
Willow Creek Cañon, Miles’ splendid campaigning, his hard fighting at
Cedar Creek and Wolf Mountain, his pursuit of Lame Deer, his policy and
skill in dealing with the critical situations which had arisen, at last
brought peace to the blood-drenched land. The most important work ever
done by the United States Army outside of the greater wars of the nation
had been successfully and brilliantly accomplished.


              IV. Farewell to a Great Chief and His Hopes

A note of the fate of the two chief antagonists of the United States may
fittingly close this chapter. Sitting Bull returned to the United
States, and surrendered to the army a few years later. Ever a
malcontent, he was one of the moving spirits in the Ghost Dance
uprising, which culminated in the battle of Wounded Knee in 1890, and he
was killed by the Indian police while resisting arrest.[108]

The end of Crazy Horse came sooner, in a mêlée in a guard-house on the
7th of September, 1877. He was stabbed in the abdomen, and died from the
effects of the wound. He was dissatisfied always, in spite of his
surrender, and had been conspiring to take the war-path again. Believing
that his intentions had become known and that he would be rigorously
dealt with on account of the discovery, he started to run amuck, with a
knife of which he had become possessed by some means, in the
guard-house. When the fracas was over, he was found on the ground, with
a desperate wound in the abdomen. Whether the wound was given by the
bayonet of the sentry at the door, whether the blow was delivered by
some of the Indians who threw themselves upon him, and with whom he
struggled, is a matter which cannot be determined. However it was come
by, it was enough, for from the effects he died in a short time.

So that was the melancholy end of Crazy Horse, the protagonist of these
tales, and one of the most famous Indians that ever lived. Captain
Bourke[109] thus describes him:

“I saw before me a man who looked quite young, not over thirty years
old, five feet eight inches high, lithe and sinewy, with a scar in the
face. The expression of his countenance was one of quiet dignity, but
morose, dogged, tenacious, and melancholy. He behaved with stolidity,
like a man who realized that he had to give in to Fate, but would do so
as sullenly as possible.... All Indians gave him a high reputation for
courage and generosity. In advancing upon an enemy, none of his warriors
were allowed to pass him. He had made himself hundreds of friends by his
charity toward the poor, as it was a point of honor with him never to
keep anything for himself, excepting weapons of war. I never heard an
Indian mention his name save in terms of respect. In the Custer
Massacre, the attack by Reno had first caused a panic among the women
and children and some of the warriors, who started to flee; but Crazy
Horse, throwing away his rifle, brained one of the incoming soldiers
with his stone war-club, and jumped upon his horse.”

Crazy Horse was a born soldier, whose talents for warfare and leadership
were of the highest order. He had repulsed Reynolds on the Powder River,
wresting a victory from apparent defeat. He had thrown himself in
succession upon the columns of Crook on the Rosebud and of Custer on the
Little Big Horn; and it must be admitted that he had not only checked,
but had driven back, Crook by a crushing attack upon him, while he had
annihilated half of Custer’s command. He had fought a desperate, and,
from a military point of view, highly creditable, action with Crook’s
vastly superior forces at Slim Buttes. The only man who had fairly and
squarely defeated him was Miles at Wolf Mountain, and even there Crazy
Horse managed to keep his force well in hand as he withdrew from the
field.

He would probably never have surrendered, had it not been for the
defections around him, and for the disastrous defeat of the Cheyennes by
Mackenzie, and the destruction of so much of his camp equipage at Wolf
Mountain. As it was, he might have continued the fighting, had not his
warriors been freezing and starving, and almost entirely out of
ammunition. There was nothing left for the Indians but surrender. As one
of them said to Miles:

“We are poor compared with you and your force. We cannot make a rifle, a
round of ammunition, or a knife. In fact, we are at the mercy of those
who are taking possession of our country. Your terms are harsh and
cruel, but we are going to accept them, and place ourselves at your
mercy.”

That summed up the situation, although the terms granted the Indians
were very far from being harsh or cruel.

So passed out of history the great war chief of the Sioux, one of the
bravest of the brave, and one of the most capable and sagacious of
captains in spite of his absurd name. He had many of the vices, perhaps
all the vices, of his race; but he had all their rude virtues, too, and
great abilities, which most of them lacked. Sitting Bull, wise, crafty,
indomitable as he was, was not to be compared with him for a moment.

It was a tragedy any way you look at it. You cannot but feel much
admiration for those Sioux and Cheyennes—cruel, ruthless though they
were. I bid good-by to them with a certain regret.

Some one has said, as the Rosebud and the Little Big Horn marked the
high-water of Indian supremacy in the Northwest, so the forgotten grave
of Crazy Horse marks an ebb from which no tide has ever risen.

As he passes to the happy hunting-ground in the land of the Great
Spirit, I stand and salute him with a feeling of respect which I have
gathered not only from a study of his career, but from the statements
and writings of men who could best judge of his qualities—for they were
the soldiers who fought him.


                      NOTES ON THE LAME DEER FIGHT

                By Colonel D. L. Brainard, U. S. A.[110]

  The command, consisting of four troops of the Second Cavalry, “F,”
  “G,” “H,” and “L,” two companies of the Fifth Infantry, two of the
  Twenty-second Infantry, and a company of mounted scouts, all under
  command of Colonel Nelson A. Miles, left the cantonment on Tongue
  River May 1, 1877, and marched up Tongue River, with a view of
  intercepting a band of hostile Indians, under Lame Deer, known to be
  at or near the head-waters of the Rosebud River. The transportation
  consisted of bull teams, mule teams, and a few pack animals. The
  command marched up Tongue River four days, when the train was left
  in charge of a small guard, the main command pushing on with pack
  trains, the cavalry leading and the infantry following more slowly,
  striking across country toward the Rosebud River, marching day and
  night, stopping only long enough to make coffee for the men, and to
  rest and graze the animals.

  We bivouacked on the evening of the 6th in a deep valley near Little
  Muddy Creek, and about two o’clock the following morning were again
  in the saddle, moving silently and swiftly down the valley toward
  the Indian camp, which had been located the previous evening by
  White Bull, Brave Wolf, Bob Jackson, and the other scouts. The
  scouts had reported that the camp was only about six miles distant,
  but it was soon discovered that it was much farther than this, and
  at early dawn we were still some distance away. The command had been
  moving at a trot, but the gallop was immediately taken up, and just
  as the sun appeared above the horizon, we rounded a bend in the
  valley and came in sight of the Indian camp, which was located on
  the right side, close to the hills.

  At first we saw no Indians except a few boys guarding the ponies,
  which were grazing a little distance beyond the camp, but they came
  out immediately, and dropping in the grass, began to fire in our
  direction, though without effect. As we charged down on the camp,
  these Indians, together with squaws and children, ran for the hills,
  driving with them the few horses that were near the tepees. “H”
  Company, under command of Lieutenant Lovell H. Jerome, charged
  through the camp and beyond, capturing the pony herd. The other
  companies, all under command of Captain Ball, charged to the
  village, formed line to the right, deployed as skirmishers, and
  pursued the Indians up the hill.

  The hills were so steep at this point that it was necessary to
  dismount the command and advance on foot, the horses being sent
  around by an easier route to join us later near the summit of the
  hill. The line as formed was “F” troop (Tyler) on the right, “L”
  troop (Norwood) center, and “G” troop (Wheelan) on the left. The
  Indians were driven up over the hills, where they scattered like
  quail. Our horses were brought up, and mounting, we charged across
  the country for two or three miles, and later returned to the
  village.

  As my recollections serve me, four soldiers and fourteen Indians
  were killed, ten soldiers being wounded, myself being one of the
  number. About four hundred ponies were captured, which were
  afterward used for mounting a battalion of Infantry, which later
  performed much effective work in the field. There were over sixty
  tepees, in which we found tons of dried buffalo meat, a few arms,
  some ammunition, and a great many buffalo robes, saddles, and an
  assortment of camp property, all of which were burned that
  afternoon, thus so effectually crippling the band that the remnant
  came in and surrendered a few weeks later.

  We camped on the battle-ground that night, the following day moving
  back in the direction of our wagon train.

  One of the most interesting incidents of the fight occurred just as
  the troop to which I belonged (“L”) charged on the village. I saw
  General Miles riding toward the first tepee, near which were two
  Indians, followed by his orderly. He called out something to these
  Indians which I did not understand, but I later understood he had
  called on them to surrender. One of these was evidently the Chief,
  Lame Deer, for he wore a long head-dress of eagle feathers, the
  head-dress reaching to the ground. As Miles approached on horseback,
  the Chief walked rapidly toward him, with his hand extended, as
  though to shake hands, but when within ten or twelve feet of him,
  the Indian in the rear, who was said to be Iron Star, a son of Lame
  Deer, and also a medicine man of the tribe, called sharply to Lame
  Deer, presumably warning him of the approaching troops, and urging
  him to follow the other Indians to the hills.

  Lame Deer stopped, turned, hesitated, then ran back a few steps, and
  picking up a loaded carbine from the ground, fired point blank at
  General Miles, who, seeing the movement, wheeled his horse sharply
  and bent forward. The bullet passed over him, striking his orderly
  in the breast, killing him instantly. The Chief then ran up the
  steep hill, accompanied by the other Indian. The head-dress made a
  very conspicuous mark, and many shots were immediately fired in that
  direction. From his tottering steps we saw that the Chief was badly
  wounded, and at this point his companion, instead of escaping as he
  could have done, placed his arm around the Chief’s waist, and
  supported him up the hill. About this time the Chief drew a
  revolver, and without turning about, held it in rear of him and
  fired in our direction, the bullets striking the ground only a few
  feet in his rear. This act, we assumed, was one of defiance of a man
  who knew he could not escape, but who was game to the last. Iron
  Star supported the Chief until the latter fell, when he escaped over
  the hill, only to be killed by “G” troop, which had been pushing up
  on that side. After the devotion and bravery he had displayed in
  supporting Lame Deer up the hill, we were almost sorry he had not
  escaped alive.

  A few days later Bob Jackson told me that, on examining Lame Deer’s
  body after the fight, he had found that he had been hit seventeen
  times.

  Another incident which illustrates the valor of the United States
  soldier was that of Private Leonard, Troop “L,” Second Cavalry, who
  had dropped behind to readjust his saddle, a couple of miles from
  the Indian camp. The command was moving rapidly, and the Indians
  slipped in between the rear of the column and this lone soldier.
  However, when he saw them he rode to the top of a hill, and lying
  down behind some rocks, held these Indians at bay for several hours
  until relief came to him. It was fortunate that relief came as it
  did, for he had nearly exhausted his ammunition in firing at these
  Indians, who had several times charged his position.

-----

Footnote 103:

  Personal Recollections of General Nelson A. Miles, U. S. A.

Footnote 104:

  As an instance of Miles’ capacity in handling men, this is what
  Baldwin says in a private letter, afterward made public, of the orders
  he received: “When I was given command of this battalion opposite the
  mouth of Squaw Creek, and the General took command of a less number of
  men, it was a question as to which would find the hostile Indians, and
  with the only order or suggestion given by him in that earnest manner
  characteristic of him, he said, ‘Now, Baldwin, do the best you can. I
  am responsible for disaster, success will be to your credit; you know
  what my plans are, and what we are here for.’” There is a dashing,
  manly ring about such words which I rejoice to recognize. It is a
  great soldier who can first choose and then trust his subordinates.

Footnote 105:

  At the battle of King’s Mountain, in the American Revolution, the
  small loss of life among the Americans was due to the fact that the
  English, trained marksmen though they were, firing down the slopes of
  the mountain, overshot their opponents, although they had them in full
  view all the way up the slope; and it is the tendency of troops always
  to do the same thing. Troops on a level usually fire too low, and the
  ground between the advancing lines of soldiers is often plowed up by
  bullets from the depressed muzzles, which should have gone into the
  breasts of the approaching enemy.

Footnote 106:

  Each lodge accounted for from five to ten persons.

Footnote 107:

  See close of this chapter for another account of the Lame Deer Fight.

Footnote 108:

  These affairs are to be discussed at length in a forthcoming volume.

Footnote 109:

  “On the Border With Crook,” Captain John G. Bourke, U. S. A.

Footnote 110:

  Colonel Brainard won his commission by his heroic conduct in the
  Greely Arctic Expedition, 1881–4.—C. T. B.




                             CHAPTER TWELVE
  What They Are There For A Sketch of General Guy V. Henry, a Typical
                            American Soldier


                           I. Savage Warfare

The most thankless task that can be undertaken by a nation is warfare
against savage or semi-civilized peoples. In it there is usually little
glory; nor is there any reward, save the consciousness of disagreeable
duty well performed. The risk to the soldier is greater than in ordinary
war, since the savages usually torture the wounded and the captured.
Success can only be achieved by an arduous, persistent, wearing down
process, which affords little opportunity for scientific fighting, yet
which demands military talents of the highest order.

Almost anybody can understand the strategy or the tactics of a pitched
battle where the number engaged is large, the casualties heavy, and the
results decisive; but very few non-professional critics appreciate a
campaign of relentless pursuit by a small army of a smaller body of
mobile hostiles, here and there capturing a little band, now and then
killing or disabling a few, until in the final round-up the enemy,
reduced to perhaps less than a score, surrenders. There is nothing
spectacular about the performance, and everybody wonders why it took so
long.

And as injustice and wrong have not been infrequent in the preliminary
dealings between the government and the savages, the soldier, who has
only to obey his orders, comes in for much unmerited censure from those
who think darkly though they speak bitterly. Especially is he criticized
if, when maddened by the suffering, the torture, of some comrade, the
soldier sinks to the savage level in his treatment of his ruthless
foeman. No one justifies such a lapse, of course, but few there be who
even try to understand it. The incessant campaigning in the Philippines,
with its resulting scandals, is an instance in point.

Long before the Spanish-American War and its Philippine corollary,
however, our little army had shown itself capable of the hardest and
most desperate campaigning against the Indians of the West—as difficult
and dangerous a work as any army ever undertook. There was so much of
it, and it abounded with so many thrilling incidents, that volumes could
be written upon it without exhausting its tragedy, its romance. There
were few soldiers who served beyond the Mississippi from 1865 to 1890
who did not participate in a score of engagements, whose lives were not
in peril more than once in many a hard, but now forgotten, campaign.

[Illustration:

  _From the collection of J. Robert Coster_
]

      COL. RANALD S. MACKENZIE                GEN. GUY V. HENRY
          CAPT. ANSON MILLS               W. F. CODY (BUFFALO BILL)

                 GROUP OF DISTINGUISHED INDIAN FIGHTERS

        _All except General Henry from contemporary photographs_

One of the bravest of our Indian fighters was Guy V. Henry. Personally,
he was a typical representative of the knightly American soldier.
Officially, it was his fortune to perform conspicuous services in at
least three expeditions subsequent to the Civil War. He was a West
Pointer, and the son of another, born in the service at Fort Smith in
the Indian Territory. Graduating in 1861, a mere boy, he participated in
four years of the hardest fighting in the Civil War, from Bull Run to
Cold Harbor. At the age of twenty-three, his merit won him the
appointment of Colonel of the Fortieth Massachusetts Volunteers, “a
regiment that was never whipped.” The tall, brawny Yankees fairly
laughed at the beardless stripling who was appointed to command them.
“They laugh best who laugh last,” and Henry had the last laugh. He
mastered them, and to this day they love his memory.

He was thrice mentioned in despatches, and brevetted five times for
conspicuous gallantry in action during the war, out of which he came
with the rank of brigadier-general. For heroic and successful fighting
at Old Cold Harbor, he received the highest distinction that can come to
a soldier, the medal of honor. Having two horses shot from under him in
the attack upon the Confederate lines, he seized a third from a trooper,
mounted him under a withering fire, and led his soldiers forward in a
final assault, which captured the enemy’s intrenchments; this third
horse was shot under him just as he leaped the breastworks.

“Thin as a shoestring and as brave as a lion,” he was a past-master of
military tactics and a severe disciplinarian. “I tell you he is a
martinet,” cried one young officer angrily, smarting under a
well-deserved reproof. “You are wrong,” replied a wiser officer, who
knew Henry better; “he is trying to make your own record better than you
could ever make it yourself.” Sudden as a thunderbolt and swift as a
hawk when he struck the red Sioux, in his family and social relations he
was a kindly, considerate, Christian gentleman. He could kill
Indians—but never cruelly, mercilessly, only in open warfare—and teach a
class in Sunday-school. I’ve seen him do the latter, and no man did it
better; the boys of his class simply idolized him. And his men in the
army did the same. Cool and tactful, a statesman, for all his fiery
energy, he was perhaps the best of our colonial governors. When he died
the people of Porto Rico mourned him as a friend, where the little
children had loved him as a father.


                       II. A March in a Blizzard

At the close of the Civil War he was transferred to the Third Cavalry, a
regiment with which he was destined to win lasting renown. It must have
been hard for men who had exercised high command, and who had proved
their fitness for it, to come down from general officers to subalterns;
but Henry accepted the situation cheerfully. He was as proud of his
troop of cavalry as he had been of his regiment and brigade of
volunteers. His new detail took him to Arizona, where for two years he
commanded a battalion engaged in hard scouting among the Apaches. The
winter of 1874 found him at Fort Robinson in the Black Hills. While
there he was ordered to go into the Bad Lands to remove certain miners
who were supposed to be there in defiance of treaty stipulations.

The day after Christmas, with his own troop and fifteen men of the Ninth
Infantry under Lieutenant Carpenter, with wagons, rations, and forage
for thirty days, the men set forth. The expedition involved a march of
three hundred miles, over the worst marching country on the face of the
globe, and in weather of unimaginable severity, the cold continually
ranging from twenty to forty degrees below zero. The miners were not
found, and on the return journey the command, which had suffered
terrible hardships, was overtaken by a blizzard.

When, in an Eastern city, the thermometer gets down to the zero mark,
and it blows hard, with a heavy snow for twenty-four hours, people who
are not familiar with the real article call such insignificant weather
manifestations a blizzard. Imagine a fierce gale sweeping down from the
north, filled with icy needles which draw blood ere they freeze the
naked skin, the thermometer forty degrees below zero, a rolling,
treeless country without shelter of any sort from the blinding snow and
the biting wind, and you have the situation in which that expedition
found itself. The storm came up an hour after breaking camp on what was
hoped to be the last day on the return journey. To return to the place
of the camp was impossible. To keep moving was the only thing to be
done. The cold was so intense that it was at first deemed safer to walk
than ride. The troops dismounted and struggled on. Many of the men gave
out and sank exhausted, but were lifted to their saddles and strapped
there, Henry himself doing this with his own hands. Finally, the whole
party got so weak that it was impossible for them to proceed. In
desperation, they mounted the exhausted horses and urged them forward.
Henry had no knowledge of direction, but trusted to the instincts of his
horse. He led the way. Many of the men had to be beaten to keep them
awake and alive—to sleep was death.

Finally, when hope and everything else was abandoned, they came to a
solitary ranch under the curve of a hill, occupied by a white man and
his Indian wife. They were saved; that is, they had escaped with their
lives. The horses were put in shelter in the corral, the men crowded
into the house, and the painful process of thawing out was begun. The
ranch was fifteen miles from Fort Robinson, and when the blizzard abated
the next day wagons and ambulances were sent out, and the helpless
soldiers were carried back to the post.

Most of them were in a terrible condition, and few had escaped. They
were broken from the hardships they had undergone, especially from the
freezing, which those who have suffered from declare causes a
prostration from which it is difficult to recover. When Henry entered
his quarters his wife did not recognize him. His face was black and
swollen. His men cut the bridle reins to free his hands, and then slit
his gloves into strips, each strip bringing a piece of flesh as it was
pulled off. All his fingers were frozen to the second joint; the flesh
sloughed off, exposing the bones. One finger had to be amputated, and to
the day of his death his left hand was so stiff that he was unable to
close his fingers again. As he was a thin, spare man, with no
superfluous flesh, he had suffered more than the rest. Yet he made no
complaint, and it was only due to his indomitable persistence that the
men were not frozen to death that awful day. Henry’s winter march is
still remembered, by those in the old service, as one of the heroic
achievements of the period.


                       III. A Ghastly Experience

The heroism and sufferings of the young soldier were nothing, however,
to what he manifested and underwent two years later. Just before the
Custer Massacre, General Crook, with some eleven hundred men, moved out
from Fort Fetterman, Wyoming, on the expedition that culminated in the
battle of the Rosebud. Colonel W. B. Royall had command of the cavalry
of Crook’s little army. One morning in June the Sioux and the Cheyennes,
under Crazy Horse, who as a fighter and general was probably second to
few Indians that ever lived, attacked Crook’s men. The left wing, under
Royall, was isolated in a ravine and practically surrounded by a foe who
outnumbered them five to one. The rest of the army, heavily engaged,
could give them no succor. The Indians made charge after charge upon the
troops, who had all dismounted except the field officers. Henry had
command of the left battalion of Royall’s force. Cool as an iceberg, he
rode up and down the thin line, steadying and holding his men. At one
time, by a daring charge, he rescued an imperiled company under a
brother officer.

At last, in one of the furious attacks of the Sioux, he was shot in the
face. A rifle bullet struck him under the left eye, passed through the
upper part of his mouth under the nose, and came out below the right
eye. The shock was terrific. His face was instantly covered with blood,
his mouth filled with it. He remained in the saddle, however, and strove
to urge the troops on. In the very act of spurring his horse forward to
lead a charge, he lost consciousness, and fell to the ground.

At that instant the war-bonneted Indians, superbly mounted, delivered an
overwhelming onslaught on the left flank of the line. The men, deprived
of their leader, for a time gave back. The Indians actually galloped
over the prostrate figure of the brave soldier. Fortunately, he was not
struck by the hoofs of any of the horses. A determined stand by Chief
Washakie, of the friendly Shoshones, our Indian allies in that battle,
who with two or three of his braves fought desperately over Henry’s
body, prevented him from being scalped and killed.

The officers of the Third speedily rallied their men, drove back the
Indians, and reoccupied the ground where Henry lay. He was assisted to
his horse and taken to the rear where the surgeons were. Such was the
nature of his wound that he could not speak above a whisper; he could
not see at all, he could scarcely hear, and he had great difficulty in
breathing. As the doctor bent over him he heard the wounded man mumble
out, “Fix me up so that I can go back!”

There was no going back for him that day. Through the long day he lay on
the ground while the battle raged about him. There was little water and
no shelter; there wasn’t a tent in the army. Although it was bitter cold
during the nights in that country at that season, at midday it was
fearfully hot. He was consumed with thirst. His orderly managed to give
him a little shade by holding his horse so that the shadow of the
animal’s body fell upon the wounded man. His wound was dressed
temporarily as well as possible, and then he was practically left to
die.

One of the colonel’s comrades came back to him during a lull in the
fight. There he lay helpless on the bare ground, in the shadow of the
restive horse, which the orderly had all he could do to manage. No one
else could be spared from the battle line to attend to Henry’s wants,
although, as a matter of fact, he expressed no wants. The flies had
settled thickly upon his bandaged face. The officer bent over him with
an expression of commiseration.

“It’s all right, Jack,” gurgled out from the bleeding lips; “it’s what
we’re here for.”[111]

Royall’s forces were finally able to effect a junction with the main
body by withdrawing fighting, and Henry was carried along any way in the
hurried movement. The Indians at last withdrew from the field (the
battle must be considered a drawn one), and then there was time to
consider what was to be done with the wounded. The facilities for
treatment were the slenderest. The column had been stripped of its
baggage, in order to increase its mobility, to enable it to cope with
the Indians. All they had they carried on their persons, and that
included little but the barest necessities.

Nobody expected Henry to survive the night. He didn’t expect to live
himself, as he lay there through the long hours, listening to the men
digging graves for those who had fallen, and wondering whether or not he
was to be one of the occupants thereof. The next day they sent him to
the rear. He was transported in what is called a travois. Two saplings
were cut from the river bank; two army mules, one at each end, were
placed between the saplings, which were slung over the backs of the
animals. An army blanket, or piece of canvas, was then lashed to the
poles, and on them the sufferer was placed. There were a number of
wounded—none of them, however, so seriously as Henry. It was some two
hundred miles to Fort Fetterman, and they carried him all that distance
that way.

The weather at night was bitterly cold. In the daytime it was burning
hot. The travois was so short—they had to take what poles they could
get, of course—that several times the head of the rear mule hit the
wounded officer’s head, so that finally they turned him about, putting
his head behind the heels of the foremost animal, where he was liable to
be kicked to death at any moment.

On one occasion one of the mules stumbled and fell and pitched Henry out
upon his head. The officers of the little escort stood aghast as they
saw him fall out; but it is a matter of record, solemnly attested, that
such was Henry’s iron self-control that he made no sound, although the
agony was excruciating. In fact, on the whole journey he made no
complaint of any sort. His only food was broth, which was made from
birds shot by the soldiers as they came upon them, and he got this very
infrequently.

Finally, the little cortège reached Fort Fetterman. The last mishap
awaited them there. The river was crossed by a ferryboat, which was
pulled from shore to shore by ropes and tackles. The river was very high
and the current running swiftly, and as they prepared to take the
wounded officer across, the ropes broke, and the whole thing went to
pieces, leaving him within sight, but not within reach, of clean beds,
comforts, and medical attention he hoped to secure. Some of the escort,
rough soldiers though they were, broke into tears as they saw the
predicament of their beloved officer. He himself, however, true to his
colors, said nothing. Finally, they offered to take him across the
raging torrent in a small skiff—the only boat available—if he were
willing to take the risk. Of course, if the skiff were overturned, he
would have been drowned. He took the risk, and with two men to paddle
and an officer to hold him in his arms, the passage was made.


                            IV. An Army Wife

Three hundred miles away, at Fort D. A. Russell, his wife was waiting
for him. Long before he reached Fort Fetterman, she heard through
couriers the news of his wound, which was reported to her as fatal,
although he had taken care to cause a reassuring message to be sent her
with the first messenger. With the heroism of the army wife, although
she was in delicate health at the time, she immediately made
preparations to join him. The railroad at that time ran as far as
Medicine Bow. Beyond that there was a hundred-mile ride to Fort
Fetterman. All the troops were in the field; none could be spared from
the nominal garrisons for an escort. Again and again Mrs. Henry made
preparations to go forward, several times actually starting, and again
and again she was forbidden to do so by the officers in command at the
various posts. It was not safe to send a woman across the country with a
few soldiers; the Indians were up and out in all directions. There was
no safety anywhere outside the forts or larger towns; she had to stay at
home and wait. Sometimes the devoted wife got word from her husband,
sometimes she did not. The savages were constantly cutting the wires.
Her suspense was agonizing.

Finally, the arrival of troops at Fort Fetterman enabled a stronger
escort to be made up, and Henry was sent down to Fort D. A. Russell. The
troops arrived at Medicine Bow on the third of July. The train did not
leave until the next day. They were forced to go into camp. The cowboys
and citizens celebrated the Fourth in the usual manner. That night the
pain-racked man narrowly escaped being killed by the reckless shooting
of the celebrators. Two bullets passed through the tent in which he lay,
just above his head. The next morning found him on the train. His heart
action had been so weakened by chloral and other medicines which they
had given him, that at Sherman, the highest point on the journey, he
came within an inch of dying.

His thoughts all along had been of his wife. When he got to the station
he refused to get in an ambulance, in order to spare her the sight of
his being brought home in that way. A carriage was procured, and
supported in the arms of the physician and his comrades, he was driven
back to the fort. With superhuman resolution, in order to convince his
wife that he was not seriously hurt, he determined to walk from the
carriage to the door. Mrs. Henry had received instructions from the
doctor to control herself, and stood waiting quietly in the entrance.

“Well,” whispered the shattered man, as she took him tenderly by the
hand, alluding to the fact that it was the Fourth of July, “this is a
fine way to celebrate, isn’t it?”

After the quietest of greetings—think of that woman, what her feelings
must have been!—he was taken into the house and laid on the sofa. The
doctor had said that he might have one look at his wife. The bandages
were lifted carefully from his face, so that he might have that single
glance; then they were replaced, and the wife, unable to bear it longer,
fled from the room. The chaplain’s wife was waiting for her outside the
door, and when she got into the shelter of that good woman’s arms she
gave way and broke down completely.

“You know,” said the chaplain’s wife, alluding to many conversations
which they had had, “that you asked of God only that He should bring him
back to you, and God has heard that prayer.”

Everybody expected that Henry would die, but die he did not; perhaps it
would be better to say die he would not. And he had no physique to back
his efforts, only an indomitable will. He never completely recovered
from that experience. He lost the sight of one eye permanently, and to
the day of his death was liable to a hemorrhage at any moment, in which
there was grave danger of his bleeding to death.

He took a year’s leave of absence, and then came back to duty. In 1877,
when his troop was ordered to the front in another campaign under Crook
against the redoubtable Sioux, he insisted upon accompanying them. He
had been out an hour or so when he fell fainting from the saddle. Did
they bring him back? Oh, no! He bade them lay him under a tree, leave
two or three men with him to look after him, and go ahead. He would
rejoin them that night, when it became cooler and he could travel with
more ease! What he said he would do he did. A trooper rode back to the
post on his own account and told of his condition. An order was sent him
by the post commander to return. Henry quietly said he would obey the
first order and go on. He remained with the troop for six weeks, until
finally he was picked up bodily and carried home, vainly protesting, the
doctor refusing to answer either for his eyesight or for his life if he
stayed in the field any longer.


                 V. The Buffalos and Their Famous Ride

Thirteen years after that Henry was commanding the Ninth Cavalry, with
headquarters at Fort McKinney. The Ninth Cavalry was a regiment of
negroes. From the overcoats which they wore in Wyoming in the winter
they were called the “Buffalos,” and sometimes they were facetiously
referred to as “Henry’s Brunettes.” Whatever they were called, they were
a regiment of which to be proud.

In 1890 occurred the last outbreak of the Sioux under the inspiration of
the Ghost Dancers, which culminated in the battle of Wounded Knee.
Troops from all over the United States were hurried to the Pine Ridge
Agency as the trouble began. On the 24th of December Henry and the
“Brunettes” were ordered out to the former’s old stamping ground in the
Black Hills on a scouting expedition. It was bitter cold that Christmas
Eve, but, thank God! there was no blizzard. Fifty miles on the back of a
trotting horse was the dose before them. They rested at four A.M. on the
morning of Christmas Day. Some of the garments the men wore were frozen
stiff. They had broken through the ice of the White River in crossing
it. How the men felt inside the frozen clothing may be imagined. Eight
miles farther they made their camp. They did not have much of a
Christmas celebration, for as soon as possible after establishing their
base at Harney Springs they went on the scout. They hunted assiduously
for several days, but found no Indians. These had gone south to join
their brethren concentrated about the agency. One day they rode
forty-two miles in a vain search. They got back to camp about seven
o’clock. At nine a courier from the agency fifty miles away informed
them of the battle of Wounded Knee, and that five thousand Oglala Sioux
were mustering to attack the agency.

“Boots and Saddles!” instantly rang out, and the tired troopers mounted
their jaded horses again. This time the camp was broken for keeps, and
tents were struck, wagons packed to abandon it. It was a bitter cold
night. There was a fierce gale sweeping through the valley, blowing a
light snow in the faces of the men wrapped to the eyes in their buffalo
coats and fur caps. They pushed steadily on in spite of it, for it was
Henry’s intention to reach the agency in the dark in order to avoid
attack by the Indians.

It was thought advisable, therefore, to leave the wagon train under an
escort of one company and press forward with the rest. The men arrived
at the agency at daybreak, completing a ride of over ninety miles in
less than twenty hours. Fires were kindled, horses picketed, and the
exhausted men literally threw themselves on the ground for rest. They
had been there but a short time when one of the men from the escort came
galloping madly in with the news that the wagon-train was heavily
attacked, and that succor must be sent at once. Without waiting for
orders, without even stopping to saddle the horses, Henry and his men
galloped back over the road two miles away, where the escort was
gallantly covering the train. A short, sharp skirmish, in which one man
was killed and several wounded, drove back the Indians, and the regiment
brought in the train.

It was ten o’clock now, and as the negro troops came into the agency,
word was brought that the Drexel Mission, seven miles up the valley, was
being attacked, and help must be sent immediately. There were two
regiments of cavalry available, the Seventh and the Ninth. For some
unexplained reason, the Ninth was ordered out. In behalf of his men,
Henry made protest. They must have a little rest, and so the Seventh was
despatched, and was soon hotly engaged. Two hours later a messenger
reported that the Seventh, in the valley where the mission was situated,
was heavily attacked by the Indians, who had secured commanding
positions on the surrounding ridges. Unless they could be relieved, they
would probably be overwhelmed. Again the trumpet call rang out, and the
tired black troopers once more climbed into their saddles and struck
spurs into their more tired horses, galloping away to the rescue of
their hard-pushed white comrades. The ridges were carried in most
gallant style, and after some sharp fighting the Indians were driven
back. The Seventh was extricated and the day was saved.

In thirty-four hours of elapsed time, the Ninth Cavalry had ridden one
hundred and eight miles—the actual time in the saddle being twenty-two
hours. They had fought two engagements and had rested only two hours.
Marvelous to relate, there wasn’t a sore-backed horse in the whole
regiment. One horse died under the pressure, but aside from that and
their fatigue, horses and men were in excellent condition.

That was probably the most famous ride ever performed by troops in the
United States. For it Henry was recommended for a further brevet, as
major-general—the sixth he had received.

The Spanish-American War was too short to afford Henry an opportunity to
distinguish himself in the field, but in Porto Rico he showed that his
talents were not merely of the military order. In the brief period his
health permitted him to remain there, he accomplished wonders, and did
it all in such a way as to gain the respect—nay, the affection—of the
people over whom, with single-hearted devotion and signal capacity, he
ruled. He stayed there until he broke down. I, sick with typhoid fever
on a transport at Ponce, saw him just before he collapsed. We were old
friends, and he came off to the ship to visit me. I was not too ill then
to realize that his own time was coming. He would not ask to be
relieved.

“Here I was sent”, he said; “here I will stay until my duty is done.”

He was the knightliest soldier I ever met, and I have met many. He was
one of the humblest Christians I ever knew, and I have known not a few.
It was his experience at Porto Rico which finally brought about his
death; for it is literally true that he died, as a soldier should, in
his harness. In those trying times at Ponce, when life and health were
at a low ebb, he wrote, in the sacred confidence of his last letter to
his faithful wife, words which it was not his custom to speak, but which
those of us who knew him felt expressed his constant thought:

“I am here alone. One by one my staff officers have fallen ill and gone
home. Home!—let us not speak of it. Jesus is here with me, and makes
even this desolation home until a brighter one is possible.”

So, his memory enshrined in the hearts that loved him, his heroic deeds
the inspiration of his fellow-soldiers, passed to his brighter home Guy
V. Henry, a Captain of the Strong.

-----

Footnote 111:

  John F. Finerty, who was present as the correspondent of the Chicago
  _Times_, and who relates the incident, says that Henry, immediately
  after this remark, advised Finerty to join the army. Encouraging
  circumstances to back up such a recommendation!




                               APPENDICES




                              APPENDIX A.
Being a Further Discussion of General Custer’s Course in the Little Big
                          Horn Campaign.[112]


                                   I.

Whether General Custer did, or did not, obey General Terry’s orders;
whether these orders were, or were not, well considered, and such as
could be carried out; whether, if General Custer did disobey General
Terry’s orders he was warranted in so doing by the circumstances in
which he found himself, are questions of the deepest interest to the
student of military matters and the historian thereof. I presume the
problem they present will never be authoritatively settled, and that men
will continue to differ upon these questions until the end of time.

The matter has been discussed, pro and con, at great length on many
occasions. A number of books and magazine articles have been written
upon different phases of the situation. I have come to the conclusion
indicated in my own article, as I said, against my wish. In view of his
heroic death in the high places of the field, I would fain hold General
Custer, for whom I have long cherished an admiration which I still
retain, entirely innocent. I have only come to this conclusion after a
rigid investigation including the careful weighing of such evidence as I
could secure upon every point in question.

This evidence consists, first, of a great variety of printed matter;
second, of personal conversations with soldiers and military critics,
which, as any record of it would necessarily be hearsay and secondhand,
I have not set down hereafter save in one instance; third, of letters
which have been written me by officers who, from their participation in
the campaign, or from unusual opportunities to acquire knowledge
concerning it which they have enjoyed, have become possessed of
information which they were willing to give to me.

The object of this appendix is to set down, so that it may be here
preserved in permanent and available form for future reference, such
evidence in these letters as may be pertinent and useful; also to refer
the student, who desires to go deeper into the subject, to some of the
more valuable printed accounts which are easily accessible.

I am glad that some of the communications I have received, notably those
from Colonel Godfrey, make a stout defense of General Custer. Perhaps
upon consideration of Colonel Godfrey’s points and arguments, which are
not only strong and well taken, but also admirably put, the critic may
be inclined to differ from my conclusion. For the sake of General
Custer’s fame, I sincerely hope so. I should be glad to be proved to be
mistaken.

Without specifically noting the various descriptions of the campaign and
battle, which are interesting, but irrelevant to my purpose,[113]
Custer’s conduct has been critically considered at some length—by
persons whose standing requires that their opinions should be
respectfully received—in several publications which I note in such order
as best serves the purpose of this discussion without regard to the
order in which they appeared.

Colonel Edward S. Godfrey,[114] U. S. A., now commanding the Ninth
Cavalry, who, as a lieutenant, commanded K Troop, in Benteen’s
battalion, which joined that of Reno in the battle of the 26th of June,
1876, wrote a most interesting account of the battle, containing some
valuable reflections upon some disputed points, which was published in
the _Century Magazine_, Vol. XLIII., No. 3, January, 1892. To this
article, in the same number, were appended certain comments by
Major-General James B. Fry, U. S. A., since deceased.

This article and these comments came to the notice of Major-General
Robert P. Hughes, U. S. A. (retired), then Colonel and
Inspector-General. General Hughes was General Terry’s aide-de-camp
during the Little Big Horn Campaign. He wrote an exhaustive criticism on
Fry’s comments to Godfrey’s article, which was in effect a discussion of
the main proposition that Custer disobeyed his orders and thereby
precipitated the disaster, for which he was therefore responsible. This
campaign was also considered in an article by Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews,
president of the University of Nebraska, who was then president of Brown
University, Providence, Rhode Island, which appeared in _Scribner’s
Magazine_ for June, 1895. A fuller reference to Dr. Andrews’ position
will be made later.

General Hughes’ article was offered to the _Century_, but was not
accepted, and was finally published in the _Journal of the Military
Service Institution_, Vol. XVIII., No. 79, January, 1896.

Among the many books in which the matter has been discussed, three only
call for attention.

In “THE STORY OF THE SOLDIER,” by Brigadier-General George A. Forsyth,
U. S. A. (retired), the following comment appears:

  “Under the peculiar condition of affairs, bearing in mind the only
  information he could possibly have had concerning Sitting Bull’s
  forces, was Custer justified, in a military sense and within the
  scope of his orders, in making the attack?

  “In the opinion of the writer he was within his orders, and fully
  justified from a military standpoint in so doing.”

General Forsyth gives no reason for his decision, but it is to be
presumed that he did not arrive at that decision hastily and carelessly,
and as he is a very able and distinguished officer and military critic,
due weight should be accorded his views.

In “THE UNITED STATES IN OUR OWN TIME,” by Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews,
published by Chas. Scribner’s Sons, edition of 1903, pages 190–1–2–3,
there is a concise discussion of the question, based on the article in
_Scribner’s Magazine_, referred to above, with some additional
reflections on General Hughes’ paper.

In “PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF GENERAL NELSON A. MILES, U. S. A.,”
chapter xv., pages 198–210, there is a further discussion by the
Lieutenant-General, lately in command of the United States Army.

In order clearly to understand what follows the student should refer to
each of the sources mentioned and examine carefully into what is therein
set forth. It is not practicable to quote all these authors at length. I
have corresponded with every one of the authors mentioned except General
Fry. I print their letters to me, having made no change except once in a
while breaking a page into paragraphs and supplying a missing word here
and there which had no especial bearing upon the point at issue. Some of
the letters were written in pencil amid press of duties. Most of these
documents I print without comment. It is necessary, however, that I
should call attention to some features brought out by the
correspondence.

President Andrews says, in the book referred to:

  “Much turns on the force of Custer’s written orders, which, judged
  by usual military documents of the kind, certainly gave Custer a
  much larger liberty than Colonel Hughes supposed. There is an
  affidavit of a witness who heard Terry’s and Custer’s last
  conversation together at the mouth of the Rosebud, just before
  Custer began his fatal ride. Terry said: ‘Use your own judgment and
  do what you think best if you strike the trail; and whatever you do,
  Custer, hold on to your wounded.’”

General Miles says, in his book:

  “But we have positive evidence in the form of an affidavit of the
  last witness who heard the two officers in conversation together on
  the night before their commands separated, and it is conclusive on
  the point at issue. This evidence is that General Terry returned to
  General Custer’s tent,[115] after giving him the final order, to say
  to him that on coming up to the Indians he would have to use his own
  discretion and do what he thought best. This conversation occurred
  at the mouth of the Rosebud, and the exact words of General Terry,
  as quoted by the witness, are:

  “’Custer, I do not know what to say for the last.’

  “Custer replied: ‘Say what you want to say.’

  “Terry then said: ‘Use your own judgment, and do what you think best
  if you strike the trail; and, whatever you do, Custer, hold on to
  your wounded.’

  “This was a most reasonable conversation for the two officers under
  the circumstances. One had won great distinction as a general in the
  Civil War; was an able lawyer and department commander, yet entirely
  without experience in Indian campaigns. The other had won great
  distinction as one of the most gallant and skilful division
  commanders of cavalry during the war, commanding one of the most
  successful divisions of mounted troops; he had years of experience
  on the plains and in handling troops in that remote country, and he
  had fought several sharp engagements with hostile Indians.”

If General Terry spoke such words to General Custer the last thing
before Custer’s departure, those remarks have a very important, almost a
decisive, bearing on the matter at issue. The only question then
existing would be, how far the verbal order ought to be considered as
superseding the written one. _It is my opinion that the charge that
Custer disobeyed orders would fall to the ground if the truth of the
alleged remarks could be established._ By giving him this verbal order,
Terry would make Custer an absolutely free agent. The vital importance
of establishing this affidavit is therefore obvious.

I call attention to the fact that Terry nowhere refers to this
conversation, which it would be incumbent upon a gentleman to declare
immediately Custer was charged with disobeying Terry’s written order,
and that Terry, in that portion of his report which is quoted by me on
page 225, virtually not only fails to exculpate but actually charges
that Custer did disobey his order, by saying he did the very thing that
he was not expected to do.

To establish this affidavit, I wrote to President Andrews, asking his
authority for stating that such an affidavit existed and requesting a
copy of it. Here is his reply. I insert it without comment.

                     The University of Nebraska, Chancellor’s Office,
                                           Lincoln, November 22d, ’03.

  My Dear Sir:

  Replying to your esteemed favor of the eleventh inst. I regret to
  say that I have no means of recalling with certainty the source of
  my information touching the Custer affidavit. My impression is,
  however, that my informant was Gen. Miles, with whom I communicated
  on the subject while I was writing my account. I also conversed
  personally with Hughes and with a very intimate friend, now
  deceased, of Gen. Terry’s.

  I shall be extremely pleased to read your views upon this subject.

                                 Very truly yours,
                                                     E. BENJ. ANDREWS.

I also wrote to General Miles and received the following reply from him:

                                             1736 N Street, N. W.,
                                 Washington, D. C., November 20, 1903.

  My Dear Sir:

  In reply to your two letters, you will find in my book, “Personal
  Recollections, or from New England to the Golden Gate,” published by
  Werner & Co., Akron, Ohio, perhaps all the information you will
  require. I can not give the time now to going over the campaign in
  detail. I presume you will find the book in most libraries.[116] You
  will notice in it a chapter on the Custer campaign. General Custer
  did not disobey orders. When General Terry divided his command,
  taking one portion of it with him up the Yellowstone, and sending
  General Custer with the other portion far out in the Indian country,
  it necessarily put from seventy-five to one hundred miles between
  the two commands, and therefore placed upon General Custer the
  responsibility of acting on the offensive or defensive, for he could
  have been attacked by the whole body of the combined tribes, and, on
  the other hand, if he allowed them to escape without attacking them,
  he would have been severely censured. It would be silly to suppose
  that Indian chiefs like Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse would permit
  two columns to march around over the country with infantry, cavalry,
  wagon trains, etc.,[117] and wait for them to come up on both sides
  simultaneously, and one must believe the American people very
  gullible if they thought such a proposition had military merit.

                                  Yours very truly,
                                                      NELSON A. MILES.

I immediately wrote General Miles a second letter asking him for the
name of the affiant and any statement he might be willing to make about
the affidavit. I pointed out to him what he very well knew—the
prominence given to the story in his own book indicates that—the
importance of the affidavit in establishing General Custer’s position
and defending him against the charge of disobedience. I received no
answer to this letter.

Meanwhile the question of the affidavit was taken up by General Hughes
in his several communications to me which appear below.

In order not to break the thread of the discourse I will anticipate
events and here insert a third letter which I wrote to General Miles,
after carefully considering General Hughes’ remarks. The letter was sent
to General Miles by registered mail. I hold the registry receipt showing
that he received it. To this inquiry I have as yet received no reply.

                                      455 East 17th Street, Flatbush,
                                    Brooklyn, N. Y., March 30th, 1904.

  Lieutenant-General NELSON A. MILES, U. S. A.,
                  1736 N Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

  My Dear General Miles:

  A few months since I addressed to you a letter asking you for the
  name of the person, alluded to in your book, who made the affidavit
  as to the last remark of General Terry to General Custer. This
  letter has probably never reached you since I have never received
  any answer to it.

  The statement is questioned by a number of officers, and in the
  interest of historical accuracy and for the sake of bringing forward
  every particle of evidence tending to clear General Custer of the
  charges which are made against him in that campaign, I most
  respectfully ask you to give me the name of the affiant together
  with such other statements concerning the affidavit as may be
  conclusive. How did you become possessed of the affidavit, for
  instance? Did you see it? Did you know the affiant? Was he a person
  whose testimony was to be implicitly relied upon? Is he alive now?
  In short, any information concerning it will be most acceptable as
  well as most useful.

                                 Very sincerely yours,
                                                 CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY.

I do not desire to comment on General Miles’ refusal further than to say
that if he has in his possession the affidavit he should either submit
it to the inspection of impartial observers, give it to historians,
state who made it, where it was made, furnish a certified copy of it to
the public, or otherwise establish it. If he is not willing to do this
he should at least say why he is not willing. I submit that no man,
whatever his rank or station, ought to make statements which affect the
fame and reputation of another man _without giving the fullest publicity
to his sources of information, or stating why the public must be content
with a simple reference thereto_.

While I am on the subject of the affidavit, I call the student’s
attention to a possible suggestion in Colonel Godfrey’s second
communication below.

It is twenty-eight years since the Battle of the Little Big Horn. If the
alleged affiant is now alive, what reason can exist to prevent him
coming out and acknowledging his affidavit? If he is dead, why should
secrecy about it longer exist? Why does not General Miles break his
silence? _The whole matter turns on the production of this affidavit,
with satisfactory evidence as to the character of the affiant._

The other position taken in General Miles’ letter above, which of course
is a summary of his views as set forth in his book, is discussed later
on by General Woodruff.


                                  II.

I now refer the student to the following letter in answer to one from me
asking information and calling General Hughes’ attention to President
Andrews’ book, which has just been reissued in a new and amplified
edition:

                                                New Haven, Conn.,
                                                      18th Nov., 1903.

  Dear Sir:

  Your letter of the 13th was duly received. I had not heard of Dr. E.
  Benjamin Andrews’ book prior to receipt of your letter, but have
  looked it up since.

  After a careful examination of what he says about the Sioux campaign
  of 1876, I cannot find any good and sufficient reason for changing
  aught that was stated in the article published in the _Journal of
  the Military Service Institution_, in January, 1896. I do find,
  however, that something could be added to the statement of the case
  in reply to new matter which he has injected into it in his book.
  These items are three in number, to wit:

  1st. General Miles does not agree with the views therein expressed.

  2d. New evidence in the form of an affidavit made by some
  individual, name not given.

  3rd. The writer of the book dissents from my view of the case.

  We will take these items up severally:

  First: “General Miles is strongly of the opinion that Custer was not
  guilty of disobeying any orders.”

  It is not a new experience to learn that the views of General Miles
  and myself are at variance. Indeed, it seems that they are seldom in
  accord. But, in this instance, my views are supported by the late
  General P. H. Sheridan, who states as follows:

  “General Terry, now pretty well informed of the locality of the
  Indians, directed Lieutenant-Colonel George A. Custer to move with
  the Seventh Cavalry up the Rosebud, until he struck the trail
  discovered by Major Reno, with instructions _that he should not
  follow it directly to the Little Big Horn, but that he should send
  scouts over it and keep his main force farther south_.”[118]

  General Gibbon, in a letter to General Terry, written after having
  reached his post, Fort Shaw, Montana, and bearing date November 5th,
  1876, writes as follows, speaking of the “Conference”:

    “We both impressed upon him (Custer) that he should keep
    constantly feeling to his left, and even should the trail turn
    toward the Little Big Horn that he should continue his march
    southward along the headwaters of the Tongue, and strike west
    toward the Little Big Horn. So strong was the impression upon my
    mind and great my fear that Custer’s zeal would carry him
    forward too rapidly, that the last thing I said to him when
    bidding him good-by, after his regiment had filed past you when
    starting on the march, was, ‘Now, Custer, don’t be greedy, but
    wait for us.’ Poor fellow! Knowing what we do now, and what an
    effect a fresh Indian trail seemed to have on him, perhaps we
    were expecting too much to anticipate a forbearance on his part
    which would have rendered coöperation between the two columns
    practicable.”

  The foregoing clearly shows that no doubt existed in the minds of
  the Division Commanders and the third party present at the
  conference as to what the instructions required and that those
  instructions were not complied with.

  Second: Dr. Andrews states that there was a listener at the last
  conversation between Terry and Custer at the mouth of the Rosebud,
  just before Custer began his fatal ride, and that his affidavit sets
  up that:

  “Terry said: ‘Use your own judgment and do what you think best if
  you strike the trail and, whatever you do, Custer, hold on to your
  wounded.’”

  It is quite evident that this is the same affidavit which General
  Miles refers to in his book. My attention was called to that
  reference in the winter of 1896, and in behalf of the family and
  friends of General Terry I asked to see the affidavit, saying that I
  might wish to make a copy of it. My request was refused by General
  Miles, with the further information that it had been in his
  possession for nineteen years, which carried the date back to a time
  when Colonel Miles was commanding a post in General Terry’s
  Department. The value of the document could have been very readily
  determined at that time by General Terry himself, and I am thankful
  to say its worthlessness is still capable of proof.

  The quotations given by Dr. Andrews would alone be sufficient to
  condemn the paper with any one familiar with General Terry and the
  situation.

  It will be noticed that he is represented as saying, “If you strike
  the trail.” Terry was sending, with Custer, Reno and six troops of
  cavalry, who had followed the trail for many weary miles only three
  days before, and there was no “if” in the case.

  The other quotation is equally incredible. General Terry had an
  enviable reputation throughout the army for his exceptional courtesy
  on all occasions and under all circumstances, to all those serving
  in his command. To have made the remarks quoted, “Whatever you do,
  hold on to your wounded,” would have been tantamount to saying to
  one of his Lieutenant-Colonels, to whom he was confiding the finest
  command in his department, that he considered it necessary to
  caution him on the elementary principle of the position assigned
  him. To an officer of General Custer’s experience and gallantry such
  a caution would have been far from agreeable, and such action would
  have been entirely foreign to the life-long conduct of General
  Terry.

  But, fortunately, we are not dependent upon deductive evidence in
  this instance. There are still living a good many people who were
  witnesses of that “march past” and parting of Generals Terry and
  Custer. By personal observation I positively know that any one,
  General Gibbon excepted, who makes affidavit to the effect that, at
  the said parting at the Rosebud, there was a conversation between
  Terry and Custer to which he was the only listener, is guilty of
  perjury.

  When the notice came that the command was ready to take up its march
  I was sitting with Terry and Gibbon. General Terry invited General
  Gibbon to go with him and see it. They walked off a few yards from
  the bank of the stream and stood together when Custer joined them.
  The three remained together until the command had filed past and the
  final good-by was said. Custer mounted his horse and rode off, and
  Terry and Gibbon came back to where I had remained. The last remark
  made to Custer was by Gibbon. If any change was made at that time in
  Custer’s orders it was perforce known to Gibbon, who was alongside
  of Terry, and the only one who was with him and Custer. Now let us
  see what Gibbon said in a letter written to General Terry
  twenty-seven years ago, when he could not foresee for what purpose
  his words would be quoted:

    “Except so far as to draw profit from past experience it is,
    perhaps, useless to speculate as to what would have been the
    result had _your plan_ been carried out. But I cannot help
    reflecting that, in that case, my column, supposing the Indian
    camp to have remained where it was when Custer struck it, would
    have been the first to reach it; that with our infantry and
    Gatling guns we should have been able to take care of ourselves,
    even though numbering only two-thirds of Custer’s force.”

  The only person actually in the presence of Terry and Custer at that
  final parting, happened to be the third member of the conference,
  who knew the “plan,” and on the fifth of the November following he
  writes as above, of what would have been the result had “your plan”
  (Terry’s conference plan) been carried out.

  It so happened that I went over this whole subject with General
  Gibbon personally only a short time before his death. He certainly
  knew nothing of any change in the “conference plan” at that time.
  Any historian who makes use of the affidavit General Miles had some
  years ago, would do well to look carefully into the facts.

  Third: Andrews states: “He (Hughes) adduced many interesting
  considerations, but seemed to the writer not at all to justify his
  views.”

  I am, by no means, sure that this dissent would have disturbed me if
  I had depended on my own judgment alone in submitting the
  article[119] for publication, but it so happened that I did not do
  so. The tragedy discussed being of an exceedingly grave character,
  and both the responsible heads having passed away, rendered it
  unusually important that every possible precaution should be taken
  against mistakes. For this reason, after the “many interesting
  considerations” were prepared for publication, I submitted the
  article to different _competent military men_ with the simple
  question, “Is it conclusive?”

  The final review was made by General Henry L. Abbott, U. S. Army,
  who enjoys a world-wide reputation for military ability and
  scholarly attainments. The gentlemen who revised the article were
  unanimously of the opinion that the statement was _absolutely
  conclusive_, and with the support of such men I have felt little
  anxiety about the criticisms that have been made.

                                   Very truly yours,
                                                         R. P. HUGHES.

Thereafter I wrote again to General Hughes about some matters repeated
to me in conversation by General Carrington, who told me that Custer
actually got down on his knees to Terry and begged him, for the sake of
Custer’s honor and fame as a soldier, to get the orders detaining him at
Fort Lincoln revoked, so that he might be spared the disgrace of seeing
his regiment march to the front leaving him behind. Carrington’s
recollection was that the scene took place in Terry’s bedroom.

Here is General Hughes’ letter on that point:

                                                  New Haven, Conn.,
                                                      27th Nov., 1903.

  My Dear Sir:

  Yours of the 27th at hand. Carrington is all right except as to
  location—the incident occurred in General Terry’s office in St.
  Paul, corner Fourth and Wabashaw Streets. It drew from Terry a
  request to the President to permit Custer to go with him, the answer
  being through Sherman, “If Terry wishes Custer let him take him
  along.” Just after notifying Custer of the reply and telling him he
  would take him along, Custer met Ludlow on the street and made the
  “swing clear” remark which is spoken of in Andrews’ history and is
  referred to in my article in the journal. I shall have to apply for
  a copy of the Secretary of War’s report for 1876, which has the
  reports of Sheridan, Crook, Terry, Gibbon, Reno, etc., pages
  439–487.[120]

                                   Yours very truly,
                                                         R. P. HUGHES.


                                  III.

Meanwhile I had communicated with Colonel Godfrey, who had already
furnished me with much data in addition to that contained in his
valuable and interesting paper, calling particular attention to some of
the statements made by General Hughes in his article in the _Journal_
_of the Military Service Institution_. From Colonel Godfrey I received
the following paper:

  MEMORANDA FOR REV. C. T. BRADY

  A semi-official account entitled “Record of Engagements with Hostile
  Indians in the Division of the Missouri, from 1868 to 1882,” was
  published by the Division of the Missouri. This paper is now being
  reprinted in the _United States Cavalry Journal_, Fort Leavenworth,
  Kansas. The part relating to the Little Big Horn, is in the October,
  1903, number. This account reads:

  “About two o’clock in the morning of July 25th, the column halted
  for about three hours, made coffee, and then resumed the march,
  crossed the divide, and by _eight o’clock_ were in the valley of one
  of the branches of the Little Big Horn.”

  This is misleading and not altogether true. We halted about two
  A.M., till eight A.M., then marched till ten A.M., halted, and it
  was not until nearly noon that we crossed the divide. We were in a
  narrow valley. The march is correctly described in my article. The
  inference is that Custer was so very eager that he crossed the
  divide into the valley of the Little Big Horn and put himself where
  he could be discovered. General Hughes’ article is a _special plea_
  to clear General Terry from the odium that he and his family seemed
  to think was heaped upon him for failure to push forward with the
  information they had on June 25th and 26th, and that General
  Custer’s family and friends were supposed to hold him (Terry)
  responsible for the disaster in a measure. I do not remember a
  charge of disobedience as having been made at any time during this
  campaign; nor, on the other hand, do I recall that much was said
  that Terry and Gibbon did not do as they thought best on June 25th
  and 26th.

  The marching distance from the Yellowstone, where Gibbon’s command
  was crossed, to the Little Big Horn, was about forty-six miles. East
  of the Big Horn, the country over which Gibbon’s forces marched, was
  rough—bad lands. The Second Cavalry on its march June 25th, saw the
  “big smoke” (from the fire in the bottom at the time of Reno’s
  attack) and at once sent word to General Gibbon (and Terry) that
  they thought a fight was going on, or something to that effect. I
  don’t know when they saw this “big smoke,” but my recollection is
  that it corresponded or tallied very well with the time of Reno’s
  attack. The Second Cavalry got to the Little Big Horn, four or five
  miles above the mouth, about nine-thirty, June 26th. They were then
  distant from the battlefield about eight or ten miles—an infantry
  officer says six miles. They arrived in the vicinity of our position
  about eleven A.M., June 27th, nearly two days after the “signs,” the
  “big smoke” of the fight, had been communicated.

  That the country between the Yellowstone and the Little Big Horn was
  rough; that the 25th of June was hot; that the water was scarce, we
  all know; but we thought it strange that, after they learned from
  the Crow scouts—say at ten-thirty, June 26th, on the Little Big
  Horn—that a disaster had occurred, it took them so long to get a
  move. Yet none of us blamed them for being cautious at that time.

  General Terry was not an Indian fighter and would never have made a
  success of getting Indians on the plains. The idea is
  preposterous[121] that a force can march through the open country (a
  great big country like we had) pass by the Indians fifty or sixty
  miles south, then turn round and find them in the same place, and
  crush them between that force and another from the opposite
  direction. They don’t linger that way. Our march from eleven P.M.,
  June 24th, was in a close country and not exposed—was in a close
  valley, a branch of the Rosebud. The Indians who discovered us and
  sent word to the village would have discovered our trail and
  consequently informed them of our movements.

  General Custer did not intend to attack until June 26th, the date
  Terry was to be at the Little Big Horn.[122] Herandeen was the scout
  that was to take the information through to Terry, but developments
  made it necessary, in General Custer’s opinion, if we were to strike
  the Indians at all, that we should do it at once. Even then he
  expected only a running fight. Their stand and concentration were
  unexpected, because the chance of “surprise” was gone, and he
  probably did not send Herandeen, as was intended, to communicate
  with Terry for the reason that he did not think he could get
  through.

  Now, suppose the Indians had been located on the headwaters of the
  Rosebud or Tongue, or Powder, and not on the Little Big Horn, and we
  had bumped up behind them on the north, should Custer have backed
  away, sent a scout through to Terry, made a detour so as to get to
  the south side? Terry’s instructions had fairly located the Indians,
  but it was a mere _guess_.[123] On the 17th they had fought Crook to
  a retreat, then they concentrated upon the Little Big Horn.

  In my opinion, if our attack had been delayed even a few hours we
  would not have found the Indians all in the village. When we got to
  the divide their pony herds were still out grazing; when the attack
  was made all herds had been driven into the village; they did not
  have time to strike their tepees and steal away. I don’t believe
  they had a long warning of our advance. The Indian runners had the
  same, or a greater, distance to get back than we had to advance. It
  was their evident purpose to drop out of sight of our scouts who
  were in position for observation before daylight, and did not see
  them returning down the valley on the trail. Therefore, they must
  have made a wide detour.

  Again, when they discovered us we were probably in bivouac and, at
  all events, an ordinary day’s march distant from the village. The
  time of warning, I think, could be safely conjectured as the time of
  arrival of the few warriors that came out to meet the advance and
  attack Reno. All those warriors that had their ponies handy, I
  believe, were assembled at once to come out and meet the troops. The
  rapid advance didn’t give the Indians a chance to collect their
  belongings and mature any plans to escape; otherwise I believe the
  expected “scattering” would have taken place. And in just so much
  was the attack a “surprise.”

  That General Custer deliberately disobeyed Terry’s orders I do not
  believe. Custer was intensely in earnest and fully determined to
  find the Indians and, when found, to attack them, even if it took
  him back to the agencies. Suppose Custer had asked Terry “If I find
  these Indians shall I attack, or wait for you?” Undoubtedly Terry
  would have replied “Attack!” He was too good a soldier not to
  appreciate opportunity, but he was not enough of a cavalryman or
  Indian fighter to appreciate the flash-like opportunities for
  hitting the Indians on the broad prairies.

  Custer was what in these modern days is styled a “strenuous” man.
  Terry was not. He was the personification of gentleness and
  deliberateness. And besides, Terry’s instructions _gave the
  necessary latitude_. He told Custer what he thought should be done
  but, after all, left it to Custer’s judgment and discretion when so
  nearly in contact with the enemy.[124] If Custer had passed on south
  and the Indians had escaped, or had gone forth and attacked him, as
  they had Crook, and defeated him, would these instructions have
  shielded him? Not much. He would have been damned as cordially for
  the failure of the expedition as he is now, by those same men, for
  courting disaster. I have no doubt in my mind, that if Custer had
  passed south even one more day, the Indians would have attacked us
  as they had General Crook, and upon almost the same ground, just one
  week before.[125]

  Terry says, in his instructions, “He will indicate to you his own
  views of what your action should be, and he desires that you should
  conform to them unless _you should see sufficient reason for
  departing from them_.”[126] Custer was an experienced war soldier, a
  thorough cavalryman, and an experienced Indian campaigner. So why
  not give him the benefit of “sufficient reason”? Were Terry’s
  instructions “definite and explicit”? Terry himself says in his
  order that “definite instructions” were “impossible.”

  There was not an officer or soldier of the Seventh Cavalry but that
  expected a fight when we were preparing to leave the mouth of the
  Rosebud. Where the fight would take place we knew not, but I venture
  to say that never was there a thought that the Indians would take a
  position and wait there for us to go through a lot of manœuvers.
  Reno’s scout had not brought any _definite_ information. I find my
  notes (June 20th) say that it was generally thought the trail, when
  they left it, was about _three weeks old_ and the indications showed
  perhaps three hundred and fifty lodges. I don’t think General Terry
  had any later information than Reno’s scout on which to guess the
  location of the Indians on the Little Big Horn. General Custer’s
  statement that he would follow the trail until he found the Indians,
  even if it took us to the agencies on the Missouri or in Nebraska,
  does not indicate that he expected them to wait in position on the
  Little Big Horn or elsewhere. This statement was made after it had
  been decided that we should go over the trail, June 21st, but
  probably before the general instructions had been made out.

  As it turned out I think Custer did make a mistake in going in with
  a divided force, not that the division of itself would have been
  fatal, but because Reno failed to hold a leg even if he couldn’t
  skin.

  If Custer had followed Reno the latter, in my opinion, would never
  have dared to halt, or even hesitate, in his attack. If Reno had
  even held to the bottom, the overwhelming forces would have been
  divided. There was nothing in Reno’s past career that would indicate
  confidence should not be placed in his courage. Custer could not
  have anticipated a faint-hearted attack or that Reno would get
  stampeded.

  I believe that Reno was dismayed when he saw the showing in front of
  him, and when he failed to see the “support” promised, I think he
  lost his nerve, and then when his Ree scouts stampeded and he found
  his force being surrounded in the bottom, I believe he abandoned
  himself to his fears, then stampeded to the hills and lost his
  reason, throwing away his ivory handled pistols. If Reno had held to
  the bottom, Custer’s left flank (Keogh and Calhoun) would not have
  been so quickly overwhelmed (for the Indians leaving Reno made that
  envelopment), and it is reasonable to suppose Custer would have had
  a better show to withdraw and rejoin other forces.

  If Custer had followed up Reno he would have taken matters in his
  own hands, held and concentrated his men in such manner as to
  control the situation until Benteen and the packs came up. The
  Indians, as a rule, will not stand punishment unless cornered. I
  went over the ground in the bottom where Reno was when he concluded
  to go to the hills, and I believe he could have held the position. I
  talked the matter over with General Gibbon and he practically agreed
  with me. I know many others think otherwise, including some who were
  in that part of the fight.

  I have doubts about the saving of Custer if Reno had advanced after
  the packs joined us, for I think the fight was practically over
  then. To have advanced before then might possibly have done
  something in favor of Custer, but probably not. I am of the opinion
  that part of the fight was settled quickly. Custer’s battalion had
  practically no shelter and no time to make any. While a good many
  horses were killed, I fear that most of those getting away carried
  their reserve ammunition, and it didn’t take long to get away with
  fifty rounds in a fight. With a different commander than Reno we
  might have created a diversion by advancing as soon as the
  ammunition packs came up, which was some little time before
  McDougall arrived with all the packs. Reno was apparently too busy
  waiting for further orders from Custer to take any initiative. Weir
  asked permission to take his troop to reconnoiter in the direction
  of the firing on Custer, and Reno would not give it. Weir started on
  his own hook, and Edgerly (Weir’s Lieutenant) supposing permission
  had been given for the troop, followed Weir with the troop. I think
  Reno subsequently tried to make it appear that this advance of Weir
  was by authority. I don’t think Reno was drunk, for I don’t believe
  there was enough whiskey in the command to make a “drunk.”[127]

  At the Reno Court of Inquiry I was asked if I thought Reno had done
  all he could as a commanding officer, and I replied “No.” That was
  about the effect of the question and answer. The testimony and
  proceedings were reported in full in the Chicago _Times_. The New
  York _Herald_ had an able correspondent, Mr. Kelly, that joined our
  forces on the Yellowstone in July or August, and wrote, giving all
  the information he could gather from all sources that pervaded the
  command, that he could _get at_. There were a “whole lot” of
  correspondents in the field after the fight, but Mr. Kelly was
  considered one of the ablest. Being in the field till September
  26th, we saw but few newspapers from the east.

                                                        E. S. GODFREY.

On the receipt of this memoranda I sent Colonel Godfrey all the papers
printed above, and asked him further to discuss these papers. They were
returned to me with the following letter, accompanied by these
additional notes:

                      Headquarters, Ninth United States Cavalry,
                                      Fort Walla Walla, Washington,
                                                  February 12th, 1904.

  My Dear Doctor:

  I return to-day the letters sent to me by registered mail. I am very
  sorry to have kept them so long from you, but I have been suffering
  from a sprained knee which has laid me up, and have been otherwise
  under the weather.

  I feel that I have not in my memoranda done justice to the subject.
  It is largely one of sentiment, and the best rule is to put yourself
  in his place and act under the lights then exposed to view. That
  Custer may have been actuated by other motives I do not doubt. The
  main question to me was whether he was justified from a military
  point, in a campaign against Indians, in his conduct of the march
  and battle.

  If we could have foreseen as we now look back and see!

                                    Sincerely yours,
                                                        E. S. GODFREY.


                  ADDITIONAL NOTES BY COLONEL GODFREY.

The statement of General Sheridan, quoted by Hughes, was made in his
annual report for 1876, and of course from data furnished by General
Terry. It is but natural that he should reflect more or less the views
of Terry. He could have had only the newspaper and other unofficial
accounts. Of course I recognize that “unofficial accounts” very often
give more _inside_ information than the official report.

A word as to that affidavit. I don’t know anything about it and am ready
to take Hughes’ say-so as to what _officers_ were present, but I suggest
a possible solution: When Custer dismounted he had his orderly and
generally his flags with him; naturally the orderly would be somewhat
retired, and when Custer went to mount his horse, Terry may have gone
aside to accompany him and spoken the caution to him in a subdued voice
so that Gibbon would not have heard him, but the orderly might have
heard.[128]

In going over a lot of letters relating to the campaign, etc., I find
one from General J. S. Brisbin (now dead), then Major, commanding Second
Cavalry Battalion. It is dated January 1st, 1892, just two weeks before
his death. In it he is very bitter against Custer. He says that Custer
disobeyed:

“If not in letter, then in spirit, and I think and have ever thought, in
letter as well as spirit. Terry intended, if he intended anything, that
we should be in the battle with you. I was on the boat, steamer Far
West, Captain Grant Marsh, the night of the 21st, when the conference
took place between Gibbon, Custer and Terry, to which you refer, and I
heard what passed. Terry had a map and Custer’s line of march up the
Rosebud was blocked out on it by pins stuck in the table through the
paper. Terry showed Custer his line of march and, being somewhat
near-sighted as you know, Terry asked me to mark the line, and I did so
with a blue pencil. Custer turned off that line of march from the
Rosebud, just twenty miles _short_ of the end of the pins and blue
line.”

Just how much dependence can be placed on Brisbin’s statements I don’t
know. He may have been present at this conference, but Hughes makes no
mention of him; in fact, entirely ignores him and may have forgotten
him. I will make another quotation from Brisbin:

“I read the order you print as being the one given by Terry to Custer
for this march. If that is the order Custer got it is not the order
copied in Terry’s books at Department Headquarters. You will remember
that after Custer fell Terry appointed me chief of cavalry. I looked
over all the papers affecting the march and battle of Little Big Horn
and took a copy of the order sending you up the Rosebud. The order now
lies before me and it says ‘you should proceed up the Rosebud until you
ascertain definitely the direction in which the trail above spoken of
leads (Terry had already referred to the trail Reno followed). Should it
be found, as it appears almost certain that it should be found, to turn
toward the Little Big Horn, he thinks (that is, the Department Commander
thinks) that you should still proceed southward, perhaps as far as the
headwaters of the Tongue River, and _then_ (‘then’ underscored in order)
turn _toward Little_ Big Horn, feeling constantly, however, to your
left, so as to preclude the possibility of the escape of the Indians to
the south or southeast by passing around your left flank. It is desired
that you conform as nearly as possible to those instructions and that
you do not depart from them unless you shall see absolute necessity for
doing so.’”

That part of the quotation from “It is desired” to “necessity for doing
so,” is omitted in the order as printed in the report of General Terry.
Not having seen the original order I cannot vouch for either being the
true copy, but the omission looks peculiar to say the least, if omission
there was.[129]

I do not know that I can add very much to what I have already sent to
you on the question of disobedience. Here is a commander who has had
experience in war, civilized and Indian, sent in command of his regiment
against an unnumbered foe, located we know not where (although well
conjectured in the instructions, as it turned out); given instructions
to _preclude their_ escape; to coöperate with another column separated
from fifty to one hundred miles, having infantry and artillery, marching
over a rough, untried country. Now if that commander thought that to go
on farther south before he had located the foe (when he was on the
trail) was to leave an opening and an almost certainty of their escape,
if they wanted to do so, is it reasonable to expect him to leave the
trail and go on “in the air”? The commander who gives him his
instructions cannot be communicated with. Is this isolated commander not
allowed to act on his own responsibility, if he thinks he cannot
_preclude_ the escape by leaving the very trail that will locate the
enemy?

Hughes in his article, and the official reports, make it appear that we
were at or near the “Crow’s Nest” at daylight and crossed the divide at
eight A.M. The scouts were at the “Crow’s Nest,” but at eight A.M. we
took up the march to near the divide and “Crow’s Nest,” arriving at ten
o’clock, A.M.; that is, we were in the Rosebud Valley, one mile from the
divide. We did not cross the divide till nearly noon. Hughes seems to
pooh-pooh the idea that we were not to attack till the morning of the
26th. We had Custer’s own statement as to that. He said so himself when
he called the officers together on the night of June 24th and again
reiterated the statement before crossing the divide.

During the second or third day (23rd or 24th) up the Rosebud, several
times we thought we (I mean some of us) saw smoke in the direction of
the Tullock, and finally we spoke of it to the General (Custer) at one
of the halts. He said it could not be, that he had scouts over on that
side and they most certainly would have seen any such “signs” and report
to him, and he reiterated that there were scouts out looking toward
Tullock’s Valley. After this assurance we made it a point to watch this
“smoke business” and we discovered the illusion was due to fleecy clouds
on the horizon and the mirage, or heated air, rising from the hills on
that side. The air was full of dust from our marching columns, which
helped the illusion.

With reference to my slip that “about eighteen hundred had gone _from
one agency_ alone.” I took that from my diary, as I had been informed by
some one who got the information from Department Headquarters. I had
never seen the despatch and put down the item as it came to me. It was a
matter of common report in the camp.

Another point occurs to me: “For Custer to be in coöperating distance on
the only line of retreat if the Indians should run away.” (Hughes’
magazine article, page 36.) Hughes intimates that there was only one
line of retreat, presumably up the valley of the Little Big Horn. The
Indians certainly could have retreated over their traveled route, or
could have cut across the headwaters of the Tullock for the Yellowstone
had Custer gone south. Hughes seems to forget that an almost impassably
rough country—the Wolf Mountains—would lie between Custer and those
lines of retreat. Yet he would insist that it was good generalship to
leave these routes open to close up one other. The Indians were in light
marching order and could travel faster than Gibbon over the Tullock
Divide, and there would have been a long-distance, “tail-end” pursuit
for Custer when he descended the Little Big Horn (by following the
“plan”) and found the enemy had escaped over the very trail he had left
behind him, or had struck for the Yellowstone, passing Gibbon’s left.

It has been the criticism almost ever since Indian fighting began that
commanders were too prone to follow some strategic theory and fail to
bring the Indians to battle—give them a chance to escape. It was
Custer’s practice to take the trail and follow it, locate the enemy and
then strike home by a surprise attack. Custer knew the ridicule and
contempt heaped on commanders who had failed to strike when near the
enemy; or who had given the enemy opportunity to escape when nearly in
contact with them. Whatever may be the academic discussions as to his
disobedience, I hold that he was justified by sound military judgment in
making his line of march on the trail.[130]


                                  IV.

General Hughes and Colonel Godfrey may be considered fairly enough as
representatives of the opposing views on the question. I thought it
would be well to have the papers discussed by an officer who might be
considered as taking an impartial view of the matter. I therefore sent
them to Brigadier-General Charles A. Woodruff, U. S. A. (retired), and
his review of the whole question is as follows:

                                               103 Market Street,
                                           San Francisco, May 3, 1904.

  My Dear Dr. Brady:

  I have read with a great deal of pleasure, your three articles on
  “War with the Sioux,” and I have taken the liberty of making various
  marginal notes and corrections on the manuscript. I have also read
  the letters from General Miles, Professor Andrews, General Hughes,
  and Colonel Godfrey.

  General Miles, in his letter of November 20, 1903, dismisses the
  matter very curtly. He says “Custer did not disobey orders,” and he
  states as military dictum that, in sending General Custer
  seventy-five or one hundred miles away, Terry could not indicate
  what Custer should do, and that, practically, Custer was not under
  any obligations to execute Terry’s orders, even when he found
  conditions as Terry had expected and indicated.[131]

  The order states explicitly “Should it—the trail up the Rosebud—be
  found (as it appears almost certain it will be found) to turn toward
  the Little Big Horn, then you should still proceed southward.” Now,
  when he found that it turned toward the Little Big Horn, instead of
  going south or stopping where he was and scouting south or southwest
  and west and try to locate the village, or examining Tullock Creek,
  or sending scouts to Gibbon, he made that fatal night march with the
  deliberate intention of trying to locate and strike the village
  before Gibbon could possibly get up.

  Gibbon says (page 473, Vol. I., Report of the Secretary of War for
  1876), “The Department Commander (Terry) strongly impressed upon him
  (Custer) the propriety of not pressing his march too rapidly.”
  Whether Custer’s written instructions were based upon a “guess” of
  the actual condition, as Colonel Godfrey suggests, or had no
  “military merit,” as General Miles states, the facts remain: First:
  That they were based upon a “foresight” as good as the present
  “hindsight,” which is often not the case. Second: That Custer
  accepted them without demur. Third: No further information was
  gained to suggest a modification, or, to use the words of the
  letter: “unless you see sufficient reason for departing from them.”
  On the contrary, the supposed turn of the trail was found to be an
  actual fact.

  Therefore, Custer did not obey his written instructions, in letter
  or spirit, and had no proper military justification for not doing
  so, unless General Terry afterwards told him, “Use your own judgment
  and do what you think best,” which, in my opinion, would have made
  the instructions advisory rather than positive orders. If these
  facts (I ignore the unproduced affidavit) do not constitute
  disobedience of orders, I do not see how it is possible for the
  charge of disobedience of orders to hold against any man, under any
  circumstances, when away from his superior.

  Here is a trifling sidelight on the matter. On the night of June
  23d, General Gibbon, in reply to an optimistic remark of mine, told
  me in effect, “I am satisfied that if Custer can prevent it we will
  not get into the fight.” The meaning I gathered was that Gibbon
  thought that Custer was so eager to retrieve the good opinion that
  he might have lost owing to his controversy over post traderships,
  that he would strike when and where he could.

  While Terry, with Gibbon’s command, was camped at Tullock’s Creek,
  Saturday night and Sunday morning, June 24th and 25th, he was
  looking for a message from Custer very anxiously, so I was told at
  the time.

  Colonel Godfrey speaks of the odium Terry’s family seemed to think
  was “heaped upon him for the failure to push forward on the
  information they had on June 25th and 26th.” Now let me say a few
  words with reference to that.

  The smoke that is spoken of as having been seen by Terry’s
  command—and I saw it myself—was on the afternoon of June 25th. It
  was occasioned, I understood, by attempts to drive some of Reno’s
  stragglers out of the brush, and must have been somewhere from two
  to four o’clock in the afternoon. Now let me quote from a telegram
  of General Terry, dated June 27, and found on page 463, Vol. I.,
  Report of the Secretary of War of 1876, to show that Gibbon’s
  command did not linger by the wayside:

  “Starting soon after five o’clock in the morning of the 25th, the
  infantry made a march of twenty-two miles over the most difficult
  country which I have ever seen. In order that the scouts might be
  sent into the valley of the Little Big Horn, the cavalry, with the
  battery, was then pushed on thirteen or fourteen miles farther,
  reaching camp at midnight. The scouts were sent out at half-past
  four in the morning of the 26th. They soon discovered three Indians,
  who were at first supposed to be Sioux; but, when overtaken, they
  proved to be Crows, who had been with General Custer. They brought
  the first intelligence of the battle. Their story was not credited.
  It was supposed that some fighting, perhaps severe fighting, had
  taken place; but it was not believed that disaster could have
  overtaken so large a force as twelve companies of cavalry. The
  infantry, which had broken camp very early, soon came up, and the
  whole column entered and moved up the valley of the Little Big
  Horn.”

  I want to say that the infantry broke camp about four o’clock on the
  morning of the 26th. It had rained that preceding night and the lash
  ropes of the packs were soaked with water and, as we moved, they
  stretched continuously and we were stopping constantly to replace
  the packs, and besides that, mind you, traveling in adobe mud was
  very trying. I continue the quotation as follows:

  “During the afternoon efforts were made to send scouts through to
  what was supposed to be General Custer’s position, to obtain
  information of the condition of affairs; but those who were sent out
  were driven back by parties of Indians, who, in increasing numbers,
  were seen hovering in General Gibbon’s front. At twenty minutes
  before nine o’clock in the evening, the infantry had marched between
  twenty-nine and thirty miles. The men were very weary and daylight
  was fading. The column was therefore halted for the night, at a
  point about eleven miles in a straight line from the mouth of the
  stream. This morning the movement was resumed, and, after a march of
  nine miles, Major Reno’s intrenched position was reached.”

  It was the general opinion from indications found next day just
  beyond where we halted for the night, that had we proceeded five
  hundred yards more, we would have been in the midst of a night
  attack from the Sioux Indians, who came to meet us as a means of
  guarding their fleeing village.

  In reference to the number of Indians, the same telegram of General
  Terry’s says: “Major Reno and Captain Benteen, both of whom are
  officers of great experience, accustomed to seeing large masses of
  mounted men, estimate the number of Indians engaged at not less than
  twenty-four hundred. Other officers think that the number was
  greater than this. The village in the valley was about three miles
  in length and about a mile in width. Besides the lodges proper, a
  great number of temporary brushwood shelters were found in it,
  indicating that many men, besides its proper inhabitants, had
  gathered together there.”

  I am under the impression now that we counted positions occupied by
  twelve hundred lodges.

  I coincide with your view that had Reno proceeded in his attack,
  with the audacity that should characterize, and usually does
  characterize, a cavalry charge, there would have been a different
  story to tell; perhaps as many men would have been killed, but they
  would have been divided among at least eight, if not eleven, troops
  of cavalry rather than concentrated in five, which meant
  annihilation for those.

  I have been told, or was told at the time, that it was thought that
  about sixty lodges were a few miles up the Little Big Horn above the
  main village, and that, in the early morning, when Custer’s
  proximity was discovered, that this small village, knowing that they
  were but a mouthful for Custer’s command, hurriedly packed up and
  dashed down the valley. It can readily be understood that sixty
  lodges, with the horses and paraphernalia, moving rapidly down the
  valley, might well create the impression that a very large force was
  in retreat.

  Now, if the Indian village was in retreat, Custer’s division of his
  forces was not altogether bad. One command to hurry them up and
  continue the stampede, his main force to attack them in the right
  flank if they turned that way, which was most probable, Benteen’s to
  attack them if they turned to the left, which was possible but not
  as probable.

  Unfortunately for Custer they were not fleeing. Colonel Godfrey
  rather dwells upon the fact that Custer had to attack these Indians
  or they would have gotten away from him. The fact is, as I have
  stated above, when he left the Rosebud he did not know where they
  were, had not located them, was not in visual contact even with
  them, and a glance at the map will show that, standing on the
  Rosebud, where the trail left it to go over to the Little Big Horn,
  Custer was in the best possible position for intercepting these
  Indians on three of their four lines of retreat. For having passed
  into the Little Big Horn Valley, there were only four practicable
  routes of flight for the Indians, north, toward Gibbon, or east,
  northeast, or southeast. From the point where he left the Rosebud,
  Custer was in a position to strike either one of the three last
  lines of flight, whereas, if, after making the forced night march
  with his fatigued animals, he had struck the Little Big Horn, and a
  reconnaissance had shown that the village had left the Little Big
  Horn, going northeast, on the 24th of June, he would have been two
  days’ march behind them.

  Had he sent a scout, on the night of the 24th, to Gibbon, whose
  exact whereabouts was almost known to him, that scout would have
  reached Terry or Gibbon, on Tullock’s Fork, a few miles from the
  Yellowstone, on the morning of Sunday, and by Sunday night Gibbon’s
  command would have been within less than ten miles of what is
  designated as Custer Peak, the hill on which Custer perished. Then,
  with Custer moving on the morning of the 26th, Gibbon’s infantry and
  Gatling guns could have forced those Sioux out of the village on to
  the open ground, extending from the Little Big Horn to the Big Horn,
  and Custer’s twelve troops of cavalry and Gibbon’s four, sixteen
  troops in all, between them would have made the biggest killing of
  Indians who needed killing ever made on the American continent since
  Cortez invaded Mexico. While this is a speculation, and an idle one,
  it is to my mind a rather interesting one.

  I think myself that General Hughes makes out his case in reference
  to that affidavit that General Miles has so carefully treasured for
  so many years. It would be a very interesting historical document,
  but it would have been more satisfactory if it had been produced
  while Terry or General Gibbon or both were alive. I doubt very much
  whether Major Brisbin’s supposed copy of the order book at Terry’s
  headquarters was compared with the original after Brisbin had made
  it.

  I regret to say that my paper upon this campaign was lost, and I
  have not even the notes from which it was written. I found one brief
  page, which I quote merely as indication of my reasons for believing
  that there were more than two thousand Indian warriors in the battle
  of June 25th: “Before May 10th of ’77 more than one thousand
  warriors came in and surrendered, not including the warriors killed
  in that battle or the half dozen other engagements, nor the
  individual warriors by the hundreds that sneaked back to the
  agencies and those who went to British America under Sitting Bull,
  numbering, it was understood, over two thousand warriors.”

  I do not think you are too severe upon Major Reno. I conversed with
  most of the officers of that command at one time or another, while
  in the field, and nearly all were very pronounced in their severe
  criticism of Reno. The testimony at the Reno court of inquiry was
  less severe than the sentiments expressed within a few days, weeks,
  and months after the occurrence. That was perhaps natural. It is
  barely possible that some of it was due to the fact that Captain
  Weir, one of General Custer’s most pronounced friends and one of
  Major Reno’s most bitter critics, died before the court of inquiry
  met.

  I do not think that Sturgis, Porter, etc., were captured and
  tortured. I found most of the lining of Porter’s coat in the camp,
  which showed that the bullet that struck him must have broken the
  back and passed in or out at the navel. My theory has been, with
  reference to those whose bodies could not be found, that most of
  them made a dash into the Bad Lands in the direction of the mouth of
  the Rosebud, where they had last seen General Gibbon’s command. It
  would have been easy for them to have perished from thirst in the
  condition they were in, and if they reached the Yellowstone and
  undertook to swim it, the chances were decidedly against their
  succeeding.

                                 Very sincerely,
                                       C. A. WOODRUFF,
                       Brigadier-General, United States Army, Retired.


                                   V.

So soon as this appendix as above was in type, I sent printed proofs of
it to Generals Hughes, Woodruff, and Carrington, and to Colonel Godfrey
for final revision and correction before the matter was plated. In
returning the proof, General Carrington and Colonel Godfrey both add
further communications, which I insert below.

I also sent the same proof to Mrs. Elizabeth B. Custer, widow of General
Custer, and to Mrs. John H. Maugham, his sister, with an expression of
my willingness—nay, my earnest desire—to print any comment they or
either of them might wish to make upon the question under discussion.

At Mrs. Custer’s request I sent the appendix to Lieutenant-Colonel Jacob
L. Greene, U. S. V., now president of the Connecticut Mutual Life
Insurance Company, who was Custer’s adjutant-general during the war and
his life-long friend thereafter. His able defense of his old commander
is printed as the last of this interesting series of historic documents.

Desiring that Custer, through his friends, may have the final word, I
print it without comment, save to say that I fully join Colonel Greene
in his admiration for the many brilliant qualities and achievements of
his old commander.


                      GENERAL CARRINGTON’S LETTER

                                     Hyde Park, Mass., Sept. 25, 1904.

  Dear Dr. Brady:

  I appreciate the favor of reading the proof-sheets of the appendix
  to your papers upon the Custer massacre. When it occurred I was
  greatly shocked by an event so similar in its horrors to that of the
  Phil Kearney massacre, in 1866. A previous interview with General
  Custer came to mind, and I attended the sessions of the court of
  inquiry at Chicago, taking with me, for reference, a map which I had
  carefully prepared of that country, with the assistance of James
  Bridger, my chief guide, and his associates.

  The evidence indicated that when Custer reached the “Little Big
  Horn” (so known upon that map) and sent Benteen up stream, with
  orders that, “if he saw any Indians, to give them hell,” ordering
  Reno to follow the trail across the river and move down toward the
  Indian camps, while he moved down the right bank, detaching himself
  from the other commands, he practically cut the Indians off from
  retreat to the mountains, which was part of his special mission;
  but, in the flush of immediate battle, lost thought of the combined
  movement from the Big Horn, which had for its purpose the
  destruction of the entire Indian force by overwhelming and
  concentrated numbers.

  Indeed, the court of inquiry did not so much discredit the conduct
  of Reno as reveal the fact that he faced a vastly superior force
  with no assurance that he could have immediate support from the
  other battalions, so vital in a sudden collision with desperate and
  hard-pressed enemies. The succeeding fight, on the defensive,
  protracted as it was, with no information of Custer’s position, or
  possible support from him, was a grave commentary upon the whole
  affair.

  The interview with General Custer referred to was in 1876, when,
  upon leaving the lecture platform of the Historical Society in New
  York, he made the remark, on our way to his hotel, “It will take
  another Phil Kearney massacre to bring Congress up to a generous
  support of the army.” We spent several hours together, while he
  discussed his troubles with the authorities at Washington. He
  recalled the events of 1867, and felt that General Sherman had
  severely judged his operations on the Republican, but that the time
  was near when he might have an opportunity to vindicate himself, and
  that, “if he again had a chance he would accomplish it or die in the
  attempt.” He was practically on a leave of absence, and its
  extension was not his choice. Colonel Smith was sick, and he claimed
  the right to command his regiment, since it had been ordered to
  report as part of General Terry’s command.

  The famous sutlership scandal was fully discussed, and here there
  has been confusion as to Custer’s position. He had nothing to do
  with the popular complaint that Belknap was farming out sutlerships
  for personal emolument. Neither is it technically correct that the
  Secretary of War could make original appointments of the kind
  complained of. Post commanders, with their councils of officers, had
  both the selection of their sutler, and fixed the prices of articles
  to be sold. The Secretary simply issued the appointment thus
  designated, unless for good reasons declined, thereby requiring
  another selection by the officers. In cases of troops in campaign,
  or detached, or on distant service, the commanding General confirmed
  the officer’s choice. Custer’s position was manly, legal, and just;
  but his assertion of this right, so far as made, offended Belknap,
  at the expense of officers whose rights were overruled by
  non-military influence.

  Custer was _not under charges_ that would militate against his
  assignment to the rightful command of his regiment when ordered into
  field service. I did not hesitate to urge him to press his claim,
  but could not entertain the idea that he would go to Bismarck, or
  otherwise to make his claim in person, except through Washington
  Headquarters.

  If ever a man had an incentive to dare odds with his regiment, this
  fearless fighter and rider, whose spirit reached the verge of frenzy
  in battle, was the man for the occasion.

  Through all the papers cited by you, there runs the same subtle
  suggestion that he who, as an independent commander of aggressive
  cavalry in the Civil War, was almost expected to take into the field
  a large discretion as to his actions (whereby he had formerly
  achieved success) when confronted by the enemy, within striking
  distance in the Little Big Horn Valley, lost all sense of danger and
  all thought of prescribed details of action in the confidence that,
  somehow, the old Seventh could not be whipped by any savage force
  whatsoever!

  I have always regarded Terry’s general plan as well conceived, for
  Reno’s prior scouting had almost assured the inevitable course of
  the Indian trail westward, and events confirmed Terry’s judgment.
  General Hughes had served upon Terry’s staff during the Civil War
  with credit, as well as captain in the 18th Infantry on the
  frontier, and his assurances that General Terry fully explained to
  Custer the reasons why Washington authorities distrusted his
  discretion and was more precise in giving him this detached command,
  cannot be impeached by an asserted affidavit that whispered hints,
  unheard by officers by his side, allowed him to be his own master in
  a matter where a combined movement of three commands was the prime
  factor in complete success.

  Neither is there any doubt whatever that Custer’s earnest plea, that
  he be trusted to fulfil the exact duties assigned to his command,
  secured not only the sympathy and confidence of Terry in his behalf,
  but that on that condition only did the Washington authorities
  authorize General Terry to vacate the order for his arrest because
  of going to his command without orders.

  As already stated, Custer’s confidence in the Seventh Cavalry was
  well deserved. It, with him, was a veritable thunderbolt in action;
  but it was not omnipotent. That over-confidence which dissolved its
  unity at the supreme crisis was fatal. Even then, a realized success
  of which Custer had no doubt, would have minimized the rashness of
  his dash and have largely condoned his fault.

                                    Yours sincerely,
                                                  HENRY B. CARRINGTON.


                    COLONEL GODFREY’S FINAL REMARKS

I have no desire to pose as the special champion of General Custer, and
it is still further from my desire to pose as inimical to General Terry.
My only purpose is to demonstrate the truth, not only for this
discussion, but for history.

This subject surely has gotten to the stage of academic discussion. I am
not willing to admit that the phrase “he desires that you should conform
to them (his views) unless,” etc., conveys a direct, positive command
which could not be more explicit. Nor do I admit that orders given by a
commander, in which he uses the words “desires,” “wishes,” and
equivalents, convey _positive_ commands under all circumstances. In
personal or social matters, such words convey the idea of what is wanted
and what is expected; and in such matters the expressed wishes and
desires are usually conveyed to personal friends, who loyally conform
thereto, if not in letter, in spirit and in results. In such relations a
commander does not want to use language that would appear dogmatic. I
further admit that in personally giving orders a commander may
accentuate the expression of his desires, wishes, etc., so as to leave
no doubt about his intentions, and to convey positiveness thus expressed
to his commands. When a commander gives written orders through official
channels, the words “commands,” “orders,” and “directs,” or the use of
the imperative, leave little ambiguity or doubt as to what is ordered or
intended.

Developments subsequent to the campaign or battle leave little doubt
that General Terry had about him men or influences that were suspicious,
inimical, or hostile to General Custer. I sincerely believe General
Terry was too high minded knowingly to allow himself to be influenced by
any sinister motive.

That the “instructions” give rise to this discussion shows they were
vague. Was this vagueness intentional? General Terry was a lawyer. He
was a soldier. As lawyer and soldier his trained mind should have
weighed the words embodied in these instructions. Now read them: “It is
of course _impossible_[132] to give you any _definite instructions_ in
regard to this movement, and were it not _impossible_ to do so, the
Department Commander places too much confidence in your zeal, energy,
and ability _to wish to impose upon you precise orders_ which might
hamper your action when nearly in contact with the enemy,” and then goes
on to indicate what he thinks should be done; or, in other words,
indicates what he (Terry) himself would do if he found conditions as
expressed. Custer evidently saw “sufficient reasons for departing from
them” and did what a reasonable interpretation of the instructions
contemplated, _made his own plans_.[132] I interpret the phrase “when so
nearly in contact with the enemy” to refer to the immediate time or
place (June 21, mouth of Rosebud) of writing it.[133]

As to the location of the Indians. Terry believed they were on the
Little Big Horn;—we found them on that river about 15 miles above its
forks with the Big Horn. Had the village been at the forks, the attack
would have been delivered on the 25th of June, as the village would not
have been located by Custer from the divide. It is possible the two
columns might have joined in the attack. Now, suppose the village had
been located 50 or 60 miles farther south, it would have still been
within Terry’s guess, but it would have been a far cry to Gibbons’
column which, under the instructions, would have remained at the forks.
It must be remembered that Custer would have had the Wolf Mountains
(Rosebud Mountains on later maps) between him and the Little Big Horn
had he ignored the trail and gone on southward up the Rosebud, as
Custer’s critics would have us believe were the intentions of the
instructions.

General Woodruff would have him stop at the camp of June 24 and scout to
locate the village, etc. Would that have complied with Woodruff’s
interpretation of the instructions? And from that position he says:
“Custer was in a position to strike either one of the three last lines
of flight (east, northeast or southeast), whereas if, after making the
_forced_[134] night march with his fatigued animals, he had struck the
Little Big Horn, and a reconnaissance had shown that the village had
left the Little Big Horn going northeast, on June 24 he would have been
two days’ march behind them.” That “forced” night march was about eight
miles, and every mile made was in the direction to place us in the best
position to intercept any flight to the northeast and east. Instead of
being two days behind them, we would have met them almost “head on.”

Of what practical use to send scouts through to Gibbon June 24?

There was no fresh or new positive information to send to him; Terry had
“guessed” it all.

Now let us repeat the marches made: June 22, twelve miles; June 23,
thirty-three miles; June 24, twenty-eight miles; June 25, eight miles to
the bivouac; and ten miles to the divide, and then say fifteen miles to
the village. That is to say, ninety-one miles up to noon June 25, when
it was decided to attack, and one hundred and six miles in all four
days. That doesn’t indicate that we made _forced_ marches.

Woodruff further states that “he made that fatal night march with the
_deliberate_(?) intention of trying to locate and strike the village
before Gibbon could possibly get up.” I say that statement is
deliberately unfair, and contradicts the twice-told statement by Custer,
that he did not intend to attack the village until the 26th, once before
he knew the location of the village, the night of the 24th, and again
when he called the officers together after the discovery at the divide.

Reno’s position in the bottom, in the old river bed, was sheltered from
fire from the hills by heavy timber, and was nearly a mile from the
hills. I have never before heard that he was fired upon from those
hills; but he was fired upon from the woods on the opposite side of the
river. General Gibbon and I both thought the hills were too far away to
give any effective fire. It must be remembered that the river bottom was
heavily timbered for some distance above and below this position. This
timber subsequently was cut for the construction of Fort Custer.


             LIEUTENANT-COLONEL GREENE’S DEFENSE OF CUSTER

                                   Hartford, Conn., September 1, 1904.

  My Dear Sir:

  I have read with great interest your discussion of the question of
  General Custer’s alleged disobedience of orders, both in the
  narrative of the Battle on the Little Big Horn and in the appendix
  to the volume, and upon which you have asked my comment.

  For whatever bearing it may have upon the propriety of any comment
  of mine, let me say that General Custer was my intimate friend, and
  that his first act after receiving his appointment in the Civil War
  as a brigadier-general was to secure my appointment and detail to
  him as adjutant-general, which relation I held until his muster out
  of the volunteer service in 1866. I think no one knows better his
  quality as a soldier and as a man. I know his virtues and his
  defects, which were the defects of his virtues. He was a born
  soldier, and specifically a born cavalry man. The true end of
  warfare was to him not only a professional theory—it was an
  instinct. When he was set to destroy an enemy, he laid his hand on
  him as soon as possible, and never took it off. He knew the whole
  art of war. But its arts and its instruments and their correct
  professional handling were not in his eyes the end all of a
  soldier’s career, to be satisfied with a technical performance. They
  were the means and the tools in the terms of which and by the use of
  which his distinct military genius apprehended and solved its
  practical and fateful problems. When he grappled his task it was to
  do it, not to go correctly through the proper motions to their
  technical limit, and then hold himself excused.

  He was remarkable for his keenness and accuracy in observation, for
  his swift divination of the military significance of every element
  of a situation, for his ability to make an instant and sound
  decision, and then, for the instant, exhaustless energy with which
  he everlastingly drove home his attack. And the swiftness and
  relentless power of his stroke were great elements in the
  correctness of his decisions as well as in the success of his
  operations. He was wise and safe in undertaking that in which a man
  slower in observation, insight and decision, and slower and less
  insistent in action, would have judged wrongly and failed.

  I knew Custer as a soldier when he was a brigade and division
  commander under Pleasanton and Sheridan, the successive commanders
  of the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Potomac. Those who knew the
  estimate in which those great commanders held him—the tasks they
  committed to his soldierly intelligence and comprehension, his
  fidelity and skill—need no reminder that in nothing of all their
  dependence upon and confidence in him did he ever fail in letter or
  spirit. I know how absolutely loyal he was under the conflicting
  conditions which sometimes confront every subordinate charged with
  grave responsibilities, and which test the sense of duty to the
  utmost. He was true as steel. He was depended upon for great things
  because he was dependable.

  In temperament he was sanguine and ardent. He loved his friends; he
  was impatient of every form of inefficiency and of pretense; he did
  not highly esteem mere professionalism; he was impulsive and
  sometimes abrupt in manner, but kind of heart; he was sensitive only
  to unjust criticism; he despised intrigue, chicane and all meanness;
  he was independent in opinion and judgment, and frank in their
  expression; he was open in opposition, and fair to an enemy.

  And it goes without saying that such a man had enemies—men who were
  envious of his abilities, his achievements and his fame; men whom he
  never sought to placate, and who sought envy’s balm in detraction
  and hatred; men who could not measure him or be fair to him, but men
  who in a pinch would have turned to him with unhesitating trust,
  whether in his ability or his soldierly faith.

  Did this man, this soldier, whose service throughout the Civil War
  and a long career of frontier warfare was for eighteen years
  unequaled for efficiency and brilliancy within the range of its
  opportunities and responsibilities, who never failed his commanders,
  who never disobeyed an order, nor disappointed an expectation, nor
  deceived a friend—did this man, at the last, deny his whole life
  history, his whole mental and moral habit, his whole character, and
  wilfully disobey an understood order, or fail of its right execution
  according to his best judgment, within the limits of his ability
  under the conditions of the event; and, what is worse—and this is
  what his detractors charge—did he not only disobey, but did he from
  the inception of the enterprise plan to disobey—to deceive his
  commander who trusted him, in order that he might get the
  opportunity to disobey?

  To any man who knew Custer, except those who for any reason hold a
  brief against him, not only is the charge of premeditated,
  deliberate disobedience absurd, but it is a foul outrage on one of
  the memories that will never fail of inspiration while an American
  army carries and defends an American flag.

  In one of Mrs. Custer’s letters to me, narrating what took place
  during the days of preparation for the General’s departure, she
  wrote:

  “A day before the expedition started, General Terry was in our house
  alone with Autie (the General’s pet name). A.’s thoughts were calm,
  deliberate, and solemn. He had been terribly hurt in Washington.
  General Terry had applied for him to command the expedition. He was
  returned to his regiment because General Terry had applied for him.
  I know that he (Custer) felt tenderly and affectionately toward him.
  On that day he hunted me out in the house and brought me into the
  living-room, not telling me why. He shut the door, and very
  seriously and impressively said: ‘General Terry, a man usually means
  what he says when he brings his wife to listen to his statements. I
  want to say that reports are circulating that I do not want to go
  out to the campaign under you.’ (I supposed that he meant, having
  been given the command before, he was unwilling to be a
  subordinate.) ‘But I want you to know that I do want to go and serve
  under you, not only that I value you as a soldier, but as a friend
  and a man.’ The exact words were the strongest kind of a declaration
  that he wished him to know he wanted to serve under him.”

  That was Custer all over. And to any one who knew him—to any one who
  can form a reasonable conception of the kind of a man he must needs
  have been to have done for eighteen years what he had done and as he
  had done it, and won the place and fame he had won—that statement
  ends debate. Whatever of chagrin, disappointment, or irritation he
  may have felt before, however unadvisedly the sore-hearted,
  high-spirited man may have spoken with his lips when all was
  undetermined, and his part and responsibility had not been assigned,
  this true soldier, knowing the gossip of the camp, conscious
  possibly it was not wholly without cause, however exaggerated, but
  facing now his known duty and touched by the confidence of his
  superior as Custer never failed to be touched, could not part from
  his commander with a possible shadow resting between them. He knew
  the speech of men might have carried to Terry’s mind the suggestion
  of a doubt. And yet Terry had trusted him. He could not bear to part
  without letting General Terry know that he was right to trust him.
  That statement to Terry was a recognition of whatever folly of words
  he might before have committed in his grief and anger; it was an
  open purging of an upright soldier’s soul as an act honorably due
  alike to superior and subordinate; it was, under the circumstances,
  the instinctive response of a true man to the confidence of one who
  had committed to him a trust involving the honor and fame of both.
  Disobedience, whether basely premeditated, or with equal baseness
  undertaken upon after-deliberation, is inconceivable, unless one
  imputes to Custer a character void of every soldierly and manly
  quality. With such an one discussion would be useless.

  Upon the discussion itself, which is presented in the narrative and
  in the appendix, I have little to say. In the opening paragraph of
  the appendix, you say: “I presume the problem ... will never be
  authoritatively settled, and that men will continue to differ upon
  these questions until the end of time.”

  In other words, the charge of disobedience can never be proved. The
  proof does not exist. The evidence in the case forever lacks the
  principal witness whose one and only definite order was to take his
  regiment and go “in pursuit of the Indians whose trail was
  discovered by Major Reno a few days since.” They were the objective;
  they were to be located and their escape prevented. That was
  Custer’s task. All the details were left, and necessarily left, to
  his discretion. All else in the order of June 22d conveys merely the
  “views” of the commander to be followed “unless you should see
  sufficient reasons for departing from them.” The argument that
  Custer disobeyed this order seems to resolve itself into two main
  forms. One is trying to read into the order a precision and a
  peremptory character which are not there and which no ingenuity can
  put there, and to empty it of a discretion which is there and is
  absolute; the other is in assuming or asserting that Custer departed
  from General Terry’s views without “sufficient reasons.” And this
  line of argument rests in part upon the imputation to Custer of a
  motive and intent which was evil throughout, and in part upon what
  his critic, in the light of later knowledge and the vain regrets of
  hindsight, thinks he ought to have done, and all in utter ignorance
  of Custer’s own views of the conditions in which, when he met them,
  he was to find his own reasons for whatever he did or did not do.
  Under that order, it was Custer’s views of the conditions when they
  confronted him that were to govern his actions, whether they
  contravened General Terry’s views or not. If in the presence of the
  actual conditions, in the light of his great experience and
  knowledge in handling Indians, he deemed it wise to follow the
  trail, knowing it would reach them, and deeming that so to locate
  them would be the best way to prevent their escape, then he obeyed
  that order just as exactly as if, thinking otherwise, he had gone
  scouting southward where they were not, and neither Terry nor he
  expected them to be.

  To charge disobedience is to say that he wilfully and with a wrong
  motive and intent did that which his own military judgment forbade;
  for it was his own military judgment, right or wrong, that was to
  govern his own actions under the terms of that order. The quality of
  his judgment does not touch the question of obedience. If he
  disobeyed that order, it was by going contrary to his own judgment.
  That was the only way he could disobey it. If men differ as to
  whether he did that, they will differ.

                                  Respectfully yours,
                                                      JACOB L. GREENE.


                                  VI.

To sum up, I suggest this as a possible line of investigations by which
the student may determine the question for himself:

First. Were Terry’s written orders definite and explicit?

Second. Were they intelligent orders capable of execution?

Third. Did these orders admit of more than one meaning?

Fourth. What are the various meanings, if more than one?

Fifth. Did Custer carry them out in any of their meanings?

Sixth. Did Custer depart from them?

Seventh. If so, how far?

Eighth. Such being the case, was he justified in so departing by the
exigencies of the situation?

Ninth. Were the consequences of such a departure serious?

Tenth. Did Custer receive verbal orders from Terry at the last moment?

Eleventh. If so, when?

Twelfth. Did these verbal orders supersede the written orders?

In closing, I repeat that I should be glad to be convinced that I have
erred in my conclusions; and that if any one can convince me that Custer
did not disobey, or that in doing so he was justified in his
disobedience, I shall make the fullest public amends for my expression
of opinion that he did and that he was not.[135] If this Appendix shall
cause any light to be thrown on the affidavit so often referred to, it
will serve an excellent purpose; for, I say again, I shall consider the
establishment of that affidavit as settling the question.

The subject is now left with the student. Perhaps I cannot more fitly
close the discussion than by this quotation from the confidential report
of General Terry by General Sheridan, dated July 2, 1875:

  “I do not tell you this to cast any reflection on Custer, for
  whatever errors he may have committed he has paid the penalty, and
  you cannot regret his loss more than I do; but I felt that our plan
  must have been successful had it been carried out, and I desire you
  to know the facts.”

-----

Footnote 112:

  All notes in this appendix are signed by the initials of their writers
  to identify them.—C. T. B.

Footnote 113:

  Such as Congressman Finerty’s graphic account in his book, “War-path
  and Bivouac;” Dr. Charles S. Eastman’s paper in the _Chautauqua
  Magazine_, Vol. XXXI., No. 4, 1900; and Mr. Hamlin Garland’s report of
  Two Moon’s account of the battle in _McClure’s Magazine_, Vol. XI.,
  No. 5, September, 1898.—C. T. B.

Footnote 114:

  General G. A. Forsyth writes me that he considers Colonel Godfrey one
  of the ablest officers in the United States Army—in which opinion I
  concur.—C. T. B.

Footnote 115:

  These two authorities seem to differ as to just when the conversation
  took place. Andrews, apparently quoting Miles, says: “Just before
  Custer began his fatal ride.” Miles, quoting the mysterious and
  unknown affiant, says the conversation took place the night before,
  and at Custer’s tent. The difference is radical and, in view of
  Colonel Godfrey’s suggestion below, is material. Besides, the regiment
  marched away at noon on the 22d, and that is the date of the order;
  hence, Custer had no orders the night before. The regiment passed
  Generals Terry, Gibbon, and Custer in review as it marched away. When,
  then, was the precise hour at which this alleged conversation took
  place?—C. T. B.

Footnote 116:

  I have it in my own library, of course, and have consulted it
  frequently.—C. T. B.

Footnote 117:

  This is overdrawn. Custer had neither infantry, artillery nor wagons
  with him; Gibbon had cavalry, infantry and artillery, but no wagons,
  be it remembered.—C.T.B.

Footnote 118:

  Report of Secretary of War, Vol. I., 1876, page 443. Italics in
  quotation above are mine.—C. T. B.

Footnote 119:

  The reference is to the article in the _Journal of the Military
  Service Institution_ mentioned above.—C. T. B.

Footnote 120:

  I have had them before me constantly for the past six months, and have
  examined them most carefully again and again, verifying quotations,
  etc.—C. T. B.

Footnote 121:

  If the orders were preposterous, or involved movements that were
  profitless and absurd, why did not Custer point out these patent
  absurdities to Terry and Gibbon _before he started_? There had been no
  change in conditions; the trail, the Indian position, and everything
  else were just as the orders predicted.—C. T. B.

Footnote 122:

  The time of the arrival of Terry at the Little Big Horn is assumed to
  be June 26th. What authority there is for that assumption I do not now
  recall. It is not embodied in the “instructions.” We of the command
  knew nothing of it till after the battle; after Terry’s arrival, that
  is.—E. S. GODFREY.

Footnote 123:

  Having located them, guess or not, the conditions were exactly those
  contemplated in the orders.—C. T. B.

Footnote 124:

  But if Custer had followed his orders, he would not have been nearly
  in contact with the enemy—there’s the rub!—C. T. B.

Footnote 125:

  This I consider a good point in Custer’s favor.—C. T. B.

Footnote 126:

  Italics mine.—E. S. GODFREY.

Footnote 127:

  Colonel Godfrey made this statement in answer to a question from me.
  On this point see Appendix B.—C. T. B.

Footnote 128:

  Again I ask General Miles if this is the explanation of the affidavit?
  If so, how does it accord with the statement that the conversation
  occurred the night before the command separated? Or, has General Miles
  written carelessly “the night before,” and does he mean just before
  the final march past?—C. T. B.

Footnote 129:

  Personally I do not believe that the sentence in question was in the
  order given to Custer. For if it was, why should Terry suppress it,
  since it only confirms his own claims? Besides I should be loath to
  believe that Terry would suppress anything. The sentence may have been
  in a rough draft of the orders, and not in the final copy.—C. T. B.

Footnote 130:

  This also is very interesting and seems to point to the order as a
  “preposterous” one under the circumstances. It may be so; but if so, I
  wish Custer had pointed it out to Terry before he started.—C. T. B.

Footnote 131:

  Would General Miles excuse subordinates for such obedience (?) of his
  orders for a combined movement?—C. A. WOODRUFF.

Footnote 132:

  No italics in original.—E. S. GODFREY.

Footnote 133:

  This is interesting, and is the first suggestion I have met with that
  the phrase refers to the position of Terry and Custer when the orders
  were prepared or delivered, and not to the time anticipated when
  Custer should meet the Sioux. I regret that I cannot agree with this
  interpretation. Still, it is possible that such an interpretation is
  certainly a point for Custer.—C. T. B.

Footnote 134:

  Italics mine.—E. S. GODFREY.

Footnote 135:

  At the risk of tiring the reader, but because I am sensitive in the
  matter and anxious not to be misunderstood, I append here a letter
  written by me to a sister of General Custer, who had expressed the
  hope that I would not take the position that he disobeyed his orders

                                                      July 13th, 1904.

    My Dear Madam:

    I have received and read and reread your letter of the 12th inst.
    That letter and the thought of Mrs. Custer, whose character, in
    common with all Americans, I respect and admire, taken in
    connection with the position which my conscience, much against my
    will, has compelled me to assume, has filled me with deep regret.

    Having read thus far, you will undoubtedly divine that I am
    compelled to say that I believe General Custer did disobey his
    orders. I have nowhere stated that I consider him guilty of
    rashness. I have also made it plain, I think, that even though he
    did disobey his orders, the ultimate annihilation of his battalion
    was due to the cowardice or incapacity of Major Reno.

    I remember to have seen General Custer when I was a boy in Kansas.
    My father, who was a veteran of the Civil War, had a great
    admiration for him. I was present when the bodies of the officers
    of the Seventh Cavalry were brought back for reinterment at Fort
    Leavenworth. My wife, a Southern woman, is a cousin of the late
    General Dod Ramseur, who was General Custer’s intimate friend. The
    family have never forgotten General Custer’s kindness when Ramseur
    was killed.

    I did, and still have, a warm admiration for the brilliant and
    soldierly qualities of General Custer. He was, and is, my beau
    ideal of a cavalry soldier. When I began to write these articles,
    I would not hear the charge that he had disobeyed orders. But I
    have been compelled by my investigations to take that position. I
    cannot tell you how painful it has been to me, and it is, to come
    to this conclusion. I have thought long and deeply over the
    matter.

    Of course I read General Hughes’ now famous article. I did not,
    however, allow that article alone to determine me; but I carefully
    considered every account. I examined every discussion which I
    could find. Not only that, I corresponded with a number of
    officers, among them being Lieutenant-General Miles, Major-General
    Hughes, Brigadier-General C. A. Woodruff, Brigadier-General
    Carrington, and Colonel Godfrey. The remarks of these officers
    were submitted to one another. Their statements were weighed and
    digested with the utmost care by me. I could come to no other
    conclusion than that I have arrived at.

    As an Appendix I have inserted in full my correspondence with
    different officers concerning the matter. I have been glad to
    print all that Colonel Godfrey, who has indeed been a powerful
    advocate in opposition to my views, has written. I have called
    attention to one significant fact which, in my opinion, would
    fully clear General Custer from the charge of disobedience. That
    is the affidavit of an alleged witness to the last conversation
    between Terry and General Custer.

    General Miles refers to this affidavit in his book, “Personal
    Recollections of General Nelson A. Miles.” President E. Benjamin
    Andrews also refers to it in his book, “The United States in our
    Own Time.” I wrote to President Andrews, who gave Miles as his
    authority. I wrote to General Miles _three times_, registering the
    last letter, asking him to substantiate the affidavit, the
    existence of which was doubted by many army officers. General
    Miles has made no reply. I take it for granted, therefore, that
    _he cannot substantiate the affidavit_.

    I have said frankly that if he can prove this affidavit and
    establish the credibility of the affiant, I will make public
    amends in the most ample manner for having said General Custer
    disobeyed his orders. I have said that if _anybody_ can convince
    me that I have been wrong in my conclusion; if any evidence can be
    produced which will establish the contrary, I shall be most happy
    to retract what I have said in any possible way that may be
    suggested to me.

    I beg you to believe that I have written in no spirit of animosity
    to General Custer. My real feelings for General Custer can easily
    be seen from my article on the Battle of the Washita, to which you
    have referred. It would be most agreeable to me if you would
    forward this letter to Mrs. Custer.

    Again deploring the unfortunate conclusion I am conscientiously
    compelled to arrive at, and regretting more than I can express
    that I must give pain to Mrs. Custer, to you, and to the friends
    of General Custer, I am,

                                     Yours sincerely,
                                                 CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY.




                               APPENDIX B
               Further Light on the Conduct of Major Reno


After the publication of the Custer article censuring Reno, my attention
was called to the following editorial, which appeared in the
_Northwestern Christian Advocate_, of September 7, 1904:


                      WHY GENERAL CUSTER PERISHED

General George A. Custer was and will always be regarded as one of the
most brilliant officers of the United States Army. His career abounds in
romantic interest; and his death, together with that of every officer
and soldier fighting with him, was one of the most tragic and memorable
incidents in Indian warfare. The story of Custer’s last fight with the
Indians, which took place on the Little Big Horn River in the summer of
1876, is graphically described by Cyrus Townsend Brady. It is not our
purpose to relate the story of the battle, but to call attention to the
real cause of Major Reno’s conduct, which resulted in Custer’s defeat
and death.

After describing the movements by which Custer distributed his force,
and the task assigned to Major Reno, who displayed remarkable indecision
and errors of judgment, which would have been inexcusable even in an
inexperienced young officer, and caused Reno to retreat instead of
vigorously attacking the Indians, Mr. Brady says:

  “His [Reno’s] second position was admirable for defense. Sheltered
  by the trees, with his flanks and rear protected by the river, he
  could have held the place indefinitely. He had not, however, been
  detailed to defend or hold any position, but to make a swift,
  dashing attack; and after a few moments of the feeblest kind of
  advance, he found himself thrown upon the defensive. Such a result
  would break up the most promising plan. It certainly broke up
  Custer’s.

  “It is a painful thing to accuse an army officer of misconduct, but
  I have taken the opinion of a number of army officers on the
  subject, and every one of them considers Reno culpable in a high
  degree. One, at least, has not hesitated to make known his opinion
  in the most public way. I am loath to believe that Major Reno was a
  coward; _but he certainly lost his head, and when he lost his head
  he lost Custer_. His indecision was pitiful. Although he had
  suffered practically no loss and had no reason to be alarmed, he was
  in a state of painful uncertainty as to what he should do next. The
  soldier—like the woman—who hesitates in an emergency which demands
  instant decision is lost....

  “There had, as yet, been no panic, and under a different officer
  there would have been none; but it is on record that Reno gave an
  order for the men to mount and retreat to the bluffs. Before he
  could be obeyed he countermanded this order. Then the order was
  given again, but in such a way that nobody, save those immediately
  around him, heard it because of the din of the battle then raging in
  a sort of aimless way all along the line, and no attempt was made to
  obey it. It was then repeated for the third time. Finally, as those
  farthest away saw those nearest the flurried commander mounting and
  evidently preparing to leave, the orders were gradually communicated
  throughout the battalion and nearly the whole mass got ready to
  leave. Eventually they broke out of the timber in a disorderly
  column of fours, striving to return to the ford they had crossed
  when they had entered the valley.

  “Reno calls this a charge, and he led it! He was so excited that,
  after firing his pistols at the Indians, who came valiantly after
  the fleeing soldiers, he threw them away. The pressure of the
  Indians upon the right of the men inclined them to the left, away
  from the ford. In fact, they were swept into a confused mass and
  driven toward the river. All semblance of organization was lost in
  the mad rush for safety. The troops had degenerated into a mob.”

Major Reno was not a coward, as many believe. His career in the army
during the Civil War and his promotion for gallant and meritorious
services at Kelley’s Ford, March 17, 1863, and at the battle of Cedar
Creek, October 19, 1864, are evidence of his courage. What, then, was
the explanation of his conduct at the Battle of the Little Big Horn? Dr.
Brady does not give it. Perhaps he does not know. But Major Reno himself
told the late Rev. Dr. Arthur Edwards, then editor of the
_Northwestern_, that his strange actions were due to the fact that HE
WAS DRUNK. Reno’s conduct in that battle lost him many of his military
friends. To Arthur Edwards, who knew him well, and continued his
faithful friend, Major Reno often unburdened his heart, and on one
occasion in deep sorrow said that his strange actions were due to drink,
and drink ultimately caused his downfall. His action at the Battle of
the Little Big Horn was cited as one instance of the result of his use
of intoxicating liquor. Liquor finally caused his expulsion from the
army in disgrace. In 1880 he was found guilty, by a general
court-martial, of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman. While
in an intoxicated condition he engaged in a brawl in a public billiard
saloon, in which he assaulted another officer, destroying property and
otherwise conducted himself disgracefully. For this offense the court
sentenced him to be dismissed from the army.

                  *       *       *       *       *

It had occurred to me that probably the explanation of Reno’s conduct
lay in the fact that he might have been intoxicated. I asked Colonel
Godfrey if he thought so, and his reply has been noted above in Appendix
A.

After reading the article in the _Advocate_, I wrote to the editor, Dr.
David D. Thompson, asking for further evidence of the statement quoted.
Here follows his letter:

                                          Chicago, September 30, 1904.

  My Dear Sir:

  Doctor Arthur Edwards, the former editor of the _Northwestern
  Christian Advocate_, was chaplain in the army during the Civil War.
  He was a soldier by instinct, and kept up his interest in military
  and naval affairs and his acquaintance with army and naval officers
  during all his life. In the army he won the confidence of his
  fellow-officers by his character and moral courage.

  He was requested, by a number of officers, to wait upon General
  Hooker, then in command of the army, and express to him the great
  anxiety felt by the officers over his intemperate habits. Doctor
  Edwards waited upon General Hooker, and told him what the officers
  had requested him to say. He did it in so manly and delicate a way
  that General Hooker thanked him, and told him the army would not
  again have occasion to fear ill results because of his habits.

  The story of this incident came to the knowledge of Mr. H. I.
  Cleveland, an editorial writer on the Chicago _Herald_, who
  published it several years ago over his own name in that paper. I
  had never before heard the story from Doctor Edwards, and when I saw
  Mr. Cleveland’s article I asked Doctor Edwards about it. He related
  the story to me, and, after doing so, told the story of Reno as I
  give it briefly in the _Northwestern_.

  From all that I can learn of Reno, the feeling in the army against
  him was not due to his drinking habits, but to his conduct in his
  relations with others. Doctor Edwards told me that Reno told him
  that all of his trouble in his contact with his fellow-officers was
  due, primarily, to his drinking habits, which had undermined his
  moral character. Doctor Edwards knew Reno very well, and told me he
  believed that drinking was, as Reno himself stated, the cause of all
  his trouble. He had known him in the army during the Civil War, and
  spoke highly of his character as a soldier at that time.

                                         Yours sincerely,
                                                       D. D. THOMPSON.

  P. S.—Doctor Edwards intended at some time to publish this story,
  but died in April, 1901, before doing so.


                                  II.

As I have always been most willing and anxious to give the accused a
hearing in every case, it gives me great pleasure to insert here a
letter recently received from Mr. William E. Morris, an attorney, who is
also an alderman of Greater New York. In this letter will be found a
spirited defense of Major Reno, with interesting details of his fight.
Although Mr. Morris dissents from many of my conclusions, and differs
radically from the printed accounts of Colonel Godfrey and others, I am
glad to place the other side before my readers. I only regret that this
paper was received too late to be included in the body of the book.

                                                     Haven, Maine,
                                                   September 21, 1904.

  Dear Sir:

  I have read your article entitled “War with the Sioux,” and as a
  survivor of Reno’s Battalion desire to enter an earnest protest
  against the many incorrect statements of alleged facts.

  Col. Reno was cruelly libeled while he was alive, and took his
  medicine manfully, knowing that he had the respect of every officer
  and enlisted man who served under him on the 25th and 26th days of
  June, 1876.

  The 7th Cavalry had no use for cowards, and had Reno showed the
  white feather, he would have been damned by every member of his
  command.

  As a matter of fact, we revere his memory as that of a brave and
  gallant officer, who, through circumstances over which he had no
  control, was blamed by the public, who had no personal knowledge of
  the facts for the result of the Battle of the Little Horn.

  It is quite evident to me that you have never interviewed a single
  member of Reno’s Battalion, to wit: Troops “A,” “G,” and “M,” for if
  you had you would not misstate the facts, as I assume that you
  intend to be fair, and would not intentionally mislead the public
  mind.[136]

  I was a member of Capt. Thomas H. French’s Troop “M,” 7th U. S.
  Cavalry, and I submit the following as a concise statement of the
  facts:

  We lost sight of Custer, whose command was on our right, at least
  thirty minutes before we crossed the Little Horn River.

  We saw a party of about one hundred Indians before we reached the
  river; we pursued them across the Little Horn and down the valley.
  As soon as we forded, Reno gave the command, “Left into line,
  gallop—forward, guide, center,” and away we went faster than I had
  ever ridden before. The Indians rode as fast as they could, and the
  battalion in line of battle after them. A body of at least two
  thousand came up the valley to meet the one hundred or more we were
  pursuing. They immediately made a flank movement to our left and a
  stand, opened a galling fire, causing some of our horses to become
  unmanageable. John R. Meyer’s horse carried him down the valley
  through the Indians, some of whom chased him two or three miles over
  the hills and back to ford. He escaped with a gun-shot wound in the
  neck. Rutten’s horse also ran away, but he succeeded in making a
  circle before reaching the Indians, and received only a gun-shot
  wound in the shoulder. We were then abreast the timber; to continue
  the charge down the valley meant (to the mind of every one)
  immediate destruction of the battalion, which consisted of about one
  hundred and twenty men (the old guard, of ten men from each troop,
  being with the packs).

  Reno, very properly, gave the command “Battalion halt—prepare to
  fight on foot—dismount!” He directed French to send ten men from the
  right of his troop to skirmish the woods, before the “numbers four”
  proceeded there with the horses. We immediately deployed as
  skirmishers and opened fire. The odds were at least thirty to one,
  as our line with the fours out did not exceed seven officers and
  ninety men. We had, however, a few Indian scouts and civilians. We
  had entire confidence in our officers and in ourselves, and went to
  work smiling and as cool as if we were at target practice. In less
  time than it takes to relate it, the Indians were on three sides of
  us. We were ordered to lie down, and every man that I could see,
  except Reno and French, were fighting lying down. Reno walked along
  the line giving instructions to the men, while French was calling
  his men’s attention to his own marksmanship with an infantry
  long-tom that he carried.

  While in this position, the man next on my right, Sergeant O’Hara,
  was killed. The smoke obscured the line, but bullets were taking
  effect all along it. We were perfectly cool, determined, and doing
  good execution and expected to hear Custer attack. We had been
  fighting lying down about fifteen minutes when one of our men came
  from the timber and reported that they were killing our horses in
  the rear. Every troop had, at this time, suffered loss and the enemy
  was closing in, despite our steady and deadly fire. Reno then made
  his only error; he gave the command, “Retreat to your horses, men!”
  French immediately corrected the mistake with the command, “Steady,
  men—fall back, slowly; face the enemy, and continue your fire.” “M”
  troop fell back slowly and in perfect order, held the Indians in
  check until “A” and “G” had mounted. Several of their horses had
  been shot, and their riders, consequently, very much disturbed.

  “M” Troop left Sergeant O’Hara and Private Smith on the skirmish
  line. Isaiah, the colored interpreter of Fort Rice, Bloody Knife,
  the Chief of the Rees Scouts, and a civilian also remained. Lawrence
  was hit in the stomach when about to mount. I went to his relief,
  which caused me to be the last man to leave the timber, with the
  command, with the exception of Lieutenant Hare, who passed me in the
  bottom. Sergeant Charles White was wounded in the arm and his horse
  killed. He was left in the woods, as was also “Big Fritz,” a
  Norwegian, whose surname I do not remember, but whose horse was
  killed. “A” and “G” had men left in the timber also, and they all
  reached the command on the hill during the night with De Rudio, or
  about the same time.

  I give more details in regard to “M” than the other troops, because
  of a personal acquaintance with each member. Corporal Scollen and
  Private Sommers fell in the charge from the timber to the ford. It
  was a charge and not a retreat, and it was led by Reno. Every man
  that I saw used his revolver at close range. I was at least twenty
  yards behind the rear of the command. The Indians closed in, so I
  was compelled to jump my horse off the bank, at least fifty yards
  below the ford, and while in the river had an excellent view of the
  struggle. It was hand to hand, and McIntosh was certainly there at
  the ford and sold his life as dearly as he possibly could. When I
  reached the cut in bank, I found Turley and Rye mounted and
  Lieutenant Hodgson wounded and dismounted. He was waist-deep in the
  water. He grasped my off stirrup strap with both hands. Rye let
  Turley go ahead through the cut, and he was killed as he reached the
  top; Rye followed without receiving a scratch. The lieutenant held
  onto my stirrup for two or three seconds, and was dragged out of the
  water. He was hit again, and let go as my horse plunged up the cut.
  Sergeant Criswell may have assisted him out of the water, but if he
  did he went back into it again. To say that any man could or did
  ride back down that cut is to suggest, to my mind, the impossible.
  Upon reaching the level above the cut I dismounted and led my horse
  as fast as possible up the bluff, and overtook Tinker, Bill Meyer
  and Gordon about half way up the bluff. We stopped a moment to rest.
  The bodies of the fallen soldiers were plainly visible. They marked
  the skirmish line and the line of the charge from the timber to the
  ford, and were in the river and at the top of the cut. At this
  instant a shower of lead sent Meyer and Gordon to the happy
  hunting-ground, and a fifty caliber passed through the left breast
  of your humble servant. Our horses were also hit. I continued up the
  hill alone and joined the command; was then assisted to the
  improvised hospital.

  Reno at this time had lost, in killed, wounded, and left dismounted
  in the woods, over 30 per cent. of his battalion (there were over
  ten left in the woods). Lieutenant Hare was particularly
  conspicuous, and distinguished himself by his cool and determined
  manner when he ordered the men to fall in at the top of the hill,
  and whatever demoralization there was, was immediately dispelled by
  that courageous young Texan. Benteen, arriving about an hour later,
  came up as slow as though he were going to a funeral. By this
  statement I do not desire to reflect in any way upon him; he was
  simply in no hurry; and Müller, of his troop, who occupied an
  adjoining cot to mine in the hospital at Fort Abraham Lincoln, told
  me that they walked all the way, and that they heard the heavy
  firing while they were watering their horses.

  Benteen was, unquestionably, the bravest man I ever met. He held the
  Indians in absolute contempt, and was a walking target from the time
  he became engaged until the end of the fight at sundown on the 26th.
  He took absolute charge of one side of the hill, and you may rest
  assured that he did not bother Reno for permission of any kind. He
  was in supreme command of that side of the hill, and seemed to enjoy
  walking along the line where the bullets were the thickest. His
  troop, “H,” did not dig rifle-pits during the night of the 25th, as
  the other troops did, and in the morning their casualties were
  increased on that account. He ordered “M” out of their pits to
  reinforce his troop. There was some dissatisfaction at the order, as
  the men believed that the necessity was due solely to the neglect of
  “H,” in digging pits. They obeyed, however, and assisted Benteen in
  his famous charge.

  It was rumored, subsequently, that French recommended his First
  Sergeant, John Ryan, a sharpshooter, and some other men for medals,
  and that Benteen refused to indorse the recommendation as to Ryan,
  because he failed immediately to order the men out of their pits at
  his end of the line at his (Benteen’s) order. It was claimed that
  French thereupon withdrew his list. Ryan was in charge of the ten
  men that Reno sent to skirmish the woods.

  I was very much amused to learn, from your article, that Windolph
  received a medal. I remember him as the tailor of “H” troop, and
  have a distinct recollection of his coming into the field-hospital,
  bent almost double and asking for treatment for a wound which, his
  appearance would suggest, was a mortal one, but which the surgeon
  found, on removing his trousers, to be only a burn. The surgeon
  ordered him back to the line amid a shout of laughter from the
  wounded men. Mike Madden of “K” lost his leg, and Tanner of “M” his
  life, in the dash for the water for the wounded. I hope Madden
  received a medal.

  In view of the conflict between the foregoing and the statements
  contained in your article, I ask you to investigate the matter
  further, with a view to correcting the false impression that your
  readers must have concerning Reno and his command. In conclusion, I
  ask you “how, in God’s name,” you could expect Reno, with one
  hundred and twenty men, to ride through upwards of three thousand
  armed Sioux, and then be of assistance to Custer or any one else? I
  say we were sent into that valley and caught in an ambush like rats
  in a trap. That if we had remained ten minutes longer, there would
  not have been one left to tell the tale. That the much abused Reno
  did charge out of the timber, and that we who survive owe our lives
  to that identical charge which he led. We, at least, give him credit
  for saving what he did of his command. I am, sir,

                                          Very respectfully,
                                                  WM. E. MORRIS,
                        Late private Troop “M,” Seventh U. S. Cavalry.

-----

Footnote 136:

  I have been in communication with a number of persons who belonged to
  this battalion.—C. T. B.




                                 INDEX


                                   _A_

 “Ab-sa-ra-ka, Land of Massacre,” book written by Mrs. Carrington, 34
    note

 Allen breech-loading rifle, 45, 46

 American Horse, Sioux chief, surprised by Capt. Mills, 307;
   killed, 310

 Amick, Lieut., 124, 137;
   sent in search of Fifth Cavalry, 125–127;
   covers Graham’s retreat, 128, 138

 Andrews, Dr. E. B., on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign, 361

 Apache Indians, cruelties of, 73

 Arapahoe Indians, 64

 Arikara scouts in Reno’s command flee from the Sioux, 238

 Arickaree Fork, Republican River, 72;
   Gen. Bankhead’s march to, 108, 111 note, 112

 Army woman’s devotion in Indian warfare, 11, 12


                                   _B_

 “Bad Lands” of Dakota, of volcanic origin, 5, 209, 230

 Bailey, Indian guide, 15

 Baliran, M., naturalist, killed by Rain-in-the-Face, 212, 213, 215

 Ball, Capt., 336

 Bankhead, Col., Forsyth’s letter to, from Beecher’s Island, 93

 Banzhaf, Lieut., assists in Col. Forsyth’s rescue, 100, 106, 124;
   repulses Indians, 131

 Barnitz, Capt., Seventh Cavalry, killed, 161

 Barrett, Lawrence, actor, his eulogy on Gen. Custer, 261

 Battle of Beaver Creek, 131–140;
   of Big Horn, 243–250;
   of Little Big Horn, 216–236;
   Battle of Little Big Horn, the personal story of, by
      Rain-in-the-Face, 279–292;
   Rosebud River, 191–198, 203–208;
   Summit Springs, 170–179;
   Washita, 146–169;
   of Wounded Knee, 352

 Beaver Creek, Captain Carpenter’s fight on, 123–135;
   map of position of wagons and soldiers, 130, 132 note;
   further discussion of fight on, 136–145

 Becker, John, mule packer, in the Sibley scout, 298, 299

 Beecher, Lieut. Frederick H., second in command to Capt. Forsyth, 77;
   killed, 88;
   monument to, 111;
   attention to, before dying, 120

 Beecher’s Island, fight of Rough Riders at, 72;
   named, 88;
   siege of, 90–96;
   a scout’s story of the defense of, 113–122

 Belknap, Gen., Secretary of War, his relations with Gen. Custer,
    216–218

 Bell, Major, Seventh Cavalry, 164, 166

 Benteen, Col., in battle of Washita, 162;
   in battle of Big Horn, 233, 235, 236, 243–246, 250;
   his magnificent courage, 251, 253, 274–276;
   Gen. Terry comes to his relief, 276

 Big Crow, Indian chief, defeated by Gen. Miles, 329, 330

 Big Horn Mountains, controlled by jealous Indian tribes, 5

 Big Horn Range, streams from, 5

 Big Piney Creek, Gen. Carrington establishes camp on banks of, 13, 64

 Bingham, Lieut., under Gen. Carrington, 20;
   killed, 21

 Black Hills, 209;
   gold discovered in, 209

 Black Kettle (Mo-ke-ta-va-ta), 73;
   head chief of the Cheyennes, brutality of, 157;
   killed, 162

 Blackfeet Indians, 64

 Blizzard, Gen. Custer’s march in a, 150–161

 Bloody Knife, Arikara scout with Custer, 210, 267

 Bourke, Capt John G., his books, “Campaigning with Crook,” quoted, 186;
   “On the Border with Crook,” 191, 204, 333

 Bowers, Sergeant, in fight with Indians, 20;
   scalped, 21;
   badge found when reinterred, 21 note

 Bowyer, Mitch, Crow interpreter, warns Gen. Custer, 268

 Bozeman trail, 4, 7, 9, 13, 60;
   army post on, 9, 189

 Brainard, Col. D. L., notes on the Lame Deer fight, 335–338

 Brave Wolf, scout, 336

 Bridger, James, fur trader and scout, adviser of Gen. Carrington, 4, 61

 Bridger’s Ferry, 60

 Brown, Capt. Frederick, rashness of, 23;
   malcontent conduct of, 24;
   joins Capt. Fetterman, 26;
   promotion of, 26;
   death of, 32

 Brulé, Sioux Indians, faithful to whites, 8;
   attack Capt. Powell’s corral, 48

 “Brunette” regiment, see Tenth Cavalry

 Brunettes, Gen. Henry’s, 351–355

 Buffalo Bill, see Cody, Wm. F.

 Buffalo Chip, scout, killed, 308 note

 Buffalo, herds of, in Montana valleys, 5

 “Buffaloes,” Gen. Henry’s, and their rides, 351–353

 “Bull teams,” for prairie schooners, 7


                                   _C_

 California Joe, scout, 155

 Camp Supply, Indian Territory, 150

 Canadian River, Gen. Custer’s march on, 152

 Carpenter, Captain Louis H., Tenth Cavalry, sent to rescue Gen.
    Forsyth, 100;
   the story of his “brunettes,” 123–135;
   promotion of, 135

 Carr, Major-Gen. Eugene A., ordered to Fort Wallace, 124;
   in fight on Beaver Creek, 131, 132;
   pursues Indians over the Platte River, 135;
   his account of the fight on Beaver Creek, 136–140;
   Carr and Tall Bull at Summit Springs, 170–179

 Carrington, Gen. Henry B., in Central Montana, 5;
   effects treaty with Indians at Fort Laramie, 8;
   romantic expedition of, 9–13;
   sketch of, 9;
   repairs and garrisons Fort Reno, 12;
   establishes camp on Big Piney Creek, 13;
   in desperate fight at Lodge Trail Ridge, 20, 21;
   inadequate force of, 23, 24;
   carries out Gen. Sherman’s instructions, 24;
   specific instructions to Capt. Fetterman, 26;
   his stern resolution, 32–37;
   used as a scapegoat, 37;
   acquitted of all blame by a mixed commission, 38;
     also by a military court and by Gen. Sherman, 38;
   his views on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign, 386–388

 Carrington Powder River expedition, reminiscences of, 59–71

 Central Montana, objective of Gen. Carrington’s expedition, 5

 Chambers, Col., 188

 Cheyenne Indians dispute advance of the white man, 5;
   Harney-Sanborne treaty with, 7;
   attack Capt. Powell’s corral, 48;
   cruelty of, 73;
   break away from Red Cloud Agency, 293;
   Gen. Merritt heads them off, 294;
   bravery of, 312, 313;
   their winter stores destroyed, 316;
   sufferings of, 316–318;
   surrender and turn against Crazy Horse, 318;
   savage ferocity of, 318

 Civil War, soldiers of the, emigrate to the West, 6

 Civilization, the demands of, 6;
   the outpost of, 13–18

 Clear Creek, Montana, 321

 Cloud Peak, 13

 Clybor, Jack, adopted by Indians and named “Comanche,” 96

 Cody, William F. (Buffalo Bill), Gen. Carr’s guide at Summit Springs,
    170, 173, 174;
   scout for Gen. Merritt, 294, 295;
   duel with Yellow Hair, 296, 297

 Coffee Coolers, 282

 Collins, W. R. E., letter of, in reference to Red Cloud’s losses in
    wagon-corral attack, 58

 “Comanche,” Capt. Keogh’s horse, in Custer’s last fight, 256 note

 Conestoga wagons, only method of transportation before railroad, 7

 Conner, Gen., establishes Fort Reno, 60

 Contest for Indian lands, 6

 Cook, Adjutant, Seventh Cavalry, 158, 159;
   killed with Custer, 258

 Cook, Capt., 268, 270

 Cooke, Gen., relieves Gen. Carrington of his command, 37

 Corbin, scout, in Gen. Custer’s command, 152, 154, 155

 Crawford, Lieut., 307

 Crazy Horse, an Oglala chief, 184;
   his village surprised and taken, 186, 187;
   warns Gen. Crook, 189;
   sketch of, 189 note;
   begins attack, 193;
   plans ambush for Crook, 194;
   successful stand against Crook, 201, 202;
   opposed to Maj. Reno, 241, 254;
   attacks Custer, 256;
   defeated by Gen. Crook at Slim Buttes, 310, 311;
   refuses to succor Cheyennes, 317;
   meets crushing defeat by Gen. Miles, 326–330;
   surrenders, 330;
   stabbed in guard-house, 333;
   Captain Bourke’s description of, 333;
   a born soldier, 334

 Crazy Woman’s Fork, 61, 312

 Criswell, Sergeant, bravery of, in fight with Indians, 242

 Crittenden, Lieut., Custer’s brother-in-law, killed, 257

 Crook, Gen. George, opinion of Apache Indians, 74;
   his advance against Indians in the Northwest, 183–202;
   assumes command of expedition, 188;
   Ex-Trooper Towne’s account of his fight on the Rosebud, 203–208;
   joined by Gen. Merritt at Fort Laramie, 293;
   at Slim Buttes, 304–309;
   his deplorable condition for want of supplies, 305, 306;
   defeats
 Crazy Horse at Slim Buttes, 310, 311

 Crow Indians, auxiliaries in Gen. Crook’s expedition, 190, 205

 Crow King, Indian chief, opposed to Major Reno, 241, 256

 Curley, Crow scout, only survivor of Custer’s command, 256

 Custer, Boston, civilian forage-master, killed with Gen. Custer, 258

 Custer, Gen. George Armstrong, in command of Seventh Cavalry, 146–150;
   record of, 146, 147;
   selects his own officers, 147;
   protects Kansas settlers, 148;
   his march in a blizzard, 150–153;
   has command under Gen. Stanley, 210;
   his faculty for scouting, 210;
   loses his command, 216–219;
   his relations with Gen. Belknap, 216;
   question as to whether he obeyed Gen. Terry’s orders, 219–228;
   Gen. Terry’s letter of instructions, 220, 221;
   various opinions about Terry’s instructions to Custer, 224–228;
   account of his last expedition, 229–236;
   his officers under Reno tried to join him, 248 note;
   his fine manœuvering, 254;
   signals to Reno, 255;
   killed, 256, 257;
   Mr. Theodore W. Goldin’s reminiscences of, 263–278;
   a further discussion of his course in the Little Big Horn campaign,
      359–397;
   various opinions on Custer’s campaign—Col. Edward S. Godfrey, 360,
      371–380, 388–390;
     Major-Gen. James B. Fry, 360;
     Major-Gen. Robert P. Hodges, 360, 366–370;
     Brig.-Gen. George A. Forsyth, 361;
     Dr. C. B. Andrews, 361;
     Gen. Nelson A. Miles, 361–365;
     Gen. Gibbon, 367;
     Brig.-Gen. Charles A. Woodruff, 380–385;
     Gen. Henry B. Carrington, 386–388;
     Lieut.-Col. Jacob L. Greene, 391–395

 Custer, Capt. Tom, brother of Gen. Custer, 210, 212, 213;
   captures Rain-in-the-Face, 214;
   in the Big Horn Fight, 254;
   killed, 257;
   called Little Hair by Rain-in-the-Face, 284;
   story of his killing, 289

 Custer family, disaster to, 258

 “Custer Massacre,” 259, 281


                                   _D_

 Daniels, Lieut., killed, 22

 Davis, Capt., 316

 Dead Cañon of the Rosebud, 193, 196, 198

 Denver, Col., white settlements at, 5

 DeRudio, Lieut., 243

 DeWolf, Dr., killed by Indians, 242

 Dodge, Col. R. I., his book, “Our Wild Indians,” quoted, 168;
   claims Gen. Custer committed suicide, 257

 Dog Soldiers, 163 note

 Donovan, scout, assists in Col. Forsyth’s rescue, 106

 Drexel Mission attacked by Indians, 353

 Dry Fork, 60

 Dull Knife, Cheyenne chief, attacked by Mackenzie, 313–315;
   killed, 315


                                   _E_

 Eastman, Charles A., M. D., a full-blooded Sioux, his account of Reno’s
    fight at Little Big Horn, 238;
   with Gen. Custer, 253

 Edgerly, Lieut., 248

 Eighteenth Regular Infantry in the Mountain District, 9, 25;
   at Fort Kearney, 59

 Elliott, Major, Custer’s second in command, 152;
   in battle of the Washita, 157;
   fate of, 166–169

 Emigrants, protected by Fort Phil Kearney, 4

 Evans, Col., Third Cavalry, 188


                                   _F_

 “Far West,” Gen. Terry’s supply steamer on the Rosebud, 265

 Farley, scout, wounded, 108;
   bravery of, 109

 Fetterman, Capt., fight with Indians at Lodge Trail Ridge, 20;
   rashness of, 23;
   annihilation of his command, 24–32;
   begs command of expedition from Gen. Carrington, 25;
   map of massacre of his command, 27;
   death of, 32;
   result of his disobeying orders, 36, 39

 Fifth Cavalry, in battle of Summit Springs, 172;
   other engagements, 293, 294, 312

 Fifth Infantry, 326, 335

 Finerty, John F., Chicago _Times_ correspondent, joins the Sibley
    scout, 298, 303;
   account of Gen. Henry’s ghastly experience, 346

 Fisher, civilian volunteer, 26;
   killed, 35

 Fitzgerald, Dr., 100

 Forsyth, George Alexander (“Sandy”), and the Rough Riders of ’68,
    description of, 72–96;
   aide to Gen. Sheridan, 75;
   sketch of, 76;
   desperate situation of, on Beecher’s Island, 97;
   adventures of Scouts Trudeau and Stillwell to rescue, 97–112;
   map of march to relieve Forsyth and escort Gen. Carr, 103;
   a few words about Forsyth’s men, 109–112;
   his battlefield preserved, 111;
   letter of, on the relations between Gen. Custer and Gen. Belknap,
      216–218;
   on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign, 361

 Forsyth Association, 111

 Fort Abraham Lincoln, Seventh Cavalry stationed at, 213, 214;
   Rain-in-the-Face imprisoned at, 215;
   Gen. Terry at, 218;
   Mrs. Custer at, 258

 Fort Caspar, Gen. Crook’s headquarters, 37

 Fort C. F. Smith established, 17, 25, 62;
   attacked, 46 note

 Fort D. A. Russell, Gen. Henry at, 349

 Fort Ellsworth, Indian council held at, 72

 Fort Fetterman, Wyoming, established, 39;
   actions at, 188, 202, 208, 312, 344, 348, 349

 Fort Laramie, Nebraska, government commissioners negotiate treaty with
    Indians at, 7, 293

 Fort Phil Kearney, establishment and abandonment of, 3, 209;
   constantly surrounded by Indians, 3;
   Montana emigrants protected by, 4;
   plan of, 16;
   the tragedy of, 19–39;
   working plan of, 33;
   troops ordered to relief of, 37;
   closely invested, 40, 41;
   fort completed, 41;
   Red Cloud’s attack on, 46;
   burned by Indians, 58;
   Mr. R. J. Smyth’s personal reminiscences of, and the wagon-box fight,
      59–71;
   Gen. Crook at, 189;

 Fort Reno, removal of ordered, 9;
   repaired and garrisoned, 12;
   construction of, 15–17;
   plan of, 16;
   established by Gen. Conner, 60;
   Gen. Crook at, 189

 Fort Wallace, Kansas, temporary terminus of Kansas Pacific Railroad,
    78;
   orders issued from, to rescue Col. Forsyth, 100;
   Capt. Carpenter arrives at, 134

 Fourth Cavalry, 312

 Fourth Infantry, 188

 French, Capt., 251, 271

 Frontier, protecting the, 3–179

 Fry, Gen. James B., his book, “Army Sacrifices,” quoted, 72;
   on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign, 360

 Furey, Major, with Gen. Crook, 191


                                   _G_

 Gall, Indian chief, opposed to Reno, 241, 253, 254;
   attacks Custer, 256, 286;
   at big feast after the Custer battle, 290;
   attacks Gen. Miles, 325

 “Galvanized soldiers,” 60

 “Garry Owen,” played in battle of the Washita, 161;
   at Fort Lincoln, 218

 Ghost Dancers, Sioux, 352

 Gibbon, Gen. encamps on the Yellowstone, 218;
   letter to Gen. Terry regarding Gen. Custer’s situation, 223, 224;
   relieves Reno and finds Custer’s body, 257;
   his conference with Custer, 266;
   goes to relief of Col. Benteen, 276;
   his command returned to Montana, 305

 Gibson, Lieut., 251

 Godfrey, Col. Edward S., 249;
   his article in _Century Magazine_ “Custer’s Last Battle,” quoted,
      226, 227, 253;
   his account of Custer’s defeat, 260;
   on Custer’s Little Big Horn Campaign, 360, 371–380, 388–390

 Gold discovered in the Black Hills, 209

 Goldin, Mr. Theodore W., one of the last to see Custer alive, his
    reminiscences of the general, 263–278

 Goose Creek, 13, 192, 201, 209

 Gordon, Major G. A., 316

 Graham, Capt., Tenth Cavalry, 124;
   scouts on the Beaver, 127;
   retreat of, 128;
   unmilitary action of, 133 note

 Grant, President U. S., indignant at Gen. Custer’s statements regarding
    Gen. Belknap, 217

 Greene, Lieut.-Col. Jacob L., his views on Custer’s Little Big Horn
    campaign, 391–395

 Grover, Sharp, guide, 77;
   his acquaintance with Indian signs and customs, 125–127, 139

 Gruard, Frank, celebrated scout, with Gen. Crook, 191, 203;
   sketch of, 191 note;
   his clever scouting, 298, 301, 302, 309

 Grummond, Lieut., Eighteenth Infantry, 15, 20, 22;
   in charge of cavalry at Fort Phil. Kearney, 25, 26;
   killed, 35, 36


                                   _H_

 Hall, Lieut., 294, 295

 Hamilton, Capt. John M., 316

 Hamilton, Capt. Louis McLane, in Gen. Custer’s winter expedition, 153,
    157, 159;
   killed, 161

 Hanley, Sergeant, 249

 Hare, Lieut. Luther R., 249, 267, 274

 Harney-Sanborne treaty with Indians, 7

 Harrington, Lieut., killed with Custer, 259

 Hat Creek, see War Bonnet

 Hazen, Gen. W. B., inspects Fort Reno, 17 note

 Henry, Gen. Guy V., Third Cavalry, 190, 193, 195, 196, 198;
   wounded, 197;
   in Dead Cañon, 200, 201;
   sketch of, 339–355;
   his march in a blizzard, 342–344;
   a ghastly experience, 344–348;
   bravery of his wife, 348–351;
   his “Buffaloes” and their famous rides, 351–355;
   in the Spanish-American War, 354;
   in Porto Rico, 354;
   dies there, 355

 Henry rifle, breech-loading rapid fire, use of, 26, 35

 Herndon, scout, 266, 267, 274

 Hines, Acting-Assistant Surgeon, sent to join Capt. Fetterman, 29

 Hodgson, Lieut., killed by Indians, 242;
   account of his death, 263, 272, 273

 Honzinger, Dr., veterinarian, killed by Rain-in-the-Face, 12, 213, 215,
    283 note, 285

 Horse Creek, 60

 Horton, Surgeon, on wagon-beds, 44 note, 50, 56, 69

 Howitzers, Indian fear of, 29

 Hughes, Major-Gen. Robert P., his book, “The Campaign Against the
    Sioux,” quoted, 224;
   Little Big Horn campaign, 360, 366–370

 Humfreville, Capt. J. Lee, his book “Twenty Years Among Our Hostile
    Indians” quoted, 318

 Hunting ground, Indian title to, 6

 Hunting parties forbidden at Fort Phil Kearney, 4


                                   _I_

 Indian attacks on Fort Phil Kearney, 4, 37–71

 Indian fights at Beaver Creek, 123–140;
   on Beecher’s Island, 97;
   at Fort C. F. Smith, 46 note;
   at Fort Phil Kearney, 40–56;
   at Glendive, Mont., 321;
   at Lodge Trail Ridge, 20, 21;
   on the Rosebud River, 191–198, 203–208;
   at Slim Buttes, 304–309;
   at Summit Springs, 170–179

 Indian fighters and their field, 3–8

 Indian police kill Sitting Bull, 332

 Indian skulls, scientific study of, 69

 Indian traders, their mercenary policy, 184

 Indian wars, cause of, 4;
   sieges in, 3

 Indian’s dread of scalping, 91–92 note

 Indians, annihilate Capt. Fetterman’s command outside Fort Phil
    Kearney, 30–32

 Indians as patriots, 74, 185;
   looseness of tie binding tribes, 313 note

 Indians, Montana, jealous of intrusion by whites, 5

 Iron Star, Indian chief, attacked by Gen. Miles and killed, 330–332

 Island of Death, the, 78–85

 Itiomagaju, see Rain-in-the-Face.


                                   _J_

 Jackson, Bob, scout, 336, 338

 Jenness, Lieut. John C., detailed under Capt. Powell to protect
    wood-cutters, 43;
   killed, 51, 67

 Jerome, Lieut. Lovell H., 336

 Jewish boy’s bravery in Gen. Forsyth’s fight, 110;
   Gen. Fry’s poem on, 110 note

 Johnson, Hugh, Adjutant, sends Captain Carpenter to succor Col.
    Forsyth, 100, 101;
   prompt action of, 111, 112

 Johnson, President Andrew, congratulates Congress on peace with
    Indians, 22

 Julesberg, 59


                                   _K_

 Kane, Capt., Fifth Cavalry, in Beaver Creek fight, 137, 138

 Kansas Pacific Railroad, building of, resisted by Indians, 7–72

 Kansas trail, 7

 Kansas, Western, swept and devastated by Cheyennes, 75

 Kellogg, Mark, newspaper correspondent, killed with Custer, 258

 Kennedy, Sergeant-Major, 7th Cavalry, brave death of, 168

 Keogh, Capt., killed with Custer, 258, 259

 Kidder, Lieut., Second Cavalry, slaughtered, 149

 King, Gen., his book, “Campaigning with Crook,” quoted, 188

 King, Lieut. Charles, fighter and author, 294

 Kinney, Capt., sent to establish Fort C. F. Smith, 17


                                   _L_

 Lame Deer, Indian chief, attacked by Gen. Miles and killed, 330–332;
   notes on the fight, 335–338

 Laramie Commission, announcement of, 15 note

 Leighton, Al., sutler, Indians stampede stock of, 60

 Little Beaver, Indian scout, 155

 Little Big Horn, battle of, the story of by Rain-in-the-Face, 279–292

 Little Big Horn Campaign, the, 216–236;
   map of, 234

 Little Big Horn Valley, 233

 Little Crow, Indian, wounded, 140

 Little Hair (Tom Custer), 284

 Little Muddy Creek, 336

 Little Raven, Arapahoe Indian chief, 164

 Little Rock, Indian chief, killed, 164

 Lodge Trail Ridge, 13, 20, 26, 29–31

 Longfellow’s poem, “The Revenge of Rain-in-the-Face,” sold by the
    Indian himself at the World’s Fair, 291

 Long Hair, Gen. Custer’s Indian name, 146

 Lord, Dr., killed with Custer, 258, 259

 Luettwitz, Lieut. Von, 307;
   wounded, 308

 Lummis, Charles F., on the Apache Indians, 74 note


                                   _M_

 Mackenzie, Ranald S., Col. Fourth Cavalry, 305;
   his winter battle, 312–316;
   attacks Indians at Willow Creek Cañon, 313–316

 MacIntosh, Lieut., killed by Indians, 242, 268, 272, 274

 Mahapiya-luta, see Red Cloud

 Mah-wis-sa, Black Kettle’s sister, endeavors to marry Gen. Custer to an
    Indian girl, 167

 “Mauvaises Terres,” or “bad lands,” 5

 McCall, Sergeant W. H. H., 77, 78

 McDougall, Capt., joins Maj. Reno with pack train, 248;
   serves under Custer at the Little Big Horn, 233

 McKinney, Lieut. John A., charges Cheyennes at Willow Creek Cañon, 315;
   shot, 315

 Medicine Man, daring of a, 133

 Merritt, Gen. Wesley, ordered to join Gen. Crook at Fort Laramie, 293;
   his fight with Cheyennes, 295–297

 Miles, Gen. Nelson A., his “Personal Recollections” quoted, 189;
   his Indian campaigning, 305;
   his great campaigning, 319–338;
   his foot cavalry defeat Sitting Bull, 319–326;
   interview with Sitting Bull, 323, 324;
   his crushing defeat of Crazy Horse, 326–330;
   his capacity for handling men, 326;
   attacks and captures Lame Deer’s village, 330–332;
   his views on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign, 361–365

 Mills, Capt. Anson, Third Cavalry, 190, 193, 195, 196;
   his advance down Dead Cañon, 199–202;
   sent on foraging expedition, 305, 306

 Miniconjou Indians attack Capt. Powell, 48

 Montana, emigrants and wagon-trains to, annihilated by Indians, 4;
   white settlements at, 5

 Mooers, Dr. John H., 77;
   killed, 84

 Moore, Tom, veteran, 192, 196

 Morris, William E., on the conduct of Major Reno, 401–405

 Mountain District, army posts in, 9

 Mountain game in Montana ranges, 6

 Mountain standard time, 5

 Mo-ke-ta-va-ta, see Black Kettle

 Moylan, Capt., with Custer, 211, 212, 271

 Mussa ranch, 60

 Myers, Capt., Seventh Cavalry, 157, 159


                                   _N_

 Napoleon guns, 326

 Nickerson, Capt., in Crook’s command, 200

 Nineteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, in Sheridan’s winter campaign
    against Indians, 150

 Ninth Cavalry, 351–355

 Ninth Infantry, 188, 342

 North, Col. Francis, in Summit Springs battle, 173

 North Platte, 5, 59, 60

 Northern Pacific Railroad, survey of, 209

 _Northwestern Christian Advocate_ on the conduct of Major Reno, 398–400

 Noyes, Major, Second Cavalry, 188, 193, 196


                                   _O_

 Oglala Indians attack Capt. Powell’s corral, 48

 Oregon trail, 7

 Orleman, Lieut., assists in Col. Forsyth’s rescue, 100, 124;
   in expedition to Beaver Creek, 127;
   covers Graham’s retreat, 128;
   repulses Indians, 131

 Osage Indians, with Custer in battle of the Washita, 159, 160

 Otis, Lieut.-Col. Elwell S., attacked by Indians at Glendive, Mont.,
    321;
   Sitting Bull’s letter to, 321


                                   _P_

 Pawnee scouts at battle of Summit Springs, 173–177

 Peno Creek, 13, 20, 64

 Peno Valley, 28, 31, 36

 Phil Kearney Garrison, post return of, 30 note

 Pilot Hill, 13, 14, 19

 Pine Ridge Agency, 293

 Piney Island, logging camp on, 14;
   the improvised corral on, 40–46;
   wood-cutting on, 43;
   wagon-box corral illustrated, 45

 Porter, Lieut., killed with Custer, 258, 259

 Pourier, Baptiste (Big Bat) scout with Gen. Crook, 298

 Powder River, Indians encamped on, 23;
   Sitting Bull at, 184;
   Gen. Reynolds captures Crazy Horse’s village on the, 186;
   Gen. Terry at, 218, 265, 312

 Powder River Expedition, the, 3–18;
   reminiscences of, 59–71

 Powell, Capt. James, 22;
   report of, to Gen. Carrington, 23;
   command of relief party given to, 25;
   detailed to guard wood-cutting party, 42;
   sketch of, 42;
   his gallant fight in the wagon-corral against Red Cloud, 48–55;
   promotion of, 57

 Prairie schooners, early use of, 7

 Pretty Bear, Cheyenne chief, killed, 176, 177

 Pumpkin Buttes, 61


                                   _R_

 Rabbit Creek, 307

 Rain-in-the-Face (Itiomagaju), Indian chief, his grievance, 209–215;
   capture of, 213–215;
   escapes, 215;
   attacks Custer, 256;
   his revenge, 257;
   his personal story of the fight, 279–292;
   boasts of murdering Dr. Honzinger, 283;
   his map of Custer’s battlefield, 287;
   wounded, 289 note

 Red Cloud (Mahapiya-luta), Sioux chief, opposes treaty with Gen.
    Carrington, 7, 8;
   revenge on, for massacre at Fort Phil Kearney, 39;
   becomes leading war chief, 40;
   surprised and disarmed by Gen. Mackenzie, 40 note;
   his most thrilling adventure, 40, 41, note;
   determines to capture Fort Phil Kearney, 41;
   his attack, 46;
   his baptism of fire, 51–56;
   his losses in the attack on Capt. Powell’s wagon-corral, 58

 Red Cloud Agency, 293

 Rees, Indian auxiliaries, 238, 240, 267

 Religious belief of Indians in regard to scalping, 91–92 note

 Reno, Major Marcus A., in the Big Horn country, 218;
   Custer gives command to, 232;
   record of, 232 note;
   his advance, 234–236;
   his failure at the Little Big Horn, 237–243;
   plan of his defence on the bluff, 247;
   his failure to press his attack, 260;
   his report to Custer, 265;
   further light on the conduct of Major Reno, 398–405

 Reno’s Creek, 233, 253

 Reynolds, Charlie, famous scout, killed with Custer, 258

 Reynolds, Gen. Joseph J., surprises and takes Crazy Horse’s village,
    186

 Riley, Lieut., killed, 258

 Rodenbough, Gen., his “Sabre and Bayonet” quoted, 43, 44

 Roman Nose, Indian chief, insolent speech of, 72, 73;
   attacks Capt. Forsyth, 83–85;
   charge of his five hundred warriors, 85–88;
   killed, 87;
   his tepee discovered by Capt. Carpenter, 105, 108, 109

 Romero, Indian interpreter, 155, 167

 Rosebud River, Crook’s advance against Indians on the, 189, 191–193;
   battle of the, 193–198;
   map of battle, 197;
   Ex-Trooper Towne’s account of the battle on, 203–208

 Rough Riders of ’68, the, 72–96

 Royall, Col. William B., Fifth Cavalry, ordered to attack Indians on
    Beaver Creek, 124;
   given command under Gen. Crook, 188;
   anecdote of, 188 note;
   charges Indians at the Rosebud, 195, 196, 198


                                   _S_

 Salt Lake, white settlements at, 5

 Salt Lake trail, 59

 Sample, Gen. Carrington’s orderly, reports on Fetterman’s command, 30

 Sand Creek, 60

 Sans Arc Indians attack Capt. Powell’s corral, 48

 Santa Fé trail, 7

 Satanta, Kiowa Indian chief, 164;
   captured by Custer, 169

 Savage warfare, 339–344

 Savagery, the rights of, 6

 Scalping, Indian belief in, 91–92 note

 Schlesinger, Sigmund, his bravery in Gen. Forsyth’s fight, 110;
   Gen. Fry’s poem on, 110 note;
   his story of the defense of Beecher’s Island, 113–122

 Schwatka, Lieut., Arctic explorer, successful attack on Sioux by, 307

 Second Cavalry, in tragedy of Fort Phil Kearney, 25, 60;
   other engagements, 188, 195, 196, 312, 335

 Settlers on Indian lands, 6–7

 Seventh Cavalry, Gen. Custer in command of, 146;
   formation of regiment, 147;
   protects Kansas settlers, 148;
   in Sheridan’s winter campaign, 150;
   other engagements, 213, 218, 229, 293, 305, 355

 Sheridan, Gen. Philip, attacks the Cheyenne Indians, 75;
   inaugurates winter campaign against Indians, 150

 Sheridan City, terminus of Union Pacific Railroad, 134

 Sherman, Gen., advises ladies to join Gen. Carrington’s expedition, 11;
   boy’s challenge to, 12;
   acquits Gen. Carrington of all blame for disaster at Fort Phil
      Kearney, 38

 Short Nose Creek, 125, 127

 Shoshone Indians, auxiliaries in Gen. Crook’s expedition, 190, 205

 Sibley, Lieut. Frederick W., Third Cavalry, his scouting after Crazy
    Horse, 298–303

 Sioux Indians dispute the advance of the white man, 5;
   Harney-Sanborne treaty with, 7;
   accept valuable gifts from Gen. Carrington, 8;
   invest Fort Phil Kearney under Red Cloud, 40–42;
   wild charge of 46–51

 Slim Buttes, South Dakota, Gen. Crook and Capt. Mills at, 304–309

 Sitting Bull, Unkpapa Indian chief, his character, 183, 184;
   out-generals Custer, 279;
   in the sun dance, 282 note;
   strategy of, 286;
   at big feast after the Custer fight, 290;
   sends letter to Col. Otis, 321;
   interview with Gen. Miles, 323, 324;
   attacked by Lieut. Baldwin, 326;
   escapes to British Columbia, 332;
   surrenders to United States army, 332;
   a moving spirit in ghost dance uprising, 332;
   killed by Indian police, 332

 Smith, Capt. Gray Horse Troop, killed with Custer, 257

 Smith, Captain E. W., Eighteenth Infantry, sends Gen. Terry’s
    instructions to Gen. Custer, 220, 221

 Smith, Major rescues Capt. Powell in wagon-corral fight, 56

 Smyth, R. J., reminiscences of the Carrington Powder River Expedition,
    59–71

 Snow, Bugler, shot, 206

 South Pass, 5

 South Platte River, 59

 Spencer breech-loading carbine, 10, 25, 41, 67, 76

 Spencer rifle, 132, 140, 159

 Spotted Tail, Brulé Sioux chief, 8

 Springfield muzzle-loading muskets, 10, 61, 64;
   breech-loading rifles, modification of, 45

 Standing Elk, Brulé Sioux chief, 8

 Standing Rock, 282

 Standing Rock Agency, Rain-in-the-Face captured at, 213

 Stanley, Gen., sent on expedition to the Black Hills, 210

 Stillwell, John, scout, 90;
   adventures of, to rescue Gen. Forsyth, 97–112;
   volunteers to go to Fort Wallace, 121;
   studied law and became a judge, 122 note;
   death of, 122

 Sturgis, Lieut., killed, 258, 259

 Sullivant Hills, 13, 14, 19, 24, 25

 Summit Springs, Col., Gen. Carr’s fight with Tall Bull at, 170–179;
   account of battle of, 173–179

 Sun Dance, the, description of, 282 note


                                   _T_

 Tall Bull, Indian chief, Gen. Carr’s fight with at Summit Springs,
    170–179;
   killed, 172, 177

 Ten Eyck, Capt., sent to Capt. Fetterman’s relief, 29;
   returns with tidings of disaster, 31

 Tenth Cavalry (negro regiment), sent to the rescue of Gen. Forsyth, 100

 Terry, Major-Gen. Alfred H., takes command of Custer’s column, 216;
   did Custer obey orders? 219–228;
   text of his letter to Custer, 220, 221;
   his report to the Secretary of War on his orders to Custer, 225 note;
   relieves Maj. Reno, 257;
   finds Custer’s body, 257;
   goes to relief of Col. Benteen, 276;
   a discussion on his orders to Gen. Custer, 359–397

 Third Cavalry, 188, 190, 193, 198, 205, 342

 Thomas, W. Kent, the personal story of Rain-in-the Face by, 279–292

 Thompson, Capt., Seventh Cavalry, 157

 Thompson, David D., editor _Northwestern Christian Advocate_, on the
    conduct of Major Reno, 398–400

 Tongue River, a fork of the Yellowstone, 13, 20, 221, 265, 298, 319,
    326, 336;
   Gen. Crook’s march to, 187–190, 192

 Towne, Phineas, Ex-Trooper, on the Rosebud fight, 203–208

 Trudeau, scout, 90;
   adventures of, to rescue Gen. Forsyth, 97–112

 Tullock’s Creek, 221, 226

 Twenty-second Infantry, 326, 336

 Twenty-seventh Regular Infantry in the Mountain District, 9;
   detailed to protect wood-cutting party, 42

 Twenty-third Infantry, attacked at Glendive, Montana, 321


                                   _U_

 Union Pacific Rail-Road, building of, 7;
   military posts along, 184

 Unkpapa Indians attack Capt. Powell’s corral, 48


                                   _V_

 Van Vliet, Capt., Third Cavalry, 190, 193, 195, 196

 Varnum, Lieut., with Custer, 211, 267

 Vroom, ——, Third Cavalry, 198, 201


                                   _W_

 “Wagon Guns,” 69

 Wagons made for defence in Indian wars, 43

 Wallace, Lieut., 271, 272, 276

 War Bonnet, (creek in South Dakota), the fight on the, 293–298

 War Department censures Gen. Carrington unjustly, 70

 Warfare against savages, 339–344

 Washakie, Shoshone Indian chief, 198

 Washita, battle of the, 146–169

 Weir, Capt. of D troop, under Major Reno, 248, 275

 Welch, J. E., letter of, to Col. H. O. Clark on battle of Summit
    Springs, 173–179

 West, Capt., Seventh Cavalry, 157, 159

 Wheatley, civilian volunteer, 26;
   killed, 35

 White Antelope, Cheyenne chief, killed by Lieut. Sibley, 300

 White Bull, scout, 336

 “White Eagle,” name given to Gen. Carrington by Indians, 8

 Whittaker, Capt. Frederick, his “Complete Life of General George A.
    Custer,” quoted, 146;
   extract from, 261

 Willow Creek Cañon, Big Horn Mountains, Mackenzie attacks Cheyennes at,
    313

 Winchester rifles, Sioux armed with, 41

 Wolf Creek, Custer’s march down, 151

 Wolf Mountains, Big Horn Range, 327

 Women, in Gen. Carrington’s expedition, 11;
   fate of, in Indian warfare, 11

 Woodruff, Brig.-Gen. Charles A., on Custer’s Little Big Horn campaign,
    380–385

 Wounded Knee, battle of, 352


                                   _Y_

 Yanktonais, 282

 Yates, Capt., assists in capture of Rain-in-the-Face, 214;
   killed, 258

 Yellow Hand, Indian chief, shot by Buffalo Bill, 296

 Yellowstone expedition of 1873, 209–213

 Yellowstone River, threaded with streams from the Big Horn Range, 5;
   army post established on, 9

 Yuma County, Col., Gen. Forsyth’s battlefield preserved in national
    park there, 111


                      THE McCLURE PRESS. NEW YORK

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES


 1. Changed “Gillore” to “Greene” on p. 413 per text.
 2. Silently corrected typographical errors.
 3. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
 5. Superscripts are denoted by a carat before a single superscript
      character, e.g. M^r.