A Travel Guide to the Plains Indian Wars.

AuthorKreyche, Gerald F.
PositionBook review

A TRAVEL GUIDE TO THE PLAINS INDIAN WARS BY STAN HOIG UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESS 2006, 217 PAGES, $21.95

When we think of war within the U.S. it is the Civil War that comes to mind. The battles were legion--Shiloh, Antietiem, Gettysburg, etc. The casualties were in the hundreds of thousands and any other military actions paled before them. Still, the American West had an unenviable legacy of what might be termed war, although most encounters more resembled skirmishes, raids, and hit-and-run tactics. Yet, several stand out as massacres.

In 1862, the Santee Sioux in Minnesota rioted against the whites because of a delay in receiving their annuities, and murdered about 700 citizens, mostly around New Ulm. Gens. Henry Sibley and Alfred Sully pursued and captured many of the Indian miscreants. Two hundred were condemned to be hanged at Mankato, Minn., but that figure was reduced to 38--still the largest mass hanging in American history.

In 1866, at Ft. Phil Kearny, along the Bozeman Trail in Wyoming Territory, there was bad blood between the Oglala Sioux Chieftain, Red Cloud, and the military unit that built the fort to protect travelers going to the Montana gold fields. The problem was that it was located squarely in the hunting grounds of the Indians. On Dec. 21, 1866, woodcutters from the fort were attacked by Red Cloud's Indians. The post commander, Col. Henry Carrington, sent Lt. Col. William J. Fetterman and a detachment of men to relieve them, but specifically told Fetterman not to pursue the Indians. Fetterman disobeyed those orders and was ambushed, resulting in the death of 81 men.

The defeat of Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer and his Seventh Cavalry at Little Big Horn on June 25, 1876, was the most spectacular battle, Custer and five companies being wiped out. It was a Pyrrhic victory for the Indians, though, as their doom now was sealed by white vengeance.

Many of the battle sites are still extant, although one has to search for them. Some have disappeared because...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT