SAND CREEK MASSACRE

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The 'Sand Creek massacre' (also known as the 'Chivington massacre' or the 'Battle of Sand Creek') was an incident in the Indian Wars of the United States that occurred on November 29, 1864, when Colorado Territory militia attacked and destroyed a peaceful village of Cheyenne and Arapaho encamped on the eastern plains. The brutality of the massacre shocked the nation.

Contents
Background
Attack
Aftermath
Impact on Indians
Warfare
Official investigations
Sand Creek today
Depiction in fiction
Footnotes
References
External links

Background


By the terms of the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie, between the United States and the Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes, the Cheyenne and Arapaho were recognized to hold a vast territory encompassing the lands between the North Platte River and Arkansas River and eastward from the Rocky Mountains to western Kansas. This area included present-day southeastern Wyoming, southwestern Nebraska, most of eastern Colorado, and the westernmost portions of Kansas.[1] However, the discovery in November 1858 of gold in the Rocky Mountains in Colorado[2] (then part of the western Kansas Territory)[3] brought on a gold rush and a consequent flood of white emigration across Cheyenne and Arapaho lands.2 Colorado territorial officials pressured federal authorities to redefine the extent of Indian lands in the territory,1 and in the fall of 1860 A.B. Greenwood, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, arrived at Bent's New Fort along the Arkansas River to negotiate a new treaty.2
On February 18, 1861, six chiefs of the Southern Cheyenne and four of the Arapaho signed the Treaty of Fort Wise with the United States,[4] in which they ceded to the United States most of the lands designated to them by the Fort Laramie treaty.1 The Cheyenne chiefs included Black Kettle, White Antelope, Lean Bear, Little Wolf, Tall Bear, and Left Hand; the Arapaho chiefs included Little Raven, Storm, Shave-Head, and Big Mouth.4
The new reserve, less than one-thirteenth the size of the 1851 reserve,1 was located in eastern Colorado3 between the Arkansas River and Sand Creek.1 Some bands of Cheyenne including the Dog Soldiers, a militaristic band of Cheyennes and Lakotas that had evolved beginning in the 1830s, were angry at those chiefs who had signed the treaty, disavowing the treaty and refusing to abide by its constraints.[5] They continued to live and hunt in the bison-rich lands of eastern Colorado and western Kansas, becoming increasingly belligerent over the tide of white immigration across their lands, particularly in the Smoky Hill River country of Kansas, along which whites had opened a new trail to the gold fields.[6] Cheyennes opposed to the treaty said that it had been signed by a small minority of the chiefs without the consent or approval of the rest of the tribe, that the signatories had not understood what they signed, and that they had been bribed to sign by a large distribution of gifts. The whites, however, claimed that the treaty was a "solemn obligation" and considered that those Indians who refused to abide by it were hostile and planning a war.[7]
The beginning of the American Civil War in 1861 led to the organization of military forces in Colorado Territory. In March 1862, the Coloradans defeated the Texas Confederate Army in the Battle of Glorieta Pass in New Mexico. Following the battle, the First Regiment of Colorado Volunteers returned to Colorado Territory and were mounted as a home guard under the command of Colonel John Chivington. Chivington and Colorado territorial governor John Evans adopted a hard line against Indians, accused by white settlers of stealing stock. Conflicts between settlers and Indians in the spring of 1864 included the capture and destruction of a number of small Cheyenne camps.[8] On May 16, 1864, a force under Lieutenant George S. Eayre crossed into Kansas and encountered Cheyennes in their summer buffalo-hunting camp at Big Bushes near the Smoky Hill River. Cheyenne chiefs Lean Bear and Star approached the soldiers to signal their peaceful intent, but were shot down by Eayre's troops.8[9] This incident touched off a war of retaliation by the Cheyennes in Kansas.8
As conflict between Indians and white settlers and soldiers in Colorado continued, many of the Cheyennes and Arapahos (including those bands under Cheyenne chiefs Black Kettle and White Antelope who had sought to maintain the peace in spite of pressures from whites) were resigned to negotiate peace. They were told to camp near Fort Lyon on the eastern plains and they would be regarded as friendly.

Attack


Black Kettle, a chief of a group of around 800 mostly Southern Cheyennes, reported to Fort Lyon in an effort to declare peace. After having done so, he and his band, along with some Arapahos under Chief Left Hand, camped out at nearby Sand Creek, less than 40 miles north. The Dog Soldiers, who had been responsible for much of the conflict with whites, were not part of this encampment. Assured by the U.S. Government's promises of peace, Black Kettle sent most of his warriors to hunt, leaving only around 60 men in the village, most of them too old or too young to participate in the hunt. Black Kettle flew an American flag over his lodge since previously he had been assured that this practice would keep him and his people safe from U.S. soldiers' aggression.[10]
Setting out from Fort Lyon, Colonel Chivington and his 800 troops of the First Colorado Cavalry, Third Colorado Cavalry and a company of First New Mexico Volunteers marched to their campsite. On the night of November 28, soldiers and militia drank heavily and celebrated their anticipated victory.[11] On the morning of November 29, 1864, Chivington ordered his troops to attack. One officer, Captain Silas Soule refused to follow the Chivington's order and told his men to hold fire. Other soldiers in Chivington's force, however, immediately attacked the village. Disregarding the American flag, and a white flag that was run up shortly after the soldiers commenced firing, Chivington's soldiers massacred the majority of its mostly-unarmed inhabitants.
Fifteen U.S. soldiers were killed and more than 50 wounded.[12] Between the effects of the heavy drinking and the chaos of the assault, the majority of the U.S. casualties were due by friendly fire.[11] Between 150 and 200 Indians were estimated killed, nearly all elderly men, women and children. In testimony before a Congressional committee investigating the massacre, Chivington reported that as many as 500-600 Indian warriors killed. [14]. One source from the Cheyenne said that about 53 men and 110 women and children were killed.[15] Chivington and his men dressed their weapons, hats and gear with scalps and other body parts, including human fetuses and male and female genitalia. They also publicly displayed these battle trophies in the Apollo Theater and saloons in Denver.

Aftermath


Impact on Indians

The Sand Creek Massacre resulted in a heavy loss of life and material possessions by the Cheyenne and Arapaho bands affected by the massacre. It also devastated the Cheyenne's traditional government, due to the deaths at Sand Creek of eight of 44 members of the Council of Forty-Four, including White Antelope, One Eye, Yellow Wolf, Big Man, Bear Man, War Bonnet, Spotted Crow, and Bear Robe, as well as headmen of some of the Cheyenne's military societies.[16] Among the chiefs killed were most of those who had advocated peace with white settlers and the U.S. government.[17] The effect of this on Cheyenne society was to exacerbate the social and political rift between the traditional council chiefs and their followers on the one hand and the militaristic Dog Soldiers on the other.
Beginning in the 1830s, the Dog Soldiers had evolved from the Cheyenne military society by that name into a separate, composite band of Cheyenne and Lakota warriors that took as its territory the headwaters country of the Republican and Smoky Hill rivers in southern Nebraska, northern Kansas, and the northeast of Colorado Territory. By the 1860s, as conflict between Indians and encroaching whites intensified, the influence wielded by the militaristic Dog Soldiers, together with that of the military societies within other Cheyenne bands, had become a significant counter to the influence of the traditional Council of Forty-Four chiefs, who were more likely to favor peace with the whites.[18] To the Dog Soldiers, the Sand Creek Massacre illustrated the folly of the peace chiefs' policy of accommodating the whites through the signing of treaties such as the first Treaty of Fort Laramie and the Treaty of Fort Wise[1] and vindicated the Dog Soldiers' own militant posture towards the whites.18
The traditional Cheyenne clan system was dealt a fatal blow by the events at Sand Creek. It had already been dealt a severe blow by an 1849 cholera epidemic which killed perhaps half the Southern Cheyenne population[20], especially the Masikota and Oktoguna bands,[21] and further weakened by the emergence of a separate Dog Soldiers band.[22] Hardest hit by the massacre were the Wutapai (Black Kettle's band), perhaps half of the Hevhaitaniu including the clan's chiefs Yellow Wolf and Big Man, about half of the Oivimana under War Bonnet, and heavy losses to the Hisiometanio (Ridge Men) under White Antelope. Chief One Eye was also killed along with many of his band. The Suhtai clan and the Heviqxnipahis clan under Chief Sand Hill experienced relatively few losses. The Dog Soldiers and the Masikota, who by that time had joined the Dog Soldiers, were not present at Sand Creek.[23] Of about ten lodges of Arapahos under Chief Left Hand, representing about fifty or sixty people, only a handful escaped with their lives.[24]
Warfare

After this event, many Cheyenne and Arapaho men joined the Dog Soldiers and sought revenge on settlers throughout the Platte valley, killing as many as 200 civilians.
Official investigations

The attack was initially reported in the press as a victory against a brave opponent. Within weeks, however, a controversy was raised about a possible massacre. Several investigations were conducted — two by the military, and one by the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War. The panel declared:
Statements taken by Major Edward Wynkoop and his adjutant substantiated the later accounts of survivors. These statements were filed with his reports and can be found in the ''Official Records of the War of the Rebellion'', copies of which were submitted as evidence in the Joint Committee of the Conduct of the War and in separate hearings conducted by the military in Denver.
During these investigations, numerous witnesses came forward with damning testimony, almost all of which was substantiated by other witnesses. At least one of those witnesses, Captain Silas Soule, was murdered in Denver just weeks after offering his testimony. However, despite the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the Wars' recommendation, justice was never served on those responsible for the massacre. A Civil War memorial installed at the Colorado Capitol in 1909 listed the Sand Creek massacre as one of the Union's great victories.

Sand Creek today


A stone marker commemorates the "Sand Creek Battle Ground."

The site, on Big Sandy Creek in Kiowa County, is now preserved by the National Park Service with the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site in Colorado, which was dedicated on April 28, 2007, almost 142 years after the massacre.
Meanwhile, the Sand Creek Massacre Trail in Wyoming follows the paths of the Northern Arapaho and Cheyenne in the years after the massacre until their eventual surrender and the establishment of the Wind River Indian Reservation near Riverton in central Wyoming. The trail passes through Cheyenne, Laramie, Casper, and Riverton en route to Ethete in Fremont County in the reservation. In recent years, Arapaho youth have taken to running the length of the trail in an effort to bring healing to their nation. Alexa Roberts, superintendent of the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site, said that the trail represents a living portion of the history of the two tribes.

Depiction in fiction



★ The Sand Creek massacre is the subject of the 1970 movie ''Soldier Blue''.

★ The massacre is portrayed in Steven Spielberg's mini-series ''Into the West''.

★ Acoma Pueblo poet Simon Ortiz used the Sand Creek massacre as inspiration for his 1981 collection of poems ''From Sand Creek''.

★ American novelist James Michener included a fictionalized account of the massacre and its aftermath in his book ''Centennial'', moving the incident further north, near the South Platte River and making the victims primarily Arapaho.

★ American comic book artist Jack Jackson, a.k.a Jaxon, told the story of the massacre in his 1975 story ''Nits Make Lice''.

Footnotes


1. Greene 2004, p. 27.
2. Hoig 1980, p. 61.
3. Greene 2004, p. 12.
4. Kappler 1904, p. 810.
5. Greene 2004, pp. 12-13.
6. Hoig 1980, p. 62.
7. Hyde 1968, p. 118.
8. Hoig 1980, p. 63.
9. Michno 2003, p. 137.
10. Brown 1970, p. 88.
11. Brown, 1970, p. 91.
12. Michno 2003, p. 159.
13. Brown, 1970, p. 91.
14. "Testimony of Colonel J.M. Chivington, April 26, 1865" to the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War. New Persptectives on the West: Documents on the Sand Creek Massacre. PBS.
15. George Bent, the son of the American William Bent and a Cheyenne mother, was at Black Kettle’s village when Chivington’s men struck. Sand Creek Massacre National Historical Site has the following information: "On April 30, 1913, Bent wrote: "''About 53 men were killed and 110 women and children killed, 163 in all killed. Lots of men, women and children were wounded''."
16. Greene 2004, p. 23.
17. Greene 2004, p. 24.
18. Greene 2004, p. 26.
19. Greene 2004, p. 27.
20. Hyde 1968, p. 96.
21. Hyde 1968, p. 97.
22. Hyde 1968, p. 338.
23. Hyde 1968, p. 159.
24. Hyde 1968, pp. 159, 162.

References



★ ''Official Records of the War of the Rebellion''.

Brown, Dee. (1970). ''Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West'', Owl Books. ISBN 0-8050-6669-1.

★ Greene, Jerome A. (2004). ''Washita, The Southern Cheyenne and the U.S. Army.'' Campaigns and Commanders Series, vol. 3. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806135514.

★ Hatch, Thom. (2004). ''Black Kettle: The Cheyenne Chief Who Sought Peace but Found War''. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-47144-592-4.

★ Hoig, Stan. (1977). ''The Sand Creek Massacre''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1147-6.

★ Hoig, Stan. (1980). ''The Peace Chiefs of the Cheyennes''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-1573-4.

★ Hyde, George E. (1968). ''Life of George Bent Written from His Letters''. Ed. by Savoie Lottinville. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-1577-7.

★ Kappler, Charles J., compiler and editor. (1904). "Treaty with the Arapaho and Cheyenne, 1861" (Treaty of Fort Wise). 12 Stat. 1163, Feb. 15, 1861. In ''Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties — Vol. II: Treaties.'' Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. Through Oklahoma State University Library, Electronic Publishing Center.

★ Michno, Gregory F. (2003). ''Encyclopedia of Indian Wars: Western Battles and Skirmishes 1850-1890''. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87842-468-7.

★ United States Army. (1867). Courts of Inquiry, Sand Creek Massacre. ''Report of the Secretary of War Communicating, In Compliance With a Resolution of the Senate of February 4, 1867, a Copy of the Evidence Taken at Denver and Fort Lyon, Colorado Territory, By a Military Commission, Ordered to Inquire into the Sand Creek Massacre, November, 1864.'' Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. Senate Executive Document 26, 39th Congress, Second Session. Reproduced in Wynkoop, Christopher H. (2004-08-13). "Inquiry into the Sand Creek Massacre, November, 1864." The Wynkoop Family Research Library. Rootsweb.com: Freepages. Retrieved on 2007-04-29.

★ United States Congress. (1867).''Condition of the Indian Tribes''. Report of the Joint Special Committee Appointed Under Joint Resolution of March 3, 1865, with an Appendix. (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.

★ United States Senate. (1865). ''Massacre of the Cheyenne Indians''. Report of the Joint Committee on The Conduct of the War. (3 vols.) Senate Report No. 142, 38th Congress, Second Session. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.

★ West, Elliott. (1998), ''The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado''. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-1029-4.

★ Winger, Kevin. (2007-08-17). "Trail Helps Mark 1864 Massacre." ''Cheyenne Wyoming Tribune-Eagle''.

External links



Who is the Savage?

Finding The Site

Sand Creek Massacre Historic Site

Sand Creek Tours

Historic Documents from PBS, especially look up testimony from John S. Smith to Congress

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