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Red River War
Source: The Handbook of
Texas Online
The Red River
War, a series of military engagements fought between the
United States Army and warriors of the Kiowa, Comanche,
Southern Cheyenne, and southern Arapaho Indian tribes
from June of 1874 into the spring of 1875, began when the
federal government defaulted on obligations undertaken to
those tribes by the Treaty of Medicine Lodge in 1867.
Rations to be
issued the Indians consistently fell short or failed
entirely, gun running and liquor trafficking by white
profiteers were not curtailed, and white outlaws from
both Kansas and Texas who entered the Indian Territory to
steal Indian stock were not punished or even, in most
cases, pursued. On all these counts, the two federal
Indian agents who dealt with the Indians, James M.
Haworth at Fort Sill and John D. Miles at Darlington,
both Quaker missionaries, did everything in their power
to remedy the situation, but they received no cooperation
from either the military or the Washington officials of
the Office of Indian Affairs.
The army declined to enforce provisions of the Medicine
Lodge Treaty prohibiting white entry onto tribal lands,
and between 1872 and 1874 organized, professional buffalo
hunters based in Dodge City, Kansas, wiped the herds out
on the Cheyenne-Arapaho Reservation. With no rations
arriving from the government and nothing left to hunt,
all four tribes were in a desperate situation.
A Comanche
medicine man named Isa-tai called for a Sun Dance, even
though that ritual had never been part of the Comanche
religion. At that gathering, he and a young war leader of
the Quahadi band of Comanches, Quanah Parker, recruited
warriors for raids into Texas to avenge slain relatives
of theirs. Other Comanche chiefs, notably Isa-Rose (White
Wolf) and Tabananica (Sound of the Sun) of the Yapparika
band, identified the hide merchants as the real threat to
the Indian way of life, and suggested that if Quanah were
to attack anybody, he should attack them. A war party
headed west into the Panhandle of Texas.
The second battle of Adobe Walls occurred between June 27
and July 1, 1874, when a war party of 700 Comanche,
Kiowa, Cheyenne, and Arapahoe warriors attacked the
buffalo hunters' camp at Adobe Walls on the Canadian
River in what is now Hutchinson County. In the first
skirmish of that conflict three whites were killed, but
as many as seventy Indians were killed and wounded.
Afterward, the Indians maintained a sporadic siege of
Adobe Walls until July 1. In this battle William (Billy)
Dixon's renowned "long shot" occurred, and the
local restaurateur, William Olds, accidentally shot
himself in the head as he was descending from a
watchtower.
The great majority of Kiowas did not take part in the
Adobe Walls episode. Instead, they awaited direction at
their annual Sun Dance, held the first week in July at
the western edge of the reservation. There, Chief Kicking
Bird persuaded most of the Kiowas to return to the agency
with him. The principal chief, Lone Wolf, succeeded in
recruiting a war party of just fifty men, and that with
the help of Maman-ti, the only other chief who voted for
war. In the "Lost Valley Fight" on July 12, in
a shallow draw near Jacksboro, Texas, they confronted a
force of Texas Rangers of the Frontier Battalion,
commanded by Maj. John B. Jones, and killed two, David
Bailey and William Glass. The rangers escaped under cover
of night.
After numerous bloody incidents in Texas, Kansas, and the
Indian Territory, the federal government organized an
attack. The strategy was that of Gen. William T. Sherman
and Lt. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, who commanded the
Military Division of the Missouri, in which the trouble
had broken out. Peaceful Indians were to be quickly
registered at their agencies and confined to the
reservation before the hostiles could return. Then, troop
columns would enter the field from five different
directions, force the warriors into their traditional
refuges in the canyons along the Caprock of the Texas
Panhandle, and there annihilate them or else force their
surrender. This strategy was in force by July 25.
In the battle of Palo Duro Canyon the first column in the
field was that of Col. Nelson A. Miles. His force left
Fort Dodge, Kansas, on August 11, 1874. It comprised
eight companies of the Sixth Cavalry, four companies of
the Fifth Infantry, plus artillery (one Parrott
ten-pounder and two ten-barrel Gatling guns), scouts, and
Delaware Indian trackers. A number of Miles's scouts were
buffalo hunters who had been present at Adobe Walls.
Advancing into
the Texas Panhandle in a searing midsummer drought, Miles
fought a running battle with a force of Cheyennes from
August 27 to 31, before the Indians dispersed and
vanished. This was along the Red River in the far lower
reaches of Palo Duro Canyon. The battle is sometimes
styled the first battle of Palo Duro Canyon, and the
subsequent action by Ranald S. Mackenzie, the second.
Miles's and Sheridan's reports depict this action as a
significant victory, but later sources indicate that the
engagement was at best inconclusive because Miles outran
his supply lines and left himself open to attack from the
rear.
Confinement of tractable Indians at their agencies
resulted in violence at the Wichita Agency at Anadarko,
Indian Territory, and caused once-peaceable Kiowas to
stampede for the Llano Estacado. On the upper Washita
they crossed the path of a thirty-six-wagon army-supply
train commanded by Capt. Wyllys Lyman, which was being
desperately awaited by Miles. The Kiowas pounced on
Lyman's Wagon Train on the morning of September 10,
killing a sergeant and civilian teamster, and maintained
a siege thereafter for, according to Indian sources, the
sake of the excitement. After a desperate escape from the
Indians, William Schmalsle returned on September 14 with
a relief column, but by then the Kiowas had abandoned the
fight.
Colonel Miles sent scouting parties back along his trail
to try to locate his supply train. One of these parties,
consisting of Billy Dixon, Camp Supply interpreter Amos
Chapman, and four soldiers, was pinned down in a buffalo
wallow on the morning of September 12 by the same Indians
who had attacked the wagon train. One of the whites was
killed and all except Dixon were wounded; all six were
awarded the Medal of Honor.
The awards of
Dixon and Chapman, however, were later revoked because
they were not in the regular army. Another of Sheridan's
troop columns came east from New Mexico under Maj.
William Redwood Price and arrived at the scene on the
afternoon of September 12. Price escorted the wagon train
south, but refused aid to the scouts in the buffalo
wallow, an act for which Miles censured him and assumed
command of Price's troops.
A third column of eight companies of the Fourth United
States Cavalry, five companies of the Tenth and Eleventh
Infantry, and an assortment of scouts including Seminole,
Lipan Apache, and Tonkawa Indians, assembled at a base
camp on Catfish Creek, about 150 miles west of Fort
Griffin, Texas. Under the command of Colonel Mackenzie
this group fought a skirmish in Tule Canyon on September
26. Two days later, Mackenzie outwitted a large force of
Kiowas under Maman-ti, Comanches under a chief named
O-ha-ma-tai, and Cheyennes under Iron Shirt, who had
taken refuge, trapping them with their families in their
main hideout in upper Palo Duro Canyon.
In a daring dawn
attack down the steep canyon wall, Mackenzie's troops
killed only two or three Indians, but captured and
torched several entire villages and slaughtered over a
thousand captured Indian ponies. This action broke the
back of much of the Indian resistance. The warriors,
dismounted and short of supplies, began drifting back to
their reservations.
The weather during the fall turned unusually wet, and the
Indians still at large referred to the miserable pursuit
as the "Wrinkled Hand Chase." On November 8,
1874, Lt. Frank D. Baldwin led a detachment from Miles's
column and destroyed a large Cheyenne camp at the
headwaters of McClellan Creek, where he rescued two of
the German sisters, Julia and Addie.
Numerous smaller actions were fought throughout the
autumn and winter of 1874-75, and the troops were joined
by others from Fort Sill, commanded by Lt. Col. John W.
Davidson, and from Forts Griffin and Richardson, Texas,
commanded by Lt. Col. George Buell. Surrenders increased
in number until the last holdouts, Quahadi Comanches
under Quanah Parker, surrendered to Mackenzie at Fort
Sill, Indian Territory, on June 2, 1875. Previously, on
April 28, 1875, about seventy-two captured chiefs had
been sent by Sherman to Fort Marion, Florida, where they
were held until 1878.
The Red River War, characterized by supply problems on
both sides, was an important event in Texas and South
Plains history. It saw the virtual extinction of the
southern herd of buffalo, the final subjugation of the
powerful Comanche, Kiowa, and southern Cheyenne Indians,
and consequently the opening of the Texas Panhandle to
white settlement. The advent of the ranching era followed
swiftly.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: James L. Haley, The Buffalo War: The
History of the Red River Indian Uprising of 1874 (Garden
City, New York: Doubleday, 1976). Paul Hutton, Phil
Sheridan and His Army (Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, 1985). Robert M. Utley, Frontier Regulars: The
United States Army and the Indian, 1866-1891 (New York:
Macmillan, 1973).
James L. Haley
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