Jerome A. Greene

Home > Other > Jerome A. Greene > Page 1




  © 2007 by Jerome A. Greene

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Any similarities between characters and real life occurrences are completely coincidental.

  Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress.

  ISBN 1-932714-26-X

  eISBN 9781611210224

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  First Edition, First Printing

  Published by

  Savas Beatie LLC

  521 Fifth Avenue, Suite 3400

  New York, NY 10175

  Phone: 610-853-9131

  Editorial Offices:

  Savas Beatie LLC

  P.O. Box 4527

  El Dorado Hills, CA 95762

  Phone: 916-941-6896

  (E-mail) [email protected]

  Savas Beatie titles are available at special discounts for bulk purchases in the United States by corporations, institutions, and other organizations. For more details, please contact Special Sales, P.O. Box 4527, El Dorado Hills, CA 95762. You may also e-mail us at [email protected], or click over for a visit to our website at www.savasbeatie.com for additional information.

  Dedicated to the memory of Don G. Rickey,

  who knew these men.

  Books by Jerome A. Greene

  Evidence and the Custer Enigma: A Reconstruction of Indian-Military History (Kansas City, 1973)

  Slim Buttes, 1876: An Episode of the Great Sioux War (Norman, 1982)

  Yellowstone Command: Colonel Nelson A. Miles and the Great Sioux War, 1876-1877(Lincoln, 1991; Norman, 2006)

  Battles and Skirmishes of the Great Sioux War, 1876-1877: The Military View (Norman, 1993)

  Lakota and Cheyenne: Indian Views of the Great Sioux War, 1876-1877 (Norman, 1994)

  Frontier Soldier: An Enlisted Man’s Journal of the Sioux and Nez Perce Campaigns, 1877 (Helena, 1998)

  Nez Perce Summer, 1877: The U. S. Army and the Nee-Me-Poo Crisis (Helena, 2000)

  Morning Star Dawn: The Powder River Expedition and the Northern Cheyennes, 1876(Norman, 2003)

  Washita: The U. S. Army and the Southern Cheyennes, 1867-1869 (Norman, 2004)

  (Co-author with Douglas D. Scott) Finding Sand Creek: History, Archeology, and the 1864 Massacre Site (Norman, 2004)

  The Guns of Independence: The Siege of Yorktown, 1781 (New York and Staplehurst, UK, 2005)

  Fort Randall on the Missouri, 1856-1892(Pierre, 2005)

  CONTENTS

  Preface and Acknowledgments

  Introduction: The Indian War Veterans, 1880s-1960s

  Part I: Army Life in the West

  Press Interview with Five Veterans

  A Typical Entry in Winners of the West

  Finding the Right Drum Major, 1872, by John Cox

  Ten Years a Buffalo Soldier, by Perry A. Hayman

  Cavalry Duty in the Southwest in the 1870s, by George S. Raper

  Wyoming Service in the 1870s, by George F. Tinkham

  Relocating with the Sixth U.S. Infantry, by William Fetter

  Battling in the Little Bighorn, by Alonzo Stringham

  Fourteen Years in the Army, 1881-1895, by Ernst A. Selander

  Fifth Cavalry Service, by Charles M. Hildreth

  An Incident at Fort Abraham Lincoln in 1884, by Archibald Dickson

  Reminiscences of an Eighth U. S. Cavalryman, 1883-1888, by Frederick C. Kurz

  Twelve Years in the Eighteenth Infantry, by Phillip Schreiber

  Cemeteries at Fort Laramie, by Michael M. O’Sullivan

  Life as a Rookie, by John T. Stokes

  A Boyhood at Tongue River Cantonment and Fort Keogh, 1877-1882, by Dominick J. O’Malley

  The Border-to-Border March of the Eighth Cavalry, 1888, by William G. Wilkinson

  Sidelights of the Eighth Cavalry’s Historic March, by Soren P. Jepson

  Memories of Old Fort Cummings, New Mexico Territory, by Wolsey A. Sloan

  The Fort Custer Dance, by Maurice J. O’Leary

  Christmas at Fort Robinson, 1882, by Martin J. Weber

  Incidents of Army Life at Fort Wingate, 1892-1893, by Frederick H. Krause

  Part II: Battles and Campaigns

  A. Northern Plains and Prairies

  The Fetterman Tragedy, 1866, by Timothy O’Brien

  Note on the Fetterman Fight, by Alexander Brown

  The Relief of Fort Phil Kearny and Fort C. F. Smith, 1866, by Bartholomew Fitzpatrick

  Guarding the Union Pacific, by Laurence W. Aldrich

  A Reality of Warfare, by Samuel H. Bently

  A Skirmish at Heart River, Dakota, 1872, by John W. Jenkins

  The Yellowstone Expedition of 1873, by William Foster Norris

  Notes on the Yellowstone Expedition, by John Walsh

  A Buffalo Stampede during the Northern Pacific Survey Expedition, 1873, by William D. Nugent

  Bates’s Fight in the Owl Range, 1874, by James H. Rhymer

  Service at Red Cloud Agency, Nebraska, 1874-1875, by Lines P. Wasson

  With the Third Cavalry in 1876, by Oliver C.C. Pollock

  Fighting at Powder River and Rosebud Creek, 1876, by Phineas S. Towne

  Attacking the Cheyennes at Powder River in 1876, by John Lang

  A Sioux War Diary, by George S. Howard

  Combatting Cheyennes at Powder River and the Red Fork, 1876, by James N. Connely

  Campaigning with the Seventh Infantry in 1876, by George C. Berry

  Memories of the Little Bighorn, 1876, by Jacob Hetler

  Some Thoughts about the Battle of the Little Bighorn, by Theodore W. Goldin

  With the Water Carriers at the Little Bighorn, by William D. Nugent

  Fought with Reno on the Bluffs, by Henry M. Brinkerhoff

  Mutilation of Custer’s Dead, by William D. Nugent

  News of the Custer Battle Reaches Fort Randall, Dakota, by John E. Cox

  The Skirmish at Warbonnet Creek, 1876, by Chris Madsen

  Witness to Cody at Warbonnet Creek, Diary entries by James B. Frew

  Surrounding Red Cloud and Red Leaf, by Luther North

  Battle of the Red Fork, 1876, by James S. McClellan

  Dismounting and Disarming the Agency Sioux along the Missouri River, by Theodore W. Goldin

  Scouting with Lieutenant Baldwin in Montana, 1876, by Joseph Culbertson

  Fighting Crazy Horse in the Wolf Mountains, 1877, by Luther Barker

  Surrender of Chief Dull Knife (Morning Star), 1878, by Louis DeWitt

  An Incident of the Fort Robinson Outbreak, 1879, by James E. Snepp

  An Encounter with the Cree Indians near the Canadian Line, 1881, by Lawrence Lea

  On Patrol in Montana and Sitting Bull’s Surrender in 1881, by John C. Delemont

  The Killing of Sitting Bull, 1890, Account of James Connelly

  Arrest and Death of Sitting Bull, by Matthew F. Steele

  Two Letters Regarding Fort Yates and Sitting Bull’s Death, 1890, by George B. DuBois

  Scouting for Sioux in 1890, by John Rovinsky

  Time at Wounded Knee, by William J. Slaughter

  An Army Medic at Wounded Knee, by Andrew M. Flynn

  A Memory of the Pine Ridge Campaign, by Henry B. Becker

  A Trooper’s Vignette, by Frank Sturr

  On the Pine Ridge Campaign, by Grant C. Topping

  Infantry Operations at Pine Ridge, by Richard T. Burns

  Recollections of the Pine Ridge Campaign and Wounded
Knee, by August Hettinger

  Incidents of Wounded Knee, by Joseph Monnett

  Maneuvers in Montana during the Ghost Dance Crisis, by James E. Wilson

  The Leech Lake Uprising of 1898, by Harry V. Wurdemann

  B: Central and Southern Plains

  Supplies for Colorado in 1864, by Elias J. Quick

  Campaigning in Colorado and New Mexico, 1860s, by Luke Cahill

  Service with the Eighteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry in 1867, by Henderson Lafayette Burgess

  On the Kansas Plains during Hancock’s Campaign, 1867, by James P. Russell

  A Skirmish with Kiowas in Colorado Territory, 1868, by Edward Mayers

  Combat near Fort Hays, Kansas, 1867, by George W. Ford

  A Memory of Beecher Island, 1868, by Reuben Waller

  Sully’s Campaign in the Autumn of 1868, by A. C. Rallya

  The Fight at Beaver Creek, 1868, by Edward M. Hayes

  A Buffalo Soldier Recalls Beaver Creek, by Reuben Waller

  Kansas Troops and the 1868 Campaign, by W. R. Smith

  Trials of the Southern Plains Campaign, 1868-1869, by Henry Pearson

  With Custer at the Washita, 1868, by Henry Langley

  The Battle at Palo Duro Canyon, 1874, by John B. Charlton

  The Battle of Punished Woman’s Fork, 1878, by Albert Fensch

  C. Mountain West

  The Fight at White Bird Canyon, 1877, by Frank Fenn

  Reminiscences of White Bird Canyon, by John P. Schorr

  The Nez Perce War and the Battle of the Big Hole, 1877, by Charles N. Loynes

  The Bear’s Paw Campaign and the Surrender of Chief Joseph, by Luther Barker

  Bannock War Service, 1878, by Ernest F. Albrecht

  Fighting the Bannocks, by George Buzan

  Action in the Ute War of 1879, by Eugene Patterson

  Merritt’s Relief Column to Milk River, by Jacob Blaut

  Reminiscences of the Ute Uprising, by Jacob Blaut

  The Fifth Cavalry Comes Through, by Arthur S. Wallace

  A Sidelight of the Ute Campaign, by Earl Hall

  Occupation Duty in Utah, 1879-1880, by George K. Lisk

  D. West Coast

  A Close Call in Oregon, 1868, by John M. Smith

  Scouting during the Modoc War, 1873, by Oliver C. Applegate

  Murder of the Peace Commissioners, by Oliver C. Applegate

  Incident in the Charge on the Modocs, January 17, 1873, by Jasper N. Terwilliger

  E. Southwest

  Pursuing Indians during Utah’s Black Hawk War, 1865, by Joseph S. McFate

  An Apache Fight near Camp Bowie, Arizona, 1871, by John F. Farley

  Combat at Salt River Canyon, 1872, by an “Old Non-Com”

  Memories of Lieutenants Hudson and Tyler, by Peter Lacher

  A Personal Bout with Apaches, by George O. Eaton

  The Fight at Cibicu, 1881, by Anton Mazzanovich

  Notes on the Cibicu Creek Fight and the Fight at Fort Apache, by William Baird

  Campaigning in Arizona in the 1880s, by John E. Murphy

  The Fight at Black Mesa, 1882, by Earl S. Hall

  Certificate of Merit for Combat in New Mexico, 1885, by Sylvester Grover

  The Campaign against Geronimo, by Henry W. Daly

  The Fight in Guadaloupe Canyon, 1885, by Emil Pauly

  After the Apaches, 1885-1886, by Clarence B. Chrisman

  Service in Arizona, 1885, by John P. Gardner

  Trailing Geronimo by Heliograph, 1886, by William W. Neifert

  Remembrance of the Apache Campaign, by Samuel D. Gilpin

  To and from Mexico, 1886, by Albert Willis

  Present at the Surrender, 1886, by Arnold Schoeni

  Chasing the Apache Kid, 1892-1894, by Richard F. Watson

  Suggested Reading

  Index

  Maps and photos have been inserted through the text for the convenience of the reader. A full-color gallery of rare Indian war veteran-related medals, ribbons, and badges begins after page 212.

  Commission certificate appointing Albert Fensch as National Aide-de-Camp of the National Indian War Veterans and signed by Commander-in-Chief John H. Brandt in Los Angeles, 1925. Editor’s Collection.

  Preface and Acknowledgments

  This book comprises a reader embracing significant personal accounts by army veterans of their life and service on the trans-Mississippi frontier during the last four decades of the nineteenth century, the core period of Indian-white warfare in that region. The essays are drawn from various sources, each as indicated, but with most from the constituency of the National Indian War Veterans Association via the group’s periodical tabloid, Winners of the West. The first articles, those dealing with veterans’ reminiscences of their routine day-to-day experiences on the frontier, are presented in chronological order. Those describing elements of campaign and warfare history are arranged chronologically within geographical areas of the West and constitute the largest part of the book. A few of these essays have appeared elsewhere, although none have previously been widely disseminated.

  In all instances, the intent has been to reproduce the content of each essay so that readers might derive the author’s original meaning clearly and comprehensively, despite obvious variances in writing technique and ability. Occasionally, minor grammatical, punctuation, and spelling changes have been introduced editorially without brackets to improve readability. Rarely, too, words have been interjected to complete and improve factual representations, such as in giving an individual’s full name and/or military rank. (Infrequently, for example, authors of some pieces have referenced brevet or honorary rank in introducing officers, and this has been consistently corrected to reflect proper Regular Army rank usage throughout.) In no way has the substance of an article been altered or otherwise miscast. Footnotes have been scrupulously avoided in the essays for the purpose of insuring an uninterrupted reading experience.

  While an ex-soldier might occasionally exaggerate recollected facts or conditions, he might also make factual errors, and in such instances bracketed insertions have been made to correct grievously erroneous data. Also brackets have been used sparingly wherever brief introductory, transitional, and clarifying material was deemed appropriate. In most instances, the titles of individual essays have been changed from the headline format of the original presentations to better convey the content of each. And wherever parts of an article wavered from its purpose or became irrelevant to its subject, those parts were omitted and their omission indicated with ellipses. Finally and importantly, as testimony reflective of the periods during which the veterans performed their service (the 1860s-1890s) and later wrote their pieces (generally the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s), the references to Indians are often disparaging and occasionally brutally racist. As such, the remarks mirror a temper of thought grounded in ignorance that existed during those times. However objectionable they seem today, they nonetheless provide useful insights into the thinking of this element of early twentieth-century American society, and they have not been sanitized herein.

  I wish to acknowledge the following individuals and institutions for their assistance in this project: L. Clifford Soubier, Charles Town, West Virginia; Douglas C. McChristian, Tucson, Arizona; John D. McDermott, Rapid City, South Dakota; James B. Dahlquist, Seattle, Washington; Thomas R. Buecker, Crawford, Nebraska; R. Eli Paul, Kansas City, Missouri; Paul L. Hedren, O’Neill, Nebraska; John Doerner, Hardin, Montana; James Potter, Chadron, Nebraska; David Hays, Boulder, Colorado; Gordon Chappell, San Francisco, California; Dick Harmon, Lincoln, Nebraska; John Monette, Louisville, Colorado; Paul Fees, Cody, Wyoming; Judy M. Morley, Centennial, Colorado; Robert G. Pilk, Lakewood, Colorado; Paul A. Hutton, Albuquerque, New Mexico; Neil Mangum, Alpine, Texas; Douglas D. Scott, Lincoln, Nebraska; Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art, Tulsa, Oklahoma; Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, Crow Agency, Montana; and Jack Blades of Night Ranger. Special thanks go to Sandra Lowry, Fort Laramie National Historic
Site, Wyoming, for her help in providing full and correct names for many of the enlisted men mentioned herein.

  My thanks are also extended to everyone at Savas Beatie who helped get this book into print.

  Introduction

  The Indian War Veterans, 1880s-1960s

  They called themselves the “Winners of the West.” They were the soldier veterans of the U. S. Army and state and territorial forces in the West, many of them survivors of Indian campaigns between 1864 and 1898, and they regarded themselves as the vanguards of civilization on the frontier. Some had fought Sioux, Cheyenne, Nez Perce, Comanche, Kiowa, and Apache warriors at renowned places like Washita, Apache Pass, Rosebud, Little Bighorn, White Bird Canyon, Bear’s Paw Mountains, and Wounded Knee, although the majority who also claimed to be Indian war veterans had performed more routine and unheralded duties during their years beyond the Mississippi River.

  While in many ways their service facilitated the economic exploitation of Indian lands wrought by mining and settlement, as well as the internment of the tribes on reservations that followed, like most Americans of the time they embraced concepts of Manifest Destiny, by which they justified their own and their government’s actions. Most of them were former enlisted men, drawn together by camaraderie but also for the purpose of bettering living conditions for themselves and their families by championing pension benefits from a seemingly distant and unsympathetically frugal federal government that had extended its largess more charitably to the disabled veterans of the Civil War and the Spanish-American War.

  The creation of associations specific to the interests of Indian war veterans followed a course similar to that of other veterans’ groups after the period of focus their service represented. Groups composed of veteran officers generally reflected their fraternal interests, as did, for example, the Society of the Cincinnati for those who served in the Revolutionary War; the Society of the War of 1812; the Aztec Club for former Mexican War officers; the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States for former Civil War officers; and several smaller societies observing officer service in Cuba, the Philippines, and China late in the nineteenth century.1

  Enlisted veteran organizations, generally more concerned with welfare issues, had roots in various municipal and regional relief organizations founded during the Civil War to help needy soldiers and which continued to promote relief programs after the war. In the immediate postwar years, a profusion of groups evolved that eventually (1866-69) merged into a single association, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) that included both former Union officers and enlisted men. (A parallel and smaller body, the United Confederate Veterans, later served the interests of those who had fought for the South.)

 

‹ Prev