The Wild Frontier

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The Wild Frontier Page 37

by William M. Osborn


  1680-84: The Five Nations fought the Illinois and the Miami.59 1680s: The Iroquois attacked the Miami and the Illinois.60 They were defeated, ending the westward expansion of the Iroquois.61 The Ottawas and Hurons fought the Iroquois.62

  At the height of their power, the Five Nations compelled Algonquin in Indiana and Michigan to pay tribute.63 Late 1600s: The Kickapoos suffered several massacres at the hands of their neighbors the Sioux and the Iroquois. In response they fled to the area around Green Bay, Wisconsin, and formed a confederacy with the Fox and the Mascouten.64 The Powhatans fought the Iroquois.65

  1683: The Five Nations lost several hundred warriors in a battle with the Ojibway and Fox.66

  Before 1690: The Iroquois drove the Shawnee from the Ohio River Valley.67 Around 1690: The Chickasaw allied themselves with Charleston, South Carolina, slave traders. The Chickasaw raided the Choctaw, killing more than 1,800 and taking about 500 slaves. The Chickasaw lost about 800 warriors in these raids.

  The 2 were still fighting as late as 1702.68 Late 1600s-early 1700s: The Creeks fought Indians who had been missionized by the Spanish, especially the Apalachee and the Timucuas.69 Before 1700: The Sioux fought their hereditary enemies, the Chippewa, beginning perhaps as early as this date. Time and time again over the course of many years, the Sioux were defeated.70

  Intertribal Wars in the 1700s

  Around 1700: The Comanche moved from territory between the Yellowstone and Platte rivers to the South Plains. They fought with the Apache and drove them away. The Comanche made raids along their borders against both Indians and settlers for the next 150 years.71 Around 1700: The Comanche supported by the French made “unrelenting war” on the Apache and Navajo.72

  The Pawnee killed hundreds of Navajo.73

  The Arapaho fought the Ute.74

  The Sioux were driving the Crows to the west.75

  1700: The French got help from the Choctaw, who overpowered the Natchez Indians, almost wiping them out.76

  The Choctaw, at the request of the French, attacked the Chickasaw.77 When that fight was ended, the Choctaw vowed they would continue to make war on the Chickasaw. They said they would “never cease to strike at that perfidious race as long as there should be any portion of it remaining.”78

  Early 1700s: Neighboring tribes repeatedly raided the Tuscarora in North Carolina. Their children were stolen and sold as slaves.79

  The Tuscarora attacked English and German settlers, killing about 130 of them. South Carolina Indian trader John Barnwell led an army of 50 English and Indians from several tribes, especially Yamasees. His army entered Tuscarora territory, destroying houses and taking slaves.80

  1701-04: The Creeks fought the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Guale, Apalachee, Westos, and Savannah.81

  1702: The Creeks fought with the Timucuas.82

  1704-10: Carolina Indian trader Thomas Moore led about 1,000 Creeks and 50 English against the Timucuas, Guale, and Apalachee. Somewhere between 10,000 and 12,000 Indians were captured and sold into slavery.83 The Apalachee were practically destroyed.84

  1710-75: The Comanche were at war almost all the time with the Apache, the Mescalero, and the Faraon.85

  1711: The Cherokee fought the Tuscarora.86

  1711: The Fox fought the Hurons, Ottawas, and Potawatomis. After the Fox surrendered, about 1,000 of them were killed.87

  1711: After the Tuscarora killed 137 Carolinians, the settlers got the Catawbas and the Cherokee to help them fight the Tuscarora.88

  1716: Cherokee fought Yamasees and Lower Creeks. Casualties were heavy on both sides.89

  1720: The Fox fought the Miami and the Illinois.90

  1723: The Fox fought the Ojibway.91

  1724: The Seneca and the Cherokee fought. The Creeks offered to mediate. The Seneca said they could not afford to make peace because “we have no people to war against nor yet no meal to eat but the Cherokees.”92

  Around 1725: The Cree and Blackfeet were at war with the Shoshoni.93

  1729: Tunica helped the French suppress the Natchez.94

  Around 1729: The Kickapoos assisted the French against their former ally, the Fox, and fought them and the Chickasaw.95 Late 1720s: The French enlisted the Winnebagos, the Ottawas, the Chippewa, and the Menominees to try to exterminate the Fox. They almost succeeded in

  1730.96

  Before 1730: The Cherokee fought the Chickasaw and the Shawnee.97

  1731: The French with Choctaw allies stormed Natchez strongholds. One thousand were killed, 400 sold as slaves, and many burned at the stake. By the end of the year, the Natchez tribe, which once had more than 5,000 people, had ceased to exist. The survivors obtained refuge with other tribes.98

  1732: The Iroquois pressured a band of Delaware to give up their land near Philadelphia and move to where they lived under a minor Iroquois chief.99 Around 1734: The Chippewa fought the Fox and Sioux.100 Around 1740: The Comanche invaded Apache territory.101

  1742: The Cherokee fought the Six Nations.102

  1749: The Ottawas fought the Mississaugas.103

  1750: The Shawnee fought the Chickasaw.104

  Around 1750: The Apache invaded the Pimas, the Zuñi, and the Laguna.105

  The Chippewa fought the Sioux. The Chippewa took over Sioux territory as far as the prairie.106

  Last half of the 1700s: The Sioux and the Cheyenne expelled the Kiowa from the Black Hills.107

  The Sioux and the Cheyenne drove the Pawnee south of the Platte River in Nebraska and the Crows from eastern Montana westward.108

  1755: The Iroquois simply ordered the Delaware to leave eastern Pennsylvania. This forced the Shawnee to move to Ohio.109

  1760s: The settlers obtained Indian help in suppressing the Cherokee. This war lasted 2 years.110

  After 1763: Kickapoo territory was invaded by the Sioux from the west and by the Iroquois from the east. They then turned to warfare as a major pursuit and supported Ottawa leader Pontiac.111

  1765: Pontiac helped the British (England, Scotland, and Wales had joined to form Great Britain in 1707) subdue Illinois tribes who were being incited by Frenchmen.112 Warriors in one of the Peoria villages decided to kill Pontiac. One of their braves did so in 1769.113

  Around 1770: The Sioux and Cheyenne drove the Kiowa out of the Black Hills.114

  1770s: The Arikara, or Rees, who had been weakened by 3 successive smallpox epidemics, were driven from their territory by the Sioux.115

  1775: Some Kickapoos had been forced out of Wisconsin into Illinois and even farther west by tribes moving into the Great Lakes area. This occurred as early as around 1775. The Kickapoos were defeated in 1811 and 1812 by these tribes.116

  * After the Kickapoos were displaced by other tribes, they, the Delaware, the Shawnee, and other displaced tribes became mercenary soldiers for the Spanish and protected their settlements from the Chickasaw and later the Osages.117

  Around 1776: There was an Iroquois civil war. Mohawk attacked Oneida, and Oneida attacked Mohawk. Iroquois fought Iroquois at the Battle of Bennington and the Battle of Saratoga, both of which were won by the American army. Mohawk leader Joseph Brant’s warriors attacked one another.118

  1777: The Comanche and Apache fought. The Spanish governor of New Mexico, Juan Bautista de Anza, who had encouraged the war, gave the Comanche cards to help them keep score.119

  During the Revolutionary War, at the Battle of Oriskany, the army of American general Nicholas Herkimer with 60 Indians, mostly Oneida, was ambushed and mauled by the army of British leader Sir John Johnson with Mohawk chief Joseph Brant and a group of Seneca warriors. Five Seneca chiefs were killed.120

  1778-79: The Iroquois continued their 70-year war against the Hurons.121 Washington wrote to the commissioners of Indian affairs in 1778. He commented on a congressional resolution giving him authority to hire 400 Indians if they could be “procured upon proper terms.” He stated that “divesting them of the Savage customs exercised in their Wars against each other, I think they may be made of excellent use.”122


  1779: General John Sullivan enlisted the aid of the Oneida against the Mohawk, Seneca, and Cayuga. The latter with British regulars and Tories destroyed Oneida settlements.123

  1780: The Fox and Sioux were defeated by the Chippewa.124

  Before 1790: The Kiowa and the Comanche had fought for many years, but then made peace and fought the Cheyenne and the Osages for 50 more years.125

  1793: During Little Turtle’s War between the Shawnee and other tribes and the new American army, a group of Ottawas and other Indians robbed and raped Shawnee women farmers in several villages.126

  *1794: At the Battle of Fallen Timbers, the army of American general Anthony Wayne included a few Chickasaw and Choctaw scouts. It attacked the army of Miami chief Little Turtle, which had numbered 2,000 Shawnee, Miami, Creeks, Cherokee, and others before Indian defections occurred. At the time of the battle, no more than 1,300 were left. Little Turtle was defeated.127

  1795: The Creeks invaded Chickasaw territory.128

  1798: The Missouri tribe fought the Sac and the Fox. The Missouri were almost destroyed.129

  End of the 1700s: The Kickapoos nearly exterminated the Illinois and other tribes in their area and then established villages in the conquered territory.130

  Intertribal Wars in the 1800s

  Early 1800s: The Missouri fought with the Osages. This time the Missouri were destroyed. Survivors went to live with the Otoe and the Iowa tribes.131 Early 1800s: The Puncahs were at war with the Sioux, the Pawnee, the Osages, and the Konzas.132

  The Cheyenne fought the Mandan.133 Kiowa, Crows, and Pawnee were attacked by the Sioux.134

  1800: The Sioux held the west bank of the Mississippi against Iroquois aggression as late as this date.135

  1800: The Hidatsa attacked the Shoshoni.136

  Around 1800: The Sioux became more warlike and made war on the Crows, the Pawnee, “and every other western tribe they met.”137

  The Winnebagos fought the Chippewa, Fox, Sac, and others.138 The Comanche were fighting the Apache.139

  The Cheyenne carried on “almost unceasing war” with the Pawnee and Blackfeet.140

  Most of the 1800s: The Comanche fought the Pawnee and the Osages.141 1803 or before: The Kaskaskia Indians in Illinois were mentioned in Jefferson’s message to Congress. He said they were friendly and had never had a difference with the government, but they had been “reduced by the wars” to a few individuals and were “unable to defend themselves against the neighboring tribes.”142

  1804: The Hidatsa fought the Blackfeet.143

  The Tetons fought the Omaha.144

  The Sioux and Arikara attacked the Mandan.145 Early 1800s: The Winnebagos fought the Chippewa.146 Before 1806: The Flatheads fought the Blackfeet.147

  *1811: General William Henry Harrison with an army of 1,000 men and some Delaware and Miami scouts was in battle with the Shawnee near the Tippecanoe River in Indiana. About 50 were killed on each side.148

  1812: William Wells, an Indian agent in Indiana, left Chicago (Fort Dearborn) with 30 Miami. The Potawatomis attacked the party, killing Wells and many others.149

  *1813: The Creeks had a civil war. The Lower Creeks, or White Sticks, wanted to cooperate with the settlers, but the Upper Creeks, or Red Sticks, wanted to drive them out.150 After Red Stick attacks upon settlers, an army was authorized by the Tennessee legislature. Led by General Jackson and strengthened by White Sticks, Choctaw, and Cherokee, it made 3 attacks on the Red Stick towns. The Red Stick people were nearly wiped out.151 Jackson learned that some friendly Indians were besieged by the main force of Creeks. He went to their relief. The Creeks lost 290 dead.152 *1813-14: The Chickasaw and the Americans fought the Creek Red Sticks.153

  1814: The Sioux drove the Kiowa out of the Black Hills and drove the Crow from the Powder River country a few years later. The Pawnee also were attacked by the Sioux.154

  *1814: General Jackson and his army defeated the Creeks. He required them to sign a treaty ceding nearly all their land in Alabama and some in Georgia. He then recruited about 1,000 Creek and Choctaw warriors for his campaign against the Florida tribes. William T. Hagan said that “the Indian capacity for self-destruction seemed limitless.”155

  Around 1820: The Delaware fought the Osages.156

  The Sioux conquered the Arikara, the Mandan, and other tribes.157

  1821: Crows stole horses from the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Comanche, and Kiowa and used them to fight.158

  Around 1825-50: The Cheyenne fought the Ute, the Delaware, and other tribes.159

  1829: The Sac and the Fox under Chief Black Hawk had been defeated by an army under General Winfield Scott. The Indians unsuccessfully tried to retreat by several routes. Finally they decided to try to cross the Mississippi into Sioux country. Soldiers and a gunboat killed many of them. Two hundred warriors who reached the west bank were killed or captured by the Sioux.160

  1820s-30s: The Kiowa launched raids on the Caddos, Navajo, Ute, Apache (except the Kiowa-Apache band), Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Osages. Peace accords were reached in the 1830s.161

  1830s: The Shoshoni with the Bannocks fought the Blackfeet and the Crows.162

  1831: The Nez Perce and the Blackfeet fought.163

  Ironically, the arrival of traders into an area sometimes brought about fighting among tribes. They would move to be nearer the traders, thus bringing them into conflict with the tribes already there.164

  1832: Sioux fought the Sac and the Fox at the end of the Black Hawk War.165

  1833: Several removed tribes were attacked by other tribes. The Pawnee removed and were attacked by Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho.166 The Sioux attacked the removed Otoes, Missouri, and Omaha.167 The removed Potawatomis, Ottawas, Chippewa, Winnebagos, Delaware, and Sac and Fox were attacked by other Indians.168

  1837: The army hired Shawnee, Delaware, Kickapoos, Sac and Fox, and Choctaw to fight against the Seminoles.169

  1838: The Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache fought the Cheyenne and Arapaho at the Battle of Wolf Creek.170

  1839: The Apache attacked a large Comanche village at Spring Creek in Texas.

  They killed a number of people in the village, including 5 settlers who had been captured by the Comanche.171 Before 1840: The Arapaho made war with the Shoshoni, Crows, and Sioux.172 Around 1840: The Kickapoos accepted the invitation of the Creeks to settle with them to provide protection from “the wild tribes.”173 1840s: The Kiowa, Comanche, Cheyenne, and Wichitas made war on the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creeks, and Seminoles. The latter were known as the Five Civilized Nations.174

  1847: The Pawnee were attacked by the Sioux, who killed 23. Other Sioux warriors raided the same year. As a result, the Pawnee moved.175

  1848: Because the buffalo were being exterminated, tribes encroached on one another for food. Catholic priest P. J. De Smet wrote that the Plains Indians’ subsistence needs forced them into small bands who, “like hungry wolves,” poached on their neighbors:

  The Sioux must necessarily encroach on the lands of the Arickaras, Crows, Assiniboins, Cheyennes and Pawnees—the Crows and Assiniboins on the Blackfeet and vice versa, and thus endless struggles, and murderous and cruel wars daily perpetrated and multiplied.176

  1848: The Cheyenne and Arapaho fought their old enemies the Ute.177

  Before 1850: The Shoshoni fought the Blackfeet and Crows, sometimes in alliance with the Bannocks.178 1800s: The Cheyenne were driven from their eastern homes by the Cree and the Sioux.179

  1850s: The Shoshoni fought the Blackfeet, the Cheyenne, and the Sioux.180 1850s: A Fox war party attacked a Menominee camp because the Menominees had killed several Fox chiefs.181

  *In the First Seminole War, Jackson’s army, joined by a large number of Creeks, attacked the Seminoles.182 By 1850: The Sioux themselves had been driven westward by the Cree.183

  1851: During the meetings at Fort Laramie, Sioux chief Black Hawk acknowledged the fights between the Sioux on the one hand and the Kiowa and the Crows on the other. He said, “These lands once belonged to the Ki
owas and the Crows, but we whipped these nations out of them, and in this we did what the white men do when they want the lands of the Indians.”184 The Cheyenne and Arapaho again fought the Ute.185

  1855: Comanche fought a group of their old enemies, the Apache.186

  1857: The Sioux fought the Pawnee.187

  1857: The Assiniboine and Cree fought the Blackfeet and Sioux.188

  1857: Mdewakanton Sioux chief Little Crow led his warriors in battle against another division of Sioux, the Wahpekute.189

  1857: The Pimas had fought the Apache for generations.190

  1850s: The Maricopas and the Yumas fought the Mojaves and the Yumas.191 The

  Pimas and the Maricopas fought the Apache and the Yumas.192 1860-64: During the Civil War, the Choctaw and the Chickasaw sided with the Confederacy. Their buildings were burned and their livestock taken by Kansas settlers “and their willing Indian helpers.”193

  1862: The Shawnee, Delaware, and Kickapoos, at the request of Union officers, invaded the Wichita agency, which was being protected by the Tonkawa Indians.

  The Tonka was were almost annihilated.194 *1864: Osage scouts helped the militia during the Sand Creek Massacre. After it was over, some of the scouts dangled Cheyenne scalps from their lances.195

  1865: The Kickapoos fought the Cherokee, the Creeks, and others.196

  1867: The Blackfeet defeated the Gros Ventres and the Crows.197 1867-68: The Cheyenne did battle with their old enemies, the Kaw and the Osages.198

  1868: The Osages fought the Kiowa, Comanche, and other tribes.199

  *1868: The Osages scouted for the army, especially in leading Custer’s troops to Black Kettle’s Cheyenne village at Washita.200 *1869: General Eugene A. Carr led about 450 cavalry and 150 Pawnee scouts under Buffalo Bill against the Sioux and the Cheyenne. At the Battle of Summit Springs, 52 defending Cheyenne were killed.201

 

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