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Sand Creek Massacre
White Flag Slaughter
Many have heard of the unjust slaughter of Indian men, women and
children at Wounded Knee, but fewer know of the equally unjust slaughter
of men, women and children at Sand Creek.
The Sand Creek Massacre
took place the dawn of November 29, 1864 on the Sand Creek reservation
in South Eastern Colorado. More than two hundred Cheyenne men, women
and children were killed on a reservation where they were told they would
be safe.
1851--The Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851, guaranteed the Cheyenne a large
area of Western Kansas and Eastern Colorado.
In 1859 Gold was discovered in Boulder Colorado, beginning the Pike's
Peak gold rush. The discovery of gold brought an estimated 100,000 gold
seekers to the to the Rockies. This led to serious white encroachments
on Cheyenne lands.
Rather than protect the Cheyenne from the whites as the Fort Larmie Treaty
of 1851 said it would do, the Government sought to resolve the problem by
demanding that the Cheyenne give up all of their lands with the exception
of the small Sand Creek Reservation.
A small band Southern Cheyenne of about three hundred were sectioned
into an area known as the Sand Creek Reservation. Located in Southeastern
Colorado. This band of Southern Cheyenne were led by thier chief Black
Kettle.
Black Kettle believed that white and red could co-exist with each other.
Though many broken promises and attacks on his life, he still believed that
his tribe could obtain peace with honor and co-exisit with the white man.
In 1861 fearing that overwhelming U.S. military power might result in an even
less favorable settlement, Black Kettle agreed to a new treaty and did what he
could to see that the Cheyenne obeyed its provisions.
The lands given as the Sand Creek reservation could not feed and clothe the
tribe. The barren land was unsuitable for growing crops or supporting enough
wildlife to feed the tribe. It was a breeding ground for epidemic diseases
which soon swept through the Cheyenne encampments.
By 1862 the nearest herd of Buffalo was over 200 miles away. Many of the
young men began leaving the reservation, looking for a way to care for their
families. They began to prey upon cattle of local settlers and passing
wagon trains.
One such raid so angered the Whites that they sent the Military to investigate
and patrol the area. A hunting party of Cheyenne saw the military approching
and rode up to meet them when the military opened fire on the band of
Cheyenne. None of the Indians in this band had participated in the raid.
This incident touched off an uncoordinated Indian uprising across the Great
Plains, as Indian tribes from the Comanche in the South to the Lakota in the
North took advantage of the army's involvement in the Civil War by striking
back at those who had settled upon their lands.
Black Kettle, however,
understood white military too well to support the cause of war. He spoke
with the local military commander at Fort Weld in Colorado and believed he
had secured a promise of safety in exchange for leading his band back to
the Sand Creek reservation.
On the morning of November 29, 1864 Colonel John Chivington, leader of
the Third Colorado Volunteers discourged by the fact that his troops had been
unsuccessful in finding a Cheyenne band to fight, learned that Black Kettle
had returned to Sand Creek. He attacked the unsuspecting encampment
while the peaceful tribe slept..
Over two hundred Cheyenne died in the ensuing massacre, many of them
women and children, and after the slaughter, Chivington's men sexually
mutilated and scalped many of the dead, later exhibiting their trophies to
cheering crowds in Denver.
Black Kettle survived the raid, even after returning to resuce his seriously
injured wife. He still believed peace was possible between the white man
and his people.
In 1868 almost 4 years to the day of the Sand Creek Massacre three columns
of troops met to launch a winter campaign against the Cheyenne. With the
Seventh Calvery, commanded by George Armstrong Custer selected to led
the attack. Custer following the tracks of a small hunting party through the
snow located an encampment of Cheyenne, and attacked at dawn.
This encampment was Black Kettle's village. Setting well within the
Cheyenne reservation boundries and with a white flag flying from his teepee.
On November 27, 1868 Custer's troop charged the village, women and
children running for their lives.
Black Kettle along with his wife fell near the rivers edge their bodies riddled
with bullets, and the 7th Calvery rode right over top of their bodies, pausing
long enough to take the scalp of the man who always preached peace and
believed that white and red could live together.
Go to "They are not vanishing"
Til norsk utgave "De forsvinner ikke"
Last updated Mar. 18. 2002
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