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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Fri Jan 9, 2015, 11:16 PM Jan 2015

136 Years Ago Today - Northern Cheyenne Breakout From Fort Robinson, NE

Just about the last of the Indian Wars, and arguably the most tragic among a parade of tragedies . . . About 350 left Oklahoma where they were dying left and right from disease. About 150 were taken captive to Fort Robinson; most of them escaped on the night of the 9th, with a little more than half surviving the next ten days.


Dull Knife

The Northern Cheyenne tribe had been removed from their traditional home to a reservation with their Southern Cheyenne kinsmen in Indian Territory (later Oklahoma) in 1877. The following year, after suffering from poor food and diseases and having been denied permission to return north, more than 350 Cheyennes decided to break away from the reservation. Under the leadership of chiefs Dull Knife and Little Wolf, the group moved northward through Kansas. Several clashes with army troops and civilians occurred, with the Indians each time able to elude recapture. Eventually they were able to slip through a cordon along the Union Pacific rail line in Nebraska and resume their northerly trek.

Somewhere in Nebraska the group broke up. Little Wolf and his followers wanted to continue moving north and join the Lakota leader Sitting Bull in Canada. For the time being, they went into hiding in the vast Sand Hills. The second group decided to try to obtain refuge with the Lakota chief Red Cloud, who was a friend of Dull Knife. With this in mind, they set out for the Red Cloud Agency. Unknown to Dull Knife, however, Red Cloud and his people had been moved into Dakota Territory, and only soldiers remained near the old agency.

South of present-day Chadron, Nebraska, an army patrol intercepted Dull Knife and his people, and on October 24, 1878, escorted them into Fort Robinson. A total of 149 men, women, and children were taken into custody and confined in the cavalry barracks. Initially the Cheyennes were free to leave the barracks as long as all were present for evening roll call. Several of the women were even employed at the fort, and this arrangement continued into December 1878.

During this period Dull Knife requested that the Cheyennes be allowed either to join Red Cloud at his agency or to remain in their former northern Plains homeland. Attempts were also being made by Kansas officials to extradite certain members of the group to stand trial for alleged crimes committed during their flight through that state. Washington officials insisted on the return of the Cheyennes to Oklahoma.

By late December the Cheyennes were prisoners in the barracks, no longer allowed to come and go. The army was under orders to pressure them into returning south, and the Cheyennes were equally determined never to go back to the southern reservation. By the night of January 9, 1879, the impasse had come to a point of crisis, and the Cheyennes broke out of the barracks. Weapons they had hidden earlier were used to shoot the guards, and while some of the men held off the soldiers, the remaining Cheyennes fled in the dark.


Frank Leslie's Illustrated, Feb. 15, 1879, depicted the Cheyenne Outbreak. [NSHS 11055-2076]

A running fight ensued along the White River valley between the fleeing Cheyennes and the pursuing soldiers. At least twenty-six Cheyenne warriors were killed that night and some eighty women and children were recaptured. Those still free eluded the soldiers until January 22, when most were killed or taken prisoner at a camp on Antelope Creek northwest of Fort Robinson. In all, sixty-four Native Americans and eleven soldiers lost their lives during the protracted escape attempt. Dull Knife and part of his family were among the few that managed to get away, and they eventually made their way to refuge with Red Cloud.

EDIT

http://www.nebraskahistory.org/sites/fortrob/outbreak.htm

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136 Years Ago Today - Northern Cheyenne Breakout From Fort Robinson, NE (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2015 OP
My family and I have been to Fort Robinson several times, they have a nice TwilightGardener Jan 2015 #1
Ghosts, indeed . . . hatrack Jan 2015 #2
Yes, it is beautiful. I have my own photos of those same eroded bluffs-- TwilightGardener Jan 2015 #3

TwilightGardener

(46,416 posts)
1. My family and I have been to Fort Robinson several times, they have a nice
Sat Jan 10, 2015, 12:44 AM
Jan 2015

campground, museums, hiking trails--it's a very cool place out in the middle of nowhere in the panhandle. The history of the fort is really interesting, in addition to the Native American aspect--I believe some WW2 German POW's were held there at some point during the war. The campground isn't ever crowded, and at night it's just you and your campfire, the vast plains, and some angry/sad ghosts.

hatrack

(59,587 posts)
2. Ghosts, indeed . . .
Sat Jan 10, 2015, 12:58 AM
Jan 2015


But also one of the most beautiful places in the Midwest . . .



Breathtakingly big country, and lovely - once you go, you'll understand why the Lakota fought so hard for it.





TwilightGardener

(46,416 posts)
3. Yes, it is beautiful. I have my own photos of those same eroded bluffs--
Sat Jan 10, 2015, 02:25 AM
Jan 2015

the lightning photo is a good reminder of why it's a little scary to sit in a small RV in western Nebraska when the supercells blow up, though.

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