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View Full Version : Good Morning...Indians massacred on the Wash1ta



Okla-homey
11/27/2006, 06:26 AM
Note: the anti-cussword software thinks Wash1ta is a cussword. Sorry.

November 27, 1868 Custer massacres Cheyenne on Wash1ta River

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138 years ago today, without even bothering to identify the village or do any reconnaissance, Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer leads an early morning attack on a band of peaceful Cheyenne living with Chief Black Kettle near present day Cheyenne, Oklahoma.

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Giant dillweed Custer in his winter fighting duds

Custer badly needed a "win" to restore his tarnished reputation. Convicted of desertion and mistreatment of soldiers at a court martial earlier that year, the government had suspended Custer from rank and command for one year.

See, in late 1867, Custer had decided he needed to visit his wife and undertook a cruelly led two hundred mile forced march to do so, absenting himself from his post without authorization and killing dozens of horses and injuring several soldiers permanently on the "booty" march. (Note: It was not at the time officially referred to as a "booty" march.)

http://img215.imageshack.us/img215/9393/wwwwwwwwwwwwuntitleddf7.png (http://imageshack.us)
Custer's wife Libby.

Ten months into his punishment, in September 1868, Gen. Phil Sheridan reinstated Custer and gave him orders to lead a campaign against Cheyenne who had been making raids in Kansas and Oklahoma the previous summer. Phil Sheridan was Custer's "sponsor" and the man who literally kept Custer from being dismissed from the Army after his "booty march" stunt.

Sheridan was frustrated by the inability of his other commanders to find and engage the enemy, and despite his poor disciplinary record and unpopularity with the men of the 7th Cavalry, Custer was was a bold fighter -- and Custer desperately wanted to prove he still had the "stuff."

Sheridan determined that a campaign in winter might prove more effective, since the Indians might be caught off-guard while in their permanent camps. On November 26, Custer located a large village of Cheyenne encamped near the Wash1ta River, just outside of present-day Cheyenne, Oklahoma.

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Chief Black Kettle of the Southern Cheyenne was one of the most tragic characters of the plains of Colorado and Kansas during the turbulent 1860's. He survived the first attack on his peaceful camp in 1864 by Chivington's "100days-er" Colorado militia only to have the same kind of bad luck on the Wash1ta River in Oklahoma at the hands of George A. Custer four years later.
Black Kettle died along with his wife Medicine Woman (who was wounded several times in the Sand Creek Massacre). In both of these so called military operations Black Kettle flew a large US flag (6 foot by 12 foot) along with a white flag of truce to show his peaceful intentions.

Custer did not attempt to identify which group of Cheyenne was in the village, or to make even a cursory reconnaissance of the situation. Had he done so, Custer would have discovered that they were peaceful people and the village was on reservation soil, where the commander of Fort Cobb had guaranteed them safety. There was even a white flag flying from one of the main dwellings, indicating that the tribe was actively avoiding conflict.

Having surrounded the village the night before, at dawn Custer called for the regimental band to play "Garry Owen," which signaled four columns of troopers to charge into the sleeping village. Outnumbered and caught unaware, scores of Cheyenne were killed in the first 15 minutes of the "battle," though a small number of the warriors managed to escape to the trees and return fire.

Within a few hours, the village was destroyed--the soldiers had killed 103 Cheyenne, including the peaceful Black Kettle and many women and children.

Despite its one-sidedness, and the fact the people Custer attacked were not hostile nor were they "off the rez," the "victory" was hailed as the first substantial Regular Army victory in the Indian wars. The Battle of the Wash1ta helped to restore Custer's reputation.

However, Custer's habit of boldly charging Indian encampments of unknown strength would eventually lead him and hundreds of his innocent troopers to their deaths at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

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You can visit the battle site now administered by the National Park Service. Its about 150 miles from downtown OKC. From I-40 take exit 20 (Sayre) and travel north on US-283 to Cheyenne. Park Headquarters and The Black Kettle Museum are located near the intersection of US-283 and SH-47. The site is 2 miles west of Cheyenne on SH-47A. Follow the National Historic Site signs to site.

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Panoramic overlook at the battlefield

There are interpretive markers and rangers at the site, due north of which, is a prominence upon which it is believed Custer sat his horse while his troopers finished destroying the village and killing everyone.

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Link to Wash1ta Battlefield National Historic Site:
http://www.nps.gov/waba/

It's open everyday, dawn to dusk, except Christmas and New Years Day

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Xstnlsooner
11/27/2006, 08:50 AM
One of the guys I work with had the best bumper sticker on
a truck he used to have. It said "Custer had it coming!"

Nuff said!

TUSooner
11/27/2006, 10:27 AM
One of the guys I work with had the best bumper sticker on
a truck he used to have. It said "Custer had it coming!"

Nuff said!

I used to see lots of those when I lived in OK; glad to see they are still around. Nobody deserved to killed in a nasty way more than Custer.

BTW, I'm kinda surprised they still call the Historic Site a "Battlefield" considering that there was not really a battle. This is a chance for "revisionist history" to get it right.

picasso
11/27/2006, 04:45 PM
props Homey.

n8v_ndn
11/27/2006, 05:06 PM
Some other favorite Indian sayings about Custer:

Custer got Siouxed!

Custer wore Arrow shirts

and my personal fave...

Custer Died for Your Sins

picasso
11/27/2006, 05:36 PM
"What do you think, Mule Skinner?"