In August 1865, the 4th Cavalry was sent to Texas. At various times during the next thirteen years, units from its twelve companies occupied military posts between the
Rio Grande and
Jacksboro, and between
San Antonio and
San Angelo. {See
Fifth Military District for reports of the 4th Cavalry in Texas between 1867-1869}. Before 1871, the operations of the regiment were limited to guarding the mail and settlements against Indians and to desultory attempts to overtake bands of Indian raiders. The regiment's commander during this period, Col. Lawrence Pike Graham, never had to lead a major campaign, and none of the regiment's fourteen skirmishes with Indians was of major significance. However, in December 1870,
Colonel Ranald S. Mackenzie was assigned command of the 4th Cavalry, with orders to put a stop to
Comanche and
Kiowa raids along the Texas frontier. On 25 February 1871, Mackenzie took command of the 4th Cavalry at
Fort Concho. A month later, he moved the regiment's headquarters to
Fort Richardson, near Jacksboro; some companies of the 4th remained at
Fort Griffin and
Fort Concho. In May, while
General William T. Sherman, then the commanding general of the army, was at
Fort Richardson, the
Kiowas brutally mutilated some teamsters from a
wagon train on nearby Salt Creek Prairie (see
Warren Wagon Train Raid). A few days later at
Fort Sill, Sherman had three leaders of the raid,
Satanta (White Bear),
Satank (Sitting Bear), and Addo-etta (Big Tree), arrested and had
Mackenzie return them to
Jacksboro to stand trial for murder. On the way, an enlisted trooper killed Satank when he tried to escape; White Bear and Big Tree were later sentenced to life imprisonment. In August 1871, Mackenzie led an expedition into Indian Territory against the Comanches and Kiowas who had left the agency, but he was later ordered to return to Texas. He then led eight companies of the 4th Cavalry and two companies of the
11th U.S Infantry, about 600 men, in search of
Quahadi Comanches, who had refused to go onto the reservation and were plundering the Texas frontier. On 10 October, he skirmished with a group of them in
Blanco Canyon, near the site of present
Crosbyton, but the entire band escaped across the plains. The following summer, Mackenzie, with six companies of the 4th Cavalry, renewed his search for the Quahadis. After establishing his supply camp on the Freshwater Fork of the
Brazos River (now the
White River) southeast of present Crosbyton, Mackenzie with five companies of cavalry followed a cattle trail across the unexplored
High Plains into the
New Mexico Territory and returned by another well-watered
Comanchero road from
Fort Bascom, near the site of present
Tucumcari, New Mexico, to the site of present Canyon. At the head of 222 cavalrymen on 29 September, he surprised and destroyed Chief Mow-way's village of Quahadi and
Kotsoteka Comanches on the North Fork of the Red River about six miles (10 km) east of the site of present-day
Lefors, Texas. An estimated 52 Indians were killed and 124 captured, with a loss of 3 cavalrymen killed and 3 wounded. For almost a year, both the Kiowas and Comanches remained at peace. In March 1873, Mackenzie and five companies (A, B, C, E, and K) of the 4th Cavalry were transferred to
Fort Clark with orders to put an end to the
Mexican-based Kickapoo and
Apache depredations in Texas, which had cost an alleged $48 million (~$ in ). On 18 May 1873, Mackenzie, with five companies of the 4th Cavalry, crossed the Rio Grande into Mexico; they then surprised and burned three villages of the raiders near Remolino,
Coahuila; the cavalrymen killed nineteen Indians and captured forty-one, with a loss of one trooper killed and two wounded. The soldiers recrossed the Rio Grande into Texas at daybreak the next morning, with some of the men having ridden an estimated in 49 hours. The raid and an effective system of border patrols brought temporary peace to the area. The John Wayne movie
Rio Grande (part of
John Ford's Cavalry Trilogy) is loosely based on this incident.
Red River War When the Southern Plains Indians opened the
Red River War in June 1874, the
Grant administration discarded its
Quaker peace policy and authorized the military to take control of the reservations and subdue all hostile Indians. General Philip H. Sheridan, commander of the Division of the Missouri, ordered five military expeditions to converge on their hideouts along the upper Red River country. In the ensuing campaign, the 4th Cavalry was the most successful. On 26–27 September, it staved off a Comanche attack at the head of Tule Canyon, and, on the morning of 28 September, descended by a narrow trail to the bottom of Palo Duro Canyon. There, it destroyed five Comanche, Kiowa, and Cheyenne villages, including large quantities of provisions, and captured 1,424 horses and mules, of which it slaughtered 1,048 at the head of Tule Canyon. Afterward, Mackenzie, with detachments of the regiment, made two other expeditions onto the High Plains. On 3 November, near the site of Tahoka, in their last fight with the Comanches, the cavalrymen killed two and captured nineteen Indians. In the spring of 1875, Mackenzie and elements of the 4th Cavalry from various posts in Texas were sent to Fort Sill to take control of the Southern Plains Indians. Meanwhile, the Indians in
Mexico had renewed their marauding in Texas. In 1878, General Sherman, at the insistence of the Texans, transferred Mackenzie and six companies of the 4th Cavalry to Fort Clark. This time, Mackenzie led a more extensive expedition into Mexico, restored a system of patrols, and reestablished peace in the devastated region of South Texas. Outside Texas, Mackenzie and the 4th Cavalry administered and controlled the Kiowa-Comanche and the Cheyenne-Arapaho reservations for several years, and, after the defeat of
George Armstrong Custer's command at the
Battle of the Little Bighorn in June 1876, forced
Crazy Horse and his band of
Sioux and the Northern Cheyennes to surrender. In the autumn of 1879, Mackenzie, with six companies of the 4th Cavalry, subdued the hostile
Utes in Southern
Colorado without firing a shot, and in August 1880 forced them to move to a reservation in
Utah Territory.
Apache War Immediately thereafter, the 4th Cavalry was transferred to
Arizona Territory, where Mackenzie was to assume full command of all military forces in the department and subdue the hostile
Apaches. Within less than a month, the Apaches had surrendered or fled to Mexico, and on 30 October, Mackenzie and the 4th Cavalry were transferred to the new District of New Mexico. By 1 November 1882, when W. B. Royall replaced Mackenzie as colonel, the 4th Cavalry had forced the White Mountain Apaches,
Jicarilla Apaches,
Navajos, and
Mescaleros to remain peacefully on their respective reservations. From 1884 to 1886, the 4th Cavalry again operated against the Apaches in Arizona and helped capture
Geronimo. Particularly noteworthy was B troop's pursuit of Geronimo into Northern Mexico, led by Capt. Lawton and Surgeon Leonard Wood. Sergeant James T. Daniels of the 4th Cavalry was a recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions during the
Cherry Creek Campaign in March 1890 against the Apaches in Arizona. In 1890, the regimental headquarters was moved to
Fort Walla Walla,
Washington. The regiment split, with half going to the Department of the Columbia, and half to the Department of California at the
Presidio of San Francisco. The California contingent provided the first superintendent and park guardians for the
General Grant,
Sequoia, and
Yosemite National Parks in 1891. ==Philippine Insurrection==