September 2-3 While Strout's company camped at the Jones Cabin, Captain George C. Whitcomb of the
Forest City Home Guard encountered a messenger from Company B. Whitcomb's squad of militia had just escaped a close encounter with a large number of Dakota 12 miles from Forest City, so it was immediately apparent the danger Strout's command was in. Calling for volunteers to warn Capt. Strout, three men answered: Jesse V. Branham, Jr., Thomas G. Holmes, and Albert H. Sperry. Knowing that it would be a long jounery for them in the dark, with a large number of hostile Dakota in the area, Capt. Whitcomb later remarked "I feared I would never see them again.". Silently issuing out several miles from Forest City, the three scouts discovered the camp at 3:00 am, which was unguarded by pickets. Capt. Strout was soon alert to the hostile Dakota which were camped nearby with over 100 warriors. The soldiers, mistakenly issued .62 caliber balls for their .58 caliber muskets, had to quickly whittle down 20 bullets per man before departing.
Battle of Acton As Strout's command headed south along the west side of
Long Lake, soldiers noticed the glistening of gun barrels in the distance. Strout initially believed this to be a relief column; this was not the case. It was Little Crow's smaller band of 35 men lurking in the wheatfields near Kellys Bluff. Scouts ahead of the column on Kelly's Bluff soon received gunfire and war cries of the enemy as they burst forward. While fighting on the lower ground, two soldiers were killed and several more were wounded, including scout Jesse Braham, who received a bullet to his lungs. Walker Among Stones' warriors evened the odds by rushing on the column's rear. Sergeant Michael Kenna took twenty men and charged with fixed bayonets up the bluff; giving time for the rest of the men to come up and fight from higher ground. Once all of Strout's command was in position, the only thing left to do was to decide on whether to fall back on Hutchinson or fight outnumbered on the Bluff. Some scouts, including Albert H. DeLong, a well-known local frontiersman, already left the field in an effort to bring reinforcements from Hutchinson. As his remaining forces rallied, Strout placed his men on both flanks of the wagon train. Before long, they continued under fire down the bluff toward
Cedar Mills. A third man was killed and several more wounded as the company advanced down the trail. The drivers, terrified, nearly left the wounded behind. Company B soon reached Cedar Mills. There, the column was once again attacked in the front, rear, and the flanks by Dakota fighting both on foot and horseback. Food and supplies loaded in the wagons were dumped in exchange for speed. Despite their lack of training and experience, the Minnesotans fought well and maintained their formation around the wagons. The
Santee-Sioux then circled around once more to the rear of the column, targeting the wagons and sewing panic among many of Strout's men. Two straggling wagons were lost, but the rest were kept out of reach as the hungry Dakota plundered them for food supplies. Strout quickly rallied his men and finally broke free of the encirclement. Reportedly, Little Crow observed the breakthrough on a fence line while bullets passed by him. The rear of the embattled company continued to be harassed in a six-hour running skirmish along the final eight miles to
Hutchinson. Help would come from a column of militia under DeLong along the way. == Aftermath ==