In 1867 and 1868, General
George Crook led companies from the
1st Cavalry Regiment and
8th Cavalry Regiment, mounted infantry from the
9th Infantry Regiment and 23rd Infantry Regiment, and Indian scouts from the
Wasco and
Warm Springs tribes in a successful campaign against Northern Paiute bands in eastern Oregon and northern
California in part of the conflict known as the
Snake War. Camp Harney was one of the outposts used to resupply Crook's troops during the campaign. The Indian raids in eastern Oregon ended in 1869 after a treaty was signed by General Crook and Wewawewa, the chief of the area's dominant Paiute band. The treaty-signing ceremony was held at Fort Harney. In 1872, the local Paiute bands were settled on a reservation north of
Malheur Lake in eastern Oregon. Camp Harney was within the reservation boundary. The camp housed Army troops assigned to guard the reservation from white trespassers and to keep the Paiutes from leaving. Despite the Army's presence, white settlers used reservation lands for grazing. This unchecked encroachment helped ignite the Bannock War in 1878. During the Bannock War, Camp Harney once again served as an important Army supply depot and military headquarters. The camp was in the center of the conflict area and several newspapers reported that Camp Harney was in imminent danger of being overrun by Native American warriors. However, the US Army forces under General
Oliver O. Howard quickly defeated the
Bannocks and Paiutes engaged in the uprising. By January 1879, there were 543 Bannock and Paiute prisoners being held at Camp Harney. After the war, the prisoners were resettled on the
Yakama Indian Reservation in the
Washington Territory, north of the Malheur reservation. The Army officially changed the name of the post to
Fort Harney on 5 April 1879. However, without a reservation to guard, there was no reason to maintain the post. As a result, Fort Harney was abandoned on 13 June 1880. On 13 September 1882, the Malheur reservation lands were officially returned to the public domain except for the Fort Harney site which was retained by the Army. The Army returned the parcel to the public domain on 2 March 1889. After the fort was abandoned, local settlers dismantled the buildings, using much of the materiel to build up the nearby town of Harney City. Today, nothing remains of Fort Harney except a small cemetery. == Fort infrastructure ==