Although Doane was involved with various Indian affairs and events for most of his U.S. Army career, he played a role in two major
Indian campaigns and a peripheral role in the aftermath of another.
Battle of the Little Bighorn In early 1877, Doane was placed in command of the
Crow Indian scouts under the command of Colonel
Nelson A. Miles. Working with the Crows, Doane was instrumental in gaining their allegiance to the U.S. Army during the Nez Perce campaign. Immediately after the ill-fated
Battle of the Little Bighorn, Doane and his troop were instrumental in moving survivors of Major
Marcus Reno's forces to safety and medical care. In June 1877, a year after the battle, Doane along with his troop of Crow Indian scouts and Lt Colonel Michael Sheridan visited the battleground to recover remains. Of the remains recovered was that of Colonel
George Armstrong Custer, who was later buried at West Point.
Nez Perce War In August and September 1877, Doane and his Crow Indian scouts played a key role in the ultimate capture of
Chief Joseph and the
Nez Perce during the
Nez Perce War. Shortly after Chief Joseph's escape from the
Battle of the Big Hole, the Nez Perce moved into Yellowstone. Doane and his scouts blocked their retreat down the
Yellowstone River and forced Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce to escape east via the
Clarks Fork Yellowstone River. This ultimately put the Nez Perce within striking distance of Colonel Miles's forces. Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce surrendered to Miles near the Canada–US border in October 1877.
Geronimo campaign In September 1884, Lieutenant Doane was finally promoted to Captain Doane and transferred from Fort Maginnis, Montana to the Presidio, San Francisco. Life was good, relative to Montana, for the Doanes in California. However, in early 1885, a
Chiricahua Apache,
Geronimo, had gone
off-reservation and began causing trouble in southern
Arizona Territory. In December 1885, the Army, needing additional troops in the territory, assigned Doane's Company A from the Presidio and others to
Fort Bowie, near present-day
Willcox, Arizona, under the overall command of General
George Crook and later in 1886, under the command of General Miles of the Plains campaigns. Doane's Company A eventually wound up at an outpost in the
Dragoon Mountains near the Cochise Stronghold. From there, his company under the command of Second Lieutenant Lloyd M. Brett, got involved in an epic pursuit of Geronimo's forces. Doane did not participate because of personal reasons. In September 1886, Geronimo surrendered to General Miles and the campaign was over. By mid-October, Doane's company was back at the Presidio. Doane's personal ambitions for involvement in the administration of Yellowstone were one of the casualties of this campaign. In August 1886, the
Secretary of the Interior asked the U.S. Army to take over administration of the park to curb poaching and vandalism. Doane had long lobbied for such administration and hoped he would be an intimate part of it. However, because of funding reasons, the U.S. Army chose a troop from close by Fort Custer to take over the park in August 1886. Because he was in Arizona, Doane and his company were not considered for the job. ==Inventor==