United States troops were called into action based on the settlers' complaints. Heading the campaign against the Sheepeaters was Troop G of the
1st Cavalry, led by Captain
Reuben Bernard; Company C and a detachment of Company K from the
2nd Infantry Regiment under the command of First Lieutenant
Henry Catley; and 20 Indian scouts commanded by Lieutenant
Edward Farrow of the
21st Infantry. The troops were all headed toward
Payette Lake, near present-day
McCall; Bernard headed north from
Fort Boise, Catley headed South from
Camp Howard, and Farrow headed East from the
Umatilla Agency. Throughout the campaign, the troops faced difficulty traveling through rough terrain. The first segment of the campaign, from May 31 to September 8, was through the Salmon River, dubbed the "River of No Return" as it was barely navigable. By August 20, a Sheepeater raiding party of ten to fifteen Indians attacked the troops as they guarded a
pack train at
Soldier Bar on
Big Creek. Those who defended the pack train included Corporal
Charles B. Hardin along with six troopers and the chief packer, James Barnes. They managed to drive the Sheepeaters off with only one casualty, Private Harry Eagan of the 2nd Infantry. By October, the campaign ended once Lieutenants W.C. Brown and Edward S. Farrow, along with a group of twenty
Umatilla scouts, negotiated the surrender of the Sheepeaters. ==See also==