Red Cloud's War Red Cloud's War was the name the U.S. Army gave to a series of conflicts fought with Native American Plains tribes in the
Wyoming and
Montana Territories. The battles were waged between the Northern
Cheyenne, allied with
Lakota and
Arapaho bands, against the Army from 1866 to 1868. In December 1866, the Native American allies attacked and defeated a United States unit in what they would call the
Fetterman Massacre (or the Battle of the Hundred Slain), which resulted in the most U.S. casualties of any Plains battle up to that point. Captain
William J. Fetterman was sent from
Fort Phil Kearny with two civilians and 79 cavalry and infantrymen to chase away a small Native American war party that had attacked a wood-gathering party days before. Captain Frederick Brown accompanied Fetterman; the two were confident in their troops and anxious to go to battle with the Native Americans. They disobeyed orders to stay behind the Lodge Trail Ridge and pursued a small decoy band of warriors led by a Native American on an injured horse. The decoy was the prominent warrior
Crazy Horse. Fetterman and his troops followed the decoy into an ambush by more than 2,000 Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho. Combined Native American forces suffered only 14 casualties, while they killed the entire 81-man U.S. detachment. Following this battle, a U.S. peace commission toured the Plains in 1867 to gather information to help bring about peace among the tribes and with the U.S. Finding that the Native Americans had been provoked by white encroachment and competition for resources, the commission recommended assigning definite territories to the Plains tribes. The Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, Arapaho, and other bands settled for peace with the U.S. under the
Treaty of Fort Laramie. The U.S. agreed to abandon its forts and withdraw from Lakota territory.
Treaty of 1868 , surrounded by the Indian delegation of braves and squaws [sic], addressing a New York audience on the wrongs done to his people” The treaty established the
Great Sioux Reservation, covering the territory of West River, west of the Missouri River in present-day Nebraska (which had been admitted as a state in 1867), and including parts of South Dakota. Uneasy relations between the expanding United States and the natives continued. In 1870, Red Cloud visited Washington D.C. and met with Commissioner of Indian Affairs
Ely S. Parker (a
Seneca and U.S. Army General), and President
Ulysses S. Grant. In 1871, the government established the
Red Cloud Agency on the
Platte River, downstream from
Fort Laramie. By 1874 it had been moved to Nebraska, with
Fort Robinson located nearby. Red Cloud took his band to the agency (a predecessor of the
Native American reservation), ready to receive government aid. Yet that aid was usually less than stipulated, and usually inferior in quality. According to Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa) Red Cloud was the last to sign "..having refused to do so until all of the forts within their territory should be vacated. All of his demands were acceded to, the new road abandoned, the garrisons withdrawn, and the new treaty distinctly stated that the Black Hills and the Big Horn were Indian countries, set apart for their perpetual occupancy and that no white man should enter that region without the consent of the Sioux. ... Scarcely was this treaty signed, however, when gold was discovered in the Black Hills, and the popular cry was: "Remove the Indians!"... The government, at first, entered some small protest, just enough to "save its face"... but there was no serious attempt to prevent the wholesale violation of the treaty and the loss of the Black Hills."
Great Sioux War of 1876 , Red Cloud, Big Road,
Little Wound, Black Crow; Standing, L to R: Red Bear,
They Fear Even His Horses, Good Voice, Ring Thunder, Iron Crow, White Tail, Young Spotted Tail, ca. 1860–1880 Red Cloud settled at the agency with his band by the fall of 1873. He soon became embroiled in a controversy with the new Indian agent, Dr. John J. Saville. In 1874, Lieutenant Colonel
George Custer led a reconnaissance mission into Sioux territory that reported gold in the
Black Hills, an area held sacred by the local Native Americans. Previously, the army had unsuccessfully tried to keep miners out of the region, and the threat of violence grew. In May 1875, Lakota delegations headed by Red Cloud,
Spotted Tail, and
Lone Horn traveled to Washington in an attempt to persuade President Grant to honor existing treaties and stem the flow of miners into their lands. The Native Americans met on various occasions with Grant, Secretary of the Interior
Delano, and Commissioner of Indian Affairs
Smith. He told them on May 27 that Congress was ready to resolve the matter by paying the tribes $25,000 for their land and resettling them into
Indian Territory. The delegates refused to sign such a treaty, with Spotted Tail saying about the proposal: When I was here before, the President gave me my country, and I put my stake down in a good place, and there I want to stay. ... You speak of another country, but it is not my country; it does not concern me, and I want nothing to do with it. I was not born there. ... If it is such a good country, you ought to send the white men now in our country there and let us alone. Although Red Cloud was unsuccessful in finding a peaceful solution, he did not take part in the
Great Sioux War of 1876, which was led by
Tȟašúŋke Witkó (
Crazy Horse) and
Tȟatȟáŋka Íyotake (
Sitting Bull). In the fall of 1877, the Red Cloud Agency was removed to the upper
Missouri River. The following year, it was removed to the forks of the
White River in present-day South Dakota, where it was renamed the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. ==Later life and death==