French explorers encountered the Washita River in the early 18th century while traveling upstream on the
Red River and thought it was the same stream described by friendly
Choctaw tribesmen as the
Ouachita River. They soon found that it appeared very different from descriptions of the Ouachita, and named it the
Faux Ouachita (False Ouachita). The name was later referred to by English-speaking American settlers as False Washita. After the
American Civil War, Americans referred to the river as the Washita. In 1842,
General and future
President Zachary Taylor established
Fort Washita near the lower end of the river to protect resettled citizens of the
Choctaw and
Chickasaw nations, who had been removed from the Southeastern United States, from the
Plains Indians inhabiting the area. The fort was about above the confluence of the Washita and Red rivers. During the later
Indian Wars, the
Battle of Washita River (also known as the Washita River Massacre) occurred at dawn on November 27, 1868. Lt. Col.
George Armstrong Custer’s
7th U.S. Cavalry attacked
Black Kettle’s
Cheyenne village on the Washita River near present-day
Cheyenne, Oklahoma, killing many inhabitants. Capt. Wyllys Lyman's wagon train was besieged by Indians near the Washita in Hemphill County on September 9–14, 1874. ==See also==