Chapter 14: Consequences (continued)
The subsequent history of the Nez Perce prisoners in
the Indian Territory was just as tragic. Joseph and his people longed to
return to the mountains of their homeland. In 1879, when the tribesmen
took up lands west of the Ponca tribe in the Cherokee Outlet to practice
agriculture and ranching, Joseph visited Washington, D.C., to lobby to
that end. He published his views, translated into polished English by an
unknown person, in the popular North American Review, in which he
stated: "I cannot understand how the Government sends out a man to fight
us, as it did General Miles, and then breaks his word. Such a Government
has something wrong with it." [58] Miles
worked hard to remedy the obvious injustice meted to the Nez Perces,
including writing arguments to President Rutherford B. Hayes and
Interior Secretary Carl Schurz in favor of their removal back to their
homeland. In addition, the Presbyterian Church and the Indian Rights
Association labored on behalf of the people. Finally, Miles's own
promotion in 1880 to command the Department of the Columbia worked in
favor of bringing the tribesmen back to the Northwest. But the
bureaucratic machinery moved slowly, and it was not until 1885 that
legislation appropriating removal funds paved the way for the return of
the Nez Perces. To protect themselves from legal indictments in Idaho as
well as from physical injury by whites living there, 150 of the
peopleincluding Josephopted to go to the Colville
Reservation in Washington Territory; the remaining 118 went to the
Lapwai Reservation. On May 22, 1885, the 268 peopleall who were
leftboarded a train at Arkansas City to start homeward. Once on
the train, "the Indians commenced howling and crying" in sorrowful
manifestation of leaving more than one hundred of their dead behind in
"Eeikish Pah""the Hot Place." [59]
For many of the Nez Perces, Bear's Paw was not the
end of their quest for freedom from the U.S. Army. Those who made it out
of the village at that place and into Canada found extended respite from
their immediate troubles. For many, however, the experience of living in
juxtaposition with the Sioux was less than appealing, and the
uncertainty of the whereabouts and condition of their friends and
relatives captured or killed at Bear's Paw only compounded the feelings
of separation and despair they felt after their long flight. The trek
into the British Possessions ended with small bands of hungry,
impoverished people, some with horses and some without, straggling
across the boundary to seek help and sustenance from the exiled Lakotas.
Evidently, the number of tribesmen who broke away from the Bear's Paw
village between September 30 and October 5 totaled as many as 233,
according to the estimate of Black Eagle, one of those who made his way
north. [60] The wife of Wounded Head
described the ordeal of her party on escaping the Bear's Paw village on
the first day of the fighting:
We mounted horses and left. Only one blanket, I rode
bareback as did the rest. Going quite a distance, we stopped. We
listened to the guns back where they were fighting. I cannot tell the
distance, but we were outside the battle. There we stayed till the
evening drew on. The night darkness came about us, and still we do not
travel further. Not only ourselves, but Chief Joseph's older wife and
daughter are with us. But people are scattered everywhere, hungry,
freezing. Almost naked, they had escaped from the camp when the soldiers
came charging and shooting. Thus we remained overnight. We must not
build a fire. No bedding, cold and chilly, we stood or sat holding our
horses. We cried with misery and loneliness, as we still heard the guns
of the battle. Daylight came, and we moved a little farther down from
that place. . . . Nothing to eat all that day, all that night we
remained there. Though no food nor fire, I grow sleepy. All of us fall
asleep. After awhile we feel as if a blanket is covering us. It is snow.
. . . Four suns in all we are hiding, no food, starving and cold. No
moccasins, I am barefooted. . . . Then we travel toward Sitting Bull's
camp. Moving that fifth day, towards evening the men killed a buffalo
bull. A fire is built. Meat is cooked by roasting, and we have supper. .
. . Next day we come to some Chippewa Indians. They are nice people.
They give us food. I am given a pair of moccasins. Then I feel better.
[61]
Some warriors and their families managed to get away
during the siege, making their way through the soldier lines after dark
and striking north. The warrior Many Wounds claimed to have killed two
soldiers during the day after his escape and to have taken their
clothing to keep warm, giving one of the uniforms to another refugee.
Later, the Crees gave him other clothes. "They told me I would be killed
if found wearing soldier uniform." [62]
Some groups of escapees likely congregated into larger bodies before
crossing into Canada. One North-West Mounted Police official reported
seeing a party of "fifty men, forty women, and a large number of
children, besides about three hundred horses" come in to Sitting Bull's
camp. [63] Certainly one of the largest
groups to get away from Bear's Paw was that headed by White Bird, whose
partyperhaps numbering more than fifty people left the night of
October 5 following Joseph's surrender. [64] They were better prepared for the journey,
but it was nonetheless rigorous. According to Ollokot's widow:
We walked out, leaving many of our friends. Some were
too bad wounded to travel and had to stay. . . . Night drew on as we
left. We had blankets but not too heavy for the traveling. Not enough to
keep us warm when camping. . . . I do not know how long, but it must
have been several days we were on that journey. Two days we had nothing
to eat. Then antelopes were seen, and some of them killed. [65]
In their course north, this party encountered the
Catholic missionary Father J. B. M. Genin with the so-called "Red River
Halfbreeds," or Metis, along Milk River. The priest treated White Bird's
wounded and gave them food before sending them on their way to Canada.
[66]
Because of the bad weather and the fact that the
tribesmen were slowed by the presence of wounded along with many
children among them, besides the fact that they were not at all certain
of the route they followed, the travel into Canada took several days.
After reaching the Lakota encampment, the Nez Perces had trouble
conversing with them, and mostly used sign talk. There was confusion
over the gesture for "water," and when the Nez Perces tried to explain
"stream," meaning Snake Creek, the Sioux thought they meant the Missouri
Rivertoo far distant for a relief force to travel with hope of
accomplishing much. The confusion was rectified after one arriving Nez
Perce explained what was meant in the Crow language, which some Lakotas
understood. [67] The knowledge of the
nearby presence of Miles and his soldiers seems to have whipped up a
flurry of excitement among the Sioux, and Superintendent Walsh issued
stern warnings to the chiefs to rein in their warriors and by no means
cross the line. Many Lakotas believed that Miles's troops were going to
come over and attack them. [68] When White
Bird and some other late arrivals reached their kinsmen already with the
Sioux, they told of the death and destruction at Bear's Paw, of the
killing of the leaders (some by accident), and of Joseph's surrender.
The news resulted in much grieving among the people. [69]
White Bird approached the Lakotas with certain
trepidation, for they were traditional enemies of the Nee-Me-Poo, and he
did not know how his people would be received. The chief later told
Duncan MacDonald that Sitting Bull personally greeted him with a group
of warriors and communicated that he was sorry he had not been aware of
the fighting at Bear's Paw. [70] A small
party continued to the scene of the battle, however, apparently arriving
after the troops and prisoners had departed. One of the group, Peopeo
Tholekt, remembered that "nothing living was seen anywhere on that
field. But we found some of our dead who were unburied, and buried them
as best we could." [71] Then they returned
into Canada. Nez Perce sources suggest that the initial response by the
Sioux to their presence was empathy, for many of their own people had
experienced similar tragedy in their relations with the army. As the
refugees explained what had happened to them, the Sioux witnesses,
including Sitting Bull, broke into sympathetic crying and wailing. [72]
In mid-October, General Terry's much-delayed
entourageescorted by a company of the Seventh Infantry as well as
the three companies of Second Cavalry so recently engaged at Bear's
Pawarrived at the border hopeful of settling difficulties with the
refugee Lakotas who had crossed into Canada in early 1877, during the
closing stages of the Great Sioux War. [73]
While Terry's mission was to convince Sitting Bull to return to the
United States, it was obvious that the recent tribulation of the Nez
Perces dominated the Hunkpapa leader's thinking, and if there had
existed any prospect that the Tetons would return, the specter of
wounded Nez Perces coming among the Sioux fresh from Bear's Pawa
vivid reminder of their own ordealcontributed to dash it away. [74] Any promise of good faith by United States
government authorities had a hollow ring to it. Terry's council with the
tribesmen occurred on October 17 at Fort Walsh. He found the Sioux
disposed against returning and surrendering. Finally, Sitting Bull told
him: "This part of the country does not belong to your people. You
belong on the other side, this side belongs to us." Terry's party went
back to Fort Benton, and the general returned to St. Paul. [75] In their official report of the meeting,
the commissioners concluded: "To the lawless and ill-disposed, to those
who commit offenses against the property and persons of the whites, the
refugee camp will be a secure asylum. . . . We have already an
illustration of this danger in the fact that more than one hundred of
the Nez Perces defeated at Bear's Paw Mountain [sic] are now in Sitting
Bull's camp." [76]
Over the next several weeks and months, the Sioux
shared their tipis with the Nez Perces, giving them food and clothing
until the people could begin to provide for themselves. Eventually, the
Nez Perces raised their own lodges and established an independent camp,
but continued hunting buffalo with the Lakotas, occasionally going below
the international line to kill the beasts. During the winter of 1877-78,
both tribes eked out a marginal existence, forced as they were to share
the game resources with the Gros Ventres, Assiniboines, and other tribes
that hunted the region. [77] There is
evidence, too, that some Nez Perces, together with some of their Lakota
hosts, journeyed as far south as Cow Creek early in November to raise
caches left there following the raid on the stores at Cow Island. And in
December 1877, Sitting Bull together with some Nez Perces traveled from
a large Lakota village on Frenchman's Creek near Milk River to the
Bear's Paw battlefield "and returned with a large quantity of ammunition
which had been cached by [the] Nez Perces previous to their surrender."
Still other Nez Perces were reported to be among the Metis camped along
Milk River. [78]
On October 22, after the excitement had subsided in
Sitting Bull's encampment following the Terry council and after the Nez
Perces had settled into their new environs, Superintendent Walsh met
with them to formalize their presence on British soil. At that time,
White Bird explained what had happened to his people to incite them to
warfare against the whites in Idaho and against the U.S. Army. He told
Walsh that the Nez Perces were undecided about what to do; some hoped to
remain with the Sioux, while others wanted to move farther north to the
Cypress Hills. White Bird movingly concluded that "the white man wanted
the wealth our people possessed; he got it by the destruction of our
people. . . . We have no country, no people, no home." [79] Walsh's impression of White Bird was that
he seemed "a very intelligent man of fine and good judgment, less
diplomatic than [Sitting] Bull but more clear in perception and quicker
in decisiona greater General than Bull." [80] It was clear, however, that the people
were now totally dependent on the Lakotas for their existence and would
remain so as long as they stayed in Canada. Yet rumors circulated
regarding the treatment of the Nez Perces by the Sioux. Colonel Gibbon
wired Sheridan that they were being "whipped and treated as slaves" and
wanted to come back to the United States. [81] And in March 1878, Assistant Commissioner
Acheson G. Irvine of the North-West Mounted Police heard "all the Nez
Perces" were entertaining notions of returning. [82] Father Genin, meanwhile, who was trying to
convince the Sioux to return south, criticized the North-West Mounted
Police for coddling the people of both tribes and not sending them below
the boundary line. Genin's quest to broker the delivery of the Sioux and
Nez Perces to the United States was finally quelled by a missive from
Major Ilges at Fort Benton, who told the priest in no uncertain terms to
"hereafter abstain from meddling with any of our Indians." [83] Still, Walsh's objective remained the
return of the people of both tribes to the United States. [84]
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