Old-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses, 98, 124, 128-29, 138, 142, 144, 187, 278
   Ollokot, 320, 322, 327-28
   Omahas, 355, 357-58
   One-Eye, 76-78; portrait, 81; killed, 91
   One-Who-Speaks-Once, 418
   Osages, 353
   Otis, Elwell, 304
   Otoes, 355, 357
   Ouray, 12, 367-68; portrait, 369; 370-73, 387, 389
   Oury, William S., 202
   P
   Paha-Sapa See: Black Hills Paiutes, 12, 104, 416, 431-34
   Palo Duro Canyon, 255, 268; battle, 269-70
   Panther, 110, 112
   Papagos, 204
   Parker, Ely S., 176-79; appointed Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 180; portrait, 181; 182-89; resigns from office, 190; 192-93, 200
   Parker, Quanah See: Quanah
   Pawnee Killer, 92, 138, 141-42, 143, 153, 163
   Pawnees, 108, 111-13, 173-74, 300, 306
   Pease, William B., 178, 180
   Pfeiffer, Albert, 27
   Piegans See: Blackfeet
   Pike’s Peak gold rush, 68
   Pine Ridge agency, 347, 349, 417, 421-22, 428-29, 434-37, 439-40, 442, 445
   Pistol Bullet See: Manuelito
   Pitkin, Frederick W., 370, 376-78, 380, 387, 388
   Platte Bridge Station fight, 98-99, 106
   Platte river, 68, 70, 82, 94, 97-98, 101, 128, 138-40, 173, 184-85, 188, 351, 356
   Plenty Bear, 188
   Pocahontas, 2
   Ponca agency, 363-64
   Poncas, 351-66
   Pontiac, 4
   Pope, John, 59, 380
   Poppleton, Andrew, 359-60
   Powder river, 70, 96-99, 104-05, 107-17, 122, 128-32, 142, 186, 188, 285-86, 308, 310
   Powhatan, 2
   Price, Shadrach, 378-80
   Price, William, 269
   Pte-San-Waste-Win, 291-96
   Q
   Quanah, 11, 260, 265-66; portrait, 267; 269-70
   Quapaws, 357
   Quinkent, 372, 378, 381-82; portrait, 383; 386, 388
   R
   Rain-in-the-Face, 296
   Ramsey, Alexander, 50, 54, 59
   Randall, George M., 214
   Raritans, 4
   Rawn, Charles, 323-24
   Rda-in-yan-ka, 55, 57, 61
   Red Cloud, 10, 97-99, 103, 105-08; portrait, 109; 110, 116-19, 123-34, 138-45, 148-49, 173, 176; visits Washington, 182-86; visits New York, 187; 188, 276-84, 299-300, 308, 310, 342-49; at Pine Ridge agency, 416-17; 420-22, 429, 439-40; portrait in old age, 450
   Red Cloud agency, 188, 277, 279, 283, 286, 298, 305
   Red Dog, 278, 282, 299, 422
   Red Horse, 291, 296
   Red Leaf, 115, 128
   Red Tomahawk, 437-38
   Reno, Marcus, 292-94, 297-98
   Republican river, 70, 92, 96, 99-100, 150, 163, 172
   Reynolds, Joseph J., 286-87
   Richard, Louis, 279
   Riddle, Frank, 229-31, 233, 236, 238, 240
   Riddle, Toby See: Winema
   Roman Nose, 10, 70, 75, 92, 98-99, 116; fight on Powder River, 117-18; 148-54; portrait, 155; 156, 158, 160, 162-65; killed, 166
   Rosebud agency, 417, 420, 428, 434
   Rosebud river, 105, 113-14, 285, 288-91
   Rough Feather, 444
   Running Antelope, 274, 423
   S
   St. Paul, Minn., 50, 54, 64, 65
   San Carlos agency, 214-16, 393-99, 401-08, 413
   Sanborn, John B., 100, 138, 142, 145-46, 157
   Sand Creek, 69, 83, 84, 86; massacre, 87-92, 94, 100, 102, 137, 148, 151, 167-68, 349
   Santa Fe, N. Mex., 14, 21-22, 30, 32
   Santee agency, 300
   Satank, 11, 249-50, 252-55
   Satanta, 11, 241-44; portrait, 245; 246-70; kills himself, 271
   Saville, J. J., 277-78
   Sayers, James A., 105-10, 113, 118
   Scalping, 25, 57, 94
   Scarfaced Charley, 221-24, 230
   Schonchin John, 221, 233-40
   Scott, Hugh, 412-13
   Schurz, Carl, 336, 338, 345, 355, 358-59, 363-64, 389
   Senecas, 178-79
   Shacknasty Jim, 221, 236
   Shakopee, 42-43, 47, 58, 62, 64
   Shangreau, John, 440
   Sheridan, Philip, 162-63, 166-72, 243-46, 265, 285, 336, 345, 364
   Sherman, William T., 34, 139-46, 157-59, 170, 228-30, 252-54, 269-70, 297, 326, 355, 364
   Shirland, Edmond, 197-98
   Short Bull, 431; portrait, 433; 434, 436
   Shoshones, 288
   Sibley, Henry H., 50-61, 122
   Sioux, 10, 38-65, 74, 76, 80, 82, 92, 94-97, 104-18, 122-46, 176-77, 217, 273-312, 327, 329, 332, 352, 367, 386, 415-45, (Blackfoot), 188, 288-94, 423, 426, 430; (Brulé), 10, 100, 122-29, 135, 138, 141-43, 177, 182-88, 288, 291, 308, 417, 420, 428-29; (Hunkpapa), 10, 104, 114-16, 123, 132, 188, 285, 287-93, 304-05, 417-20, 423-26, 430, 439; (Minneconjou), 114-16, 123, 129, 132, 135, 188, 287, 291-94, 302, 308, 431, 434, 439-42; (Oglala), 9, 104, 109, 116, 123-35, 138-39, 142, 145, 153-57, 163-64, 177, 182-88, 276-79, 282-87, 291-92, 302, 307-08, 311, 332, 416-17, 420, 429; (Sans Arcs), 288, 290, 308; (Santee), 9, 38-65, 296
   Sitting Bull, 10, 64, 114-17, 132, 188, 273, 278-79; portrait, 281; 285-88; at Little Bighorn, 291-97; 298, 300, 303-04; exile in Canada, 305, 312, 323-24, 329, 417-19; song of, 313; speeches, 415, 423-27; return to U.S., 420-23; 428-36; assassination, 437-40
   Sleeping Rabbit, 139
   Slim Buttes fight, 302-03
   Smith, Edward P., 284
   Smith, John E., 182
   Smith, John S., 79; portrait, 81; 86, 88, 100
   Smoky Hill river, 70, 72-78, 83-84, 91, 99-100, 148-49, 152, 161-62, 173
   Solomon river, 74
   Sorrel Horse, 132
   Spotted Tail, 10, 92, 122-25; portrait, 127; 128-29, 132, 138-42, 146, 177, 182; visits Washington, 183-88; 276, 279-84, 299-300, 308, 310, 343, 416-17; assassination, 420-21, 428-29
   Spotted Tail agency, 188, 279, 308, 310, 312
   Soule, Silas, 81, 86-87, 90
   Southern Pacific railroad, 406
   Squanto, 3
   Standing Bear, 351, 355-60; portrait, 361; 362-66
   Standing Elk (Brulé Sioux), 128-29, 138, 142
   Standing Elk (Cheyenne), 332-33, 340
   Standing Rock agency, 300, 417, 420, 423-30, 434-36, 439
   Stands-Looking-Back, 115
   Steamboat Frank, 221
   Steele, James, 100-101
   Steen, Enoch, 193
   Stevens, Isaac, 317
   Stone Calf, 163
   Stumbling Bear, 255-56
   Sully, Alfred, 74, 115, 138
   Summit Springs fight, 173-74, 176
   Swift Bear, 115, 124, 138, 142-43
   T
   Tainos, 2, 6
   Tall Bull, 10, 92, 148, 150, 152, 156, 161-65, 172-73; killed, 174
   Tappan, Samuel, 142
   Tatum, Lawrie, 246-249, 252-53, 260
   Tauankia, 263-64
   Taylor, E. B., 126, 128-30
   Taylor, Nathaniel, 141-43
   Taza, 217, 392, 394
   Tecumseh, 1, 4
   Teller, Henry M., 374
   Ten Bears, 11, 158; speech, 241-42; 288; visits Washington, 257; dies, 258; portrait, 259 Teninos, 238
   Terry, Alfred, 142, 279, 283, 285, 288, 290, 417-19
   Thomas, Eleazar, 228, 230-31, 236, 238
   Thompson, James B., 377-78, 381
   Thornburgh, Thomas T., 380-84; killed in fight with Utes, 386-87
   Tibbies, Thomas H., 359
   Tongue River, 110-13, 133-34, 137, 285, 287, 303, 332, 343, 348-49
   Tonkawas, 269
   Toohoolhoolzote, 320-22, 327-28
   Tosawi, 170; portrait, 171; 243, 257-58
   Touch-the-Clouds, 308, 310
   Traveling Hail, 42-43
   Treaty of 1851, 68
   Treaty of 1868, 146, 176, 185-86, 273, 276, 280, 288, 298-99, 332, 352, 428
   Tucson, Ariz., 192, 202, 204-06, 408-10
					     					 			/>   Tuekakas, 317-18
   Tule Lake, 220-21, 224, 237
   Turkey Leg, 138, 141, 340
   Turning Hawk, 444
   Two Moon, 131, 140, 286-88; at Little Bighorn, 293-98; portrait, 295; 306-07, 332, 348
   U
   Union Pacific railroad, 139, 141-42, 182, 342, 359, 441
   Utes, 12, 24, 367-88
   V
   Vickers, William B., 376-77, 387
   Victorio, 11, 197, 199-200, 396-99; portrait, 400; 401
   W
   Wabasha, 9, 42, 46, 55-56, 58, 61
   Wagon Box fight, 140-41
   Wahunsonacook, 2
   Walker, Francis, 257-58
   Walker, Samuel, 105, 113-14, 116, 118
   Walking Bird, 244
   Wallowa Valley, 317-18, 320
   War Bonnet, 78, 87; killed, 91
   Warner, William, 428
   Wasumaza, 442
   Watkins, E. T., 284
   Webster, John C, 359-60
   Webster College, 75
   Weichel, Maria, 173-74
   Weium, 233
   Welsh, William, 189-90
   Wessells, Henry W., 344-46
   West, Joseph, 198
   Whipple, Henry, 298-99
   White Antelope, 69-70, 78, 80; portrait, 81; 82, 87-88; killed, 89-90, 100
   White Bear See: Satanta
   White Bird, 320, 322, 323, 327-29
   White Bull (Cheyenne), 116-17, 286
   White Bull (Minneconjou Sioux), 136-37, 296
   White Contrary, 165
   White Eagle, 351, 353, 355-58, 363
   White Horse (Kiowa), 249; portrait, 261; 271
   White Horse (Southern Cheyenne), 148, 150, 161-65
   White Lance, 442
   White Mountain reservation, 201, 214, 393-96, 399, 401-02, 406-08
   White River agency, 368, 371-388
   White Thunder, 415, 423, 430
   Whiteman, William H, 363-65
   Whitman, Royal E., 192, 201-06
   Whitside, Samuel, 440-41
   Wichitas, 246, 268
   Wild Hog, 332, 335, 340, 343, 346
   Wild West Shows, 427
   Williford, George, 107-08
   Winema, 227-38
   Wolf Belly, 165
   Wolf Chief, 71
   Woman’s Heart, 244, 271
   Wood, Charles Erskine Scott, 328
   Wooden Leg, 286-88, 291, 333, 348
   Wounded Knee Creek, 12, 313, 417, 421, 440-42; massacre, 444-46
   Wovoka, 12; speech, 416; 431-32; portrait, 433; 435
   Wowinapa, 63
   Wynkoop, Edward W., 76-79; portrait, 81; 82-86, 149-58, 162-63, 169
   Y
   Yellow Bear, 170
   Yellow Bird, 442
   Yellow Eagle, 133-34
   Yellow Hair, 422, 429
   Yellow Wolf, 316, 325-26
   Yellow Woman, 72, 92, 96, 108
   Yellowstone Park, 326
   Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses, 97, 278, 283; portrait, 301
   The Fetterman Massacre
   For L. L. B.
   Contents
   I. April:
   MOON WHEN THE GEESE LAY EGGS
   II. May:
   PLANTING MOON
   III. June:
   MOON WHEN THE GREEN GRASS IS UP
   1
   2
   IV. July:
   MOON WHEN THE CHOKECHERRIES ARE RIPE
   V. August:
   MOON WHEN THE GEESE SHED THEIR FEATHERS
   VI. September:
   DRYING GRASS MOON
   VII. October:
   HARVEST MOON
   VIII. November:
   DEER RUTTING MOON
   IX. December:
   MOON WHEN THE DEER SHED THEIR HORNS
   1
   2
   3
   4
   5
   6
   7
   8
   X. January
   MOON OF STRONG COLD
   XI. Aftermath
   1
   2
   3
   4
   5
   Bibliography
   Notes
   Index
   I. April:
   MOON WHEN THE GEESE LAY EGGS
   	My name is Henry B. Carrington: forty-three years of age, colonel Eighteenth U.S. Infantry, and now commanding post Fort McPherson, Nebraska, late commanding post Philip Kearny, Dakota Territory, and previously thereto commanding Mountain District, Department of the Platte, which command embraced the route from Fort Reno westward to Virginia City via the Big Horn and Yellowstone Rivers, and being the new route I occupied during the summer of 1866.1
   SO BEGAN, ON A spring day in 1867, Colonel Carrington’s testimony before a commission convened at Fort McPherson to investigate the Fetterman Massacre of December 21, 1866. For several days Carrington defended his past actions, offering letters, records and reports relating to his command at Fort Phil Kearny, narrating a relentless procession of events which led to the violent deaths of three officers, seventy-six enlisted men and two civilians.
   The Fetterman Massacre was the second battle in American history from which came no survivors, and was a nationally debated incident for ten years—until overshadowed by the Custer Massacre of 1876. Acting under orders from Colonel Carrington, Brevet-Colonel William Judd Fetterman led eighty men out of the gates of Fort Phil Kearny at 11:15 A.M. of that dark December day. Carrington’s orders were explicit: relieve the wood train from Indian attack, but do not pursue the enemy beyond Lodge Trail Ridge.
   At 11:45 A.M. Fetterman’s command of forty-nine infantrymen and twenty-seven cavalrymen halted on the crest of Lodge Trail Ridge, with skirmishers out. The sky was bitter gray, thickening for snow, temperature dropping rapidly. A few minutes later Fetterman’s rear guard disappeared from view of the fort, passing over the ridge, moving north. At 12 noon, almost as the bugler was sounding dinner call in the fort, sentinels at the gate heard firing from beyond Lodge Trail Ridge. Colonel Carrington was notified immediately. By the time the colonel had mounted the lookout tower above his headquarters, firing was continuous and rapid. Without further delay, Carrington ordered Captain Tenodor Ten Eyck to move out to Fetterman’s relief. At 12:45 P.M., Ten Eyck and seventy-six men reached the summit of a ridge overlooking Peno Creek. The valley was swarming with Indians, at least two thousand of them, probably more. One or two scattered shots rang out from the hill beyond; then there was no more firing, only the jubilant cries of Indians racing their ponies, some shouting derisively at Ten Eyck’s troops, beckoning them to come down into the valley.
   For several minutes Captain Ten Eyck could see no sign of Fetterman’s command, neither the mounted nor dismounted men. Then as the Indians began withdrawing from the valley, an enlisted man cried: “There’re the men down there, all dead!”2
   Maintaining his position on high ground until the Indian forces had vanished northward, Ten Eyck then cautiously advanced toward the battlefield. Near the Bozeman Road, dead men lay naked and mutilated, blood frozen in their wounds, in a circle about forty feet in diameter. They were mostly infantrymen. After loading the dead into his two ammunition wagons, Ten Eyck began a slow withdrawal to the fort, not reaching the gates until darkness was falling. The following morning, against the advice of his staff, Carrington led a second party out to the scene of battle and recovered the remaining bodies, mostly cavalrymen.
   The full story of what happened in that brief hour of bloody carnage at high noon under the wintry sky of December 21, 1866, will never be known. During the years which followed, various Indian participants—Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho—told conflicting accounts of the battle. Yet the mystery is not so much what happened as why it happened. Why did Fetterman disobey Carrington’s orders? Why did the cavalrymen leave the infantrymen to meet the full force of attack, and retire to high ground only to die a few minutes later as they had watched the infantrymen die? Why did the Indians retire from the field instead of attempting to annihilate Captain Ten Eyck’s seventy-six men, a move wh 
					     					 			ich if successful would have left the fort vulnerable to immediate capture?
   In the first place, why were Fetterman and his men there in that lonely, uncharted wilderness, 236 miles north of Fort Laramie, in a country which only one year earlier had been ceded by treaty to the tribes as inviolable Indian territory?
   The commission investigating the Fetterman Massacre examined some of these questions directly, dwelling upon the necessity for three forts along the Bozeman Trail, debating whether or not the strength of Carrington’s military force was sufficient, yet never more than hinting at reasons for opening this road through the Plains Indians’ last unspoiled hunting ground.
   The motivating factor of course was gold, which had been discovered in Montana in 1862, creating a rush to Virginia City through 1863 and 1864. During the Civil War, thousands of miners traveled to the diggings by two routes—either up the Missouri River by way of Fort Benton, or overland along the Platte Trail to Fort Hall and then doubling back into Montana Territory. These were roundabout routes, requiring weeks for passage. Public demand for a more direct route led two explorers in 1864 to mark out trails northward from Fort Laramie. Jim Bridger, aware of the Indians’ determination to keep the white man out of their sacred Powder River country, avoided that area and led his party of trail blazers west of the Big Horn Mountains. John Bozeman, seeking an even more direct route, ran his wagons east of the Big Horns, straight through the heart of the hunting grounds.
   Except for Indian resistance, Bozeman’s route was by far the easier to travel, and by 1865 several parties of brave or foolhardy gold seekers risked their lives to make the crossing of what soon became known as the Montana Road.
   In 1865, the Federal Government also became vitally interested in a direct route to the gold fields. After four years of Civil War, the United States Treasury was virtually bankrupt; gold was urgently needed to liquidate the accruing interest of the national debt. In hopes of encouraging more prospectors to make the journey to Montana, the government financed a survey for a direct route from Sioux City by way of the Niobrara River. Leader of this expedition of about one hundred men and 250 wagons was Colonel James A. Sawyer. The party included engineers and gold prospectors, and was escorted by two companies of former Confederate soldiers, who had sworn oaths of allegiance in exchange for release from military prisons.