in a move that prevented open war across the Northern Plains, President
Ulysses S. Grant issued an executive order extending the deadline set
previously for all Native Americans to return to their reservations.
Please
click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.
The initial date for the deadline had been carefully calculated two months
before by Grant and his generals Philip Sheridan, commander of the
Division of the Missouri, and George Crook, commander of the Department of
the Platte, to be unreachable by the Indians, who had settled into their
winter quarters. When the Indians did not move (General Sheridan noted
that the Indians would not move no matter the date, though Lakota leaders
had already decided they would travel to the agencies that spring), they
would march troopers into the Indian camps and force them into submissive
positions on the reservations.
The matter at the core was gold. White encroachment on Indian lands had
gone on for decades, and the Indians had gradually migrated and dealt with
the growing White settlement. Several wars had raged, but none were as
large as the surprise attack Sheridan and Crook were planning to clear the
Indians quickly and effectively out of the Black Hills, where gold had
been discovered by the Custer Expedition in 1874. A gold rush was in full
sway and expected to boom. The Federal government had ended stopping
trespassers onto the Sioux hunting grounds as an initial part of the plan
and offered to pay the tribes $25,000 and reservations south in Indian
Territory. Spotted Tail summarized the feelings of the Sioux leaders who
had traveled to Washington with, "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".
"Another thing Grant could have done would have
been to come down _really, really hard_ on dishonest Indian Agents...a lot
of Indians had left the rezzes mainly because the food they were supposed
to get hadn't come, or had been swapped out for unedible slop with the
real food sold by the Agents. " reader's commentsYet, the land was
needed both to open for the glut of would-be miners following the Panic of
1873 as well as for railroad projects. Grant had previously reversed the
objectives of the Federal government, which had been anti-Indian since its
founding. Johnson's order to General Sheridan years before about the
Cheyenne and Arapaho had been, "I want you to go ahead, kill and punish
the hostiles, capture and destroy the ponies". Grant later confronted
Congress on the policies, saying, "Wars of extermination are demoralizing
and wicked" and "A system which looks to the extinction of a race is too
horrible for a nation to adopt without entailing upon itself the wrath of
all Christendom". Despite his advances in upholding treaties, in his
second term the question of the Black Hills had turned him to the same
policies he had derided.
In late January, a telegram from the US Indian Agent at Standing Rock
reached the president, saying that his requests to extend the deadline had
been repeatedly denied despite that travel in the midst of winter was
impossible. He noted that any God-fearing, decent man would be reasonable
rather than start a war, and Grant felt his spark of conscious. The
Whiskey Ring scandal that had implicated his secretary Orville E. Babcock
had destroyed Grant's popularity among Republicans, and he decided that
acting in favor of the Indians could not do any more damage, saying
famously, "If I'm going to be unpopular, I might as well do the right
thing".
In spring of 1876, the majority of the Indians came to their reservations
as had been agreed. Sheridan and Crook were allowed to mop up the
stragglers and then ordered to maintain some kind of peace amid the
Indians and the swarms of prospectors centering on Deadwood. Methods of
herding the remaining buffalo were organized by the Sioux and government
agents, who finally were able to work a deal for the Northern Pacific
Railroad giving the Indians a toll based on transport. When the gold began
to give out, the prospectors deserted, and the Sioux gradually came back
into control over much of the area. Conservationist Theodore Roosevelt
hunted the buffalo in 1893, and his political actions back East helped
give funding to rebuilding the Northern Buffalo Herd, which had been
barely saved from the extinction that had struck the Southern.
Despite decades more of politics and needless violence, the White and
Native Americans gradually learned to live alongside one another, perhaps
best exemplified by the peaceful demonstrations at Wounded Knee in 1890
where invited government officials understood the severity of breaking up
the Great Sioux Reservation and determined to honor the previous treaty.