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Good Words
The first white men of your people
who came to our country were named Lewis and Clark....All the Nez
Percés made friends with Lewis and Clark and agreed to let them
pass through their country, and never to make war on white men. This
promise the Nez Percés have never broken. It has always been the
pride of the Nez Percés that they were the friends of the white
men. By 1877, most Nez Percé were living on a reservation along the Clearwater River in Lapwai, Idaho, where many had converted to Christianity, wore white men's clothes, and had taken up farming. But some still held fast to their old way of life, among them a band that lived in the Wallowa Valley of eastern Oregon.
Do not misunderstand me [and] my
affection for the land. I never said the land was mine to do with as I
chose. The one who has the right to dispose of it is the one who has
created it. I claim a right to live on my land, and accord you the
privilege to live on yours. The earth is the mother of all people and
all people should have equal rights upon it.
General Oliver Otis Howard was a one-armed Civil War hero who had founded Howard University for emancipated blacks in Washington D.C. Now he was dispatched to deal with the Nez Percé. After investigating, Howard became convinced that Joseph was right about the treaty, and he offered to buy the Wallowa Valley on behalf of the government. But Joseph refused. Finally the order came to move the Nez Percé one way or another, and Howard told Joseph and the others that if they weren't on the Lapwai reservation within a month, his soldiers would force them to go. I knew I had never sold my
country, and that I had no land in Lapwai; but I did not want
bloodshed. I did not want my people killed. I did not want anybody
killed....I said in my heart that, rather than have war, I would give
up everything rather than have the blood of white men upon the hands of
my people. Joseph and the other chiefs began moving their people toward Idaho, but a handful of young warriors, seeking revenge for the way the Nez Percé had been treated, slipped away and killed eighteen whites. For the first time in their history, Joseph's people suddenly found themselves at war with the United States. Howard sent two troops of cavalry to bring the young warriors and the rest of the Nez Percé in. He wired his superiors: "Think we will make short work of it." Catching up with Joseph's band at White Bird Canyon on the Salmon River, Howard's troops attacked. The Nez Perce hurled them back.
Only three Nez Perce warriors had been wounded in the battle, but Perry had lost a third of his command and been driven from the field. "I have been in lots of scrapes," one army scout remembered, but "I never went up against anything like the Nez Percé in all my life." News of the stunning defeat at White Bird Canyon, almost one year after Custer's death at the Little Bighorn, shocked the country. Howard called for more troops, and for the next three months they would pursue Joseph and his people as they carried out one of the most remarkable military retreats in history. On July 3rd, the Nez Perce wiped out an army scouting party of thirteen men that got too close. On Independence Day they fought off an attack at an old stage stop called Cottonwood, A week later, on the Clearwater River, they killed thirteen more of Howard's men who sought to stop them.
There were about 700 of them -- only 200 warriors, the rest women, children and old people, all in Joseph's care. Still, they moved quickly, believing that if they could make it to Montana and join their allies, the Crow, they would be safe. When they reached Montana, the Nez Percé turned south along the Bitterroot River, paying for food and supplies from white settlers -- but the frightened townspeople of Missoula, Butte, Bannock, and Virginia City demanded army protection. On an elevated plateau surrounded by mountains, called the Big Hole, Looking Glass convinced the weary Indians they could rest for several days. Howard, he said, was too far behind them to worry about.
In the first moments, between 60 and 90 Nez Percé were cut down -- many of them dead before they could kick free of their blankets. But the survivors regrouped, women and children and old men fighting alongside the warriors with such fury that they drove the soldiers from the camp. Few of us will soon forget the
wail of mingled grief, rage, and horror which came from the camp four
or five hundred yards from us when the Indians returned to it and
recognized their slaughtered warriors, women, and children. Above this
wail of horror we could hear the passionate appeal of the leaders
urging their followers to fight, and the war whoops in answer which
boded us no good. The enraged warriors pinned Gibbon's men down with their fire, while Joseph led the others away from the fighting. The Nez Percé now slipped back into Idaho, then turned east again, toward the Yellowstone plateau, which had recently been set aside as a national park. William Tecumseh Sherman himself had assured visitors there was no danger from marauding Indians in the park. Indians, he said, were too superstitious to venture near the geysers. But the Nez Percé swept right through, capturing more than a dozen horrified tourists and killing two of them, before the chiefs told the warriors to let the others go. They moved on, still hoping to join forces with their longtime friends, the Crows. But the Crows were now pursuing them as scouts for the U.S. Army. Many snows the Crows had been our
friends. But now...turned enemies. I do not understand how the Crows
could think to help the soldiers. My heart was just like fire... The Nez Percé were alone. The West they had once known had vanished. Yet there remained one last chance for escape: Sitting Bull had found safety in Canada. They headed north across Montana to join him.
Now, Canada -- and freedom -- were only 40 miles away. Before crossing the border, the Nez Percé camped on Snake Creek, near the Bear Paw Mountains. General Howard, they knew, was more than two days' march behind them. They did not know, however, that Colonel Nelson A. Miles had mercilessly pushed his troops all the way from eastern Montana to intercept them. The Nez Percé were quietly
slumbering in their tents...When the charge was made...The tramp of at
least six hundred horses over the prairie fairly shook the ground, and,
although a complete surprise to the Indians in the main, it must have
given them a few minutes' notice, for as the troops charged against the
village the Indians opened a hot fire upon them. Nez Percé warriors drove off one attack -- then a second, and a third. They killed or wounded 53 of the soldiers, but all their horses had been driven off. They could not escape. Miles dug in for a siege. The weather turned colder.
For five more days, the siege went on. A few Nez Percé slipped away and straggled into Canada, where Sitting Bull welcomed them, but would send no warriors to rescue the others. Under a white flag, Miles opened negotiations. Joseph was selected to talk with him. Turn over your rifles, Miles said, and in the spring, you will be allowed to return home. My people were divided about
surrendering...[But] I could not bear to see my wounded men and women
suffer any longer; we had lost enough already. Colonel Miles...promised
that we might return to our own country with what stock we had left. I
thought we could start again. I believed Colonel Miles, or I never
would have surrendered. On the afternoon of October 5, 1877, Joseph rode out to the foot of a bluff where Colonel Miles and General Howard were waiting for him. I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs
are all killed. Looking Glass is dead....The old men are all dead. It
is cold, and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to
death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no
food. No one knows where they are....I want to have time to look for my
children, and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them
among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired. My heart is sick and
sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever. Joseph and his people were loaded onto a riverboat and sent down the Missouri to Fort Abraham Lincoln, where they expected to spend the winter. But while they were on the way, the promise that they could return home had been over-ruled by General Sherman.
Miles and Howard could not change Sherman's decision. The Nez Percé had been betrayed again. When the Indians arrived at the fort, its cannon greeted them, and the steam engine of a Northern Pacific train blasted its whistle three times. They had never seen a train before, and the Nez Percé began a mournful song. It sounded, one onlooker said, like a "death chant." Then, Joseph and his people were loaded onto the train. They were not going home, they were now told, but far away, into exile in the northeastern corner of Indian Territory in what is now Oklahoma -- nearly 2,000 miles from their beloved Wallowa Valley. Once there, they found conditions unsanitary, medicine scarce. Sixty-eight of them perished in the first year alone. Soon, they had a cemetery set aside solely for babies, with 100 graves. Among the Nez Percé who died in exile was an old man named Halahtookit, or Daytime Smoke. According to Joseph's people, he was the half Indian son of William Clark, the American explorer the Nez Perce had sheltered more than 70 years earlier, the man who had first promised that the United States would always be their friend.
You might as well expect the
rivers to run backward as that any man who was born a free man should
be contented when penned up and denied liberty to go where he
pleases... |
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