Chapter 13: Bear's Paw: Siege and Surrender (continued)
Beyond those accorded Colonel Miles, the Battle of
the Bear's Paw yielded no immediate individual honors for the soldiers
who fought there. In June 1878, Miles recommended Lieutenants Baird,
Carter, Romeyn, and McClernand for recognition via brevet promotions or
Medals of Honor. It was not, however, until after 1890, when brevets for
Indian wars service were at last authorized, that Carter and McClernand
were so recognized, along with Lieutenant Woodruff and Captains Snyder,
Moylan, and Godfrey. [153] And only in
1894 did Baird, Carter, Romeyn, McClernand, Godfrey, Moylan, Long,
Tilton, and First Sergeant Henry Hogan, Company G, Fifth Infantry,
receive coveted Medals of Honor for their services at Bear's Paw. [154] It is not known why the award of the
medals was delayed for so many years, nor why only one enlisted man was
deemed worthy for the honor. [155] Indeed,
some of the awards, such as those for McClernand, Tilton, and Long seem
to have been unwarranted based on knowledge of their roles in the
action, which were no greater than those normally expected for officers
in combat. And Baird, Moylan, and Godfrey were performing no
distinguished acts of bravery when they were wounded. That received by
Sergeant Hogan resulted from the recommendation of Henry Romeyn, who
reported that Hogan had assembled the party that "carried me off the
field" and "whose action probably enabled me to live." [156] Finally, Private John Gorham (John
Quinn) was cited for gallant service at Bear's Paw, andin perhaps
the oddest recognition of allLieutenant Guy Howard was
acknowledged for "accompanying the Department Commander through a
hostile Indian country, with a small party, from [the] Missouri River to
the battlefield at Bear [Paw] Mountain." [157]
While individual recognition was elusive in the years
ahead, Miles on October 7 issued a general order applauding his men on
their signal victory over the Nez Perces. He offered his congratulations
"for the recent exhibition they have given of the highest degree of
endurance with hardships and unyielding fortitude in battle." He noted
that "it is an added source of congratulations that Gen. O. O. Howard .
. . was present to witness the completion of his arduous and thankless
undertaking." [158] Soon after that,
General Howard assumed command, directing Miles to keep the Nez Perces
within the District of the Yellowstone until next spring owing to the
transportation costs required for moving them to the Pacific Coast.
"Then," Howard told Miles, "unless you receive instructions from higher
authority, you are hereby directed to have them sent, under proper
guard, to my Department. . . . You will treat them as prisoners of war,
and provide for them accordingly, until the pleasure of the President
concerning them shall be made known." He told Miles he would move his
own force back to their home stations, and he relinquished his command
of Sturgis's men, requesting that they, too, be permitted to return to
Fort Lincoln to recuperate from the severities of the campaign. "I am
gratified to have been present," concluded Howard, "and to have
contributed ever so little to facilitate the surrender." [159]
In reality, both Howard and Miles owed thanks to the
native peoples living in the vicinity of the Bear's Paws. Even before
the presence of troops in the area, word had reached the local tribes of
the government's expectations regarding the war with the Nez Perces. The
Gros Ventres (Atsinas) and Assiniboines had earlier sent parties to the
Missouri River to watch for the Nez Perces. On October 3, a party of
Gros Ventre warriors, assisted by some Assiniboines, encountered some
Nez Perces on a fork of Box Elder Creek, killing five men and capturing
two women. Later, they helped the army search for Bear's Paw refugees.
Twenty-five Gros Ventres received a supply of tobacco as a reward for
providing information about the location of some Nee-Me-Poo. Forty
mounted Gros Ventres also ranged through the western Bear's Paw
Mountains searching for escapees. And when several families of Nez
Perces approached the Gros Ventre camps, they were turned away. [160] For their part, the Assiniboines had
been formally solicited by the army leadership at Fort Benton to help
contain the Nez Perces, and Miles sent word to them from the battlefield
"that they could fight any that escaped and take their arms and ponies."
The Assiniboines succeeded in capturing some army horses and mules near
Milk River, and they claimed to have killed seven Nez Perces and
captured four more. [161] On the other
hand, there is evidence that Plains Cree Indians took in some Nez Perce
refugees in the area of Milk River, provided them with food and
blankets, and helped them in crossing into Canada. [162]
Against this backdrop and before he left Bear's Paw,
Miles sent a request to Terry at Fort Benton to send supplies to meet
Tyler's Second Cavalry battalion, which would start for that point to
join the commission to the Sioux. On Major Ilges's direction, Second
Lieutenant Hugh L. Scott left Fort Benton with a train of provisions,
escorted by Company E, Seventh Cavalry, under First Lieutenant Charles
C. DeRudio. Both officers had lately been in the national park at the
approximate time of the Nez Perce passage. On October 10, as Scott and
six of his men approached the trading post of Fort Belknap (discontinued
as an Indian agency in 1876) along Milk River near the present community
of Chinook, they stumbled on the remains of five Nez Perces.
Assiniboines gathered at the former agency readily admitted that some of
their young men had killed and scalped these people. [163] Meanwhile, as early as the fifth, Miles
had sent detachments of troops (and evidently some selected Nez Perces,
too [164]) to scour the countryside for
tribesmen who had escaped the besieging force, either having gone with
White Bird or with myriad parties that had broken away since the
fighting began.
Lieutenant Maus headed one of these detachments. Near
Fort Belknap, after turning over his provisions to Tyler's battalion,
Scott shortly encountered Maus and his ten men ranging over the area
searching for refugee Nez Perces. Two warriors who had been in the camp
at Bear's Paw, Tippit and Nez Perce John, were with Maus. While DeRudio
headed the wagons to a rendezvous point at Three Buttes near the Little
Rockies, Scott and Maus traveled down Milk River to a village of
so-called "Red River half-breeds"Metis hunters from Pembinawhere
they found twelve Nez Perces (mainly women and children, but also two
wounded men) who had stopped there instead of proceeding directly to the
line. Maus rented two wood-wheeled Red River carts and loaded the people
aboard, and he and Scott started for Three Buttes and DeRudio's wagons,
passing over the battlefield on the way. "It had gotten very cold then,"
recalled Scott. "Maus and I had . . . one robe & two saddle blankets
& slept together shivering all night. We killed buffalo & we
wrapped the children in fresh green buffalo hides to keep them from
freezing." [165] From Three Buttes, they
proceeded with their captives to meet Miles at the Missouri River. [166] Elsewhere, on the seventh Major Ilges
reported that the Gros Ventres were turning a Nez Perce woman and a
child over to him. [167]
Miles started his command on the back trail to the
Musselshell crossing of the Missouri at noon Sunday, exactly one week
after the Battle of the Bear's Paw Mountains opened. The Seventh Cavalry
and Fifth Infantry troops escorted the Nez Perce prisoners, many riding
ponies from the captured herd, their truck being transported in the
wagons. Tyler's Second Cavalry battalion, Dr. Gardner accompanying,
prepared to head for the agency at Fort Belknap en route to Fort Benton,
there to join Terry's commission as originally planned. Wrote Tilton:
"The Indians clad in lively colors and strung out in a long line; the
pack train, the pony herd, the mounted troops, the wagons, the wounded
on travois, all combine to make an unusual and striking picture." [168] Over the course of the ten miles
traveled this day, seven of the wounded soldiers rode on travois, while
the two amputation cases occupied the broken ambulance. Other injured
men rode on grass and willow branches in the wagons, while two more of
the travois were given over to the Nez Perces for their injured. On the
trail, two ambulances from Sturgis's command arrived, and next day
Lieutenant Romeyn, shot through the lung, boarded one of them, and two
of the wounded men the other, for the balance of the journey. On the
night of the seventh, a lightning and thunder storm struck, but subsided
before causing a stampede of the stock; on the eighth a torrential
downpour kept the command in camp all day. [169]
On the eighth, Howard prepared a dispatch for General
McDowell, specifying his role in bringing about the surrender,
explaining the Nez Perces' casualties (Ollokot, Looking Glass,
Toohoolhoolzote, besides "33 warriors, either in battle or as fugitives
to other tribes") and telling him that "the Camas Prairie murderers
[are] now all killed in action." He also recounted his directive to
Miles regarding removing the prisoners to Tongue River. Howard then
departed, intending to send his command homeward down the Missouri.
Joining Major Mason, he reached the mouth of Little Rocky Creek on the
ninth and left aboard the Benton for Squaw Creek next afternoon
to prepare the steamers Meade and Silver City to receive
Miles's wounded and cross his troops. Meanwhile, Miles continued by slow
marches on his diagonal trail back to the Missouri opposite the mouth of
Squaw Creek. [170] On the ninth, Miles
lifted the restriction on firing, and the men and prisoners dined on
antelope steaks that evening. Over the next several days, they passed
Peoples, Beaver, and Fourchette creeks, and on the afternoon of the
thirteenth they arrived at the Missouri, "Joseph and some of his people
riding with Miles at the head of the column." [171] That afternoon, Howard and his troops
started home. The general would visit in St. Paul and Chicago en route,
while the Twenty-first infantrymen and Fourth artillerymen would go by
steamer to Omaha, then via rail to San Francisco, and by steamship to
Portland. Leaving the reunited and resupplied Seventh Cavalry at "Camp
Owen Hale" on the north side of the river as a precaution against
Sitting Bull's possible resurgence, Miles and the Fifth Infantry and the
Nez Perce prisoners Sunday and Monday forded the river aboard the
Silver City. That afternoon, the most serious cases of wounded
soldiers were placed aboard the Silver City for transport to
hospitals at Forts Buford and Lincoln. On Tuesday Miles struck out
cross-country for the Yellowstone and the cantonment. More than a week
later, at noon on October 23, the troops and prisoners, several wounded
of which had died en route, pulled up on the north bank opposite the
post. [172] "As the command filed down the
ravine," recorded Tilton, "flags were unfurled, the band struck up,
'Hail to the Chief,' while cannon thundered forth a salute of welcome to
the troops who had so successfully ended the campaign against the Nez
Perces." [173]
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