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TheHistoryNet | American Indian Wars
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20061030015556/http://www.historynet.com/wars_conflicts/american_indian_wars
HOME :: WARS CONFLICTS :: AMERICAN INDIAN WARS






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The Stock Market Crashes
 
War and a terrible winter were fresh memories when Colonel Henry Maynadier allowed tearful Spotted Tail to bury his daughter at Fort Laramie, which, in turn, helped convince the Brulé Sioux leader to bury the hatchet forever.
Lakotas: Feared Fighters of the Plains

The Tule River War



EARLY INDIAN WARS
Powhatan Uprising of 1622
Indian warriors killed hundreds of Virginia colonists during the Powhatan Uprising of 1622. Also among the victims were 20 women whose stories will never be fully told.
   
EARLY INDIAN WARS
King Philip's War: Indian Chieftain's War Against the New England Colonies
More than 330 years ago, a great Indian chieftain known as King Philip led a strong native American confederation in a bloody war to obliterate the New England colonies, nearly succeeding in dramatically altering the course of American history.
 
SAND CREEK MASSACRE
Sand Creek Massacre
More often called a massacre than a battle, the attack by Colonel John M. Chivington's Colorado volunteers on Chief Black Kettle's village will forever be controversial.
Sand Creek Massacre: The Real Villains
 
   
 
BLACK HAWK WAR
Black Hawk War
Outnumbered and harried through trackless swamps, Black Hawk's starving band of Sauk Indians made a desperate stand along the Mississippi.
Trail of Black Hawk
 
 
WOUNDED KNEE MASSACRE
Wounded Knee Massacre: United States versus the Plains Indians
Some 30 years of warfare between the United States and the Plains Indians reached a grisly climax on December 29, 1890, at South Dakota's Pine Ridge Reservation.
   
 
BATTLE OF WHITE BIRD CANYON
The Battle of White Bird Canyon: First Fight of the Nez Perce
After young warriors killed some settlers in Idaho Territory, General O.O. Howard ordered Captain David Perry at Fort Lapwai to go get them, telling him, 'You must not get whipped.'
 
THE FETTERMAN FIGHT
The Fatal Fetterman Fight
Called a massacre at the time, the December 1866 clash near Fort Phil Kearny was, in fact, a military triumph by the Plains Indians and the Army's greatest blunder in the West until the Battle of the Little Bighorn 10 years later.
   
 
GUADALUPE CANYON
Soldiers vs. Apaches: One Last Time at Guadalupe Canyon
Nearly 10 years after Geronimo called it quits following a massive manhunt, the U.S. Army began a smaller campaign against renegade Apaches.
 
GERONIMO
General Nelson Miles and the Expedition to Capture Geronimo
General Nelson Miles summoned Lieutenant Charles Gatewood to Albuquerque in July 1886 and ordered the reluctant veteran of the Apache wars to go find the elusive Chiricahua leader down in the mountains of Mexico.
   
 
ESTANISLAO
Estanislao: Rebellious Indian Warrior
Named after a Polish saint, Estanislao became an Indian official with a mission--flee Mission San Jose and lead one of the largest Indian forces ever to fight against whites in California.
 
GEORGE CROOK
George Crook: Indian Fighter
Against the Apaches in Arizona Territory and the Sioux and Cheyenne in the northern Plains, Crook did his job more effectively than most Army leaders on the Plains.
   
 
PHILIP WELLS
Philip Wells: Wounded at Wounded Knee
The son of a white father and a half-blood mother, Wells nearly lost his nose in the tragic 1890 affair but still managed to be merciful.
 
LIEUTENANT CASPER COLLINS
Lieutenant Casper Collins: Fighting the Odds at Platte Bridge
Lieutenant Casper Collins and 20 others faced at least 1,000 Indians in the 1865 Running Battle, and on its heels came another lopsided encounter on the North Platte -- Custard's Last Stand.
   
 
PATRICK CONNOR
Patrick Connor and the Battle of Bear River
Disappointed Army officer Patrick Connor wanted to be back East fighting Rebels. Instead, he found himself in the bitter cold along icebound Bear Creek, near today's Utah-Idaho border, with a Shoshone village spread out below him.
 
   
 
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