requiring the tribes signing the treaty to retire
to reservations allotted them in the Indian Territory.
Although the chiefs and head-men were well-nigh unanimous
in ratifying these concessions, it was discovered
in the spring of 1868 that many of the young men were
bitterly opposed to what had been done, and claimed
that most of the signatures had been obtained by misrepresentation
and through proffers of certain annuities, and promises
of arms and ammunition to be issued in the spring
of 1868. This grumbling was very general in
extent, and during the winter found outlet in occasional
marauding, so, fearing a renewal of the pillaging and
plundering at an early day, to prepare myself for the
work evidently ahead the first thing I did on assuming
permanent command was to make a trip to Fort Larned
and Fort Dodge, near which places the bulk of the
Indians had congregated on Pawnee and Walnut creeks.
I wanted to get near enough to the camps to find
out for myself the actual state of feeling among the
savages, and also to familiarize myself with the characteristics
of the Plains Indians, for my previous experience had
been mainly with mountain tribes on the Pacific coast.
Fort Larned I found too near the camps for my purpose,
its proximity too readily inviting unnecessary “talks,”
so I remained here but a day or two, and then went
on to Dodge, which, though considerably farther away
from the camps, was yet close enough to enable us to
obtain easily information of all that was going on.
It took but a few days at Dodge to discover that great
discontent existed about the Medicine Lodge concessions,
to see that the young men were chafing and turbulent,
and that it would require much tact and good management
on the part of the Indian Bureau to persuade the four
tribes to go quietly to their reservations, under an
agreement which, when entered into, many of them protested
had not been fully understood.
A few hours after my arrival a delegation of prominent
chiefs called on me and proposed a council, where
they might discuss their grievances, and thus bring
to the notice of the Government the alleged wrongs
done them; but this I refused, because Congress had
delegated to the Peace Commission the whole matter
of treating with them, and a council might lead only
to additional complications. My refusal left
them without hope of securing better terms, or of even
delaying matters longer; so henceforth they were more
than ever reckless and defiant. Denunciations
of the treaty became outspoken, and as the young braves
grew more and more insolent every day, it amounted
to conviction that, unless by some means the irritation
was allayed, hostilities would surely be upon us when
the buffalo returned to their summer feeding-grounds
between the Arkansas and the Platte.