The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War. Annie Heloise Abel

Читать онлайн.
Название The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War
Автор произведения Annie Heloise Abel
Жанр Документальная литература
Серия
Издательство Документальная литература
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664630254



Скачать книгу

them

      Compare the statistics given in the following: Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Report, 1861, p. 151; 1862, pp. 137, 157; Indian Office Special Files, no. 201, Southern Superintendency, C 1525 of 1862; General Files, Southern Superintendency, C 1602 of 1862.

      The army furnished the first relief that reached them. In its issue (cont.)

      

      Footnote 168: (return)

      (cont.) of January 18, 1862, the Daily Conservative has this to say: "The Kansas Seventh has been ordered to move to Humboldt, Allen Co. to give relief to Refugees encamped on Fall River. Lt. Col. Chas. T. Clark, 1st Battalion, Kansas Tenth, is now at Humboldt and well acquainted with the conditions."

      Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Report, 1862, pp. 151–152.

      O.S. Coffin to William G. Coffin, January 26, 1862, Indian Office Special Files, no. 201, Southern Superintendency, C 1506 of 1862.

      

      Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Report, 1862, pp. 152–154.

      Dole had an interview with the Indians immediately upon his arrival in Kansas [Moore, Rebellion Record, vol. iv, 59–60, Doc. 21].

      Hunter to Dole, February 6, 1862, forwarded by Edward Wolcott to Mix, February 10, 1862 [Indian Office General Files, Southern Superintendency, 1859–1862, W 513 and D 576 of 1862; Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Report, 1862, p. 150].

      Agent G.C. Snow reported, February 13, 1862, on the utter destitution of the Seminoles [Indian Office General Files, Seminole, 1858–1869] and, on the same day, Coffin [ibid., Southern Superintendency, 1859–1862, C 1526] to the same effect about the refugees as a whole. They were coming in, he said, about twenty to sixty a day. The "destitution, misery and suffering amongst them is beyond the power of any pen to portray, it must be seen to be realised—there are now here over two thousand men, women, and children entirely barefooted and more than that number that have not rags enough to hide their nakedness, many have died and they are constantly dying. I should think at a rough guess that from 12 to 15 hundred dead Ponies are laying around in the camp and in the river. On this account so soon as the weather gets a little warm, a removal of this camp will be indespensable, there are perhaps now two thousand Ponies living, they are very poor and many of them must die before grass comes which we expect here from the first to the 10th of March. We are issuing a little corn to (cont.)

      

      time for economy. The inadequacy of the Indian service and the inefficiency of the Federal never showed up more plainly, to the utter discredit of the nation, than at this period and in this connection.

      The Indian encampment upon the occasion of

      Footnote