Where a Hundred Soldiers Were Killed: The Struggle for the Powder River Country in 1866 and the Making of the Fetterman Myth

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UNM Press, 2008 - History - 316 pages

The Powder River country of what is now north central Wyoming was one of the most resource-rich regions of the northern plains in the nineteenth century. As U.S. mining interests and white settlement to the north in Montana Territory increased, conflict arose between the United States and the Lakota and Cheyenne nations. On December 21, 1866, the struggle climaxed when a well-organized force of Lakota, Northern Cheyennes, and Arapahos attacked and destroyed a detachment of forty-nine infantrymen and three officers of the 18th Infantry, twenty-seven troopers of the 2nd Cavalry, and two civilians under the command of Captain William Judd Fetterman near Fort Phil Kearny. The Battle of Where a Hundred Soldiers Were Killed or Hundred in the Hand, as the event is still called, was the worst defeat the U.S. Army had suffered in the Great Plains, only to be exceeded by the Battle of Little Big Horn a decade later.

Because none of the soldiers lived to tell what happened, the Fetterman fight has fostered a body of myth and speculation. In this study, John H. Monnett provides a groundbreaking examination of the conflicts that ensued in the Powder River Country during the nineteenth century and clarifies events and personalities that have become distorted in the annals of Western history. Monnett examines military interests as well as the geopolitical importance of the area and takes into account the environmental history of the conflict as it relates to hunting ranges, vital wood and water resources, and access to trade avenues.

 

Contents

The Sowing of the Dragon
1
This Land Is Indian
22
The Overland Circus
35
Lakotas Strike to Defend the Powder River Country
51
Autumn of Trial
72
Wauneechee Lakotas Unite for WarFetterman Arrives
92
Where a Hundred Soldiers Were Killed
119
Time of Triumph Time of Fear
181
The Achilles Syndrome
209
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

John H. Monnett teaches Western & Native American history at Metropolitan State College of Denver & is the author of "Colorado Profiles: Men & Women Who Shaped the Centennial State" (with Michael McCarthy), "The Battle of Beecher Island & the Indian War of 1867-1869", "Massacre at Cheyenne Hole: Lieutenant Austin Henely & the Sappa Creek Controversy", & "A Rocky Mountain Christmas: Yuletide Stories of the West".

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