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The Battle of The Washita

Oklahoma Historic Marker

Historical Marker at Washita Battlefield Roger Mills, Oklahoma (near Cheyenne). Here General George Armstrong Custer brutally attacked and massacred a band of friendly Cheyenne Indians while they slept. Photo by J. Stephen Conn / Flickr (noncommercial use permitted with attribution).

Marker Inscription

THE BATTLE OF THE WASHITA
BLACK KETTLE   1868   GEORGE A. CUSTER
 

The Battle of the Washita, a major engagement in the Plains Indian War which established the Western expansion of the United States, was fought on this site. Col. George A. Custer's command of 500 troopers from the 7th Cavalry, and a detachment of scouts including the famed Ben Clark and the Osage, Hardrope, destroyed Chief Black Kettle's Cheyenne village here on Nov. 27, 1868.

Black Kettle, peace leader of the southern Cheyennes, had sought military assurance that he would not be attacked here. There were in his camp, however, young men who had taken part in war parties raiding in Kansas.

Custer's command left Camp Supply on November 23. His scouts located the Cheyenne village on the night of November 26. After a forced march through a bitterly cold blizzard and deep snow, Custer deployed his command to surround the village. And at dawn, with the regimental band playing "Gary Owen" swept in to attach the sleeping Cheyennes.

The number of Indians killed in the fighting is a point of controversy. Custer claimed 103 men, 16 women, and 9 children, including Black Kettle and his wife.

Captain Louis Hamilton, grandson of Alexander Hamilton, was one of two officers killed. Major Joel Elliott and a squad of troopers in pursuit of fleeing Cheyennes were trapped on Sergeant Major Creek beyond a mile from the village and killed to the last man.

The Cavalry returned toward Camp Supply with 53 women and children captives.

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