|
Click here for the story of the
Fetterman Fight
On August 2, 1867, Captain Powell and his company of soldiers were once
again in the foothills of the Big Horns (see
map), guarding the civilian wood crews.
When they had arrived at their site a few days before, the cautious Powell's
first task was to create a defensible position. He did this by taking
the boxes off some of his wagons, arranging them in a circle in an open
area, and piling sacks of grain on top. The wagon carriages were then
dragged across the openings between boxes. Powell's men carried brand
new .50 caliber Springfield breech loading rifles, one tangible benefit of
the Fetterman fiasco.
Early that morning 1500 to 2000 Lakota under the leadership of Red Cloud and
Crazy Horse had infiltrated the woods surrounding the camp. When two
men entered the woods looking for fresh game, they glimpsed Lakota warriors
instead. In the first scramble for safety, everyone who could made a
break for Fort Phil Kearny, a little more than five miles away. Three
or four men were killed outright; thirty-two men, including Captain Powell,
took refuge inside the wagon box circle. The war party turned the full
force of its anger on this tiny group.
As they waited for the battle
to begin in earnest, Captain Powell took a position at one end and
Lieutenant John Jenness took the other. Poor shots were ordered to
reload for the others. At 8:00 a.m. the first wave of about 500 Lakota
rushed the wagon box circle. (The Indians frequently attacked in
waves, a strategy designed to take advantage of lulls in the shooting caused
by the time it took to reload the old rifles -- they had not yet encountered
the new rifles.) Powell held his order to fire until the Lakota were
very close, and the surprising barrage Powell's men unleashed drove the
first wave back, and three or four successive waves as well. At one
point, however, warriors made it to within five feet of the wagon boxes
before they were shot down.
Around noon, the Lakota massed for a direct assault.
Their sheer numbers would surely have won the day, but reinforcements from
Fort Phil Kearny arrived just in time, a howitzer in tow, and the Lakota
vanished, taking their dead with them. They later admitted to having
lost 50 to 60 braves. The soldiers estimated that they had killed
hundreds. Of the thirty-two men inside the wagon box fort, only three
were dead. |