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The Medicine Lodge Treaty A Re-Telling by Tawnya Herman The year was 1867. The Civil War was over. More and more people moved West to start new lives. General Philip H. Sheridan took command of the U.S. forces in the West. He promised to bring peace to the plains by destroying the buffalo. The buffalo were sacred to the Indians. The Indians lived off of the buffalo. "Kill the buffalo, and you kill the Indians," the general said. The Native Americans went on the warpath. They fought to protect their way of life. They fought to keep their lands. People back East wanted to stop the war
with the Plains Indians. The railroad owners wanted to lay track
all the way to the Pacific Ocean. But the railroad was at a standstill.
Fighting got in the way. President Andrew Johnson heard about the
trouble in the plains. He formed a special Peace Commission to make
peace with the Indians. He wanted to remove Indians so whites could settle
their lands.
People talked for a long time about where to meet to talk about peace. The Indians chose the area known as Medicine Lodge. Medicine Lodge is located in Kansas. The waters of Elm Creek and Medicine River join together there. The Kiowa went there once a year to bathe in the healing waters of the river. They renewed their medicine at the sacred lodge. There were no railroads. There were no white settlements nearby. It was many miles to the nearest Army post. The Indians felt safe from surprise attacks from white men. Over 5,000 Indians from five different tribes came to the meeting. The Kiowa, Comanche, Kiowa-Apache, Cheyenne, and Arapaho all came. There were many white men there, too. The 7th Cavalry came to protect the white men. Some Indians came because they heard there was free food. During the meeting, both the white men
and the Indians made many speeches. Satanta, the chief of the Kiowas,
spoke for his people. Satanta said,
No longer would the plains be one big reservation divided up among the tribes. Instead, all of the Indians would move to their own reservation. All of the reservations would be in the Indian Nations. This was in the western part of present-day Oklahoma. The Indians had to agree to give up all of their rights to their native lands. The treaty became known as the Medicine Lodge Treaty. There were three different treaties signed. The first was signed October 21, 1867 with the Kiowa and Comanche tribes. The second treaty was signed on the same day. The Kiowa-Apache tribe signed. The third treaty was signed on October 28, 1867. The Cheyenne and Arapaho signed. The Medicine Lodge Treaty did not end all the fighting. But it is known as the most important treaty signed on the Southern Plains. The Indians gave up their hunting grounds and their nomadic, carefree way of life. Some lived through the fighting and accepted life on the reservation. Others died for what they believed in. Many Indians did not stay on the reservations. They went on the warpath instead. This led to terrible warfare with the whites. |
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