And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:56:52 EST
  
Search to pinpoint exact site of 1864 Sand Creek Massacre 
Copyright © 1999 Nando Media
Copyright © 1999 Associated Press 

By DENIS M. SEARLES 

EADS, Colo. (February 20, 1999 1:26 p.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) 
- Within the fallow grain fields that checker this windy, high plains 
sage country, the Big Sandy Creek once ran red with the blood of 
Cheyenne and Arapaho men, women and children. Researchers want to find 
the site of that massacre. 

Scores were killed, scalped and mutilated by volunteers of the Colorado 
militia. Unknown to most Americans, the Sand Creek Massacre that cold 
morning of Nov. 29, 1864, is as fresh as yesterday to the Cheyenne and 
Arapaho. No one, however, is sure how many died or where the attack 
occurred. 

Now the National Park Service is working with tribal advisers to 
pinpoint the exact site so it can be nominated as a national park. The 
agency is using high-tech tools, aerial photographs and oral histories 
of the tribes. 

"Never has justice been done to satisfy the spirits" of those slain, 
said Robert Tabor, vice chairman of the Cheyenne-Arapaho in Oklahoma. 

"Sand Creek itself defined the United States' relations to all Indian 
people. It is time we set the ground aside and made it a national park," 
said state historian David Halaas. 

The bill to finance the Sand Creek study and search for the massacre 
site was pushed through Congress last fall by Sen. Ben Nighthorse 
Campbell, a Colorado Republican who's part Cheyenne. 

"The massacre was a shameful part of American history. The women and 
children slaughtered there, many of whom were my ancestors, should 
respectfully be remembered and honored," Campbell said last year. 

In 1864, two cultures - Indian hunters and pioneer farmers - had 
collided on the plains, with atrocities committed on both sides. Raids 
on wagon trains, ranches and farms were increasing. Far to the East, the 
Civil War was raging, leaving frontier Army posts lightly garrisoned and 
poorly equipped. 

On that bitter November sunrise, the Colorado volunteers, led by Col. 
John M. Chivington and supported by four howitzers, attacked the camp of 
Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle and 500 or more Cheyenne and Arapaho along 
the creek, now called Big Sandy. 

Chivington and his volunteers had been spurred to action by the 
slaughter of the Hungate family on a ranch southwest of Denver, an 
attack most believe was unconnected to Black Kettle and his people. 

Accounts of the day said the man was shot, the woman stabbed and 
"violated." Both were scalped; their two young daughters were nearly 
decapitated. Their bodies were put on display in Denver, rousing panic 
and vengeance in the populace, and the calling up of the militia by 
Territorial Gov. John Evans. 

The massacre toll at Sand Creek varies widely, from 63 to 500. Halaas 
believes about 160 were killed. 

Adding to the tragedy was Black Kettle's belief he had a peace agreement 
with the U.S. Army. Historians say when the first shots were fired, 
Black Kettle raised an American flag and a white cloth of truce. 


It only drew more fire. Black Kettle escaped with many others. 

If the slaughtered Hungate family was the battle cry of the Colorado 
volunteers, Sand Creek became the rallying cry of the plains tribes. 

Halaas said famously fierce Cheyenne Dog Soldiers united with Sioux and 
Arapaho. 

"About 2,000 warriors stayed together from January through October 1865. 
Hundreds (of white settlers) were killed" across the plains, Halaas 
said. 

"The impact of Sand Creek ended 12 years later at the Little Big Horn," 
where Lt. Col. George Custer and his 7th Cavalry unit were massacred, he 
said. 

The question of the site, long thought to be on the private property of 
James Dawson northeast of Eads, arose recently when a search by the 
state Historical Society failed to turn up conclusive evidence. 

Laird Cometsevah, a chief of the Southern Cheyenne in Oklahoma, is the 
great-grandson of a Cheyenne who escaped. "We know where it is ... but 
according to the National Park Service, they have to document ... the 
Sand Creek area," he said. "As far as the Cheyenne are concerned, the 
Dawson site was the main camp area of Chief Black Kettle when they were 
attacked." 

Tabor is not so sure. 

"Even nowadays you don't camp with the wind at your face. ... The way 
the bluffs are established (at the Dawson site) the camp would have been 
in the open. 

"The site we located is south. I visited that location and there are 
bluffs that would block the north wind, plenty of vegetation and water 
available," Tabor said. He has asked the park service to check that 
site. 

Periodic flooding has washed away evidence over the last century, but 
searchers are hoping to find tools, bone fragments or other relics by 
using core samples, maps, metal detectors and other methods. The search 
committee - Tabor, Cometsevah, Park Service coordinator Rick Frost and 
representatives of the Northern Cheyenne, Northern Arapaho, landowners 
and the Colorado Historical Society - must report to Congress by August 
2000. 

Tabor said the final determination will be made by the old ways. 

"We usually listen to the wind and watch the animals. There is a lot of 
eagle sightings there," he said. 

"Native Americans believe spirits come and visit" their death site, 
"especially when there's been sudden, unexpected or untimely deaths. The 
spirits are not ready to rest. The creator has a time for each of us. 
There is still a lot of unrest." 


http://www.nando.com/noframes/story/0,2107,20522-33653-243524-0,00.html 

  

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