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to Ft Gibson,
Oklahoma
APPENDIX I
National Cemetery
There were several small cemeteries
around Fort Gibson in which the dead were buried from the earliest days of the fort. The number of interments was increased to such an extent during the Civil War that more space was required, and in 1869 the National Cemetery was established on land that was originally part of the military reservation of Fort Gibson. After the abandonment of the fort, the reservation was transferred to the Department of the Interior on February 11, 1891, a parcel of seven acres being reserved for cemeterial purposes.
On August 6, 1872, William W. Belknap, Secretary of
War, gave instructions to have the remains of his father, General William
Goldsmith Belknap, removed from Fort Washita, where they were interred in
1851, to the cemetery at Keokuk, Iowa, the home of the Secretary. At the
same time he directed the quartermaster general to arrange for the removal
of the remains of other soldiers and their families found at Fort Washita,
Fort Towson and Fort Arbuckle, to the National Cemetery at Fort Gibson.
Bids were advertised for, and a contract let to P. J. Byrne of Fort Gibson,
who succeeded in removing the remains of forty-six persons in 1872: only
two of them, however, were definitely known to be soldiers. Owing to the
careless manner in which the men who served at the remote post had been
buried, and the fact that fires had been permitted to run through the
cemeteries and burn off all wooden headboards, and the difficulty of
finding other marks of identification in the graves, or indeed, of finding
the remains and the boxes containing them in such condition that they
could be removed at all, instructions were given to abandon further
removal. However, information was later acquired of forty-six additional
graves at Fort Washita; fifty-four at Fort Arbuckle, and eighteen at Big
Sandy Creek on the Fort Smith and Fort Arbuckle road. Efforts were then
renewed, and another contractor undertook to remove the remains to the
Fort Gibson National Cemetery but this effort proved abortive
also.
In 1873, it was reported to the office of the Adjutant
General at Washington that the bodies of one hundred and twenty-five
soldiers killed in the Battle of the Washita were buried on that
battlefield. This again stimulated interest in the subject of removal, and
the visitor will see in the Officers' Circle in the National Cemetery the
grave of Major Joel H. Elliott of the Seventh Infantry, killed on November
27, 1868, at the Battle of the Washita.
The removal of remains from all these burial places was
attended with much difficulty because of the lack of identifying marks. It
was impossible to determine whether they were removing soldiers or
civilians, and the whole undertaking was attended with much confusion. It
appeared that during the Civil War a large number of Confederates died and
were buried near Fort Washita. The correspondence relating to the subject
would indicate that removal of the dead from this cemetery was limited to
those known to have been in the service of the Union Army, and the
Confederate dead were probably not disturbed.
The result was summarized in a report of December 31,
1893, which accounted for graves in the National Cemetery at Fort Gibson,
of 231 known to be soldiers & 2,212 whose identity and service were
unknown. Of the comparatively few who are identified by inscriptions on
monuments, the greatest number are to be seen within what is known as the
Officers' Circle. Among these is Flora, the young Cherokee wife of
Lieutenant Daniel H. Rucker, who died at Fort Gibson June 26, 1845. Her
husband survived her to become in later years Quartermaster General of the
United States Army. John Decatur, brother of Stephen Decatur, died on
November 12, 1832, while a sutler at Fort Gibson. Lieutenant John W.
Murray of the West Point Class of 1830, of the Seventh Infantry, was
killed on February 14, 1831, by being thrown from his horse. Murray's
classmate, Lieutenant James West, died at Fort Gibson on September 28,
1834.
On May 27, 1831, Lieutenant Fredrick Thomas of the
Seventh Infantry, a West Point graduate of 1825, was drowned in the
Arkansas River. His classmate, Lieutenant Benjamin W. Kinsman, also of the
Seventh Infantry, died May 14, 1832. Lieutenant Thomas C. Brockway, a
graduate of West Point of the class of 1828, died at Fort Gibson,
September 28, 1831. Among those removed from Fort Towson were West Point
graduates of the class of 1826, Lieutenant Charles L. C. Minor and
Alexander G. Baldwin, both of the Fifth Infantry, who died at Fort Towson
in 1833 and 1835 respectively, and Lieutenant James H. Taylor of the Third
Infantry, who was drowned near Fort Towson in the Cositot River, in 1835.
Also in the Officers' Circle is the monument ofCaptain Billy Bowlegs, the
celebrated Seminole warrior, who served in the Union Army and died during
the Civil War, and who is buried in another part of the
cemetery.
General John Nicks (also buried in this cemetery)
acquired his title from the appointment, by the Governor of Arkansas
Territory, as commanding general of the Arkansas militia. He was later
sutler at Fort Gibson, where he died December 31, 1831. He was survived by
his widow, Sallie Nicks, who continued to "sutle" at the post. Sallie was
a popular young widow whose charms were enhanced by the fact that the
estate left by the General was valued at $20,000. When Washington Irving
visited the post in 1832, he recorded in his notebook that several of the
officers at the post paid court to her, and the quartermaster serenaded
her so often and so vigorously that he disturbed the sleep of others, and
made himself a good deal of a nuisance in the post. According to Irving,
General William Clark and Colonel Arbuckle were both fascinated by the
young widow, and a civilian named Lewis paid such ardent court that all of
the officers united against him.
Sutlers were licensed to do business in the post, and
there was considerable rivalry for the privilege, as the profits were
tempting. At one time Sam Houston was an aspirant for the position of
sutler at Fort Gibson. During his absence in the East on a political
mission, he heard that General Nicks was to be removed from his post as
sutler, and on his way back to Fort Gibson he wrote a letter to the
Secretary of War, making application for the post. Houston was returning
with a keelboat load of supplies for Wigwam Neosho, his little store
northwest of Fort Gibson. They included nine barrels of whiskey, brandy,
gin, rum, wine and other goods with which he meant to stock the sutler's
store he intended to take over if Nick's removal should pave the way for
his appointment. However, after arriving at Fort Gibson and learning of
the gossip said to have emanated from Washington concerning him, he
indignantly withdrew his application with and excoriating letter to the
Secretary of War, obviously written while he was drunk.
To one who wonders what care the soldiers at Fort
Gibson took of their personal appearance, a long inventory of merchandise
in the sutler's store at Fort Gibson in 1845 will be illuminating. The
following is about one-sixth of the total list. It was submitted to the
commandant for the purpose of establishing the prices at which these
articles might be sold to the soldiers:
Cigars, shaving boxes, round shaving soap, transparent
soap, flotant soap, chrystalline wash balls, whisker pomatum, spontaneous
compound, oleophane, bear's oil, philocome, fancy soap perfume boxes,
fancy cologne water, round cologne water, farina cologne water, prevost
cologne water, red and white powder, sweeping brush, clamp brush, horse
brush, shoe brush, counter brush, hat brush, wall brush, cloth brush,
shaving brush, teeth brush, ivory brush, nail brush, violin strings, razor
strops, mirrors, shirt butts, cotton purses, silk purses, pencil cases,
halebones, suspenders, snuff boxes, necklaces, fishing lines, guard
chains, flasks, thimbles, court plaisters, hooks and eyes, silk guards,
pocket combs, English combs, dressing combs.
Click on the Next Button below to see the Cemetery
List.
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This page last updated February 2005 - Copyright Jacque Hopkins, 1996-2005 |