 |
to Ft Gibson,
Oklahoma
Nalora is a good genealogy friend I met on the internet through a genealogy mailing list. She loves history, so most of what you see here is the result of her exhaustive researches for information (most of it from Oklahoma) and the desire to have it online, free to all. She transcribed everything, sent it to me in email, and all I did was place it here for you to see. If you have any questions about the information, I can not answer them, nor do I have the book to get you copies, Sorry.
Follows is the Fort Gibson History
by Grant Foreman with the list of officers. This came from a little volume I picked up at my bookseller. Grant Foreman
was a pretty well known Oklahoma Historian, specializing in Fort Gibson History. He contributed many articles to the Chronicles in the 1920-1930
era. He almost single-handedly got the Government of Oklahoma to restore the old fort. The pamphlet is not copyrighted.
FORT GIBSON - A BRIEF HISTORY Grant Foreman Press of Hoffman-Speed Printing Co., Muskogee,
Oklahoma
FORT GIBSON was not only the oldest and most celebrated military establishment in the annals of Oklahoma but in its early days it
was the farthest west outpost of the United States, and in many respects continued for years to be one of the most important on that frontier. It
was one of the chain of forts reaching from the northern to the southern boundaries of the nation, which included Fort Snelling, Fort Gibson, Fort
Towson, Fort Leavenworth, and Fort Jesup, at times there were as many soldiers stationed at Fort Gibson as in all the other forts together. It
was constructed in a wilderness frequented by bears, wolves, and panthers, while the neighboring prairies were the feeding grounds of wild horses,
buffalo and deer. The nearby streams were rich in beaver, and furs were shipped by trappers and traders to eastern markets.
This fort actually owed its establishment to the indomitable spirit of the Osage Indians who ranged the surrounding country and claimed exclusive right to the game in that locality; consequently they challenged the hunters from eastern Indian tribes, notably the Cherokees, and were constantly engaging in savage battles with them. This situation resulted in the establishment, in 1817, of a garrison at Belle Point, subsequently called Fort Smith, which it was hoped would be able to abate the warlike activities of the Osages. As it was not able to achieve the desired results, the garrison was abandoned and the troops were directed to find a new location at the mouth of the Verdigris River, where they would be near the towns of the Osages and better able to watch and control their movements. When Colonel Matthew Arbuckle came up the Arkansas River with his command of the Seventh Infantry, he found the best boat landing on the Verdigris River, and adjacent territory for three miles above its mouth occupied by a considerable settlement of white
traders and trappers the earliest trading settlement within the limits of Oklahoma. Most conspicuous among the settlers was Colonel A. P. Chouteau,
a graduate of West Point of the class of 1806, who resigned from the army
the next year to engage in Indian trade. From 1815 to the time of his
death in 1838 he was identified with the Indian Territory and performed
valuable service for the government in the negotiation of important
treaties with the Indians, with whom he had more influence than any other
man of his time. He was long a familiar and welcome figure at Fort Gibson.
His judgment commanded greater respect of army officers, commissioners and
Washington officials than that of any other man on the frontier; he was
frequently consulted and his services solicited for the settlement of
important problems relating to the Indians.
In connection with his Indian trade at the Three Forks,
Chouteau's establishment was integrated with the facilities of river
navigation. He employed a large number of men for assorting and packing
for shipment the peltries purchased from the Indians; he also maintained a
little shipyard on the bank of the river where he made the boats in which,
with the help of a rough and hardy class of river men, he shipped his
peltries to New Orleans and St. Louis. As the settlement of traders and
trappers would have made it troublesome to establish a garrison on the
site, Arbuckle decided to find a location for his fort a short distance up
the nearby Grand River, which discharged its waters into the Arkansas
about half a mile from the mouth of the Verdigris.
It was on the twenty-first day of April 1824, that two
long flatboats were to be seen ascending Grand River, manned by bearded
young men in the uniform of the United States Army. As they worked the
boats up the river they scanned the shore for a landing place, and about
three miles from the river's mouth they were successful in discovering a
wide ledge of shelving rock on the east bank, which made a natural boat
landing. They tied up their boats at this ledge, and unloaded axes, adzes,
froes, saws, food supplies, tents, baggage, and a miscellaneous assortment
of camp equipment. On the bank they met other uniformed young men,
unshaved and long of hair, who had come by land to the place from Fort
Smith with their horses and oxen. They were, in all, 122 officers and
privates of companies B, C, G, and K of the Seventh Infantry.
The river bottom land near their landing place was low
and fertile, and covered by an immense canebrake, great forest trees, and
a jungle of vines and undergrowth. The soldiers were soon engaged in
clearing sufficient space in which to set up their tents. Then began the
weeks and months of labor necessary to remove the cane, vines, and
brambles from an area large enough for an army post; the ring of the ax
and the crash of the huge falling trees were heard, and roaring fires
consumed the prodigality of nature. Logs were fashioned by axes and
cross-cut saws into lengths and shapes suitable to form the walls of
houses; other logs were split into puncheons for floors, or rived into
clapboards to roof the structures to be built.
By the early part of 1826 a number of log houses had
been completed, providing quarters for the soldiers, quartermaster,
sergeants, surgeon, and a hospital, guard room, matron's room and
storeroom. These buildings were constructed on four sides of a square and,
with the upright logs or pickets surrounding them, constituted the
stockade, so arranged for protection against possible attack by the
Indians. This stockade has long since fallen into decay; but on the site
another has been constructed from the original plans, as nearly like the
old one as possible, where it is now to be seen.
Fort Gibson maintained communication with the outside
world by means of transportation on the Arkansas River over which, at
first, the keelboat brought men and supplies to the fort from remote
distances, and down which furs and peltries were shipped by the traders
living in the neighborhood. Later, steamboats that supplanted the
keelboats came up to the fort with military supplies and merchandise for
the sutler at the post and for merchants in that vicinity. During 1833,
seventeen steamboats were tied up to the boat landing from time to time
through the season. Under the railroad bridge which now spans the river at
this spot may be seen one of the rings anchored in the rock to which the
boats were secured many years ago. The fort was also reached by the famous
thoroughfare known as the Texas Road, which came through southwestern
Missouri, southeastern Kansas, and following the course of Grand River
passed Fort Gibson and continued on to Texas. For many years an amazing
number of emigrants, freighters, and traders going to or returning from
the then unknown country beyond Red River passed over this road.
In 1831, the whole of the Seventh Infantry was ordered
to Fort Gibson and the officers reported the interior of the stockade much
overcrowded by the host of officers and men, laundresses and servants. The
year 1832 was a notable one in the history of Fort Gibson. A commission
had been created by Congress for the purpose of locating in the Indian
Territory the Indians about to be removed from the East. It was necessary
for the commission to make its headquarters at Fort Gibson, and negotiate
treaties with the wild Indians which were to prepare them for the
impending changes in their neighbors. The commissioners were Montford
Stokes, until then governor of North Carolina, Henry L. Ellsworth, of
Hartford, Connecticut, and Rev John Schermerhorn. They were afforded
protection by the Ranger company of Captain Jesse Bean, who arrived at the
post in October, 1832, and was then ordered to the West on an exploring
tour. Mr. Ellsworth arrived at Fort Gibson that same month, accompanied by
Washington Irving and some friends whom he had met on Lake Erie and had
invited to accompany him to Fort Gibson. They came down the Texas Road
past the Creek agency at Three Forks, just below the site of Okay, and
arrived at the bank of Grand River, across which Irving noted the neatly
whitewashed blockhouses and palisades of Fort Gibson. Someone halooed
across the river, and a scow, which served as ferryboat, was brought over;
the travelers entered the boat, which was poled by soldiers across the
stream; as it was tied up to the landing the visitors stepped ashore and
walked up the bank 150 yards to the gate of the garrison. A sergeant's
guard admitted them, and as they entered the fort their attention was
attracted to a number of men pilloried in stocks and riding the wooden
horse. Startled at this spectacle, Irving made a note of it in his
journal.
On their arrival at Fort Gibson, Washington Irving and
Commissioner Ellsworth and their friends, on learning that Captain Bean's
company was somewhere up the Arkansas River, after spending two nights in
Colonel Arbuckle's quarters in the fort, started out to overtake the
Rangers and share in their adventures. They were gone a month on this
trip, and from his experiences on that expedition Irving wrote his famous
book, A Tour on the Prairies. The company returned to Fort Gibson on the
ninth of November, and the next day Irving departed down the Arkansas
River by steamboat for New Orleans and Washington.
The inhabitants of the fort were awakened each morning
as the bugler sounded reveille at daybreak to rouse a sleeping garrison;
later the crash of the morning gun echoed and re-echoed among the
neighboring hills and rumbled across the more distant prairies, startling
deer and bear in their sheltered beds. The flag was run to the top of the
staff to catch the first rays of the rising sun. After an early breakfast
the soldiers went about their routine duties; details worked in the
garrison garden among the vegetables; oxen, horses, and mules were fed,
watered, and cared for; recruits were put through their drills by the
sharp commands of officers, and the bugle sounded at intervals throughout
the day, carrying its lively messages over the surrounding valleys and
hills.
The end of the day of toil or boredom, as the case
might be, was announced by the drums sounding retreat, followed by the
evening gun and the ceremony of lowering the flag at sunset. The roll of
the drum and the shrill notes of the fife sounded tatoo at nine o'clock
and warned stragglers to cease their amours and other diversions and
return to their quarters within the palisades before the great gates
should close and shut them out; taps then sounded, and Fort Gibson was
again stilled in darkness. This routine repeated day after day, month
after month, and year after year, made life at the post a dull experience.
It was an isolated station in the western wilderness, far from
civilization and white settlements of consequence. The officers and men,
exiled, as they termed it, to this remote garrison, wearied of its limited
possibilities for entertainment. Trifling incidents varied the dull
routine of their lives, and episodes that mattered were of absorbing
interest.
Some cheerful diversions were available however; there
was good fishing in the river a few yards from the post, and thousands of
prairie chickens and other game afforded zestful hunting. A billiard room
furnished entertainment. Plays were written and presented in the
"theater," the building used on occasions for Indian councils and
religious services.
A course was laid out and every year there were
exciting horse races for high stakes with entries from all divisions of
the fort's population--officers, traders, and Indians. Indian ponies, that
hardly had time to rest up from running buffalo, were entered against the
horses of the post. And there were crooked race horse owners who came up
the river to the fort for the sole purpose of making what money they could
by their peculiar methods. This situation became so demoralizing that
Colonel Loomis issued an order barring these people from the reservation.
When other things palled--and when they did not-there was always the
gossip of the post, rumors and confirmation of promotions, expeditions,
and details; the departure of a command on a commission that would at
least give the men a change of scene; the rare arrival of the paymaster,
with fifty to one hundred thousand dollars in the custody of his military
escort; the frequent arrival of steam-boats when the rivers were high; and
when they were not, visitors and supplies coming by keelboats, wagons, or
pack trains.
The hoarse resonance of a steam whistle in the distance
told a jaded garrison that a steamboat on the Arkansas River was
approaching the fort. Presently the boom of the signal gun on board
announced that she had passed the bars three miles below and had safely
entered the Grand River. There was always a crowd at the landing place to
see her as she came into view down the stream. As the jangle of her bell
or the exhaust of her engines heralded her arrival, the multitude was
increased by people who were anxious to share in the excitement when she
was tied up to the shelving rock that made a natural dock.
For there were passengers to come ashore-friends to
greet, who were returning from leave with news from the outside world,
messages, and newspapers, and strangers to inspect--young officers from
West Point, older officers trained by service in other posts who had come
to a new assignment, recruits to fill gaps in the ranks. There were
civilians, too, merchants from the neighborhood who had been east
exchanging furs and skins for fresh supplies of merchandise; sutlers who
brought stores to sell to the officers and soldiers, and bonnets, dresses,
and finery for the ladies of the post. And there were wives and children
come to unite long-separated families, and young ladies who planned to
visit and bring a measure of gaiety to the garrison. Mail bags promised
letters from distant relatives and friends. Deck hands and soldiers
unloaded boxes and crates of merchandise. It was a busy and noisy scene.
Officers went aboard to enjoy the hospitality of the captain and to sample
the liquors on his boat.
Young ladies came from the East to visit relatives at
the post and they frequently married officers whom they met there, or had
previously known.In the 1830's and 1840's, when Fort Gibson received many
young officers recently out of West Point, such romances were
common.
Propinquity and the charm of the Cherokee maidens
accounted for many unions between them and the soldiers and officers at
the post. Fort Gibson was the center of society and gaiety for a large
section of the country that included the Cherokee Nation. The young women
of that tribe were much sought by the officers and were welcome guests at
the parties given at the post, where many romances budded and bloomed
during the seventy years the old fort existed. The result was that in that
part of Oklahoma which formerly constituted the Cherokee Nation, many
families descended from unions between the soldiers and Indians.
Frequently, when their terms of enlistment expired, soldiers remained in
the neighborhood, married Indian girls, reared Indian families, and became
prosperous from the land holdings these alliances brought them.
For want of diversions of greater interest, numbers of
soldiers at Fort Gibson sought such excitement as they could find in the
doggeries maintained by mixed-blood Cherokee Indians on tribal lands just
off the reservation, where drinking and gambling were indulged in.
Violations of the rule forbidding a soldier to remain outside the garrison
after retreat had sounded were frequent, and iron bars were employed on
the windows in the outer walls of the houses to enforce the regulations.
These precautionary measures, said an observer, gave the barracks the
appearance of a dilapidated Arkansas jail; the enclosure, he said, was
made to hold five companies of troop--officers and men, laundresses and
servants herded together in a climate where the temperature ranged in
summer from eighty to one hundred degrees. These remarks truly painted a
picture that explained much of the resistance to discipline and violation
of regulations.
As an instance of punishment, an offender was sentenced
to "stand on the head of a barrel with an empty bottle in each hand, in
front of the dragoon guardhouse every alternate two hours from reveille
until retreat for eight days with a board around his neck marked 'Whiskey
Seller,' to carry a pack on his back weighing fifty pounds every alternate
two hours for eight days, from reveille until retreat; to work at hard
labor in charge of the guard for fourteen days, and to have seven days of
his pay stopped." Another culprit was sentenced "to be drummed around the
garrison immediately in the rear of Corporal Charles Kelloun of H Company,
First Dragoons, carrying a keg in his arms, to have a plank hanging on his
back marked 'Whiskey Runner,' and to serve fifteen days at hard labor in
charge of the guard, making good all time lost by sickness."
Drunkenness and desertion were the most persistent and
difficult violations with which officers had to deal. The courts martial
varied the punishments inflicted upon offenders as far as their
imagination would permit. One culprit was sentenced to the custody of the
guard for thirty days "and during that period to walk in front of the
guardhouse with a pack of stones weighing fifty pounds upon his back from
eight o'clock A. M. to one P. M., and from two o'clock P. M. to retreat."
Another, in the winter was condemned "to be immersed for ten consecutive
mornings in the river, fifteen minutes before breakfast roll call."
Another's sentence was to have his "hands tied to a post above his head
from reveille to guard mount, five days at hard labor and to forfeit one
dollar per day and his portion of sugar and coffee." Forfeiture of sugar,
coffee, and whiskey was a cruel measure often resorted to. Sentence to the
stocks was employed, and frequently the garrison displayed the ghastly
spectacle of a dozen men with hands and heads projected through these
cruel devices which compelled them to stand and gave them no support. It
was charged that in some cases culprits had died under this punishment. In
October 1833, two privates of the First Dragoons convicted of desertion
were sentenced to be branded with the letter "D" on the right thigh, to
have their heads shaved, and be drummed out of the service of the United
States with strong halters around their necks.
In the early 1850's a traveler coming from the
North-west left an interesting picture of Fort Gibson: The Verdigris River
forded, "another ride of an hour or more brought us to the Neosho (Grand
River); this forded, we ride into Fort Gibson. This is a pretty place.
There is the fort itself, with its blockhouses, the palisades with their
heavy wooden gates, the stables on a hill nearby, the quarters of the
dragoons in a former day and their look-out, the campus outside the fort,
a plot of ground elevated above the river, having on two sides the houses
of the officers, the chapel and schoolhouse, the government store, and all
newly whitewashed. In this enclosure was a little burying ground,
carefully protected and tastefully adorned with trees and shrubs. We pass
out into the Cherokee country by a large gate, near which is a store
having one entrance from the fort, and another from the Indian country.
Around this door a great number of horses were tied while their riders
were within, some with articles to barter for goods, others endeavoring to
purchase by giving a lien on the annuity which will come next year, which
annuity may be sold or gambled away to several other parties, all of whom
will be at the council to claim it when it at length arrives."
Fort Gibson was still a young fort when it was
discovered that the green logs of which the houses were built were rapidly
decaying and constant repairs were required to make them habitable. It was
a sickly place and the great number of deaths which occurred there gave it
the name of the charnel house of the army. From the time of its founding
to December 8, 1835, eleven and a half years, 561 privates and 9 officers
had died at the post. During the years 1834 and 1835 the deaths numbered
293 privates and 6 officers. In the summertime, in order to avoid the
miasmic breezes carrying disease from the surrounding swamps and
canebrakes, detachments of troops were ordered to camp on the hill above,
or seven miles east on Bayou Manard at a place known as Clark's Springs,
where at one time the Cherokee agency, and later the home known as the
McLain place, were situated.
Probably no fort in the West exerted a greater
influence for the civilization of the surrounding country than did Fort
Gibson, and this became the purpose of its maintenance for many years.
With the appointment of the Stokes Indian Commission in 1832, efforts were
made to bring representatives of the wild tribes to Fort Gibson for the
purpose of making treaties with them and impressing them with the
sovereignty of the United States; it was hoped that they would conform
their conduct accordingly and become friends of the whites and of the
Indian immigrants from the East who were to be the new owners of the
Indian Territory. Ellsworth's efforts in 1832, when Irving accompanied
him, failed to accomplish this result. In 1833 another expedition set out
from Fort Gibson commanded by Lieutenant Colonel James Many.
In his command were two select companies of the Seventh
Infantry and three companies of Rangers commanded by captains Bean, Ford,
and Boone, the latter Nathan Boone, son of the famous Daniel. They went as
far as the country on the Washita, Blue, and Red rivers, but returned
empty-handed after suffering tremendous hardships.
The third effort to make contact with these Western
Indians was successfully carried out in 1834, by what became known as the
famous Dragoon Expedition. General Henry Leavenworth arrived at Fort
Gibson April 28 of that year and assumed command of the post, which he
held until June 12 when he departed in command of the expedition. This
expedition included also Colonel Henry Dodge, Colonel Stephen Watts
Kearney, and Major R. B. Mason. Jefferson Davis, a lieutenant a few years
out of West Point, was in command of one company. This train of five
hundred mounted troops, a large number of white-covered baggage wagons,
and seventy head of beeves made an imposing procession. It was accompanied
by eleven Osage, eight Cherokee, six Delaware, and seven Seneca Indians
who went along to serve as guides, hunters, interpreters, and as
representatives of their respective nations. They crossed the Arkansas
River below the mouth of Grand River, passed over the prairies near the
site of the future Muskogee, traveled southwest to the mouth of the
Washita River, then northwest, where they visited the site of a Comanche
village at the western end of the Wichita Mountains.
This was a disastrous expedition which resulted in the
deaths of nearly 150 men from disease and the effects of excessive hot
weather and poor water upon the unseasoned and undisciplined soldiers
lately recruited from private life in the North and East. Included among
the casualties of this expedition was that of General Leavenworth, who
died July 21 near the Washita River.
However, they did succeed in bringing back to Fort
Gibson representatives of the Kiowa, Wichita, and Waco tribes, and after
their return invitations were extended to all the Indians within reach to
attend a grand council at the post--Choctaws, Cherokees, Creeks, Senecas,
Osages, Delawares, and others. Here, on September 2, 1834, began one of
the most interesting and important Indian councils ever held in the
country. On this occasion every effort was made to impress the wild
Indians who had never made a treaty with the United States and make them
understand the changed political condition of the country. There were 150
Indians participating in the council, and with their numerous women and
children, tepees and tents, they made one of the most picturesque scenes
ever witnessed at any army post.
Governor Stokes and the army officers who attended did
not have authority at this time to enter into a treaty, but, with the
potent influence of Colonel A. P. Chouteau, who participated in the
council, the commissioners secured an agreement with the wild Indians to
meet in treaty council the following year. And so the plans which were
launched and carried out at Fort Gibson resulted in a treaty council begun
August 24, 1835, at Fort Mason on the Canadian River near the present
Purcell, Oklahoma, where was negotiated the first treaty ever entered into
by a number of these western tribes.
In 1837 members of the Kiowa, Apache, and Tawakoni
tribes were induced to send representatives to Fort Gibson, where on May
26 another important treaty, the first with these Indians, was negotiated.
These treaties gave assurance of peace on the part of the Indians and
guarantees of safe passage for the traders over the Santa Fe
route.
After the return of the Dragoon Expedition there were a
number of resignations of young officers who were thoroughly tired of
frontier service. An amusing incident growing out of the tension between
them resulted in a charge of insubordination against Lieutenant Jefferson
Davis by Major R. B. Mason, followed by a court martial of the young
officer at Fort Gibson. The court found him guilty but attached no
criminality to the facts, and the judgment was that he be acquitted. While
the records and decision were being considered by General E. P. Gaines,
commander of the Southwestern Military Department at Memphis, Tennessee,
Lieutenant Davis resigned from the army and went to Kentucky, where he met
and married Sarah Knox, the daughter of General Zachary Taylor, whom he
had wooed when he was serving under her father at Fort Crawford on the
upper Mississippi River.
This statement, based on the life of Davis written by
his widow, and other authentic accounts, disposes of the romantic but
wholly fictitious yarn that Davis and his bride eloped from Fort Gibson;
equally apocryphal is a house nearby that formerly was pointed out by the
credulous as the "Jeff Davis house," since during the period of scarcely
more than a year that young Lieutenant Davis served there, he and the
other members of the Dragoons did not live in a house but were quartered
in tents half a mile from the fort.
At Fort Gibson were planned and launched other
important military expeditions among the wild Indians to the west that
made possible the negotiation of numerous essential treaties with these
tribes. A number of picturesque Indian councils were held at the fort,
with representatives of many tribes from large areas of the West and
Southwest participating. These councils and negotiations exerted a
profound influence over the country, and Fort Gibson became known far and
wide as the source of important information concerning this remote
country. The early newspapers of the East consequently carried a Fort
Gibson date line more often than that of any other place west of the
Mississippi.
This ancient fort performed a multitude of other
services in connection with the civilization of this western country.
Through the years numerous military escorts were provided for the
protection of parties engaged in exploring meandering streams and
surveying boundaries of the lands occupied by different Indian tribes,
pursuant to treaties made from time to time. In the effort to prevent the
introduction of whiskey into the Indian country, detachments frequently
were sent out from the fort to seize shipments of that contraband or
arrest and remove across the line whiskey peddlers who were engaged in
this unlawful activity; others were employed either on land or in boats in
patrolling the Arkansas River for the same purpose.
The commandant at the fort was frequently called upon
by the authorities in Washington to aid parents or other relatives living
in Texas in the rescue of children captured in raids by Kiowa and Comanche
Indians. Emissaries were sent out to bring their captive children to the
fort, where a ransom was effected and the children turned over to grateful
relatives.
From several points of view Fort Gibson enjoyed a
unique association with the growth of the army. In 1832 a call was made
for six companies of mounted troops known as Rangers for service in the
Black Hawk War in Illinois. Before the companies had all been recruited
the orders were changed, and the Rangers were directed to proceed to Fort
Gibson to aid in preparing that country for the reception of the tribes
about to be emigrated from the East. The company commanded by Captain
Jesse Bean was the first to reach the fort, and they went on the scouting
tour, already mentioned, that was accompanied by Washington
Irving.
The next year it was decided to discontinue the Ranger
organization and merge the six companies with the regiment of Dragoons
authorized that year by Congress. Major Henry Dodge headed this regiment,
Major Stephen Watts Kearney was lieutenant colonel, and Captain Richard B.
Mason was appointed major. Five companies were recruited and concentrated
at Jefferson Barracks. After a proud send-off by the citizens of St.
Louis, they departed for Fort Gibson where they arrived on December 17,
1834. They were not quartered in the fort but had their own reservation on
land about half a mile south of it, and for a time lived in tents. This
regiment began its distinguished service by the tragic expedition of that
year which left so many of its members in unmarked graves along the route,
and in the little cemeteries around the fort. They were accompanied by
George Catlin, the artist, who not only painted many portraits of the
Indians he saw, but wrote an interesting account of the experiences of the
regiment.
One company of this regiment did not go on this
celebrated expedition because it was engaged, under Captain Clifton
Wharton, in escorting a company of traders on the Santa Fe Trail as far as
the Spanish boundary. In the summer of 1836 three troops of the Dragoon
regiment, with six companies of the Seventh Infantry, marched from Fort
Gibson to Nachitoches to aid the Texans in resisting what was thought to
be an impending attack by a large force of Mexicans. The peril did not
materialize and the troops returned to Fort Gibson after an arduous
campaign of several months involving a march of a month each way. During
their absence, and due to an exaggerated alarm of war with Mexico; several
hundred men in Arkansas were mustered in as volunteers and remained in
camp at Fort Gibson for months.
Again, in 1837, a company under Captain Eustace Trenor
escorted Colonel A. P. Chouteau to his trading house near the present
Purcell, Oklahoma, where he called the wild Indians to a conference in an
effort to counteract the machinations of the emissaries from Mexico and
Texas who were trying to enlist them in their respective
controversies.
And in 1839 a detachment of Dragoons commanded by
Lieutenant James M. Bowman escorted the famous trading expedition headed
by Dr. Josiah Gregg to the limits of the United States on the way to Santa
Fe and Chihuahua. Captain Nathan Boone headed a command of Dragoons that
left Fort Gibson May 14, 1843, and followed an interesting route over the
Santa Fe Trail and through the country west of this post in order to
afford protection to traders from Texas. The Dragoons continued to police
the West until this service was interrupted by the Mexican War, in which
it distinguished itself in several important battles.
Frequent reports came to Fort Gibson of the hostilities
of the Plains Indians against the people of Texas, along with rumors that
the Mexicans were aiding and abetting them. Requests were made for the
authorities at Fort Gibson to aid in making peace with these Indians on
both sides of the Red River. The Secretary of War directed this to be done
and in March, 1843, Cherokee Agent Pierce Butler left the post, and with
an escort attended a council on Tawakoni Creek in Texas, where, however,
nothing definite was accomplished. Another effort was made in the fall
when Butler was accompanied by eighty men commanded by Colonel Harney.
Again the Indians were elusive and non-committal. The next summer in 1844,
another effort was made when Captain Nathan Boone, with a company of the
First Dragoons, left the post September 25 and went to the rendezvous in
Texas; but the Indians had left when Boone arrived and he returned to Fort
Gibson unsuccessful, after an absence of six weeks. A fourth attempt was
made when in January, 1846, Governor Butler departed from Fort Gibson with
a large company of civilian hunters and adventurers and representatives of
the Creek, Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Seminole tribes. Butler was finally
successful, and on May 15, 1846, at Council Springs, Texas, negotiated a
treaty of peace with the Comanche, Anadarko, Caddo, Wichita, Waco, and
other western tribes that brought a sense of security to the frontier
settlers of Texas.
Officers and men went from Fort Gibson to take their
places in the war with Mexico; the veteran ommander Colonel Gustavus
Loomis was the last high ranking officer to leave, when he departed in
February, 1848, for his post in Mexico City. After that many war veterans
who had seen service in Mexico became part of the military establishment
at Fort Gibson.
Captain Braxton Bragg, who was to become a celebrated
commander in the Confederate Army, arrived at Fort Gibson from St. Louis
on October 31, 1853, at the head of Company C of the Third Artillery and
assumed command of the post, which he retained until June 20 of the
following year.
Indian hostilities were harassing a large extent of the
surrounding country and Colonel Pitcairn Morrison was ordered out from
Fort Gibson with three companies of the Seventh Infantry, numbering 235
officers and men. They left in June and went out over the Santa Fe Trail
in Kansas to Fort Mann and Bent's Fort, where Morrison held councils with
the chiefs of the Kiowa, Comanche, Arapaho, Apache, and Cheyenne Indians.
He then returned and arrived at Fort Gibson October 15. And so the
policing of the western country from Fort Gibson went on and on.
Soon after Morrison's return, the post entertained the
Second Cavalry just created by Congress, which was on its way to Fort
Belknap, its station in Texas, to police that country against the Indians.
They left Jefferson Barracks near St. Louis October 27, 1855, and a month
later arrived at Fort Gibson, where they remained a few days to shoe their
horses and give them a much needed rest. This regiment was commanded by
Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston; other officers of the regiment were
Colonel E. V. Sumner, Colonel J. E. Johnston, Colonel W. H. Emory, Delos
B. Sackett, J. E. B. Stuart, and other men who became known to history.
Colonel Robert E. Lee was second in command of the regiment, George H.
Thomas was a major, Edmund Kirby Smith was a captain, and John B. Hood a
lieutenant.
After the Mexican War the First Dragoons continued as
regulators of the wild Indians throughout the West. On August 3, 1861, its
designation was changed to the First United States Cavalry, and it served
with distinction during the Civil War. For the next seventy-one years this
veteran organization maintained its fine traditions. Less than two years
ago, after a hundred years of service in the saddle, this organization
ceased to exist as a mounted regiment and was removed by gas power from
Marfa, Texas to Fort Knox, Kentucky.
Fort Gibson was a haven of refuge for many classes of
people. When the emigration of the Creeks began in 1828 the first arrivals
settled on the Verdigris and Arkansas rivers near the fort to enjoy the
protection it afforded against the wild Indians occupying their lands to
the west.
In 1836 the remainder of the Creek Indians were
forcibly removed from their homes in Alabama. After appalling suffering
and many deaths on the way, their conductor brought them to Fort Gibson.
Ten thousand of them, cold, destitute, and broken spirited, were encamped
through the winter around the fort where they were given food enough to
sustain life until spring, when they could be removed to the land intended
for them. Later, when the Seminole Indians were brought as prisoners from
their old home in Florida, they were landed from the boats at Fort Gibson.
Several thousand of them were established in camps in this locality where
rations were issued to them; some of them remained several years before
they could be induced to remove to the lands intended for them. At one
time a few hundred Seminole Negroes were located at the same place. They
had surrendered to General Jesup in Florida, and claimed that they had
been promised emancipation in return for their surrender. Some of the
wealthier Seminoles claimed them as slaves, and they were retained in the
custody of the garrison while their status was being investigated and
determined by the authorities in Washington. They were employed in 1845
and 1846 in the construction of the stone buildings at the fort.
Some of the Creek immigrants who had ventured to locate
on their lands in the more remote part of their country near the present
site of Holdenville, in 1843 became involved with a band of Wichita
Indians, four of whom were killed by the Creeks. A call for help was sent
in to the settlements and a general alarm spread over the Creek country.
The Creeks became panic stricken, and women and children came flocking
into Fort Gibson. The Creek agent and some of the traders on the Verdigris
also rushed to the post for protection. Captain Boone was sent with his
company to the mouth of Little River and returned a week later with the
report that the alarm was unfounded.
Fort Gibson was employed also as a base for the
establishment of other garrisons; thus in 1833 Fort Smith was temporarily
re-established by a detachment of the Seventh Infantry from Fort Gibson
commanded by Captain John Stuart. Two years later this detachment was
again removed up the river thirteen miles to make Fort Coffee, to which
point a road was constructed from Fort Gibson. In 1838 they were removed
from Fort Coffee to create, near the Arkansas line, an establishment
called Fort Wayne, another subsidiary to Fort Gibson. In the summer of
1834, under the direction of General Leavenworth, Camp Arbuckle at the
mouth of the Cimarron River and Fort Holmes at the mouth of Little River
were established, and the necessary buildings erected by detachments of
the Seventh Infantry sent out from Fort Gibson.
In the spring of 1841 a detachment from Fort Gibson
commanded by Captain B. D. Moore was dispatched to select a location for a
fort on the Washita River; it was visited the next year by General Zachary
Taylor who approved the site for the fort, which he named Fort Washita.
Details from Fort Gibson were engaged also in the construction of a number
of important roads; thus in 1826 Captain Pierce M. Butler and Lieutenant
James L. Dawson surveyed a military road from Fort Gibson to Fort Smith,
the first planned road construction within the limits of the present
Oklahoma. Other details built the road from the post to the site of Camp
Arbuckle at the mouth of the Cimarron, and another to the mouth of the
Washita River.
The unhealthful location of Fort Gibson and the
appalling death rate there resulted in ceaseless agitation for the
abandonment of the old log fort and the removal of the garrison to a more
healthful situation. The people of Arkansas had never given up hope that
the garrison might be returned to them. When they were admitted into the
Union in 1836 they had sufficient influence to secure the passage of a
bill by Congress providing for the removal of the post to that new state.
A commission of army officers was appointed to select a new site but they
definitely reported against the wisdom of changing the location of the
fort which, they said, was greatly needed where it was; but they said that
if it were to be removed, the site selected should be at Fort Coffee,
still within the limits of the Indian Territory, about thirteen miles up
the Arkansas River from Fort Smith. As this did not meet the wishes of the
people of Arkansas the matter was dropped.
It was necessary to make constant repairs on the
decaying buildings; in 1843 a sawmill was set up at the post for cutting
lumber with which to do this work, and a contract was let to Thomas Rogers
for the delivery there of 2,000 pine logs which he was to cut on the
Spavinaw and float down Grand River.
An order was made the next summer requiring all troops
to appear on all parades and drills in white trousers, and in white
jackets on all drills. First fatigue call was to be at 5:30 in the morning
and guard mount an hour and a half later.
Continued agitation for the construction of more
substantial quarters for the garrison resulted in an appropriation by
Congress, and on July 17, 1845, General Thomas S. Jesup, quartermaster of
the army, arrived at Fort Gibson to direct the construction of new
buildings of stone on the hill above, and on the slope between it and the
old log fort. Work on the new structures was soon started and by March
1846, a barracks for two companies had progressed above the second floor
and timbers for both floors and piazzas were laid.
When the work had reached this stage it was stopped by
the burning of the saw mill at the fort with the loss of mill, lumber, and
tools. By 1855, the only building completed was the commissary, which is
to be seen across the present street from the barracks. The walls of the
partially constructed barracks stood for more than ten years, and still
marked the unfinished plans of the army when the post was abandoned. The
other structures of the fort at that time were principally log barracks,
although a substantial number of those originally standing had been
destroyed by a disastrous fire in December 1854.
The Cherokee people had been agitating for several
years for the removal of Fort Gibson from their country in order that they
might enjoy the use of the boat landing which was claimed to be the only
good landing place giving access to the interior of the Cherokee Nation.
Their argument was strengthened by the fact that, as the frontier had
advanced, newer forts had supplanted Fort Gibson in usefulness and
strategic location.
The Cherokees were finally successful; the order to
abandon the fort was issued June 8, 1857, and within the month was
substantially executed. The fort and reservation were turned over to the
Cherokee Nation, & the Cherokee Council, on November 6, 1857, passed
an act creating the town of Kee-too-wah upon what had been the military
reservation, and provided for the sale to Cherokee citizens of lots
therein.
The Civil War brought further changes to the old fort.
For a time in possession of the Confederate Army, it was afterwards
regained by the Union side and on April 5, 1863, the whole hill was
reoccupied by three Cherokee regiments, four companies of Kansas cavalry,
and Hopkins' Battery of Volunteers, an aggregate of 3,150 men, with four
field pieces and two mountain howitzers.
A main works embraced fifteen to twenty acres with
angles and facings; from this extended a line of earthworks about a
quarter of a mile in length, the whole defense being considered strong
enough to resist a force of 20,000 men. To this work was, for a time,
given the name of Fort Blunt, in compliment to Major General James G.
Blunt, then commanding the district of the frontier.
General Blunt had made a forced march from Kansas to
Fort Gibson and on the night of July 16, 1863, crossed the Arkansas River,
proceeded down the Texas Road, and the next morning attacked the
Confederate command under General Douglas H. Cooper at Honey Springs, near
the site of the present Oktaha, south of Muskogee. By this engagement, the
most important battle in the Indian Territory during the war, the Union
forces succeeded in preventing a union of Cooper's forces with those of
General William L. Cabell, coming from Fort Smith, and the probable
recapture of Fort Gibson by the Confederates.
After this battle the strength of Fort Gibson was
increased until on July 31 it aggregated 5,204, and on August 31 there
were 6,014 troops at the garrison, with eighteen field pieces. Being the
most important fortified point in the Territory, it served as headquarters
for the military operations in this region during the remainder of the
Civil War and played a conspicuous part in strengthening the hands of the
loyal elements among the tribes. The name of Blunt was officially attached
to the post until December 31, 1863, when it was dropped in favor of the
old name, Fort Gibson.
After the Union forces took possession of the fort it
was surrounded by several thousand destitute Indian and Negro refugees who
remained there for protection and for the food that was issued to them in
small quantities. The multitude of people thus congregated presented a
problem to the commandant. Some of them put in small crops under the
protection of the guns of the fort; they would have gone farther away to
their homes but for the fear that they would be raided by predatory bands
from both sides, ranging over the country.
A detachment of regular troops from the first battalion
of the Tenth United States Infantry in command of Major James M. Mulligan,
on February 17, 1866, relieved the Sixty-second Illinois Volunteers then
constituting the garrison. The post remained garrisoned under the name of
Fort Gibson by four companies of the Sixth Infantry until September 30,
1871; it was then vacated by the command under General W. B. Hazen and
broken up as a military post; there was left only a guard composed of a
small detachment of the Sixth Infantry for the quartermaster's department,
which temporarily occupied the post as a depot for such transportation and
other facilities as were necessary to enable paymasters and other officers
to communicate with Fort Sill.
Beginning with that of 1811, nearly all the classes of
the United States Military Academy at West Point were represented among
the more than one hundred graduates who were stationed at Fort Gibson from
time to time prior to the Civil War. Every class after 1819 had from three
to ten graduates who served in later years at that famous post. Many
graduates were sent from West Point direct to Fort Gibson to get their
first taste of army life and frontier experience. Eight of the class of
1842 came for their frontier service to this fort from whence they were
engaged in protecting the Santa Fe traders.
Except for short intervals, General Arbuckle commanded
at Fort Gibson for 17 years until 1841 when, because of the dilapidated
condition of the buildings there, he removed his department headquarters
(but not the garrison), to Fort Smith. Soon afterward the command was
given to General Zachary Taylor. When Taylor departed for service in
Mexico, Arbuckle was returned to the command of Fort Gibson and remained
there through the years of trouble and turmoil of his Indian neighbors of
the Cherokee Nation, with whom he was more or less involved.
Fort Gibson was garrisoned by detachments of the
Seventh Infantry from its inception in 1824 to February 7, 1839, when the
troops left for service in Florida and were replaced by the Fourth
Infantry that had arrived the day before, after a long, weary march from
that remote Seminole battleground. For a time three companies of the Third
Infantry served at the fort until the spring of 1840. The next year
General Arbuckle was relieved of his command and it was transferred for a
time to Colonel Alexander Cummings of the Fourth Infantry.
In 1843 the post was garrisoned by three troops of
Dragoons and four companies of the Sixth Infantry under the command of
Colonel William Davenport. Another well known officer who was in command
of the post in 1850 was General W. G. Belknap of the Fifth Infantry.
Belknap and Arbuckle died in 1851.
The conclusion of the Civil War returned Fort Gibson to
the unimportant status to which it was reduced by its abandonment in 1857.
For years, however, the large number of substantial buildings of the post
were found useful from time to time. It was reoccupied in July, 1872, by
two companies of the Tenth Cavalry under Colonel Benjamin H. Grierson who
was sent there to cope with the lawless element attracted by the movement
of the railroad camps engaged in building the Missouri, Kansas, and Texas
Railroad from the Kansas line to the Red River.
After the brief stay of the Tenth Cavalry a company of
the Sixth Cavalry and a detachment of the Fifth Infantry were assigned to
the post to help police the country, With Lieutenant Thomas M. Woodruft of
the Fifth Infantry in command. They were mainly occupied in aiding the
Cherokee agent in resisting the encroachment of intruding white men
unlawfully seeking to settle in the Cherokee Nation. In order to maintain
communication with the outside world a telegraph line was constructed to
the fort from the ailroad at Gibson Station. Men engaged in cutting poles
for the line were crossing the Grand River on a ferry flatboat on April
20, 1874, when in the middle of the river, by awkward handling of the
front guy rope, the boat was allowed to swing broadside to the current;
this caused it to fill with water and sink. As a result six soldiers of
the Fifth Infantry and the Sixth Cavalry and one civilian
drowned.
Later, in 1879, a detachment of the Twenty-second
Infantry under the command of Major A. S. Hough was stationed at the post
endeavoring to aid the civilian authorities in suppressing a gang of forty
or fifty thieves & desperadoes that had been plundering and
terrorizing the country, particularly in the Chickasaw Nation and on the
Potawatomi reservation. To this duty Hough had been ordered by General
Sheridan.
During the Creek trouble of 1883, called the Green
Peach War, part of the Twentieth Infantry was stationed at Fort Gibson and
detachments were sent out to Muskogee, Eufaula, and Okmulgee to police the
country. One detachment went to the Sac and Fox agency and captured
several hundred Creeks who were brought to Fort Gibson where they were
detained for a time and given protection from the hostile faction. The
Adjutant General on August 22, 1890, issued a final rder for the
abandonment of the fort, directing the withdrawal of the troops and
disposition of the public property there. In 1899, when the little
disturbance greatly exaggerated by the name of the "Snake Uprising" caused
some discussion, a company of the Ninth Infantry was for a short time
stationed at the old post.
For a number of years the Cherokee agency was conducted
at Fort Gibson, first by Montford Stokes, former governor of North
Carolina, and by his successor, Pierce M. Butler, former governor of South
Carolina, who left Fort Gibson to return to his home and organize the
Palmetto Regiment which he was commanding in the Mexican War when he was
killed August 20, 1847, at Churubusco.
Even after the removal of the agency the old fort was
the scene of amazing activities during some of the payments to the
Cherokees, notably the payment of 1852 and that of 1894. These were
festive occasions when there were nearly as many white men as Indians,
come to take what advantage they might from the large amount of currencv
in circulation. Many of them were creditors of the Indians who had come to
collect their dues; others were vendors of every conceivable sort of
merchandise calculated to tempt the Indians to part with their suddenly
acquired wealth. The payment of over a million dollars in 1894 was made in
the old barracks building. The money was piled on a table in front of the
clerks, while a dozen armed Indians stood guard on either side, and the
Indians came up as their names were called and received their
shares.
Among the many interesting visitors to Fort Gibson was
picturesque Sam Houston, who came in 1829 and established himself about
three miles northwest of the post at a place which he called Wigwam
Neosho. Here he was in close touch with the fort, the Creek agency, and
the trading post on the Verdigris River an equal distance to the
northwest, where he carried on his intrigues with the Indians, and drank
and played poker with the army officers and traders. There he lived and
enjoyed the solace of his pretty Cherokee componion, Diana Rogers, until
1832 when he left for his adventures in Texas. It may have been in a
measure the recollection of Houston and his companionship that later
influenced the movement of troops from Fort Gibson for the relief of
beleaguered Texans.
One officer of outstanding interest who served at Fort
Gibson was the Frenchman, B. L. E. Bonneville of the Seventh Infantry. In
1824, while he was a lieutenant, he secured a leave of absence and as
secretary accompanied General Lafayette to France after his triumphal tour
of the United States. Eight years later he secured another leave and made
a protracted expedition in the Rocky Mountains. He kept voluminous notes
of his experiences, which were purchased by Washington Irving who made
them into the fascinating book, The Adventures of Captain
Bonneville.
In 1888 Colonel J. J. Coppinger of the Eighteenth
Infantry was in command at Fort Gibson, and in March made an inventory of
the buildings at the post together with a general description of them. He
reported seven stone buildings and ten frame, nearly all large,
substantial buildings which ranged in condition from fair to
good.
These buildings fell into private ownership and most of
them were razed for the material that was in them. Four of the stone
buildings are standing. The barracks was originally 23 by 154 feet in
size, containing ten rooms for the accomodation of two companies of
Infantry. The north half of this building was torn down and the material
used in the construction of a house.
The Oklahoma Historical Society purchased the remaining
south half of the barracks building, the stone ammunition building, and
the great brick oven, together with the land on which they stand.
Considerable money was expended in the restoration of these buildings, and
the barracks building is now occupied by a custodian and his family who
will show the place to visitors. The most picturesque exhibit at Fort
Gibson is the reconstructed log stockade built on the site of the first
log fort. This work was directed by a commission created by the State of
Oklahoma.
The best-preserved relic of the old fort is the
commanding officer's residence, facing what was the parade ground of the
fort. Colonel William Babcock Hazen came to command the fort in January
1871. He brought there his bride who, as his widow, was later to become
the wife of the Spanish-American hero, Admiral George Dewey. Lieutenant
Colonel John Joseph Coppinger, commandant of the fort, occupied the
building in 1886 with his family. James G. Blaine, father of Mrs.
Coppinger, visited his daughter in this residence and was confined there
at one time by illness. The cornerstone of the building bears the
inscription: "Erected A. D. 1867, A. S. Kimball, Capt. A. Q. M. U.
S."
The story of Fort Gibson is an epic of the prairies; a
tale of the winning of the great Southwest; an account of the conquest of
the fleet warriors of the plains; a narrative of the security of trade and
contact with old Santa Fe and California. Fort Gibson saw the beginning
and the end of the keelboat and the whole career of the river
steamboat.
Unknown to the present generation, the old fort and the
few relics of that venerable establishment that have escaped the hand of
the vandal should still have a claim on our consideration. Around them
cluster associations with the past and reminders of early attempts at the
civilization of this western country. The activities of this frontier
post, the toil and hardship, sickness and death endured there, the
picturesqueness of its population, the pageantry of its activities and
functions--all these are calculated to stir the imagination of the
beholder and stimulate in him an interest in the fascinating history of
this country.
Click on the Next button below to see a list of the
Officers that were stationed at Ft. Gibson
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Ginger's Graphics and are her property. If you would like to see other
work by this artist, click on the link below.
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This page last updated February 2005 - Copyright Jacque Hopkins, 1996-2005
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