The
following article, The End of the Indian
Wars, was published in The Cashmere
Valley Record, Vol. 30, No. 8, on 20 February 1936. I share it with you
because it was of interest to Washington history buffs.
The next time you drive from Spokane to Pullman and
Lewiston, take particular notice of Steptoe Butte. If you have ever driven over
this road you will remember it, for it is a landmark for miles around. It was a
guide post for the gold seekers at Colville and Pierce and for missionaries,
stockmen and homesteaders.
The hill was named for Lt. Col. Steptoe, one of Col.
George Wright’s assistants in the Indian Wars of the ‘50s. During the summer of
1856, and throughout 1857 and 1858, the Indian troubles had continued on about
the same three fronts as already noted: the Seattle-Puget Sound country, the
Yakima Valley, and the Palouse-Walla Walla area. Col. Wright had wintered at
Vancouver and had started upstream in March. Leaving the portage around the
rapids in the Columbia, from which the city of The Dalles, Ore., takes its
name, guarded by a handful of men, he pushed on, heading for Walla Walla and
the upper country.
It was at this portage that the Indians resumed the
war on March 26, 1856. An attack was made and several whites killed and
scalped. Help arrived from Vancouver under Sheridan just in time to avoid a
complete massacre. Thus the first state of the ’56 campaign ended in the
whites’ favor. Col. Wright then crossed Simcoe Pass to the Yakima Country. Here
Wright, who clung to the idea that the Indians had been wronged, spent several
months in parleying for peace.
But the governor remembered well his experiences at
the hands of the Nez Perces. They had saved his life…and he well knew it. He
therefore determined to place a force at Walla Walla that would insure the fair
treatment of his friends.
Col. Wright, avoided going to the “aid” of the Nez
Perces, and sent Col. Steptoe instead. The Governor went himself to try and
make another peace, but it fared little better than the big peace council
formerly held there. The two factions had too many differences…there was too
much involved. As a result of this 1856 failure, Gen. Wool, commanding the
regular army regiments concerned, ordered the area vacated by all except
soldiers and missionaries. And, too, Fort Walla Walla was built…just where the
present city stands.
Please
stay tuned for Part 2 next time.
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