13
13
0
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 8
The Nez Perce last stand | Chief Joseph (Part 1)
The incredible story of the Nez Perce last stand in 1877 and their leader Chief Joseph. Follow us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nativea...
Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on October 5, 1877 Nez Perce leader Chief Joseph formally surrendered his forces to General Nelson A. Miles and General Oliver Otis Howard at Bear Paw Mountain, Montana Territory.
The Nez Perce last stand | Chief Joseph (Part 1)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EykveisE8xQ
Images:
1. Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt or Hinmatóowyalahtq it surrenders to General Nelson Appleton Miles on October 5, 1877, thereby ending the Nez Perce War.
2. Chief Joseph and Family, ca. 1880;
3. Chief Joseph's House, Colville Indian Reservation, 1901; Photo by Edmond Meany
4. Studio portrait of Nez Perce Chief Joseph (1840-1904) Photo by Milton Loryea,
Background from {[https://www.historylink.org/File/8975]}
Chief Joseph (1840-1904) By Jim Kershner
Posted 4/07/2009
HistoryLink.org Essay 8975
Chief Joseph (1840-1904) was a leader of the Wallowa band of the Nez Perce Tribe, who became famous in 1877 for leading his people on an epic flight across the Rocky Mountains. He was born in 1840 and he was called Joseph by Reverend Henry H. Spalding (1803-1874), who had established a mission amongst the Nez Perce in 1836. Young Joseph and his father soon returned to their traditional ways in their Wallowa homeland in Oregon. When Joseph grew up and assumed the chieftanship, he was under increasing governmental pressure to abandon his Wallowa land and join the rest of the Nez Perce on their reservation near Lapwai, Idaho. Joseph refused, saying that he had promised his father he would never leave. In 1877, these disputes erupted into violence and Joseph's band, along with other Nez Perce bands, fled across the Bitterroot Mountains into Montana, with federal troops in pursuit. Joseph was by no means the military leader of the group, yet his standing in the tribe made him the camp chief and the group's political leader. It was Joseph who finally surrendered the decimated band to federal troops near the Canadian border in Montana. Joseph and the tribe were taken to a reservation in Indian Territory in present day Oklahoma, where they remained until 1885 when they were sent to the Colville Reservation in North Central Washington. Joseph made several visits to Washington, D.C., to plead for a return to the Wallowa country, but his pleas were in vain. Joseph died in 1904 in Nespelem, Washington, of what his doctor called "a broken heart." His tomb remains in Nespelem today.
Reverend Spalding and Young Joseph
The boy who came to be called In-Mut-Too-Yah-Lat-Tat (sometimes spelled Hin-Mah-Too-Yah-Lat-Kekht or Heinmot Tooyalakekt) or, Thunder Rolling in the Mountains entered the world in 1840, somewhere in the beautiful and dramatic landscape centered on Wallowa Lake in northeastern Oregon. His father, Tuekakas (d. 1871), was the chief of the Wallowa Nez Perce band. They lived far from the main body of the tribe, which was across the Snake River in Idaho, but they reunited often to fish for salmon, gather camas roots, and socialize.
The Presbyterian missionary Rev. Spalding had arrived at Lapwai, Idaho, in 1836 to spread Christianity amongst the Nez Perce. Tuekakas was intrigued by Spalding and his white religion; Spalding baptized him and gave him the name Joseph. When his son came along, he was called Young Joseph.
Young Joseph spent much of his earliest years at Spalding's mission, and probably attended some of Spalding's lessons. But he was too young to learn much English and when the boy was still small, Old Joseph (Tuekakas) had a falling-out with Spalding. His band returned to its old ways at Wallowa.
Yet it became increasingly difficult to maintain the old ways of life. White miners and settlers began to encroach on their lands. Uprisings by other tribes across the Columbia Plateau had resulted in U.S. Army incursions, although Old Joseph managed to keep the Nez Perce at peace.
Treaties and Tragedies Following
In 1855, Old Joseph and Young Joseph attended a treaty council called by territorial governor Isaac Stevens (1818-1862) at Walla Walla. Stevens convinced the region's tribes that the best way to preserve their homelands from white encroachment was to sign a reservation treaty. The Nez Perce chiefs, including Old Joseph, signed it because the reservation included the band's Wallowa homeland and almost all of the other areas in present day Oregon, Washington, and Idaho where the band roamed.
Yet within months it became clear that the treaty was unenforceable. The settlers and miners kept coming. In 1863, federal authorities called another treaty council. Young Joseph attended as an observer. This time, many of the chiefs were alarmed at the provisions of the treaty. It called for giving up almost all of the tribe's lands -- including the entire Wallowa country -- in exchange for a small area around Lapwai and Kamiah. The government presumed that the Nez Perce wanted to settle down and become farmers, a notion that particularly appalled Young Joseph, who was passionately committed to his band's ancient roaming ways.
Old Joseph was equally disgusted. He, along with four other chiefs, refused to have any part of it and walked out. Some of the Christianized bands based at Lapwai and Kamiah remained at the council and one of their chiefs, named Lawyer ("because he was a great talker," said Joseph later) signed the treaty. The treaty gave away all of the Nez Perce lands outside that small reservation area, laying the foundations for tragedy to come.
The Nez Perce Divided
The tribe was now divided between the treaty Nez Perce and the non-treaty Nez Perce. Old Joseph, defiantly non-treaty, went back to Wallowa and, in disgust, tore up the Bible that Spalding had once given him.
By 1871, Old Joseph's health was failing. As he lay dying in his beloved Wallowa country, he gave his young successor advice on how to handle the inevitable conflicts with the whites.
"When you go into council with the white man, always remember your country," he told his son. "Do not give it away" (Joseph).
Chief Joseph
In August 1871, his father died and Young Joseph became Chief Joseph, the leader of his band (although he continued to call himself In-Mut-Too-Yah-Lat-Tat). He was by most accounts a tall, handsome man, with a natural charisma and command.
"He was at that time an ideal type of an American Indian, six feet in height, graceful of movement, magnificently proportioned, with deep chest and splendid muscles," wrote Eliza Spalding Warren, the daughter of Reverend Spalding, in 1916. "His expression was mild and impassive, except when aroused, when a light would come into his small bright eyes, which denoted the iron will and defiant, war-like spirit that lay beneath" (Warren).
General O. O. Howard (1830-1909) who became famous for his pursuit of Chief Joseph, later wrote that Joseph was "finely formed" and notable mostly for the "particular expression of his face" (Howard). "It appeared to partake of the mild obstinacy of his father and the treacherous slyness of his mother's people [the Cayuse]," Howard wrote. "Joseph wore a somber look and seldom smiled."
Yet, according to biographer Kent Nerburn, Chief Joseph did not have a reputation within his band as a warrior or even as a hunter. He was valued more for his counsel and his strength of purpose, and his commitment to the old ways on the band's ancestral lands. During a series of parlays with government officials, he continued to insist that he "would not sell the land" nor "give up the land" (Nerburn).
Soon that steadfast commitment would be stretched to the breaking point. Pressure was building to move all of the Nez Perce onto the small Idaho reservation. Howard called another treaty council in May 1877, but this time, there would be no negotiation. Howard told Joseph and the other chiefs that their people would need to move, and would have 30 days to do it. If they refused, the army would move them by force.
"Rather than Have War ..."
When Joseph returned from the council, he discovered that soldiers had already moved in to the Wallowa Valley, ready to force them off.
"I said in my heart that, rather than have war, I would give up my country," Joseph later said. "I would rather give up my father's grave. I would rather give up everything than have the blood of the white men upon the hands of my people" (Joseph).
Joseph then led his forlorn -- and in many cases, angry -- people to Camas Prairie in Idaho for one last tribal rendezvous before picking out their own parts of the reservation. He was convinced it was the only way to keep his people safe and intact. He also believed that he could eventually work out an agreement that would allow them to return to Wallowa and at least share the land with the white settlers.
Joseph had one intensely personal reason for avoiding war. He had a newborn child -- one of his wives, Springtime, had just given birth days before to a daughter. But the mood at Camas Prairie was belligerent. A band of Nez Perce warriors had ridden off to the white settlements to exact bloody revenge for an earlier murder. Warfare broke out.
"When my young men began the killing my heart hurt," said Joseph. "Although I did not justify them, I remembered all the insults I had endured, and my blood was on fire. Still, I would have taken my people to buffalo country without fighting, if possible" (Joseph).
The Long Exodus
Joseph and the other chiefs concluded that the only way to avoid all-out war was to leave their country altogether, head over Lolo Pass into Montana, and buy some time among the friendly Flathead people in the buffalo country. Yet as they made preparations to move, fierce battles with soldiers broke out in White Bird Canyon on the Snake River, and then on the Clearwater River. All-out war was already upon them.
At this point, Joseph was only one chief among several strong leaders, including White Bird, Chief Looking Glass, and Toohoolhoolzote. The latter two were strongly in favor of crossing Lolo Pass and then continuing even farther east to the buffalo plains of central and eastern Montana. Joseph was not convinced; he wanted to cross the pass, spend time in the Bitterroot Valley, wait until tempers cooled down, and then return to the Wallowa Valley. What was the point of fighting, he said, if they weren't fighting for their land?
Yet Looking Glass prevailed and became the acknowledged military commander of the group. Joseph is said to have replied, "This is your fight, not mine. I will conduct the retreat of the women and the children. It is your task to keep the soldiers away" (Beal).
Joseph's role became that of camp chief -- organizing all of the camp logistics and making sure that all of the families were safe and accounted for. This was an enormous and important task -- somewhere around 800 Nez Perce were on the move, the majority women and children, accompanied by horses and pack animals estimated at 3,000.
The task was never more important than on the first part of the exodus, the Lolo Trail across the Bitterroots, notorious for its cliffs, mud, rocks and steep-cut mountains. Yet the Nez Perce had a huge advantage as they filed their way atop these heavily forested ridges. They had traveled the route for centuries, on the way to the buffalo grounds. General Howard, burdened with wagons and guns, lagged far behind.
Howard later wrote that the Indians "jammed their ponies through, up the rocks, over and under the logs and among the fallen trees without attempting to cut a limb, leaving blood to mark their path." If he had followed their example, after three days he "would not have had ten mules left on their feet" (Howard).
Joseph and the Nez Perce made it over Lolo Pass and down to the Bitterroot Valley with only minor skirmishes. Joseph believed that they had left the war behind them. During one early confrontation with soldiers at an ineffectual barricade nicknamed Fort Fizzle, they struck an impromptu deal.
"We agreed not to molest anyone and they agreed that we might pass through the Bitterroot country in peace," Joseph later wrote (Joseph).
They even stopped for several days at Stevensville to rest up and to trade stock with white settlers. Looking Glass patrolled the streets of Stevensville, making sure his young warriors weren't getting drunk and causing trouble.
The Flathead people, however, had chosen to remain neutral and were far from welcoming. By this time, even Joseph was resigned to crossing all the way over the Rocky Mountains and getting to the plains.
Peace Is Shattered
Any illusion of peace was shattered at the Battle of the Big Hole. Soldiers under the command of Colonel John Gibbon (1827-1896) caught up with the Nez Perce, camped in a high mountain meadow. The soldiers made a surprise attack, firing into the lodges and teepees. A fierce fight raged for the rest of the day. Joseph estimated that 80 Nez Perce were killed; 50 of them women and children.
"Nez Perce never make war on women and children," Joseph later said. "We could have killed a great many ... while the war lasted, but we would feel ashamed to do so" (Beal).
Gibbon lost 29 soldiers, plus five civilian volunteers. The Nez Perce had managed to rally and make a successful escape, but this battle marked a turning point. No more would Joseph and his tribe believe that peace could be an option. Mutual distrust and violence marked the rest of the long Nez Perce trail, which would lead for another 1,000 miles.
Joseph never pretended to be a master military strategist, as others later claimed, yet he did play a key role in salvaging an important victory at Big Hole. He and another warrior rescued the tribe's grazing horses from being stampeded by the soldiers, thus ensuring that the exodus could continue.
Yellowstone Country and Beyond
The tribe put their wounded on travois poles and continued toward the Yellowstone country, with several more skirmishes and raiding parties along the way. When they entered Yellowstone National Park, they ran into several parties of tourists. Some of the young warriors, now utterly distrustful of all whites, apprehended and shot two of them, although Joseph did what he could to protect the rest. He later said that most of them "were treated kindly" and the "women were not insulted" (Joseph). Clearly, it was becoming more and more difficult for Joseph, Looking Glass, and another leader named Poker Joe to keep the angry and desperate warriors in line.
Army troops were waiting for the Nez Perce to emerge from the park, but Joseph and his people crossed the Absaroka Range in places deemed impassable, and eluded their captors. Then they struck straight north for the Canadian border, their refuge of last resort.
It was now September 1877 and the weather was starting to turn bad. They had lost many of their warriors and the families were exhausted by this epic journey. They were camped at the foot of the Bear Paw Mountains in Montana, only a couple of days ride from the Canadian border, when troops under Colonel Nelson Miles (1839-1925) caught up with them.
The Last Battle
In a series of bloody battles, some fought in the snow, Looking Glass and Toohoolhoolzote were killed. So was Joseph's brother, Ollokut. Some Nez Perce, as many as 200, escaped and made their way over the Canadian border. But most were tired, wounded and exhausted.
"I could not bear to see my wounded men and women suffer any longer," said Joseph. "We had lost enough already" (Joseph).
In the face of their hopeless situation, it was left to Joseph to meet with Miles and Howard on October 5, 1877, and hand over his rifle in a symbolic gesture of surrender.
Joseph's surrender speech, recorded by one of the soldiers, became one of the most famous speeches of the American West:
"It is cold and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are — perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me my chiefs. I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever" (Beal).
The accuracy of that transcription is in doubt; for one thing, Joseph did not speak English and whatever he said had to be translated. But Joseph later specified that he did say words which amounted to, "From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more" (Joseph).
He surrendered with the assurance from Miles that he and his people would be transported back to the reservation in Idaho. This was one more promise not kept. Federal authorities were afraid that passions would be re-ignited in Idaho if the Nez Perce returned, so the ailing and wounded band, now 400 strong, was escorted first to North Dakota, then to a camp in Kansas, and finally, in the summer of 1878, to a reservation in Indian Territory, now Oklahoma.
Chief Joseph, National Icon
Chief Joseph, to his surprise, had become a nationwide sensation. Even while the war was going on, Joseph was getting credit for every Nez Perce victory. The press called him "The Red Napoleon." After the Battle of the Big Hole, The New York Times reported that the military skills of Joseph and the Nez Perce were "as if they had been acquired at West Point" (West).
Howard himself lavished praise on Joseph's "consummate generalship" which was "equal to that of many a partisan leader whose deeds have entered into classic story" (Howard).
Now that Joseph was the only Nez Perce chief left, he became even more idolized. A newspaper correspondent from St. Louis said, "A more noble captive has never graced our land." Joseph tried to use some of this newfound admiration to get a better deal for his people. He was sent to Washington, D.C., in 1879 to meet with President Rutherford B. Hayes (1822-1893) and other officials. He received a huge ovation when he spoke to a group of congressmen and other officials, but no other satisfaction.
A Tragic Exile
Joseph and his fellow Northwesterners were miserable and ravaged by disease in the utterly alien Indian Territory. His young daughter, born as the war started, succumbed. Joseph told the Washington dignitaries that his new home "amounts to nothing."
Joseph wrote to his old friend Chief Moses (1829-1899), of the Columbia tribe, and asked him if his band could join Moses on his recently established Colville Reservation in North Central Washington. It was about 150 miles from the Wallowa country, but it had the same salmon, camas meadows, and ponderosa pines they remembered so fondly. Moses agreed and, eventually, so did the federal government.
In 1885, Joseph and 149 others were packed into trains and sent to the Colville Reservation; about 118 of the other exiles, mostly the Christianized Nez Perce, were sent back to Lapwai.
Moses greeted Joseph as a brother, but the reception was cooler amongst the San Poil and Nespelem tribes, which also shared the reservation. At one point, hostilities with the San Poil were barely averted. Joseph and his band lived close to Moses' band near the little settlement of Nespelem and settled into a relatively peaceful, but poverty-stricken, life.
They were free once again to hunt, fish, and gather roots and berries -- but everything was harder to come by. The Indian agents wanted the Nez Perce to grow their own food, but Joseph showed no inclination to become a farmer.
Two Old Chiefs
Some white settlers of the region considered Joseph's presence to be dangerous. They called him a "large, fat-faced, scheming, cruel-looking cuss" (Nerburn). Moses and Joseph became a common sight in Wilbur and other nearby towns. A Wilbur reporter wrote the "two old murdering rascals" strutted around town "as only becomes men of rank" (Ruby and Brown).
They later became increasingly jealous of each other and did not always get along. Once, when someone asked Moses if Chief Joseph was going to come to the Yakima Jubilee, Moses said, "He is not very good to ride now and it will take him as long to come down here as an old woman" (Ruby and Brown).
As the years passed, it became harder for the Nez Perce to maintain the horse herds that were so integral to the Nez Perce way of life. Moses complained that the Nez Perce had become indolent since coming to the reservation and indulged too much in drinking and gambling. Joseph and his people became more dependent on government handouts.
Yet Joseph never gave up his crusade to return to the Wallowa Valley. He made several more fruitless trips to Washington, D.C., to make his case. During an 1897 trip, he was invited to New York City to attend Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show at Madison Square Garden, where, remarkably, he was greeted by old enemies Howard and Miles and conversed congenially with them.
Hopes Dashed Forever
Finally, in 1900, Chief Joseph received permission to return to Wallowa and make his case before the valley's white settlers. He told a large crowd that he had never sold his land and that he now wished to reclaim some of the prime land near his father's burial place, as well as some areas near Wallowa Lake and parts of the Imnaha Valley. He was met with jeers. They considered Joseph sentimental and delusional and expressed no willingness to sell him, much less give him, any land at all.
A government inspector who accompanied Joseph recommended that Joseph was better off staying on the Colville.
So, his hopes dashed forever, he remained on the Colville with his small band, living in a teepee instead of the house that had been provided him. His people stuck to their old ways, building a longhouse for their ceremonies. To the local Indian agent, this was simply "passing away their time in a filthy and licentious way of living" (Nerburn).
He remained a celebrity back East, however. In 1903 he was invited to give an anniversary speech at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, where he shared the stage with General Howard. He said that "ever since the war, I have made up my mind to be friendly to the whites and to everybody" (Nerburn).
A Broken Heart
His health and his spirits slowly declined. On September 21, 1904, as he lay dying of an undiagnosed illness, he asked his wife to get his headdress because "I wish to die as a chief" (Nerburn). Soon after, Chief Joseph's long journey was over.
His name lives on in the Chief Joseph Dam on the Columbia River, Chief Joseph Pass in Montana, and the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway in Wyoming. Most poignantly, it lives on in the places he loved best: Joseph Creek, Joseph Canyon and the small town of Joseph, Oregon, in the heart of the Wallowa Valley.
Yet his tomb, marked by a tall white monument, remains in Nespelem, Washington, not far from where he died. He never achieved his dream to be buried in the land he loved.
"Chief Joseph," said the white physician who attended him, "died of a broken heart" (Nerburn).
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick MSG Felipe De Leon Brown SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj Kim Patterson PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi
The Nez Perce last stand | Chief Joseph (Part 1)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EykveisE8xQ
Images:
1. Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt or Hinmatóowyalahtq it surrenders to General Nelson Appleton Miles on October 5, 1877, thereby ending the Nez Perce War.
2. Chief Joseph and Family, ca. 1880;
3. Chief Joseph's House, Colville Indian Reservation, 1901; Photo by Edmond Meany
4. Studio portrait of Nez Perce Chief Joseph (1840-1904) Photo by Milton Loryea,
Background from {[https://www.historylink.org/File/8975]}
Chief Joseph (1840-1904) By Jim Kershner
Posted 4/07/2009
HistoryLink.org Essay 8975
Chief Joseph (1840-1904) was a leader of the Wallowa band of the Nez Perce Tribe, who became famous in 1877 for leading his people on an epic flight across the Rocky Mountains. He was born in 1840 and he was called Joseph by Reverend Henry H. Spalding (1803-1874), who had established a mission amongst the Nez Perce in 1836. Young Joseph and his father soon returned to their traditional ways in their Wallowa homeland in Oregon. When Joseph grew up and assumed the chieftanship, he was under increasing governmental pressure to abandon his Wallowa land and join the rest of the Nez Perce on their reservation near Lapwai, Idaho. Joseph refused, saying that he had promised his father he would never leave. In 1877, these disputes erupted into violence and Joseph's band, along with other Nez Perce bands, fled across the Bitterroot Mountains into Montana, with federal troops in pursuit. Joseph was by no means the military leader of the group, yet his standing in the tribe made him the camp chief and the group's political leader. It was Joseph who finally surrendered the decimated band to federal troops near the Canadian border in Montana. Joseph and the tribe were taken to a reservation in Indian Territory in present day Oklahoma, where they remained until 1885 when they were sent to the Colville Reservation in North Central Washington. Joseph made several visits to Washington, D.C., to plead for a return to the Wallowa country, but his pleas were in vain. Joseph died in 1904 in Nespelem, Washington, of what his doctor called "a broken heart." His tomb remains in Nespelem today.
Reverend Spalding and Young Joseph
The boy who came to be called In-Mut-Too-Yah-Lat-Tat (sometimes spelled Hin-Mah-Too-Yah-Lat-Kekht or Heinmot Tooyalakekt) or, Thunder Rolling in the Mountains entered the world in 1840, somewhere in the beautiful and dramatic landscape centered on Wallowa Lake in northeastern Oregon. His father, Tuekakas (d. 1871), was the chief of the Wallowa Nez Perce band. They lived far from the main body of the tribe, which was across the Snake River in Idaho, but they reunited often to fish for salmon, gather camas roots, and socialize.
The Presbyterian missionary Rev. Spalding had arrived at Lapwai, Idaho, in 1836 to spread Christianity amongst the Nez Perce. Tuekakas was intrigued by Spalding and his white religion; Spalding baptized him and gave him the name Joseph. When his son came along, he was called Young Joseph.
Young Joseph spent much of his earliest years at Spalding's mission, and probably attended some of Spalding's lessons. But he was too young to learn much English and when the boy was still small, Old Joseph (Tuekakas) had a falling-out with Spalding. His band returned to its old ways at Wallowa.
Yet it became increasingly difficult to maintain the old ways of life. White miners and settlers began to encroach on their lands. Uprisings by other tribes across the Columbia Plateau had resulted in U.S. Army incursions, although Old Joseph managed to keep the Nez Perce at peace.
Treaties and Tragedies Following
In 1855, Old Joseph and Young Joseph attended a treaty council called by territorial governor Isaac Stevens (1818-1862) at Walla Walla. Stevens convinced the region's tribes that the best way to preserve their homelands from white encroachment was to sign a reservation treaty. The Nez Perce chiefs, including Old Joseph, signed it because the reservation included the band's Wallowa homeland and almost all of the other areas in present day Oregon, Washington, and Idaho where the band roamed.
Yet within months it became clear that the treaty was unenforceable. The settlers and miners kept coming. In 1863, federal authorities called another treaty council. Young Joseph attended as an observer. This time, many of the chiefs were alarmed at the provisions of the treaty. It called for giving up almost all of the tribe's lands -- including the entire Wallowa country -- in exchange for a small area around Lapwai and Kamiah. The government presumed that the Nez Perce wanted to settle down and become farmers, a notion that particularly appalled Young Joseph, who was passionately committed to his band's ancient roaming ways.
Old Joseph was equally disgusted. He, along with four other chiefs, refused to have any part of it and walked out. Some of the Christianized bands based at Lapwai and Kamiah remained at the council and one of their chiefs, named Lawyer ("because he was a great talker," said Joseph later) signed the treaty. The treaty gave away all of the Nez Perce lands outside that small reservation area, laying the foundations for tragedy to come.
The Nez Perce Divided
The tribe was now divided between the treaty Nez Perce and the non-treaty Nez Perce. Old Joseph, defiantly non-treaty, went back to Wallowa and, in disgust, tore up the Bible that Spalding had once given him.
By 1871, Old Joseph's health was failing. As he lay dying in his beloved Wallowa country, he gave his young successor advice on how to handle the inevitable conflicts with the whites.
"When you go into council with the white man, always remember your country," he told his son. "Do not give it away" (Joseph).
Chief Joseph
In August 1871, his father died and Young Joseph became Chief Joseph, the leader of his band (although he continued to call himself In-Mut-Too-Yah-Lat-Tat). He was by most accounts a tall, handsome man, with a natural charisma and command.
"He was at that time an ideal type of an American Indian, six feet in height, graceful of movement, magnificently proportioned, with deep chest and splendid muscles," wrote Eliza Spalding Warren, the daughter of Reverend Spalding, in 1916. "His expression was mild and impassive, except when aroused, when a light would come into his small bright eyes, which denoted the iron will and defiant, war-like spirit that lay beneath" (Warren).
General O. O. Howard (1830-1909) who became famous for his pursuit of Chief Joseph, later wrote that Joseph was "finely formed" and notable mostly for the "particular expression of his face" (Howard). "It appeared to partake of the mild obstinacy of his father and the treacherous slyness of his mother's people [the Cayuse]," Howard wrote. "Joseph wore a somber look and seldom smiled."
Yet, according to biographer Kent Nerburn, Chief Joseph did not have a reputation within his band as a warrior or even as a hunter. He was valued more for his counsel and his strength of purpose, and his commitment to the old ways on the band's ancestral lands. During a series of parlays with government officials, he continued to insist that he "would not sell the land" nor "give up the land" (Nerburn).
Soon that steadfast commitment would be stretched to the breaking point. Pressure was building to move all of the Nez Perce onto the small Idaho reservation. Howard called another treaty council in May 1877, but this time, there would be no negotiation. Howard told Joseph and the other chiefs that their people would need to move, and would have 30 days to do it. If they refused, the army would move them by force.
"Rather than Have War ..."
When Joseph returned from the council, he discovered that soldiers had already moved in to the Wallowa Valley, ready to force them off.
"I said in my heart that, rather than have war, I would give up my country," Joseph later said. "I would rather give up my father's grave. I would rather give up everything than have the blood of the white men upon the hands of my people" (Joseph).
Joseph then led his forlorn -- and in many cases, angry -- people to Camas Prairie in Idaho for one last tribal rendezvous before picking out their own parts of the reservation. He was convinced it was the only way to keep his people safe and intact. He also believed that he could eventually work out an agreement that would allow them to return to Wallowa and at least share the land with the white settlers.
Joseph had one intensely personal reason for avoiding war. He had a newborn child -- one of his wives, Springtime, had just given birth days before to a daughter. But the mood at Camas Prairie was belligerent. A band of Nez Perce warriors had ridden off to the white settlements to exact bloody revenge for an earlier murder. Warfare broke out.
"When my young men began the killing my heart hurt," said Joseph. "Although I did not justify them, I remembered all the insults I had endured, and my blood was on fire. Still, I would have taken my people to buffalo country without fighting, if possible" (Joseph).
The Long Exodus
Joseph and the other chiefs concluded that the only way to avoid all-out war was to leave their country altogether, head over Lolo Pass into Montana, and buy some time among the friendly Flathead people in the buffalo country. Yet as they made preparations to move, fierce battles with soldiers broke out in White Bird Canyon on the Snake River, and then on the Clearwater River. All-out war was already upon them.
At this point, Joseph was only one chief among several strong leaders, including White Bird, Chief Looking Glass, and Toohoolhoolzote. The latter two were strongly in favor of crossing Lolo Pass and then continuing even farther east to the buffalo plains of central and eastern Montana. Joseph was not convinced; he wanted to cross the pass, spend time in the Bitterroot Valley, wait until tempers cooled down, and then return to the Wallowa Valley. What was the point of fighting, he said, if they weren't fighting for their land?
Yet Looking Glass prevailed and became the acknowledged military commander of the group. Joseph is said to have replied, "This is your fight, not mine. I will conduct the retreat of the women and the children. It is your task to keep the soldiers away" (Beal).
Joseph's role became that of camp chief -- organizing all of the camp logistics and making sure that all of the families were safe and accounted for. This was an enormous and important task -- somewhere around 800 Nez Perce were on the move, the majority women and children, accompanied by horses and pack animals estimated at 3,000.
The task was never more important than on the first part of the exodus, the Lolo Trail across the Bitterroots, notorious for its cliffs, mud, rocks and steep-cut mountains. Yet the Nez Perce had a huge advantage as they filed their way atop these heavily forested ridges. They had traveled the route for centuries, on the way to the buffalo grounds. General Howard, burdened with wagons and guns, lagged far behind.
Howard later wrote that the Indians "jammed their ponies through, up the rocks, over and under the logs and among the fallen trees without attempting to cut a limb, leaving blood to mark their path." If he had followed their example, after three days he "would not have had ten mules left on their feet" (Howard).
Joseph and the Nez Perce made it over Lolo Pass and down to the Bitterroot Valley with only minor skirmishes. Joseph believed that they had left the war behind them. During one early confrontation with soldiers at an ineffectual barricade nicknamed Fort Fizzle, they struck an impromptu deal.
"We agreed not to molest anyone and they agreed that we might pass through the Bitterroot country in peace," Joseph later wrote (Joseph).
They even stopped for several days at Stevensville to rest up and to trade stock with white settlers. Looking Glass patrolled the streets of Stevensville, making sure his young warriors weren't getting drunk and causing trouble.
The Flathead people, however, had chosen to remain neutral and were far from welcoming. By this time, even Joseph was resigned to crossing all the way over the Rocky Mountains and getting to the plains.
Peace Is Shattered
Any illusion of peace was shattered at the Battle of the Big Hole. Soldiers under the command of Colonel John Gibbon (1827-1896) caught up with the Nez Perce, camped in a high mountain meadow. The soldiers made a surprise attack, firing into the lodges and teepees. A fierce fight raged for the rest of the day. Joseph estimated that 80 Nez Perce were killed; 50 of them women and children.
"Nez Perce never make war on women and children," Joseph later said. "We could have killed a great many ... while the war lasted, but we would feel ashamed to do so" (Beal).
Gibbon lost 29 soldiers, plus five civilian volunteers. The Nez Perce had managed to rally and make a successful escape, but this battle marked a turning point. No more would Joseph and his tribe believe that peace could be an option. Mutual distrust and violence marked the rest of the long Nez Perce trail, which would lead for another 1,000 miles.
Joseph never pretended to be a master military strategist, as others later claimed, yet he did play a key role in salvaging an important victory at Big Hole. He and another warrior rescued the tribe's grazing horses from being stampeded by the soldiers, thus ensuring that the exodus could continue.
Yellowstone Country and Beyond
The tribe put their wounded on travois poles and continued toward the Yellowstone country, with several more skirmishes and raiding parties along the way. When they entered Yellowstone National Park, they ran into several parties of tourists. Some of the young warriors, now utterly distrustful of all whites, apprehended and shot two of them, although Joseph did what he could to protect the rest. He later said that most of them "were treated kindly" and the "women were not insulted" (Joseph). Clearly, it was becoming more and more difficult for Joseph, Looking Glass, and another leader named Poker Joe to keep the angry and desperate warriors in line.
Army troops were waiting for the Nez Perce to emerge from the park, but Joseph and his people crossed the Absaroka Range in places deemed impassable, and eluded their captors. Then they struck straight north for the Canadian border, their refuge of last resort.
It was now September 1877 and the weather was starting to turn bad. They had lost many of their warriors and the families were exhausted by this epic journey. They were camped at the foot of the Bear Paw Mountains in Montana, only a couple of days ride from the Canadian border, when troops under Colonel Nelson Miles (1839-1925) caught up with them.
The Last Battle
In a series of bloody battles, some fought in the snow, Looking Glass and Toohoolhoolzote were killed. So was Joseph's brother, Ollokut. Some Nez Perce, as many as 200, escaped and made their way over the Canadian border. But most were tired, wounded and exhausted.
"I could not bear to see my wounded men and women suffer any longer," said Joseph. "We had lost enough already" (Joseph).
In the face of their hopeless situation, it was left to Joseph to meet with Miles and Howard on October 5, 1877, and hand over his rifle in a symbolic gesture of surrender.
Joseph's surrender speech, recorded by one of the soldiers, became one of the most famous speeches of the American West:
"It is cold and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are — perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me my chiefs. I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever" (Beal).
The accuracy of that transcription is in doubt; for one thing, Joseph did not speak English and whatever he said had to be translated. But Joseph later specified that he did say words which amounted to, "From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more" (Joseph).
He surrendered with the assurance from Miles that he and his people would be transported back to the reservation in Idaho. This was one more promise not kept. Federal authorities were afraid that passions would be re-ignited in Idaho if the Nez Perce returned, so the ailing and wounded band, now 400 strong, was escorted first to North Dakota, then to a camp in Kansas, and finally, in the summer of 1878, to a reservation in Indian Territory, now Oklahoma.
Chief Joseph, National Icon
Chief Joseph, to his surprise, had become a nationwide sensation. Even while the war was going on, Joseph was getting credit for every Nez Perce victory. The press called him "The Red Napoleon." After the Battle of the Big Hole, The New York Times reported that the military skills of Joseph and the Nez Perce were "as if they had been acquired at West Point" (West).
Howard himself lavished praise on Joseph's "consummate generalship" which was "equal to that of many a partisan leader whose deeds have entered into classic story" (Howard).
Now that Joseph was the only Nez Perce chief left, he became even more idolized. A newspaper correspondent from St. Louis said, "A more noble captive has never graced our land." Joseph tried to use some of this newfound admiration to get a better deal for his people. He was sent to Washington, D.C., in 1879 to meet with President Rutherford B. Hayes (1822-1893) and other officials. He received a huge ovation when he spoke to a group of congressmen and other officials, but no other satisfaction.
A Tragic Exile
Joseph and his fellow Northwesterners were miserable and ravaged by disease in the utterly alien Indian Territory. His young daughter, born as the war started, succumbed. Joseph told the Washington dignitaries that his new home "amounts to nothing."
Joseph wrote to his old friend Chief Moses (1829-1899), of the Columbia tribe, and asked him if his band could join Moses on his recently established Colville Reservation in North Central Washington. It was about 150 miles from the Wallowa country, but it had the same salmon, camas meadows, and ponderosa pines they remembered so fondly. Moses agreed and, eventually, so did the federal government.
In 1885, Joseph and 149 others were packed into trains and sent to the Colville Reservation; about 118 of the other exiles, mostly the Christianized Nez Perce, were sent back to Lapwai.
Moses greeted Joseph as a brother, but the reception was cooler amongst the San Poil and Nespelem tribes, which also shared the reservation. At one point, hostilities with the San Poil were barely averted. Joseph and his band lived close to Moses' band near the little settlement of Nespelem and settled into a relatively peaceful, but poverty-stricken, life.
They were free once again to hunt, fish, and gather roots and berries -- but everything was harder to come by. The Indian agents wanted the Nez Perce to grow their own food, but Joseph showed no inclination to become a farmer.
Two Old Chiefs
Some white settlers of the region considered Joseph's presence to be dangerous. They called him a "large, fat-faced, scheming, cruel-looking cuss" (Nerburn). Moses and Joseph became a common sight in Wilbur and other nearby towns. A Wilbur reporter wrote the "two old murdering rascals" strutted around town "as only becomes men of rank" (Ruby and Brown).
They later became increasingly jealous of each other and did not always get along. Once, when someone asked Moses if Chief Joseph was going to come to the Yakima Jubilee, Moses said, "He is not very good to ride now and it will take him as long to come down here as an old woman" (Ruby and Brown).
As the years passed, it became harder for the Nez Perce to maintain the horse herds that were so integral to the Nez Perce way of life. Moses complained that the Nez Perce had become indolent since coming to the reservation and indulged too much in drinking and gambling. Joseph and his people became more dependent on government handouts.
Yet Joseph never gave up his crusade to return to the Wallowa Valley. He made several more fruitless trips to Washington, D.C., to make his case. During an 1897 trip, he was invited to New York City to attend Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show at Madison Square Garden, where, remarkably, he was greeted by old enemies Howard and Miles and conversed congenially with them.
Hopes Dashed Forever
Finally, in 1900, Chief Joseph received permission to return to Wallowa and make his case before the valley's white settlers. He told a large crowd that he had never sold his land and that he now wished to reclaim some of the prime land near his father's burial place, as well as some areas near Wallowa Lake and parts of the Imnaha Valley. He was met with jeers. They considered Joseph sentimental and delusional and expressed no willingness to sell him, much less give him, any land at all.
A government inspector who accompanied Joseph recommended that Joseph was better off staying on the Colville.
So, his hopes dashed forever, he remained on the Colville with his small band, living in a teepee instead of the house that had been provided him. His people stuck to their old ways, building a longhouse for their ceremonies. To the local Indian agent, this was simply "passing away their time in a filthy and licentious way of living" (Nerburn).
He remained a celebrity back East, however. In 1903 he was invited to give an anniversary speech at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, where he shared the stage with General Howard. He said that "ever since the war, I have made up my mind to be friendly to the whites and to everybody" (Nerburn).
A Broken Heart
His health and his spirits slowly declined. On September 21, 1904, as he lay dying of an undiagnosed illness, he asked his wife to get his headdress because "I wish to die as a chief" (Nerburn). Soon after, Chief Joseph's long journey was over.
His name lives on in the Chief Joseph Dam on the Columbia River, Chief Joseph Pass in Montana, and the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway in Wyoming. Most poignantly, it lives on in the places he loved best: Joseph Creek, Joseph Canyon and the small town of Joseph, Oregon, in the heart of the Wallowa Valley.
Yet his tomb, marked by a tall white monument, remains in Nespelem, Washington, not far from where he died. He never achieved his dream to be buried in the land he loved.
"Chief Joseph," said the white physician who attended him, "died of a broken heart" (Nerburn).
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick MSG Felipe De Leon Brown SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj Kim Patterson PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi
(10)
(0)
LTC Stephen F.
The Nez Perce last stand | Chief Joseph (Part 2)
In 1877 the Nez Perce tribe was ordered to move from their homeland to the Lapwai reservation. With a tense situation on their hands leading to war, they dec...
The Nez Perce last stand | Chief Joseph (Part 2)
In 1877 the Nez Perce tribe was ordered to move from their homeland to the Lapwai reservation. With a tense situation on their hands leading to war, they decided to fight and make a stand. This is the incredible story of the Nez Perce last stand and their leader Chief Joseph.
Chief Joseph's surrender speech:
"Tell General Howard I know his heart. What he told me before I have in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed. Looking Glass is dead. Toohoolhoolzote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led the young men is dead. It is cold and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs. I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qYPYf4RsPk
Images:
1. Chief Joseph of the Nez Pierce
2. Governor Stevens with Indians, Walla Walla Council, May 1855; Detail, Illustration by Gustav Sohon,
3. A map showing the migration and battle sights of the Nez Perce tribe
4. Chief Joseph meets with a white settler in the Wallowa Valley.
Background from {https://allthatsinteresting.com/chief-joseph]}
Chief Joseph Sought Peace With The U.S. Government Through Diplomacy — But They Wouldn’t Listen By Katie Serena
Published February 25, 2019; Updated July 9, 2020
Chief Joseph was determined not to abandon his ancestral lands and to stand his ground without violence. But the U.S. government had other ideas.
Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce tribe in the Pacific Northwest was a warrior and a humanitarian who made it his life’s work to ensure the survival of his people’s land and heritage during the westward expansion of the United States. Throughout his life, he did just that, even coming to blows with the U.S. government over it.
But neither the government nor the threat of incarceration could break the resolve of Chief Joseph, who would go down in history for his bravery, perseverance, and love for his people.
A Legend Is Born
Chief Joseph, whose native name was Hinmatóowyalahtq̓it, was born in 1840 when his father Tuekakas, known as Old Joseph or Elder Joseph, was the leader of the Wal-lam-wat-kain (or Wallowa) tribe of Nez Perce Indians. The Wallowa tribe resided in the Pacific Northwest in an extensive plot of land in the Wallowa Valley in northeastern Oregon.
Old Joseph had a history of trying to maintain cordial relations with white settlers and even converted to Christianity in 1838 and was baptized — when he received the name “Joseph.”
Around 1850, when Chief Joseph the younger was a boy, the Wallowa Valley began playing host to newcomers, a group of white settlers who had begun to move in from the north and the east, settling in the valley’s fruitful lands. Old Joseph was characteristically welcoming to the white settlers at first.
But before long, the settlers began to encroach ever further on the tribe’s land and demanded more space. When denied by Old Joseph, the settlers took it by force anyway and built farms and pastures for their livestock. As the settlers continued to move into native lands, tensions began to build. In an effort to make peace and create land boundaries, Isaac Stevens, governor of the Washington Territory, organized a council.
Under Stevens’ council, the 1855 Treaty of Walla Walla was drawn up. Signed by Old Joseph as well as the chiefs of the surrounding tribes, the treaty created a reservation encompassing more than 7 million acres of land for the various tribes – including the Wallowa Valley where the Wallowa tribe resided.
For the next eight years, the treaty seemed to have succeeded in maintaining a peaceful cohabitation between the Native American tribes and the white settlers. However, in 1863, a gold rush brought more settlers than the land could handle.
A second council was organized and a new treaty proposed, though this one was much more in favor of the white settlers. The treaty downgraded their previous 7-million-acre homeland to just over 700,000 acres. Worse yet was the fact that it excluded the Wallowa Valley entirely, and moved all of the tribes to western Idaho.
Several of the Nez Perce tribes agreed to the treaty and moved quickly. Old Joseph and a few others, however, declined to sign and stood their ground. Old Joseph broke ties literally and figuratively with the United States at that point: He threw away his Bible and burned his American flag.
Then, Old Joseph marked the Wallowa Valley with poles to outline their land and he declared: “Inside this boundary, all our people were born. It circles the graves of our fathers, and we will never give up these graves to any man.”
His words served as the fire that fueled his tribe and his son in the tumultuous decades to come.
Chief Joseph’s Non-Violent Stand
In 1871, before Old Joseph died, he counseled and prepared his son for the role of leader. In one recorded speech, he explained to his son the importance of the land, and his orders never to concede it to the settlers.
“When I am gone, think of your country… My son, never forget my dying words. This country holds your father’s body. Never sell the bones of your father and your mother.”
Old Joseph
With those words, young Joseph became Chief Joseph and promised to uphold his father’s stance.
“A man who would not defend his father’s grave,” he said, “is worse than a wild beast.”
Chief Joseph’s reign would pick right up from the chaos that the end of his father’s leadership had left behind. While his father had forced a boundary and stood his ground, he had never faced quite as many settlers, among them greedy prospectors, as Chief Joseph now did.
As the prospectors raided the Wallowa Valley and demanded land for farming and raising livestock, Chief Joseph came to verbal blows with them, made several concessions, and suffered through threats of violence and injustices against his people.
But he never allowed violence in retaliation for he feared the U.S. Government. Instead, the Nez Perce would simply stand their ground and intimidate the white settlers into leaving without violence.
In 1873, it seemed that the struggle was over at last. A new treaty was drawn up, once again, that ensured the safety of the Nez Perce’s home in the Wallowa Valley. Unfortunately, four years later the treaty was overturned, and the Native Americans were faced with a more formidable opponent: Army General Oliver O. Howard.
Chief Joseph meets with a white settler in the Wallowa Valley.
General Howard had been granted permission to evict the Nez Perce from the Wallowa Valley this time with violence if they didn’t comply. Chief Joseph offered some parts of the land but not others in a compromise and offered that some Nez Perce leave but not all. He also attempted to reason with General Howard by telling him that he didn’t believe “the Great Spirit Chief gave one kind of men the right to tell another kind of men what they must do.”
In the end, though, Howard and Joseph couldn’t agree. In June of 1877, General Howard told Chief Joseph and two other band leaders within the Nex Perce tribe, White Bird, and Looking Glass, that their cordial negotiations were over and that from that day forward, the Army would consider any Nez Perce presence in the valley after 30 days an act of war.
Chief Joseph realized non-violence and peace were no longer options. Rather than face more bloodshed, he asked that his people to move quietly to the reservation.
Though his people did not actively participate in a physical battle, Chief Joseph was a key player in what would become known as the Nez Perce War. As other Nez Perce tribes clashed with General Howard’s army, Chief Joseph managed to herd his people out of the Wallowa Valley and into Idaho.
For more than 1,170 miles across present-day Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana, Chief Joseph’s people successfully avoided the aggressive white pursuers.
His retreat has been remembered as a brilliant military maneuver, but in truth, it was a desperate attempt at a peaceful end to the violence facing his people. Only once was his tribe engaged in a full battle where they emerged victoriously – with 34 white soldiers killed and only three Nez Perce men wounded.
Eventually, unable to bear his people participating in violence, Chief Joseph sought an accord. He had lost more than 100 of his men and his people were hungry and tired. On Oct. 5, 1877, Chief Joseph conceded to Howard, with a speech that went down in history, and even gained the respect of several U.S. Army generals.
“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed…I want to have time to look for my children, to see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”
Life For Chief Joseph After The Battle
Nez Perce tribal leaders Lean Elk, Looking Glass, and Joseph’s brother Ollokot were all killed in the final battles against the U.S. government.
Following his surrender, Chief Joseph and his people were carted away by rail car to Oklahoma where many of his people died from exposure to new diseases. But he continued to advocate for his people. Eventually, tired of discussing moving arrangements with generals, Chief Joseph traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet with President Rutherford B. Hayes.
It was not until 1885 that Joseph and other Nez Perce were returned to the Pacific Northwest, though half of them, including Joseph himself, were taken to a reservation in northern Washington that was not a part of their ancestral lands. They were thus separated from the rest of their people.
For the next 30 years, Chief Joseph would continue to fight for his people’s homeland through speech and diplomacy, though never successfully. Finally, on Sept. 21, 1904, Chief Joseph died. His doctor claimed it was of a broken heart, and his people agreed.
FYI SGM Gerald FifeMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill FrazerSSG Jeffrey LeakeSP5 Dennis LobergerSSG Chad HenningSPC Chris HallgrimsonMSG Glen MillerSSG Robert RicciSSG Paul HeadleeCWO3 Randy WestonSGT John Graham1651880-spc-kerry-good]SFC (Join to see)SSG Samuel KermonSSG Robert Mark OdomCpl (Join to see) PVT Mark Zehner SPC Margaret Higgins PO3 Phyllis Maynard
In 1877 the Nez Perce tribe was ordered to move from their homeland to the Lapwai reservation. With a tense situation on their hands leading to war, they decided to fight and make a stand. This is the incredible story of the Nez Perce last stand and their leader Chief Joseph.
Chief Joseph's surrender speech:
"Tell General Howard I know his heart. What he told me before I have in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed. Looking Glass is dead. Toohoolhoolzote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led the young men is dead. It is cold and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food; no one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs. I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qYPYf4RsPk
Images:
1. Chief Joseph of the Nez Pierce
2. Governor Stevens with Indians, Walla Walla Council, May 1855; Detail, Illustration by Gustav Sohon,
3. A map showing the migration and battle sights of the Nez Perce tribe
4. Chief Joseph meets with a white settler in the Wallowa Valley.
Background from {https://allthatsinteresting.com/chief-joseph]}
Chief Joseph Sought Peace With The U.S. Government Through Diplomacy — But They Wouldn’t Listen By Katie Serena
Published February 25, 2019; Updated July 9, 2020
Chief Joseph was determined not to abandon his ancestral lands and to stand his ground without violence. But the U.S. government had other ideas.
Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce tribe in the Pacific Northwest was a warrior and a humanitarian who made it his life’s work to ensure the survival of his people’s land and heritage during the westward expansion of the United States. Throughout his life, he did just that, even coming to blows with the U.S. government over it.
But neither the government nor the threat of incarceration could break the resolve of Chief Joseph, who would go down in history for his bravery, perseverance, and love for his people.
A Legend Is Born
Chief Joseph, whose native name was Hinmatóowyalahtq̓it, was born in 1840 when his father Tuekakas, known as Old Joseph or Elder Joseph, was the leader of the Wal-lam-wat-kain (or Wallowa) tribe of Nez Perce Indians. The Wallowa tribe resided in the Pacific Northwest in an extensive plot of land in the Wallowa Valley in northeastern Oregon.
Old Joseph had a history of trying to maintain cordial relations with white settlers and even converted to Christianity in 1838 and was baptized — when he received the name “Joseph.”
Around 1850, when Chief Joseph the younger was a boy, the Wallowa Valley began playing host to newcomers, a group of white settlers who had begun to move in from the north and the east, settling in the valley’s fruitful lands. Old Joseph was characteristically welcoming to the white settlers at first.
But before long, the settlers began to encroach ever further on the tribe’s land and demanded more space. When denied by Old Joseph, the settlers took it by force anyway and built farms and pastures for their livestock. As the settlers continued to move into native lands, tensions began to build. In an effort to make peace and create land boundaries, Isaac Stevens, governor of the Washington Territory, organized a council.
Under Stevens’ council, the 1855 Treaty of Walla Walla was drawn up. Signed by Old Joseph as well as the chiefs of the surrounding tribes, the treaty created a reservation encompassing more than 7 million acres of land for the various tribes – including the Wallowa Valley where the Wallowa tribe resided.
For the next eight years, the treaty seemed to have succeeded in maintaining a peaceful cohabitation between the Native American tribes and the white settlers. However, in 1863, a gold rush brought more settlers than the land could handle.
A second council was organized and a new treaty proposed, though this one was much more in favor of the white settlers. The treaty downgraded their previous 7-million-acre homeland to just over 700,000 acres. Worse yet was the fact that it excluded the Wallowa Valley entirely, and moved all of the tribes to western Idaho.
Several of the Nez Perce tribes agreed to the treaty and moved quickly. Old Joseph and a few others, however, declined to sign and stood their ground. Old Joseph broke ties literally and figuratively with the United States at that point: He threw away his Bible and burned his American flag.
Then, Old Joseph marked the Wallowa Valley with poles to outline their land and he declared: “Inside this boundary, all our people were born. It circles the graves of our fathers, and we will never give up these graves to any man.”
His words served as the fire that fueled his tribe and his son in the tumultuous decades to come.
Chief Joseph’s Non-Violent Stand
In 1871, before Old Joseph died, he counseled and prepared his son for the role of leader. In one recorded speech, he explained to his son the importance of the land, and his orders never to concede it to the settlers.
“When I am gone, think of your country… My son, never forget my dying words. This country holds your father’s body. Never sell the bones of your father and your mother.”
Old Joseph
With those words, young Joseph became Chief Joseph and promised to uphold his father’s stance.
“A man who would not defend his father’s grave,” he said, “is worse than a wild beast.”
Chief Joseph’s reign would pick right up from the chaos that the end of his father’s leadership had left behind. While his father had forced a boundary and stood his ground, he had never faced quite as many settlers, among them greedy prospectors, as Chief Joseph now did.
As the prospectors raided the Wallowa Valley and demanded land for farming and raising livestock, Chief Joseph came to verbal blows with them, made several concessions, and suffered through threats of violence and injustices against his people.
But he never allowed violence in retaliation for he feared the U.S. Government. Instead, the Nez Perce would simply stand their ground and intimidate the white settlers into leaving without violence.
In 1873, it seemed that the struggle was over at last. A new treaty was drawn up, once again, that ensured the safety of the Nez Perce’s home in the Wallowa Valley. Unfortunately, four years later the treaty was overturned, and the Native Americans were faced with a more formidable opponent: Army General Oliver O. Howard.
Chief Joseph meets with a white settler in the Wallowa Valley.
General Howard had been granted permission to evict the Nez Perce from the Wallowa Valley this time with violence if they didn’t comply. Chief Joseph offered some parts of the land but not others in a compromise and offered that some Nez Perce leave but not all. He also attempted to reason with General Howard by telling him that he didn’t believe “the Great Spirit Chief gave one kind of men the right to tell another kind of men what they must do.”
In the end, though, Howard and Joseph couldn’t agree. In June of 1877, General Howard told Chief Joseph and two other band leaders within the Nex Perce tribe, White Bird, and Looking Glass, that their cordial negotiations were over and that from that day forward, the Army would consider any Nez Perce presence in the valley after 30 days an act of war.
Chief Joseph realized non-violence and peace were no longer options. Rather than face more bloodshed, he asked that his people to move quietly to the reservation.
Though his people did not actively participate in a physical battle, Chief Joseph was a key player in what would become known as the Nez Perce War. As other Nez Perce tribes clashed with General Howard’s army, Chief Joseph managed to herd his people out of the Wallowa Valley and into Idaho.
For more than 1,170 miles across present-day Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana, Chief Joseph’s people successfully avoided the aggressive white pursuers.
His retreat has been remembered as a brilliant military maneuver, but in truth, it was a desperate attempt at a peaceful end to the violence facing his people. Only once was his tribe engaged in a full battle where they emerged victoriously – with 34 white soldiers killed and only three Nez Perce men wounded.
Eventually, unable to bear his people participating in violence, Chief Joseph sought an accord. He had lost more than 100 of his men and his people were hungry and tired. On Oct. 5, 1877, Chief Joseph conceded to Howard, with a speech that went down in history, and even gained the respect of several U.S. Army generals.
“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed…I want to have time to look for my children, to see how many I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”
Life For Chief Joseph After The Battle
Nez Perce tribal leaders Lean Elk, Looking Glass, and Joseph’s brother Ollokot were all killed in the final battles against the U.S. government.
Following his surrender, Chief Joseph and his people were carted away by rail car to Oklahoma where many of his people died from exposure to new diseases. But he continued to advocate for his people. Eventually, tired of discussing moving arrangements with generals, Chief Joseph traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet with President Rutherford B. Hayes.
It was not until 1885 that Joseph and other Nez Perce were returned to the Pacific Northwest, though half of them, including Joseph himself, were taken to a reservation in northern Washington that was not a part of their ancestral lands. They were thus separated from the rest of their people.
For the next 30 years, Chief Joseph would continue to fight for his people’s homeland through speech and diplomacy, though never successfully. Finally, on Sept. 21, 1904, Chief Joseph died. His doctor claimed it was of a broken heart, and his people agreed.
FYI SGM Gerald FifeMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill FrazerSSG Jeffrey LeakeSP5 Dennis LobergerSSG Chad HenningSPC Chris HallgrimsonMSG Glen MillerSSG Robert RicciSSG Paul HeadleeCWO3 Randy WestonSGT John Graham1651880-spc-kerry-good]SFC (Join to see)SSG Samuel KermonSSG Robert Mark OdomCpl (Join to see) PVT Mark Zehner SPC Margaret Higgins PO3 Phyllis Maynard
(4)
(0)
GySgt Thomas Vick
Chief Joseph a brilliant man, that only made one mistake, he should've stayed in Canada.
(1)
(0)
MSG Glen Miller
I love the Native American history. If we owe retribution to anybody it’s to them. We, as the country of the United States of America, have and still are treating them like third calss citizens.
I used to live in a small town called White Bird, Idaho. The area used to be the winter camp and the town was named after the war chief White Bird. Very sad and shameful history, comparable with the Third Reich and Stalin’ gulags.
I used to live in a small town called White Bird, Idaho. The area used to be the winter camp and the town was named after the war chief White Bird. Very sad and shameful history, comparable with the Third Reich and Stalin’ gulags.
(1)
(0)
The surrender speech given by Chief Joseph is profoundly sad and reads as follows:
"Tell General Howard I know his heart. What he told me before, I have it in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our Chiefs are killed; Looking Glass is dead, Ta Hool Hool Shute is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led on the young men is dead. It is cold, and we have no blankets; the little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are - perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my Chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever."
Chief Joseph - Thunder Traveling to the Loftier Mountain Heights - 1877
SGT Robert Pryor SGT (Join to see) SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth SGT Mark Anderson PO2 Frederick Dunn
"Tell General Howard I know his heart. What he told me before, I have it in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our Chiefs are killed; Looking Glass is dead, Ta Hool Hool Shute is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led on the young men is dead. It is cold, and we have no blankets; the little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are - perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my Chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever."
Chief Joseph - Thunder Traveling to the Loftier Mountain Heights - 1877
SGT Robert Pryor SGT (Join to see) SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth SGT Mark Anderson PO2 Frederick Dunn
(5)
(0)
50 years ago I read, "I Will Fight No More Forever": Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce War," For 25 years I owned land, and for 17 years I lived, in Okanogan County, not far from the Colville Reservation, which is home to the Chelan, Chief Joseph Band of Nez Perce, Colville, Eniat, Lakes, Methow, Moses-Columbia, Nespelem, Okanogan, Palus, San Poil and Wenatchi Tribes. I lived in the Methow Valley. Researches determined that the abandoned route that ran through my property had been used for 3,500 years. It even had historical markers on either end. I just used it for parking.
(4)
(0)
Read This Next