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Ned Wynkoop and the Lonely Road from Sand Creek (Paperback)
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Ned Wynkoop and the Lonely Road from Sand Creek (Paperback)
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When Edward W. Wynkoop arrived in Colorado Territory during the
1858 gold rush, he was one of many ambitious newcomers seeking
wealth in a promising land mostly inhabited by American Indians.
After he worked as a miner, sheriff, bartender, and land
speculator, Wynkoop's life drastically changed after he joined the
First Colorado Volunteers to fight for the Union during the Civil
War. This sympathetic but critical biography centers on his
subsequent efforts to prevent war with Indians during the volatile
1860s. A central theme of Louis Kraft's engaging narrative is
Wynkoop's daring in standing up to Anglo-Americans and attempting
to end the 1864 Indian war. The Indians may have been dangerous
enemies obstructing ""progress,"" but they were also human beings.
Many whites thought otherwise, and at daybreak on November 29,
1864, the Colorado Volunteers attacked Black Kettle's sleeping
camp. Upon learning of the disaster now known as the Sand Creek
Massacre, Wynkoop was appalled and spoke out vehemently against the
action. Many of his contemporaries damned his views, but Wynkoop
devoted the rest of his career as a soldier and then as a U.S.
Indian agent to helping Cheyennes and Arapahos to survive. The
tribes' lifeways still centered on the dwindling herds of buffalo,
but now they needed guns to hunt. Kraft reveals how hard Wynkoop
worked to persuade the Indian Bureau to provide the tribes with
firearms along with their allotments of food and clothing - a hard
sell to a government bent on protecting white settlers and paving
the way for American expansion. In the wake of Sand Creek, Wynkoop
strove to prevent General Winfield Scott Hancock from destroying a
Cheyenne-Sioux village in 1867, only to have the general ignore him
and start a war. Fearing more innocent people would die, Wynkoop
resigned from the Indian Bureau but, not long thereafter, receded
into obscurity. Now, thanks to Louis Kraft, we may appreciate
Wynkoop as a man of conscience who dared to walk between Indians
and Anglo-Americans but was often powerless to prevent the tragic
consequences of their conflict.
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