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Blood on the Marias - The Baker Massacre (Paperback)
Loot Price: R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save: R84
(14%)
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Blood on the Marias - The Baker Massacre (Paperback)
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List price R582
Loot Price R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save R84 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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On the morning of January 23, 1870, troops of the 2nd U.S. Cavalry
attacked a Piegan Indian village on the Marias River in Montana
Territory, killing many more than the army's count of 173, most of
them women, children, and old men. The village was afflicted with
smallpox. Worse, it was the wrong encampment. Intended as a
retaliation against Mountain Chief's renegade band, the massacre
sparked public outrage when news sources revealed that the
battalion had attacked Heavy Runner's innocent village - and that
guides had told its inebriated commander, Major Eugene Baker, he
was on the wrong trail, but he struck anyway. Remembered as one of
the most heinous incidents of the Indian Wars, the Baker Massacre
has often been overshadowed by the better-known Battle of the
Little Bighorn and has never received full treatment until now.
Author Paul R. Wylie plumbs the history of Euro-American
involvement with the Piegans, who were members of the Blackfeet
Confederacy. His research shows the tribe was trading furs for
whiskey with the Hudson's Bay Company before Meriwether Lewis
encountered them in 1806. As American fur traders and trappers
moved into the region, the U.S. government soon followed, making
treaties it did not honor. When the gold rush started in the 1860s
and the U.S. Army arrived, pressure from Montana citizens to
control the Piegans and make the territory safe led Generals
William Tecumseh Sherman and Philip H. Sheridan to send Baker and
the 2nd Cavalry, with tragic consequences. Although these generals
sought to dictate press coverage thereafter, news of the cruelty of
the killings appeared in the New York Times, which called the
massacre ""a more shocking affair than the sacking of Black
Kettle's camp on the Washita"" two years earlier. While other
scholars have written about the Baker Massacre in related contexts,
Blood on the Marias gives this infamous event the definitive
treatment it deserves. Baker's inept command lit the spark of
violence, but decades of tension between Piegans and whites set the
stage for a brutal and too-often-forgotten incident.
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