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ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

MAY 12:

 May 12, 1858: Comanche Chief Iron Jacket (Po-hebitsquash) is killed in a fight with Texas Rangers on the Canadian River.

May 12, 1860: A battle in the Paiute War takes place in Nevada at Big Bend in the valley of the Truckee River. Major William Ormsby's Nevada militia are attacked by Paiutes under war Chief Numaga.
 

BACKGROUND:
 

From http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/II/fir5.html
 

IRON JACKET (?-1858). Iron Jacket (Po-hebitsquash, Pro-he-bits-quash-a, Po-bish-e-quasho) was a Comanche chieftain and medicine man to whom the Indians attributed the power to blow approaching missiles aside with his breath. His name probably resulted from his practice of wearing a Spanish-type coat of mail into battle. On May 12, 1858, the jacket failed to protect him, and he was killed on the bank of the South Canadian River in a battle with a combined force of Texas Rangers and Brazos Reservation Indians led by John S. Ford and Shapley P. Ross.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: John S. Ford, Memoirs (MS, John Salmon Ford Papers, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin). Rupert N. Richardson, The Comanche Indians, 1820-1861 (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, 1928).
 

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Excerpts from http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ok/county/ellis/littlerobe.html
 

The following was published in "Our Ellis County Heritage 1885-1979" Reprinted with permission of Jerry Denson and The Ellis County Historical Society, November, 1999.
 

THE BATTLE OF LITTLE ROBE CREEK, 1858
WRITTEN BY JERRY DENSON
ARNETT, OKLAHOMA

... The years 1858 and 1859 were bloody years on the Texas frontier due to Indian raids. The newly elected governor, Hardin R. Runnels, was determined to protect the Texas citizens living on the frontier from these attacks. The Comanches of Indian Territory were responsible for much of the depredations and had become so troublesome that the Texas legislature passed a law for the defense and protection of the settlers living on the Texas frontier.

On January 28,1858, Ranger John S. Ford, considered by state authorities the best man to command an expedition into Indian Territory, took command of all state forces with the title of Senior Captain. Authorized to call an additional one hundred men and instructed to establish headquarters at some suitable point on the frontier, Ford left Austin in February for the frontier.

Governor Runnels gave direct orders to Ford, "I impress upon you the necessity of action and energy. Follow any trail and all trails of hostile or suspected hostile Indians you may discover and if possible, overtake and chastise them if unfriendly." On March 19, 1858, Captain Ford went to the Brazos Reservation, near Present day Fort Worth where he planned to induce reservation Indians into his force. An Agent, Captain L. S. Ross, called the chief to council where he stirred their war spirit against their traditional enemies, the Comanches. Appoximately 100 warriors volunteered and spies were sent to locate Comanche camps north of the Red River. The allied Indians were under the command of Shapely P. Ross, son of the agent, and Chief Placido.  A few of the tribes that were represented in this force leaving the reservation on April 20, were Caddoes, Wacos, Anadarkos, Tonkawas and a few others.

A cavalcade consisting of 102 men, two wagons, an ambulance, and 15 pack-mules left Camp Runnels, near the Brazos Reservation, on April 22. The force traveled north until they met the 113 braves from the reservation at a location known as Cottonwood Springs. Ford's subordinates on this expedition besides Ross were W.A.Pitts, J.H. Tankersly, and W.G. Preston. "Old Rip", as he was known to his men, recognized the eagerness in his men to fight to compensate for the huge amounts of property damage that the Comanches were causing on the frontier. The reservation Indians needed no encouragement to join the Rangers in the fight because they already hated the Comaches.

Traveling north from Cottonwood Springs, Captain Ford's force crossed the Red River on April 29 and traveled up the north bank making stops and sending out spies along the way hoping to locate the hostile camps. After traveling up the river more than a week without finding any signs of enemy forces, the expedition headed north for the Washita River on May 7. The Rangers followed the 98th parallel until they reached a branch of the Washita the following day.

The force had been marching for 21 days when they first encountered signs of Comanches in the area. Spies sent out by Captain Ford, found a crippled buffalo and killed it on May 10. Two Comanche arrowheads were extracted from the beast. The following day Captain Ford and a few of his men stood in the road from Fort Smith to Santa Fe just north of the Rio Negro or False Washita, and watched a few Comanches chasing buffalos in the valleys to the north. The direction that the meat ladden Comanche ponies took indicated the way to the camp. The Texas force was now very deep into Comanche territory and in order to keep from being discovered, Ford left the wagons and baggage behind, plus a few men to guard them. Late in the day, a Keeche Indian tracker, found the location of a small Comanche camp. The attack had to be postponed because of approaching darkness.

The Comanches in this small camp of five lodges were completely unaware of the approaching danger. Chief Placido and his braves completely destroyed the camp before dawn on May 12. A few women and children were taken captives. Preferring death to capture, not one Comanche warrior was taken alive, nor did even one Comanche escape to warn other camps across the South Canadian River.

After sunrise, a much larger camp was sighted on the north side of the Canadian River, near the mouth of Little Robe Creek. This Village contained 70 lodges. Soon after they had spotted the camp, a lone Comanche was sighted riding south toward the stricken camp completely unaware of its fate. The Rangers tried to overtake him, but he turned and fled back across the river towards the main camp. He led his pursuers to a safe crossing on the almost impassable river.

The rider was able to give warning just before the rangers charged through the camp, the momentum of which carried the Rangers through the village and beyond. As Captain Ford was regrouping the Rangers for another charge, the Comanches trying to give the women and children time to escape, formed a line between the village and Rangers. Suddenly a lone rider appeared from the Comanche line. He rode an iron-gray colored horse and was carrying a lance with a white flag attached. The rider wore the horned headdress and a buffalo robe of the Koteoteka, or Buffalo-eater Comanche. This Comanche was the chief Pohebits Quasho or Iron Jacket, a title he obtained because of the Spanish coat of mail he wore.

As Iron Jacket bore down on the Rangers, he was followed by a few of his warriors. The white flag he carried was probably a trick because the Comanches had learned to use the flag of truce to get close to the whites and attack them easily. If that was the purpose it did not work this time, and the Rangers opened fire. The chief passed through this heavy fire without a scratch. Iron Jacket believed that because of magic breath he possessed, he could make bullets and arrows directed at him fall harmlessly at his feet. He shot a few arrows at the Rangers as he rode up and down the Ranger line. As the chief was turning his horse, he suddenly fell to the ground. His fatal mistake was leaning away from the gunfire from the Ranger line allowing a bullet, which was said to have been fired from the gun of Jim Pock- mark, an Anadarko chief in the Ranger force, to slip under one of the flaps of armor, killing the chief.

When Iron Jacket was killed, the comanche warriors fled the battle site over the hills and through the ravines west of the village. The fight now became a series of small running battles that covered an area of six miles in length and more than three in width. These small engagements lasted until around noon. While this series of encounters continued, another chief, Peta Nocona, whose eldest son, Quanah Parker would later become famous, was coming through the hills from the north. Nocona and his warriors had been hunting buffalo when he heard the sound of gunfire from the village and he began to rush back to give aid.

About one o'clock in the afternoon Shapely P. Ross returned to the village. He was the last to come in and noticed that the Rangers were forming a battle line and when he inquired why, Captain Ford, replied, "Look at the hills there and you will see." Peta Nocona and his warriors had arrived. The Rangers estimated that there were 500 warriors in the hills surrounding the village. They probably over-estimated the number since Peta Nocona seldom had as many as a hundred warriors with him, and it was very easy to over-estimate the number of figures spread out and moving all of the time on horseback.

... Casualities in the Battle of Little Robe Creek were one sided. The Rangers only had two men killed and three men wounded. In the battles at the two camps 69 Comanches were killed, most of them women and children. In battles fought with Peta Nocona's warriors seven more Comanches were killed. A party of six Comanches killed Private Robert Nickel, of Lieutenant Nelson's detachment, who became separated from the rest of the detachment in the pursuit of the enemy. The most determined resistance during the afternoon battle was in a timbered ravine. Here one Tonkawa was killed, after he had used up all of his arrows, and George W. Pascal was wounded. The Rangers captured over 300 horses and took 18 prisoners, mostly women and children.

The Battle of Little Robe Creek had like any other battle, its morbid details. Captian Ford, accused of killing women and children excused himself by saying it was hard to distinguish "warriors from squaws," but jokes he made indicated he did not care about the age or sex of his victims. The Reservation Indians with the Rangers celebrated the victory by hanging the bloody hands and feet of their Comanche victims on their ponies as trophies. ...
 
 
 
 
 
 


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On This Day on History

The original list was created by Phil Konstantin's web site.  It is used with permission and was distributed with the enlarged background information compiled by Neshoba and is now posted at Native News Online as an educational resource.
 
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