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AUGUST 23: August 23, 1868: According to Army reports, Indians attacked settlers in north Texas; eight people were killed and 300 cattle stolen. Bent's Fort in the Texas panhandle reported an Indian attack in which 15 horses and mules and four head of cattle were stolen. 1882 Regina Saskatchewan Lieutenant Governor Edgar Dewdney replaces Battleford with Regina as the seat of government for the Northwest Territories; formerly Wascana, Cree for 'Pile of Bones,' referring to the buffalo bones that formerly littered the area and were now a cash crop; renamed Regina, after Queen Victoria, by Governor General, the Marquis of Lorne. 1541 Cap Rouge, Quebec Jacques Cartier 1491-1557 arrives at Iroquois village of Stadacona on his third trip to Canada; starts to build Charlesbourg-Royale at western tip of Cape Diamond; first French fort in Canada; first French settlement in America. 1876 Fort Carlton Saskatchewan Plain/Wood Cree meet to negotiate Treaty #6 in Central Alberta and Saskatchewan; get famine relief when necessary; also adherents to 1899 treaty; total 194,725 sq km set aside for reserves. 1797 Montreal Quebec Emanuel Allen sold at public auction in Montreal; last slave transaction in Canada. 1724 Norridgewock Maine Sebastien Rale 1657-1724 killed in British raid on Abenaki village of Norridgewock. 1691 Manitoba Henry Kelsey c1667-1724 takes part in buffalo hunt with Assiniboine Indians; first European to reach Prairies; first to take part in a buffalo hunt; employee of the Hudson's Bay Company. 1577 Frobisher Bay NWT Martin Frobisher c1539-1594
kidnaps three Inuit, then sets sail for England.
BACKGROUND:
From encyclopaedia.com at http://www.encyclopedia.com/articles/01349.html
Bent's Fort A trading post of the American West, on the Arkansas River in present-day Southeast Colorado, East of Rocky Ford and La Junta and several miles above the mouth of the Purgatoire. The trading company headed by Charles Bent and Ceran St. Vrain, one of the most successful in the West, also included William Bent and two other Bent brothers. They had their first post in the area in 1826 and in 1833 moved to the completed fort, often called Bent's Old Fort. Because William Bent was the manager and chief trader in all the years of its prosperity, it is also sometimes called Fort William. Within its adobe walls came all the famous mountain men of the later period, as the fort on the mountain branch of the Santa Fe Trail came to dominate the trade of all the Native Americans South of the Black Hills as well as that of the Mexicans and the arriving Americans. Kit Carson was a hunter there from 1831 to 1842. S.W. Kearny and Sterling Price each briefly used the fort for their troops in the Mexican War. According to the generally accepted story, the Native American trade fell off and William Bent attempted to sell the fort to the U.S. government; he reached no satisfactory conclusion and in anger abandoned the fort and set the powder in it on fire, partially destroying it. In any case the fort was abandoned by 1852. William Bent erected a new establishment farther down the Arkansas in 1853. That post (Bent's New Fort) he leased to the government in 1860. Fort Lyon was afterward built around it. ***** >From "The West" at http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/people/a_c/bent.htm William Bent (1809-1869) Part of a family that built the most extensive commercial network in the frontier southwest, William Bent outlived the days of trappers and traders, surviving to see his world destroyed by the relentless pressure of white expansion. Born in St. Louis in 1809, one of four sons of a Missouri Supreme Court Justice, William Bent followed his older brother, Charles, into the fur-trading business. William was trapping along the upper Arkansas river by age fifteen, and in 1829 he helped his brother take a wagon train of trade goods down the Santa Fe Trail. With a partner, the Bents soon formed a trading company that bought and sold across the southwest -- Mexican blankets, New Mexico sheep, buffalo robes from the Plains, pelts from the Rocky Mountains, horses, mules and all manner of manufactured goods. At the center of this network stood Bent's Fort, a massive adobe outpost on the north bank of the Arkansas River in present-day Colorado, which William Bent constructed in 1833 and where he served as field manager of the company's far-flung operations. Life at Bent's Fort involved prolonged contact with the Indian peoples of the southern Plains, and like many white traders and trappers, William Bent came to occupy a sort of cultural middle ground between the Indian and white worlds. In 1835 he married the Cheyenne Owl Woman, with whom he raised four children until her death in 1847. His two subsequent marriages were also to Indian women. At the same time, however, Bent's trade in government supplies gave him a quasi-official role within the region. In 1846, at the outbreak of the Mexican War, it was natural that Bent would be called on to guide General Phil Kearney's troops along the Santa Fe Trail into New Mexico. Three years later, it was perhaps Bent's assumption that the government would pay him back for all his services that caused him to blow up Bent's Fort rather than sell it to the army at what he considered an insultingly low price. In 1857, Bent constructed a new outpost thirty-eight miles downstream from his old fort, gathered a group of settlers and created the first permanent American colony in Colorado. Two years later, however, in 1859, the Pikes Peak gold rush brought a flood of Americans into the region, and Bent suddenly found himself cutoff from the middle ground on which he had operated for so long. As tensions rose between the expanding white community and the embattled Cheyenne, Bent strove mightily, both as an Indian agent for a brief time and as a private citizen, to maintain a measure of peace and mutual toleration. In the end, however, all his efforts failed. On November 29, 1864, Colonel John Chivington marched toward the Cheyenne's Sand Creek reservation, determined to destroy the Indians encamped there, a band led by the peace chief Black Kettle. Chivington posted a guard on William Bent to prevent him from warning the Cheyenne leader, and he forced Bent's son, Robert, to guide him to the site. There he and his volunteers slaughtered more than two hundred men, women and children, taking scalps and other grisly trophies which they later exhibited to cheering crowds in Denver. The Sand Creek Massacre turned William Bent's world upside down.
Not only had his son Robert been made an unwilling accessory to the atrocity,
Bent's other three children, Charles, Julia, and George, had been living
in Black Kettle's encampment at the time of the attack. After the massacre,
Robert, who moved much more in the white world, testified against Chivington,
though to no avail. His brother Charles, meanwhile, joined the militant
"Dog Soldiers," a group of young Cheyenne warriors committed to driving
the Americans from their homeland by any means necessary. At one point
Charles apparently tried to kill even his own father. William Bent,
his heart broken, soon moved to Westport, Kansas, where he died in 1869.
On This Day on History |
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