| Nez Perce War | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theAmerican Indian Wars | |||||||
Chiefs Joseph, Looking Glass, and White Bird in the spring of 1877 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Nez Percé Palouse | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Chief Joseph Looking Glass † White Bird Ollokot † Toohoolhoolzote † Poker Joe † (Lean Elk) Red Echo (Hahtalekin) Bald head (Husishusis Kute) | |||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 1,500 soldiers, civilian volunteers, Indian scouts | 250 warriors, +500 non-combatant women and children—numbers are approximate | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 125 killed, 146 wounded[1] | 103–133 combatants and noncombatants killed, 71–91 combatants and noncombatants wounded (possibly more)[1] 418 surrendered, 150–200 escaped to Canada[2] | ||||||
TheNez Perce War was anarmed conflict in 1877 in theWestern United States that pitted several bands of theNez Perce tribe ofNative Americans and their allies, a small band of thePalouse tribe led by Red Echo (Hahtalekin) and Bald Head (Husishusis Kute), against theUnited States Army. Fought between June and October, the conflict stemmed from the refusal of several bands of the Nez Perce, dubbed "non-treaty Indians," to give up their ancestral lands in thePacific Northwest and move to anIndian reservation inIdaho Territory. This forced removal was in violation of the 1855Treaty of Walla Walla, which granted the tribe 7.5 million acres of their ancestral lands and the right to hunt and fish on lands ceded to the U.S. government.
After the first armed engagements in June, the Nez Perce embarked on an arduous trek north initially to seek help with theCrow tribe. After the Crows' refusal of aid, they sought sanctuary with theLakota led bySitting Bull, who had fled toCanada in May 1877 to avoid capture following the 1876Battle of the Little Bighorn.
The Nez Perce were pursued by elements of the U.S. Army with whom they fought a series of battles and skirmishes on a fighting retreat of 1,170 miles (1,880 km). The war ended after a final five-day battle fought alongside Snake Creek at the base of Montana'sBears Paw Mountains only 40 miles (64 km) from the Canada–US border. A large majority of the surviving Nez Perce represented byChief Joseph of theWallowa band of Nez Perce, surrendered to Brigadier GeneralsOliver Otis Howard andNelson A. Miles.[3]White Bird, of theLamátta band of Nez Perce, managed to elude the Army after the battle and escape with an undetermined number of his band to Sitting Bull's camp in Canada. The 418 Nez Perce who surrendered, including women and children, were taken prisoner and sent by train toFort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Although Chief Joseph is the most well known of the Nez Perce leaders, he was not the sole overall leader. The Nez Perce were led by a coalition of several leaders from the different bands who comprised the "non-treaty" Nez Perce, including the WallowaOllokot,White Bird of theLamátta band,Toohoolhoolzote of thePikunin band, andLooking Glass of theAlpowai band. Brigadier General Howard was head of the U.S. Army'sDepartment of the Columbia, which was tasked with forcing the Nez Perce onto the reservation and whose jurisdiction was extended by GeneralWilliam Tecumseh Sherman to allow Howard's pursuit. It was at the final surrender of the Nez Perce when Chief Joseph gave his famous "I Will Fight No More Forever" speech, which was translated by the interpreter Arthur Chapman.
An 1877New York Times editorial discussing the conflict stated, "On our part, the war was in its origin and motive nothing short of a gigantic blunder and a crime".[4][5] Many sites associated with the war are today preserved as part ofNez Perce National Historical Park.

We took away their country and their means of support, broke up their mode of living, their habits of life, introduced disease and decay among them and it was for this and against this they made war. Could anyone expect less?
— Gen.Philip H. Sheridan
In 1855, at theWalla Walla Council, the Nez Perce were coerced by thefederal government into giving up their ancestral lands and moving to theUmatilla Reservation inOregon Territory with theWalla Walla,Cayuse, andUmatilla tribes.[6] The tribes involved were so bitterly opposed to the terms of the plan that Isaac I. Stevens, governor and superintendent of Indian affairs for theWashington Territory, andJoel Palmer, superintendent of Indian affairs forOregon Territory, signed the Nez Perce Treaty in 1855, which granted the Nez Perce the right to remain in a large portion of their own lands in Idaho, Washington, and Oregon territories, in exchange for relinquishing almost 5.5 million acres of their approximately 13 million acre homeland to the U.S. government for a nominal sum, with thecaveat that they be able to hunt, fish. and pasture their horses etc. on unoccupied areas of their former land – the same rights to use public lands asAnglo-American citizens of the territories.[7]
The newly established Nez PerceIndian reservation was 7,500,000 acres (30,000 km2) in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington territories. Under the terms of the treaty, no white settlers were allowed on the reservation without the permission of the Nez Perce. However, in 1860 gold was discovered near present-dayPierce, Idaho, and 5,000 gold-seekers rushed onto the reservation, illegally founding the downstream city ofLewiston as a supply depot on Nez Perce land.[8] Ranchers and farmers followed the miners, and the U.S. government failed to keep settlers out of Indian lands. The Nez Perce were incensed at the failure of the U.S. government to uphold thetreaties, and at settlers whosquatted on their land and plowed up theircamas prairies, which they depended on for subsistence.[9][10]
In 1863, a group of Nez Perce were coerced into signing away 90% of their reservation to the U.S., leaving only 750,000 acres (3,000 km2) in Idaho Territory.[11] Under the terms of the treaty, all Nez Perce were to move onto the new and much smaller reservation east of Lewiston. A large number of Nez Perce, however, did not accept the validity of the treaty, refused to move to the reservation, and remained on their traditional lands.[12][13][14] The Nez Perce who approved the treaty were mostly Christian; the opponents mostly followed the traditional religion. The "non-treaty" Nez Perce included the band of Chief Joseph, who lived in theWallowa valley in northeastern Oregon. Disputes there with white farmers and ranchers led to the murders of several Nez Perce, and the murderers were never prosecuted.[15]

Tensions between Nez Perce and white settlers rose in 1876 and 1877. GeneralOliver Otis Howard called a council in May 1877 and ordered the non-treaty bands to move to the reservation, setting an impossible deadline of 30 days.[16][17] Howard humiliated the Nez Perce by jailing their old leader,Toohoolhoolzote, who spoke against moving to the reservation.[18] The other Nez Perce leaders, including Chief Joseph, considered military resistance to be futile; they agreed to the move and reported as ordered toFort Lapwai, Idaho Territory.[19] By June 14, 1877, about 600 Nez Perce from Joseph's and White Bird's bands had gathered on theCamas Prairie, six miles (10 km) west of present-dayGrangeville.[20]
On June 13, shortly before the deadline for removing onto the reservation, White Bird's band held a tel-lik-leen ceremony at the Tolo Lake camp in which the warriors paraded on horseback in a circular movement around the village while individually boasting of their battle prowess and war deeds. According to Nez Perce accounts, an aged warrior named Hahkauts Ilpilp (Red Grizzly Bear) challenged the presence in the ceremony of several young participants whose relatives' deaths at the hands of whites had gone unavenged. One named Wahlitits (Shore Crossing) was the son of Eagle Robe, who had been shot to death by Lawrence Ott three years earlier. Thus humiliated and apparently fortified with liquor, Shore Crossing and two of his cousins, Sarpsisilpilp (Red Moccasin Top) and Wetyemtmas Wahyakt (Swan Necklace), set out for the Salmon River settlements on a mission of revenge. On the following evening, June 14, 1877, Swan Necklace returned to the lake to announce that the trio had killed four white men and wounded another man. Inspired by the war furor, approximately sixteen more young men rode off to join Shore Crossing in raiding the settlements.[21]
Joseph and his brother Ollokot were away from the camp during the raids on June 14 and 15. When they arrived at the camp the next day, most of the Nez Perce had departed for a campsite on White Bird Creek to await the response of General Howard. Joseph considered an appeal for peace to the Whites, but realized it would be useless after the raids. Meanwhile, Howard mobilized his military force and sent out 130 men, including 13 friendly Nez Perce scouts, under the command of Captain David Perry to punish the Nez Perce and force them onto the reservation. Howard anticipated that his soldiers "will make short work of it."[22]
By June 16, the bands had moved to the southern end ofWhite Bird Canyon, about five miles (8 km) long, one mile (1.6 km) wide at its maximum, and bounded by steep mountain ridges. That night, sentinels reported the approach of U.S. soldiers from the north. After much deliberation, the Nez Perce decided that they would stay at White Bird and make an effort to avoid war, but fight if they were forced to do so. The soldiers included Company F and Company H of the1st Cavalry Regiment, commanded by Captain David Perry and Captain Joel Graham Trimble, respectively. The officers and men of the two companies totaled 106.
Awaiting the soldiers, 50 warriors underOllokot deployed to a butte on the western side of the canyon and 15 warriors under Two Moons on a butte to the east, thus placing themselves on both sides of the cavalry's route down the canyon.[23] Six Nez Perce warriors waited with a white flag to discuss a truce with the approaching soldiers. An advance party, consisting of Lieutenant Edward Theller, Trumpeter John Jones, a few Nez Perce scouts employed by the Lapwai Agency, seven soldiers from Company F and civilian volunteer Arthur "Ad" Chapman made first contact with the truce party. For reasons never fully explained, Chapman fired at the truce party. The truce party took cover and the Nez Perce returned fire.[24]
Captain Perry, riding back and forth between the two companies, saw the volunteers retreating up the canyon. Perry's left flank and Trimble's right flank were compromised. Seeing further collapse of his flank, Perry tried to rally his men to advance to McCarthy's position and make a stand on the high ground about 300 yards (270 m) to the south. But Company F, confused and having suffering numerous casualties, misinterpreted Perry's order as a general retreat. Company H, seeing the urgent retreat of Company F, joined the flight and left McCarthy and his men stranded. Sensing victory, Ollokot's mounted warriors chased the retreating soldiers.
Lieutenant Parnell and Lieutenant Theller led squads in an attempt to retrace their approach towards the White Bird camp. Under fire, Theller became trapped in a steep rocky ravine and ran out of ammunition, and he and his seven men were killed by the Nez Perce. Captain Perry and Captain Trimble fled to the northwest up steep ridges. They reached theCamas Prairie on top of the ridge line and were able to regroup at Johnson's Ranch. Within minutes, Nez Perce warriors pressed the attack and the survivors continued their retreat for several miles towardMount Idaho, where they were rescued by fresh volunteers.[25]
By midmorning, 34 U.S. Cavalry soldiers had been killed and two had been wounded, while two volunteers had also been wounded in the opening of the battle. In contrast, only three Nez Perce warriors had been wounded. Some 63 carbines, many pistols, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition were picked up off the battlefield by Nez Perce warriors. These weapons greatly enhanced the Nez Perce arsenal for the remaining months of the war.
In response to the defeat at White Bird Canyon, General Howard mobilized his forces. ThoughChief Looking Glass had not previously been hostile to the army, a company was sent to arrest Looking Glass and his followers. The camp was destroyed, but Looking Glass escaped and subsequently joined Joseph and White Bird.
After crossing and recrossing theSalmon River, the warriors rebuffed the army in a series of skirmishes nearCottonwood, Idaho, July 3–5, 1877.
Howard's main force caught up to the Nez Perce at their camp in the valley of theClearwater River and attacked; the Nez Perce were able to escape towardMontana Territory.
Approximately 250 Nez Perce warriors, and 500 women and children, along with more than 2000 head of horses and other livestock, began a remarkable fighting retreat. They crossed fromIdaho overLolo Pass into Montana Territory. Forces attempted to halt the Nez Perce atFort Fizzle, but the Nez Perce simply bypassed the barricade.
A small number of Nez Perce fighters, probably fewer than 200,[19] defeated or held off larger forces of the U.S. Army in several battles. The most notable was the two-dayBattle of the Big Hole in southwestern Montana territory, a battle with heavy casualties on both sides, including many women and children on the Nez Perce side. Until the Big Hole the Nez Perce had the naive view that they could end the war with the U.S. on terms favorable, or at least acceptable, to themselves.[26] Afterwards, the war "increased in ferocity and tempo. From then on all white men were bound to be their enemies and yet their own fighting power had been severely reduced."[27] They attempted to seek refuge with theCrow Nation, but, rejected by the Crow, ultimately decided to try to reach safety in Canada.[17]
With Howard's men camped at Camas Meadows, the Nez Perce conducted a nighttime raid in the early hours of August 20 and stole horses and mules. Howard's cavalry pursued the raiders, who were able to hold off the soldiers and continue their retreat intoYellowstone National Park.
The Nez Perce fled through Yellowstone, travelling along what was later named Nez Perce Creek across theCentral Plateau andHayden Valley, crossing theYellowstone River at Nez Perce Ford and exiting via a difficult route across theAbsaroka Mountains.
The army next caught up with the Nez Perce on September 13 in the canyon of Canyon Creek, west ofBillings. The warriors took up positions in the hills overlooking the approach to the canyon and fought a delaying action before escaping over the hills.
The war came to an end when the Nez Perce stopped to make camp and rest on the prairie adjacent to Snake Creek in the foothills of the north slope of theBear's Paw Mountains in Montana Territory, only 40 miles (64 km) from theCanada–United States border.
They believed that they had shaken off Howard and their pursuers, but they were unaware that the recently promoted Brigadier GeneralNelson A. Miles in command of the newly created District of the Yellowstone had been dispatched from theTongue River Cantonment to find and intercept them. Miles led a combined force made up of units of the Fifth Infantry, and Second Cavalry and theSeventh Cavalry. Accompanying the troops wereLakota andCheyenneIndian Scouts, many of whom had fought against the Army only a year prior during theSioux War.
They made a surprise attack upon the Nez Perce camp on the morning of September 30. After a three-day standoff, Howard arrived with his command, on October 3 and the stalemate was broken. Chief Joseph surrendered on October 5, 1877,[28] and declared in his famous surrender speech that he would "fight no more forever."[28]


By the time Chief Joseph formally surrendered on October 5, 1877, 2:20 pm,[29] European Americans described him as the principal chief of the Nez Perce and the strategist behind the Nez Perce's skilled fighting retreat. The American press referred to him as "the RedNapoleon" for the military prowess attributed to him, but the Nez Perce bands involved in the war did not consider him a war chief. Joseph's younger brother, Ollokot;Poker Joe, and Looking Glass of the Alpowai band were among those who formulated the fighting strategy and tactics and led the warriors in battle, while Joseph was responsible for guarding the camp.
Chief Joseph became immortalized by his famous speech:
I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed. Looking Glass is dead. Toohoolhoolzoote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say, "Yes" or "No." He who led the young men [Ollokot] 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.
Joseph's speech was translated by the interpreter Arthur Chapman and was transcribed by Howard's aide-de-camp LieutenantC. E. S. Wood. Among other vocations, Wood was a writer and a poet. His poem, "The Poet in the Desert" (1915), was a literary success, and some critics have suggested that he may have takenpoetic license and embellished Joseph's speech.[30]

In total, the Nez Perce engaged 2,000 American soldiers of different military units, as well as their Indian auxiliaries. They fought "eighteen engagements, including four major battles and at least four fiercely contested skirmishes."[31] Many people praised the Nez Perce for their exemplary conduct and skilled fighting ability. The Montana newspaperNew North-West stated: "Their warfare since they entered Montana has been almost universally marked so far by the highest characteristics recognized by civilized nations. "[32]
During the surrender negotiations, Howard and Miles had promised Joseph that the Nez Perce would be allowed to return to their reservation in Idaho. But, the commanding general of the Army,William Tecumseh Sherman, overruled them and directed that the Nez Perce were sent to Kansas. "I believed General Miles, or I never would have surrendered," Chief Joseph said afterward.
Miles marched his captives 265 miles (426 km) to the Tongue River Cantonment in southeast Montana Territory, where they arrived on October 23, 1877, and were held until Oct. 31. The able-bodied warriors were marched out toFort Buford, at the confluence of the Yellowstone and Missouri rivers. On November 1, women, children, the ill and the wounded set out for Fort Buford in fourteenMackinaw boats.
Between November 8 and 10, the Nez Perce left Fort Buford for Custer's post command at the time of his death;Fort Abraham Lincoln across the Missouri River fromBismarck in theDakota Territory. About two hundred left in the mackinaws on November 9 guarded by two companies of the First Infantry; the rest traveled on horseback escorted by troops of the Seventh Cavalry en route to their winter quarters.
A majority of Bismarck's citizens turned out to welcome the Nez Perce prisoners, providing a lavish buffet for them and their troop escort. On November 23, the Nez Perce prisoners had their lodges and equipment loaded into freight cars and themselves into eleven rail coaches for the trip via train toFort Leavenworth in Kansas.
One of the most extraordinary Indian Wars of which there is any record. the Indians displayed a courage and skill that elicited universal praise.They abstained from scalping: let captive women go free; did not commit indiscriminate murder of peaceful families, which as usual, and fought with almost scientific skill, usingadvance andrear guards,skirmish lines andfield fortifications.
— GeneralWilliam Tecumseh Sherman,[33]
Over the protests to Sherman by the commander of the Fort, the Nez Perce were forced to live in a swampy bottomland. One author described the effects on the Nez Perce refugees: "the 400 miserable, helpless, emaciated specimens of humanity, subjected for months to themalarial atmosphere of the river bottom."[34]
Chief Joseph went to Washington in January 1879 to plead that his people be allowed to return to Idaho or, at least, be given land inIndian Territory, what would becomeOklahoma. He met with the President and Congress, and his account was published in theNorth American Review.[35] While he was greeted with acclaim, the U.S. government did not grant his petition due to fierce opposition in Idaho. Instead, Joseph and the Nez Perce were sent to Oklahoma and eventually located on a small reservation nearTonkawa, Oklahoma. Conditions in "the hot country" were hardly better than they had been at Leavenworth.
In 1885, Joseph and 268 surviving Nez Perce were finally allowed to return to the Pacific Northwest. Joseph, however, was not permitted to return to the Nez Perce reservation but instead settled at theColville Indian Reservation inWashington. He died there in 1904.


General Oliver Otis Howard was the commanding officer of U.S. troops pursuing the Nez Perce during the Nez Perce War of 1877. In 1881, he published an account of Joseph and the war,Nez Perce Joseph: An Account of His Ancestors, His Lands, His Confederates, His Enemies, His Murders, His War, His Pursuit and Capture, depicting the Nez Perce campaign.[36]
The Nez Perce perspective was represented byYellow Wolf: His Own Story, published in 1944 byLucullus Virgil McWhorter, who had interviewedYellow Wolf, a Nez Perce warrior. This book is very critical of the U.S. military's role in the war, and especially of General Howard. McWhorter also wroteHear Me, My Chiefs!, published after his death. It was based on documentary sources and had material supporting the historical claims of each side.
The fifth volume ofWilliam T. Vollmann'sSeven Dreams cycle,The Dying Grass, offers a detailed account of the conflict.
The 1975David Wolper historical teledramaI Will Fight No More Forever, starringNed Romero as Joseph andJames Whitmore as General Howard, was well received at a time when Native American issues were receiving wider exposure in the culture. The drama was notable for attempting to present a balanced view of the events: the leadership pressures on Joseph were juxtaposed with the Army's having to carry out an unpopular task while an action-hungry press establishment looked on.
Folk singerFred Small's 1983 song "The Heart of the Appaloosa" describes the events of the Nez Perce War, highlighting the Nez Perce's skillful use of theAppaloosa in battle and in flight. The lyrics identifyChief Joseph's Nez Perce name, which translates as "Thunder Rolling Down the Mountain," and quotes extensively from his "I will fight no more forever" speech.
Texas country bandMicky & the Motorcars released the song "From Where the Sun Now Stands" on their 2014 albumHearts from Above. The song chronicles the flight of the Nez Perce through Idaho and Montana.
Many sites associated with the Nez Perce and their pursuit by the U.S. Army are today part ofNez Perce National Historical Park, includingBig Hole National Battlefield. TheNez Perce National Historical Trail connects some of the sites.
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