Plains Wars, Series of conflicts from the early 1850s through the late 1870s between Native Americans and the U.S. and its Indian allies over control of the Great Plains between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. The initial major confrontation, sometimes known as the First Sioux War, broke out in the Dakota Territory near Fort Laramie (in present-day Wyoming) following a dispute over a killed cow between white settlers traveling to the far west and local Teton (Western Sioux) people. U.S. brevet Second Lieut. John L. Grattan attacked a superior Teton force in an attempt to apprehend the suspected culprit, and the Teton returned fire, annihilating Grattan’s entire column. The following year, open conflict spread farther southward, and, from the late 1850s through the 1870s, war continued to rage along the western frontier, from Texas to Minnesota. The Plains Wars were neither solely the product of U.S. encroachment on Indian lands nor the result of Native American aggression. Rather, they were fueled in large measure by both sides’ understanding of military action as a legitimate means of securing policy goals. Indians typically sought to engage in battle only when conditions seemed most favourable to success with minimal losses. In turn, U.S. forces were dependent upon Native American auxiliaries. The element of surprise offered tremendous tactical advantages; determined to seize this edge, combatants on both sides frequently attacked entire communities without warning, leading to high casualties, particularly among women and children. In the end, the U.S. Army’s enormous logistical advantage proved decisive, as the Indians, their options increasingly narrowed by an ongoing incursion of non-Indian populations, lost control of the physical and economic resources necessary to make war.
Plains Wars Article
Plains Wars summary
Explore the causes of the Plains Wars of the early 1850s to the late 1870s
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Great Plains Summary
Great Plains, major physiographic province of North America. The Great Plains lie between the Rio Grande in the south and the delta of the Mackenzie River at the Arctic Ocean in the north and between the Interior Lowland and the Canadian Shield on the east and the Rocky Mountains on the west. Their
Arapaho Summary
Arapaho, North American Indian tribe of Algonquian linguistic stock who lived during the 19th century along the Platte and Arkansas rivers of what are now the U.S. states of Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, and Kansas. Their oral traditions suggest that they once had permanent villages in the Eastern
Apache Summary
Apache, an Indigenous North American group which, under such leaders as Cochise, Mangas Coloradas, Geronimo, and Victorio, figured largely in the history of the Southwest during the latter half of the 19th century. The Apache name is probably derived from a Spanish transliteration of ápachu, the
Battle of the Little Bighorn Summary
Battle of the Little Bighorn, (June 25, 1876), battle at the Little Bighorn River in Montana Territory, U.S., between federal troops led by Lieut. Col. George A. Custer and Northern Plains Indians (Lakota [Teton or Western Sioux] and Northern Cheyenne) led by Sitting Bull. Custer and all the men