SIR: I inclose a copy, marked A(*) (with notes since added), of
the part taken by myself and the small body of Cherokees under my command in
the action of 6th and 7th March near Elkhorn, and I avail myself of this
occasion to forward copies of certain orders and directions since issued by
me, which will put the department in possession of the plans I am endeavoring
to carry out in order to hold possession of this Indian country and keep the
several Indian tribes loyal to the Confederate States.(*)
When I consented to accept the military command of this country, while I
knew that to command the Indians would make my name detestable in the Northern
States, I was also well aware that I could not expect to gain by it any great
reputation in our own country. The Indian troops are of course entirely
undisciplined, mounted chiefly on ponies, and armed very indifferently with
common rifles and ordinary shot-guns. When they agreed to furnish troops they
invariably stipulated that they should be allowed to fight in their own
fashion. They will not face artillery and steady infantry on open ground, and
are only used to fighting as skirmishers when cover can be obtained.
All the treaties with the Indians had also stipulated that they should
not be taken out of their own country to fight without their consent. They are
incredulous people, and those who fought against us under Hopoeithleyohola
were chiefly alienated by the belief, induced by that crafty old man,
that we would get them to become soldiers, take them out of their own country,
first into Arkansas, then into Missouri, then across the Mississippi, and when
their young men were thus all gone would take and divide out their lands.
It pleased General Van Dorn in February to order me to march all the
Indian troops into Missouri and there encamp at or near Neosho. I received it
after the enemy, pursuing General Price, had invaded Arkansas, and was thus
relieved of the necessity of disobeying it. When information of this movement
of the enemy reached Fort Smith and General McCulloch, disobeying the order to
march to Pocahontas, ordered his command to Fayetteville, I sent orders to the
two Cherokee regiments and the Creek regiments to advance toward Fayetteville
and receive orders from General McCulloch. I knew that he understood the
Indian character and their mode of fighting and would not dream of using them
as part of an army in the open field, nor did I suppose that they would be
taken into Arkansas, since that step would be a confession of our weakness,
and we, instead of protecting them by white troops in their own country and
asking them only, as had been agreed, to help to hold that, would thereby
require them to leave their own country and go into ours to fight our battles.
I supposed they would be used along the frontier to harass the rear and right
flank of the invading force, cut up his foraging parties, and render such
service as their habits and manner of making war warranted Us in expecting
from them.
It is much to be regretted that they were taken into the open field, to
see half of our troops never brought into action, large bodies of cavalry
taking shelter in the woods at the discharge of a shell or two, and at other
times wholly inactive, confusion and disorder prevailing nearly everywhere,
and at last our army retreating, leaving 2,000 men, without notice of the
retreat, to shift for themselves, and, pursued and routed,
to flee in squads into the hills. I
regret that no other allusion is made by General Van Dorn in his report of
27th March of the action at Elkhorn to the Indian troops engaged than the
simple statement that he had ordered me to join him with my force. I did not
expect that any credit would ever be given them in orders for any gallantry
displayed, since that would be contrary to all precedent, but surely it would
have been wise and politic to mention their presence, and not to have assigned
to others the whole credit of what they at least aided in doing.
Having the right to refuse to leave their own country, the Creeks said
that what Hopoeithleyohola had told them was
true, and as an excuse for not going demanded to be paid off before they would
march. The Choctaws and Chickasaws were willing enough to cross the line, but,
influenced by merchants whom they owed, they too demanded to be paid, and the
result was that I left them all behind, and overtaking the Cherokee regiments,
fell in the rear of the army with them alone and two companies of mounted
Texans. That these, with not more than 150 or 200 of Colonel Sims' Texan
regiment, charged face to face and took a battery of three guns supported by
regular cavalry, having 2 men killed and I wounded in the charge, and killing
some 35 to 40 of the enemy, is certainly true. No other battery was taken in
that action, and Cherokees and no others by my orders drew the guns into the
woods. It is true that when a second battery opened on them they hastily
retired into the woods, but they went no farther and remained there, holding
the extreme right and keeping another battery and a large body of infantry in
check, who would otherwise have been at liberty by a short march to take the
other forces in flank or rear, until the action ceased.
It is equally certain that Colonel Drew's regiment of Cherokees was the
last that left that field, and that when the Choctaw and Chickasaw regiment
came up with the train which, abandoned by General Van Dorn, was pursuing its
headlong flight toward Van Buren it passed all the troops that were with the
train and with the Cherokees interposed between them and the enemy.
It is equally certain that it was a body of Colonel Watie's Cherokees
that went with ammunition that night to find the remainder of the army at the
main battle ground.
It was not reasonable to expect much of a small body of Indians, 900
men, among 18,000 or 20,000 in a regular engagement, where the enemy had to be
attacked in a position selected by himself on ground to which he had
dexterously enticed us and where he had been encamped and preparing to welcome
us for three weeks. Surely it would have been both magnanimous and wise to
acknowledge what they did do.
I also inclose a copy of an order from General Van Dorn, by which I am
advised that I am expected to maintain myself in the Indian country
independent of his army.
The Indian troops having been in the service for several months without
pay, and not being supplied with clothing, tents, and blankets, I had made
great exertions to collect supplies for them. In their thin clothing part of
them, Creeks, Choctaws, and Chickasaws, had, under Colonel Cooper, pursued Hopoeithleyohola
in the snow and cold, and fought him twice, first in the dark night and
then in open daylight, killing in the last action nearly 400 of his men, and
compelling him to retreat and abandon the country, leaving only a few hundred
men in care of the women and wounded, to be afterward routed by Colonel
Mcintosh.
I had also procured a sufficient number of pieces of artillery and a
tolerable supply of ammunition, and persons were engaged at heavy expense to
themselves and by means of most active exertions in raising two of the
regiments for service in this country that had been promised the Indians by
way of chief inducement for them to take up arms. I had the positive promise
of the late Secretary of War that 2,000 stand of small-arms should be
forwarded for these regiments out of the very first received from abroad.
The principal parts of my ordnance stores and supplies had reached Fort
Smith before the actions at Elkhorn. I had myself carried 3,000 pounds of
cannon powder there about the middle of February. I directed Maj. George W.
Clark, the depot quartermaster, to forward all as rapidly as possible to North
Fork. Instead of doing so, he by telegram asked instructions from General Van
Dorn, who by telegram, without notifying me of the order, directed him to send
nothing for my command into the Indian country.
Up to this time I have with great exertion, and owing in a great measure
to the kindness of General Price, received at this point eighteen pieces of
artillery, twelve of which are Parrott guns, 100 rockets, what rifle powder I
had procured, a small quantity of buck-shot, a supply of percussion caps, a
little lead, about 1,900 pairs of shoes out of 8,000, some 900 suits of
clothing out of 7,000, a small portion of the socks and drawers I had
obtained, about 1,000 shirts out of 4,000, about 75 tents out of 1,000, and
none at all of the small-arms I had purchased in Arkansas and North Carolina.
Part of my tents and small-arms were issued to volunteers going up to
join Price before the actions. Other tents were issued to the Louisiana
regiment to replace theirs, wantonly burned during the retreat of the train by
order of somebody not of the regiment. Of everything else of mine, even my
private stores, whatever any one wanted was taken at Fort Smith and Van Buren
after the retreat. Hardly a box comes here that has not been opened and part
of the contents abstracted. All my cannon powder, the caissons of the Parrott
guns, and many other things were sent off to Little Rock and have never been
returned. Part of the artillery was sent to Pocahontas, all the medicines
procured for the command (the first that had been procured) were ordered off,
but the medical director with some difficulty rescued them. Much of what I
have received, including all the percussion caps, was ready for shipment to
Little Rock, and part of it actually on board boat, when it was rescued by
Assistant Adjutant-General Hewitt. At the same time trains coming here were
ordered to be loaded with wet brown sugar in hogsheads that cost 10 cents a
pound in Fort Smith. That could be sent me. Captain Hewitt took the
responsibility of sending it down the river, for which I cannot too much thank
him.
Besides the Indian troops, I now have at this post two regiments of
Texan mounted men, under Gels. Robert H. Taylor and Almarine Alexander, one
company of the same and one from Arkansas with the Nineteenth Regiment and one
company of infantry from Arkansas, commanded by Col. C. L. Dawson, and two
companies of artillery, commanded by Capts. William E. Woodruff, jr., and
Henry C. West.
The number of sick, owing to bad weather and bad cooking, is very large,
so that in all there are but a little over 1,000 men present for duty.
I am dividing the fragments of my supplies as fast as I receive them
proportionally between the white and Indian troops. The latter continue loyal.
There is no enemy now in the country, and it is perfectly safe to travel in it
anywhere. Having received the moneys promised them by treaties, all the tribes
have confidence in the ability of the Government
to perform its premises and in its
good faith. The Cherokee and Creek troops are in their respective countries.
The Choctaw troops are in front of me, in their country, part on this side of
Boggy and part at Little Boggy, 34 miles from here. These observe the roads to
Fort Smith and by Perryville toward Fort Gibson. Part of the Chickasaw
battalion is sent to Camp Mcintosh, 11 miles this side of the Wichita Agency,
and part to Fort Arbuckle, and the Texan company is at Fort Cobb.
I have ordered Lieutenant-Colonel Jumper with his Seminoles to march to
and take Fort Larned, on the Pawnee Fork of the Arkansas, where are
considerable stores and a little garrison. He will go as soon as their annuity
is paid.
The Creeks under Colonel McIntosh are about to make an extended scout
westward. Stand Watie, with his Cherokees, scouts along the whole northern
line of the Cherokee country from Grand Saline to Marysville, and sends me
information continually of every movement of the enemy in Kansas and
Southwestern Missouri.
The Comanches, Kiowas, and Reserve Indians are all peaceable and quiet.
Some 2,000 of the former are encamped about three days' ride from Fort Cobb,
and some of them come in at intervals to procure provisions. They have sent to
me to know if they can be allowed to send a strong party and capture any
trains on their way from Kansas to New Mexico, to which I have no objection.
To go on the war-path somewhere else is the best way to keep them from
troubling Texas. I hear no complaints now from the Texan frontier, but Agent
Leeper informs me that some Anadarkos have lately been over there and stolen
some horses. I mean soon to invite the Reserve and Comanche chiefs to visit
me, and let them see the troops here and the great guns and witness the effect
of a rocket or two, that they may know we have the power either to protect or
punish them.
I propose also to send at intervals bodies of cavalry of 150 or 200 men
each into the Cherokee and Creek country and perhaps to the west, to assure
those tribes that the Confederate States are ready to assist them and do not
mean to abandon their country.
At this point I hold the roads to Fort Smith and Fort Gibson, to Forts
Washita, Arbuckle, and Cobb, and to Sherman, Bonham, and Preston, in Texas,
all of which here cross the Blue by a bridge. The field works planned here
will command the roads and the country around. A way of retreat to Red River
at different points will be opened to me, and I can procure ample supplies of
forage and subsistence. I could not have procured either on the Arkansas or
Canadian.
I hope to be able by means of the works here and with the artillery I
have, even if my other forces are not increased, to hold the Indian country
against any force that can invade it. A force invading Texas from the north
cannot leave us in its rear. If I can prevent the Indian country from being
occupied by the enemy I shall be content. To do so I am striving to have my
small force here drilled and disciplined, to which and to working with the
spade and pick-axe the volunteers I have are much averse, but I think I shall
overcome their aversion to it and still not lose their good-will. I had some
trouble at first, but what discontents existed have disappeared, and all seem
willing to do their duty.
I have sent requisitions to Memphis and New Orleans, and hope to be able
to supply the deficiencies in the ammunition and quartermaster stores procured
by me for the command. I hardly expect to receive <ar19_823>
any more infantry from Arkansas,
since the two regiments raised for the service have been marched to General
Van Dorn.
Money is absolutely requisite. The people who have provisions and other
supplies are very unwilling to sell and take certified accounts. With
Confederate notes I can purchase an abundance at fair prices.
A sum of money intended for the service ($160,000, I believe), which was
at Little Rock, has been taken for the service of General Van Dorn's command,
and my department quartermaster and commissary have no funds at all. I have
advanced for different purposes $20,000 of my own means and have drawn no pay.
What funds of my own remain will soon be exhausted, and then I shall have
infinite trouble if funds do not reach us soon.
The President will, I hope, allow me all the discretion in his power. I
will not abuse it. If much is not left me in many matters I can do little good
with the Indians. I have very little assistance and the Indian officers know
nothing about forms and little about reports and returns. Above all, if the
control and disposition of their troops is not left to me and if they are not
encouraged by the presence of a small force of white troops the consequences
may be very serious. The superintendent and agent do little that avails
anything, and all that concerns our relations with the Indians devolves on me.
I am willing to be responsible for the peace of the country if I have the
necessary powers and discretion; without them I should be powerless. Infinite
trouble has been caused and great inefficiency of administration here by the
necessity of transacting all the quartermaster and commissary business through
officers at Fort Smith, who were regarded by another general as under his
orders, and by the making of contracts at Richmond, which gave one man the
monopoly of supplying all the fresh beef and bacon for two armies; a contract
under which of course no beef was furnished when it began to get scarce and we
needed it most and not a pound of bacon has been heard off The reason for the
latter is obvious: the contract prices of bacon being 15 cents and it being
now worth 26; while the beef delivered, being delivered by a hundred head at a
time, costs the Government 10 or 12 cents a pound, when an abundance could
have been had at 3 1/2. It is necessary the quartermaster and commissary of
this department should purchase their own supplies and draw their funds direct
from Richmond. I protest against their having to estimate through Maj. George
W. Clark at New Orleans. I am endeavoring to put an end to swindling by
contract, and prefer to purchase corn, flour, and meat of the provider
himself. It is fortunate also that we are no longer compelled to rely for
transportation on scarecrows, that could be used nowhere else, paid for by the
Government as mules, and considered good enough for the Indian service. I hope
to be able to correct abuses in time. They have existed here long enough.
I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
ALBERT PIKE, Brig. Gen.,
Comdg. Department of Indian Territory.
SOURCE: United States War Department. THE WAR
OF THE REBELLION: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and
Confederate Armies. 128 Volumes. Washington: Government Printing Office,
1880-1901.