For my current book and the next three, my writing has
taken me to frontier Kansas. In particular, I have researched the primary
trails and frontier forts along those trails. For the next several months, I
will be sharing with you regarding the Kansas forts along the Santa Fe Trail.
I chose to start with Fort Larned, even though it is
the middle fort along the Santa Fe Trail, because it was the first fort. It was
not the earliest temporary camp, but the first to develop into a permanent
fortification.
Freight Train Crossing the Plains (colorized) - Harper's Weekly, Apr 24, 1858 |
William Bent |
A. B. Greenwood, commissioner of Indian affairs, in his
annual report (1859), enlarged upon the critical relations
between Indians and travelers on the trail. He attributed the accelerated
traffic to the discovery of gold in the Pike's Peak region, and his report
pointed out the difficulty the Indians were having to maintain their natural
subsistence. There
was also the need to protect the recently established stage stations on the Trail
from the resistance of the Plains Indians.
There were no legal barrier to the establishment of a permanent military post and mail escort station because of earlier treaties with certain Native American tribes. The area where Fort Larned was to be located was government held land, being free from any binding Indian treaty.
The location at Pawnee Fork was the choice of William Bent.
In his appeal for military protection, he stated, “I consider it essential to
have two permanent stations for troops, one at the mouth of Pawnee Fork, and
one at Big Timbers, both upon the Arkansas River. . . . To control them (the
Indians), it is essential to have among them the perpetual presence of a
controlling military force.”
On
October 22, 1859, what was to become Fort Larned, a military post under the
command of Maj.
Henry Wessels was first
established as Camp on the Pawnee Fork. He had with him Company
K of the United States cavalry, under the command of Capt. George H. Stewart, which had
been busy during the summer patrolling the region
between Cow creek and Fort Union. On February 1, 1860. Because the small
garrison of about 50 men had to remain constantly alert for Indians, orders
were issued changing the name to "Camp Alert."
The exact location of this installation was at the base of
Lookout Hill (now known as Jenkins Hill), on the south side of the Pawnee,
eight miles from its confluence with the Arkansas River.
A
description of the first structures of "Camp on the Pawnee Fork" is
given in Capt. Lambert Wolf's diary:
October 23, plans are
made for the horse and cattle stable, also for officers' and company quarters,
all of which are to be built of sod, cut with spades by members of our company.
Our stable [probably meaning fortification] is to be 100 feet square . . . wall
12 feet high . . . .
These plans must have been set aside for several months. As late
as July 22, 1860, a letter from Camp Alert (as the installation was then called),
failed to note anything more permanent than tents in the fort.
The
forces of Stewart and Wessels remained at "Camp on the Pawnee Fork"
until November 27, 1859, when they were relieved by a detail of 40 men under
the command of one Lieutenant Bell, whose specific instructions were to act as
a construction crew for the permanent site.
In
May 1860 the garrison was increased to 160 men, and Captain Henry W. Wessells
arrived with orders to build a permanent post. He selected a new site about 2
1/2 miles upstream. The new location proved to be more beneficial since it was
located on the south side of the Pawnee, with a big bend of the creek affording
a natural barrier on two sides. He also requested the name to be changed. Just
prior to the completion of the sod buildings and earth works, the post was
given its third and lasting name, Fort Larned. On May 29, 1860, pursuant to
General Order No. 14, the post was named Fort Larned, in honor of Col. Benjamin
F. Larned, paymaster of the United States army. The new name became official on
May 29, 1860. The reservation was four miles square, but the official survey
was never carried out.
By
the year's end the soldiers had constructed an adobe fort. It consisted of an officer's quarters, two combination
storehouses and barracks, a guardhouse, two laundresses' quarters, and a
hospital. Later additions included a bakery, meat house, and shops
building. For the most part these buildings were poorly constructed and
inadequate. However, with the eruption of the Civil War in 1861, these
structures were to remain until appropriations for new permanent structures
could be made in 1866.
As
a result of the Atkinson Treaty of 1853, certain tribes were granted annuities
for ten years. Originally the distribution point was in present-day Oklahoma,
but reports from Indian Agent William Bent show the tribes sought to have their
distribution station be relocated along the Arkansas River.
Possibly
as early as 1860, based on the reports sent as early as 1860 by Col. Jesse
Leavenworth at Fort Larned, but known to be the case in 1862 through 1868, Fort
Larned served as an agency of the Indian Bureau and a distribution point for
annuities. Indian agents Edward W. Wynkoop, for the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and
Plains Apache, and Colonel Jesse Leavenworth, for the Kiowa and Comanche,
located their offices at Fort Larned. After 1868, when the Indians were placed
on reservations in present Oklahoma, the agencies were relocated to Fort Cobb,
Indian Territory.
With
the establishment of Fort Larned, it appeared, for a time, the native tribes developed
a respect for the trail commerce. In August, 1861, Colonel Leavenworth,
reporting from Fort Larned, stated that the Indians had left the Santa Fe trail
area and that there was no apprehension of any hostilities in the near future.
The
Civil War affected Fort Larned in several ways. The immediate effect was the
removal of regular army troops from the post, who were sent to fight in the
East, and the gradual replacement of them with volunteer troops from Kansas,
Colorado, and Wisconsin.
The
Plains Indians took advantage of the Civil War. Indian raids and harassment of
travelers along the Trail increased. This forced travelers to seek protection
at Fort Larned. On July 17, 1864, Kiowa Indians raided Fort Larned and were
able to steal 172 horses and mules from the corral. They were pursued but never
caught. In 1865 a system of escorting wagon trains was established, and all
merchants were forbidden travel westward beyond Fort Larned without an armed
escort.
In
May, 1862, Fort Larned almost became
directly involved in the Civil War when Gen. Albert Pike, Confederate officer
in Texas, arranged an alliance with some Kiowas and a group of renegade
Seminoles. This alliance had as its design the seizure of Forts Larned and Wise
by these Indians. Nothing came of this, since as soon as the weather permitted,
the Indians left for their annual hunt.
Difficulties
with the native tribes continued during the rest of the 1860s. As more white
settlers passed through the region, the activity drove off the buffalo and
other game the natives needed to survive. Indians attacked the fort in an
effort to seize their annuities early. Spurred on by freighters who wanted to
sell to the Indians, especially whiskey, one year they threatened the fort in
an effort to seize their annuity early. Looting by the natives became more
common. On one occasion, after coming into Fort Larned under the pretext of
wanting to trade, the natives drove off a large number of horses and mules. As
difficulties increased, and the military began to withhold annuities,
particularly promised guns and bullets, the situation.
After
the Civil War concluded, the Army determined to end the problems with the
plains tribes by insisting they go onto reservations or face military campaigns
to force submission.
moved onto their assigned reservations, Major General Winfield S. Hancock
organized a force of 1,400 troops to march along the Santa Fe Trail and deal
with Indians as necessary to enforce the treaties. He did not know much about
the plains tribes, and believed a show of strength would frighten them into
submission. His command included four companies of the newly organized Seventh
Cavalry under Lieutenant Colonel (Brevet Major General) George A. Custer. This
campaign was Custer's and the Seventh's introduction to Plains Indian warfare.
The campaign resulted in General Hancock's burning a Cheyenne and Sioux village
of about 300 lodges, located approximately 3O miles up the Pawnee Fork from
Fort Larned.
In
the spring of 1867, in an attempt to defeat the Plains Indians who had not
As
a result of Major General Philip H. Sheridan's winter campaign in 1868, most of
the Indians in the Fort Larned area were forced onto reservations.
From
1866 to 1868 the sod and adobe structures at Fort Larned were replaced by the
sandstone buildings that survive today. Henry M. Stanley, later well known for
his rescue of David Livingstone in Africa, wrote after his second visit to Fort
Larned in October 1867, "a complete change has been effected at Fort
Larned . . . . The shabby, vermin-breeding adobe and wooden houses have been
torn down, and new and stately buildings of hewn sandstone stand in their
stead." When compared to many of the other frontier posts in the late
1860s and 1870s, Fort Larned was an impressive military complex.
By
1871, wagon trains using the Santa Fe Trail no longer needed military escorts. However,
the fort still provided protection for the survey and construction crews of the Atchison,
Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. By the end of 1872 the Santa Fe Railroad had
pushed all the way across Kansas. Since the railroad, once it was built,
provided transportation that was less expensive and faster, it soon replaced
freight wagons.
With
the military importance of Fort Larned gone, the post was abandoned on July 13,
1878, except for a small guard force to protect the buildings. On March 26,
1883, the Fort Larned Military Reservation was transferred from the War
Department to the General Land Office, Department of the Interior. The
buildings and land were sold at public auction in 1884.
Today the nine original sandstone structures have been
restored to their appearance in 1868.
Anyone with an interest to read more details of activities at the fort, I suggest you read “The Story of Fort Larned,” by William E. Unrau, which you can find HERE.
Anyone with an interest to read more details of activities at the fort, I suggest you read “The Story of Fort Larned,” by William E. Unrau, which you can find HERE.
My latest novel is Hannah’s Handkerchief, Book 24
in the Lockets & Lace series (also Book 4 in the Atwell Kin series). The
opening chapters take place at Fort Riley. As will my other Atwell Kin books,
an underlying theme involves the situation with the Kaw (Kansa) tribe who made
early treaties with the United States which were not enforced to these people’s
detriment.
To read the book description and find the purchase
link, please CLICK HERE.
Sources:
https://www.santafetrailresearch.com/research/fort-larned.html
https://www.kshs.org/p/the-story-of-fort-larned/13139
George A. Root. ed., "Extracts
From the Diary of Captain Lambert Bowman Wolf," The Kansas Historical
Quarterly, Topeka, v. 1 (1931 - 1932), p. 204.
Lee, Wayne C. and Howard C.
Raynesford; Trails of the Smoky Hill