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It took but a few days at Dodge to discover that great discontent

existed about the Medicine Lodge concessions, to see that the young

men were chafing and turbulent, and that it would require much tact

and good management on the part of the Indian Bureau to persuade the

four tribes to go quietly to their reservations, under an agreement

which, when entered into, many of them protested had not been fully

understood.



A few hours after my arrival a delegation of prominent chiefs called

on me and proposed a council, where they might discuss their

grievances, and thus bring to the notice of the Government the

alleged wrongs done them; but this I refused, because Congress had

delegated to the Peace Commission the whole matter of treating with

them, and a council might lead only to additional complications. My

refusal left them without hope of securing better terms, or of even

delaying matters longer; so henceforth they were more than ever

reckless and defiant. Denunciations of the treaty became outspoken,

and as the young braves grew more and more insolent every day, it

amounted to conviction that, unless by some means the irritation was

allayed, hostilities would surely be upon us when the buffalo

returned to their summer feeding-grounds between the Arkansas and the

Platte.



The principal sufferers in this event would be the settlers in middle

and western Kansas, who, entirely ignorant of the dangers hanging

over them, were laboring to build up homes in a new country. Hence

the maintenance of peace was much to be desired, if it could be

secured without too great concessions, and although I would not meet

the different tribes in a formal council, yet, to ward off from

settlers as much as possible the horrors of savage warfare, I showed,

by resorting to persuasive methods, my willingness to temporize a

good deal. An abundant supply of rations is usually effective to

keep matters quiet in such cases, so I fed them pretty freely, and

also endeavored to control them through certain men who, I found,

because of former associations, had their confidence. These men,

employed as scouts, or interpreters, were Mr. William Comstock, Mr.

Abner S. Grover, and Mr. Richard Parr. They had lived on the Plains

for many years with different tribes of Indians, had trapped and

hunted with them, and knew all the principal chiefs and headmen.

Through such influences, I thought I saw good chances of preserving

peace, and of inducing the discontented to go quietly to their

reservations in the Indian Territory as soon as General Hazen, the

representative of the Peace Commissioners, was ready to conduct them

there from Fort Larned.



Before returning to Leavenworth I put my mediators (as I may call

them) under charge of an officer of the army, Lieutenant F. W.

Beecher, a very intelligent man, and directed him to send them out to

visit among the different tribes, in order to explain what was

intended by the treaty of Medicine Lodge, and to make every effort

possible to avert hostilities. Under these instructions Comstock and

Grover made it their business to go about among the Cheyennes--the

most warlike tribe of all--then camping about the headwaters of

Pawnee and Walnut creeks, and also to the north and west of Fort

Wallace, while Parr spent his time principally with the Kiowas and

Comanches.



>From the different posts--Wallace, Dodge, and Larned Lieutenant

Beecher kept up communication with all three scouts, and through him

I heard from them at least once a week. Every now and then some

trouble along the railroad or stage routes would be satisfactorily

adjusted and quiet restored, and matters seemed to be going on very

well, the warm weather bringing the grass and buffalo in plenty, and

still no outbreak, nor any act of downright hostility. So I began to

hope that we should succeed in averting trouble
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