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Personal Memoirs-2 [96]

By Root 644 0
at Monument Creek, was to work down

the main Canadian, and remain out as long as it could feed itself

from New Mexico; Carr, having united with Penrose on the North

Canadian, was to operate toward the Antelope Hills and headwaters of

the Red River; while I, with the main column was to move southward to

strike the Indians along the Washita, or still farther. south on

branches of the Red River.



It was no small nor easy task to outfit all these troops by the time

cold weather set in, and provide for them during the winter, but by

the 1st of November I had enough supplies accumulated at Forts Dodge

and Lyon for my own and Carr's columns, and in addition directed

subsistence and forage for three months to be sent to Fort Gibson for

final delivery at Fort Arbuckle, as I expected to feed the command

from this place when we arrived in the neighborhood of old Fort Cobb,

but through some mismanagement few of these stores got further than

Gibson before winter came on.



November 1, all being ready, Colonel Grawford was furnished with

competent guides, and, after sending two troops to Fort Dodge to act

as my escort, with the rest of his regiment he started from Topeka

November 5, under orders to march straight for the rendezvous at the

junction of Beaver and Wolf creeks. He was expected to reach his

destination about the 20th, and there unite with the Seventh Cavalry

and the battalion of infantry, which in the mean time were on the

march from Dodge. A few days later Carr and Evans began their march

also, and everything being now in motion, I decided to go to Camp

Supply to give the campaign my personal attention, determined to

prove that operations could be successfully conducted in spite of

winter, and bent on showing the Indians that they were not secure

from punishment because of inclement weather--an ally on which they

had hitherto relied with much assurance.



We started from Fort Hays on the 15th of N6vember, and the first

night out a blizzard struck us and carried away our tents; and as the

gale was so violent that they could not be put up again, the rain and

snow drenched us to the skin. Shivering from wet and cold, I took

refuge under a wagon, and there spent such a miserable night that,

when at last morning came, the gloomy predictions of old man Bridger

and others rose up before me with greatly increased force. As we

took the road the sleet and snow were still falling, but we labored

on to Dodge that day in spite of the fact that many of the mules

played out on the way. We stayed only one night at Dodge, and then

on the 17th, escorted by a troop of cavalry and Forsyth's scouts, now

under the command of Lieutenant Lewis Pepoon, crossed the Arkansas

and camped the night of the 18th at Bluff Creek, where the two troops

of the Nineteenth Kansas, previously detailed as my escort, were

awaiting our coming. As we were approaching this camp some

suspicious looking objects were seen moving off at a long distance to

the east of us, but as the scouts confidently pronounced them

buffalo, we were unaware of their true character till next morning,

when we became satisfied that what we had seen were Indians, for

immediately after crossing Beaver Creek we struck a trail, leading to

the northeast, of a war party that evidently came up from the head-

waters of the Washita River.



The evening of November 21we arrived at the Camp Supply depot, having

traveled all day in another snowstorm that did not end till twenty-

four hours later. General Sully, with Custer's regiment and the

infantry battalion, had reached the place several days before, but

the Kansas regiment had not yet put in an appearance. All hands were

hard at work trying to shelter the stores and troops, but from the

trail seen that morning, believing that an opportunity offered to

strike an effective blow, I directed Custer to call in his working

parties and prepare to move immediately,
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