Personal Recollections And Observations Of General Nelson A. MilesDa Capo Press, 1969 M02 21 - 590 pages In 1897, five years after he won the Medal of Honor, General Nelson A. Miles published his memoirs, often cited and now made widely available in this two-volume Bison Book edition. While relating his own colorful adventures, General Miles also ranges over time and space, taking into account fur traders, trail blazers, gold seekers, and missionaries. The first volume described his service in the Civil War and his campaigns against the Indians on the northern plains. Volume 2 follows General Miles to Washington Territory, where he com-mands the Department of Columbia, and finally to the Southwest, where he succeeds General George Crook in directing the fight against the Apaches. The pursuit of Geronimo is one of the many subjects illustrated here by Frederic Remington. In his introduction to the second volume Robert Wooster notes the importance of this memoir as a document on the Indian wars, extremely revealing of the character of a difficult but competent general. |
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Page 141
... crossing of Powder River , where Charles Bent , with the Northern Cheyennes and a part of the Sioux , corralled them ... crossed Salt Creek ; and those troops took this band in as they came north to join Bent . The chief of the Indian ...
... crossing of Powder River , where Charles Bent , with the Northern Cheyennes and a part of the Sioux , corralled them ... crossed Salt Creek ; and those troops took this band in as they came north to join Bent . The chief of the Indian ...
Page 144
... crossed the Yellowstone , we would have caught the last band that stuck together . After the battle of Tongue River ... crossing of the Powder River ; the location at Fort Sanders on the Laramie Plains ; also at the U. P. crossing of the ...
... crossed the Yellowstone , we would have caught the last band that stuck together . After the battle of Tongue River ... crossing of the Powder River ; the location at Fort Sanders on the Laramie Plains ; also at the U. P. crossing of the ...
Page 287
... crossing the plain , fording the river , or ascending the bluffs . Just as they had followed Reno's command up the ... crossed the Little Big Horn , and had gone up on the hill , following Reno's com- mand when this alarm was given ...
... crossing the plain , fording the river , or ascending the bluffs . Just as they had followed Reno's command up the ... crossed the Little Big Horn , and had gone up on the hill , following Reno's com- mand when this alarm was given ...
Contents
A CAMPAIGN AGAINST APACHES | 182 |
Beginning of the Campaign of 1885Crossing Into MexicoMethods of the Indian | 450 |
CHAPTER XXXVII | 480 |
Copyright | |
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American Apache Arizona army band Big Horn Black Hawk body Bowie buffalo California camp campaign cañon captured Cavalry CHAPTER Cheyennes chief civilization Colonel Colorado Columbia command Creek Custer Dakota distance entire expedition feet fifty fight fire force Fort Apache Fort Bowie Fort Huachuca Fort Keogh Fort Leavenworth GEORGE CROOK Geronimo herd horses hostile hundred miles hunting Indian Territory Infantry irrigation Kansas Keokuk killed Lake Lame Deer land large number Lieutenant living Mexicans Mexico military Missouri Missouri River mountains moved nearly Nez Percés night Northern officers Oregon Pacific party passed peace plains ponies prairie pursuit race railroad region result rifle savage scouts sent Sioux Sitting Bull soldiers supplies surrender thousand tion Tongue River town trail treaty tribes troops United valley warriors Washington western Whitman wild winter wounded Yellowstone