Cheyenne
Indians, one of the most westerly tribes of the Algonquian
nation. They were seated on the Cheyenne, a branch of the Red River of
the North. Driven by the
Sioux, they retreated beyond the Missouri. Near the close of the
eighteenth century they were driven to or near the Black Hills (now in
the Dakotas and Wyoming), where Lewis and Clarke found them in 1804,
when they possessed horses and made plundering raids as far as New
Mexico.
About
1825, when they were at peace with the Sioux, and making war upon the
Pawnees, Kansas, and other tribes, a feud occurred in the family. A part
of them remained with the Sioux, and the others went south to the
Arkansas River and joined the Arapahoes. Many treaties were made with
them by agents of the United States, but broken; and, finally, losing
all confidence in the honor of the white race, they began hostilities in
1861. This was the first time that the Cheyennes were at war with the
white people. While negotiations for peace and friendship were in
progress, Colonel Chivington, of Colorado, fell upon a Cheyenne village
(Nov. 29, 1864) and massacred about 100 men, women, and children. The
whole tribe was fired with a desire for revenge, and a fierce war
ensued, in which the United States lost many soldiers and spent between
$30,000,000 and $40,000,000.
The ill-feeling of the Indians towards
the white people remained unabated. Some treaties were made and
imperfectly carried out; and, after
General Hancock burned one of their villages in 1867, they again
made war, and slew 300 United States soldiers and settlers.
General Custer defeated them on the Washita, killing their chief,
thirty-seven warriors, and two-thirds of their women and children. The
northern band of the Cheyennes remained peaceable, refusing to join the
Sioux in 1865.
In 1899 there were 2,069 Cheyennes at the
Cheyenne and Arapahoe agency, Oklahoma; 56 at the Pine Ridge agency,
South Dakota; and 1,349 at the Tongue River agency, Montana.
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