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[[Image:Dodge map 1835.png|thumb|right|500px|Map accompanying Colonel [[Henry Dodge]]'s 1835 report to the [[United States Congress|U.S. Congress]] about the expedition]]
[[Image:Dodge map 1835.png|thumb|right|500px|Map accompanying Colonel [[Henry Dodge]]'s 1835 report to the [[United States Congress|U.S. Congress]] about the expedition]]
The '''Second Dragoon Expedition''' of 1835 (also called the Dodge Expedition) left [[Fort Leavenworth, Kansas|Fort Leavenworth, unorganized territory]] May 29, 1835, charged with contacting the Indian tribes across the Central [[Great Plains|Plains]] to the Rockies as far west as the Mexican border.
The '''Second Dragoon Expedition''' of 1835 (also called the Dodge Expedition) left [[Fort Leavenworth, Kansas|Fort Leavenworth, unorganized territory]] May 29, 1835, charged with contacting the Indian tribes across the Central [[Great Plains|Plains]] to the Rockies as far west as the Mexican border. Traveling first up the Platte River they made contact with the [[Otoe]], [[Omaha people|Omaha]], [[Pawnee people|Grand Pawnee]], and [[Arikara|Arickaree]] tribes. Continuing south along the [[Front Range|front range of the Rockies]], they reached [[Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site|Bent's Fort]] on August 6. At Bent's Fort the expedition held councils with the Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Black Feet, Gros Ventres, and others. On August 12, 1835 the Dragoons began the return march from Bent's Fort, following the [[Santa Fe Trail]] eastward. They arrived at [[Council Grove, Kansas]] the evening of September 8, 1835. Between Council Grove and Hundred and Ten Mile Creek the expedition experienced its only loss, the death of 23 year old, Private Samuel Hunt on September 11, 1835. In Colonel Dodge's Journal he wrote, "On the 11th a man of company “A” died—the first death that has occurred on our whole march, and the only severe sickness. The colonel directed him to be buried on a high prairie ridge, and a stone placed at the head of the grave, with his name and regiment engraved thereon. Continued the march; crossed the Hundred-and ten-mile creek, and entered upon the dividing ridge between the Kansas and Osage rivers; passed Round and Elm Groves, and arrived at the crossing of the Kansas, at Dunlap's Ferry, on the 15th; crossed the river, and on the 16th arrived at Fort Leavenworth."
==History==

[[File:Dodge1834.png|thumb|right|200px|[[George Catlin]] sketch of Colonel Henry Dodge, commander of the [[United States Mounted Rangers]], 1833. <ref>Jung, Patrick J. (2007). ''The Black Hawk War of 1832.'' University of Oklahoma Press, p. 102.</ref>]]
[[File:Dodge1834.png|thumb|right|200px|[[George Catlin]] sketch of Colonel Henry Dodge, commander of the [[United States Mounted Rangers]], 1833. <ref>Jung, Patrick J. (2007). ''The Black Hawk War of 1832.'' University of Oklahoma Press, p. 102.</ref>]]
Traveling first up the Platte River they made contact with the [[Otoe]], [[Omaha people|Omaha]], [[Pawnee people|Grand Pawnee]], and [[Arikara|Arickaree]] tribes. Continuing south along the [[Front Range|front range of the Rockies]], they reached [[Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site|Bent's Fort]] on August 6. At Bent's Fort the expedition held councils with the Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Black Feet, Gros Ventres, and others. On August 12, 1835 the Dragoons began the return march from Bent's Fort, following the [[Santa Fe Trail]] eastward. They arrived at [[Council Grove, Kansas]] the evening of September 8, 1835.


Between Council Grove and Hundred and Ten Mile Creek the expedition experienced its only loss, the death of 23 year old, Private Samuel Hunt on September 11, 1835. In Colonel Dodge's Journal he wrote, "On the 11th a man of company “A” died—the first death that has occurred on our whole march, and the only severe sickness. The colonel directed him to be buried on a high prairie ridge, and a stone placed at the head of the grave, with his name and regiment engraved thereon. Continued the march; crossed the Hundred-and ten-mile creek, and entered upon the dividing ridge between the Kansas and Osage rivers; passed Round and Elm Groves, and arrived at the crossing of the Kansas, at Dunlap's Ferry, on the 15th; crossed the river, and on the 16th arrived at Fort Leavenworth."
:''Note: The [[First Dragoon Expedition]] was from Fort Gibson to the Southern Plains in 1834.''

==See also==
==See also==
*[[First Dragoon Expedition]]
*[[U.S. 1st Cavalry Regiment|United States Regiment of Dragoons]]
*[[U.S. 1st Cavalry Regiment|United States Regiment of Dragoons]]



Revision as of 20:32, 20 April 2024

Map accompanying Colonel Henry Dodge's 1835 report to the U.S. Congress about the expedition

The Second Dragoon Expedition of 1835 (also called the Dodge Expedition) left Fort Leavenworth, unorganized territory May 29, 1835, charged with contacting the Indian tribes across the Central Plains to the Rockies as far west as the Mexican border.

History

George Catlin sketch of Colonel Henry Dodge, commander of the United States Mounted Rangers, 1833. [1]

Traveling first up the Platte River they made contact with the Otoe, Omaha, Grand Pawnee, and Arickaree tribes. Continuing south along the front range of the Rockies, they reached Bent's Fort on August 6. At Bent's Fort the expedition held councils with the Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Black Feet, Gros Ventres, and others. On August 12, 1835 the Dragoons began the return march from Bent's Fort, following the Santa Fe Trail eastward. They arrived at Council Grove, Kansas the evening of September 8, 1835.

Between Council Grove and Hundred and Ten Mile Creek the expedition experienced its only loss, the death of 23 year old, Private Samuel Hunt on September 11, 1835. In Colonel Dodge's Journal he wrote, "On the 11th a man of company “A” died—the first death that has occurred on our whole march, and the only severe sickness. The colonel directed him to be buried on a high prairie ridge, and a stone placed at the head of the grave, with his name and regiment engraved thereon. Continued the march; crossed the Hundred-and ten-mile creek, and entered upon the dividing ridge between the Kansas and Osage rivers; passed Round and Elm Groves, and arrived at the crossing of the Kansas, at Dunlap's Ferry, on the 15th; crossed the river, and on the 16th arrived at Fort Leavenworth."

See also

References

  • Dodge, Henry. Journal of the March of a Detachment of Dragoons, Under the Command of Colonel Henry Dodge, During the Summer of 1835. American State Papers. Class V. Military Affairs. Volume VI. 24th Cong, 1st Session, H. Doc., 138. (Serial Set 21). 1836.
  • Hildreth, James (1836). Dragoon Campaigns to the Rocky Mountains: Being a History of the Enlistment Organization and First Campaigns of the Regiment of U S Dragoons. New York: Wiley & Long. Retrieved August 24, 2014.

Notes

  1. ^ Jung, Patrick J. (2007). The Black Hawk War of 1832. University of Oklahoma Press, p. 102.

External links