Battle Creek massacre
Battle Creek Massacre | |
---|---|
Location | Pleasant Grove, Utah |
Coordinates | 40°21′48″N 111°42′02″W / 40.3633°N 111.7005°W |
Date | March 5, 1849 |
Target | Timpanogos Native Americans |
Weapons | Guns, stones |
Deaths | 4 |
Injured | several injuries from being struck by thrown stones |
Perpetrators | 35 Mormon miliatamen, ordered to carry out the attack by Brigham Young |
Motive | Retaliation for reported cattle theft |
The Battle Creek massacre was a lynching of a Timpanogos group on March 5, 1849, by a group of 35 Mormon settlers at Battle Creek Canyon near present-day Pleasant Grove, Utah.[1] It was the first violent engagement between the settlers who had begun coming to the area two years before, and was in response to reported cattle theft by the group. The attacked group (led by Kone Roman Nose) was outnumbered, outgunned, and had little defense against the militia that crept in and surrounded their camp before dawn.[2][3] The massacre had been ordered by Brigham Young, the Utah territory governor and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS). The formation of the Mormon settlement of Utah Valley soon followed the attack at Battle Creek.[4] One of the young survivors from the group of 17 children, women, and men who had been attacked grew up to be Antonga Black Hawk, a Timpanogos leader in the Black Hawk War (1865–1872).
Background
[edit]Around February 1849, Dimick B. Huntington spoke with Timpanogo leader Little Chief about some of the settlers' missing cattle. Little Chief said that Roman Nose and Blue Shirt were great thieves who had decided to live off of the settlers' cattle all winter. Little Chief said that the Mormons should kill these renegades, perhaps out of fear that his tribe would be blamed and killed for the missing cattle. On March 1 Captain John Scott took fifty militiamen into Utah Valley[5]: 63 to investigate the theft of horses from Brigham Young's herd. They were under orders "to take such measures as would put a final end to their [Indian] depredations in future." They camped in the snow the first night, near Little Cottonwood Canyon, where a rider brought word that the horses had not actually been stolen. Before morning they received orders from Salt Lake City "stating that as the horses were not stolen ... we need not spend any more time in search of them but to proceed with the Indians for killing cattle as had been directed, so that the nature of our expedition was not in the least changed."[6][5]: 63
On March 2 the men continued southward to Willow Creek (now Draper, Utah) and unanimously agreed to kill a cow from a cattle herd they came upon. The company then continued on to the Jordan River (near the border of present Salt Lake and Utah counties) where they again camped. That day they had learned that the stolen horses had returned to Young's herd. Three times the company had now received word that the Indians had not stolen Young's horses, but they were directed to continue the mission to deal with the stolen/killed cattle issue.[7]
On March 3, Scott's men made their way down the Provo River and asked Little Chief and his camp about where the renegades were. Little Chief's tribe was understandably worried about the fifty armed men, and Little Chief agreed to show Scott where the renegades were. Little Chief's two sons guided Scott's men to the renegade's camp near Battle Creek Canyon. They prepared for an ambush to be carried out at dawn.
Confrontation
[edit]The company divided into four parties, surrounding the encampment. Before gunfire began, there was a verbal exchange with the Indians telling the Mormons to go away and the Mormons telling the Indians to surrender. Gunfire began from the militia, immediately killing the Timpanogo leader. The women and children fled to the stream, where they remained in the cold water during the fighting. The militiamen threw rocks into the brush to coax them out.
The militiamen started a fire to warn the women and children. One of the young women who was spared pleaded with Huntington to save her brother who was still in the fray. Huntington consented, and she brought her young teenaged brother out of the willows. The boy was initially defiant, but Huntington threatened that if the boy did not surrender their one gun, he would kill him. The boy retrieved the gun from his kinsmen and surrendered it. Shortly thereafter, the three remaining Timpanogo men fled.[5]: 66 However, the militia pursued and killed all of the men.
Hearing the reports of gunfire, Little Chief and his men rode to the valley. Upon reaching the scene, he cursed the militiamen for the slaughter. Little Chief warned the settlers that the boy would later kill a white man for revenge.[5]: 67
Aftermath
[edit]Most accounts say four Native American men were killed, but Oliver B. Huntington stated there were at least seven killed. The surviving women and children joined the militia in their journey back to Salt Lake City. Several settled in the area, but many eventually returned to their people.[7]
On March 10, Brigham Young called for 30 families to leave for the Utah Valley and settle the area. The settlement near the site of the March 1849 attack was for years called Battle Creek, until sometime later when the Mormons living there agreed to change the name to Pleasant Grove.
Years later, a mountain man named Joshua Terry, who had married a Native American woman, told writer and Pleasant Grove native Howard R. Driggs that the Ute boy that was captured grew up to become Ute war chief Antonga Black Hawk. Following the Black Hawk War, Black Hawk confided in Terry that he could never understand why the white men had shot down his people. It put bitterness in his heart; and though he lived for some time with the white people, his mind had been set on avenging the wrong.[8]
Old Elk and Stick-in-the-Head, leaders of local Timpanogos tribes, watched the settlers "relentlessly shoot down" the Utes.[5]: 67 This contributed to their later mistrust of the settlers during the events preceding the Battle at Fort Utah.[5]: 67
See also
[edit]- Act for the relief of Indian Slaves and Prisoners
- Aiken Massacre
- Circleville Massacre
- Native American people and Mormonism
- Nephi massacre
- Provo River massacre
References
[edit]- ^ Coates, Lawrence G. (1978). "Brigham Young and Mormon Indian Policies: The Formative Period, 1836-1851". BYU Studies Quarterly. 18 (3). Brigham Young University: 436–437. ISSN 0007-0106. JSTOR 43040771.
- ^ Murphree, Daniel S. (2012). Native America: A State-by-state Historical Encyclopedia. Greenwood-Heinemann Publishing. p. 364. ISBN 978-0-313-38126-3.
- ^ Walker, Ronald W.; Jessee, Dean C. (1992). "The Historians' Corner [32:4]" (PDF). BYU Studies Quarterly. 32 (4). Brigham Young University: 125–126.
- ^ Griffiths, Leonard (May 20, 2020). The First 9/11 in America: September 11, 1857 Mountain Meadows Massacre (A Senseless, Sad Tragedy). Meadville, Pennsylvania: Christian Faith Publishing. p. 347. ISBN 978-1-0980-1601-2.
- ^ a b c d e f Carter, D. Robert (2003). Founding Fort Utah. Provo City Corporation. ISBN 1-57636-151-9.
- ^ On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, Vol. 2 1844-1861, Edited by Juanita Brooks, University of Utah Press, 1964
- ^ a b Stout Diary
- ^ Timpanogos Town, Story of Old Battle Creek and Pleasant Grove, Utah, Howard R. Driggs, 1948
Further reading
[edit]- On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1844–1861, Vol. 2, Edited by Juanita Brooks, University of Utah Press, 1964, pages 344-347
- Diary of Oliver B. Huntington, 1847–1900, Vol. 2, L. Tom Perry Special Collections Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, pages 47–55 & 331-341
- Dimick Baker Huntington, Statement on Battle Creek Fight, January 1, 1862, MS 4085, LDS Archives
- LDS Journal History (May be read at LDS Church History Library)
- History of Utah in Four Volumes, Orson F. Whitney, March 1892, page 423 (Held at Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah)
- Autobiography of Pioneer John Brown, 1820–1896, Arranged & Published by his son, John Zimmerman Brown, 1941, pages 103-105
- Provo, Pioneer Mormon City, compiled by ... Writers Program ... for the state of Utah, copyright 1942 Provo City Commission, pages 36–44
- Timpanogos Town, Story of Old Battle Creek and Pleasant Grove, Utah, Howard R. Driggs, 1948, pages 14–23
- The Forgotten Kingdom, The Mormon Theocracy in the American West, 1847–1896, David L. Bigler, 1998, pages 66–68
- Founding Fort Utah, Provo's Native Inhabitants, Early Explorers, and first Year of Settlement, D. Robert Carter, 2003, Provo City Corporation, pages 60–67
External links
[edit]- Pleasant Grove City's Account of the Battle Creek Attack Click on "Prelude to Settlement, The Battle Creek Battle" for this account
- Phillip B. Gottfredson's Account of the Battle Creek Attack
- Anti-Indigenous racism in Utah
- Conflicts in 1849
- Mormonism and violence
- Mormonism-related controversies
- Pre-statehood history of Utah
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Utah
- Timpanogos
- Wars fought in Utah
- March 1849 events
- Massacres committed by Latter Day Saints
- Lynching deaths in Utah
- 1849 murders in the United States
- Mass murder in 1849
- 19th-century mass murder in the United States
- Massacres of Native Americans