Talk:List of massacres in the United States/Indian massacres duplicates removed
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This archives the list of Indian massacres removed from "List of Massacres in the United States"
Name | Date | Location | State | Deaths | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crow Creek massacre | 1325 - approximately | area now known as Chamberlain | South Dakota | 486 | between prehistoric Indian groups |
Acoma Massacre | 1599 Jan 22-24 | Acoma Pueblo | New Mexico | 300 - approximately | Indians killed by Spanish conquistadores |
Indian massacre of 1622 | 1622 Mar 22 | Colony of Virginia | Virginia | 347 | a quarter of the English population of Jamestown, killed by Powhatan Indians. |
Mystic massacre | 1637 May 26 | Near the Mystic River in present-day Connecticut | Connecticut | 400-700 | Puritan killings of Native American women and children.[1] |
Pavonia massacre | 1643 Feb 25 | Paulus Hook, New Jersey | New Jersey | 120 | including women and children |
Schenectady massacre | 1690 Feb 8 | Schenectady | New York | 60 | 27 survivors carried to captivity. Response to Lachine massacre in Canada.[2] |
Apalachee massacre | 1704 Jan 25–26 | (near Tallahassee) | Florida | 247 | A series of brutal raids by English colonists from the Province of Carolina and their Indian allies against a largely pacific population of Apalachee Indians in northern Spanish Florida that took place during Queen Anne's War in 1704.[3] |
Draper's Meadow massacre | 1755 Jul 8 | Draper's Meadow, Virginia | Virginia | 5 | settlers killed by Shawnee Indians. |
Conestoga Massacre | 1763-1764 | near Lancaster | Pennsylvania | 20 | Susquehannock killed by Scots-Irish band |
Pontiac's Rebellion school massacre | 1764 Jul 26 | Franklin County, Pennsylvania | Pennsylvania | 11 | American Indians attacked a schoolhouse, killing and scalping 10 children and a teacher |
Wyoming Massacre | 1778 Jul 3 | Wyoming | Pennsylvania | 343 | led to Cherry Valley massacre |
Gnadenhutten massacre | 1782 Mar 8 | Gnadenhutten | Ohio | 96 | Christian Lenape (Delaware) killed by colonial American militia from Pennsylvania at the Moravian missionary village of Gnadenhütten, Ohio. |
Fort Dearborn Massacre | 1812 Aug 15 | Chicago | Illinois | 42 | 51 survivors were taken captive[4] |
Fort Mims massacre | 1813 Aug 30 | near Bay Minette | Alabama | 517 | After capturing the fort, Indians killed almost all of the remaining Lower Creek, white settlers, and militia.[5] |
Spafford Farm massacre | 1832 Jun 14 | Near present day South Wayne | Wisconsin | 5 | five men were attacked by a Kickapoo war party, four whites and one Indian died, during Black Hawk War |
St. Vrain massacre | 1832 May 24 | Near present day Pearl City | Illinois | 4 | killed while delivering dispatches during Black Hawk War[6] |
Cutthroat Gap Massacre | 1833 | Kiowa County, Oklahoma | Oklahoma | 150 | Osage tribe attacked a Kiowa encampment west of the Wichita Mountains in southwest Oklahoma |
Bloody Island massacre | 1850 May 15 | Bo-no-po-ti, Clear Lake, Lake County | California | 60-400 | Pomo Indians, mostly women and children, killed by the U.S. Cavalry. Site is California Registered Historical Landmark #427. |
Yontoket massacre | 1853 | Yontocket | California | 450 | Tolowa Indians killed during prayer ceremony by company of volunteers.[7] |
Achulet massacre | 1854 | near Lake Earl | California | 65 | Tolowa Indian village of Achulet wiped out at dawn.[7] |
Bridge Gulch Massacre | 1852 Apr 23 | Trinity County | California | 150 | Wintu Indians killed by sheriff and posse at dawn.[7] |
Kelvin Grade massacre | 1889 Nov 2 | near Globe, Arizona Territory | Arizona | 2 | 1 wounded by escaping Indian prisoners during transport. Perpetrators all captured except Apache Kid.[8] |
Dade Massacre | 1835 Dec 28 | Central Florida | Florida | 110 | U.S. Army forces ambushed by Seminole fighters.[9] |
Mowry massacres | 1863 - 1865 | Mowry, Arizona Territory | Arizona | [10] | |
Camp Grant massacre | 1871 Apr 30 | Camp Grant, Arizona Territory | Arizona | 144 | 1 survivor at scene and 29 children sold to slavery. All but eight of the dead were Apache women or children.[11] |
Wickenburg massacre | 1871 Nov 5 | Wickenburg, Arizona Territory | Arizona | 6 | 2 wounded survivors of a stagecoach ambushed by Indians.[12] |
Fort Parker massacre | 1836 May 19 | near Groesbeck | Texas | 5 | 5 captured by Comanche, including Cynthia Ann Parker |
Killough massacre | 1838 Octr 5 | near Larissa | Texas | 6 | 12 settlers captured by Cherokee |
Sand Creek massacre | 1864 Nov 29 | Kiowa County | Colorado | 70–163 | [13] |
Pauma massacre | 1846 Dec | Escondido | California | 11 Californios killed by Indians . Led to Temecula massacre.[14] | |
Temecula massacre | 1846 Dec | Temecula | California | 33-40 | retaliation for Pauma massacre.[14] |
Indian Island massacre | 1860 Feb 26 - 1860 Mar 3 | Indian Island, Eureka, California, Rio Dell, California, and near Hydesville, California | California | 200-250 | Wiyot village of Tulawat wiped out at dawn. Victims mostly women, children and elders, written about by Bret Harte at local newspaper. Other villages massacred within two days. The main site is National Register of Historic Places in the United States #66000208.[15] |
Spirit Lake Massacre | 1857 Mar 8–12 | various settlements 24 | Iowa | 4 taken captive in last Native American attack on settlers in Iowa.[16] | |
Kidder massacre | 1867 Jun 29 | near Goodland | Kansas | 12 | killed included United States Second Lieutenant Lyman Kidder, along with an Indian scout and ten enlisted men in Sherman County, Kansas, near Goodland, by a Sioux and Cheyenne war party. General Custer was an after-the-fact witness at the scene.[17][18] |
Marias Massacre | 1870 Jan 23 | Montana, along the Marias River | Montana | 217 | Indians killed by U.S. Army |
Battle of Little Bighorn | 1876 Jun 26 | Big Horn County | Montana | 268 | 55 injured by Indians. The victims were all part of the U.S. Seventh Cavalry with a total force of 700 men led by George Armstrong Custer |
Gallinas Massacre | 1861 Sep 2 | Gallinas Mountains, Confederate Arizona (present day Lincoln County) | New Mexico | 4 | Confederate soldiers killed by Chiricahua Apache warriors.[19] |
Washita Massacre | 1868 Nov 27 | Roger Mills County, Oklahoma | Oklahoma | 13-150 | 13 wounded Cheyenneby Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer’s 7th U.S. Cavalry attacked a winter camp on the Washita River.[20][21] |
Wounded Knee Massacre | 1890 Dec 29 | Wounded Knee Creek | South Dakota | 150 | 51 wounded, although estimates placed the dead as many as 300 killed by 7th Cavalry after disarmament. |
Bear River Massacre | 1863 Jan 29 | Southeastern Washington Territory (Present-day Franklin County) | Idaho | 246 | 164 wounded or captured when United States Army attacked Shoshone gathered at the confluence of the Bear River.[22] |
Grattan massacre | 1854 Aug 19 | Fort Laramie, Nebraska Territory (in present-day Goshen County) | Wyoming | 31 | US Army personnel killed by Lakota Sioux warriors during First Sioux War |
- ^ The Society of Colonial Wars: 1637 - The Pequot War, accessdate 26 December 2012
- ^ Why Schenectady was destroyed in 1690. A paper read before the Fortnightly Club of Schenectady, 3 May 1897, accessdate 6 January 2013.
- ^ Hoffman, Paul E. (2002). Florida's Frontiers. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34019-1. OCLC 248260149.
- ^ Johnson, Geoffrey (2009). "The True Story of the Deadly Encounter at Fort Dearborn". Chicago Magazine. 58 (12): 86–89. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
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ignored (help) - ^ Owsley, Jr., Frank L. "The Fort Mims Massacre," Alabama Review 1971 24(3): 192-204
- ^ Armstrong, Perry A. The Sauks and the Black Hawk War, (Google Books), H.W. Rokker, 1887, pp. 415-416. accessdate 27 December 2012
- ^ a b c Norton, Jack (1979). Genocide in Northwestern California: When Our Worlds Cried. San Francisco: Indian Historian Press. pp. 56–57. B0006CYZSK.
- ^ Hayes, Jess G. Apache Vengeance: The true story of Apache Kid. (1954). University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, New Mexico, ISBN OCLC 834291
- ^ Meltzer, Milton. 2004. Hunted Like A Wolf. Pineapple Press. p.89
- ^ Browne, R. John, Adventures in the Apache County: a tour through Arizona and Sonora with notes on the silver regions of Nevada. 1869. New York: Harpers & Brothers Publishers.
- ^ Colwell-Chanthaphonh, Chip, Western Apache Oral Histories and Traditions of the Camp Grant Massacre. The American Indian Quarterly - Volume 27, Number 3&4, Summer/Fall 2003, pp. 639-666., accessdate 26 December 2012
- ^ "The Late Frederick W. Loring" (PDF). New York Times. 24 November 1871. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
- ^ Smiley, Brenda "Sand Creek Massacre", Archeology magazine. Archaeological Institute of America. accessdate 26 December 2012.
- ^ a b Horace Parker The Historic Valley of Temecula. The Temecula Massacre 24 pages, Paisano Press (1971), 286593
- ^ Rohde, Jerry (25 February 2010). "Genocide and Extortion: 150 years later, the hidden motive behind the Indian Island Massacre". North Coast Journal. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
- ^ Gardner-Sharp, Abbie History of the Spirit Lake Massacre and Captivity of Miss Abbie Gardner, Des Moines: Iowa Printing, 1885 (reprinted 1892, 1910), accessdate 28 December 2012
- ^ "Kidder Massacre: list of the fallen", Goodland, Kansas Website, accessdate 28 December 2012.
- ^ "Kidder Massacre", photo of historic marker, Garry Owen Website, accessdate 28 December 2012.
- ^ Thompson, Jerry Don, Colonel John Robert Baylor: Texas Indian Fighter and Confederate Soldier. Hillsboro, Texas: Hill Junior College Press, 1971.
- ^ Greene, Jerome A., Washita, The Southern Cheyenne and the U.S. Army. Campaigns and Commanders Series, Vol. 3., 2004 Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3551-4.
- ^ Grinnell, George Bird. "The Battle of the Washita, 1868." pp. 37–49 in Richard Ellis, ed., The Western American Indian: Case Studies in Tribal History. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1972. ISBN 0-8032-0804-9.
- ^ Hart, Newell, The Bear River Massacre. Cache Valley Newsletter Publishing Company, Preston, Idaho. 1982. ISBN 0-941462-01-3