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Battle of Big Mound

Coordinates: 47°01′27″N 99°37′45″W / 47.024036°N 99.629087°W / 47.024036; -99.629087
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Battle of Big Mound
Part of Sioux Wars, American Civil War

Big Mound battlefield
DateJuly 24, 1863
Location
Result U.S. victory
Belligerents
United States of America Santee Sioux
Yankton, Yanktonai and Teton Sioux
Commanders and leaders
Henry Hastings Sibley Inkpaduta
Standing Buffalo
Strength
2,056 soldiers
60 mixed-blood and Sioux scouts
1,000–1,500
Casualties and losses
3 killed, 4 wounded Uncertain, 9 or more killed[1]
Map of the Operations Against the Sioux in North Dakota

The Battle of Big Mound was a United States Army victory in July 1863 over the Santee Sioux Indians allied with some Yankton, Yanktonai and Teton Sioux in Dakota Territory.

Background

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The defeat of Little Crow in the Dakota War of 1862 caused the widespread dispersion of the Santee Sioux or Eastern Dakota. Of the 6,300 Santee, 2,000 were taken prisoner. About 700 of the Lower Sioux from the Mdewakanton and Wahpekute bands remained at large. Most of the 4,000 Upper Sioux from the Sisseton and Wahpeton bands, who had been reluctant participants in the war, also remained free. A few of these refugees from the war fled to Canada, but more than 4,000 congregated in the summer of 1863 in a large encampment in present-day Kidder County, North Dakota. They were joined in the camp by an unknown, but probably sizeable, number of their Teton, Yankton, and Yanktonai relatives.[2]

Despite the defeat in the 1862 war, however, Santee raids continued in 1863, resulting in more than a dozen white deaths in Minnesota. To protect the frontier, Henry Hastings Sibley, appointed brigadier general of volunteers, was ordered by his superior, General John Pope, to lead a military expedition to punish the Santee. On June 16 Sibley departed from near Fort Ridgely and marched into the Dakota Territory. His army initially numbered 3,320 men, the largest military force ever assembled to combat the Indians.[3]

Sibley's ponderous column proceeded very slowly northwestward, hampered by drought, heat, and a lack of potable water. After a month of travel without having seen a single Indian, Sibley was informed by a group of buffalo hunters, mostly Métis Chippewa, of the location of a large Santee encampment of 600 lodges. With a stripped-down army of 2,056 men – 1,436 infantry, 520 cavalry, and 100 artillery plus 60 mixed blood and Sioux scouts – Sibley located the Santee encampment on July 24.[4] He halted nearby and sent scout and interpreter Joseph LaFramboise, one-half Sioux, to the Indian camp to propose a meeting with Upper Sioux leader Standing Buffalo.[5] Sibley believed, probably correctly, that Standing Buffalo and his followers favored peace with the whites.[6] However, Inkpaduta, believed to be implacably hostile to whites, and his band were also in the Indian camp.[7]

Battle

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Anticipating a meeting between Sibley and Standing Buffalo, a group of Sioux and Sibley's scouts gathered peacefully on a hill, called Big Mound, 300 to 400 yards from Sibley's camp. An army surgeon, Dr. Josiah S. Weiser, approached Big Mound to greet several Indian friends, but was suddenly shot and killed by Tall Crown, a follower of Inkpaduta. The scouts and the Sioux opened fire on each other and the battle began.[8]

Sibley estimated that he faced 1,000 to 1,500 Indian warriors. They took cover behind hills and in ravines. Sibley sent forward two companies of Mounted Rangers to drive the Indians away from Big Mound and supported them with more soldiers and a six-pounder cannon. On reaching the top of Big Mound, Sibley could see the Indian warriors retreating, guarding the women and children of the Indian camp fleeing westward with their possessions.[9] The Santee were poorly armed. Only about one half had firearms and those had little ammunition.[10]

Several hundred of the Mounted Rangers pursued the Indian warriors, protecting the flight of their women and children, until nightfall. Most of Sibley's infantry devoted themselves to destroying the large quantities of jerky, buffalo robes, cooking utensils, and other goods left behind by the Sioux in their hasty flight.[11]

Sibley intended for the Rangers to continue the pursuit of the Sioux the next day, camping where they were for the night. However, by a mistaken order, the Rangers were ordered instead to return to their base, 12 miles from where they were. They arrived exhausted and Sibley was forced to rest his soldiers and horses the next day, July 25, before continuing his pursuit on July 26. Sibley's casualties for the day were three dead and four wounded. In Sibley's official report he estimated that 80 Indians had been killed and wounded, but his diary said that only 9 were killed.[12]

Results

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The Sioux seemed to have little stomach to fight Sibley. Standing Buffalo may have surrendered his followers en masse if not for the killing of the army surgeon which precipitated this battle. The Battles of Dead Buffalo Lake and Stony Lake soon followed as Sibley pursued the Sioux westward.

Federal Units Involved

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Clodfelter, Micheal. The Dakota War: The United States Army Versus the Sioux, 1862-1865. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 1998, p 111
  2. ^ Clodfelter, pp 88-95
  3. ^ Clodfelter, pp. 71, 90
  4. ^ "List of Sixty Dakota (Scouts for Sibley 1863) | Sioux Research-Dakota, Lakota, Nakota". oyate1.proboards.com. Retrieved 26 Feb 2012.
  5. ^ http://michellesfamilytree.com/grpf9263.html Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 24 Mar 2012
  6. ^ Clodfelter, pp. 94-95
  7. ^ Larson, Peggy Rodina. "A New Look at the Elusive Indpaduta." Minnesota History. Vol. 48, No.1 (Spring 1982), p. 34
  8. ^ Clodfelter, p. 95
  9. ^ United States War Department. The War of the Rebellion: A compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Series 1, Vol. 22, p. 354
  10. ^ Clodfelter, pp. 97-98
  11. ^ United States War Department, pp 354-355
  12. ^ Clodfelter, p. 99-100, 111
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47°01′27″N 99°37′45″W / 47.024036°N 99.629087°W / 47.024036; -99.629087