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Battle of the Rosebud

The Battle of the Rosebud (also known as the Battle of Rosebud Creek) took place on June 17, 1876, in the Montana Territory between the United States Army and its Crow and Shoshoni allies against a force consisting mostly of Lakota Sioux and Northern Cheyenne Indians during the Great Sioux War of 1876. The Cheyenne called it the Battle Where the Girl Saved Her Brother because of an incident during the fight involving Buffalo Calf Road Woman.[3] General George Crook's offensive was stymied by the Indians, led by Crazy Horse, and he awaited reinforcements before resuming the campaign in August.

Battle of the Rosebud
Part of the Great Sioux War of 1876

"Battle on the Rosebud River", 1876
DateJune 17, 1876
Location
Result Lakota / Cheyenne victory
Belligerents
Lakota Sioux
Northern Cheyenne
 United States
Crow
Shoshoni
Commanders and leaders
Crazy Horse George R. Crook
Plenty Coups (Crow)
Washakie (Shoshoni)
Strength
~1,000–1,800[1][2] ~950 soldiers
175 Crow
86 Shoshoni
~100 armed civilians
Casualties and losses
13–36 killed
63–100 wounded
U.S.: 14–28 killed; 43–46 wounded
Crow Scouts: 1–5 killed
Shoshoni Scouts: 1–8 killed

Background

 
An alleged photograph of Crazy Horse, although its authenticity is doubtful
 
General George Crook

After their victory in Red Cloud's War and with the signing of the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868), the Lakota and their Northern Cheyenne allies were allocated a reservation including the Black Hills, in Dakota Territory and a large area of "unceded territory" in what became Montana and Wyoming. Both areas were for the exclusive use of the Indians, and non-Indians (except for US government officials) were forbidden to trespass. In 1874, the discovery of gold in the Black Hills caused the US government to attempt to buy the Black Hills from the Indians. The US ordered all bands of Lakota and Cheyenne to come to the agencies on the reservation by January 31, 1876, to negotiate the sale. A few bands did not comply and when the deadline of January 31 passed the US forced Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and their followers onto the reservation. The first military expedition against the Indians in March 1876 was a failure, ending in the Battle of Powder River.[4]

In June 1876, the US military renewed the fight with a three-pronged invasion of the Bighorn and Powder river country. Colonel John Gibbon led a force from the west; General Alfred Terry (with Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer) came from the east; and General George Crook advanced northward from Fort Fetterman, near present-day Douglas, Wyoming. The objective of the converging columns was to find the Indians and force them onto the reservation. Crook's force, called the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition, consisted of 993 cavalry and mule-mounted infantry, 197 civilian packers and teamsters, 65 Montana miners, three scouts, and five journalists.[5] Crook's much-valued chief scout was Frank Grouard. Among the teamsters was Calamity Jane, disguised as a man.[6]

Crook left Fort Fetterman on the abandoned Bozeman Trail past the scene of many battles during Red Cloud's War ten years earlier. His force reached the Tongue River near present-day Sheridan, Wyoming on June 8. Crazy Horse warned that he would fight if "Three Stars" [Crook] crossed the Tongue and on June 9 the Indians launched a long-distance attack, firing into the soldier's camp and wounding two men. Crook and his men waited near the Tongue for several days for Crow and Shoshoni warriors to join his army. 175 Crow and 86 Shoshoni showed up on June 14 with Frank Grouard. They welcomed the opportunity to strike a blow against their old enemies although they warned Crook that the Lakota and Cheyenne were as "numerous as grass." The Shoshoni and Crow were well-armed.[7] Crook had made his reputation as an Indian fighter "using Indians to catch Indians" and the Crow and Shoshoni warriors were important to him.[8]

On June 16, leaving his wagon and pack train behind with most of the civilians as a guard, Crook and the soldiers, with the Crow and Shoshoni in the lead, advanced northward beyond the Tongue to the headwaters of Rosebud Creek to search for and engage the Lakota and Cheyenne. Each soldier carried four days' rations and 100 rounds of ammunition.[9] Crook's intention to make a quiet march was spoiled when the Crow and Shoshoni encountered a buffalo herd and shot many of them. Crook anticipated that he would soon find a large Indian village on Rosebud Creek to attack, but the Indian village was on Ash Creek, west of Rosebud Creek. Crook also underestimated the determination of his foe. He anticipated the usual Indian tactics of hit-and-run encounters and ambushes, not a pitched battle.[10]

The Indian force of almost 1,000 men set out from their village on June 16 in the middle of the night to seek out the soldiers on the Rosebud. They rode all night, rested their horses for a couple of hours, then continued, making contact with Crook's scouts at about 8:30 am, June 17.[11]

Attack on the Rosebud

 
General Crook's Army crossing the west fork of Goose Creek the day before the Battle of the Rosebud

On June 17, 1876, Crook's column marched northward along the south fork of Rosebud Creek. The holiday atmosphere that prevailed since the arrival of the Indian scouts on June 15 was suddenly absent. The soldiers, particularly the mule-riding infantry, were fatigued from the previous day's 35 miles (56 km) march and the early morning reveille at 3:00 am. At 8 am, Crook stopped to rest his men and animals. Although deep in hostile territory, Crook made no special dispositions for defense. His troops halted in their marching order. The Crow and Shoshoni scouts remained alert while the soldiers rested. Soldiers in camp began to hear gunfire coming from the bluffs to the north, where the Crow and Shoshoni were positioned, but initially thought it was the Crow shooting buffalo. As the intensity of fire increased, two Crows rushed into the army's resting place shouting, "Lakota, Lakota!"[12] By 8:30 am, the Sioux and Cheyenne had hotly engaged Crook's Indian allies on the high ground north of the main body. Heavily outnumbered, the Crow and Shoshoni fell back toward the camp, but their fighting withdrawal gave Crook time to deploy his forces.[13]

The battle which ensued would last for six hours and consist of disconnected actions and charges and counter-charges by Crook and Crazy Horse, the two forces spread out over a fluid front three miles wide. The Lakota and Cheyenne were divided into several groups as were the soldiers as the battle progressed. The soldiers could fend off assaults by the Indians and force them to retreat but could not catch and destroy them.[14]

Crook initially directed his forces to seize the high ground north and south of the Rosebud Creek. He ordered Captain Van Vliet with two troops of the 3rd Cavalry to occupy the high bluffs south of the Creek to guard against an Indian attack from the direction. In the north, the commands of Major Chambers with two companies of the 4th Infantry and three companies of the 9th Infantry and Captain Noyes with three troops of the 2nd Cavalry, formed a dismounted skirmish line and advanced toward the Lakota. Their progress was slow due to flanking fire from Indians occupying the high ground to the northeast.[citation needed]

To accelerate the advance, Crook ordered Captain Anson Mills, commanding six troops of the 3rd Cavalry, to charge the Lakota. Mills' mounted charge unnerved the Indians and they withdrew along the ridge line. Mills quickly re-formed three troops and led another charge, driving the Indians northwest again to the next hill. Preparing to drive the Indians from there, Mills received orders from Crook to cease the advance and assume a defensive posture. Chambers and Noyes led their forces forward in support and within minutes joined Mills on top of the ridge. The bulk of Crook's command, joined by the packers and miners, occupied a hill they called Crook's Hill. Establishing his headquarters there at approximately 9:30 am, Crook considered his next move.[15]

During Mills' advance the event occurred that would name the battle for the Cheyenne. A Cheyenne warrior, Comes in Sight, had his horse shot. While fleeing on foot from Mills' advancing soldiers, his sister Buffalo Calf Road Woman (Mutsimiuna) rode to his rescue. Comes in Sight jumped onto her horse and the two successfully escaped. Mills was impressed with the swarming Indians at his front. "They were the best cavalry soldiers on earth. In charging up toward us they exposed little of their person, hanging on with one arm around the neck and one leg over the horse, firing and lancing from underneath the horses' necks, so that there was no part of the Indian at which we could aim."[16]

Crook's initial charges secured key terrain but did little damage to the Indians. Assaults scattered the Indians but they did not quit the field. After falling back, the Lakota and Cheyenne kept firing from a distance and attacked several times in small parties. When counterattacked by the soldiers, the warriors sped away on their swift horses. Crook realized his charges were ineffective.[citation needed]

 
The position of the opposing forces at the end of the battle as the Indians withdrew

Crook believed incorrectly that the unusual tenacity of the Lakota and Cheyenne was based on defense of their families in a nearby village. He ordered Captains Mills and Noyes to withdraw their cavalry from the high ground on Crook's Hill and swing eastward to follow the Rosebud north to find the suspected village. He recalled Van Vliet's battalion from the south side of the Rosebud to reinforce him on Crook's Hill. While Mills and Noyes made their way up the Rosebud, searching for a village that did not exist, the situation of Lt. Colonel William B. Royall, Crook's second in command, had worsened. Royall had pursued the Indians attacking Crook's camp with six companies of cavalry. Royall advanced rapidly along the ridge line to the northwest to a point about one mile away from Crook and separated by the valley of Kolmarr Creek. The Lakota and Cheyenne shifted their main effort away from Crook and concentrated their attacks on Royall, and he was in danger of being cut off from Crook. Seeing this danger, Crook sent orders to Royall to withdraw to Crook's Hill. Royall sent only one company to join Crook, claiming later his forces had been too hotly engaged to withdraw.[17]

Royall's situation continued to worsen, and he tried to withdraw his entire command across Kollmar Creek, but the Indians' fire was too heavy. Next, he began to withdraw southeast along the ridge line. A large group of Sioux and Cheyenne broke off from the fight against Crook's main forces and charged boldly down the valley of Kollmar Creek, advancing all the way to the Rosebud. When Captain Guy V. Henry was wounded, his soldiers began to panic, but the Crow and Shoshoni arrived and drove the Lakota and Cheyenne back. Crook also sent two infantry companies to occupy a nearby hill to aid Royall with long-range rifle fire, which kept the Lakota and Cheyenne at a distance. The Lakota and Cheyenne did not attempt any serious attacks on the infantry, respecting the longer range of their rifles as compared to the carbines the cavalry carried. The Crow, Shoshoni, and the two infantry companies probably saved Royall's command from destruction.[18]

 
Crow tribe members. The Crow and Shoshoni allies prevented Crook from being surprised and possibly suffering a catastrophic defeat.

At approximately 11:30, Royall continued his withdrawal to the southeast and assumed a new defensive position. He was under attack on three sides. From his headquarters, Crook realized that Royall needed help that only Mills' force, which was descending Rosebud Creek two or three miles away, could provide. Crook sent orders to Mills redirecting him to turn west and attack the rear of the Indians pressing Royall.[citation needed]

At approximately 12:30, Royall began another withdrawal into the Kollmar ravine. His cavalry remounted and prepared to ride through gunfire to reach the relative safety of Crook's main position. As the US cavalry began their dash, the Crow and Shoshoni scouts counter-charged the pursuing Lakota and Cheyenne and relieved much of the pressure on Royall's men. The two companies of infantry provided covering fire from the northeast side of the ravine. Royall's command suffered most of the U.S. casualties during the battle.[19]

Mills arrived too late on the Lakota and Cheyenne flank to assist Royall's withdrawal, but his unexpected appearance caused the Lakota and Cheyenne to break contact and retire from the battlefield. The cavalry pursued the Indians, but soon gave up the chase. The battle of the Rosebud was over about 2:30 pm.[citation needed]

Casualties and aftermath

Estimates of casualties by both the soldiers and the Indians vary widely. Crook said he had 10 killed and 21 wounded. His aide John Gregory Bourke added that 4 of the wounds were mortal and gave total casualties as 57. Frank Grouard said that 28 soldiers were killed and 56 wounded. Estimates of Crow killed range from one to five and Shoshoni from one to eight. The Lakota and Cheyenne casualties are likewise uncertain with estimates of the number killed ranging from 10 to 100. The Crow reportedly took 13 scalps (although scalps might be cut into pieces and divided among warriors). Crazy Horse reportedly later said that the Lakota and Cheyenne casualties were 36 killed and 63 wounded. How he came up with such a precise number is unknown, as it seems unlikely that the Indians compiled a statistical record of the casualties among the eight or so Sioux and Lakota bands plus the Cheyenne and a few Arapaho who participated in the battle.[20]

By the standards of the usual hit-and-run raids of the Plains Indians, the Battle of the Rosebud was a long and bloody engagement. The Lakota and Cheyenne fought with persistence and demonstrated a willingness to accept casualties rather than break off the encounter. The delaying action by Crook's Indian allies during the early stages of the battle saved his command from a devastating surprise attack. The intervention of the Crow and Shoshoni scouts throughout the battle was crucial to averting disaster for Crook.[21]

Crook claimed victory by virtue of occupying the battlefield at the end of the day, but his actions belie his claim. Concerned for his wounded and short on supplies, Crook retraced his steps to his camp on Goose Creek, near Sheridan, Wyoming, and remained there immobile for seven weeks awaiting reinforcements.[19] He would play no role in the Battle of the Little Bighorn eight days later. Crook's Crow and Shoshoni allies left the army for their homes shortly after the battle. The Lakota and Cheyenne returned to the battlefield after Crook's departure and piled up rocks at the location of key events in the battle. Some of the rock piles they built are still there.[22]

U.S. ammunition expenditures

One immediate question from the U.S. Army that followed the battle of the Rosebud was how between 10,000 and 25,000 rounds of 45-70 caliber rifle and carbine ammunition could have been expended during a half day's fight with only a dozen or so enemy casualties, especially considering the use of single shot rifles and carbines.[23]

These questions resulted in the investigations of the weapon's extraction system, the composition of the brass shell casings, the cleaning of the weapon, and proper individual training and military tactics. In U.S. military publications such as the Journal of the Military Service Institution and the United Service, Army officers attempted to address these questions and problems.[24]

One suggested reason for the high expenditure of ammunition and the low enemy casualty rate was when Army Scout Bat Pourier reported to Gen. Crook that "he had watched men leave great numbers of cartridges on the ground. Infantrymen on the initial skirmish line would lie down or kneel and fire and in doing so would draw handfuls of cartridges from their belts and place them on the ground beside them, handy for use."[25] When the men moved to another position, forward or otherwise, they sometimes left a pile of ammunition where they had laid it.[25]

Historic site

The battle site is preserved at the Rosebud Battlefield State Park in Big Horn County, Montana. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and was further designated a National Historic Landmark in 2008.

 
Site sign, 2003

Order of battle

United States

Sioux and Cheyenne

See also

References

  1. ^ Vestal, Stanley (1932). Sitting Bull: Champion of the Sioux. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0806122199.
  2. ^ Hargrove, Julia (2001). Crazy Horse. Teaching & Learning Co. p. 20. ISBN 978-1573103107.
  3. ^ Page 290, Dee Brown, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Henry Holt (1991), Trade paperback, 488 pages, ISBN 0-8050-1730-5
  4. ^ . NewsInHistory.com. 2012-11-07. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  5. ^ Wiles, Jr. Richard I. "The Battle of the Rosebud: Crook's Campaign on 1876" Fort Leavenworth:US Army Command and General Staff College, 1993, p. 49
  6. ^ Porter, Joseph C. Paper Medicine Man: John Gregory Bourke and his American West Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1986, pp. 38–39
  7. ^ Porter, pp. 39–41
  8. ^ Wiles, Jr., p. 49
  9. ^ Porter, p. 41
  10. ^ Wiles, pp. 72–73
  11. ^ Greene, Jerome A. Lakota and Cheyenne: Indian Views of the Great Sioux War, 1876–1877 Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, p. 17–19
  12. ^ Vaughn 1956, p. 50.
  13. ^ Collins, Jr., Charles D. Atlas of the Sioux Wars, Second Edition. Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2006, Map 19
  14. ^ Collins, Map 22
  15. ^ Collins, Jr., Map 20
  16. ^ Sarf, Wayne Michael The Little Bighorn Campaign Conshohocken, PA: Combined Books, 1993, p. 98
  17. ^ Collins, Jr., Map 20, 21
  18. ^ Vaughn, J.W. Indian Fights: New Facts on Seven Encounters Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1966, p. 136, 139, 143
  19. ^ a b Collins, Map 23
  20. ^ Vaughn, J.W. Indian Fights; New Facts on Seven Encounters Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1966, p. 139; Utley, Robert M. Frontier Regulars: The United States Army and the Indian, 1866–1891 New York: MacMillan Publishing Company, 1973, p. 256; Wiles, Jr. Richard I. "The Battle of the Rosebud: Crook's Campaign on 1876" Fort Leavenworth:US Army Command and General Staff College, 1993, p. 106; "Crook's Report" https://books.google.com/books?id=5O5CAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA448&dq=Battle+of+Rosebud+Creek&lr=&cd=16#v=onepage&q=Battle%20of%20Rosebud%20Creek&f=false, accessed 22 Feb 2013
  21. ^ Vaughn, p. 139
  22. ^ Vaughn, p. 141
  23. ^ Hedren, Paul L. (2019). p. 379. "Rosebud June 17, 1876, Prelude To The Little Big Horn." University of Oklahoma Press: Norman
  24. ^ Hedren (2019) p. 379-384
  25. ^ a b Hedren (2019) p. 293
  26. ^ Hedren (2019) p. 375, 376

Bibliography

  • Dillon, Richard H. (1983). North American Indian Wars.
  • Finerty, John F., War-path and Bivouac: or, the Conquest of the Sioux: a first-hand account by a Chicago newspaper reporter accompanying the Crook expedition and present at the Rosebud
  • Vaughn, J. W. (1956). With Crook at the Rosebud. Stackpole Co. p. 245. Retrieved 2012-01-12.

External links

  • Crook's report of Rosebud Battle
  • Battle of Rosebud 1876: Crazy Horse vs Gen. Crook Part 1
  • Part 2

Coordinates: 45°13′23″N 106°59′52″W / 45.22306°N 106.99778°W / 45.22306; -106.99778

battle, rosebud, also, known, battle, rosebud, creek, took, place, june, 1876, montana, territory, between, united, states, army, crow, shoshoni, allies, against, force, consisting, mostly, lakota, sioux, northern, cheyenne, indians, during, great, sioux, 1876. The Battle of the Rosebud also known as the Battle of Rosebud Creek took place on June 17 1876 in the Montana Territory between the United States Army and its Crow and Shoshoni allies against a force consisting mostly of Lakota Sioux and Northern Cheyenne Indians during the Great Sioux War of 1876 The Cheyenne called it the Battle Where the Girl Saved Her Brother because of an incident during the fight involving Buffalo Calf Road Woman 3 General George Crook s offensive was stymied by the Indians led by Crazy Horse and he awaited reinforcements before resuming the campaign in August Battle of the RosebudPart of the Great Sioux War of 1876 Battle on the Rosebud River 1876DateJune 17 1876LocationBig Horn County MontanaResultLakota Cheyenne victoryBelligerentsLakota SiouxNorthern Cheyenne United StatesCrowShoshoniCommanders and leadersCrazy HorseGeorge R CrookPlenty Coups Crow Washakie Shoshoni Strength 1 000 1 800 1 2 950 soldiers175 Crow86 Shoshoni 100 armed civiliansCasualties and losses13 36 killed 63 100 woundedU S 14 28 killed 43 46 woundedCrow Scouts 1 5 killedShoshoni Scouts 1 8 killed Contents 1 Background 2 Attack on the Rosebud 2 1 Casualties and aftermath 2 1 1 U S ammunition expenditures 3 Historic site 4 Order of battle 4 1 United States 4 2 Sioux and Cheyenne 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground Edit An alleged photograph of Crazy Horse although its authenticity is doubtful General George Crook After their victory in Red Cloud s War and with the signing of the Treaty of Fort Laramie 1868 the Lakota and their Northern Cheyenne allies were allocated a reservation including the Black Hills in Dakota Territory and a large area of unceded territory in what became Montana and Wyoming Both areas were for the exclusive use of the Indians and non Indians except for US government officials were forbidden to trespass In 1874 the discovery of gold in the Black Hills caused the US government to attempt to buy the Black Hills from the Indians The US ordered all bands of Lakota and Cheyenne to come to the agencies on the reservation by January 31 1876 to negotiate the sale A few bands did not comply and when the deadline of January 31 passed the US forced Sitting Bull Crazy Horse and their followers onto the reservation The first military expedition against the Indians in March 1876 was a failure ending in the Battle of Powder River 4 In June 1876 the US military renewed the fight with a three pronged invasion of the Bighorn and Powder river country Colonel John Gibbon led a force from the west General Alfred Terry with Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer came from the east and General George Crook advanced northward from Fort Fetterman near present day Douglas Wyoming The objective of the converging columns was to find the Indians and force them onto the reservation Crook s force called the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition consisted of 993 cavalry and mule mounted infantry 197 civilian packers and teamsters 65 Montana miners three scouts and five journalists 5 Crook s much valued chief scout was Frank Grouard Among the teamsters was Calamity Jane disguised as a man 6 Crook left Fort Fetterman on the abandoned Bozeman Trail past the scene of many battles during Red Cloud s War ten years earlier His force reached the Tongue River near present day Sheridan Wyoming on June 8 Crazy Horse warned that he would fight if Three Stars Crook crossed the Tongue and on June 9 the Indians launched a long distance attack firing into the soldier s camp and wounding two men Crook and his men waited near the Tongue for several days for Crow and Shoshoni warriors to join his army 175 Crow and 86 Shoshoni showed up on June 14 with Frank Grouard They welcomed the opportunity to strike a blow against their old enemies although they warned Crook that the Lakota and Cheyenne were as numerous as grass The Shoshoni and Crow were well armed 7 Crook had made his reputation as an Indian fighter using Indians to catch Indians and the Crow and Shoshoni warriors were important to him 8 On June 16 leaving his wagon and pack train behind with most of the civilians as a guard Crook and the soldiers with the Crow and Shoshoni in the lead advanced northward beyond the Tongue to the headwaters of Rosebud Creek to search for and engage the Lakota and Cheyenne Each soldier carried four days rations and 100 rounds of ammunition 9 Crook s intention to make a quiet march was spoiled when the Crow and Shoshoni encountered a buffalo herd and shot many of them Crook anticipated that he would soon find a large Indian village on Rosebud Creek to attack but the Indian village was on Ash Creek west of Rosebud Creek Crook also underestimated the determination of his foe He anticipated the usual Indian tactics of hit and run encounters and ambushes not a pitched battle 10 The Indian force of almost 1 000 men set out from their village on June 16 in the middle of the night to seek out the soldiers on the Rosebud They rode all night rested their horses for a couple of hours then continued making contact with Crook s scouts at about 8 30 am June 17 11 Attack on the Rosebud Edit General Crook s Army crossing the west fork of Goose Creek the day before the Battle of the Rosebud On June 17 1876 Crook s column marched northward along the south fork of Rosebud Creek The holiday atmosphere that prevailed since the arrival of the Indian scouts on June 15 was suddenly absent The soldiers particularly the mule riding infantry were fatigued from the previous day s 35 miles 56 km march and the early morning reveille at 3 00 am At 8 am Crook stopped to rest his men and animals Although deep in hostile territory Crook made no special dispositions for defense His troops halted in their marching order The Crow and Shoshoni scouts remained alert while the soldiers rested Soldiers in camp began to hear gunfire coming from the bluffs to the north where the Crow and Shoshoni were positioned but initially thought it was the Crow shooting buffalo As the intensity of fire increased two Crows rushed into the army s resting place shouting Lakota Lakota 12 By 8 30 am the Sioux and Cheyenne had hotly engaged Crook s Indian allies on the high ground north of the main body Heavily outnumbered the Crow and Shoshoni fell back toward the camp but their fighting withdrawal gave Crook time to deploy his forces 13 The battle which ensued would last for six hours and consist of disconnected actions and charges and counter charges by Crook and Crazy Horse the two forces spread out over a fluid front three miles wide The Lakota and Cheyenne were divided into several groups as were the soldiers as the battle progressed The soldiers could fend off assaults by the Indians and force them to retreat but could not catch and destroy them 14 Crook initially directed his forces to seize the high ground north and south of the Rosebud Creek He ordered Captain Van Vliet with two troops of the 3rd Cavalry to occupy the high bluffs south of the Creek to guard against an Indian attack from the direction In the north the commands of Major Chambers with two companies of the 4th Infantry and three companies of the 9th Infantry and Captain Noyes with three troops of the 2nd Cavalry formed a dismounted skirmish line and advanced toward the Lakota Their progress was slow due to flanking fire from Indians occupying the high ground to the northeast citation needed To accelerate the advance Crook ordered Captain Anson Mills commanding six troops of the 3rd Cavalry to charge the Lakota Mills mounted charge unnerved the Indians and they withdrew along the ridge line Mills quickly re formed three troops and led another charge driving the Indians northwest again to the next hill Preparing to drive the Indians from there Mills received orders from Crook to cease the advance and assume a defensive posture Chambers and Noyes led their forces forward in support and within minutes joined Mills on top of the ridge The bulk of Crook s command joined by the packers and miners occupied a hill they called Crook s Hill Establishing his headquarters there at approximately 9 30 am Crook considered his next move 15 During Mills advance the event occurred that would name the battle for the Cheyenne A Cheyenne warrior Comes in Sight had his horse shot While fleeing on foot from Mills advancing soldiers his sister Buffalo Calf Road Woman Mutsimiuna rode to his rescue Comes in Sight jumped onto her horse and the two successfully escaped Mills was impressed with the swarming Indians at his front They were the best cavalry soldiers on earth In charging up toward us they exposed little of their person hanging on with one arm around the neck and one leg over the horse firing and lancing from underneath the horses necks so that there was no part of the Indian at which we could aim 16 Crook s initial charges secured key terrain but did little damage to the Indians Assaults scattered the Indians but they did not quit the field After falling back the Lakota and Cheyenne kept firing from a distance and attacked several times in small parties When counterattacked by the soldiers the warriors sped away on their swift horses Crook realized his charges were ineffective citation needed The position of the opposing forces at the end of the battle as the Indians withdrew Crook believed incorrectly that the unusual tenacity of the Lakota and Cheyenne was based on defense of their families in a nearby village He ordered Captains Mills and Noyes to withdraw their cavalry from the high ground on Crook s Hill and swing eastward to follow the Rosebud north to find the suspected village He recalled Van Vliet s battalion from the south side of the Rosebud to reinforce him on Crook s Hill While Mills and Noyes made their way up the Rosebud searching for a village that did not exist the situation of Lt Colonel William B Royall Crook s second in command had worsened Royall had pursued the Indians attacking Crook s camp with six companies of cavalry Royall advanced rapidly along the ridge line to the northwest to a point about one mile away from Crook and separated by the valley of Kolmarr Creek The Lakota and Cheyenne shifted their main effort away from Crook and concentrated their attacks on Royall and he was in danger of being cut off from Crook Seeing this danger Crook sent orders to Royall to withdraw to Crook s Hill Royall sent only one company to join Crook claiming later his forces had been too hotly engaged to withdraw 17 Royall s situation continued to worsen and he tried to withdraw his entire command across Kollmar Creek but the Indians fire was too heavy Next he began to withdraw southeast along the ridge line A large group of Sioux and Cheyenne broke off from the fight against Crook s main forces and charged boldly down the valley of Kollmar Creek advancing all the way to the Rosebud When Captain Guy V Henry was wounded his soldiers began to panic but the Crow and Shoshoni arrived and drove the Lakota and Cheyenne back Crook also sent two infantry companies to occupy a nearby hill to aid Royall with long range rifle fire which kept the Lakota and Cheyenne at a distance The Lakota and Cheyenne did not attempt any serious attacks on the infantry respecting the longer range of their rifles as compared to the carbines the cavalry carried The Crow Shoshoni and the two infantry companies probably saved Royall s command from destruction 18 Crow tribe members The Crow and Shoshoni allies prevented Crook from being surprised and possibly suffering a catastrophic defeat At approximately 11 30 Royall continued his withdrawal to the southeast and assumed a new defensive position He was under attack on three sides From his headquarters Crook realized that Royall needed help that only Mills force which was descending Rosebud Creek two or three miles away could provide Crook sent orders to Mills redirecting him to turn west and attack the rear of the Indians pressing Royall citation needed At approximately 12 30 Royall began another withdrawal into the Kollmar ravine His cavalry remounted and prepared to ride through gunfire to reach the relative safety of Crook s main position As the US cavalry began their dash the Crow and Shoshoni scouts counter charged the pursuing Lakota and Cheyenne and relieved much of the pressure on Royall s men The two companies of infantry provided covering fire from the northeast side of the ravine Royall s command suffered most of the U S casualties during the battle 19 Mills arrived too late on the Lakota and Cheyenne flank to assist Royall s withdrawal but his unexpected appearance caused the Lakota and Cheyenne to break contact and retire from the battlefield The cavalry pursued the Indians but soon gave up the chase The battle of the Rosebud was over about 2 30 pm citation needed Casualties and aftermath Edit Estimates of casualties by both the soldiers and the Indians vary widely Crook said he had 10 killed and 21 wounded His aide John Gregory Bourke added that 4 of the wounds were mortal and gave total casualties as 57 Frank Grouard said that 28 soldiers were killed and 56 wounded Estimates of Crow killed range from one to five and Shoshoni from one to eight The Lakota and Cheyenne casualties are likewise uncertain with estimates of the number killed ranging from 10 to 100 The Crow reportedly took 13 scalps although scalps might be cut into pieces and divided among warriors Crazy Horse reportedly later said that the Lakota and Cheyenne casualties were 36 killed and 63 wounded How he came up with such a precise number is unknown as it seems unlikely that the Indians compiled a statistical record of the casualties among the eight or so Sioux and Lakota bands plus the Cheyenne and a few Arapaho who participated in the battle 20 By the standards of the usual hit and run raids of the Plains Indians the Battle of the Rosebud was a long and bloody engagement The Lakota and Cheyenne fought with persistence and demonstrated a willingness to accept casualties rather than break off the encounter The delaying action by Crook s Indian allies during the early stages of the battle saved his command from a devastating surprise attack The intervention of the Crow and Shoshoni scouts throughout the battle was crucial to averting disaster for Crook 21 Crook claimed victory by virtue of occupying the battlefield at the end of the day but his actions belie his claim Concerned for his wounded and short on supplies Crook retraced his steps to his camp on Goose Creek near Sheridan Wyoming and remained there immobile for seven weeks awaiting reinforcements 19 He would play no role in the Battle of the Little Bighorn eight days later Crook s Crow and Shoshoni allies left the army for their homes shortly after the battle The Lakota and Cheyenne returned to the battlefield after Crook s departure and piled up rocks at the location of key events in the battle Some of the rock piles they built are still there 22 U S ammunition expenditures Edit One immediate question from the U S Army that followed the battle of the Rosebud was how between 10 000 and 25 000 rounds of 45 70 caliber rifle and carbine ammunition could have been expended during a half day s fight with only a dozen or so enemy casualties especially considering the use of single shot rifles and carbines 23 These questions resulted in the investigations of the weapon s extraction system the composition of the brass shell casings the cleaning of the weapon and proper individual training and military tactics In U S military publications such as the Journal of the Military Service Institution and the United Service Army officers attempted to address these questions and problems 24 One suggested reason for the high expenditure of ammunition and the low enemy casualty rate was when Army Scout Bat Pourier reported to Gen Crook that he had watched men leave great numbers of cartridges on the ground Infantrymen on the initial skirmish line would lie down or kneel and fire and in doing so would draw handfuls of cartridges from their belts and place them on the ground beside them handy for use 25 When the men moved to another position forward or otherwise they sometimes left a pile of ammunition where they had laid it 25 Historic site EditThe battle site is preserved at the Rosebud Battlefield State Park in Big Horn County Montana The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and was further designated a National Historic Landmark in 2008 Site sign 2003Order of battle EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message United States Edit Department of the Platte Brigadier General George Crook 26 2nd United States Cavalry Regiment Companies A B D E and I 3rd United States Cavalry Regiment Companies A B C D E F G I L and M 4th United States Infantry Regiment Companies D and F 9th United States Infantry Regiment Companies C G and H Crow Scouts Shoshoni Scouts CiviliansSioux and Cheyenne Edit Crazy Horse Lakota Sioux Oglala Scatters Their Own Hunkpapa Camps by the Horn Itazipco They have no bows or Sans Arc Sihasapa Black Feet band of Lakota Minicoujou or Miniconjou Plants by the water Oohenumpa Two Kettles Sicangu Burnt Thighs or Brule Dakota Santee Sioux Northern Cheyenne Northern ArapahoSee also EditList of battles won by Indigenous peoples of the Americas The Other Magpie Battle of the Little BighornReferences Edit Vestal Stanley 1932 Sitting Bull Champion of the Sioux University of Oklahoma Press p 152 ISBN 978 0806122199 Hargrove Julia 2001 Crazy Horse Teaching amp Learning Co p 20 ISBN 978 1573103107 Page 290 Dee Brown Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee Henry Holt 1991 Trade paperback 488 pages ISBN 0 8050 1730 5 Battle of the Rosebud Cheyenne amp Lakota Stop General Crook NewsInHistory com 2012 11 07 Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved 2015 10 28 Wiles Jr Richard I The Battle of the Rosebud Crook s Campaign on 1876 Fort Leavenworth US Army Command and General Staff College 1993 p 49 Porter Joseph C Paper Medicine Man John Gregory Bourke and his American West Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1986 pp 38 39 Porter pp 39 41 Wiles Jr p 49 Porter p 41 Wiles pp 72 73 Greene Jerome A Lakota and Cheyenne Indian Views of the Great Sioux War 1876 1877 Norman University of Oklahoma Press p 17 19 Vaughn 1956 p 50 Collins Jr Charles D Atlas of the Sioux Wars Second Edition Fort Leavenworth KS Combat Studies Institute Press 2006 Map 19 Collins Map 22 Collins Jr Map 20 Sarf Wayne Michael The Little Bighorn Campaign Conshohocken PA Combined Books 1993 p 98 Collins Jr Map 20 21 Vaughn J W Indian Fights New Facts on Seven Encounters Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1966 p 136 139 143 a b Collins Map 23 Vaughn J W Indian Fights New Facts on Seven Encounters Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1966 p 139 Utley Robert M Frontier Regulars The United States Army and the Indian 1866 1891 New York MacMillan Publishing Company 1973 p 256 Wiles Jr Richard I The Battle of the Rosebud Crook s Campaign on 1876 Fort Leavenworth US Army Command and General Staff College 1993 p 106 Crook s Report https books google com books id 5O5CAAAAIAAJ amp pg PA448 amp dq Battle of Rosebud Creek amp lr amp cd 16 v onepage amp q Battle 20of 20Rosebud 20Creek amp f false accessed 22 Feb 2013 Vaughn p 139 Vaughn p 141 Hedren Paul L 2019 p 379 Rosebud June 17 1876 Prelude To The Little Big Horn University of Oklahoma Press Norman Hedren 2019 p 379 384 a b Hedren 2019 p 293 Hedren 2019 p 375 376Bibliography EditDillon Richard H 1983 North American Indian Wars Finerty John F War path and Bivouac or the Conquest of the Sioux a first hand account by a Chicago newspaper reporter accompanying the Crook expedition and present at the Rosebud Vaughn J W 1956 With Crook at the Rosebud Stackpole Co p 245 Retrieved 2012 01 12 External links EditCrook s report of Rosebud Battle Battle of the Rosebud Crook s Counterattack 0830 1000 Battle of Rosebud 1876 Crazy Horse vs Gen Crook Part 1 Part 2Coordinates 45 13 23 N 106 59 52 W 45 22306 N 106 99778 W 45 22306 106 99778 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Rosebud amp oldid 1131741625, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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