Friday, September 27, 2013

Battle of Bear River

The battle of Bear River
The battle of Bear river started on January 29, 1863. The campaign was a expedition from camp Douglas, Utah territory, to cache valley, Idaho territory.The commanders in the battle were Col. Patrick Edward Connor [US], Chief bear Hunter [I]. There troops were District of Utah and the Shoshoni Indians. The estimated casualties were 451 in total, there were 67 US and 384 Indians. The result was a union victory.
The description of the battle, Shoshoni raids under Chief Bear Hunter during the winter of 1862-63 provoked Federal retaliation. Troops under Col. Patrick E. Conner set out from Ft. Douglas, Utah in the deep snow January 1863 towards Chief Bear Hunter's camp, 120 miles north near present-day Preston, Idaho. The Native American camp included about 300 Shoshoni warriors defensively placed in the Battle Creek ravine west of Bear River with high embankments in which the Indians had cut access trails. Shortly after dawn on January 29, Connor's troops appeared across the river and began crossing. Before all of the men had crossed and Connor had arrived, some troops made an unsuccessful frontal attack which the Indians easily repulsed inflicting numerous casualties. When Connor took over, he sent troops to where the ravine debouched through the bluffs. some of these men covered the mouth of the ravine to prevent escape while others moved down the rims firing on Indians below. This fire killed many of the warriors but some attempted to escape by swimming the icy river where other troops shot them. The battle stopped by mid-morning. The troopers had killled most of the warriors plus a number of women, children, old men and captured many of the women and children.


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