Grow v. United States

32 Ct. Cl. 599, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 20, 1800 WL 2129
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
DocketIndian Depredations, 5751
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ct. Cl. 599 (Grow v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grow v. United States, 32 Ct. Cl. 599, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 20, 1800 WL 2129 (cc 1897).

Opinion

Peelle, J.,

delivered the opinion of tbe court:

Tbe question presented in this case is, Were tbe defendant Indians in amity with tbe United States at the time of tbe depredation, January 26,1856; and if not, when did.they become hostile, and bow long did they so continue?

In tbe case of John P. Kinoaid, No. 8890, the court found that tbe Puyallup and Nisqually Indians were in amity with [600]*600the United States on the last day of October, 1855, and to that finding the court adheres.

The petition in this case, as indicated by the above title, is against the Nisqually Indians only, but the evidence, as disclosed in the findings, is that the depredation was committed bytheNisqually, White Bi ver, Puyallup, and Klickitat Indians.

As the official reports from the various officers of the Government with reference thereto indicate that the Indians named were acting in concert, we shall consider them together.

The reports show that other Indians were involved in the same hostilities, but as the findings show they were not the depredators in this case, we exclude them from any conclusion we may reach herein for further consideration in any case that may arise wherein the question of their relation to the United States may be presented.

The disaffection of the Indians in Washington Territory, and particularly as to the Yakima and Klickitat Indians, was such that early in October, 1855, as seen by the Pep or t of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for 1855 (pp. 15-194), Subagent Bolen was killed by them, following which other tribes and bands were requested to join them in their hostile acts, but the union as tribes was unsuccessful at that time, as shown by the same report.

October 9,1855, Major Bains, commanding Fourth Infantry in the Puget Sound district, becoming alarmed as to the threatened attitude of the Indians in that locality, addressed a communication to the governor of Oregon Territory, stating that “As commanding officer I have ordered all the United States disposable force in this district into the field immediately and shall take the command,” but as the force under him was questionable to subdue the Indians, the Yakimas and Klicki-tats, and perhaps other small bands, as his letter indicates, he called upon the governor for four companies of volunteers. (Beport Secretary of War, 1855-56, vol. 2, p. 83.)

In response to that communication the governor, writing from Portland, Oreg., under date of October 16,1855, among other things, said:

“A band of Klickitats, reported to be friendly, encamped near Cowallis some 70 miles south of this place, were in possession of the particulars of the engagement in Simcoe Yalley [601]*601between the gallant command under Major Haller and the hostile tribes north of the Columbia Hi ver on the same day that the intelligence reached this place. It has been known for some time by the superintendent of Indian affairs for Oregon that the Indians west of the Cascade Eange had been tampered with by those now engaged in open hostilities on the northern frontier, and the Shasta and Bogue Biver .Indians are now in open arms against the settlers in that section of the Territory. For the suppression of this new outbreak I have taken prompt and, I trust, effective measures.”

1-Ie further reported in that same communication that in his belief a combination had been “effected among the different tribes on -our borders, as well as in our midst, and a general war resolved upon their part against the whites.”

The governor aforesaid had previously issued two proclamations calling attention to criminal offenses which had been committed by the Indians combined for hostile purposes, and he called for volunteers and arms in response to the requisition of Major Bains.

While we adhere to our finding in the Kincaid Case (supra) that the Puyallup and Nisqually Indians were in amity with the United States on the last day of October, 1855, their dep'redations, in connection with other Indians, which commenced early in October and after the troops had been ordered east of the Cascade Mountains to suppress Indian hostilities then actively existing there, grew worse and became more wanton until the troops so ordered away were recalled, after which the Puyallup, Nisqually, Klickitats, and other Indians, acting in concert, continued their wanton destruction of life and prop-perty, resisting military authority.

November 3,1855, Lieutenant Slaughter, with about 50 regulars, and the same number of volunteers, under Hays, had an engagement with them at the crossing of White Biver, in which 1 soldier and about 30 Indians were killed. (History of the Pacific States by Bancroft, p. 120.) Again, November 6, he was attacked at the crossing of Puyallup Biver and had 6 men wounded, 3 mortally. (Ibid., p. 120.) And again, November 24 following, he was attacked at night, sustaining a loss of 40 horses, while on November 26 one member of Wallace’s company was killed. (Ibid., p. 122.) The chiefs who commanded in these attacks were Kitsap and Kanascut, of the Klikitats; [602]*602Quiemuth and Klowowit, of the Nisquallies, and Nelson, of the Green Kiver and Nisoope Indians. (Ibid., p. 122.)

December 4,1855, Lieutenant Slaughter was shot and killed while holding- a conference early in the evening. The Indians then continued firing for three hours, killing 2 noncommissioned officers and wounding 6 others. (Ibid., p. 123.)

Soon after Slaughter’s death, the pack horses being worn out and many of the soldiers sick, the troops were withdrawn from active operations against the Indians and went into garrison where they could give the best protection to the settlers. (Ibid., pp. 123,124.)

About the same time the following communications were sent to the Secretary of the Navy:

“ü. S. Flag-ship Independence,
“Navy-Yard-, Mare Island, December 4,1855.
u Sin: I have the honor to inform you that the hostilities of the Indians of Washington and Oregon Territories, manifested in the massacre of the settlers and their attacks upon the regular troops of the Army, have assumed an alarming character which, with other demonstrations farther south, would seem to indicate a concerted action and general rising among all the Indian tribes inhabiting the western side of the Sierra. Nevadas. These difficulties, in my opinion, call for all the naval force which can be spared from other duties here to act with the land forces in transporting troops as circumstances may require.
*******
“William Meevine,
Commanding Pacific Squadron.
“ Hon. J. C. Dobbin,
Secretary of the Navy, Washington, D. C.
“(Senate Doc. 26, first and second sessions Thirty-fourth Congress, p. 57.)
“U. S. Sloop oe Wae Decatue,
Port Madison, Wash. T., Puget Sound, December 5,1855.
“SlE:
*######
“I trust I shall be pardoned for stating it as my opinion that the war in this Territory is assuming a most serious aspect.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ct. Cl. 599, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 20, 1800 WL 2129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grow-v-united-states-cc-1897.