About: Wagon Box Fight   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/krD_GSPHhNL2IejCI7diCQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

In addition to guarding emigrants on the Bozeman Trail, major tasks occupying the 350 soldiers and 100 civilians at Fort Phil Kearny included gathering wood and timber from a pine forest about five miles from the Fort and cutting hay for livestock in prairie areas. These jobs were performed by civilian contractors, usually armed with Spencer repeating rifles and accompanied and guarded by squads of soldiers. The hay cutters and wood gatherers had been a favorite target of the Indians since the establishment of Fort Kearny one year earlier. Dozens of small raids had been directed against them; several dozen soldiers and civilians had been killed and hundreds of head of livestock had been stolen. The soldiers were on the defensive. Their capability to strike back at the Indians was severely

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Wagon Box Fight
rdfs:comment
  • In addition to guarding emigrants on the Bozeman Trail, major tasks occupying the 350 soldiers and 100 civilians at Fort Phil Kearny included gathering wood and timber from a pine forest about five miles from the Fort and cutting hay for livestock in prairie areas. These jobs were performed by civilian contractors, usually armed with Spencer repeating rifles and accompanied and guarded by squads of soldiers. The hay cutters and wood gatherers had been a favorite target of the Indians since the establishment of Fort Kearny one year earlier. Dozens of small raids had been directed against them; several dozen soldiers and civilians had been killed and hundreds of head of livestock had been stolen. The soldiers were on the defensive. Their capability to strike back at the Indians was severely
sameAs
Strength
  • 26(xsd:integer)
  • 300(xsd:integer)
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Partof
Date
  • 1867-08-02(xsd:date)
Commander
Caption
  • Monument at the scene of the fight
Casualties
  • 2(xsd:integer)
  • 7(xsd:integer)
  • Indian claim 5 killed, 5 wounded
  • U.S. claim: 60 killed, 120 wounded
Result
  • U.S. victory
combatant
Place
  • near Fort Phil Kearny, Wyoming Territory, Bozeman Trail
Conflict
  • Wagon Box Fight
abstract
  • In addition to guarding emigrants on the Bozeman Trail, major tasks occupying the 350 soldiers and 100 civilians at Fort Phil Kearny included gathering wood and timber from a pine forest about five miles from the Fort and cutting hay for livestock in prairie areas. These jobs were performed by civilian contractors, usually armed with Spencer repeating rifles and accompanied and guarded by squads of soldiers. The hay cutters and wood gatherers had been a favorite target of the Indians since the establishment of Fort Kearny one year earlier. Dozens of small raids had been directed against them; several dozen soldiers and civilians had been killed and hundreds of head of livestock had been stolen. The soldiers were on the defensive. Their capability to strike back at the Indians was severely limited by a shortage of horses and trained cavalrymen and their weapons, consisting of muzzle-loading Springfield Model 1861 muskets. However, soldiers had recently been issued breech-loading rifles that could fire about three times as fast as muzzle-loaders and could be more easily re-loaded from a prone position. The Indians were poorly armed, probably possessing only about 200 firearms and less than two bullets per gun. Bows and arrows were their basic weapon. Bows and arrows were deadly at short range and in a fight on horseback or on foot but were ineffective against a well entrenched or fortified enemy. To protect against Indian raids near the pine forest, the civilian contractors had constructed a corral made by removing 14 of the wooden boxes that rested on the chassis of wagons and placing them on the ground in an oval 60–70 feet (20 mts) long and 25–30 feet (8-9 mts) wide. Both soldiers and civilians in the wood-cutting details lived in tents outside the corral of wagon boxes. On July 31, Captain James Powell and his command of 51 men departed the walls of Fort Kearny on a 30 day assignment to camp near the wagon boxes and guard the wood cutters. Until then, the summer had been quiet, with few hostile encounters with the Indians.
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