A New Account of the Battle of Platte Bridge, July 28, 1865: the Recollections of John Benton Hart Edited by John Hart
A New Account of the Battle of Platte Bridge, July 28, 1865: The Recollections of John Benton Hart edited by John Hart hey thought their war was over. In the autumn of 1864, at the end of the long campaign to repel the Confederate invasion of Missouri under General Sterling Price, John Benton Hart and his comrades in the Eleventh Kansas Cavalry had done what they signed up to do in 1862: protect Kansas and help to preserve a Union in peril. But even as they made their way back from Arkansas toward their headquarters in Paola, Kansas, events on the frontier were setting them up to fight another kind of war, which would cost the unit more casualties than all of its Civil War engagements combined.1 TOn November 29, 1864, at Sand Creek in Colorado Territory, a detachment of militia under General John Chivington attacked a quiet encampment of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians: people who, unlike some of their more combative peers, had asked for peace and accepted a promise of federal protection. The Sand Creek Massacre did what had seemed impossible. It brought mutually suspicious tribal groups into alliance against the encroaching whites and unleashed a full-scale Indian war.2 John Hart, the great-grandson of John Benton Hart, is an environmental historian and the author of fifteen books concerning such topics as western water controversies, agricultural land preservation, regional planning, and wilderness preservation. He lives near San Francisco, California. The author is grateful for the research assistance of Roger Dudley of the Denver Public Library, David Hart, Darryl Levings of the Kansas City Star, Sarah Ponce of the Emporia Public Library, and Brenda Tippin, a descendant of Louis P.
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