LORDS OF THE NORTH
An old settler, speaking of the expulsion
of the squatters on the military reservation remarked:
“At that time, and both before and since, the
commanding officers of the fort were the lords of the
north. They ruled supreme. The citizens
in the neighborhood of the fort were liable at any
time to be thrust into the guard-house. While
the chief of the fort was the king, the subordinate
officers were the princes, and persons have been deprived
of their liberty and imprisoned by those tyrants for
the most trivial wrong, or some imaginary offense."
This statement is doubtless rather extreme; but the
fact remains that the fort was the only agency of
government in the region, and so the commanding officer
was indeed the supreme ruler in so far as he directed
the policy and activities of the post.
Interest in Old Fort Snelling is not
primarily in the logs and stones which made up its
building, but in the men and women who lived within
its walls. Many were the lives influenced by a
residence in its barracks. Characters were formed
by the stern rigors of frontier service. Far
from busy cities, in the tiresome routine of army life,
men were being trained who were to be leaders in the
political and military life of the Nation. Others
never rose to a higher position; but they command
attention because in their faithful performance of
daily duties, year after year, they were quietly helping
to make the history of the Northwest. It is impossible
to consider every man who might be classed among the
“Lords of the North”, but a review of the
careers of a few of them indicates the type of men
whose natural ability was supplemented by the self-confidence
and the grim determination which are the products
of frontier service.
The memory of the man who led the
troops to the mouth of the Minnesota River in 1819
is commemorated by a fort and a city in another State.
The trials which he endured during that first winter
at Cantonment New Hope were only harbingers of greater
difficulties which were to bring to him the death
of a frontier martyr. Although he had been educated
for the lawyer’s profession, Henry Leavenworth
raised a company of volunteers in Delaware County,
New York, in 1812, and was elected its captain.
He served under General Winfield Scott and won honors
for distinguished service at the Battle of Chippewa
and at Niagara Falls. After the war he continued
in the army, being appointed lieutenant colonel of
the Fifth United States Infantry on February 10, 1818.
After conducting the troops up the Mississippi River
in 1819 and remaining through the winter, he was superseded
by Colonel Snelling.
Expeditions and Indian duties occupied
his attention during the next few years, and in May,
1827, he established “Cantonment Leavenworth”
on the west bank of the Missouri River. On February
8, 1832, the name was changed to Fort Leavenworth.
During a campaign against the Pawnee Indians, who
were harassing the caravans of the Santa Fe traders,
Colonel Leavenworth was taken sick with fever and died
on July 21, 1834, in a hospital wagon at Cross Timbers
in Indian Territory. The body was wrapped in
spices and sent by way of St. Louis, New Orleans,
and New York City, to Delhi, New York, where it remained
until in 1902 it was reinterred in the national cemetery
at Fort Leavenworth. A granite shaft some twelve
feet high marks his resting-place.
The monument to the man under whose
direction the fort was built is the modern military
establishment named Fort Snelling. The erection
of this fort was the last achievement of a life which,
though comparatively brief, had already accomplished
much. Josiah Snelling was born in Boston, Massachusetts,
in 1782. His first commission was as a first
lieutenant in the Fourth Infantry and bears the date
of May 3, 1808. In the Battle of Tippecanoe on
November 7, 1811, he commanded one of the companies
that were attacked in their camp in the early morning.
An attempt was made by a company of dragoons to drive
off the groups of Indians whose fire was the heaviest,
but the officer who was leading was wounded and the
attempt failed. “The Indians”, reported
General Harrison, “were, however, immediately
and gallantly dislodged from their advantageous position
by Captain Snelling, at the head of his company."
During the War of 1812 he served with Hull’s
army about Detroit, and when the fort was surrendered
he was taken a prisoner and brought to Canada.
But he was exchanged and ordered to Plattsburg, and
later was sent to Fort Erie on the staff of General
George Izard. At the close of the war he was
retained as lieutenant colonel of the Sixth Infantry
and was stationed at Plattsburg for four years.
Bravery and impetuosity were two of
Colonel Snelling’s traits. During the campaign
about Detroit he was married to Abigail Hunt by the
chaplain of General Hull’s army. The general
and other officers were present. An account of
the life of his wife states that “the ceremony
had been performed but a few moments when the drum
beat to arms; and Capt. Snelling instantly started
up to go in search of his sword. All rushed to
the door except Gen. Hull, who laying his hand on the
young officer’s shoulder as he was about leaving
the house, said, ’Snelling, you need not go,
I will excuse you.’ ‘By no means,’
was the reply, ’I feel more like doing my duty
now than ever.’ ’Stay, it is a false
alarm by my order,’ said the General."
The ignoble surrender of Detroit by General Hull was
deplored by many of the men under him. The story
is told that while General Hull’s aid was trying
to place the white flag in position he called, “Snelling,
come and help me fix this flag.” Whereupon
that officer replied, “No, sir; I will not soil
my hands with that flag."
On June 1, 1819, he was appointed
colonel of the Fifth Infantry, and ordered to St.
Louis, where the following winter was passed.
In the summer he started up the Mississippi, but was
detained at Prairie du Chien by a court-martial of
which he was the president, and it was not until August
that he reached the troops at Camp Cold Water.
From that time until the fall of 1827 Colonel Snelling
was in command of the post, when not absent on official
business. Except when he had been drinking too
much, he was a favorite with the troops, and as he
had red hair and was somewhat bald, they nicknamed
him the “prairie-hen".
In the fall of 1827 the Fifth Infantry
was withdrawn from the post and was succeeded by the
First Infantry. The Snelling family located at
St. Louis, while Colonel Snelling proceeded to Washington
to settle some accounts. While here he was suddenly
taken sick and died on August 20, 1828.
The man whose name was applied to
the post which has become so historic was a typical
soldier of his day. Along with the bravery and
zeal of the army, he possessed also its failings.
“Of myself I have little to say”, he wrote
on one occasion. “I entered the army a subaltern,
almost eighteen years ago. From obscurity I have
passed through every grade to the command of a regiment.
I owe nothing to executive patronage, for I have neither
friend or relation connected with the government:
I have obtained my rank in the ordinary course of
promotion, and have retained it by doing my duty;
and I really flatter myself that I still possess the
confidence of the government, and the respect of those
who serve with and under me."
Daniel Webster, speaking in the Senate
on July 9, 1850, remarked that it was not in Indian
wars that heroes were celebrated, but it was there
that they were formed. The occasion of this speech
was the death of the President, Zachary Taylor, who
had served for many years upon the Indian frontier.
As lieutenant colonel of the First Infantry, he came
to Fort Snelling during the summer of 1828 and remained
there for a year, when he established his headquarters
at Fort Crawford. His achievements on the frontier
and in the Mexican War, which finally brought him to
the presidency are a familiar story, and the training
which he received in Old Fort Snelling was only a
part of that which gave him the name of “Rough
and Ready”. It is a remarkable fact that
at Fort Snelling he was remembered less for his own
actions than for those of his four pretty daughters
whose presence spread commotion in the hearts of the
homesick young officers.
In 1837 the First Infantry was withdrawn
and part of the Fifth Infantry returned to its former
station. Among the familiar faces seen about the
garrison again was that of a man whose eccentricities
and personality are closely associated with the life
of the fort. In reporting the casualties of the
battle of Molino del Rey, September
8, 1847, the general commanding the American forces
applied an adjective to only one of the dead.
The report reads, “the service mourns the high-souled
Scott, brevet lieutenant colonel 5th infantry".
This was Martin Scott, one of the most human, most
lovable, and most energetic men who ever reviewed
troops on the parade ground of Old Fort Snelling.
Only from July 15, 1837, until August 20, 1837, was
he in command, but for many years he was a familiar
figure around the barracks and in the surrounding
country.
Hunting was his favorite pastime,
and many a time the prairie rang with the yelping
of the twenty or twenty-five dogs which he kept under
the care of a special negro servant at the fort.
His deadly aim was known to all. An army officer
who insulted him was severely wounded in a duel; he
often played the part of William Tell by shooting with
his pistol through an apple placed upon the head of
his negro; and if credence is to be given to the stories
which are told, even the animals were aware that from
him there was no escape. A coon sitting high on
a tree was shot at by several hunters in succession,
but still remained in its position. Captain Scott
came along and took aim, whereupon the coon asked,
“Who is that?” The reply was, “My
name is Scott.” “Scott? what Scott?”
continued the coon. “Captain Martin Scott.”
“Are you Captain Martin Scott?” There
was a pause before the voice in the tree-top continued,
“Then hold on don’t shoot; I
may as well come down."
Martin Scott was born in Bennington,
Vermont, on January 17, 1788. His family was
extremely poor, but because of his freedom from army
vices gambling and drinking he
was able in later years to do them many favors.
His kindness was equalled only by his bravery.
For gallant conduct during the Mexican War he received
several promotions, and held a commission as lieutenant
colonel when he met death leading his regiment in
the battle of Molino del Rey.
A newspaper correspondent who went
over the field of battle, saw a gray-headed soldier
spreading the blanket over the corpse of a fallen
comrade. “I rode up to him”, wrote
the reporter to his newspaper, “and asked him
whether that was an officer. He looked up, and
every lineament of his face betokening the greatest
grief, replied, ’you never asked a question
sir, more easily answered, it is an officer.’
I then asked him who he was. He again replied,
’The best soldier of the 5th infantry, sir.’
I then alighted from my horse and uncovering the face,
found it was Col. Martin Scott. As I again
covered the face, the soldier continued, without apparently
addressing himself to any person in particular ’They
have killed him they will be paid for this if
it had only been me I have served with
him almost four enlistments but what will his poor
family say?’ And as he concluded thus the tears
coursed down his furrowed cheeks, and the swelling
of his bosom showed how deeply he was affected by
the death of his veteran and gallant commander."
When the Fifth Infantry was transferred
in 1840 there was a second home-coming at Fort Snelling
in that it was succeeded by parts of the First Infantry
which remained until the year 1848. Captain Seth
Eastman was in command at four different times during
this period, and it was through his eyes that we can
see Old Fort Snelling as it was. After his graduation
from the Military Academy he was an assistant teacher
of drawing at West Point. Following this he served
in the Florida War and on the frontier until 1850,
when he was called to Washington to illustrate the
History, Condition, and Future Prospects of the
Indian Tribes of the United States. Active
service on the frontier and in the Civil War followed,
and in 1866 he was breveted a brigadier general.
Mary Henderson Eastman, his wife,
also commands attention. The intimate association
of the fort with the surrounding Indians brought to
her knowledge many incidents connected with their
life which she embodied in a volume published in 1849
and entitled: Dahcotah: or, Life and Legends
of the Sioux around Fort Snelling. In this
volume Longfellow read of the Falls of Minnehaha,
which he describes so picturesquely in Hiawatha.
Other literary work was done by Mrs. Eastman, one of
her volumes being Aunt Phyllis’s Cabin,
a reply to Mrs. Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s
Cabin.
Parts of the Sixth Infantry were garrisoned
in Fort Snelling from 1848 to 1852, and beginning
in 1850 there was also a company of the First Dragoons
who engaged in many of the expeditions narrated in
the preceding chapter. Among the officers who
commanded during this period was Lieutenant William
T. Magruder, who was killed on July 3, 1863, at the
Battle of Gettysburg while serving in the ranks of
the Confederate army. One company of the Third
Artillery was located at the post from 1853 to 1856.
At the head of this company was Captain W. T. Sherman
who, after serving in the Indian wars and the Mexican
War, rose to prominence in the Civil War during which
he was brevetted a major general. After the Civil
War he was appointed commander of the Department of
the East.
Among the last troops which occupied
Fort Snelling before it was abandoned in 1858 was
a part of the Tenth Infantry. Major E. R. S. Canby
of this regiment was in command of the fort during
the summer and autumn of 1856. His was a wonderful
record of achievement upon the frontier and in the
Civil War, and like Colonel Leavenworth he met his
death in service. Born in Kentucky the year that
Fort Snelling was founded, he moved to Indiana as
a boy. He was appointed to the Military Academy
at West Point in 1835 and graduated in 1839.
For the next three years he was engaged as a second
lieutenant in the Second Infantry in the Florida War,
and upon the successful termination of the campaigns
he was employed in removing the Cherokees, Choctaws,
and Creeks to Indian Territory. After a few years
in garrison duty and the recruiting service he participated
in the Mexican War, being promoted “for gallant
and meritorious service” at Contreras, Cherubusco,
and the Belen Gate of the City of Mexico. On
March 3, 1855, a promotion made him major in the Tenth
Infantry; and it was while holding this position that
he served at Fort Snelling.
In 1858 Major Canby was transferred
to Fort Bridger, Utah, where he commanded an expedition
against the Navajo Indians. While stationed at
Fort Defiance, New Mexico, during the early years of
the Civil War, he repelled the Confederate general,
Sibley, who left one-half of his force behind him
in killed, wounded, and prisoners. On March 31,
1862, he was made a brigadier general of volunteers
and summoned to Washington to assist Secretary of
War Stanton. While here General Canby was called
upon to take charge of a difficult position. Draft
riots in New York City from July 13th to July 16th
resulted in the killing and wounding of about a thousand
people and the destruction of about one and a half
million dollars worth of property. On July 17th
General Canby was put in charge of the Federal troops
in the city, and he was later able to enforce the
provisions of the draft without difficulties.
Following this came an appointment as commander of
the military division of West Mississippi, where he
was wounded by Confederate guerrillas.
At the close of the war, Edward Canby,
then a major general of volunteers was sent to the
far West as commander of the Department of the Columbia.
Here the United States was engaged in a war with the
Modoc Indians led by their chief “Captain Jack”.
On April 11, 1873, General Canby held a peace parley
with the Indians. It had been agreed that both
parties should be unarmed, but in the middle of the
negotiations “Captain Jack” suddenly drew
a revolver from his breast, and shot Canby through
the head killing him instantly.
Other officers at the post who had
real power were the garrison physicians. One
of these, Dr. John Emerson was a giant in body and
impulsive in spirit. On a certain day in early
winter when the quartermaster was distributing stoves
to the officers, Dr. Emerson asked for one for his
negro servant. This the quartermaster refused,
saying that there were not enough in store; whereupon
the doctor insinuated that the statement was a lie.
Upon being insulted thus the quartermaster struck
his companion between the eyes. Emerson turned
on his heels immediately, but he returned in a few
minutes with a brace of pistols which he pointed at
his assailant. The fighting spirit of the quartermaster
fell at the appearance of these weapons, and he started
across the parade ground on a run followed by the doctor.
A third character appeared in the person of Major
Plympton, the commanding officer, who arrested Dr.
Emerson. This episode gave rise to a great commotion
in the garrison. One group who wanted some excitement
urged that only in blood could the quarrel be settled;
while the other group sought for peace, knowing that
there was no other physician nearer than Prairie du
Chien. Not for several days was the quarrel patched
up, and then the terms were never made public.
The cause of all this trouble was
Dred Scott, man of color, and the slave of Dr. Emerson.
He had been brought to Fort Snelling by his master
in 1836, and here he was married to Harriet, also colored,
who had been sold by Major Taliaferro to the doctor.
When Dr. Emerson was transferred to Missouri, he took
Dred Scott with him. After the death of his master,
Scott began proceedings in the courts for his freedom
on the ground that his residence at the military post
made him free Fort Snelling being located
on soil where slavery was prohibited by the Missouri
Compromise of 1820. Mrs. Emerson, who wanted
to avoid an appearance in the courts, made over the
control of Scott to John F. A. Sanford, and the case
was finally brought to the Supreme Court of the United
States. Thus Old Fort Snelling was connected
with the case of Scott vs. Sanford, which
was so important among the events leading up to the
Civil War.
Were battles and military operations
alone considered, the annals of Fort Snelling would
comprise few pages; and were only military men characterized
one of the most potent factors in the life of the fort
would be omitted. The influence of the fort on
the Indians was felt more through the quiet daily
work of the Indian agent who was their official friend.
Although he was an officer entirely distinct from the
military organization at the fort, his work may legitimately
be accredited among the other activities of the post.
He was, in fact, an army official. The act of
August 7, 1789, which organized the War Department,
placed Indian affairs in the hands of the Secretary;
on July 9, 1832, a commissioner of Indian affairs
was authorized; and on June 30, 1834, the relations
of the Indian agents to the military department were
more clearly defined. The Superintendent of Indian
Affairs, the Indian agents, and the sub-agents were
given the right to call upon the military forces to
remove all trespassers in the Indian country, to procure
the arrest and trial of all Indians accused of committing
any crime, and to break up any distillery set up in
the Indian country.
By the act of March 3, 1849, the Department
of the Interior was organized. Section Five of
the act stipulated that “the Secretary of the
Interior shall exercise the supervisory and appellate
powers now exercised by the Secretary of the War Department,
in relation to all the acts of the Commissioner of
Indian Affairs". On the whole this law did not
disturb the cooeperation between the two branches of
the government service, although the commander at
Fort Snelling intimated to the agent that his privileges
were “not of right but by courtesy".
One name more than any other is associated
with the agency at Fort Snelling usually
called the agency of St. Peter’s. From 1820
to 1840 regiments came and went, and the officers
who ruled as “Lords of the North” were
soon transferred to other posts. The military
establishment was itself known by several different
names in succession, but the Indian agent remained
the same Lawrence Taliaferro. His was
a lasting influence lasting because of
the position he held in the memories of his wards
and his associates, and lasting because of the records
that he left.
To the Indians he was a real “Father”.
Americans, Scotch, Sioux, and French could all find
within his breast, they said, a kindred spirit, and
they bestowed upon him the name of “Four Hearts”
because of the impartiality of his actions to all
nationalities. In June, 1858, a number of Sioux
chiefs were in Washington and came to see him.
“My old Father,” said Little Crow, “we
have called upon you; we love you; we respect you....
Since you left us a dark cloud has hung over our nation.
We have lost confidence in the promises of our Great
Father, and his people; bad men have nearly destroyed
us.... We failed to get a friend in anyone like
you; they all joined the traders. We know your
heart, it feels for your old children."
Those who were associated with him
at the fort also had kind words for him. “He
belonged to a class more common then than now”,
remarked the son of Colonel Bliss. “He
imagined it to be his imperative duty to see that
every Indian under his charge had the enjoyment of
all his rights, and never seemed to realize his opportunities
for arranging with contractors for the supply of inferior
goods and for dividing the profits." Of this
honesty Taliaferro wrote: “I have the Sad
Consolation of leaving after twenty Seven years the
public Service as poor as when first I entered The
only evidence of my integrity".
No one can write of Fort Snelling
without using the papers which Lawrence Taliaferro
left. The diary kept by him during these twenty
years shows the meager pleasures and grim duties of
his task. Of this diary only a few fragmentary
pages are extant three roughly bound collections
of sheets, many of them torn, many of them half-burned,
and their writing faded. But from almost every
page that is legible some information is gleaned,
concerning the life of the soldiers, the visits of
the Indians, the state of the weather, and reflections
on Indian relations and the best time for planting
potatoes. His wide acquaintance and the great
extent of territory which his agency covered led to
correspondence with many men. These letters also
passed through a fire, and those that were rescued
are now bound in four volumes.
His reports to General William Clark,
Superintendent of Indian Affairs at St. Louis, were
forwarded to Washington where they are now kept in
the files of the Indian office. With methodical
care Governor Clark copied the letters which he received
into letter books. The existence of these letter
books was not known until a few years ago, when some
of them were found in the hands of a junk dealer in
Lawrence, Kansas, and were rescued a great
gain to the history of the West.
Many years after he closed his connection
with the agency Lawrence Taliaferro wrote an “Autobiography” a
narrative that shows all the quaintness and egotism
of the man. “Not until after the year 1840”,
he wrote “did the government become unfortunate
in the selection of their agents for Indian affairs."
From this account can be gleaned information to supplement
the bare facts usually given about his life.
His ancestors had come to England from Genoa, Italy,
and later they emigrated to Virginia. Here Lawrence
Taliaferro was born on February 28, 1794. At
the age of eighteen he joined the army and served through
the War of 1812, being a first lieutenant when it
closed. Although he received no other promotion
he was always known among his associates as “Major".
He was appointed Indian agent for
St. Peter’s on March 27, 1819, and on April
1, 1819, he accepted resigning the same
day from the army. He reached his new station
probably in the summer of 1820, and was immediately
engaged in the duties connected with Indian affairs.
During his term of office he was continually troubled
by ill-health which resulted from his campaigns in
the late war. In 1824 he resigned because of
this ill-health, and although he continued in service,
Governor Clark at one time wrote to the Secretary of
War that “his fate is considered as very doubtful."
As early as 1831 he confided to his
diary that “there is something of a Combination
of Persons at work day after day to pick at my Actions
both public and private". His resignation finally
came in 1839, and he closed his connection with the
Department on January 1, 1840, because he could no
longer endure the machinations of the traders.
Thereafter he made his home at Bedford, Pennsylvania,
serving as a military storekeeper from 1857 to 1863,
when he was put on the retired list. Mr. Taliaferro
visited his old home at Fort Snelling in 1856 and wrote
characteristically: “We were in St. Paul
on the twenty-fourth of June, the ‘widow’s
son’ was Irving’s Rip Van Winkle; after
a nap of fifteen years, we awoke in the midst of fast
times. We truly felt bewildered when we found
all the haunts and resting-places of the once noble
sons of the forest, covered by cities, towns, and
hamlets. We asked but few questions, being to
our mind received as a strange animal; if nothing
worse."
Among the others who served before
1858 as Indian agent were Amos J. Bruce, R. G. Murphy,
and Nathaniel McLean. The influx of whites had
greatly increased the difficulties of their position,
and the memory of their former agent made the Indians
suspicious of their new advisers. The Governor
of the Territory became the Superintendent of Indian
Affairs, and his presence so near the agency took from
the agent much of his power.
Scott Campbell, the interpreter at
Fort Snelling, was the intermediary between the Indians
and their lords. He was a half-breed whom Meriwether
Lewis had met on his expedition up the Missouri River.
He took the boy with him back to St. Louis; and when
Lewis died, Campbell returned to his Sioux relatives
and finally drifted to the agency at Fort Snelling.
Having a knowledge of four languages, and possessing
the confidence of all the tribes within four hundred
miles of the post, he was indispensable. From
August, 1825, to April, 1826, he was engaged in the
fur trade, but was lured back into service by a salary
of thirty-four dollars per month and one ration per
day. By 1843, however, he had become such a drunkard
that he had to be dismissed.
The veteran missionary, S. W. Pond,
in recalling early days wrote that “Scott Campbell
no longer sits smoking his long pipe, and conversing
in low tones with the listless loungers around the
old Agency House; but who that resided in this country
thirty or forty years ago can pass by the old stone
houses near Fort Snelling and not think of Major Taliaferro
and of his interpreter?"
And who can pass the Old Round Tower
without thinking of those men who as officers at Fort
Snelling ruled supreme over a vast region, and who
left the fort for places of greater trust and greater
influence?