Something caught my attention in today's
Enid News and Eagle newspaper (
Nov. 19, 2016). A news photographer took a photo of a mural that is being painted on the side of Garfield Furniture
"to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Chisholm Trail in 2017."
I saw two mistakes immediately. The Oklahoma portion of the famous trail known as "The Chisholm Trail," was actually blazed in May 1861, not 1867, Further, it was the famous Delaware Indian Chief and U.S. army scout named
Black Beaver who blazed the trail, not Jesse Chisholm.
Black Beaver, Jesse Chisholm's good friend, led 750 Union soldiers and some civilians (including Jesse Chisholm) on a dangerous route north out of Indian Territory at the beginning of the Civil War. Four years later, Jesse Chisholm followed
Black Beaver's Trail south as he left Wichita to return to Council Grove (Oklahoma City) to open again his trading business with the Indians. The story of how
Black Beaver came to blaze this trail in May 1861 is the culmination of
The Civil War's First Secret Mission.
After the
Confederate bombing of Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, which officially began the
Civil War (1861-1865), President
Abraham Lincoln and United States General-in-Chief
Winfield "Old Fuss and Feather's" Scott, sent U.S. Cavalry Lieutenant
William Averell to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) with orders to evacuate the 750 Union officers and troops stationed in Indian Territory. The soldiers were to evacuate to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and then move to Washington Capital. Lincoln needed these troops - the finest in the United States military - to protect the vulnerable nation's capital from what the President called "the insurrection."
Dressed as a Confederate, Lieutenant Averell made his way from the nation's capital to Arkansas and then entered Indian Territory (Oklahoma) through Fort Smith. The Union fort called Fort Smith had been captured just hours earlier by the Confederates. Observed by a Confederate commander who thought he was up to no good, Averell was
chased by Confederate cavalry through Oklahoma Territory in one of the greatest horse rides in American history. Averell eventually made it to
Fort Arbuckle, the Union's headquarters in Oklahoma Territory, where he presented to
Colonel William H. Emory the order from Lincoln and Scott to evacuate.
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The Cherokee Outlet (Yellow) |
The problem the Union troops faced in fulfilling this order was the route out. The Union soldiers had come into Indian Territory through Fort Smith - now controlled by the Confederates - and the Union commanders had no experience traversing the Cherokee Outlet to the north. This land was Indian land, given by the government to the Indians as
"an outlet to the hunting grounds of the west." However, the soldiers stationed at Fort Arbuckle did know a man who was acquainted with the Cherokee Outlet - it was
Black Beaver. He had worked as a scout for the United States Army during the
Mexican War (1846-1848), and he had also been the personal guide for
John James Audubon (1785-1851) during exploratory expeditions of Colorado.
Black Beaver had crossed the Rockies and made his way to the Pacific many times, and he was very familiar with Indian Territory, including the Cherokee Outlet.
Black Beaver was considered to be the best guide on the western frontier. He was now retired and living about 30 miles from Fort Arbuckle on his farm near present day
Anadarko, Oklahoma.
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Black Beaver |
On May 3, 1861, just hours after Averell had reached Fort Arbuckle, a Union cavalry party was sent to entice
Black Beaver to guide the Union troops north through the Cherokee Outlet.
Black Beaver was
disinclined to help. He was 55 years old - an age considered
elderly in his day - and he didn't want to leave his family alone on the farm. The Union troops appealed to his patriotism and added to their enticement by promising the United States government would pay him for his services. Finally,
Black Beaver agreed.
On May 4, 1861 the flag was lowered at Fort Arbuckle. For the next 27 days,
Black Beaver guided a mile-and-a-half long train of troops, supplies, dependents, and livestock on their way to U.S. Fort Leavenworth in Kansas.
Black Beaver knew exactly where to stop along the route north, allowing for the people and horses to drink deeply from the natural springs that dotted the landscape.
Black Beaver also knew where to ford major east/west rivers in Oklahoma (Washita, North Canadian, Salt Fork, and the Arkansas). The Union troops made it safely to Fort Leavenworth on Friday, May 31, 1861. Of the 750 troops that
Black Beaver led to Fort Leavenworth, at least seven went on to become Union Generals during the Civil War, leading the United States to ultimate victory against the Confederate States of America. In addition, two of the men would be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for heroism and valor.
Black Beaver would not return to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) until after the Civil War. He couldn't. The Confederates placed a bounty on his head - dead or alive. In addition, news reached
Black Beaver while in Kansas that the Confederates who had come north from Texas into Indian Territory and had destroyed his crops, burned down his house, and taken his family as prisoners.
Black Beaver stayed in Wichita for the remainder of the Civil War with his good friend Jesse Chisholm.
Black Beaver and Chisholm had been friends for more than thirty years/ Both of them had been part of the historic
Leavenworth-Dodge Expedition of 1834, the first meeting between whites and the southern Plains Indian tribes, which occurred at the present site of
United States Army Military Post Fort Sill.
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Jesse Chisholm |
Jesse Chisholm (1805-1868) was a remarkable cowboy, Indian trader, hunter, guide and scout in his own right. Chisholm's father, a Scotsman, married Chisholm's mother, a Cherokee in Tennessee. Chisholm came with his mother to future Oklahoma in the early 1820's from their home in Polk County, Tennessee. Fluent in 14 different Indian dialects, Chisholm made his money trading product with Indians in Indian Territory. However, during the Civil War, he stayed in Wichita (Kansas) with his good friend
Black Beaver. After the war was over, Chisholm asked Black Beaver the best route to go back to Chisholm's trading post on the North Canadian River (future Oklahoma City).
Black Beaver responded, "Follow the trail I blazed with the Union troops four years ago." Chisholm followed that trail. It was
Black Beaver who had pointed out the water holes in 1861. It was
Black Beaver who had marked the river crossings to avoid the quicksand. Chisholm followed this trail. When cattle drovers from Texas followed the same trail beginning in 1867, they called it Longhorn I-One, a name initially applied to the entire trail, from deep in the heart of Texas to the Kansas railheads. After Jesse died in March 4, 1868, near Geary, Oklahoma the Longhorn I-One trail was renamed the Chisholm Trail in his honor. Without detracting from the remarkableness of Jesse Chisholm, the trail should have been named
Black Beaver's Trail from the very beginning.
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Wade with Black Beaver's family |
Black Beaver moved back to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) after the Civil War and rebuilt his house, replanted his crops, and reunited with his family after a long absence.
Black Beaver was not fully reimbursed by the government for his services in guiding the Union army out of Indian Territory. His financial loss was $20,000 - a vast sum in his day. The U.S. government, after forceful urging by Colonel Emory, gave
Black Beaver $5,000 for his services. In
Black Beaver's later years he converted to faith Christ and became a Baptist preacher among the Indians. A direct descendant of
Tamanend,
Black Beaver was the keeper of the original
Great Treaty which William Penn had signed and given to Tamanend (or Tammany), the Chief of the Delawares in 1682, the first treaty between white man and Indians. Before Black Beaver's death, a newspaper reporter asked him if he had any regrets guiding the Union Troops north out of Indian Territory in 1861.
Black Beaver paused, then said,
"The only regret I have is that when the Confederates burned my home, the Great Treaty which I kept above my mantle was destroyed." Black Beaver died May 8, 1880, at his home on the outskirts of present-day Anadarko, Oklahoma
On August 10, 1975, the United States military exhumed the body of
Black Beaver and with full military honors,
reburied Black Beaver on the grounds of
U.S. Army Military Post Fort Sill, Oklahoma. As
Black Beaver's coffin was lowered into the ground, a 21-gun salute fired. Then,
Lieutenant General David Ott, base commander, gave a moving tribute to
Black Beaver's legacy, closing with these words:
"It is with a great deal of pride that Sill accepts Chief Black Beaver."
Unfortunately, the name
Black Beaver is mostly unknown to Americans. Were the Chisholm Trail properly named,
Black Beaver's contributions to our nation's heritage would be front and center.