The Reynolds Campaign on Powder River
by J. W. Vaughn
Published by: University of Oklahoma Press
Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press
268 Pages | 6 x 9 | 17 b&w illus., 1 map
$21.95
On March 17, 1876, against the backdrop of the frenzied gold rush to the Black Hills, Colonel Joseph J. Reynolds led a now obscure attack on a Cheyenne Indian village. Although it was considered a military failure and lacked the renown of the Rosebud and the Little Bighorn battles, the engagement marked the decision of the U.S. government to force a final showdown with the Indians.
The author scoured the battlefield with a metal detector and examined the thousand pages of testimony in the court-martial proceedings that followed the retreat. He has reconstructed the battle in detail and placed the campaign in perspective as the immediate cause of the Indian Wars that followed. In presenting the point of view of both soldiers and Indians, he has ascertained the facts surrounding this misunderstood engagement.
The author scoured the battlefield with a metal detector and examined the thousand pages of testimony in the court-martial proceedings that followed the retreat. He has reconstructed the battle in detail and placed the campaign in perspective as the immediate cause of the Indian Wars that followed. In presenting the point of view of both soldiers and Indians, he has ascertained the facts surrounding this misunderstood engagement.
J. W. Vaughn was a Colorado attorney whose avocation was research on battlefields where U.S. troops had engaged Sioux and Cheyenne Indians, research employing contemporary maps, modern aerial maps, and a metal detector. He also authored The Battle of Platte Bridge and Indian Fights: New Facts on Seven Encounters.
“J. W. Vaughn places a magnifying glass upon the campaign of March 1876, which brought about the opening engagement in the Great Sioux War. . . . Indian War buffs will be delighted.”—Plains Anthropologist
“J. J. Reynolds has won a lasting victory over Indian fighter George Crook in J. W. Vaughn’s interesting book. Vaughn not only lets the facts speak for themselves, but provides firsthand evidence by searching the 1876 battlefield with metal detectors to identify and measure disputed troop positions. Vaughn knows the battlefield better than the men who fought there.”—Pacific Historical Review