(Northwestern Bands)
At the time of major white penetration
of the Great Basin and the Snake River areas in the
1840s, there were seven distinct Shoshoni groups. The
Eastern Shoshoni, numbering about 2,000 under their
famous Chief Washakie, occupied the region from the
Wind River Mountains to Fort Bridger and astride the
Oregon Trail. Their descendants today live on the Wind
River Reservation. Two other divisions having similar
cultures were the Goshute Shoshoni and the Western Shoshoni.
The former, about 900 in number, lived in the valleys
and mountains west and southwest of Great Salt Lake,
with the remnants of their bands located in and around
the small settlement of Ibapah, Utah, today. A much
more numerous people, perhaps 8,000 strong, the Western
Shoshoni occupied what is today northern and western
Nevada. There were as many as eleven major bands distributed
from the present Utah-Nevada border to Winnemucca on
the west. Their descendants today live on the Duck Valley
Reservation or scattered around the towns of northern
Nevada from Wells to Winnemucca.
The four remaining groups of Shoshoni
are usually listed under the general name of the "Northern
Shoshoni." One of these groups, the Fort Hall Shoshoni
of about 1,000 people, lived together with a band of
about 800 Northern Paiute known in history as the Bannock
at the confluence of the Portneuf and Snake rivers.
A second division, the Lemhi, numbering some 1,800 people,
ranged from the Beaverhead country in southwestern Montana
westward to the Salmon River area, which was their main
homeland. In western Idaho, along the Boise and Bruneau
rivers, a third section of about 600 Shoshoni followed
a life centered around salmon as their basic food. Finally,
the fourth and final division of 1,500 people, the Northwestern
Shoshoni, resided in the valleys of northern Utah--especially
Weber Valley and Cache Valley--and along the eastern
and northern shores of Great Salt Lake.
There were three major bands of Northwestern
Shoshoni at the time the first Mormon pioneers began
settling northern Utah. Chief Little Soldier headed
the misnamed "Weber Ute" group of about 400, who occupied
Weber Valley down to its entry into the Great Salt Lake.
Chief Pocatello commanded a similar number of Shoshoni,
who ranged from Grouse Creek in northwestern Utah eastward
along the northern shore of Great Salt Lake to the Bear
River. The third division of about 450 people, under
Chief Bear Hunter, resided in Cache Valley and along
the lower reaches of the Bear River. Bear Hunter was
regarded as the principal leader of the Northwestern
Shoshoni, being designated by Mormon settlers as the
war chief who held equal status with Washakie when the
Eastern and Northwestern groups met in their annual
get-together each summer in Round Valley, just north
of Bear Lake.
By the 1840s, the Northwestern Shoshoni
had adopted most of the Plains Culture, using the horse
for mobility and the hunting of game. Chief Pocatello
especially led his band on numerous hunts for buffalo
in the Wyoming area. Pocatello also gained notoriety
as a reckless and fearless marauder along the Oregon
and California trails. The Wasatch Mountains provided
small game for the Northwestern bands, but of even greater
importance were the grass seeds and plant roots which
grew in abundance in the valleys and along the hillsides
of northern Utah before the cattle and sheep of the
white man denuded these rich areas and left many of
the Shoshoni tribes in a starving condition and to suffer
under the ignominy of being called "Digger Indians."
Before white penetration, the Great Basin and Snake
River Shoshoni had been among the most ecologically
efficient and well-adapted Indians of the American West.
The tragic transformation for the Northwestern
Shoshoni to a life of privation and want came with the
occupation by Mormon farmers of their traditional homeland.
The white pioneers slowly moved northward along the
eastern shores of Great Salt Lake until by 1862 they
had taken over Cache Valley, home of Bear Hunter's band.
In addition, California-bound emigrants had wasted Indian
food supplies as the travelers followed the Salt Lake
Road around the lake and across the salt desert to Pilot
Peak. The discovery of gold in Montana in 1862 further
added to the traffic along the route. The young men
of Bear Hunter's tribe began to strike back in late
1862, raiding Mormon cattle herds and attacking mining
parties traveling to and from Montana.
The Indian aggression came to an end
on 29 January 1863. On the morning of that day, Colonel
Patrick Edward Connor and about 200 California Volunteers
from Camp Douglas in Salt Lake City assaulted the winter
camp of Bear Hunter's Northwestern group of 450 men,
women, and children on Beaver Creek at its confluence
with the Bear River, some twelve miles west of the Mormon
village of Franklin in Cache Valley. As a result of
the four-hour carnage that ensued, twenty-three soldiers
lost their lives and at least 250 Shoshoni were slaughtered
by the troops, including ninety women and children in
what is now called the Bear River Massacre. Bear Hunter
was killed, and the remnants of his tribe under Sagwitch
and the chiefs of nine other Northwestern bands signed
the Treaty of Box Elder at Brigham City, Utah, on 30
July 1863, bringing peace to this Shoshoni region.
After the signing of the Box Elder
agreement, government officials attempted to get all
of the Northwestern Shoshoni to move to the newly founded
Fort Hall Indian Reservation in Idaho. After several
years of receiving their government annuities at Corinne,
Utah, near the mouth of the Bear River, the Indians
bands finally gave up their homelands in Utah and settled
at Fort Hall, where their descendants live today. As
a result of their move to Idaho, the Northwestern Shoshoni
have been lost to Utah history although for centuries
they had lived in northern Utah. It is time for Utah
historians to make the Shoshoni a prominent part of
the state's history along with the Navajo, Paiute, and
Ute tribes.
Brigham D. Madsen