On 29 January 1863 Colonel Patrick Edward
Connor and about 200 California Volunteers attacked
a Northwestern Shoshoni winter village located at the
confluence of Beaver Creek and Bear River, twelve miles
west and north of the village of Franklin in Cache Valley
and just a short distance north of the present Utah-Idaho
boundary line. This band of 450 Shoshoni under war chief
Bear Hunter had watched uneasily as Mormon farmers had
moved into the Indian home of Cache Valley in the spring
of 1860 and now, three years later, had appropriated
all the land and water of the verdant mountain valley.
The young men of the tribe had struck back at the white
settlers; this prompted Utah territorial officials to
call on Connor's troops to punish the Northwestern band.
Before the colonel led his men from Camp Douglas at
Salt Lake City north to Bear River, he had announced
that he intended to take no prisoners.
As the troopers approached the Indian
camp in the early morning darkness at 6:00 a.m., they
found the Shoshoni warriors entrenched behind the ten-foot
eastern embankment of Beaver Creek (afterwards called
Battle Creek). The Volunteers suffered most of their
twenty-three casualties in their first charge across
the open plain in front of the Shoshoni village. Colonel
Connor soon changed tactics, which resulted in a complete
envelopment of the Shoshoni camp by the soldiers who
began firing on the Indian men, women, and children
indiscriminately. By 8:00 a.m., the Indian men were
out of ammunition, and the last two hours of the battle
became a massacre as the soldiers used their revolvers
to shoot down all the Indians they could find in the
dense willows of the camp.
Approximately 250 Shoshoni were slain,
including 90 women and children. After the slaughter
ended, some of the undisciplined soldiers went through
the Indian village raping women and using axes to bash
in the heads of women and children who were already
dying of wounds. Chief Bear Hunter was killed along
with sub-chief, Lehi. The troops burned the seventy-five
Indian lodges, recovered 1,000 bushels of wheat and
flour, and appropriated 175 Shoshoni horses. While the
troops cared for their wounded and took their dead back
to Camp Douglas for burial, the Indians' bodies were
left on the field for the wolves and crows.
Although the Mormon settlers in Cache
Valley expressed their gratitude for "the movement of
Col. Connor as an intervention of the Almighty" in their
behalf, the Bear River Massacre has been overlooked
in the history of the American West chiefly because
it occurred during the Civil War when a more important
struggle was taking place in the East. Of the six major
Indian massacres in the Far West, from Bear River in
1863 to Wounded Knee in 1890, the Bear River affair
resulted in the most victims, an event which today deserves
greater attention than the mere sign presently at the
site.
Brigham D. Madsen