The Black Hawk Indian War was the longest
and most destructive conflict between pioneer immigrants
and Native Americans in Utah History. The traditional
date of the war's commencement is 9 April 1865 but tensions
had been mounting for years. On that date bad feelings
were transformed into violence when a handful of Utes
and Mormon frontiersmen met in Manti, Sanpete County,
to settle a dispute over some cattle killed and consumed
by starving Indians. An irritated (and apparently inebriated)
Mormon lost his temper and violently jerked a young
chieftain from his horse. The insulted Indian delegation,
which included a dynamic young Ute named Black Hawk,
abruptly left, promising retaliation. The threats were
not idle - for over the course of the next few days
Black Hawk and other Utes killed five Mormons and escaped
to the mountains with hundreds of stolen cattle. Naturally,
scores of hungry warriors and their families flocked
to eat "Mormon beef" and to support Black Hawk, who
was suddenly hailed as a war chief.
Encouraged by his success and increasing
power, Black Hawk continued his forays, stealing more
than two thousand head of stock and killing approximately
twenty-five more whites that year. The young Ute by
no means had the support of all of the Indians of Utah,
but he succeeded in uniting factions of the Ute, Paiute,
and Navajo tribes into a very loose confederacy bent
on plundering Mormons throughout the territory. Cattle
were the main objectives of Black Hawk's offensives
but travelers, herdsmen, and settlers were massacred
when it was convenient. Contemporary estimates indicate
that as many as seventy whites were killed during the
conflict.
The years 1865 to 1867 were by far
the most intense of the conflict. Latter-day Saints
considered themselves in a state of open warfare. They
built scores of forts and deserted dozens of settlements
while hundreds of Mormon militiamen chased their illusive
adversaries through the wilderness with little success.
Requests for federal troops went unheeded for eight
years. Unable to distinguish "guilty" from "friendly"
tribesmen, frustrated Mormons at times indiscriminately
killed Indians, including women and children.
In the fall of 1867 Black Hawk made
peace with the Mormons. Without his leadership the Indian
forces, which never operated as a combined front, fragmented
even further. The war's intensity decreased and a treaty
of peace was signed in 1868. Intermittent raiding and
killing, however, continued until 1872 when 200 federal
troops were finally ordered to step in.
The Black Hawk War erupted as a result
of the pressures white expansion brought to Native American
populations. White settlement of Utah altered crucial
ecosystems and helped destroy Indian subsistence patterns
which caused starvation. Those who did not starve often
succumbed to European diseases. Contemporary sources
indicate that Indian populations in Utah in the 1860s
were plummeting at frightening rates. White efforts
to establish reservations contributed additional pressures.
These conditions were almost universal
among western Indians during the period, and in this
sense the war can be viewed as an expression of the
general Indian unrest and warfare that dominated the
trans-Mississippi West during the 1860s. Similar conflicts
also occurred during the decade between Indians and
non-Mormon settlers in each of Utah's neighboring territories.
These confrontations, however, were quickly (and brutally)
put down by federal troops; however, the mounting crusade
against polygamy and lingering "Utah War" mentalities
made the situation different in Utah. The Black Hawk
War was unique among the era's western Indian wars in
that the antipathy that existed between the United States
government and the LDS Church provided Utah's natives
with the opportunity to pursue their hostile activities
for an extended period of time without incurring the
swift and destructive military reprisals suffered by
other groups. Not surprisingly, the war ended almost
without incident when federal troops were finally ordered
to engage the Indians in 1872.
John A. Peterson