Kit Carson
Flash
back 151 years to February 1863.
At
that time Kit Carson was a bona fide American hero. It’s right there in Herman
Melville’s Moby Dick: frontiersman,
mountain man, Indian fighter. He was also a hero of the Mexican-American War,
“Father Kit” to his Ute and Apache Indians on his Agency, fictional hero-savior
to any number of innocent women and children in distress in the 19th
Century “Blood and Thunder” dime novels, and loving Taos father and husband to,
over time, three wives, two of whom were Cheyenne Indians.
John
M. Chivington was a Methodist Minister celebrated for his role in turning the
tide against the Texans in the Civil War Battle of Glorieta in New Mexico
Territory, and then helping the citizens of Denver City and the ranchers along
the south fork of the Platte River fend off raiding Cheyenne Indians.
On
the other hand, many of the Cheyenne warriors harassed farmers and settlers,
while the Navajo Indians---the Dine---were friendless throughout the West.
Severely and serially ill-treated by the Spaniards in the preceding centuries,
the Navajos evolved into a civilization that discriminated against no one in
robbing, pillaging, murdering, and enslaving women and children. The Dine
succeeded in the seemingly impossible: uniting Whites, New Mexicans, Pueblo
Indians, Cheyenne, Utes, Mexicans, and all manner of Apache tribes in their
hatred of marauding Navajo warriors. Even the Navajo headsmen, when confronted
with the opportunity to bring peace, admitted that it was beyond their power to
stop their young men from raiding. They essentially responded to attempts by
the U.S. Army to enlist their support with the 19th Century
equivalent of “Kids today!”
What
about today? The general view of the Navajo today is one of a venerable,
peaceful Native American culture. A spiritual nation inhabiting their reservation
on their native lands in northern Arizona. A people that, to this day, largely
view Kit Carson as a genocidal murderer of innocent Navajo. And the Cheyenne,
astonishingly only around 2,500 people at their peak while fighting the whites?
The Cheyenne are arguably viewed as one of the great nomadic tribes of the
Plains, begrudgingly held by their opponents as maybe the greatest cavalry
ever, and today as a positive force for Native American cultures.
And,
if asked to name great American frontiersman, very few Americans get to Kit
Carson’s name, even after mentioning Lewis and Clark, Davey Crockett, Buffalo Bill
Cody, and maybe Jim Bridger. And virtually nobody has anything good to say
about the despicable John Chivington.
What
happened during the intervening 150 years to bring about this 180-degree change?
My
first introduction to the legend of Kit Carson was by a young Navajo guide on a
private tour of Canyon de Chelly. He took me to a medium-high, cylindrical hill
covered with brush and small trees deep in the canyon and said, “That’s where
Kit Carson brought the Navajo women, children, and elderly and massacred them.”
Years later, a friend told me of his
tour of the Canyon and the story he’d
been told of the massacre at that same spot. But his guide’s version was that
the culprits were the Spaniards, centuries before Kit Carson. And then I read
Hampton Sides wonderful Blood and Thunder.
That book launched me into research into the history of the Southwest. A
passage in it inspired me to write my own novel, Where They Bury You, Sunstone Press, a murder mystery based on the
actual 1863 murder of Carson’s U.S. Marshal.
Six
or seven generations of Navajo oral history about the, in fact, horrible 1860’s
“Long Walk” to Bosque Redondo has left many, if not the majority, of living
Navajo believing that Carson was responsible.
General James Henry Carleton
The actual
fact is that Bosque Redondo was the misguided vision and policy of one General
James Henry Carleton, head of the Union Army in the Territories. When the Civil
War battles ended in the New Mexico and Arizona Territories in 1862, the Navajo
and Mescalero Apaches continued raiding and killing, and, in the case of the
Navajo, enslaving the New Mexican people and tribes. Carleton decided the only answer
was to round them up and deport them to Bosque Redondo, a totally inappropriate
section of land along the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico.
Carson
objected to the policy as untenable and tried to retire to his family and his Ute
and Jicarilla Apache Agency. But Carleton insisted that the famous frontiersman
carry out his last military orders.
First,
Carson induced the Mescalero to surrender and delivered them to Bosque Redondo.
The
Navajo turned out to be a bigger challenge. They simply vanished into the
deserts and canyons of their homeland. Carson, frustrated by his inability to
find the Navajo and their previous refusals to stop raiding and killing the
other neighboring tribes and New Mexicans, implemented a scorched earth policy
throughout the Dine homeland. It took nine months, but the Navajo people began
trickling in and surrendering. Carson, objecting to the 9,000 person four
hundred mile walk without adequate provisions, returned home to Taos for
several months. He then insisted on being the Indian Agent at Bosque Redondo in
a failed attempt to help the Navajo adjust to their new home.
Carleton’s
Bosque Redondo was a colossal failure. The Mescalero just up and left one night
in 1865 to return to what continues to be their home near Ruidoso, New Mexico.
The Navajo negotiated their departure and walked the four hundred miles back
home in June 1868, one month after the 55 year old Carson died in Taos.
At
the time, General Carleton was blamed for the failure and, in 1878, returned to
his Texas home to die in relative obscurity. The Navajo, though, have never
stopped blaming Carson for their hardships and deaths. Today, the Navajo story
and memory of Carson’s culpability resonates better in the public American culture,
while the numerous Navajo depredations and Carleton’s miserable failure have
long faded into history. In contrast to modern New Mexicans, some modern Native
American tribes still do retain a very
negative cultural memory of the Navajo history.
Justifiable
or not, reaction to the Navajo oral tradition had caused Carson to lose his
chance to be remembered alongside Davy Crockett and Buffalo Bill Cody and Lewis
and Clark as a first string All-American legend.
John Chivington
Chivington,
for his part, until recently had been celebrated for over a century by
Coloradans for his part in defeating the Cheyenne at the Battle of Sand Creek.
That “battle” took place one hundred fifty years ago last month. Over the
recent decades, historians, Native Americans, and Chivington’s own family have
more accurately portrayed the “battle” as it in fact was, namely the massacre
of innocent women and children.
Black Kettle
How
Carson actually felt about the Indians is best expressed by Carson himself
about Chivington. The Cheyenne under Black Kettle had disarmed and relocated
their village at Chivington and Governor Evans’ direction. While their warriors
were out hunting, the truly despicable Methodist Minister and commander of the
Colorado Volunteers massacred and mutilated the defenseless elderly, women, and
children of the village. Carson was asked to testify at the resulting Congressional
inquiry. He testified:
“Jis to think of that dog Chivington and his dirty
hounds, up thar at Sand Creek. His men shot down squaws, and blew the brains
out of little innocent children. You call sich soldiers Christians, do ye? And
Indians savages? What der yer 'spose our Heavenly Father, who made both them
and us, thinks of these things?
“I tell you what, I don't like a hostile red skin any
more than you do. And when they are hostile, I've fought 'em, hard as any man.
But I never yet drew a bead on a squaw or papoose, and I despise the man who
would.”
It
is said that the winners write the history books. But it is often more
complicated than that. Respect and pride should, and does, go out to the
surviving, constructive cultures of both the Navajo and Cheyenne Indians.
Chivington is now properly remembered for the horrific person he was. The public
jury is still evolving on Kit Carson. The final chapter may not yet have been
written. We’ll see.
Carson
and Chivington figure prominently in my historical fiction novel, “Where They
Bury You,” 2013, Sunstone Press.
Chivington,
Black Kettle, and George Armstrong Custer carry the story in the sequel, “Chief
of Thieves,” following the survivors of the first novel from 1863 Colorado to
June 25, 1876 at the Little Bighorn. “Chief of Thieves,” Sunstone Press, is
coming out this winter.
I’m
not hiding, and can be found at:
“Where
They Bury You” can be purchased at http://www.amazon.com/Where-They-Bury-You-Novel/dp/0865349398/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=1-1&qid=1389914377
An
earlier discussion of some of these subjects can be found both on my blog and
on Andrea Downings’s: http://andreadowning.com/2014/01/30/kit-carson-great-american-hero-or-villain-of-navajo-history/#more-903
. Thank you, Andrea.
History may never be a balanced telling. The emotions, dreams, and humans involved make it difficult. Still, we need to strive to tell it as best we can, all sides of the stories offered to the best of our research. Even then, history is filtered through the lens of our own experiences.
ReplyDeleteWishing you the best on your endeavors, they sound like a worthy undertaking, for like today, our lives are that mix of fact and myth. Doris
Thanks for this very constructive comment. Sorry to take so long to get back to you.
DeleteOne needs to remember that life was very hard for all these people in the 19th Century West and their perspectives were often valid, while conflicting. Unfairly, the victors usually get to write the history, especially when they feel their civilization is more "advance." Balanced accounts is a commendable, but difficult, goal.
Best to you as well.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Steve, great perspective. Chivington was a vile individual, the antithesis of what was and is expected of a leader. The term "coward" in the dictionary should carry a slash with the name "Chivington" after it. Carson’s testimony created Chivington’s true and lasting profile.
ReplyDeleteWe definitely agree. Thank heavens the truth (at least this time) will out.
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