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The May 17, 1858 Battle of Pine Creek


By 1858, the Americans were well established in Washington and concentrating on the non treaty Indians (the Iron Confederation) to force them to capitulate. They were continuously sending their brave warriors out to fight the invading whites, who were settlers and miners who were being driven by great greed to illegally settle down on the land of the Iron Confederation of eastern Washington. In central and western Oregon and Washington, the Iron Confederation had already been forcefully subdued by the invading Americans, which forced the Anishinabe, Assiniboine and Cree to either accept the American terms or flee eastward into eastern Oregon and Washington, Idaho or Canada. To protect their settlers the Americans again raised numerous soldiers up to wage war on the Iron Confederation of eastern Washington, to attempt to subdue them. After the American militiamen were raised and organized, they went about searching for the Indians but were incapable of finding the target of their goals, which means the Anishinabe, Assiniboine and Cree were using the nearby mountains of northeastern Washington as refuge from the Americans, and to send their warriors out to raid the invading Americans. After the American military force searched the northeastern Washington terrain for their enemy, they gradually withdrew, but it eventually led to the Iron Confederation agreeing to once again send their warriors out to raid their white enemy. In central Oregon and Washington, the Anishinabe, Assiniboine and Cree fled into the Blue Mountains and Wallowa Mountains, and many into north central Idaho’s mountainous terrain, to escape from their American enemy. Most probably fled into Idaho.
On May 6, 1858 an American military force of 160 soldiers and their Indian allies, under the command of Major Edward J. Steptoe, left the Walla Walla region. Near Rosalia, Washington they encountered an large force of warriors from the Iron Confederation (around 1,000) but decided to withdraw from them after negotiating, to request for more reinforcements. That number of 1,000 warriors hints at the population of the Iron Confederation of that region of Washington numbering around 10,000 or more. They originally lived in central, southern and western Washington but were driven out by the whites who used mainly Germ Warfare to wage war on them. On the morning of May 17 the Indians struck hard at the better armed white soldiers (they had the latest European guns which were immensely superior to the older European guns and howitzers), which led to the Americans agreeing for an retreat to a former camp of their from a couple days previous. The larger number of Indian warriors was instrumental during the early phase of this battle.
On their retreat, the Americans reached the area which is present day Rosalia, Washington then set up an perimeter to defend themselves, and ordered their howitzers to be prepared for use. Hot on their trail, the warriors from the Iron Confederation caught up to the Americans then attempted to attack the Americans, but the Americans superior weapons prevented the Indians from forcing them to capitulate. With the ensuing night the Americans agreed to flee from the intense battle against the far more numerous Indian warriors, and after finding a location among the surrounding Indian warriors which they felt offered them a good opportunity of escaping, they took it. Although this was an Iron Confederation victory it was a costly one. Indian casualties were estimated at 50 to 100, with either 9 killed or 40 killed. American casualties were around 20 with 7 killed. The high Indian casualties were the result of the superior weapons of the whites. After this battle the Americans lost, it made them all the more enraged and another military expedition was organized soon afterwards, to attempt to force the Iron Confederation to capitulate.





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