The Grattan Massacre (or Grattan Fight) of 19 August 1854 was the incident that sparked the First Sioux War. Lt. Grattan demanded the Brule Sioux surrender a warrior accused of killing a Mormon emigrant's cow. Grattan opened fire, mortally wounding Chief Conquering Bear; the Sioux annihilated the entire 30-man detachment. The Army responded with Harney's 1855 punitive campaign. The Grattan incident established the cycle of demand-resistance-escalation that defined US-Sioux relations for the next four decades.
The Indian Wars encompass more than three centuries of armed conflict between the United States government, American settlers, and Indigenous nations — from the Powhatan Wars of the 1620s through the final Plains campaigns of the late 19th century. The eastern conflicts — King Philip's War (1675–1676), the Tuscarora War (1711–1715), and the Creek and Seminole Wars — largely ended organized Indigenous resistance east of the Mississippi by the 1840s. On the Great Plains, the Sioux Wars (1854–1890), Red River War (1874–1875), and Nez Perce War (1877) followed the displacement wrought by the transcontinental railroad and the near-extinction of the American bison — an estimated 30 to 60 million animals reduced to fewer than 1,000 by 1890. The Ghost Dance religious movement and the massacre at Wounded Knee (December 29, 1890), in which US cavalry killed approximately 250 Lakota men, women, and children, marked the effective end of armed resistance. The Dawes Act (1887) allotted reservation land to individual families, opening millions of acres to white settlement and reducing Indigenous landholdings by about two-thirds over the following decades.
All 30 US soldiers killed including Grattan; Chief Conquering Bear mortally wounded
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