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Crook, George, 1829-1889.
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Crook, George, 1829-1890
Crook, George, 1829-1889.
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Crook, George, 1829-1889.
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- Crook, George, 1829-1889.
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- Crook, George, 1829-1889.
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Crook, George, 1829-1890
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Crook
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George
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1829-1890
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890
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Major general, U.S. Army; served during Civil War and in Arizona and New Mexico, where in addition to defending settlers, defended Apaches from illegal squatters and miners; known as America's most successful Indian fighter, but also known for his fair and honest dealings with the Indians.
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- BiogHist
- BiogHist
Crook was born to Thomas and Elizabeth Matthews Crook on a farm near Taylorsville, Montgomery County, Ohio (near Dayton). Nominated to the United States Military Academy by Congressman Robert Schenck, he graduated in 1852, ranking near the bottom of his class.
He was assigned to the 4th U.S. infantry as brevet second lieutenant, serving in California, 1852–61. He served in Oregon and northern California, alternately protecting or fighting against several Native American tribes. He commanded the Pitt River Expedition of 1857 and, in one of several engagements, was severely wounded by an Indian arrow. He established a fort in Northeast California that was later named in his honor; and later, Fort Ter-Waw in what is now Klamath Glen, California.
During his years of service in California and Oregon, Crook extended his prowess in hunting and wilderness skills, often accompanying and learning from Indians whose languages he learned. These wilderness skills led one of his aides to liken him to Daniel Boone, and more importantly, provided a strong foundation for his abilities to understand, navigate and use Civil War landscapes to Union advantage.
Crook was promoted to first lieutenant in 1856, and to captain in 1860. He was ordered east and in 1861, with the beginning of the American Civil War, was made colonel of the 36th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
He married Mary Tapscott Dailey, from Virginia.
When the Civil War broke out, Crook accepted a commission as Colonel of the 36th Ohio Infantry and led it on duty in western Virginia. He was in command of the 3rd Brigade in the District of the Kanawha where he was wounded in a small fight at Lewisburg. Crook returned to command of his regiment during the Northern Virginia Campaign. He and his regiment were part of John Pope's headquarters escort at the Second Battle of Bull Run.
After the Union Army's defeat at Second Bull Run, Crook and his regiment were attached to the Kanawha Division at the start of the Maryland Campaign. On September 12 Crook's brigade commander, Augustus Moor, was captured and Crook assumed command of the 2nd Brigade, Kanawha Division which had been attached to the IX Corps. Crook led his brigade at the Battle of South Mountain and near Burnside's Bridge at the Battle of Antietam. He was promoted to the rank of brigadier general on September 7, 1862. During these early battles he developed a lifelong friendship with one of his subordinates, Col. Rutherford B. Hayes of the 23rd Ohio Infantry.
Following Antietam, General Crook assumed command of the Kanawha Division. His division was detached from the IX Corps for duty in the Department of the Ohio. Before long Crook was assigned to command an infantry brigade in the Army of the Cumberland. This brigade became the 3rd Brigade, 4th Division, XIV Corps, which he led at the Battle of Hoover's Gap. In July he assumed command of the 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps in the Army of the Cumberland. He fought at the battle of Chickamauga and was in pursuit of Joseph Wheeler during the Chattanooga Campaign.
In February 1864, Crook returned to command the Kanawha Division, which was now officially designated the 3rd Division of the Department of West Virginia.
To open the spring campaign of 1864, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant ordered a Union advance on all fronts, minor as well as major. Grant sent for Brigadier General Crook, in winter quarters at Charleston, West Virginia, and ordered him to attack the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Richmond's primary link to Knoxville and the southwest, and to destroy the Confederate salt works at Saltville, Virginia.
The 35-year-old Crook reported to army headquarters where the commanding general explained the mission in person. Grant instructed Crook to march his force, the Kanawha Division, against the railroad at Dublin, Virginia, 140 miles (230 km) south of Charleston. At Dublin he would put the railroad out of business and destroy Confederate military property. He was then to destroy the railroad bridge over New River, a few miles to the east. When these actions were accomplished, along with the destruction of the salt works, Crook was to march east and join forces with Major General Franz Sigel, who meanwhile was to be driving south up the Shenandoah Valley.
After long dreary months of garrison duty, the men were ready for action. Crook did not reveal the nature or objective of their mission, but everyone sensed that something important was brewing. "All things point to early action", the commander of the second brigade, Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes, noted in his diary.
On April 29, 1864, the Kanawha Division marched out of Charleston and headed south. Crook sent a force under Brigadier General William W. Averell westward towards Saltville, then pushed on towards Dublin with nine infantry regiments, seven cavalry regiments, and 15 artillery pieces, a force of about 6,500 men organized into three brigades. The West Virginia countryside was beautiful that spring, but the mountainous terrain made the march a difficult undertaking. The way was narrow and steep, and spring rains slowed the march as tramping feet churned the roads into mud. In places, Crook's engineers had to build bridges across wash-outs before the army could advance.
The column reached Fayette on May 2, and then passed through Raleigh Court House and Princeton. On the night of May 8, the division camped at Shannon's Bridge, Virginia, 10 miles (16 km) north of Dublin.
The Confederates at Dublin soon learned the enemy was approaching. Their commander, Colonel John McCausland, prepared to evacuate his 1100 men, but before transportation could arrive, a courier from Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins informed McCausland that the two of them were ordered by General John C. Breckinridge to stop Crook's advance. The combined forces of Jenkins and McCausland amounted to 2,400 men. Jenkins, the senior officer, took command.
Breaking camp on the morning of May 9, Crook moved his men south to the top of a spur of Cloyd's Mountain. Before the Union troops lay a precipitous, densely wooded slope with a meadow about 400 yards wide at the bottom. On the other side of the meadow, the land rose in another spur of the mountain, and there Jenkins' rebels waited behind hastily erected fortifications.
Crook dispatched the third brigade under Colonel Carr B. White to work its way through the woods and deliver a flank attack on the rebel right. At 11 am, he sent Hayes' first brigade and Colonel Horatio G. Sickel's second brigade down the slope to the edge of the meadow, where they were to launch a frontal assault on the Confederates as soon as they heard the sound of White's guns.
The slope before them was so steep that the officers had to dismount and descend on foot. Crook stationed himself with Hayes' brigade, which was to lead the assault. After a long, anxious wait, Hayes at last heard cannon fire off to his left and led his men at a slow double time out onto the meadow and into the rebels' musketry and artillery fire, which Crook called "galling". Their pace quickened as they neared the other side, but just before the up-slope they came to a waist-deep creek. The barrier caused little delay and the Yankee infantry stormed up the hill and engaged the rebel defenders at close range.
The only man to have trouble with the creek was General Crook. Dismounted, he still wore his high riding boots, and as he stepped into the stream, the boots filled with water and bogged him down. Nearby soldiers grabbed their commander's arms and hauled him to the other side.
Vicious hand-to-hand fighting erupted as the Yankees reached the crude rebel defenses. The Southerners gave way, tried to re-form, then broke and retreated up and over the hill towards Dublin.
The Yankees rounded up rebel prisoners by the hundreds and seized General Jenkins, who had fallen wounded. At this point the discipline of the Union men wavered, and there was no organized pursuit of the fleeing enemy. General Crook was unable to provide leadership as the excitement and exertion had sent him into a faint.
Colonel Hayes kept his head and organized a force of about 500 men from the soldiers milling about the site of their victory. With his improvised command, he set off, closely pressing the rebels.
While the fight at Cloyd's Mountain was going on, a train pulled into the Dublin station and disgorged 500 fresh troops of General John Hunt Morgan's cavalry, which had just diverted Averell away from Saltville. The fresh troops hastened towards the battlefield, where they soon met their compatriots retreating from Cloyd's Mountain. The reinforcements halted the rout, but Colonel Hayes, although ignorant of the strength of the force now before him, immediately ordered his men to "yell like devils" and rush the enemy. Within a few minutes General Crook arrived with the rest of the division, and the defenders broke and ran.
Cloyd's Mountain cost the Union army 688 casualties, while the rebels suffered 538 killed, wounded, and captured.
Unopposed, Crook moved his command into Dublin, where he laid waste to the railroad and the military stores. He then sent a party eastward to tear up the tracks and burn the ties. The next morning the main body set out for their next objective, the New River bridge, a key point on the railroad, a few miles to the east.
The Confederates, now commanded by Colonel McCausland, waited on the east side of the New River to defend the bridge. Crook pulled up on the west bank, and a long, ineffective artillery duel ensued. Seeing that there was little danger from the rebel cannon, Crook ordered the bridge destroyed, and both sides watched in awe as the structure collapsed magnificently into the river. McCausland, without the resources to oppose the Yankees any further, withdrew his battered command to the east.
General Crook, supplies running low in a country not suited for major foraging, now entertained second thoughts about his orders to push on east and join Sigel in the Shenandoah Valley. At Dublin he had intercepted an unconfirmed report that General Robert E. Lee had beaten Grant badly in the Wilderness, which led him to consider whether the Confederate commander might not soon move against Crook with a vastly superior force.
Having accomplished the major part of his mission, destruction of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Crook turned his men north and after another hard march, reached the Union base at Meadow Bluff, West Virginia.
That July Crook assumed command of a small force called the Army of the Kanawha. Crook was defeated at the Second Battle of Kernstown. Nevertheless, he was appointed as a replacement for David Hunter in command of the Department of West Virginia the following day. However Crook did not assume command until August 9. Along with the title of his department Crook added "Army of West Virginia." Crook's army was soon absorbed into Philip H. Sheridan's Army of the Shenandoah and for all practical purposes functioned as a corps in that unit. Although Crook's force kept its official designation as the Army of West Virginia, it was often referred to as the VIII Corps. The official VIII Corps of the Union Army was led by Lew Wallace during this time and its troops were on duty in Maryland and Northern Virginia.
Crook led his corps in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 at the battles of Opequon (Third Winchester), Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Creek. On October 21, 1864, he was promoted to major general of volunteers.
In February 1865 General Crook was captured by Confederate raiders at Cumberland, Maryland, and held as a prisoner of war in Richmond until exchanged a month later. He very briefly returned to command the Department of West Virginia until he took command of a cavalry division in the Army of the Potomac during the Appomattox Campaign. Crook first went into action with his division at the battle of Dinwiddie Court House. He later took a prominent role in the battles of Five Forks, Amelia Springs, Sayler's Creek and Appomattox Court House.
At the end of the Civil War, George Crook received a brevet as major general in the regular army, but reverted to the permanent rank of major. Only days later, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel, serving with the 23rd Infantry on frontier duty in the Pacific Northwest. In 1867, he was appointed head of the Department of the Columbia.
Crook successfully campaigned against the Snake Indians in the 1864-68 Snake War, where he won nationwide recognition. Crook had fought Indians in Oregon before the Civil War. He was assigned to the Pacific Northwest to use new tactics in this war, which had been waged for several years. Crook arrived in Boise to take command on December 11, 1866. The general noticed that the Northern Paiute used the fall, winter and spring seasons to gather food, so he adopted the tactic recommended by a predecessor George B. Currey to attack during the winter. Crook had his cavalry approach the Paiute on foot in attack at their winter camp. As the soldiers drew them in, Crook had them remount; they defeated the Paiute and recovered some stolen livestock.
Crook used Indian scouts as troops as well as to spot enemy encampments. While campaigning in Eastern Oregon during the winter of 1867, Crook's scouts located a Paiute village near the eastern edge of Steens Mountain. After covering all the escape routes, Crook ordered the charge on the village while intending to view the raid from afar, but his horse got spooked and galloped ahead of Crook's forces toward the village. Caught in the crossfire, Crook's horse carried the general through the village without being wounded. The army caused heavy casualties for the Paiute in the battle of Tearass Plain. Crook later defeated a mixed band of Paiute, Pit River, and Modoc at the Battle of Infernal Caverns in Fall River Mills, California.
President Ulysses S. Grant next placed Crook in command of the Arizona Territory. Crook's use of Apache scouts during his Tonto Basin Campaign of the Yavapai War brought him much success in forcing the Yavapai and Tonto Apache onto reservations. Crook's victories during the Yavapai War included the Battle of Salt River Canyon, also known as the Skeleton Cave Massacre, and the Battle of Turret Peak.
In 1873, Crook was appointed brigadier general in the regular army, a promotion that passed over and angered several full colonels next in line.
From 1875 to 1882 and again from 1886 to 1888, Crook was head of the Department of the Platte, with headquarters at Fort Omaha in North Omaha, Nebraska.
On 28 May 1876, Brigadier General George Crook assumed direct command of the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition at Fort Fetterman. Crook had gathered a strong force from his Department of the Platte. Leaving Fort Fetterman on 29 May, the 1,051-man column consisted of 15 companies from the 2d and 3d Cavalry, 5 companies from the 4th and 9th Infantry, 250 mules, and 106 wagons. On 14 June, the column was joined by 261 Shoshone and Crow allies. Based on intelligence reports, Crook ordered his entire force to prepare for a quick march. Each man was to carry only 1 blanket, 100 rounds of ammunition, and 4 days' rations. The wagon train would be left at Goose Creek, and the infantry would be mounted on the pack mules.
On 17 June, Crook's column set out at 0600, marching northward along the south fork of Rosebud Creek. The Crow and Shoshone scouts were particularly apprehensive. Although the column had not yet encountered any sign of Indians, the scouts seemed to sense their presence. The soldiers, particularly the mule-riding infantry, seemed fatigued from the early start and the previous day's 35-mile (56 km) march. Accordingly, Crook stopped to rest his men and animals at 0800 (8 o'clock AM). Although he was deep in hostile territory, Crook made no special dispositions for defense. His troops halted in their marching order. The Cavalry battalions led the column, followed by the battalion of mule-borne foot soldiers, and a provisional company of civilian miners and packers brought up the rear.
The Crow and Shoshone scouts remained alert while the soldiers rested. Several minutes later, the soldiers heard the sound of intermittent gunfire coming from the bluffs to the north. As the intensity of fire increased, a scout rushed into the camp shouting, "Lakota, Lakota!" The Battle of the Rosebud was on. By 0830, the Sioux and Cheyenne had hotly engaged Crook's Indian allies on the high ground north of the main body. Heavily outnumbered, the Crow and Shoshone scouts fell back toward the camp, but their fighting withdrawal gave Crook time to deploy his forces. Rapidly firing soldiers drove off the attackers but used up much of the ammunition meant for use later in the campaign. Low on ammunition and with numerous wounded, the General returned to his post.
Historians debate whether Crook's pressing on could have prevented the killing of the five companies of the 7th Cavalry Regiment led by George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
After the disaster at the Little Bighorn, the U.S. Congress authorized funds to reinforce the Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition. Determined to demonstrate the willingness and capability of the U.S. Army to pursue and punish the Sioux, Crook took to the field. After briefly linking up with General Alfred Terry, military commander of the Dakota Territory, Crook embarked on what came to be known as the grueling and poorly provisioned Horsemeat March, upon which the soldiers were reduced to eating their horses and mules. A party dispatched to Deadwood for supplies came across the village of American Horse the Elder on September 9, 1876. The well-stocked village was attacked and looted in the Battle of Slim Buttes. Crazy Horse led a counter-attack against Crook the next day, but was repulsed by Crook's superior numbers.
In 1879, Crook spoke on behalf of the Ponca tribe and Native American rights during the trial of Standing Bear v. Crook. The federal judge affirmed that Standing Bear had some of the rights of U.S. citizens.
That same year his home at Fort Omaha, now called the General Crook House and considered part of North Omaha, was completed.
Crook was made head of the Department of Arizona and successfully forced some members of the Apache to surrender, but Geronimo continually evaded capture. As a mark of respect, the Apache nicknamed Crook Nantan Lupan, which means "Chief Wolf". In March, 1886, Crook received word that Geronimo would meet him in Cañon de los Embudos, in the Sierra Madre Mountains about 86 miles (138 km) from Fort Bowie. During the three days of negotiations, photographer C. S. Fly took about 15 exposures of the Apache on 8 by 10 inches (200 by 250 mm) glass negatives. One of the pictures of Geronimo with two of his sons standing alongside was made at Geronimo's request. Fly's images are the only existing photographs of Geronimo's surrender. His photos of Geronimo and the other free Apaches, taken on March 25 and 26, are the only known photographs taken of an American Indian while still at war with the United States.
Geronimo, camped on the Mexican side of the border, agreed to Crook's surrender terms. That night, a soldier who sold them whiskey said that his band would be murdered as soon as they crossed the border. Geronimo and 25 of his followers slipped away during the night; their escape cost Crook his command.
Nelson A. Miles replaced Crook in 1886 in command of the Arizona Territory and brought an end to the Apache Wars. He captured Geronimo and the Chiricahua Apache band, and detained the Chiricahua scouts, who had served the U.S. Army, transporting them all as prisoners-of-war to a prison in Florida. (Crook was reportedly furious that the scouts, who had faithfully served the Army, were imprisoned along with the hostile warriors. He sent numerous telegrams protesting their arrest to Washington. They, along with most of Geronimo's band, were forced to spend the next 26 years in captivity at the fort in Florida before they were finally released.)
After years of campaigning in the Indian Wars, Crook won steady promotion back up the ranks to the permanent grade of Major General. President Grover Cleveland placed him in command of the Military Division of the Missouri in 1888.
Crook served in Omaha again as the Commander of the Department of the Platte from 1886 to 1888. While he was there, his portrait was painted by artist Herbert A. Collins.
He spent his last years speaking out against the unjust treatment of his former Indian adversaries. He died suddenly in Chicago in 1890 while serving as commander of the Military Division of the Missouri. Crook was originally buried in Oakland, Maryland. In 1898, Crook's remains were transported to Arlington National Cemetery, where he was reinterred on November 11.
Red Cloud, a war chief of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux), said of Crook, "He, at least, never lied to us. His words gave us hope."
His good friend and Union Army subordinate, future President Rutherford B. Hayes, named one of his sons George Crook Hayes (September 29, 1864 - May 24, 1866), in honor of his commanding officer. The little boy died before his second birthday of scarlet fever.
Crook Counties in Wyoming and Oregon were named for him, as was the town of Crook, Colorado.
"Crook City," an unincorporated place in the Black Hills of South Dakota, was named for his 1876 camp there. Nearby and between Deadwood and Sturgis, South Dakota is Crook Mountain, named for him. Crook City Road passes through there from Whitewood heading toward Deadwood.
Crook Peak in Lake County, Oregon, elevation 7,834 feet (2,388 m), in the Warner Mountains is named after him. It is near where the general set up Camp Warner (1867–1874) in a campaign to subdue the Paiute Indians.
Crook Mountain, a peak in the North Cascades, was named for him.
Cañon Pintado Historic District, 10 miles (16 km) south of Rangely, Colorado, has numerous ancient Fremont culture (0-1300 CE) and Ute petroglyphs, first seen by Europeans in the mid-18th century. One group of carvings has several horses, which locals call "Crook's Brand Site". They claim the horses carry the general's brand. The Ute adopted the horse in the 1600s.
Forest Road 300 in the Coconino National Forest is named the "General Crook Trail." It is a section of the trail which his troops blazed from Fort Verde to Fort Whipple, and on to Fort Apache through central Arizona.
Numerous military references honor him: Fort Crook (1857 – 1869) was an Army post near Fall River Mills, California, used during the Indian Wars. Later during the Civil War, it was used for the defense of San Francisco. It was named for then Lt. Crook by Captain John W. T. Gardiner, 1st Dragoons, as Crook was recovering there from an injury. California State Historical Marker 355 marks the site in Shasta County.
Fort Crook (1891 – 1946) was an Army Depot in Bellevue, Nebraska, first used as a dispatch point for Indian conflicts on the Great Plains. Later it served as airfield for the 61st Balloon Company of the Army Air Corps. It was named for Brig. Gen. Crook due to his many successful Indian campaigns in the west. The site formerly known as Fort Crook is now part of Offutt AFB, Nebraska.
3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division is nicknamed "Greywolf" in his honor, in a variation of his Apache nickname meaning "Chief Wolf".
The General Crook House at Fort Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska is named in his honor, as he was the only Commander of the Department of the Platte to live there. At Fort Huachuca, Crook House on Old Post is named after him as well. The Crook Walk in Arlington National Cemetery is near General Crook's gravesite.
eng
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Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
<p>Crook was born to Thomas and Elizabeth Matthews Crook on a farm near Taylorsville, Montgomery County, Ohio (near Dayton). Nominated to the United States Military Academy by Congressman Robert Schenck, he graduated in 1852, ranking near the bottom of his class.</p>
<p>He was assigned to the 4th U.S. infantry as brevet second lieutenant, serving in California, 1852–61. He served in Oregon and northern California, alternately protecting or fighting against several Native American tribes. He commanded the Pitt River Expedition of 1857 and, in one of several engagements, was severely wounded by an Indian arrow. He established a fort in Northeast California that was later named in his honor; and later, Fort Ter-Waw in what is now Klamath Glen, California.</p>
<p>During his years of service in California and Oregon, Crook extended his prowess in hunting and wilderness skills, often accompanying and learning from Indians whose languages he learned. These wilderness skills led one of his aides to liken him to Daniel Boone, and more importantly, provided a strong foundation for his abilities to understand, navigate and use Civil War landscapes to Union advantage.</p>
<p>Crook was promoted to first lieutenant in 1856, and to captain in 1860. He was ordered east and in 1861, with the beginning of the American Civil War, was made colonel of the 36th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.</p>
<p>He married Mary Tapscott Dailey, from Virginia.</p>
<p>When the Civil War broke out, Crook accepted a commission as Colonel of the 36th Ohio Infantry and led it on duty in western Virginia. He was in command of the 3rd Brigade in the District of the Kanawha where he was wounded in a small fight at Lewisburg. Crook returned to command of his regiment during the Northern Virginia Campaign. He and his regiment were part of John Pope's headquarters escort at the Second Battle of Bull Run.</p>
<p>After the Union Army's defeat at Second Bull Run, Crook and his regiment were attached to the Kanawha Division at the start of the Maryland Campaign. On September 12 Crook's brigade commander, Augustus Moor, was captured and Crook assumed command of the 2nd Brigade, Kanawha Division which had been attached to the IX Corps. Crook led his brigade at the Battle of South Mountain and near Burnside's Bridge at the Battle of Antietam. He was promoted to the rank of brigadier general on September 7, 1862. During these early battles he developed a lifelong friendship with one of his subordinates, Col. Rutherford B. Hayes of the 23rd Ohio Infantry.</p>
<p>Following Antietam, General Crook assumed command of the Kanawha Division. His division was detached from the IX Corps for duty in the Department of the Ohio. Before long Crook was assigned to command an infantry brigade in the Army of the Cumberland. This brigade became the 3rd Brigade, 4th Division, XIV Corps, which he led at the Battle of Hoover's Gap. In July he assumed command of the 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps in the Army of the Cumberland. He fought at the battle of Chickamauga and was in pursuit of Joseph Wheeler during the Chattanooga Campaign.</p>
<p>In February 1864, Crook returned to command the Kanawha Division, which was now officially designated the 3rd Division of the Department of West Virginia.</p>
<p>To open the spring campaign of 1864, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant ordered a Union advance on all fronts, minor as well as major. Grant sent for Brigadier General Crook, in winter quarters at Charleston, West Virginia, and ordered him to attack the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Richmond's primary link to Knoxville and the southwest, and to destroy the Confederate salt works at Saltville, Virginia.</p>
<p>The 35-year-old Crook reported to army headquarters where the commanding general explained the mission in person. Grant instructed Crook to march his force, the Kanawha Division, against the railroad at Dublin, Virginia, 140 miles (230 km) south of Charleston. At Dublin he would put the railroad out of business and destroy Confederate military property. He was then to destroy the railroad bridge over New River, a few miles to the east. When these actions were accomplished, along with the destruction of the salt works, Crook was to march east and join forces with Major General Franz Sigel, who meanwhile was to be driving south up the Shenandoah Valley.</p>
<p>After long dreary months of garrison duty, the men were ready for action. Crook did not reveal the nature or objective of their mission, but everyone sensed that something important was brewing. "All things point to early action", the commander of the second brigade, Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes, noted in his diary.</p>
<p>On April 29, 1864, the Kanawha Division marched out of Charleston and headed south. Crook sent a force under Brigadier General William W. Averell westward towards Saltville, then pushed on towards Dublin with nine infantry regiments, seven cavalry regiments, and 15 artillery pieces, a force of about 6,500 men organized into three brigades. The West Virginia countryside was beautiful that spring, but the mountainous terrain made the march a difficult undertaking. The way was narrow and steep, and spring rains slowed the march as tramping feet churned the roads into mud. In places, Crook's engineers had to build bridges across wash-outs before the army could advance.</p>
<p>The column reached Fayette on May 2, and then passed through Raleigh Court House and Princeton. On the night of May 8, the division camped at Shannon's Bridge, Virginia, 10 miles (16 km) north of Dublin.</p>
<p>The Confederates at Dublin soon learned the enemy was approaching. Their commander, Colonel John McCausland, prepared to evacuate his 1100 men, but before transportation could arrive, a courier from Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins informed McCausland that the two of them were ordered by General John C. Breckinridge to stop Crook's advance. The combined forces of Jenkins and McCausland amounted to 2,400 men. Jenkins, the senior officer, took command.</p>
<p>Breaking camp on the morning of May 9, Crook moved his men south to the top of a spur of Cloyd's Mountain. Before the Union troops lay a precipitous, densely wooded slope with a meadow about 400 yards wide at the bottom. On the other side of the meadow, the land rose in another spur of the mountain, and there Jenkins' rebels waited behind hastily erected fortifications.</p>
<p>Crook dispatched the third brigade under Colonel Carr B. White to work its way through the woods and deliver a flank attack on the rebel right. At 11 am, he sent Hayes' first brigade and Colonel Horatio G. Sickel's second brigade down the slope to the edge of the meadow, where they were to launch a frontal assault on the Confederates as soon as they heard the sound of White's guns.</p>
<p>The slope before them was so steep that the officers had to dismount and descend on foot. Crook stationed himself with Hayes' brigade, which was to lead the assault. After a long, anxious wait, Hayes at last heard cannon fire off to his left and led his men at a slow double time out onto the meadow and into the rebels' musketry and artillery fire, which Crook called "galling". Their pace quickened as they neared the other side, but just before the up-slope they came to a waist-deep creek. The barrier caused little delay and the Yankee infantry stormed up the hill and engaged the rebel defenders at close range.</p>
<p>The only man to have trouble with the creek was General Crook. Dismounted, he still wore his high riding boots, and as he stepped into the stream, the boots filled with water and bogged him down. Nearby soldiers grabbed their commander's arms and hauled him to the other side.</p>
<p>Vicious hand-to-hand fighting erupted as the Yankees reached the crude rebel defenses. The Southerners gave way, tried to re-form, then broke and retreated up and over the hill towards Dublin.</p>
<p>The Yankees rounded up rebel prisoners by the hundreds and seized General Jenkins, who had fallen wounded. At this point the discipline of the Union men wavered, and there was no organized pursuit of the fleeing enemy. General Crook was unable to provide leadership as the excitement and exertion had sent him into a faint.</p>
<p>Colonel Hayes kept his head and organized a force of about 500 men from the soldiers milling about the site of their victory. With his improvised command, he set off, closely pressing the rebels.</p>
<p>While the fight at Cloyd's Mountain was going on, a train pulled into the Dublin station and disgorged 500 fresh troops of General John Hunt Morgan's cavalry, which had just diverted Averell away from Saltville. The fresh troops hastened towards the battlefield, where they soon met their compatriots retreating from Cloyd's Mountain. The reinforcements halted the rout, but Colonel Hayes, although ignorant of the strength of the force now before him, immediately ordered his men to "yell like devils" and rush the enemy. Within a few minutes General Crook arrived with the rest of the division, and the defenders broke and ran.</p>
<p>Cloyd's Mountain cost the Union army 688 casualties, while the rebels suffered 538 killed, wounded, and captured.</p>
<p>Unopposed, Crook moved his command into Dublin, where he laid waste to the railroad and the military stores. He then sent a party eastward to tear up the tracks and burn the ties. The next morning the main body set out for their next objective, the New River bridge, a key point on the railroad, a few miles to the east.</p>
<p>The Confederates, now commanded by Colonel McCausland, waited on the east side of the New River to defend the bridge. Crook pulled up on the west bank, and a long, ineffective artillery duel ensued. Seeing that there was little danger from the rebel cannon, Crook ordered the bridge destroyed, and both sides watched in awe as the structure collapsed magnificently into the river. McCausland, without the resources to oppose the Yankees any further, withdrew his battered command to the east.</p>
<p>General Crook, supplies running low in a country not suited for major foraging, now entertained second thoughts about his orders to push on east and join Sigel in the Shenandoah Valley. At Dublin he had intercepted an unconfirmed report that General Robert E. Lee had beaten Grant badly in the Wilderness, which led him to consider whether the Confederate commander might not soon move against Crook with a vastly superior force.</p>
<p>Having accomplished the major part of his mission, destruction of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Crook turned his men north and after another hard march, reached the Union base at Meadow Bluff, West Virginia.</p>
<p>That July Crook assumed command of a small force called the Army of the Kanawha. Crook was defeated at the Second Battle of Kernstown. Nevertheless, he was appointed as a replacement for David Hunter in command of the Department of West Virginia the following day. However Crook did not assume command until August 9. Along with the title of his department Crook added "Army of West Virginia." Crook's army was soon absorbed into Philip H. Sheridan's Army of the Shenandoah and for all practical purposes functioned as a corps in that unit. Although Crook's force kept its official designation as the Army of West Virginia, it was often referred to as the VIII Corps. The official VIII Corps of the Union Army was led by Lew Wallace during this time and its troops were on duty in Maryland and Northern Virginia.</p>
<p>Crook led his corps in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 at the battles of Opequon (Third Winchester), Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Creek. On October 21, 1864, he was promoted to major general of volunteers.</p>
<p>In February 1865 General Crook was captured by Confederate raiders at Cumberland, Maryland, and held as a prisoner of war in Richmond until exchanged a month later. He very briefly returned to command the Department of West Virginia until he took command of a cavalry division in the Army of the Potomac during the Appomattox Campaign. Crook first went into action with his division at the battle of Dinwiddie Court House. He later took a prominent role in the battles of Five Forks, Amelia Springs, Sayler's Creek and Appomattox Court House.</p>
<p>At the end of the Civil War, George Crook received a brevet as major general in the regular army, but reverted to the permanent rank of major. Only days later, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel, serving with the 23rd Infantry on frontier duty in the Pacific Northwest. In 1867, he was appointed head of the Department of the Columbia.</p>
<p>Crook successfully campaigned against the Snake Indians in the 1864-68 Snake War, where he won nationwide recognition. Crook had fought Indians in Oregon before the Civil War. He was assigned to the Pacific Northwest to use new tactics in this war, which had been waged for several years. Crook arrived in Boise to take command on December 11, 1866. The general noticed that the Northern Paiute used the fall, winter and spring seasons to gather food, so he adopted the tactic recommended by a predecessor George B. Currey to attack during the winter. Crook had his cavalry approach the Paiute on foot in attack at their winter camp. As the soldiers drew them in, Crook had them remount; they defeated the Paiute and recovered some stolen livestock.</p>
<p>Crook used Indian scouts as troops as well as to spot enemy encampments. While campaigning in Eastern Oregon during the winter of 1867, Crook's scouts located a Paiute village near the eastern edge of Steens Mountain. After covering all the escape routes, Crook ordered the charge on the village while intending to view the raid from afar, but his horse got spooked and galloped ahead of Crook's forces toward the village. Caught in the crossfire, Crook's horse carried the general through the village without being wounded. The army caused heavy casualties for the Paiute in the battle of Tearass Plain. Crook later defeated a mixed band of Paiute, Pit River, and Modoc at the Battle of Infernal Caverns in Fall River Mills, California.</p>
<p>President Ulysses S. Grant next placed Crook in command of the Arizona Territory. Crook's use of Apache scouts during his Tonto Basin Campaign of the Yavapai War brought him much success in forcing the Yavapai and Tonto Apache onto reservations. Crook's victories during the Yavapai War included the Battle of Salt River Canyon, also known as the Skeleton Cave Massacre, and the Battle of Turret Peak.</p>
<p>In 1873, Crook was appointed brigadier general in the regular army, a promotion that passed over and angered several full colonels next in line.</p>
<p>From 1875 to 1882 and again from 1886 to 1888, Crook was head of the Department of the Platte, with headquarters at Fort Omaha in North Omaha, Nebraska.</p>
<p>On 28 May 1876, Brigadier General George Crook assumed direct command of the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition at Fort Fetterman. Crook had gathered a strong force from his Department of the Platte. Leaving Fort Fetterman on 29 May, the 1,051-man column consisted of 15 companies from the 2d and 3d Cavalry, 5 companies from the 4th and 9th Infantry, 250 mules, and 106 wagons. On 14 June, the column was joined by 261 Shoshone and Crow allies. Based on intelligence reports, Crook ordered his entire force to prepare for a quick march. Each man was to carry only 1 blanket, 100 rounds of ammunition, and 4 days' rations. The wagon train would be left at Goose Creek, and the infantry would be mounted on the pack mules.</p>
<p>On 17 June, Crook's column set out at 0600, marching northward along the south fork of Rosebud Creek. The Crow and Shoshone scouts were particularly apprehensive. Although the column had not yet encountered any sign of Indians, the scouts seemed to sense their presence. The soldiers, particularly the mule-riding infantry, seemed fatigued from the early start and the previous day's 35-mile (56 km) march. Accordingly, Crook stopped to rest his men and animals at 0800 (8 o'clock AM). Although he was deep in hostile territory, Crook made no special dispositions for defense. His troops halted in their marching order. The Cavalry battalions led the column, followed by the battalion of mule-borne foot soldiers, and a provisional company of civilian miners and packers brought up the rear.</p>
<p>The Crow and Shoshone scouts remained alert while the soldiers rested. Several minutes later, the soldiers heard the sound of intermittent gunfire coming from the bluffs to the north. As the intensity of fire increased, a scout rushed into the camp shouting, "Lakota, Lakota!" The Battle of the Rosebud was on. By 0830, the Sioux and Cheyenne had hotly engaged Crook's Indian allies on the high ground north of the main body. Heavily outnumbered, the Crow and Shoshone scouts fell back toward the camp, but their fighting withdrawal gave Crook time to deploy his forces. Rapidly firing soldiers drove off the attackers but used up much of the ammunition meant for use later in the campaign. Low on ammunition and with numerous wounded, the General returned to his post.</p>
<p>Historians debate whether Crook's pressing on could have prevented the killing of the five companies of the 7th Cavalry Regiment led by George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.</p>
<p>After the disaster at the Little Bighorn, the U.S. Congress authorized funds to reinforce the Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition. Determined to demonstrate the willingness and capability of the U.S. Army to pursue and punish the Sioux, Crook took to the field. After briefly linking up with General Alfred Terry, military commander of the Dakota Territory, Crook embarked on what came to be known as the grueling and poorly provisioned Horsemeat March, upon which the soldiers were reduced to eating their horses and mules. A party dispatched to Deadwood for supplies came across the village of American Horse the Elder on September 9, 1876. The well-stocked village was attacked and looted in the Battle of Slim Buttes. Crazy Horse led a counter-attack against Crook the next day, but was repulsed by Crook's superior numbers.</p>
<p>In 1879, Crook spoke on behalf of the Ponca tribe and Native American rights during the trial of Standing Bear v. Crook. The federal judge affirmed that Standing Bear had some of the rights of U.S. citizens.</p>
<p>That same year his home at Fort Omaha, now called the General Crook House and considered part of North Omaha, was completed.</p>
<p>Crook was made head of the Department of Arizona and successfully forced some members of the Apache to surrender, but Geronimo continually evaded capture. As a mark of respect, the Apache nicknamed Crook Nantan Lupan, which means "Chief Wolf". In March, 1886, Crook received word that Geronimo would meet him in Cañon de los Embudos, in the Sierra Madre Mountains about 86 miles (138 km) from Fort Bowie. During the three days of negotiations, photographer C. S. Fly took about 15 exposures of the Apache on 8 by 10 inches (200 by 250 mm) glass negatives. One of the pictures of Geronimo with two of his sons standing alongside was made at Geronimo's request. Fly's images are the only existing photographs of Geronimo's surrender. His photos of Geronimo and the other free Apaches, taken on March 25 and 26, are the only known photographs taken of an American Indian while still at war with the United States.</p>
<p>Geronimo, camped on the Mexican side of the border, agreed to Crook's surrender terms. That night, a soldier who sold them whiskey said that his band would be murdered as soon as they crossed the border. Geronimo and 25 of his followers slipped away during the night; their escape cost Crook his command.</p>
<p>Nelson A. Miles replaced Crook in 1886 in command of the Arizona Territory and brought an end to the Apache Wars. He captured Geronimo and the Chiricahua Apache band, and detained the Chiricahua scouts, who had served the U.S. Army, transporting them all as prisoners-of-war to a prison in Florida. (Crook was reportedly furious that the scouts, who had faithfully served the Army, were imprisoned along with the hostile warriors. He sent numerous telegrams protesting their arrest to Washington. They, along with most of Geronimo's band, were forced to spend the next 26 years in captivity at the fort in Florida before they were finally released.)</p>
<p>After years of campaigning in the Indian Wars, Crook won steady promotion back up the ranks to the permanent grade of Major General. President Grover Cleveland placed him in command of the Military Division of the Missouri in 1888.</p>
<p>Crook served in Omaha again as the Commander of the Department of the Platte from 1886 to 1888. While he was there, his portrait was painted by artist Herbert A. Collins.</p>
<p>He spent his last years speaking out against the unjust treatment of his former Indian adversaries. He died suddenly in Chicago in 1890 while serving as commander of the Military Division of the Missouri. Crook was originally buried in Oakland, Maryland. In 1898, Crook's remains were transported to Arlington National Cemetery, where he was reinterred on November 11.</p>
<p>Red Cloud, a war chief of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux), said of Crook, "He, at least, never lied to us. His words gave us hope."</p>
<p>His good friend and Union Army subordinate, future President Rutherford B. Hayes, named one of his sons George Crook Hayes (September 29, 1864 - May 24, 1866), in honor of his commanding officer. The little boy died before his second birthday of scarlet fever.</p>
<p>Crook Counties in Wyoming and Oregon were named for him, as was the town of Crook, Colorado.</p>
<p>"Crook City," an unincorporated place in the Black Hills of South Dakota, was named for his 1876 camp there. Nearby and between Deadwood and Sturgis, South Dakota is Crook Mountain, named for him. Crook City Road passes through there from Whitewood heading toward Deadwood.</p>
<p>Crook Peak in Lake County, Oregon, elevation 7,834 feet (2,388 m), in the Warner Mountains is named after him. It is near where the general set up Camp Warner (1867–1874) in a campaign to subdue the Paiute Indians.</p>
<p>Crook Mountain, a peak in the North Cascades, was named for him.</p>
<p>Cañon Pintado Historic District, 10 miles (16 km) south of Rangely, Colorado, has numerous ancient Fremont culture (0-1300 CE) and Ute petroglyphs, first seen by Europeans in the mid-18th century. One group of carvings has several horses, which locals call "Crook's Brand Site". They claim the horses carry the general's brand. The Ute adopted the horse in the 1600s.</p>
<p>Forest Road 300 in the Coconino National Forest is named the "General Crook Trail." It is a section of the trail which his troops blazed from Fort Verde to Fort Whipple, and on to Fort Apache through central Arizona.</p>
<p>Numerous military references honor him: Fort Crook (1857 – 1869) was an Army post near Fall River Mills, California, used during the Indian Wars. Later during the Civil War, it was used for the defense of San Francisco. It was named for then Lt. Crook by Captain John W. T. Gardiner, 1st Dragoons, as Crook was recovering there from an injury. California State Historical Marker 355 marks the site in Shasta County.</p>
<p>Fort Crook (1891 – 1946) was an Army Depot in Bellevue, Nebraska, first used as a dispatch point for Indian conflicts on the Great Plains. Later it served as airfield for the 61st Balloon Company of the Army Air Corps. It was named for Brig. Gen. Crook due to his many successful Indian campaigns in the west. The site formerly known as Fort Crook is now part of Offutt AFB, Nebraska.</p>
<p>3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division is nicknamed "Greywolf" in his honor, in a variation of his Apache nickname meaning "Chief Wolf".</p>
<p>The General Crook House at Fort Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska is named in his honor, as he was the only Commander of the Department of the Platte to live there. At Fort Huachuca, Crook House on Old Post is named after him as well. The Crook Walk in Arlington National Cemetery is near General Crook's gravesite.</p>
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Wikipedia.org article for George R. Crook, viewed December 7, 2021
<p>Crook was born to Thomas and Elizabeth Matthews Crook on a farm near Taylorsville, Montgomery County, Ohio (near Dayton). Nominated to the United States Military Academy by Congressman Robert Schenck, he graduated in 1852, ranking near the bottom of his class.</p> <p>He was assigned to the 4th U.S. infantry as brevet second lieutenant, serving in California, 1852–61. He served in Oregon and northern California, alternately protecting or fighting against several Native American tribes. He commanded the Pitt River Expedition of 1857 and, in one of several engagements, was severely wounded by an Indian arrow. He established a fort in Northeast California that was later named in his honor; and later, Fort Ter-Waw in what is now Klamath Glen, California.</p> <p>During his years of service in California and Oregon, Crook extended his prowess in hunting and wilderness skills, often accompanying and learning from Indians whose languages he learned. These wilderness skills led one of his aides to liken him to Daniel Boone, and more importantly, provided a strong foundation for his abilities to understand, navigate and use Civil War landscapes to Union advantage.</p> <p>Crook was promoted to first lieutenant in 1856, and to captain in 1860. He was ordered east and in 1861, with the beginning of the American Civil War, was made colonel of the 36th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.</p> <p>He married Mary Tapscott Dailey, from Virginia.</p> <p>When the Civil War broke out, Crook accepted a commission as Colonel of the 36th Ohio Infantry and led it on duty in western Virginia. He was in command of the 3rd Brigade in the District of the Kanawha where he was wounded in a small fight at Lewisburg. Crook returned to command of his regiment during the Northern Virginia Campaign. He and his regiment were part of John Pope's headquarters escort at the Second Battle of Bull Run.</p> <p>After the Union Army's defeat at Second Bull Run, Crook and his regiment were attached to the Kanawha Division at the start of the Maryland Campaign. On September 12 Crook's brigade commander, Augustus Moor, was captured and Crook assumed command of the 2nd Brigade, Kanawha Division which had been attached to the IX Corps. Crook led his brigade at the Battle of South Mountain and near Burnside's Bridge at the Battle of Antietam. He was promoted to the rank of brigadier general on September 7, 1862. During these early battles he developed a lifelong friendship with one of his subordinates, Col. Rutherford B. Hayes of the 23rd Ohio Infantry.</p> <p>Following Antietam, General Crook assumed command of the Kanawha Division. His division was detached from the IX Corps for duty in the Department of the Ohio. Before long Crook was assigned to command an infantry brigade in the Army of the Cumberland. This brigade became the 3rd Brigade, 4th Division, XIV Corps, which he led at the Battle of Hoover's Gap. In July he assumed command of the 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps in the Army of the Cumberland. He fought at the battle of Chickamauga and was in pursuit of Joseph Wheeler during the Chattanooga Campaign.</p> <p>In February 1864, Crook returned to command the Kanawha Division, which was now officially designated the 3rd Division of the Department of West Virginia.</p> <p>To open the spring campaign of 1864, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant ordered a Union advance on all fronts, minor as well as major. Grant sent for Brigadier General Crook, in winter quarters at Charleston, West Virginia, and ordered him to attack the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Richmond's primary link to Knoxville and the southwest, and to destroy the Confederate salt works at Saltville, Virginia.</p> <p>The 35-year-old Crook reported to army headquarters where the commanding general explained the mission in person. Grant instructed Crook to march his force, the Kanawha Division, against the railroad at Dublin, Virginia, 140 miles (230 km) south of Charleston. At Dublin he would put the railroad out of business and destroy Confederate military property. He was then to destroy the railroad bridge over New River, a few miles to the east. When these actions were accomplished, along with the destruction of the salt works, Crook was to march east and join forces with Major General Franz Sigel, who meanwhile was to be driving south up the Shenandoah Valley.</p> <p>After long dreary months of garrison duty, the men were ready for action. Crook did not reveal the nature or objective of their mission, but everyone sensed that something important was brewing. "All things point to early action", the commander of the second brigade, Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes, noted in his diary.</p> <p>On April 29, 1864, the Kanawha Division marched out of Charleston and headed south. Crook sent a force under Brigadier General William W. Averell westward towards Saltville, then pushed on towards Dublin with nine infantry regiments, seven cavalry regiments, and 15 artillery pieces, a force of about 6,500 men organized into three brigades. The West Virginia countryside was beautiful that spring, but the mountainous terrain made the march a difficult undertaking. The way was narrow and steep, and spring rains slowed the march as tramping feet churned the roads into mud. In places, Crook's engineers had to build bridges across wash-outs before the army could advance.</p> <p>The column reached Fayette on May 2, and then passed through Raleigh Court House and Princeton. On the night of May 8, the division camped at Shannon's Bridge, Virginia, 10 miles (16 km) north of Dublin.</p> <p>The Confederates at Dublin soon learned the enemy was approaching. Their commander, Colonel John McCausland, prepared to evacuate his 1100 men, but before transportation could arrive, a courier from Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins informed McCausland that the two of them were ordered by General John C. Breckinridge to stop Crook's advance. The combined forces of Jenkins and McCausland amounted to 2,400 men. Jenkins, the senior officer, took command.</p> <p>Breaking camp on the morning of May 9, Crook moved his men south to the top of a spur of Cloyd's Mountain. Before the Union troops lay a precipitous, densely wooded slope with a meadow about 400 yards wide at the bottom. On the other side of the meadow, the land rose in another spur of the mountain, and there Jenkins' rebels waited behind hastily erected fortifications.</p> <p>Crook dispatched the third brigade under Colonel Carr B. White to work its way through the woods and deliver a flank attack on the rebel right. At 11 am, he sent Hayes' first brigade and Colonel Horatio G. Sickel's second brigade down the slope to the edge of the meadow, where they were to launch a frontal assault on the Confederates as soon as they heard the sound of White's guns.</p> <p>The slope before them was so steep that the officers had to dismount and descend on foot. Crook stationed himself with Hayes' brigade, which was to lead the assault. After a long, anxious wait, Hayes at last heard cannon fire off to his left and led his men at a slow double time out onto the meadow and into the rebels' musketry and artillery fire, which Crook called "galling". Their pace quickened as they neared the other side, but just before the up-slope they came to a waist-deep creek. The barrier caused little delay and the Yankee infantry stormed up the hill and engaged the rebel defenders at close range.</p> <p>The only man to have trouble with the creek was General Crook. Dismounted, he still wore his high riding boots, and as he stepped into the stream, the boots filled with water and bogged him down. Nearby soldiers grabbed their commander's arms and hauled him to the other side.</p> <p>Vicious hand-to-hand fighting erupted as the Yankees reached the crude rebel defenses. The Southerners gave way, tried to re-form, then broke and retreated up and over the hill towards Dublin.</p> <p>The Yankees rounded up rebel prisoners by the hundreds and seized General Jenkins, who had fallen wounded. At this point the discipline of the Union men wavered, and there was no organized pursuit of the fleeing enemy. General Crook was unable to provide leadership as the excitement and exertion had sent him into a faint.</p> <p>Colonel Hayes kept his head and organized a force of about 500 men from the soldiers milling about the site of their victory. With his improvised command, he set off, closely pressing the rebels.</p> <p>While the fight at Cloyd's Mountain was going on, a train pulled into the Dublin station and disgorged 500 fresh troops of General John Hunt Morgan's cavalry, which had just diverted Averell away from Saltville. The fresh troops hastened towards the battlefield, where they soon met their compatriots retreating from Cloyd's Mountain. The reinforcements halted the rout, but Colonel Hayes, although ignorant of the strength of the force now before him, immediately ordered his men to "yell like devils" and rush the enemy. Within a few minutes General Crook arrived with the rest of the division, and the defenders broke and ran.</p> <p>Cloyd's Mountain cost the Union army 688 casualties, while the rebels suffered 538 killed, wounded, and captured.</p> <p>Unopposed, Crook moved his command into Dublin, where he laid waste to the railroad and the military stores. He then sent a party eastward to tear up the tracks and burn the ties. The next morning the main body set out for their next objective, the New River bridge, a key point on the railroad, a few miles to the east.</p> <p>The Confederates, now commanded by Colonel McCausland, waited on the east side of the New River to defend the bridge. Crook pulled up on the west bank, and a long, ineffective artillery duel ensued. Seeing that there was little danger from the rebel cannon, Crook ordered the bridge destroyed, and both sides watched in awe as the structure collapsed magnificently into the river. McCausland, without the resources to oppose the Yankees any further, withdrew his battered command to the east.</p> <p>General Crook, supplies running low in a country not suited for major foraging, now entertained second thoughts about his orders to push on east and join Sigel in the Shenandoah Valley. At Dublin he had intercepted an unconfirmed report that General Robert E. Lee had beaten Grant badly in the Wilderness, which led him to consider whether the Confederate commander might not soon move against Crook with a vastly superior force.</p> <p>Having accomplished the major part of his mission, destruction of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Crook turned his men north and after another hard march, reached the Union base at Meadow Bluff, West Virginia.</p> <p>That July Crook assumed command of a small force called the Army of the Kanawha. Crook was defeated at the Second Battle of Kernstown. Nevertheless, he was appointed as a replacement for David Hunter in command of the Department of West Virginia the following day. However Crook did not assume command until August 9. Along with the title of his department Crook added "Army of West Virginia." Crook's army was soon absorbed into Philip H. Sheridan's Army of the Shenandoah and for all practical purposes functioned as a corps in that unit. Although Crook's force kept its official designation as the Army of West Virginia, it was often referred to as the VIII Corps. The official VIII Corps of the Union Army was led by Lew Wallace during this time and its troops were on duty in Maryland and Northern Virginia.</p> <p>Crook led his corps in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 at the battles of Opequon (Third Winchester), Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Creek. On October 21, 1864, he was promoted to major general of volunteers.</p> <p>In February 1865 General Crook was captured by Confederate raiders at Cumberland, Maryland, and held as a prisoner of war in Richmond until exchanged a month later. He very briefly returned to command the Department of West Virginia until he took command of a cavalry division in the Army of the Potomac during the Appomattox Campaign. Crook first went into action with his division at the battle of Dinwiddie Court House. He later took a prominent role in the battles of Five Forks, Amelia Springs, Sayler's Creek and Appomattox Court House.</p> <p>At the end of the Civil War, George Crook received a brevet as major general in the regular army, but reverted to the permanent rank of major. Only days later, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel, serving with the 23rd Infantry on frontier duty in the Pacific Northwest. In 1867, he was appointed head of the Department of the Columbia.</p> <p>Crook successfully campaigned against the Snake Indians in the 1864-68 Snake War, where he won nationwide recognition. Crook had fought Indians in Oregon before the Civil War. He was assigned to the Pacific Northwest to use new tactics in this war, which had been waged for several years. Crook arrived in Boise to take command on December 11, 1866. The general noticed that the Northern Paiute used the fall, winter and spring seasons to gather food, so he adopted the tactic recommended by a predecessor George B. Currey to attack during the winter. Crook had his cavalry approach the Paiute on foot in attack at their winter camp. As the soldiers drew them in, Crook had them remount; they defeated the Paiute and recovered some stolen livestock.</p> <p>Crook used Indian scouts as troops as well as to spot enemy encampments. While campaigning in Eastern Oregon during the winter of 1867, Crook's scouts located a Paiute village near the eastern edge of Steens Mountain. After covering all the escape routes, Crook ordered the charge on the village while intending to view the raid from afar, but his horse got spooked and galloped ahead of Crook's forces toward the village. Caught in the crossfire, Crook's horse carried the general through the village without being wounded. The army caused heavy casualties for the Paiute in the battle of Tearass Plain. Crook later defeated a mixed band of Paiute, Pit River, and Modoc at the Battle of Infernal Caverns in Fall River Mills, California.</p> <p>President Ulysses S. Grant next placed Crook in command of the Arizona Territory. Crook's use of Apache scouts during his Tonto Basin Campaign of the Yavapai War brought him much success in forcing the Yavapai and Tonto Apache onto reservations. Crook's victories during the Yavapai War included the Battle of Salt River Canyon, also known as the Skeleton Cave Massacre, and the Battle of Turret Peak.</p> <p>In 1873, Crook was appointed brigadier general in the regular army, a promotion that passed over and angered several full colonels next in line.</p> <p>From 1875 to 1882 and again from 1886 to 1888, Crook was head of the Department of the Platte, with headquarters at Fort Omaha in North Omaha, Nebraska.</p> <p>On 28 May 1876, Brigadier General George Crook assumed direct command of the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition at Fort Fetterman. Crook had gathered a strong force from his Department of the Platte. Leaving Fort Fetterman on 29 May, the 1,051-man column consisted of 15 companies from the 2d and 3d Cavalry, 5 companies from the 4th and 9th Infantry, 250 mules, and 106 wagons. On 14 June, the column was joined by 261 Shoshone and Crow allies. Based on intelligence reports, Crook ordered his entire force to prepare for a quick march. Each man was to carry only 1 blanket, 100 rounds of ammunition, and 4 days' rations. The wagon train would be left at Goose Creek, and the infantry would be mounted on the pack mules.</p> <p>On 17 June, Crook's column set out at 0600, marching northward along the south fork of Rosebud Creek. The Crow and Shoshone scouts were particularly apprehensive. Although the column had not yet encountered any sign of Indians, the scouts seemed to sense their presence. The soldiers, particularly the mule-riding infantry, seemed fatigued from the early start and the previous day's 35-mile (56 km) march. Accordingly, Crook stopped to rest his men and animals at 0800 (8 o'clock AM). Although he was deep in hostile territory, Crook made no special dispositions for defense. His troops halted in their marching order. The Cavalry battalions led the column, followed by the battalion of mule-borne foot soldiers, and a provisional company of civilian miners and packers brought up the rear.</p> <p>The Crow and Shoshone scouts remained alert while the soldiers rested. Several minutes later, the soldiers heard the sound of intermittent gunfire coming from the bluffs to the north. As the intensity of fire increased, a scout rushed into the camp shouting, "Lakota, Lakota!" The Battle of the Rosebud was on. By 0830, the Sioux and Cheyenne had hotly engaged Crook's Indian allies on the high ground north of the main body. Heavily outnumbered, the Crow and Shoshone scouts fell back toward the camp, but their fighting withdrawal gave Crook time to deploy his forces. Rapidly firing soldiers drove off the attackers but used up much of the ammunition meant for use later in the campaign. Low on ammunition and with numerous wounded, the General returned to his post.</p> <p>Historians debate whether Crook's pressing on could have prevented the killing of the five companies of the 7th Cavalry Regiment led by George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.</p> <p>After the disaster at the Little Bighorn, the U.S. Congress authorized funds to reinforce the Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition. Determined to demonstrate the willingness and capability of the U.S. Army to pursue and punish the Sioux, Crook took to the field. After briefly linking up with General Alfred Terry, military commander of the Dakota Territory, Crook embarked on what came to be known as the grueling and poorly provisioned Horsemeat March, upon which the soldiers were reduced to eating their horses and mules. A party dispatched to Deadwood for supplies came across the village of American Horse the Elder on September 9, 1876. The well-stocked village was attacked and looted in the Battle of Slim Buttes. Crazy Horse led a counter-attack against Crook the next day, but was repulsed by Crook's superior numbers.</p> <p>In 1879, Crook spoke on behalf of the Ponca tribe and Native American rights during the trial of Standing Bear v. Crook. The federal judge affirmed that Standing Bear had some of the rights of U.S. citizens.</p> <p>That same year his home at Fort Omaha, now called the General Crook House and considered part of North Omaha, was completed.</p> <p>Crook was made head of the Department of Arizona and successfully forced some members of the Apache to surrender, but Geronimo continually evaded capture. As a mark of respect, the Apache nicknamed Crook Nantan Lupan, which means "Chief Wolf". In March, 1886, Crook received word that Geronimo would meet him in Cañon de los Embudos, in the Sierra Madre Mountains about 86 miles (138 km) from Fort Bowie. During the three days of negotiations, photographer C. S. Fly took about 15 exposures of the Apache on 8 by 10 inches (200 by 250 mm) glass negatives. One of the pictures of Geronimo with two of his sons standing alongside was made at Geronimo's request. Fly's images are the only existing photographs of Geronimo's surrender. His photos of Geronimo and the other free Apaches, taken on March 25 and 26, are the only known photographs taken of an American Indian while still at war with the United States.</p> <p>Geronimo, camped on the Mexican side of the border, agreed to Crook's surrender terms. That night, a soldier who sold them whiskey said that his band would be murdered as soon as they crossed the border. Geronimo and 25 of his followers slipped away during the night; their escape cost Crook his command.</p> <p>Nelson A. Miles replaced Crook in 1886 in command of the Arizona Territory and brought an end to the Apache Wars. He captured Geronimo and the Chiricahua Apache band, and detained the Chiricahua scouts, who had served the U.S. Army, transporting them all as prisoners-of-war to a prison in Florida. (Crook was reportedly furious that the scouts, who had faithfully served the Army, were imprisoned along with the hostile warriors. He sent numerous telegrams protesting their arrest to Washington. They, along with most of Geronimo's band, were forced to spend the next 26 years in captivity at the fort in Florida before they were finally released.)</p> <p>After years of campaigning in the Indian Wars, Crook won steady promotion back up the ranks to the permanent grade of Major General. President Grover Cleveland placed him in command of the Military Division of the Missouri in 1888.</p> <p>Crook served in Omaha again as the Commander of the Department of the Platte from 1886 to 1888. While he was there, his portrait was painted by artist Herbert A. Collins.</p> <p>He spent his last years speaking out against the unjust treatment of his former Indian adversaries. He died suddenly in Chicago in 1890 while serving as commander of the Military Division of the Missouri. Crook was originally buried in Oakland, Maryland. In 1898, Crook's remains were transported to Arlington National Cemetery, where he was reinterred on November 11.</p> <p>Red Cloud, a war chief of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux), said of Crook, "He, at least, never lied to us. His words gave us hope."</p> <p>His good friend and Union Army subordinate, future President Rutherford B. Hayes, named one of his sons George Crook Hayes (September 29, 1864 - May 24, 1866), in honor of his commanding officer. The little boy died before his second birthday of scarlet fever.</p> <p>Crook Counties in Wyoming and Oregon were named for him, as was the town of Crook, Colorado.</p> <p>"Crook City," an unincorporated place in the Black Hills of South Dakota, was named for his 1876 camp there. Nearby and between Deadwood and Sturgis, South Dakota is Crook Mountain, named for him. Crook City Road passes through there from Whitewood heading toward Deadwood.</p> <p>Crook Peak in Lake County, Oregon, elevation 7,834 feet (2,388 m), in the Warner Mountains is named after him. It is near where the general set up Camp Warner (1867–1874) in a campaign to subdue the Paiute Indians.</p> <p>Crook Mountain, a peak in the North Cascades, was named for him.</p> <p>Cañon Pintado Historic District, 10 miles (16 km) south of Rangely, Colorado, has numerous ancient Fremont culture (0-1300 CE) and Ute petroglyphs, first seen by Europeans in the mid-18th century. One group of carvings has several horses, which locals call "Crook's Brand Site". They claim the horses carry the general's brand. The Ute adopted the horse in the 1600s.</p> <p>Forest Road 300 in the Coconino National Forest is named the "General Crook Trail." It is a section of the trail which his troops blazed from Fort Verde to Fort Whipple, and on to Fort Apache through central Arizona.</p> <p>Numerous military references honor him: Fort Crook (1857 – 1869) was an Army post near Fall River Mills, California, used during the Indian Wars. Later during the Civil War, it was used for the defense of San Francisco. It was named for then Lt. Crook by Captain John W. T. Gardiner, 1st Dragoons, as Crook was recovering there from an injury. California State Historical Marker 355 marks the site in Shasta County.</p> <p>Fort Crook (1891 – 1946) was an Army Depot in Bellevue, Nebraska, first used as a dispatch point for Indian conflicts on the Great Plains. Later it served as airfield for the 61st Balloon Company of the Army Air Corps. It was named for Brig. Gen. Crook due to his many successful Indian campaigns in the west. The site formerly known as Fort Crook is now part of Offutt AFB, Nebraska.</p> <p>3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division is nicknamed "Greywolf" in his honor, in a variation of his Apache nickname meaning "Chief Wolf".</p> <p>The General Crook House at Fort Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska is named in his honor, as he was the only Commander of the Department of the Platte to live there. At Fort Huachuca, Crook House on Old Post is named after him as well. The Crook Walk in Arlington National Cemetery is near General Crook's gravesite.</p>
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- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Crook
Crook, George, 1829-1889. Papers, 1871-1890.
Title:
Papers, 1871-1890.
Two letter copybooks from Cook to others; miscellaneous letters from Emmett Crawford, J.C. Kelton, R. Williams, Philip Sheridan, and an Indian council; and Crook's annual military reports (1871-1889).
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70965833 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1889. Papers, 1871-1890.
Lockwood, John C., 1857-1928. Papers of John C. Lockwood, 1860-1926 (bulk 1920-1925).
Title:
Papers of John C. Lockwood, 1860-1926 (bulk 1920-1925).
The three volumes of manuscript memoirs cover John Lockwood's life as a gold miner, member of the U.S. 7th cavalry regiment, employee of the Hudson's Bay Company, and stagecoach driver in Utah and California. There are eleven pieces of correspondence, which are between Lockwood and various people regarding military pensions and the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Little Bighorn; the other authors are Elizabeth Custer, Senator Peter Norbeck, and Representative Harold Knutson. The group also includes 23 pieces of ephemera including 58 newspaper clippings about the Battle of Little Bighorn and its anniversary celebration. Subjects covered are: National Indian War Veterans, coaching in the southwest, Comanche the horse, the Crow, Sioux, Cheyenne, and Nez Perce ́Indians, gold mining in the Black Hills, military veterans, Montana and South Dakota. Persons covered are: George Crook, George Custer, Chief Gall, Chief Joseph, Nelson Miles, Rain in the Face, Marcus Reno, army scout Charley Reynolds, Sitting Bull, Samuel Sturgis, and Alfred Terry. Also included is an unpublished monograph entitled "Spur, pick and Winchester: the life of John C. Lockwood," by Louis Addison Bone.
ArchivalResource: 95 items.
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- Lockwood, John C., 1857-1928. Papers of John C. Lockwood, 1860-1926 (bulk 1920-1925).
1866 - Crook, George - File No. C211
Title:
1866 - Crook, George - File No. C211
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Records of the Adjutant General's Office. 1762 - 1984. Generals' Papers and Books. 1830 - 1884. Papers and Books of George Crook
Title:
Records of the Adjutant General's Office. 1762 - 1984. Generals' Papers and Books. 1830 - 1884. Papers and Books of George Crook
ArchivalResource:
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- Records of the Adjutant General's Office. 1762 - 1984. Generals' Papers and Books. 1830 - 1884. Papers and Books of George Crook
1865 - Crook, George - File No. C231
Title:
1865 - Crook, George - File No. C231
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Arizona Historical Foundation. Arizona Historical Foundation Microfilm Collection, 1812-1980 1870-1910 [microform].
Title:
Arizona Historical Foundation Microfilm Collection, 1812-1980 1870-1910 [microform].
The microfilm was collected from various sources over many years. The content reflects the research, publication, exhibitions, and special project interests of former AHF directors. Some of the reels are cataloged individually in the ASU Libraries catalog. The collection is divided into four series: Series I: Newspapers; Series II: Federal Documents; Series III: Personal Papers; Series IV: Other. Series I: Newspapers. The newspapers are arranged alphabetically, first by state or country location and then by the title of the newspaper. More than one newspaper may appear on a reel. In this case, it is arranged by the first title listed. The date ranges are approximate and some may be incomplete. When known, title changes are noted. Series II: Federal Documents. The majority of reels in this series are from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The NARA record group and microfilm call number are listed at the end of each entry. The reels are arranged alphabetically by agency or department, then by title of record. Series III: Personal Papers. This series contains pioneer biographies, personal journals, diaries, letter books, and correspondence. The source of the original, if known, is listed at the end of the entry. The pioneer biographies start the series and include documents, biographical summaries, and newspaper entries. The rest of the series is arranged alphabetically by last name. Series IV: Other. The series contains various topics and record types including business directories, territorial records, dissertations, articles, journals, historic building surveys and railway records. It is arrange by title or record type.
ArchivalResource: 587 reels of microfilm.
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- Arizona Historical Foundation. Arizona Historical Foundation Microfilm Collection, 1812-1980 1870-1910 [microform].
Crook, George - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1866
Title:
Crook, George - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1866
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70606427 View
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AHF Subject Photograph Collection, ca. 1850-ca. 1990 [picture].
Title:
AHF Subject Photograph Collection, ca. 1850-ca. 1990 [picture].
Contains approximately 15,000 photographs in fair to good condition. The collection represents an aggregation of images from multiple and diverse sources. Most of these derive from previously un-catalogued, unprocessed, or poorly described materials. The majority are identified and captioned. Geographic areas include Arizona, California, Texas, New Mexico, and Mexico. This is an active collection where future additions are anticipated. Collection highlights include late 19th century mining towns and housing developments in Phoenix from the 1960s. The collection is organized by broad subject categories: Animals, Artifacts, Biography, Buildings, Canals, Dams, and Irrigation, Cemeteries and Graveyards, Churches, Missions, and Temples, Farming and Agriculture, Geology, Housing, Indians, Law Enforcement, Landscapes, Military, Mining, Natural Disasters, Organizations, People, Places, Plants, Parades and Rodeos, Schools and Universities, Sports, Transportation, and Utilities. The broad subjects are broken into more narrow subjects under each heading and arranged alphabetically and then by date.
ArchivalResource: 30 linear feet (78 boxes)
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- AHF Subject Photograph Collection, ca. 1850-ca. 1990 [picture].
1874 - File No. 1058 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1874 - File No. 1058 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1885 - File No. 193 - Crook, George - Arizona
Title:
1885 - File No. 193 - Crook, George - Arizona
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1868 - Crook, George - File No. C825
Title:
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C825
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1879 - File No. 2653 (Crook, Geo - Missouri)
Title:
1879 - File No. 2653 (Crook, Geo - Missouri)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1875 - File No. 5237 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1875 - File No. 5237 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1874 - File No. 532 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1874 - File No. 532 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142883473 View
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Bush, Edward G. (Edward Geer), 1832-1892. Edward G. Bush official correspondence, 1887.
Title:
Edward G. Bush official correspondence, 1887.
Handwritten military orders and official correspondence plus photocopies. Also included is a hand-drawn map of the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation and nearby areas. This item is housed separately in a location for oversized materials. General George Crook (1828-1890) sent orders to Fort Douglas directing that two companies be sent to assure that the road between Price, Utah and the Uintah Reservation be made passable for heavy freight. Major, later lieutenant colonel, Bush was given the assignment. The materials document his assignment, activities, and the troubles encountered.
ArchivalResource: 9 folders (0.25 linear ft.)
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- Bush, Edward G. (Edward Geer), 1832-1892. Edward G. Bush official correspondence, 1887.
Custer, George A. (George Armstrong), 1839-1876. George Armstrong Custer and Elizabeth (Bacon) Custer collection [microform], 1856-1933.
Title:
George Armstrong Custer and Elizabeth (Bacon) Custer collection [microform], 1856-1933.
This collection includes: correspondence, orders, manuscripts, notes, broadsides, clippings, memorabilia, and pamphlets. There are no dates listed for any of the items.
ArchivalResource: 8 microfilm reels ; 35 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49497076 View
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- Custer, George A. (George Armstrong), 1839-1876. George Armstrong Custer and Elizabeth (Bacon) Custer collection [microform], 1856-1933.
Bourke, John Gregory, 1846-1896. John Gregory Bourke papers, 1873-1897.
Title:
John Gregory Bourke papers, 1873-1897.
Correspondence, including letters from Gen. George Crook recommending Bourke for promotions, letters from publishers, and others to and from Bourke relating to his writing and military experiences.
ArchivalResource: 15 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/31036851 View
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- Bourke, John Gregory, 1846-1896. John Gregory Bourke papers, 1873-1897.
1879 - File No. 8136 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1879 - File No. 8136 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143145818 View
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1888 - File No. 2110 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1888 - File No. 2110 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1872 - File No. 2388 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 2388 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Crook, George - [Blank] - 1880 - File No. 4054
Title:
Crook, George - [Blank] - 1880 - File No. 4054
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1889 - File No. 1559 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 1559 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Crook, George - State: Ohio - Year: 1868
Title:
Crook, George - State: Ohio - Year: 1868
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1873 - File No. 1974 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1873 - File No. 1974 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142864967 View
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Nichols, Charles A., 1878-1970. Nichols manuscripts, ca. 1950.
Title:
Nichols manuscripts, ca. 1950.
Typewritten manuscripts by Charles A. Nichols. The bulk of the collection is a 340-page manuscript entitled "Dear Old Cochise" about pioneers of Cochise County. It includes sections on Apaches (Cochise, Eskiminzin, Geronimo, Apache Kid, Victorio, and others) and personalities (Wyatt Earp, Jeff Milton, Nelson Bledsoe, James Douglas, William H. Brophy, Nellie Cashman, and others). Another manuscript is present about Gen. John J. Pershing.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box)
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- Nichols, Charles A., 1878-1970. Nichols manuscripts, ca. 1950.
Generals P.H. Sheridan and George Crook to Commanding Officer, Fort Robinson, Nebraska.
Title:
Generals P.H. Sheridan and George Crook to Commanding Officer, Fort Robinson, Nebraska.
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/284986 View
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Arizona Scenes Photograph Collection, 1880-1910
Title:
Arizona Scenes Photograph Collection 1880-1910
This collection contains photographs of scenes in Arizona including General Crook with staff, interpreters, and packers; Walnut Canyon; and the San Francisco Mountains.
ArchivalResource: 1 box (.3 cu. ft.)
http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=nmupict995-007.xml View
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- Arizona Scenes Photograph Collection, 1880-1910
Crook, George L - State: [Blank] - Year: 1869
Title:
Crook, George L - State: [Blank] - Year: 1869
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70512449 View
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1888 - File No. 4437 - Crook, George - Nebraska
Title:
1888 - File No. 4437 - Crook, George - Nebraska
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146632656 View
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Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Title:
Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Autograph letter signed. Crook writes of going to New York to sell property.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; 20 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/80279114 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Crook, George - Unit: 36th Infantry, Company: F&S - Enlistment Rank: Colonel, Discharge Rank: Colonel
Title:
Crook, George - Unit: 36th Infantry, Company: F&S - Enlistment Rank: Colonel, Discharge Rank: Colonel
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Secunda, Sholom, 1894-1974. P[ark] A[venue] S[ynagogue], May 8, 1959 [sound recording] : Shabbat Sholom Secunda : archival disc / [by Sholom Secunda].
Title:
P[ark] A[venue] S[ynagogue], May 8, 1959 [sound recording] : Shabbat Sholom Secunda : archival disc / [by Sholom Secunda].
ArchivalResource: 3 sound discs + on 1 side of 1 sound disc : analog, 33 1/3 rpm, stereo. ; 12 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/47833081 View
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- Secunda, Sholom, 1894-1974. P[ark] A[venue] S[ynagogue], May 8, 1959 [sound recording] : Shabbat Sholom Secunda : archival disc / [by Sholom Secunda].
Chrisman, Clarence. Chrisman papers 1885-1927 (bulk 1885-1887).
Title:
Chrisman papers 1885-1927 (bulk 1885-1887).
Diary, manuscript, and sketchbooks from Chrisman's military service in southern Arizona and Fort Craig, New Mexico. Includes one field diary, 1885-1887, which describes military encampments in New Mexico and Arizona. The diary doesn't mention the Geronimo Campaign. A handwritten manuscript, "The Apache Campaign of 1885-86", was written by Chrisman and was published in Winners of the West, 1927. Also present are two 16 x 20 sketchbooks, one drawn at Fort Craig, N.M., 1885-1886; the other contains drawings of Geronimo, George Crook, Nelson Miles, the Apache Kid, and others, but is undated.
ArchivalResource: 1.75 linear ft. (2 boxes).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37863607 View
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- Chrisman, Clarence. Chrisman papers 1885-1927 (bulk 1885-1887).
1872 - File No. 1356 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 1356 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142834878 View
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1884 - File No. 2709 - Crook, George - New York
Title:
1884 - File No. 2709 - Crook, George - New York
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146457758 View
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Porter, Henry R., 1848-1903. Letters, 1872-1873.
Title:
Letters, 1872-1873.
The collection consists of fifteen letters to his family while serving with General Crook in the Apache campaign. The letters are dated July 6, 1872, to March 29, 1873.
ArchivalResource: 15 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28205487 View
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- Porter, Henry R., 1848-1903. Letters, 1872-1873.
1872 - File No. 4091 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 4091 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142850330 View
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Nye, William H., b. 1833. William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
Title:
William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
22 ALS from Nye to his mother about life in San Francisco, the trip from California to Idaho, Boise life and scenery, a Boise vigilance committee, and gold and silver mines in Idaho. In addition, the letters carry references to his strong unionist sympathies and the death of a brother in the Civil War, the cost of living in Boise, earthquakes in San Francisco, General George Crook's campaign against the Snake Indians, and Nye's opinion that the Indians should be "exterminated."
ArchivalResource: 22 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/79189260 View
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- Nye, William H., b. 1833. William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
Strauss, Charles Moses, 1840-1892. Charles Moses Strauss papers, 1823-1892.
Title:
Charles Moses Strauss papers, 1823-1892.
Genealogical information; newspapers and assorted materials about nineteenth century Delaware and Massachusetts, with special reference to those states' politics and railroads; papers and clippings about political, business, and cultural issues in Arizona; histories of cities in Arizona that were written by school children; photographs, including one of Tucson (1889); and Freemason documents and certificates for both Charles and Julia Strauss.
ArchivalResource: 186 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/74985199 View
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- Strauss, Charles Moses, 1840-1892. Charles Moses Strauss papers, 1823-1892.
Constance Wynn Altshuler Collection
Title:
Constance Wynn Altshuler Collection
Contains research material used by Constance Wynn Altschuler in preparing her writings on Arizona history. Arranged in five series: Series I. Correspondence; Series II. Research files; Series III. Index card research files; Series IV. Microfilm; Series V. Oversized.
ArchivalResource: 15 linear feet
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- Altschuler, Constance Wynn. Constance Wynn Altschuler collection, 1965-1996.
1889 - File No. 1359 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 1359 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146648488 View
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Topographical map of the country traversed by the Command of General George Crook in his expedition against [the] Chiricahua Indians May 1 to June 10, 1883
Title:
Topographical map of the country traversed by the Command of General George Crook in his expedition against [the] Chiricahua Indians May 1 to June 10, 1883
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/207454733 View
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Petitions and Memorials, Resolutions of State Legislatures, and Related Documents which were Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs during the 47th Congress
Title:
Petitions and Memorials, Resolutions of State Legislatures, and Related Documents which were Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs during the 47th Congress
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/12131566 View
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1889 - File No. 931 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 931 - Crook, George - Missouri
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https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146645583 View
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Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 1793 - 1999. Council Proceedings, 5/26/1875 - 4/19/1894
Title:
Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 1793 - 1999. Council Proceedings, 5/26/1875 - 4/19/1894
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1145940 View
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1874 - File No. 5612 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1874 - File No. 5612 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142909064 View
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1872 - File No. 1790 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 1790 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142837812 View
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Francis R. Hagner collection, 1860-1946, 1876-1925
Title:
Francis R. Hagner collection 1860-1946 1876-1925
Francis Randall Hagner (1873-1940), a collector of Americana, practiced medicine in Washington, D.C. A specialist in genito-urinary surgery, he was an attending physician to U.S. President William H. Taft. Collection consists of typed copies of letters, diaries, articles, court martial proceedings, and printed matter concerning General George A. Custer and the Battle of the Little Big Horn in 1876. Typed transcripts are of the writings of participants in the campaign as well as contemporary and later commentators on the Indian Wars. Among the transcripts are accounts of the battle, commentary on Custer's participation in the Battle of the Washita in 1868, Custer's 1867 court martial, 1876 diary and article by General E.S. Godfrey, Court of Inquiry of Major Marcus A. Reno, and manuscript autobiography of Major General George Crook. Also, clippings and articles on the Indian Wars and related topics.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear foot (3 boxes, 2 oversize folders)
http://archives.nypl.org/mss/1280 View
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- Francis R. Hagner collection, 1860-1946, 1876-1925
1880 - File No. 3092 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1880 - File No. 3092 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143158310 View
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1862 - Crook, George - File No. C529
Title:
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C529
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85389413 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, Virginia, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, Virginia, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120386917 View
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1883 - File No. 3818 - Crook, George
Title:
1883 - File No. 3818 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146422222 View
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Crook, George, 1828-1890. Letters, 1876.
Title:
Letters, 1876.
Handwritten and signed letters. Two are dated 25 Sept. 1876 and the other is dated 1 Oct. 1876. All three were written at Ft. Laramie, Wyoming and addressed to Wesley Merritt, commander of the 5th Calvary. Crook orders the discharge of some scouts, advises that "California Joe" be made the Merritt's guide, and tells him how to attack Red Cloud's Dakota Indians.
ArchivalResource: 3 items (7 pages).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122536612 View
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- Crook, George, 1828-1890. Letters, 1876.
Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
Title:
Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
As Brigadier general, George Crook orders two companies of infantry to Fort Laramie and comments that depredations will start in that section as soon as the expedition is on its way.
ArchivalResource: 1 p.; 22 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702129637 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
1888 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1888 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146640936 View
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1886 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, [Blank] - Nebraska
Title:
1886 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, [Blank] - Nebraska
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146553141 View
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1875 - File No. 2524 (Crook, George - Ohio)
Title:
1875 - File No. 2524 (Crook, George - Ohio)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1872 - File No. 1552 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 1552 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142835980 View
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1871 - File No. 3309 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1871 - File No. 3309 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142819852 View
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1883 - File No. 1153 - Crook, George - Arizona
Title:
1883 - File No. 1153 - Crook, George - Arizona
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146408530 View
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Powell, John Wesley, 1834-1902. Correspondence of John Wesley Powell, 1876-1902.
Title:
Correspondence of John Wesley Powell, 1876-1902.
These four items are facsimiles of letters written both to and from John Wesley Powell during his work with the Rocky Mountain Geological Survey and the Bureau of American Ethnology (the originals are at the National Archives of the United States). Correspondents include George Crook, Clarence E. Dutton, Abram S. Hewitt, Collis Huntington, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Othniel Marsh, J. S. Newberry, Carl Schurz, J. J. Stevenson, A. H. Thompson, and the United States General Land Office. Subjects discussed in the letters are Powell's work in exploring the Western United States including the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River, his efforts to obtain money for the surveys, and his search for a publisher for his writings.
ArchivalResource: 4 items, facsimiles from microfilm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/79457987 View
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- Powell, John Wesley, 1834-1902. Correspondence of John Wesley Powell, 1876-1902.
1872 - File No. 1302 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 1302 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142834798 View
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1883 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, George - California
Title:
1883 - File No. [Blank] - Crook, George - California
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146430950 View
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1866 - Crook, George - File No. C254
Title:
1866 - Crook, George - File No. C254
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76928165 View
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Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888. Telegram, 1876 Jul 10.
Title:
Telegram, 1876 Jul 10.
Philip Sheridan, commanding the Military Division of the Missouri, gives Gen. Crook, commanding the Department of the Platte, his opinions on Custer's defeat at the Little Big Horn and informs him of subsequent troop movements and dispositions.
ArchivalResource: 3 p.; 25 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702129644 View
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- Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888. Telegram, 1876 Jul 10.
Consolidated Military Officer's File of General George Crook
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of General George Crook
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7263286 View
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1885 - File No. 2735 - Crook, Geo
Title:
1885 - File No. 2735 - Crook, Geo
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146492073 View
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1889 - File No. 1196 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 1196 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146647616 View
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Thaddeus Hurlbut Capron Family Papers, 1864-1966 (bulk 1867-1884)
Title:
Thaddeus Hurlbut CapronFamily Papers 1864-1966(bulk 1867-1884)
Thaddeus H. Capron was aUnited States Infantry officer during the Civil War and the subsequent IndianWars. He served under General Crook at the Battle of the Rosebud (June, 1876).The collection includes diaries and letters of Thaddeus Capron andreminiscences of his wife, Cynthia. Photographs and drawings are alsoincluded.
ArchivalResource:
http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah01694.xml View
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- Thaddeus Hurlbut Capron Family Papers, 1864-1966 (bulk 1867-1884)
Crook, George - State: Louisiana - Year: 1866
Title:
Crook, George - State: Louisiana - Year: 1866
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70309607 View
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1888 - File No. 4511 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1888 - File No. 4511 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146632963 View
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King, Charles, 1844-1933. Papers of Charles King, 1875-1954.
Title:
Papers of Charles King, 1875-1954.
The majority of the collection consists of correspondence by Charles King to fellow soldier George O. Eaton. In these letters, King reminisces about his time in the military and his involvement in the Indian Wars under General Crook. He talks about Buffalo Bill; George Crook; George Custer; Sitting Bull; Alfred Terry; the Shoshoni Indians; the Apache Indians; the Yavapai Indians; and the Wisconsin National Guard. There are also letters by George O. Eaton and Walter Scribner Schuyler, which are about their experiences in the U.S. military. The ephemera consists of photographs of George O. Eaton and William Henry Corbusier (a fellow soldier and addressee in the collection), and two printed items and five newspaper clippings regarding Charles King's military career, George Custer and Buffalo Bill.
ArchivalResource: 44 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122545756 View
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- King, Charles, 1844-1933. Papers of Charles King, 1875-1954.
William H. Whitney Civil War Letters, August 1864-September 1864
Title:
William H. Whitney Civil War Letters, August 1864-September 1864
This collection consists of five letters of Lt. William H. Whitney, Union officer, who wrote to his mother, Mrs. C.F. Whitney Russell, and a brother, Frank. E. Whitney, both of Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, concerning camp life and skirmishes near Berryville, Virginia, in General Philip Sheridan's campaign in 1864.
ArchivalResource: This collection consist of five letters.
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu02114.xml;query=; View
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- Whitney, William H. Civil War letters of William H. Whitney, 1864 August 20 to September 18.
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C549
Title:
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C549
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77057940 View
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United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri. Dispatch, 1876 Jul 16.
Title:
Dispatch, 1876 Jul 16.
General Crook planned an ambitious campaign against the Sioux Indians for the summer of 1876. In this dispatch, General Sheridan provides information on movements of hostile Indians, assignments and movements of United States troops, and availability of supplies and equipment.
ArchivalResource: 2 p.; 25 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702689219 View
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- United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri. Dispatch, 1876 Jul 16.
Kosakoff, R. (Reuven). Park Avenue Synagogue, May 13, 1960 [sound recording] : Lichvod Shabbat : archival disc / Reuven Kosakoff.
Title:
Park Avenue Synagogue, May 13, 1960 [sound recording] : Lichvod Shabbat : archival disc / Reuven Kosakoff.
ArchivalResource: 1 sound disc + on 1 side of 1 sound disc : analog, 33 1/3 rpm, stereo. ; 12 in. + 10 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/47833152 View
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- Kosakoff, R. (Reuven). Park Avenue Synagogue, May 13, 1960 [sound recording] : Lichvod Shabbat : archival disc / Reuven Kosakoff.
Kennon, Lyman Walter Vere, 1858-1918. Papers, 1863-1917.
Title:
Papers, 1863-1917.
Letters from Kennon to his wife, Anna Beecher Rice Kennon, letters from his superior officers, draft of a speech narrating Gen. George Crook's Chiricahua campaign, scrapbook of correspondence, articles, and newpaper clippings, and some papers of Gen. Crook, to whom Kennon was aide-de-camp. Subjects include the Indian wars and the surrender of Geronimo, Kennon's work in South America in 1891-1892, the Spanish American War, and his service in 1899 as Military Governor of the Philippines.
ArchivalResource: 143 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/19933412 View
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- Kennon, Lyman Walter Vere, 1858-1918. Papers, 1863-1917.
1889 - File No. 5703 - Crook, George - Nebraska
Title:
1889 - File No. 5703 - Crook, George - Nebraska
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146670704 View
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1889 - File No. 2941 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 2941 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146654185 View
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Bourke, John Gregory, 1846-1896. Letter to S.S. McClure, 1890 March 22.
Title:
Letter to S.S. McClure, 1890 March 22.
Bourke offers to send a pamphlet as a sample of his writing and asks if McClure would like a sketch of General Crook and "Indian ambuscades into which we ran together."
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50544368 View
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- Bourke, John Gregory, 1846-1896. Letter to S.S. McClure, 1890 March 22.
Kennon, Lyman W. V., d. 1918. Lyman W.V. Kennon photograph collection.
Title:
Lyman W.V. Kennon photograph collection. 1877-1917.
Contains the following types of materials: photographs, postcards. Covers the following wars: Late Indian Wars; Philippines Insurrection; Spanish-American War; World War I (WWI). Contains photographs of the following military units: 6th U.S. Infantry Regiment; 34th Volunteer Infantry Regiment. General description of the collection: The Lyman W.V. Kennon photograph collection consists of 480 photographs, in which 343 of the photos deal with the building of the Baguio Road in the Philippines, several photos of his West Point years, several portrait photos of his early Army career, several photos of his service in Cuba, two photos of General George Crook, and several of his duties at the two depot camps during WWI.
ArchivalResource: 2 boxes (480 photographs)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49340858 View
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- Kennon, Lyman W. V., d. 1918. Lyman W.V. Kennon photograph collection.
The Crook-Kennon papers, 1830-1923.
Title:
The Crook-Kennon papers, 1830-1923.
Contains the following types of materials: correspondence / letters, memoirs, organizational documents, diary / journal, maps / charts, clippings. Contains information pertaining to the following wars and time period: Civil War -- Western and Eastern Theater, late Indian Wars, 1865-1891. Contains information pertaining to the following military units and organizations: (Crook): 4th United States (U.S.) Infantry Regiment; 36th Ohio Infantry Regiment; Provisional and Second Brigades, Kanawha Division; Crook's Brigade, Army of Kentucky; 3rd Brigade, 4th Division, XIV (14th) Army Corps; 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Cumberland; 2nd Division, Army of West Virginia; 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac; 3rd and 23rd U.S. Infantry Regiments; District of Boise and Departments (Depts.) of the Columbia, Arizona, and the Platte; Military Division of the Missouri. (Kennon): 6th Infantry Regiment; assistant adjutant general (AG) and acting chief of staff, Dept. of Cuba; 34th Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 1st and 3rd Brigades, VIII (8th) Army Corps; 10th, 7th, 14th, 25th, 26th, and 9th Infantry Regiments; 3rd Brigade, 15th Provisional Division; 1st Brigade, 12th Provisional Division; 171st Infantry Brigade; 86th Infantry Division; Camp Greene, North Carolina. General description of the collection: The Crook-Kennon papers include holdings of the papers of the Union general and Indian fighter George Crook and one of his aides-de-camp, Lyman Kennon. Three manuscript autobiographies (1852-1876, 1852-1965, and 1856-1857) of Crook; his West Point account book (1848-1852); a memorandum book (1871-1873 and 1878); and diaries (1885-1890) are included. There is a letter from Captain Samuel D. Sturgis III to "Dear Bugs," written several years after 1936, concerning Colonel Samuel D. Sturgis, Sr., Second Lieutenant James G. Sturgis, Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer, and Crook as Indian fighters, regarding the Battle of Little Big Horn. Also included is correspondence (1874-1890); material dealing with Crook's death (March 22, 1890); some miscellaneous papers; correspondence of family members (1890-1891); and five volumes of newspaper clippings covering his entire career, especially his operations against Indians following the Civil War. One volume of clippings contains newspaper articles pasted over a diary kept by his sister-in-law, Fannie A. Dailey, in 1871; fragments of this journal remain visible around the clippings. There are biographies of him by two of his staff officers, L.W.V. Kennon (1830-1863) and Major Azor H. Nickerson (1866-1890).
ArchivalResource: 4 boxes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51109838 View
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- The Crook-Kennon papers, 1830-1923.
Gray, John S. (John Stephens), 1910-1991. John S. Gray research papers, 1942-1991.
Title:
John S. Gray research papers, 1942-1991.
Research notes, writings, and correspondence of Dr. John S. Gray, 1942-1991.
ArchivalResource: 9 cubic ft. (27 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50171878 View
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- Gray, John S. (John Stephens), 1910-1991. John S. Gray research papers, 1942-1991.
Bennett, Frank P. Comments regarding the removal of the Apaches from Mount Vernon, Alabama : ADS, [ca. 1890].
Title:
Comments regarding the removal of the Apaches from Mount Vernon, Alabama : ADS, [ca. 1890].
Commentary from Bennett concerning the plan to remove Apaches from Mount Vernon, Ala., to Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory, to provide a better climate and more arable lands for farming and livestock. The plan, recommended by the Secretary of War and Gen. George Crook, is criticized by Gen. Nelson A. Miles, who feels the Apaches are untrustworthy and would make new allies and threaten white settlements. Miles also questions the loyalty of Indian scouts who helped capture Geronimo in 1886. In his comments, Bennett favors the plan, defends Crook's ability as an "Indian manager," and extensively refutes Miles' views on the plan. He cites examples of the Apache's good character and loyalty, and explains their past actions, including that of Geronimo's escape after his 1886 surrender to Crook. In addition, he quotes a letter from Indian interpreter George Wratton, who feels the Apaches are incapable of any hostility due to their broken spirit following their internment. It is possible Bennett's comments were written for publication as a pamphlet or in a newspaper.
ArchivalResource: 19 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48781348 View
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- Bennett, Frank P. Comments regarding the removal of the Apaches from Mount Vernon, Alabama : ADS, [ca. 1890].
1889 - File No. 5137 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 5137 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146664143 View
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Brisbin, James S. (James Sanks), 1837-1892. Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
Title:
Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
ALS with the salutation, "My Dear Mr. Clark," in which Brisbin requests a pass from S. H. H. Clark, general superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska, for travel from Ogden to Omaha on the Union Pacific Railroad in order to bring his family from Omaha to his new post at Fort Ellis in Montana. He also discusses the arrangements for shipping horses for the Cavalry from the East, and the plan to join with the troops of Generals Crook, Custer and Gibbon in fighting the Sioux. "Private & Personal" written in Brisbin's hand, and the receipt stamp of the General Superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad dated May [23?], 1876, appear at the head of the letter; page four contains note, "Jas. S. Brisbin 4/22/76, Requests pass No. [no number]." Accompanied by typed transcript.
ArchivalResource: 1 item ([4] p.) ; 25 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/82154343 View
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- Brisbin, James S. (James Sanks), 1837-1892. Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Title:
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Scrapbook collection of Civil War photographs and autographs, assembled by Philip Case Lockwood.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (.38 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00542/catalog View
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- Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
1864 - Crook, George - File No. C325
Title:
1864 - Crook, George - File No. C325
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76686604 View
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1872 - File No. 4427 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 4427 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143162938 View
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Crook, George, 1829-1889. Papers, 1871-1890.
Title:
Papers, 1871-1890.
Two letter copybooks from Crook to others; miscelllaneous letters from Emmett Crawford, J.C. Kelton, R. Williams, Philip Sheridan, and an Indian council; and Crook's annual military records (1871-1889).
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49797564 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1889. Papers, 1871-1890.
1889 - File No. 5444 - Crook, Geo - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 5444 - Crook, Geo - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146666138 View
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Rice, Elliott Warren, 1835-1887. Elliott Warren Rice Papers, 1861-1887.
Title:
Elliott Warren Rice Papers, 1861-1887.
Papers of General Elliott W. Rice include correspondence, commissions, and miscellaneous items. Military commissions by Governor Samuel J. Kirkwood of Iowa and Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson. Correspondence includes one letter to sister, Angeline A. Rice, and letters from John C. Fremont, George Crook, and Albert W. Swalm. Obituary notices and letters of sympathy to niece, Mrs. Annette Rice Cochran, from William W. Belknap and Ettie Van Hook. The collection also includes "Personal Recollections of General Elliott W. Rice" by Gertrude Cochran Crane.
ArchivalResource: .33 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/631278043 View
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- Rice, Elliott Warren, 1835-1887. Elliott Warren Rice Papers, 1861-1887.
Corbusier, William Henry, 1844-1930. Indian language vocabularies of William Henry Corbusier, 1851-1927.
Title:
Indian language vocabularies of William Henry Corbusier, 1851-1927.
The majority of items in this group are vocabulary lists for the languages of several Arizona and California Indian groups including the Cahuilla, Cupeno, Diegueno, Hualapai, Yavapai, and the Yuma. Some of the vocabulary lists have introductions regarding the history of the Indian group and the rules of the language. There are also typescripts of two articles written by Amiel Whipple and Alfred L. Kroeber, regarding California Indians, that Corbusier annotated with his notes. There is also an essay regarding Corbusier's time in the military and General George Crook and the 5th U.S. Cavalry's dealings with the Tonto Apache leader Delshay. Also included are two Indian folk tales, How Wolf's Son Became a Star (Hualapai), and How Whets-A-Whets Went Up to the Fourth Heaven (Yuma); the stories are written in the Indian language and English. There is also a copy of a letter by Corbusier to Jesse Walter Fewkes.
ArchivalResource: 17 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86129725 View
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- Corbusier, William Henry, 1844-1930. Indian language vocabularies of William Henry Corbusier, 1851-1927.
1888 - File No. 2542 - Crook, George - Kansas
Title:
1888 - File No. 2542 - Crook, George - Kansas
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Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 6446
Title:
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 6446
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Crook, George - California - 1857 - File No. C482
Title:
Crook, George - California - 1857 - File No. C482
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1865 - Crook, George - File No. A1233
Title:
1865 - Crook, George - File No. A1233
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Crook, George - State: California - Year: 1860 - File Number: C248
Title:
Crook, George - State: California - Year: 1860 - File Number: C248
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/28710682 View
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1889 - File No. 1101 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 1101 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146647374 View
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Schuyler, Walter Scribner, 1850-1932. Papers of Walter Scribner Schuyler, 1871-1932.
Title:
Papers of Walter Scribner Schuyler, 1871-1932.
Includes letters written by Schuyler to his parents about his army service in the West, esepcially in Arizona Territory between 1872 and 1874, letters from George Crook about Indian affairs in the 1870s, an account of a survey party he conducted to Yellowstone National Park in 1883, and his 1904 report as a military observer during the Russo-Japanese War. Of note are 46 volumes of journals written by Schuyler between 1898 and 1932, detailing his later military career and his business affairs. There is also correspondence from Philip Henry Sheridan to George Crook in the collection, as well as a typescript of a sketch by Azor Hewitt Nickerson titled: Major General Goerge Crook and the Indians [1890<].
ArchivalResource: 152 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122644268 View
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- Schuyler, Walter Scribner, 1850-1932. Papers of Walter Scribner Schuyler, 1871-1932.
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 6448
Title:
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 6448
DigitalArchivalResource:
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This letter was meant for the commander of the Department of the Missouri who was George R. Crook at the time.
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McKay, W. C. (William Cameron), 1824-1893. Papers, 1866-1868.
Title:
Papers, 1866-1868.
Papers include: Photocopy of diary (November 12, 1866-October 31, 1867) kept by William C. McKay while leading a contingent of Warm Springs Indian scouts during a military campaign, commanded by General George Crook, against the Snake and Paiute Indians in Eastern Oregon; list (1867-1868) of Indian scouts serving under McKay; typescript register (1866-1867) of all Warm Springs Indians serving as scouts in the U.S. Army. The Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs at the time of McKay's appointment was J.W. Perit Huntington.
ArchivalResource: .10 cu. ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32935531 View
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- McKay, W. C. (William Cameron), 1824-1893. Papers, 1866-1868.
Valentine McGillycuddy diary, 1876-1877
Title:
Valentine McGillycuddy diary 1876-1877
ArchivalResource: 1 v.; (35 p.) (0.5 linear ft.)
http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%20SC%20139 View
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- Valentine McGillycuddy diary, 1876-1877
Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
Title:
Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
As Brigadier general, George Crook orders two companies of infantry to Fort Laramie and comments that depredations will start in that section as soon as the expedition is on its way.
ArchivalResource: 1 p.; 22 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702129637 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter: to Lt. General P. H. Sheridan / by George Crook, 1876 May 27.
Brininstool, E. A. (Earl Alonzo), 1870-1957. Edward Brininstool papers, undated.
Title:
Edward Brininstool papers, undated.
Contains the following type of materials: correspondence / letters. Contains information pertaining to the following wars and time periods: Late Indian Wars. General description of the collection: The Edward A. Brininstool papers include a copy of a letter from an anonymous veteran of the Indian Wars to the historian Brininstool (June 1935), giving his views on the Battle of Little Big Horn, "Buffalo Bill" Cody and other scouts, George Crook, George A. Custer, Philip H. Sheridan, and the treatment of Indians. Some evidence indicates that the writer had served under Crook before deserting.
ArchivalResource: 1 folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50386459 View
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- Brininstool, E. A. (Earl Alonzo), 1870-1957. Edward Brininstool papers, undated.
Crook, George - State: Idaho - Year: 1867
Title:
Crook, George - State: Idaho - Year: 1867
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70401206 View
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Crook, George - California - 1856 - File No. C472
Title:
Crook, George - California - 1856 - File No. C472
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/111997777 View
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Photograph collection, ca. 1867, 1879-1890, 1930s (bulk 1880-1890)
Title:
Photograph collection, ca. 1867, 1879-1890, 1930s (bulk 1880-1890)
Photographs of southwestern Army personnel, forts and camps, Apache Indians and Scouts, and scenery in Arizona and the Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico, mostly taken circa 1877 to 1915
ArchivalResource: .5 linear ft. (1 box)
https://www.arizonahistoricalsociety.org/wp-content/upLoads/library_PC_Gatewood-Charles.pdf View
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- Gatewood, Charles. Gatewood photograph collection, ca. 1867, 1879-1890, 1930s (bulk 1880-1890).
1879 - File No. 7031 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1879 - File No. 7031 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143141284 View
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Crook, George, 1829-1890. George Crook papers, 1863-1890.
Title:
George Crook papers, 1863-1890.
Collection consists of letters concerning the Sioux campaign of 1876, the Apache campaigns of 1883 and 1886, the Sioux Commission, 1889, and the relocation of the Apache Indian reservation.
ArchivalResource: 2 folders (45 letters)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54518323 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. George Crook papers, 1863-1890.
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C657
Title:
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C657
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77058361 View
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Thomas Henry Tibbles papers
Title:
Thomas Henry Tibbles papers
ArchivalResource: 2 Linear feet; 41 Photographs
https://sova.si.edu/record/NMAI.AC.066 View
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1889 - File No. 933 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 933 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1875 - File No. 490 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1875 - File No. 490 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142911058 View
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Crook, George - California - 1858 - File No. C324
Title:
Crook, George - California - 1858 - File No. C324
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/112043438 View
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Nye, William H., b. 1833. William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
Title:
William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
22 ALS from Nye to his mother about life in San Francisco, the trip from California to Idaho, Boise life and scenery, a Boise vigilance committee, and gold and silver mines in Idaho. In addition, the letters carry references to his strong unionist sympathies and the death of a brother in the Civil War, the cost of living in Boise, earthquakes in San Francisco, General George Crook's campaign against the Snake Indians, and Nye's opinion that the Indians should be "exterminated."
ArchivalResource: 22 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702164939 View
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- Nye, William H., b. 1833. William H. Nye letters from Boise, Idaho and San Francisco, 1864-1867.
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 7541
Title:
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 7541
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/93225328 View
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1873 - File No. 2931 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1873 - File No. 2931 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1869 - Crook, George - File No. C345
Title:
1869 - Crook, George - File No. C345
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77115691 View
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1888 - File No. 2177 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1888 - File No. 2177 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter from Camp Warner, 1866 Aug. 20.
Title:
Letter from Camp Warner, 1866 Aug. 20.
Letter from Camp Warner, Oregon, written by George Crook, Lt. Col. of the 23rd U.S. Infantry, to "My dear General" [Jefferson Columbus Davis], thanking the General for transporting Mrs. Crook, discussing the climate, and providing news regarding the Native Americans in the [Boise District.] He notes that the "Indians raid all over the country and give the impression among the citizens that they live in their midst which is a great mistake, for these Indians think nothing of riding two or three hundred miles to commit their depredations." He recommends that "the country west of Steens Mountain be formed into a separate district, as this present district is entirely too extensive for one officer to command." He comments that the district "is cursed with several worthless commanding officers," and that "both the tone and discipline of the troops here is in a very bad state and will require much hard labor to dress them up." He complains about being detained in his operations against the Indians because of a lack of supplies.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (4 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43404236 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter from Camp Warner, 1866 Aug. 20.
Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, Maryland, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, Maryland, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120383267 View
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Recommendations for Brevets of Officers in Indian Campaigns and Engagements, 1867 - 1888
Title:
Recommendations for Brevets of Officers in Indian Campaigns and Engagements, 1867 - 1888
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7422069 View
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1864 - Crook, George - File No. C153
Title:
1864 - Crook, George - File No. C153
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76686051 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, West Virginia, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of George Crook, West Virginia, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120386273 View
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1882 - File No. 5045 - Crook, George
Title:
1882 - File No. 5045 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146386090 View
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1866 - Crook, George - File No. C735
Title:
1866 - Crook, George - File No. C735
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76929868 View
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Hagner, Francis R. (Francis Randall), 1873-1940,. Francis R. Hagner collection, 1860-1946, bulk (1876-1925).
Title:
Francis R. Hagner collection, 1860-1946, bulk (1876-1925).
Collection consists of typed copies of letters, diaries, articles, court martial proceedings, and printed matter concerning General George A. Custer and the Battle of the Little Big Horn in 1876.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear foot (2 boxes, 2 v. and 1 oversize folder)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122517554 View
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- Hagner, Francis R. (Francis Randall), 1873-1940,. Francis R. Hagner collection, 1860-1946, bulk (1876-1925).
Fly, C. S. (Camillus Sidney), 1849-1901. Cañon de los Embudos photographs, March 1886.
Title:
Cañon de los Embudos photographs, March 1886.
Nineteen photographs of seventeen different scenes, taken by C.S. Fly, and documenting the final days of negotiation of the surrender of Geronimo in 1886 at the Cañon de los Embudos in Mexico near the Arizona border. The images include views of Geronimo, Chief Naiche, Nana, Gen. George Crook, Charles M. Strauss, John Bourke, Tom Horn, Al Sieber, Santiago McKinn, and Apache men, women and children. Scenes include Geronimo and Naiche, and their Chiricahua Apache followers in camp and negotiating with General George Crook.
ArchivalResource: .75 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44529160 View
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- Fly, C. S. (Camillus Sidney), 1849-1901. Cañon de los Embudos photographs, March 1886.
1889 - File No. 4508 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 4508 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146660643 View
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Bukey, Van H., 1836-1909. Van H. Bukey papers, 1863-1884 (bulk 1863-1864)
Title:
Van H. Bukey papers, 1863-1884 (bulk 1863-1864)
The Van H. Bukey papers consist of letters from Bukey to his wife Celia, letters from Colonel Daniel Frost to Bukey and an unknown colonel, and letters to Bukey and his wife from Sergeant Major Ayers, Chaplin A.J. Lyon, Brigadier General George Crook, and Dr. E.D.J. Bond. Topics of the letters include combat, battles and campaigns, military life, Union and Confederate officers, casualties, and other topics pertaining to the American Civil War.
ArchivalResource: .33 cu. ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/285313053 View
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- Bukey, Van H., 1836-1909. Van H. Bukey papers, 1863-1884 (bulk 1863-1864)
McGillycuddy, Valentine Trent O'Connell, 1849-1939. Diary, 1876-1877.
Title:
Diary, 1876-1877.
Handwritten record of McGillycuddy's duties as a surgeon with General George Crook during the Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition of 1876, including an description of the Battle of Slim Buttes, September 9, 1876 and the death of the Sioux chief, American Horse. The diary continues, beginning December 14, 1876 in the hand of McGillycuddy's wife, Fanny, and describes garrison life at Camp Robinson, Nebraska.
ArchivalResource: 1 vol. (35 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122497108 View
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- McGillycuddy, Valentine Trent O'Connell, 1849-1939. Diary, 1876-1877.
Crook, George - State: Oregon - Year: 1868
Title:
Crook, George - State: Oregon - Year: 1868
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70488041 View
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1883 - File No. 615 - Crook, George
Title:
1883 - File No. 615 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146391007 View
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1881 - File No. 4783 - Crook, George - Wyoming
Title:
1881 - File No. 4783 - Crook, George - Wyoming
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146328174 View
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Sanford, Wilmot P. Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Title:
Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Three holograph diaries dated September 26-December 8, 1874; December 9, 1874-May 23, 1875; and March 25, 1876-March 1877, of Wilmot P. Sanford, a private in Company D, 6th United States Infantry stationed on the Dakota-Montana frontier. The diaries describe Sanford's daily life including army chores, inspections, illnesses, discharges, his frequent visits to the library and his becoming assistant librarian on April 19, 1875, and letter writing. The entries in the diary of 1876-77 note Sanford's co-ownership of a photographic studio at Fort Buford, Dakota Territory, and contain his comments regarding Indian trouble as well as news of General Custer and the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and General George Crook and the Battle of the Rosebud. Each diary also includes Sanford's accounts of personal expenses. The two earlier diaries are written in small notebooks; the last diary is written in a printed diary by an unknown publisher containing various printed time and measurement tables, phases of the moon, postal rates, etc. In addition to the diaries there are three manuscript letters to Sanford: H. L. Barnes, Haven, Iowa, February 27, 1872, to "Absent Nephew," Nashua New Hampshire, regarding family and farming matters; W. Laughlin, Fort Buford, Dakota Territory, July 20, 1874, to "Friend Sanford," Co. D, 6th Infantry with Northern Boundary Survey, regarding Sanford's mail; and Jacob Pipher, Fort Peck, Montana Territory, April 6, 1878, to "Friend Sanford," Hudson, New Hampshire, discussing news of Sanford's former army acquaintances. Accompanied by volume 3, no. 4 of the journal North Dakota History, which contains an article by Ben Innes with a transcript of the diaries dating from September 26, 1874 to May 23, 1875.
ArchivalResource: 0.20 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702127293 View
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- Sanford, Wilmot P. Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Anspach family. Papers : of the Anspach family, 1864, n.d.
Title:
Papers : of the Anspach family, 1864, n.d.
The collection includes genealogical information about the family of Johann Peter and Catherine Barbara Reid Anspach and a transcript of a letter, 1864 June 23, from Frederick Anspach, Liberty, Va., to his brother Robert Anspach. Frederick Anspach mentions the death and funeral of his grandfather Reuben Parker and the difficulty of getting a decent funeral. He also describes the arrival of Union forces commanded by David Hunter, George Crook, William Woods Averill, and Jeremiah Cutler Sullivan, in Liberty, Va., on June 15, 1864, who burned parts of the town, took food supplies, freed several slaves, and plundered several stores. The Union forces then marched to Lynchburg, met the Confederate forces commanded by Jubal Early, and retreated. During the retreat some skirmishes with the pursuing forces of Early occurred.
ArchivalResource: 2 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30793415 View
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- Anspach family. Papers : of the Anspach family, 1864, n.d.
1869 - Crook, George - File No. C693
Title:
1869 - Crook, George - File No. C693
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77117100 View
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Frank Casanova collection, 1881-1886, 1964-1966
Title:
Frank Casanova collection, 1881-1886, 1964-1966
Collection contains a manuscript of John Gregory Bourke on Cataract Canyon, correspondence regarding the publication of Frank Casanova’s manuscript, and part of Casanova’s research material including a copy of an 1881 report by Lieutenant-Colonel WM Redwood Price and copies of 1885-86 correspondence concerning aid to the Havasupai.
ArchivalResource: 0.75 cm textual material
http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/mna/FrankCasanova.xml View
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- Frank Casanova collection, 1881-1886, 1964-1966
1888 - File No. 1469 - Crook, George - Nebraska
Title:
1888 - File No. 1469 - Crook, George - Nebraska
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146619583 View
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1882 - File No. 2894 - Crook, George
Title:
1882 - File No. 2894 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146365375 View
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Carrington Family papers, 1749-1929
Title:
Carrington Family papers 1749-1929
The papers consist of correspondence, pamphlets, printed material, scrapbooks, sermons, and other papers relating to members of the Carrington family. Henry Beebee Carrington (1824-1912) and his grandfather, David Lewis Beebe (1763-1803), are two central figures in the papers. Material relating to David Lewis Beebe, including essays and sermons, documents his religious duties in Connecticut and family concerns in Ohio. Henry Beebee Carrington material includes correspondence, a diary, a letterbook, maps, pamphlets, scrapbooks, and other items documenting his experiences as a student at Yale University, as a lawyer practicing in Ohio, and as a commanding officer for Union forces during the Civil War. Carrington's role in military campaigns and treaty negotiations with Indians of the American West is also documented. His design of Fort Philip Kearney, the site of a famous massacre, and treaty negotiations with the Flathead Indians of Montana are detailed in pamphlets, scrapbooks and other papers.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet (8 boxes, 1 folio)
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0130 View
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- Carrington Family papers, 1749-1929
1884 - File No. 4862 - Crook, George - Arizona
Title:
1884 - File No. 4862 - Crook, George - Arizona
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146477792 View
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1876 - File No. 4163 (Crook, George - Wyoming)
Title:
1876 - File No. 4163 (Crook, George - Wyoming)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142977337 View
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1868 - Crook, George - File No. C655
Title:
1868 - Crook, George - File No. C655
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77058347 View
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Wasson, Joseph, 1833-1909. General Crook's campaign : letters to the Owyhee Avalanche, Silver City, Idaho, 1867 July 20-Oct. 13 / by Joseph Wasson.
Title:
General Crook's campaign : letters to the Owyhee Avalanche, Silver City, Idaho, 1867 July 20-Oct. 13 / by Joseph Wasson.
Letters concerning General Crook's campaign written by Joseph Wasson and published in the Owyhee Avalanche, Silver City, Idaho Territory.
ArchivalResource: 1 folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25017530 View
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- Wasson, Joseph, 1833-1909. General Crook's campaign : letters to the Owyhee Avalanche, Silver City, Idaho, 1867 July 20-Oct. 13 / by Joseph Wasson.
1880 - File No. 2036 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1880 - File No. 2036 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143154973 View
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Kimball, William A. Orders and correspondence, 1878.
Title:
Orders and correspondence, 1878.
Collection of military orders and correspondence to and by William A. Kimball, Fort Hall, Idaho, November 8. 1878. Kimball was an engineer officer from Utah to the United States Army, 14th Infantry.
ArchivalResource: 50 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702130163 View
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- Kimball, William A. Orders and correspondence, 1878.
Crook, George - State: Oregon - Year: 1869
Title:
Crook, George - State: Oregon - Year: 1869
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70512041 View
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1889 - File No. 2419 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1889 - File No. 2419 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146651531 View
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George Crook Collection 'Ellington Tapes', 1929-1987
Title:
George Crook Collection 'Ellington Tapes' 1929-1987
ArchivalResource: c1400 reel to reel tapes
http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb2942-gc View
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- George Crook Collection 'Ellington Tapes', 1929-1987
Crook, George - State: California - Year: 1870
Title:
Crook, George - State: California - Year: 1870
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70547544 View
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1874 - File No. 4003 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1874 - File No. 4003 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Title:
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Autograph letters and documents of officers and statesmen associated with the Union in the Civil War collected by Frederick Myers Dearborn.
ArchivalResource: 8 boxes (4 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01501/catalog View
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- Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
King, Charles, 1844-1933. Indian campaigns : sketches of cavalry service in Arizona and on the northern plains, 1880-1889.
Title:
Indian campaigns : sketches of cavalry service in Arizona and on the northern plains, 1880-1889.
Typescript, with hand-written corrections, of a book published by the Old Army Press in 1984. Most of these items were first published as newspaper articles in the Milwaukee "Sentinel" mostly in the 1880s. They were edited by Harry H. Anderson. The work is a first-person account of King's activities and experiences in fighting Indians in the United States.
ArchivalResource: 1 vol. (196 pages) + 12 illustrations.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122536543 View
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- King, Charles, 1844-1933. Indian campaigns : sketches of cavalry service in Arizona and on the northern plains, 1880-1889.
Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Title:
Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Autograph letter signed. Crook writes of going to New York to sell property.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; 20 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52249187 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to Strong, 1880 May 2.
Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 1793 - 1999. Council Proceedings, 5/26/1875 - 4/19/1894
Title:
Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 1793 - 1999. Council Proceedings, 5/26/1875 - 4/19/1894
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1145940 View
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- Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 1793 - 1999. Council Proceedings
1874 - File No. 722 (Crook, George - California)
Title:
1874 - File No. 722 (Crook, George - California)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142884520 View
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Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter, 1866.
Title:
Letter, 1866.
Handscript letter (September 1, 1866) addressed to the Honorable Lewis D. Campbell; Crook refuses to write or be published, saying that an officer of the regular army should not take part in politics unless under very extraordinary circumstances.
ArchivalResource: 2 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/40634908 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Letter, 1866.
Crook, George -- Brigadier General
Title:
Crook, George -- Brigadier General
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1758586 View
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1887 - File No. 2711 - Crook, George - Wyoming
Title:
1887 - File No. 2711 - Crook, George - Wyoming
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146568834 View
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1873 - File No. 1721 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1873 - File No. 1721 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142863987 View
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1888 - File No. 4884 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1888 - File No. 4884 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146634312 View
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1862 - Crook, George - File No. C996
Title:
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C996
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85391224 View
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Crook, George - California - 1854 - File No. C265
Title:
Crook, George - California - 1854 - File No. C265
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/145692552 View
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1889 - File No. 5903 - Crook, George - District of Columbia
Title:
1889 - File No. 5903 - Crook, George - District of Columbia
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146671935 View
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1878 - File No. 388 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1878 - File No. 388 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143042460 View
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Crook, George, 1829-1890. Crook collection, 1867-1890.
Title:
Crook collection, 1867-1890.
Primarily biographical material consisting of articles about Crook. There is also an undated manuscript by Crook entitled "The Apache Problem," a letter that Crook wrote about his childhood, a telegram to Lt. Gatewood about an expediture of funds, a letter to Lt. Goodale, 1867, describing conditions at Camp Warner in Oregon, and a letter thanking Hewitt & Bartlett for their firm's help with military efforts, 1873.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/40047379 View
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- Crook, George, 1829-1890. Crook collection, 1867-1890.
Arizona scenes photograph collection [picture].
Title:
Arizona scenes photograph collection [picture]. [1880]-
ArchivalResource: Photographs.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/45422839 View
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- Resource Relation
- Arizona scenes photograph collection [picture].
1889 - File No. 5214 - Crook, George - Illinois
Title:
1889 - File No. 5214 - Crook, George - Illinois
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146664605 View
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1888 - File No. 1155 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1888 - File No. 1155 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146618185 View
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William A. Carter papers, 1863-1925
Title:
William A. Carter papers 1863-1925
This collection includes several personal and business letters between 1863 and 1925, and letters of condolence at the time of Carter's death in 1881. In addition there is an undated map of Fort Bridger detailing the water lines and buildings.
ArchivalResource: 5 folders; (0.08 linear ft.)
http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%20SC%20490 View
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- William A. Carter papers, 1863-1925
Topographical Map of Country Traversed by the Command of General George Crook in his Expedition against Chiricahua Indians May 1st to June 10th 1883
Title:
Topographical Map of Country Traversed by the Command of General George Crook in his Expedition against Chiricahua Indians May 1st to June 10th 1883
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/208104790 View
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Capron, Thaddeus Hurlbut, 1840-1890. Thaddeus Hurlbut Capron Family papers, 1864-1966 (bulk 1867-1884)
Title:
Thaddeus Hurlbut Capron Family papers, 1864-1966 (bulk 1867-1884)
The collection includes 12 volumes of "Thad's and my letters" (1867-1884) copied and edited by Cynthia Capron in the early 1890s; manuscript correspondence between Capron and his officers and wife from 1864-1882; an 1868 diary form daybook for Capron while stationed at Camp Wright, California, as well as excerpts from other diaries; pamphlets, magazine and newspaper clippings; manuscripts; notebooks; reminiscences by Hazen Selwyn Capron regarding army life as a child; photographs; and miscellaneous invitations, calling cards, and announcements.
ArchivalResource: 1.35 cubic ft. (3 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27302789 View
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- Capron, Thaddeus Hurlbut, 1840-1890. Thaddeus Hurlbut Capron Family papers, 1864-1966 (bulk 1867-1884)
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C870
Title:
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C870
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85390794 View
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1888 - File No. 848 - Crook, George - Missouri
Title:
1888 - File No. 848 - Crook, George - Missouri
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146616320 View
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1871 - File No. 3952 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1871 - File No. 3952 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142822857 View
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Chase, George F. The George F. Chase papers, 1867-1901.
Title:
The George F. Chase papers, 1867-1901.
Contains the following types of materials: organizational documents, clippings, maps / charts, financial account book, registers, military court materials. Contains information pertaining to the following wars: Late Indian Wars. Contains information pertaining to the following military unit: 3rd U.S. Cavalry Regiment. General description of the collection: The George F. Chase papers include Cadet Chase's West Point financial account book, 1867-1871. Other material includes miscellaneous official papers and clippings, mostly concerning his service in the 3rd U.S. Cavalry Regiment. Among them are three headquarters (HQ) books: testimony and verdicts at military trials which he adjudged, 1886-1888; summary of verdicts of trials over which he presided, 1896-1898; and roster of officers (including their assignments, supplies issued to them, etc.), January-April, 1898. A large number of clippings, in addition, are available concerning the Catarino Garza revolution against Porfirio Diaz in January, 1892, and Chase's role in maintaining the inviolability of American soil during it. A few clippings are on hand criticizing George Crook's conduct of operations against Crazy Horse and Geronimo. The lone item on the Philippine Insurrection is a street map of Manila, prepared in 1901.
ArchivalResource: 2 boxes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50133759 View
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- Chase, George F. The George F. Chase papers, 1867-1901.
Moore, Thomas. Letter, 1890.
Title:
Letter, 1890.
Collection consists of a 24 page letter written by Moore to John G. Bourke, a U.S. Army officer who served with General Crook, describing the Paiute War from 1866-1868 and the Bannock War of 1878.
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33862846 View
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- Moore, Thomas. Letter, 1890.
Walking Cherry Woman Collection, June 28, 1889
Title:
Walking Cherry Woman Collection June 28, 1889
ArchivalResource: 1 folder
http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wycob-m00298.xml View
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- Walking Cherry Woman Collection, June 28, 1889
McGillycuddy, Julia B. (Julia Blanchard). McGillycuddy, agent / by Julia Mcgillycuddy, [ca. 1940].
Title:
McGillycuddy, agent / by Julia Mcgillycuddy, [ca. 1940].
Carbon copy of typewritten manuscript biography of Valentine McGillycuddy, written by his second wife, mainly describing her husband's experiences on the Great Plains, 1875-1886, and focusing on his years as Indian agent at Pine Ridge.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (156 leaves) ; 28 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/35232277 View
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- McGillycuddy, Julia B. (Julia Blanchard). McGillycuddy, agent / by Julia Mcgillycuddy, [ca. 1940].
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 3942
Title:
Crook, George - Nebraska - 1880 - File No. 3942
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/93214929 View
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Proctor, Redfield, 1831-1908. TLS, 1889 September 21 : Washington, D.C. to George Crook.
Title:
TLS, 1889 September 21 : Washington, D.C. to George Crook.
The Indian Rights Association suggests removing the Mt. Vernon Apaches to be near the Cherokee settlement in North Carolina as a measure to improve their self sufficiency. Proctor requests Crook's opinion as an expert and one who has had success with the Sioux.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; 27 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18501204 View
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- Proctor, Redfield, 1831-1908. TLS, 1889 September 21 : Washington, D.C. to George Crook.
Colyer, Vincent, 1825-1888. Scrapbook of clippings on Indian activities in Arizona, New Mexico, and the Southwest 1870-1872.
Title:
Scrapbook of clippings on Indian activities in Arizona, New Mexico, and the Southwest 1870-1872.
Scrapbook of clippings on Indian activities in Arizona, New Mexico, and the Southwest, often highlighting the activities of Vincent Colyer as a member of the Board of Indian Commissioners. Clippings are from newspapers from across the country. Clippings mention legislation, conflicts, attacks by the Ku Klux Klan, visits with Cochise, and assimilation. Pasted to the cover is the title page from Peace with the Apaches of New Mexico and Arizona. Report of Vincent Colyer, member of Board of Indian Commissioners, 1871 to the cover, a copy of the report is contained in the scrapbook. Title page says "Presented by Edward F. Weed, Nov, 14 1922."
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68051620 View
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- Colyer, Vincent, 1825-1888. Scrapbook of clippings on Indian activities in Arizona, New Mexico, and the Southwest 1870-1872.
Crook, George - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1866
Title:
Crook, George - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1866
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70305637 View
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Warner, J. Chapin. Papers. 1861-1905. (bulk: 1862-1865)
Title:
Papers. 1861-1905. (bulk: 1862-1865)
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/8290729 View
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- Warner, J. Chapin. Papers. 1861-1905. (bulk: 1862-1865)
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Minnesota Commandery. Organizational records, 1866-1953.
Title:
Organizational records, 1866-1953.
Correspondence and printed materials regarding meetings, membership, and administrative activities of the Minnesota Commandery; membership applications, registers, and indexes; memorials and other biographical data on members; Civil War reminiscences; minute books (1885-1906); and financial records.
ArchivalResource: 16.4 cu. ft. (33 boxes, including 49 v.); 1 oversize item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/313838898 View
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- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Minnesota Commandery. Organizational records, 1866-1953.
Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888. Telegram, 1876 Jun 28.
Title:
Telegram, 1876 Jun 28.
Details of troop movements in the campaign against hostile Indians.
ArchivalResource: 3 p.; 25 cm.
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/bibid/3204880 View
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- Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888. Telegram, 1876 Jun 28.
Gatewood, Charles Baehr, 1853-1896. Gatewood papers, 1883-1955.
Title:
Gatewood papers, 1883-1955.
Letters, transcribed reports of U.S. Army field operations, manuscripts, correspondence, magazine and newspaper excerpts, publications, and transcripts concerning the military in Arizona and New Mexico with an emphasis on Charles Gatewood's involvement in the Geronimo Campaign and earlier Apache engagements. Includes original letters from Lt. Gatewood to his wife, four letters from Gen. Crook to Gatewood concerning the Apache, and letters of congratulation from various people to Gatewood upon the surrender of Geronimo. There are original manuscripts by Gatewood about the Apache Indians, a map used during the Geronimo Campaign and autographs of Geronimo. A significant portion of the collection consists of extracts of articles, correspondence, and books; printed articles; transcripts of reports; and newsclippings concerning Lt. Gatewood, the Apache Campaigns, artillery, the heliograph, and similar topics. There is also a great deal of correspondence between Gatewood's son, officers who served in Arizona, and other researchers. Significant correspondents include E.A. Brininstool, Henry W. Daly, Anton Mazzanovich, Gen. Thomas Cruse, Henry W. Lawton, Eugene B. Beaumont, and Ken Kayitah. Correspondence between the Arizona Historical Society and Gatewood family members is also present.
ArchivalResource: 6.0 linear ft. (12 boxes).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37253645 View
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- Gatewood, Charles Baehr, 1853-1896. Gatewood papers, 1883-1955.
Stanton, Thaddeus Harlan, 1835-1900. Itinerary of a journey to and through Arizona in the winter of 1871-2, 1871-1872.
Title:
Itinerary of a journey to and through Arizona in the winter of 1871-2, 1871-1872.
This typed copy of Stanton's diary covers his trip to and through Arizona. He left San Francisco December 4, 1871, sailed south, rouded the tip of Baja California and arrived in Fort Yuma two weeks later where he transferred to a steamboat and sailed up the Colorado River. The expedition ends in March 1872 with Stanton and his men finally arriving in Los Angeles. The diary details Stanton's expedition through Arizona. The small group made stops at several forts and towns including Fort MacDowell, Camp Grant, Camp Bowie, Camp Apache, Prescott, and Florence, Arizona. Stanton also spent much time in Tucson and describes the frontier town in detail. Stanton discusses such matters as the bad weather and other harsh conditions his men faced, the physical landscape he saw, some dissatisfaction with the US Army by his men, events and parties he attended, the beautiful women of the area, and the people he met along the way. Stanton meets and mentions several notable people including General George Crook and Arizona Governor A. P. K. Safford. Other subjects mentioned include: the Camp Grant Massacre, quartz mines and mining, the American military experience and various native peoples such as the Apache, the Hualapai and the Paiute. The diary also includes a short biography of Stanton.
ArchivalResource: 124 pages, bound volume, 29 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/244953414 View
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- Stanton, Thaddeus Harlan, 1835-1900. Itinerary of a journey to and through Arizona in the winter of 1871-2, 1871-1872.
1878 - File No. 8104 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1878 - File No. 8104 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143085546 View
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Crook, George, 1828-1890. Telegrams, 1886.
Title:
Telegrams, 1886.
Telegrams to Lt. Gen. Philip Sheridan concerning talks with Geronimo requesting that the Apaches surrender unconditionally. Geronimo makes three counter proposals and Crook accepts the first one, which provides that the Indians and their families should be sent east. Gen. Crook also requests the acceptance of his resignation.
ArchivalResource: 5 items (9 p.); 22 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702689202 View
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- Crook, George, 1828-1890. Telegrams, 1886.
John Upton Terrell manuscripts
Title:
John Upton Terrell manuscripts
This collection consists of 2 unpublished book manuscripts, Shawnee Chronicle and Frontier Soldier, written by John Upton Terrell in approximately 1975.
ArchivalResource: 0.42 Linear feet
https://sova.si.edu/record/NMAI.AC.400 View
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1872 - File No. 4458 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 4458 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143162998 View
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Carter, William A. (William Alexander), 1818-1881. William A. Carter papers, 1863-1929.
Title:
William A. Carter papers, 1863-1929.
Collection includes several personal and business letters between 1863-1925 and letters of condolence at the time of Carter's death in 1881. In addition there is an undated map of Fort Bridger detailing the water lines and buildings.
ArchivalResource: 5 folders (0.08 linear ft.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/365128365 View
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- Carter, William A. (William Alexander), 1818-1881. William A. Carter papers, 1863-1929.
Standing Bear v. George Crook
Title:
Standing Bear v. George Crook
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7403552 View
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1878 - File No. 6677 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1878 - File No. 6677 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143070051 View
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1888 - File No. 2110 - Crook, George - California
Title:
1888 - File No. 2110 - Crook, George - California
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146623370 View
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Coates, Benjamin F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1827-1899. Benjamin F. Coates collection, 1862-1881 (bulk 1862-1865).
Title:
Benjamin F. Coates collection, 1862-1881 (bulk 1862-1865).
Approximately 200 letters, chiefly written by Coates to his wife, Elizabeth J. (Patterson) Coates, during his Civil War service, reflecting his activities as an officer (colonel and brigadier general) with 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry, his participation in the battles of South Mountain, Cloyds Mountain, Cedar Creek, and others, and the pursuit of John Hunt Morgan; together with minor miscellaneous correspondence with Rutherford B. Hayes and others.
ArchivalResource: 201 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70925250 View
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- Coates, Benjamin F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1827-1899. Benjamin F. Coates collection, 1862-1881 (bulk 1862-1865).
Crook, George - State: [Blank] - Year: 1869
Title:
Crook, George - State: [Blank] - Year: 1869
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70512705 View
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United States. War Dept. Dept. of the Platte. U. S. War Department. Department of the Platte records, 1875-1888.
Title:
U. S. War Department. Department of the Platte records, 1875-1888.
These records of the U.S. War Department's Department of the Platte consist of outgoing correspondence (1875-1888) of General George Crook to the Military Division of the Missouri; reports; and general orders. [MF 4: Partial reel. Portions same as SC 929.]
ArchivalResource: Partial reel of microfilm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/781299273 View
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- United States. War Dept. Dept. of the Platte. U. S. War Department. Department of the Platte records, 1875-1888.
United States. Army. Spotted Tail commission, 1876.
Title:
Spotted Tail commission, 1876.
Commission of Spotted Tail as the Head Chief of all the bands of the Sioux Nation, signed by General George Crook on October 23, 1876.
ArchivalResource: 1 leaf ; 25 x 20 cm 1 envelope.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61257719 View
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- United States. Army. Spotted Tail commission, 1876.
George Crook papers, 1863-1890
Title:
George Crook papers 1863-1890
George Crook was a U.S. Army officer. The George Crook papers comprise letters concerning the Sioux campaign of 1876, the Apache campaigns of 1883 and 1886, the Sioux Commission, 1889, and the relocation of the Apache Indian reservation.
ArchivalResource: 0.1 linear feet, 2 folders
http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv29760 View
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- George Crook papers, 1863-1890
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C1002
Title:
1862 - Crook, George - File No. C1002
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85391245 View
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1872 - File No. 2698 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1872 - File No. 2698 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142843094 View
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Hayes, Webb Cook, 1856-1935. Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
Title:
Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
Photographs, glass negatives, and flexible negatives, spanning Hayes's lifetime, chiefly images of Col. Webb C. Hayes, including formal portraits and candid shots, reflecting his strong interest in military affairs, including his participation in the First Cleveland Troop and its successors, the Spanish American War, Philippine Insurrection, Boxer Rebellion, China Relief Expedition, Russo-Japanese War, and World War I.
ArchivalResource: 18 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70962934 View
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- Hayes, Webb Cook, 1856-1935. Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
1864 - Crook, George - File No. C410
Title:
1864 - Crook, George - File No. C410
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76686875 View
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1882 - File No. 266 - Crook, George
Title:
1882 - File No. 266 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146346832 View
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1875 - File No. 5891 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1875 - File No. 5891 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142951711 View
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Hale, Francis G. Civil War diaries of Francis G. Hale [manuscript], 1861-1864,
Title:
Civil War diaries of Francis G. Hale [manuscript], 1861-1864,
Hale describes life in Camp Denison; transport down the Ohio River; life in West Virginia camps including illness, flooding, daily routine and interaction with civilians; work as hospital orderly; guerilla warfare against bushwhackers; foraging; scouting; Crook's expedition against the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad; Hunter's raid to Lynchburg; Of interest are very brief references to "snake hunters" in [West] Virginia clubbing any "secech" they find; hanging a civilian who shot at the soldiers and other incidents involving both friendly and hostile civilians; skirmishes at Chapmansville, Princeton and Fayetteville; expedition to the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad and the destruction at Wytheville; a drunken fight in Co. C. in which one soldier hit General A. N. Duffie; capture of Lewisburg; and hot springs.
ArchivalResource: 3 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647991016 View
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Citation
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- Hale, Francis G. Civil War diaries of Francis G. Hale [manuscript], 1861-1864,
Hamilton, John M., 1839-1898. Lt. Colonel John M. Hamilton papers, 1863-1925 (bulk 1898).
Title:
Lt. Colonel John M. Hamilton papers, 1863-1925 (bulk 1898).
Papers and photographs of Lt. Colonel John M. Hamilton, a soldier whose career spanned almost 40 years, from the Civil War through the Indian Wars, until finally ending with his death on San Juan Hill during the Spanish-American War.
ArchivalResource: 1.5 cubic feet (1 document box, 1 flat box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/58795189 View
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- Hamilton, John M., 1839-1898. Lt. Colonel John M. Hamilton papers, 1863-1925 (bulk 1898).
1873 - File No. 2933 (Crook, George - Arizona)
Title:
1873 - File No. 2933 (Crook, George - Arizona)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142869339 View
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1879 - File No. 2135 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1879 - File No. 2135 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143099994 View
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Civil War Miscellaneous Collection
Title:
Civil War Miscellaneous Collection
The Civil War Miscellaneous Collection, 1860-2005 (bulk 1862-1928), consists of one box of materials related to the Civil War. This is an assembled collection, and the order of materials has been imposed by the archivist from the original unordered arrangement. Civil War records included in the collection consist of muster rolls from the years 1862-1865, certificates of discharge and pension, lists of veterans, and lists of applicants and recipients of the Southern Cross of Honor from the years 1860-1926. Most of these records pertain to Confederate companies and individuals from Rockingham and Shenandoah Counties, but there are also a few records related to companies and soldiers within the Union Army. Other materials include personal letters from Civil War soldiers giving views of camp life and activities in and around Rockingham and Shenandoah Counties, writings by local historian John W. Wayland, twentieth century newspaper clippings relating to the Civil War, letters and poetry by Cassie Moncure Lyne, materials relating to Harrisonburg Civil War museums and monuments, and late nineteenth and early twentieth century bulletins and pamphlets about the Civil War. Please note that not all dates are inclusive.
ArchivalResource: 0.2 cubic feet (1 box)
https://aspace.lib.jmu.edu/repositories/4/resources/280 View
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- Resource Relation
- Rutherford, Mildred Lewis, 1852-1928. Civil War miscellaneous collection, 1860-1965, and undated.
Brisbin, James S. (James Sanks), 1837-1892. Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
Title:
Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
ALS with the salutation, "My Dear Mr. Clark," in which Brisbin requests a pass from S. H. H. Clark, general superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska, for travel from Ogden to Omaha on the Union Pacific Railroad in order to bring his family from Omaha to his new post at Fort Ellis in Montana. He also discusses the arrangements for shipping horses for the Cavalry from the East, and the plan to join with the troops of Generals Crook, Custer and Gibbon in fighting the Sioux. "Private & Personal" written in Brisbin's hand, and the receipt stamp of the General Superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad dated May [23?], 1876, appear at the head of the letter; page four contains note, "Jas. S. Brisbin 4/22/76, Requests pass No. [no number]." Accompanied by typed transcript.
ArchivalResource: 1 item ([4] p.) ; 25 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702150289 View
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- Brisbin, James S. (James Sanks), 1837-1892. Letter : Fort Pease (Mont.), to S.H.H. Clark, 1876 Apr 22.
1884 - File No. 5732 - Crook, George - District of Columbia
Title:
1884 - File No. 5732 - Crook, George - District of Columbia
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146472831 View
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Baird, George William, 1839-1906. George William Baird papers, 1877-1899.
Title:
George William Baird papers, 1877-1899.
These papers concern: Indian Territory Expedition, 1874-1875; Sitting Bull, 1876; Crazy Horse, January 1877; Lame Deer, May 1877; Joseph and the Nez Percés; the Bannocks, 1878; and Sitting Bull, 1879-1881; Geronimo, as well as the military careers of Major Wham, Indian agent in Lapwai, Oregon,Arizona and Wyoming; George Baird's courts-martial; Gen. Nelson A. Miles and his aide Capt. Maus; the problems of the Indian missions, schools, and citizenship.
ArchivalResource: 121 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702127303 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Baird, George William, 1839-1906. George William Baird papers, 1877-1899.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
A collection of images, manuscripts, and printed material, mostly relating to the Massachusetts soldiers and regiments in the American Civil War. Some material relates to other Union regiments and the Confederate States of America.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet (143 boxes, 2 volumes)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog View
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- Resource Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive);, 1861-1912 (bulk).
1879 - File No. 2579 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1879 - File No. 2579 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/143101632 View
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- Resource Relation
Crook, George, 1828-1890. Autobiography of Major General George Crook, U.S.A.
Title:
Autobiography of Major General George Crook, U.S.A. 1939?
ArchivalResource: [451] p. ; 28 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9426250 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Crook, George, 1828-1890. Autobiography of Major General George Crook, U.S.A.
Luhn, Gerhard Luke, 1831-1920. Papers, 1863-1918.
Title:
Papers, 1863-1918.
The collection includes four autobiographical accounts by Luhn covering various time spans from 1831-1918. The correspondence (1864, 1876, 1880, 1882), is addressed to his wife and children, except for one 1880 letter to General Crook, and deals chiefly with his day to day experiences as a soldier on the western frontier and in the Civil War. There are diaries (1863, 1876); photos of Forts Bridger, Fetterman, Laramie, and Sanders; military decorations; and miscellaneous materials. Typed transcriptions have been made of the handwritten originals.
ArchivalResource: .9 cubic ft. (2 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27744636 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Luhn, Gerhard Luke, 1831-1920. Papers, 1863-1918.
1876 - File No. 727 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
Title:
1876 - File No. 727 (Crook, George - Nebraska)
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/142959368 View
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Stanton, Thaddeus H., d. 1900. Thaddeus H. Stanton papers, 1835-1929.
Title:
Thaddeus H. Stanton papers, 1835-1929.
Contains the following types of materials: correspondence / letters, memoirs, organizational documents, clippings, magazines, reports / studies, diary / journal, ephemera. Contains information pertaining to the following wars and time periods: Civil War; Late Indian War; Spanish-American War; 1865-1897; 1899-1917; "Bleeding Kansas", 1850s. Contains information pertaining to the following military units and organizations: 3rd District of Columbia Infantry Battalion; 19th Iowa Infantry Regiment; Pay Department (Dept.); Paymaster General; Chief of Scouts, Department of the Platte. General description of the collection: The Thaddeus H. Stanton papers include general officer's papers consisting mainly of a scrapbook of clippings and papers on his military career (1861-1899), his retirement, and his death in 1900. Many focus on his service in the Indian Wars, especially the Sioux War of 1876-1877, as the "Fighting Paymaster" and Chief of Scouts. Diary with brief, intermittent entries in 1874.
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50634061 View
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- Resource Relation
- Stanton, Thaddeus H., d. 1900. Thaddeus H. Stanton papers, 1835-1929.
Smith, William Henry, 1833-1896. Papers.
Title:
Papers. 1800-1896.
Journalist, Republican politician, and historian, of Ohio. Correspondence, diaries, scrapbooks, albums, and other papers relating to Ohio and national politics, the campaign of 1876, civil service reform, conservation, and journalism. Also includes transcripts of historical documents apparently written by and/or for Smith. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 9.25 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6003544 View
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- Resource Relation
- Smith, William Henry, 1833-1896. Papers.
Glover, James Benton, 1842-1929. Glover papers, 1928-1929.
Title:
Glover papers, 1928-1929.
Handwritten memoirs entitled "My Life in the West", written in 1930. There is also a typescript of the memoirs and a typed "Reminiscences of James B. Glover as told to Mrs. George F. Kitt, 1928,1929." His memoirs describe the overland journey to the West. His reminiscences tell about army life, the Geronimo campaign, Gen. Crook, the Apache Kid, and the Wham payroll robbery.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/39909517 View
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- Resource Relation
- Glover, James Benton, 1842-1929. Glover papers, 1928-1929.
Baird, George William, 1839-1906. Indian campaigning with General Miles in Montana.
Title:
Indian campaigning with General Miles in Montana.
An excellent character sketch of the military skill of General Miles of the 5th Infantry during the Indian wars of 1876 and 1877 when the Sioux nations, after defeating Generals Crook and Terry, held the country from the Missouri River to the Big Horn Mountains and indefinitely northward. In the ensuing skirmishes, General Miles ultimately secured the surrender of three of the most important Indian leaders, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Joseph, and their followers.
ArchivalResource: 58 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702127307 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Baird, George William, 1839-1906. Indian campaigning with General Miles in Montana.
Crook, George - State: [Blank] - Year: 1868
Title:
Crook, George - State: [Blank] - Year: 1868
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70476582 View
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Hayes, Webb Cook, 1856-1935. Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
Title:
Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
Photographs, glass negatives, and flexible negatives, spanning Hayes's lifetime, chiefly images of Col. Webb C. Hayes, including formal portraits and candid shots, reflecting his strong interest in military affairs, including his participation in the first Cleveland Troop and its successors, the Spainish American War, Philippine Insurrection, Boxer Rebellion, China Relief Expedition, Russo-Japanese War, and World War I.
ArchivalResource: 18 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48483281 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Hayes, Webb Cook, 1856-1935. Webb C. Hayes I photograph collection, [ca. 1850]-1934.
Correspondence, Lists, Reports, and Returns, 1882 - 1900
Title:
Correspondence, Lists, Reports, and Returns, 1882 - 1900
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/301882 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Records of U.S. Army Continental Commands. 1817 - 1947. Correspondence, Lists, Reports, and Returns
Letters Sent, 1/9/1871 - 1928
Title:
Letters Sent, 1/9/1871 - 1928
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/2843029 View
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- Resource Relation
1881 - File No. 6185 - Crook, George
Title:
1881 - File No. 6185 - Crook, George
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146337060 View
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- Resource Relation
Letters of General O.O. Howard, Special Commissioner of Indian Affairs, to U.S. Grant, Colonel Nathaniel Pope, General George Crook, the Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Arizona, and others, together with transcripts of meetings of Howard with Indian l
Title:
Letters of General O.O. Howard, Special Commissioner of Indian Affairs, to U.S. Grant, Colonel Nathaniel Pope, General George Crook, the Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Arizona, and others, together with transcripts of meetings of Howard with Indian l
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/5681281 View
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- Resource Relation
Indians and settlers, 1876-1877.
Title:
Indians and settlers, 1876-1877.
Handwritten notes and transcripts from Robert E. Strahorn's Hand Book of Wyoming (Cheyenne, 1877), and from the Cheyenne Daily Sun, March 8 - December 28, 1876. Some information on the building up of Cheyenne, but mostly concerned with the disastrous Sioux campaigns of Crook and Custer, 1876. See also "Wyoming Territorial Affairs" [BANC MSS P-M 10].
ArchivalResource: Originals : 100 leaves ; 32 cm.Copies : partial microfilm reel (101 exposures) : negative (Rich. 116:16) and positive.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/215005767 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Indians and settlers, 1876-1877.
Sanford, Wilmot P. Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Title:
Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Three holograph diaries dated September 26-December 8, 1874; December 9, 1874-May 23, 1875; and March 25, 1876-March 1877, of Wilmot P. Sanford, a private in Company D, 6th United States Infantry stationed on the Dakota-Montana frontier. The diaries describe Sanford's daily life including army chores, inspections, illnesses, discharges, his frequent visits to the library and his becoming assistant librarian on April 19, 1875, and letter writing. The entries in the diary of 1876-77 note Sanford's co-ownership of a photographic studio at Fort Buford, Dakota Territory, and contain his comments regarding Indian trouble as well as news of General Custer and the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and General George Crook and the Battle of the Rosebud. Each diary also includes Sanford's accounts of personal expenses. The two earlier diaries are written in small notebooks; the last diary is written in a printed diary by an unknown publisher containing various printed time and measurement tables, phases of the moon, postal rates, etc. In addition to the diaries there are three manuscript letters to Sanford: H. L. Barnes, Haven, Iowa, February 27, 1872, to "Absent Nephew," Nashua New Hampshire, regarding family and farming matters; W. Laughlin, Fort Buford, Dakota Territory, July 20, 1874, to "Friend Sanford," Co. D, 6th Infantry with Northern Boundary Survey, regarding Sanford's mail; and Jacob Pipher, Fort Peck, Montana Territory, April 6, 1878, to "Friend Sanford," Hudson, New Hampshire, discussing news of Sanford's former army acquaintances. Accompanied by volume 3, no. 4 of the journal North Dakota History, which contains an article by Ben Innes with a transcript of the diaries dating from September 26, 1874 to May 23, 1875.
ArchivalResource: 0.20 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86093495 View
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- Resource Relation
- Sanford, Wilmot P. Wilmot P. Sanford diaries and letters, 1874-1878.
Arizona. Legislature. Committee on Military and Indian Affairs. Reports and resolutions about Apache Indians, 1868-1873.
Title:
Reports and resolutions about Apache Indians, 1868-1873.
Summary: Handwritten six-page report of the Arizona Legislature's Committee on Military and Indian Affairs, signed by Chairman Daniel H. Stickney, dated December 9, 1868. It reports that the Territorial Militia has neither organization, arms or ammunition and presses for an increase in military protection from the Apaches. This is accompanied by a two-page, handwritten "Resolutions relating to Governor Safford's message and to Indian affairs in Arizona Territory approved by Arizonians in San Francisco, January 30, 1871." The resolutions were referred to the Committee on Military and Indian Affairs on February 13, 1871 and called for a war of subjugation against the Apache and for the government to provide arms and provisions to soldiers and volunteers in the field. Also present is a resolution, dated February 14, 1873, thanking George Crook and his men for the gallant and efficient way the war against the Apaches was being conducted.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48991766 View
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- Resource Relation
- Arizona. Legislature. Committee on Military and Indian Affairs. Reports and resolutions about Apache Indians, 1868-1873.
Cooley, Corydon E. (Corydon Eliphalet), 1836-1917. Corydon Cooley guest register, 1883-1913.
Title:
Corydon Cooley guest register, 1883-1913.
Book of inscriptions and autographs by U.S. Army officers and other guests visiting Cooley's ranch near the Fort Apache Reservation between 1883 and 1913. Also present is one letter from Gen. George Crook, Sept. 1883, thanking Cooley for curios.
ArchivalResource: .75 linear ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38253693 View
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- Cooley, Corydon E. (Corydon Eliphalet), 1836-1917. Corydon Cooley guest register, 1883-1913.
Post, Rita Johns. Research material primarily for the history of Fort Bidwell (Modoc Co.) and Fort Crook (Shasta Co.) Calif., 1934-1935.
Title:
Research material primarily for the history of Fort Bidwell (Modoc Co.) and Fort Crook (Shasta Co.) Calif., 1934-1935.
Correspondence with various U.S. Army officers (including General W.C. Brown), Adjutant General's Office and various offices of the War Dept.; notes and drafts (including "Battle of Infernal Caverns"); photographs of the forts. With these: service records of Generals George Crook and W.C. Brown; publication notice for Don Russell's 103 Fights and Skirmishes: biography of General R.F. Bernard; newspaper clippings concerning the Modoc War and, also, Sierra City; biographical notes on her father, William Johns.
ArchivalResource: 13 folders in portfolio.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25528813 View
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- Resource Relation
- Post, Rita Johns. Research material primarily for the history of Fort Bidwell (Modoc Co.) and Fort Crook (Shasta Co.) Calif., 1934-1935.
1886 - File No. 6823 - Crook, George - Nebraska
Title:
1886 - File No. 6823 - Crook, George - Nebraska
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146550976 View
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Felton, William G. Life and adventures of Captain William G. Felton, California Bill, 1886.
Title:
Life and adventures of Captain William G. Felton, California Bill, 1886.
This handwritten manuscript was prepared by William G. Felton in 1886. In his reminiscences, Felton talks in detail about the following subjects: his time in the army, the Battle of Lewisburg, the siege of Vicksburg and his time at the Camp Ford Stockade Prison; his experiences in stage coaching in Wyoming and South Dakota, including an incident with the Dakota Indians, after which Felton was sent to Fort Laramie; the Battle of Little Bighorn; Crazy Horse's death at Camp Robinson; farming in California and Nevada; and mining in Colorado. Felton specifically talks about the following individuals: Buffalo Bill, Crazy Horse, George Crook, George Custer, Ulysses S. Grant, Henry Heth, Wild Bill Hickok, and Joseph Reynolds.
ArchivalResource: 73 pages, 32 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/81612152 View
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- Felton, William G. Life and adventures of Captain William G. Felton, California Bill, 1886.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Crawford, Emmett
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kelton, J. C. (John Cunningham), 1828-1893
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Williams, Robert, 1829-1901
Allison, William B., (William Boyd), 1829-1908
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65b0ghb
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Allison, William B., (William Boyd), 1829-1908
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Altschuler, Constance Wynn.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Anspach family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Arizona Historical Foundation.
Arizona. Legislature. Committee on Military and Indian Affairs.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63c2v9p
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Arizona. Legislature. Committee on Military and Indian Affairs.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Baird, George William, 1839-1906.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bennett, Frank P.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bourke, John Gregory, 1846-1896.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brininstool, E. A. (Earl Alonzo), 1870-1957.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brisbin, James S. (James Sanks), 1837-1892.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bukey, Van H., 1836-1909.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bush, Edward G. (Edward Geer), 1832-1892.
Butler-Gunsaulus Collection (University of Chicago. Library)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6fb8xn1
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Butler-Gunsaulus Collection (University of Chicago. Library)
Campbell, Lewis D. (Lewis Davis), 1811-1882
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6611s72
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correspondedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- Campbell, Lewis D. (Lewis Davis), 1811-1882
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Capron, Thaddeus Hurlbut, 1840-1890.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family.
Carter, William A. (William Alexander), 1818-1881.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kw5ntk
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carter, William A. (William Alexander), 1818-1881.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Casanova, Frank
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Chase, George F.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Chrisman, Clarence.
Coates, Benjamin F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1827-1899.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xs6h9n
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coates, Benjamin F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1827-1899.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Colyer, Vincent, 1825-1888.
Cooley, Corydon E. (Corydon Eliphalet), 1836-1917.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68g9tqw
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correspondedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cooley, Corydon E. (Corydon Eliphalet), 1836-1917.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Corbusier, William Henry, 1844-1930.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Crawford, Emmett
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Crook, George, 1829-1890.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Crook George Jazz collector
Custer, George A. (George Armstrong), 1839-1876.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6cf9n91
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Custer, George A. (George Armstrong), 1839-1876.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Davis, Jefferson Columbus, 1828-1879
Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6mm013c
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ellington Duke 1899-1974
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Felton, William G.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fly, C. S. (Camillus Sidney), 1849-1901.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gatewood, Charles.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gatewood, Charles Baehr, 1853-1896.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Geronimo, 1829-1909.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Glover, James Benton, 1842-1929.
Grasshopper, Isaac (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6x47zrp
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Grasshopper, Isaac (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gray, John S. (John Stephens), 1910-1991.
Hagner, Francis R. (Francis Randall), 1873-1940,
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66h79bq
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hagner, Francis R. (Francis Randall), 1873-1940,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hale, Francis G.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hamilton, John M., 1839-1898.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hayes, Webb Cook, 1856-1935.
High Wolf (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tk1nr7
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- High Wolf (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kelton, J. C. (John Cummingham), 1828-1893
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kennon, Lyman Walter Vere, 1858-1918.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kennon, Lyman W. V., d. 1918.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kimball, William A.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- King, Charles, 1844-1933.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kosakoff, R. (Reuven)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lockwood, John C., 1857-1928.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lockwood, Philip Case, 1844-1897
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Luhn, Gerhard Luke, 1831-1920.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mackenzie, Ranald Slidell, 1840-1889.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Marshau, F. C.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Maus, Marion P. (Marion Perry), 1850-1930.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McGillycuddy, Julia B. (Julia Blanchard)
McGillycuddy, Valentine Trent O'Connell, 1849-1939.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6183xwv
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McGillycuddy, Valentine Trent O'Connell, 1849-1939.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McKay, W. C. (William Cameron), 1824-1893.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Merritt, Wesley, 1834-1910.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c099t4
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Minnesota Commandery.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w64n3zr6
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Minnesota Commandery.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Moore, Thomas.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nichols, Charles A., 1878-1970.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nye, William H., b. 1833.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Porter, Henry R., 1848-1903.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Post, Rita Johns.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Powell, John Wesley, 1834-1902.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Proctor, Redfield, 1831-1908.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Red Cloud, 1822-1909.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rice, Elliott Warren, 1835-1887.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sanford, Wilmot P.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Schuyler, Walter Scribner, 1850-1932.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Secunda, Sholom, 1894-1974.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sheridan, Philip Henry, 1831-1888
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Smith, William Henry, 1833-1896.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stanton, Thaddeus Harlan, 1835-1900.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stanton, Thaddeus H., d. 1900.
Strahorn, Robert E. (Robert Edmund), 1852-1944.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6z68kb4
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Strahorn, Robert E. (Robert Edmund), 1852-1944.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Strauss, Charles Moses, 1840-1892.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Cavalry, 5th
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Cavalry, 8th
United States. Army. Department of the Columbia
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6303897
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leaderOf
George R. Crock was commander of the Department of the Columbia from 1867 to 1870.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Department of the Columbia
United States. Army. Department of the Platte
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kx6711
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leaderOf
George R Crook was commander of the Department of the Platte from 1875 to 1882 and from 1886 to 1888.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Department of the Platte
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 23rd.
United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 4th
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kw9pq5
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memberOf
George R. Crook was assigned to the 4th US Infantry Regiment after graduating from the US Military Academy.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 4th
United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xx02c8
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leaderOf
George R. Crook was in command of the Military Division of Missouri from 1889 to 1890.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri.
United States. Army of the Cumberland. Corps, 14th
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6n65dd1
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memberOf
George R Crook was a brigade commander in the 14th Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Cumberland. Corps, 14th
United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 9th (1862-1865)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6p916cx
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memberOf
George R. Crook was a brigade commander in the 9th Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 9th (1862-1865)
United States. Army of the Shenandoah
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65n6xqs
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memberOf
George R Crook was in command of the Army of West Virginia that served under the Army of the Shenandoah was referred to as the 8th Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Shenandoah
United States. Army. Ohio Infantry Regiment, 36th (1861-1865)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6799zdg
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leaderOf
George R. Crook was the Colonel and commander of the 36th Ohio Infantry Regiment.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Ohio Infantry Regiment, 36th (1861-1865)
United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Pine Ridge Agency.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61g59vs
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Pine Ridge Agency.
United States Military Academy
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67x01xt
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alumnusOrAlumnaOf
George R. Crook graduated from the US Military Academy in the Class of 1852.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States Military Academy
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Sioux Commission (1889)
Walking Cherry Woman (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wj5rcb
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Walking Cherry Woman (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
Walking Woman (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vn7dkc
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Walking Woman (Cheyenne Indian), fl. 19th century
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Warner, J. Chapin.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wasson, Joseph, 1833-1909.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Whitney, William H.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Williams, Robert, 1829-1901
eng
Latn
Citation
- Language
- eng
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Apache Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Apache Indians
Apache Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Apache Indians
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Appomattox Campaign, 1865
Citation
- Subject
- Appomattox Campaign, 1865
Cedar Creek, Battle of, Va., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Cedar Creek, Battle of, Va., 1864
Cheyenne Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Cheyenne Indians
Chickamauga, Battle of, Ga., 1863
Citation
- Subject
- Chickamauga, Battle of, Ga., 1863
Civil War, 1861-1865
Citation
- Subject
- Civil War, 1861-1865
Cloyds Mountain, Battle of, Va., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Cloyds Mountain, Battle of, Va., 1864
Crow Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Crow Indians
Dakota Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Dakota Indians
Dakota Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Dakota Indians
Five Forks, Battle of, Va., 1865
Citation
- Subject
- Five Forks, Battle of, Va., 1865
General
Citation
- Subject
- General
Generals
Citation
- Subject
- Generals
Generals
Citation
- Subject
- Generals
Generals
Citation
- Subject
- Generals
Politics and government
Citation
- Subject
- Politics and government
Jazz
Citation
- Subject
- Jazz
Maryland Campaign, 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Maryland Campaign, 1862
Military
Citation
- Subject
- Military
Military passes
Citation
- Subject
- Military passes
Modoc Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Modoc Indians
Native Americans
Citation
- Subject
- Native Americans
Pacific Coast Indians, Wars with, 1847-1865
Citation
- Subject
- Pacific Coast Indians, Wars with, 1847-1865
Red Cloud's War, 1866-1867
Citation
- Subject
- Red Cloud's War, 1866-1867
Rosebud, Battle of the, Mont., 1876
Citation
- Subject
- Rosebud, Battle of the, Mont., 1876
Safe-conducts
Citation
- Subject
- Safe-conducts
Sailor's Creek, Battle of, Va., 1865
Citation
- Subject
- Sailor's Creek, Battle of, Va., 1865
Shoshone Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Shoshone Indians
Sioux War, 1876
Citation
- Subject
- Sioux War, 1876
Slim Buttes (S.D.), Battle of, 1976
Citation
- Subject
- Slim Buttes (S.D.), Battle of, 1976
South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Generals
Citation
- Occupation
- Generals
Soldiers
Citation
- Occupation
- Soldiers
Soldiers
Citation
- Occupation
- Soldiers
Citation
- Place
- United States
United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- New Mexico
New Mexico
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Antietam
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Antietam.
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Amelia County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Sailor’s Creek.,
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Big Horn County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Rosebud.
Citation
- Place
Charleston
AssociatedPlace
Residence
George R. Crook had winter quarters in Charleston, West Virginia.
Citation
- Place
Winchester
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Third Battle of Winchester.
Citation
- Place
Nottoway County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Sailor’s Creek.
Citation
- Place
Warren County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Cedar Creek.
Citation
- Place
Frederick County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Second Battle of Kernstown. George R. Crook was involved in the Third Battle of Winchester. George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Cedar Creek.
Citation
- Place
Prescott
AssociatedPlace
Residence
George R. Crook was commander of the Department of Arizona.
Citation
- Place
Omaha
AssociatedPlace
Residence
George R. Crook was commander of the Department of the Platte.
Citation
- Place
Dinwiddie County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Five Forks.
Citation
- Place
Greenbrier County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was wounded at Lewisburg during the Civil War.
Citation
- Place
Appomattox County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Appomattox Court House.
Citation
- Place
Boise
AssociatedPlace
Residence
George R. Crook took command of Indian Campaigns in Boise, Idaho in 1866.
Citation
- Place
Highland County
AssociatedPlace
Birth
George R. Crook was born in Taylorsville, Ohio on September 8, 1828.
Citation
- Place
Del Norte County
AssociatedPlace
Residence
George R. Crook established Fort Ter-Waw.
Citation
- Place
Converse County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was in command of the Bighorn and Yellowstone Expedition at Fort Fetterman, Wyoming.
Citation
- Place
Prince William County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Second Battle of Bull Run.
Citation
- Place
Chickamauga
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Chickamauga.
Citation
- Place
Tonto Basin
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Salt River Canyon. George R. Crook was involved in the Battel of Turret Peak.
Citation
- Place
Shenandoah County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Fisher’s Hill. George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Cedar Creek.
Citation
- Place
Prince Edward County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Sailor’s Creek.
Citation
- Place
Modoc County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Infernal Caverns.
Citation
- Place
Washington County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook destroyed the Confederate Saltworks in Saltville, Virginia.
Citation
- Place
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Owyhee River. George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Steen’s Mountain.
Citation
- Place
Frederick County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of South Mountain.
Citation
- Place
Pulaski
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook was involved in the Battle of Cloyd’s Mountain.
Citation
- Place
Smyth County
AssociatedPlace
Work
George R. Crook destroyed the Confederate Saltworks in Saltville, Virginia.
Citation
- Place
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 442