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Information: The first column shows data points from Chivington, John Milton, 1821-1894 in red. The third column shows data points from Chivington, L. H. in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
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Chivington, John Milton, 1821-1894
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Chivington, L. H.
Chivington, John Milton, 1821-1894
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Surname :
Chivington
Forename :
John Milton
Date :
1821-1894
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- Chivington, John Milton, 1821-1894
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- Chivington, John Milton, 1821-1894
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Chivington was born in Lebanon, Ohio on January 27, 1821, the son of Isaac and Jane Chivington, who had fought under General William Henry Harrison against members of Tecumseh's Confederacy at the Battle of the Thames.
Drawn to Methodism, Chivington became a minister. Following ordination in 1844, his first appointment was to Payson Circuit in the Illinois Conference. On the journey from Ohio to Illinois, Chivington contracted smallpox. He served the Illinois conference for ten years. In 1853, he worked in a Methodist missionary expedition to the Wyandot people in Kansas, a part of the Kansas–Nebraska Annual Conference. His outspoken views in favor of abolitionism put him in danger, and upon the advice of "Congressman Craig and other friends," Chivington was persuaded to leave the Kansas Territory for the Nebraska Territory.
As a result, the Methodist Church transferred Chivington to a parish in Omaha, Nebraska. Chivington left this position after a year. Historian James Haynes said of Chivington's pastoral abilities: "Mr. Chivington was not as steady in his demeanor as becomes a man called of God to the work of the ministry, giving his ministerial friends regret and even trouble in their efforts to sustain his reputation."
In May 1860, Chivington moved, with his family, to the Colorado Territory and settled in Denver. From there, he sought to establish missions in the South Park mining camps in Park County. He was elected Presiding Elder of the new Rocky Mountain District and served in that capacity until 1862. Controversy began to mar Chivington's appointment, who stopped performing his function as presiding elder. Chivington was not reappointed at the 1862 conference; rather, his name was recorded as "located." According to early Methodist polity, describing a minister as "located" means that the minister has effectively been retired. Historian of Methodism Isaac Beardsley, a personal friend of Chivington, suggested that Chivington was "thrown out" because of his involvement with the armed forces. Chivington's status as being "located" did not remove him completely from Methodist politics. His name appears as a member of the executive board of Colorado Seminary, the historic precursor of the University of Denver and the Iliff School of Theology. His name also appears in the incorporation document issued by the Council and House of Representatives of the Colorado Territory, which was approved by then governor John Evans.
When the Civil War broke out, Colorado Territorial Governor William Gilpin offered him a commission as a chaplain, but Chivington refused it, saying he wanted to fight. He was commissioned a major in the 1st Colorado Volunteers under Colonel John P. Slough. During Confederate General Henry Hopkins Sibley's offensive in the East Arizona and New Mexico territories, Chivington led a 418-man detachment to Apache Canyon. On March 26, 1862, they surprised about 300 Confederate Texans under Major Charles L. Pyron. The startled Texans were routed with 4 killed, 20 wounded and 75 captured, while Chivington's men lost 5 killed and 14 wounded. This small victory raised morale in Slough's army. On March 28, Slough sent Chivington and his men on a circling movement, with orders to hit Sibley in the flank once Slough's main force had engaged his front at Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. Chivington got into position above the Pass, but waited in vain for either Slough or Sibley to arrive. While they waited, scouts reported that Sibley's entire supply train was nearby at Johnson's Ranch.
Chivington's command, among whom there was a detail of Colorado Mounted Rangers, descended the slope and crept up on the supply train. They waited for an hour in concealment, then attacked, driving off or capturing the small Confederate guard detail without any casualties. Chivington ordered the supply wagons burned, and the horses and mules slaughtered. Meanwhile, the Battle of Glorieta Pass was raging at Pigeon's Ranch. Chivington returned to Slough's main force to find it rapidly falling back. The Confederates had won the Battle of Glorieta Pass, but because of Chivington and his forces, they had no supplies to sustain their advance and were forced to retreat. Chivington had completely reversed the result of the battle. Sibley's men reluctantly retreated back to Texas and never again threatened New Mexico.
Chivington earned high praise for his decisive stroke at Johnson's Ranch, even though his discovery of the Confederate supply train was accidental. Critics have suggested that had Chivington returned quickly to reinforce Slough's army when he heard gunfire, his 400 extra men might have allowed the Union to win the battle.
In April 1862, Chivington was appointed colonel of the 1st Colorado Volunteer Regiment of Cavalry. The darker side of Chivington was revealed in the complaints of a captured Confederate chaplain, who wrote that Chivington had threatened to kill the prisoners whom he took at Johnson's Ranch. In November 1862, Chivington was appointed brigadier general of volunteers, but the appointment was withdrawn in February 1863.
Damn any man who sympathizes with Indians! ... I have come to kill Indians, and believe it is right and honorable to use any means under God's heaven to kill Indians. ... Kill and scalp all, big and little; nits make lice.
— Col. John Milton Chivington
In the fall of 1864, several events took place. Major Edward Wynkoop received a letter from Black Kettle requesting a peace council and an exchange of prisoners, and Wynkoop succeeded in holding a conference with multiple Cheyenne and Arapaho chiefs, including Black Kettle and Left Hand, and securing the release of some prisoners who had been taken during earlier Dog Soldier raids. Wynkoop and Captain Silas Soule, after the peace conference, traveled to Denver with both the returned prisoners and some of the chiefs. Wynkoop convinced a reluctant Territorial Governor John Evans to meet with the chiefs. Known as the Camp Weld Conference, it resulted in Evans making an offer of protection to those Indians who would surrender to Major Wynkoop at Fort Lyon. The chiefs agreed, and, after gathering their peaceful tribes, camped about 40 miles north of Fort Lyon, at Big Sandy Creek.
Around the same time, Gov. Evans received permission from the War Department to found the 3rd Colorado Cavalry, which would consist of volunteers who would sign on for 100 days. The purported purpose of the regiment was to protect Denver and the Platte road, and it was assigned to the District of Colorado, commanded by Chivington. For political reasons, Evans had stoked the fears of the populace regarding Indian attacks, and he and Chivington had hoped successful military engagements against the Indians would further their careers. But most of the Indian war parties and attacks were occurring hundreds of miles away.
In October 1864, the 100-day enlistment of the 3rd Colorado Cavalry volunteers was nearing an end, and Chivington's Civil War enlistment had expired, meaning he would soon lose his command position. After learning of the agreement reached with the chiefs, Chivington complained to the head of the Department of Kansas, Samuel R. Curtis, that Major Wynkoop was too conciliatory to the Indians. Curtis replaced Wynkoop with Major Scott Anthony, who agreed with Chivington's goal of Indian eradication. But Major Anthony requested that Wynkoop stay and advise him for a short period, despite being under orders from Curtis to end the protection of the Arapaho and Cheyenne encamped near Fort Lyon, and end the distribution of provisions that had also been promised.
After resettling his mostly Southern Cheyenne people, and hearing from Major Anthony that the distribution of provisions was ended, Black Kettle sent most of his warriors to hunt, leaving only 60 men in the village, most of them too old or too young to hunt. Dog soldiers and other Indian warriors were not part of the Sand Creek encampment.
In November, setting out from Fort Lyon, Colonel Chivington and his eight hundred troops of the First Colorado Cavalry, Third Colorado Cavalry and a company of First New Mexico Volunteers marched nearly to the reservation. On the night of November 28, after camping, soldiers and militia drank heavily and celebrated the anticipated fight. On the morning of November 29, 1864, Chivington ordered his troops to attack.
Captain Silas Soule believed the Indians to be peaceful and refused to follow Chivington's order and told his men to hold fire. Other soldiers in Chivington's force, however, immediately attacked the village. Ignoring the U.S. flag, and a white flag they raised shortly after the soldiers began firing, Chivington's soldiers massacred the majority of the mostly unarmed Cheyenne, taking scalps and other body parts as battle trophies, including human fetuses and male and female genitalia. The attack became known as the Sand Creek Massacre.
The Colorado forces lost 15 killed and more than 50 wounded, mostly due to friendly fire (likely caused by their heavy drinking). Between 150 and 200 Indians were estimated dead, nearly all women and children. Chivington testified before a Congressional committee that his forces had killed 500 to 600 Indians and that few of them were women or children. Others testified against him.
A prominent mixed-race Cheyenne witness named Edmund Guerrier, said that about 53 men and 110 women and children were killed.
With Chivington's declaring his forces had won a battle against hostile Cheyenne, the action was initially celebrated as a victory. Some soldiers displayed Indian body parts as trophies in Denver saloons. However, the testimony of Soule and his men resulted in a U.S. Congressional investigation into the incident, which concluded that Chivington had acted wrongly.
Soule and some of the men whom he commanded testified against Chivington at his U.S. Army court martial. Chivington denounced Soule as a liar. Within three months, Soule was murdered by a soldier who had been under Chivington's command at Sand Creek. Some believed Chivington may have been involved.
Irving Howbert, an 18-year-old cavalryman who later became one of the founders of Colorado Springs, long defended Chivington's role in the events. In his autobiographical Memories of a Lifetime in the Pike's Peak Region, Howbert argues that the Indian women and children were not attacked, but a few who did not leave the camp were killed once the fighting began. He said that the number of warriors in the village was about equal to the force of the Colorado cavalry. According to Howbert, Chivington was retaliating for Indian attacks on wagon trains and settlements in Colorado and for the torture and the killings of citizens during the preceding three years; evidence of attacks on the white settlers – including "more than a dozen scalps of white people, some of them from the heads of women and children" – was found in the Indian camp after the battle.
Howbert also said that the account of the battle made to the United States Congress by Lieutenant Colonel Samuel F. Tappan was inaccurate. He accused Tappan of giving a false view of the battle because Tappan and Chivington had been military rivals.
Chivington was soon condemned for his part in the massacre, but he had already resigned from the Army. The general post-Civil War amnesty meant that criminal charges could not be filed against him. An Army judge publicly stated that the Sand Creek massacre was "a cowardly and cold-blooded slaughter, sufficient to cover its perpetrators with indelible infamy, and the face of every American with shame and indignation". Public outrage at the brutality of the massacre, particularly considering the mutilation of corpses, was intense. It was believed to have contributed to public pressure to change Indian policy. The Congress later rejected the idea of a general war against the Indians of the Middle West.
The panel of the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War declared:
As to Colonel Chivington, your committee can hardly find fitting terms to describe his conduct. Wearing the uniform of the United States, which should be the emblem of justice and humanity; holding the important position of commander of a military district, and therefore having the honor of the government to that extent in his keeping, he deliberately planned and executed a foul and dastardly massacre which would have disgraced the verist [sic] savage among those who were the victims of his cruelty. Having full knowledge of their friendly character, having himself been instrumental to some extent in placing them in their position of fancied security, he took advantage of their in-apprehension and defenceless [sic] condition to gratify the worst passions that ever cursed the heart of man. Whatever influence this may have had upon Colonel Chivington, the truth is that he surprised and murdered, in cold blood, the unsuspecting men, women, and children on Sand creek, who had every reason to believe they were under the protection of the United States authorities.
Chivington resigned from the army in February 1865. In 1865 his son, Thomas, drowned and Chivington returned to Nebraska to administer the estate. There he became an unsuccessful freight hauler. He seduced and then married his daughter-in-law, Sarah. In October 1871, she obtained a decree of divorce for non-support.
Public outrage forced Chivington to withdraw from politics and kept him out of Colorado's campaign for statehood. The editor of the Omaha Daily Herald tagged Chivington a "rotten, clerical hypocrite."
In July 1868, Chivington went to Washington, D.C. in an unsuccessful pursuit of a $37,000 claim for Indian depredations. He returned to Omaha, but journeyed to Troy, New York during 1869 to stay with Sarah's relatives. He borrowed money from them but did not repay. Sarah recalled that they returned to Washington in the spring of 1870 and Chivington "spent his time trying to get money without labor. ...
The early spring of 1871 he skipped as I heard afterward to Canada ... Left me without means of support. I had no desire to live with a criminal.
After living briefly in California, Chivington returned to Ohio to farm. Later he became editor of a local newspaper. In 1883, he campaigned for a seat in the Ohio legislature, but withdrew when his opponents drew attention to the Sand Creek Massacre.
He returned to Denver where he worked as a deputy sheriff until shortly before his death from cancer in 1894. His funeral took place at the city's Trinity United Methodist Church before his remains were interred at Fairmount Cemetery.
To the end of his life, Chivington maintained that Sand Creek had been a successful operation. He argued that his expedition was a response to Cheyenne and Arapaho raids and torture inflicted on wagon trains and white settlements in Colorado.
Chivington violated official agreements for protection of Black Kettle's friendly band. He also overlooked how the massacre caused the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Sioux to strengthen their alliance and to accelerate their raids on white settlers. Until he died, Chivington still claimed to have been justified in ordering the attack, consistently stating, "I stand by Sand Creek."
In 1887, the unincorporated settlement of Chivington, Colorado, was established and named after John Chivington. The railroad town on the Missouri Pacific Railroad line was fairly close to the site of the massacre. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was largely depopulated by the Dust Bowl, but some buildings still remain.
Because of Chivington's position as a lay preacher, in 1996 the General conference of the United Methodist Church expressed regret for the Sand Creek massacre. It issued an apology to the Southern Cheyenne for the "actions of a prominent Methodist".
In 2005, the City Council of Longmont, Colorado, agreed to change the name of Chivington Drive in the town following a two-decade campaign. Protesters had objected to Chivington being honored for the Sand Creek Massacre. The street was renamed Sunrise Drive.
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Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
<p>Chivington was born in Lebanon, Ohio on January 27, 1821, the son of Isaac and Jane Chivington, who had fought under General William Henry Harrison against members of Tecumseh's Confederacy at the Battle of the Thames.</p>
<p>Drawn to Methodism, Chivington became a minister. Following ordination in 1844, his first appointment was to Payson Circuit in the Illinois Conference. On the journey from Ohio to Illinois, Chivington contracted smallpox. He served the Illinois conference for ten years. In 1853, he worked in a Methodist missionary expedition to the Wyandot people in Kansas, a part of the Kansas–Nebraska Annual Conference. His outspoken views in favor of abolitionism put him in danger, and upon the advice of "Congressman Craig and other friends," Chivington was persuaded to leave the Kansas Territory for the Nebraska Territory.</p>
<p>As a result, the Methodist Church transferred Chivington to a parish in Omaha, Nebraska. Chivington left this position after a year. Historian James Haynes said of Chivington's pastoral abilities: "Mr. Chivington was not as steady in his demeanor as becomes a man called of God to the work of the ministry, giving his ministerial friends regret and even trouble in their efforts to sustain his reputation."</p>
<p>In May 1860, Chivington moved, with his family, to the Colorado Territory and settled in Denver. From there, he sought to establish missions in the South Park mining camps in Park County. He was elected Presiding Elder of the new Rocky Mountain District and served in that capacity until 1862. Controversy began to mar Chivington's appointment, who stopped performing his function as presiding elder. Chivington was not reappointed at the 1862 conference; rather, his name was recorded as "located." According to early Methodist polity, describing a minister as "located" means that the minister has effectively been retired. Historian of Methodism Isaac Beardsley, a personal friend of Chivington, suggested that Chivington was "thrown out" because of his involvement with the armed forces. Chivington's status as being "located" did not remove him completely from Methodist politics. His name appears as a member of the executive board of Colorado Seminary, the historic precursor of the University of Denver and the Iliff School of Theology. His name also appears in the incorporation document issued by the Council and House of Representatives of the Colorado Territory, which was approved by then governor John Evans.</p>
<p>When the Civil War broke out, Colorado Territorial Governor William Gilpin offered him a commission as a chaplain, but Chivington refused it, saying he wanted to fight. He was commissioned a major in the 1st Colorado Volunteers under Colonel John P. Slough.
During Confederate General Henry Hopkins Sibley's offensive in the East Arizona and New Mexico territories, Chivington led a 418-man detachment to Apache Canyon. On March 26, 1862, they surprised about 300 Confederate Texans under Major Charles L. Pyron. The startled Texans were routed with 4 killed, 20 wounded and 75 captured, while Chivington's men lost 5 killed and 14 wounded. This small victory raised morale in Slough's army. On March 28, Slough sent Chivington and his men on a circling movement, with orders to hit Sibley in the flank once Slough's main force had engaged his front at Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. Chivington got into position above the Pass, but waited in vain for either Slough or Sibley to arrive. While they waited, scouts reported that Sibley's entire supply train was nearby at Johnson's Ranch.</p>
<p>Chivington's command, among whom there was a detail of Colorado Mounted Rangers, descended the slope and crept up on the supply train. They waited for an hour in concealment, then attacked, driving off or capturing the small Confederate guard detail without any casualties. Chivington ordered the supply wagons burned, and the horses and mules slaughtered. Meanwhile, the Battle of Glorieta Pass was raging at Pigeon's Ranch. Chivington returned to Slough's main force to find it rapidly falling back. The Confederates had won the Battle of Glorieta Pass, but because of Chivington and his forces, they had no supplies to sustain their advance and were forced to retreat. Chivington had completely reversed the result of the battle. Sibley's men reluctantly retreated back to Texas and never again threatened New Mexico.</p>
<p>Chivington earned high praise for his decisive stroke at Johnson's Ranch, even though his discovery of the Confederate supply train was accidental. Critics have suggested that had Chivington returned quickly to reinforce Slough's army when he heard gunfire, his 400 extra men might have allowed the Union to win the battle.</p>
<p>In April 1862, Chivington was appointed colonel of the 1st Colorado Volunteer Regiment of Cavalry. The darker side of Chivington was revealed in the complaints of a captured Confederate chaplain, who wrote that Chivington had threatened to kill the prisoners whom he took at Johnson's Ranch. In November 1862, Chivington was appointed brigadier general of volunteers, but the appointment was withdrawn in February 1863.</p>
<p>Damn any man who sympathizes with Indians! ... I have come to kill Indians, and believe it is right and honorable to use any means under God's heaven to kill Indians. ... Kill and scalp all, big and little; nits make lice.</p>
<p>— Col. John Milton Chivington</p>
<p>In the fall of 1864, several events took place. Major Edward Wynkoop received a letter from Black Kettle requesting a peace council and an exchange of prisoners, and Wynkoop succeeded in holding a conference with multiple Cheyenne and Arapaho chiefs, including Black Kettle and Left Hand, and securing the release of some prisoners who had been taken during earlier Dog Soldier raids. Wynkoop and Captain Silas Soule, after the peace conference, traveled to Denver with both the returned prisoners and some of the chiefs. Wynkoop convinced a reluctant Territorial Governor John Evans to meet with the chiefs. Known as the Camp Weld Conference, it resulted in Evans making an offer of protection to those Indians who would surrender to Major Wynkoop at Fort Lyon. The chiefs agreed, and, after gathering their peaceful tribes, camped about 40 miles north of Fort Lyon, at Big Sandy Creek.</p>
<p>Around the same time, Gov. Evans received permission from the War Department to found the 3rd Colorado Cavalry, which would consist of volunteers who would sign on for 100 days. The purported purpose of the regiment was to protect Denver and the Platte road, and it was assigned to the District of Colorado, commanded by Chivington. For political reasons, Evans had stoked the fears of the populace regarding Indian attacks, and he and Chivington had hoped successful military engagements against the Indians would further their careers. But most of the Indian war parties and attacks were occurring hundreds of miles away.</p>
<p>In October 1864, the 100-day enlistment of the 3rd Colorado Cavalry volunteers was nearing an end, and Chivington's Civil War enlistment had expired, meaning he would soon lose his command position. After learning of the agreement reached with the chiefs, Chivington complained to the head of the Department of Kansas, Samuel R. Curtis, that Major Wynkoop was too conciliatory to the Indians. Curtis replaced Wynkoop with Major Scott Anthony, who agreed with Chivington's goal of Indian eradication. But Major Anthony requested that Wynkoop stay and advise him for a short period, despite being under orders from Curtis to end the protection of the Arapaho and Cheyenne encamped near Fort Lyon, and end the distribution of provisions that had also been promised.</p>
<p>After resettling his mostly Southern Cheyenne people, and hearing from Major Anthony that the distribution of provisions was ended, Black Kettle sent most of his warriors to hunt, leaving only 60 men in the village, most of them too old or too young to hunt. Dog soldiers and other Indian warriors were not part of the Sand Creek encampment.</p>
<p>In November, setting out from Fort Lyon, Colonel Chivington and his eight hundred troops of the First Colorado Cavalry, Third Colorado Cavalry and a company of First New Mexico Volunteers marched nearly to the reservation. On the night of November 28, after camping, soldiers and militia drank heavily and celebrated the anticipated fight. On the morning of November 29, 1864, Chivington ordered his troops to attack.</p>
<p>Captain Silas Soule believed the Indians to be peaceful and refused to follow Chivington's order and told his men to hold fire. Other soldiers in Chivington's force, however, immediately attacked the village. Ignoring the U.S. flag, and a white flag they raised shortly after the soldiers began firing, Chivington's soldiers massacred the majority of the mostly unarmed Cheyenne, taking scalps and other body parts as battle trophies, including human fetuses and male and female genitalia. The attack became known as the Sand Creek Massacre.</p>
<p>The Colorado forces lost 15 killed and more than 50 wounded, mostly due to friendly fire (likely caused by their heavy drinking). Between 150 and 200 Indians were estimated dead, nearly all women and children. Chivington testified before a Congressional committee that his forces had killed 500 to 600 Indians and that few of them were women or children. Others testified against him.</p>
<p>A prominent mixed-race Cheyenne witness named Edmund Guerrier, said that about 53 men and 110 women and children were killed.</p>
<p>With Chivington's declaring his forces had won a battle against hostile Cheyenne, the action was initially celebrated as a victory. Some soldiers displayed Indian body parts as trophies in Denver saloons. However, the testimony of Soule and his men resulted in a U.S. Congressional investigation into the incident, which concluded that Chivington had acted wrongly.</p>
<p>Soule and some of the men whom he commanded testified against Chivington at his U.S. Army court martial. Chivington denounced Soule as a liar. Within three months, Soule was murdered by a soldier who had been under Chivington's command at Sand Creek. Some believed Chivington may have been involved.</p>
<p>Irving Howbert, an 18-year-old cavalryman who later became one of the founders of Colorado Springs, long defended Chivington's role in the events. In his autobiographical Memories of a Lifetime in the Pike's Peak Region, Howbert argues that the Indian women and children were not attacked, but a few who did not leave the camp were killed once the fighting began. He said that the number of warriors in the village was about equal to the force of the Colorado cavalry. According to Howbert, Chivington was retaliating for Indian attacks on wagon trains and settlements in Colorado and for the torture and the killings of citizens during the preceding three years; evidence of attacks on the white settlers – including "more than a dozen scalps of white people, some of them from the heads of women and children" – was found in the Indian camp after the battle.</p>
<p>Howbert also said that the account of the battle made to the United States Congress by Lieutenant Colonel Samuel F. Tappan was inaccurate. He accused Tappan of giving a false view of the battle because Tappan and Chivington had been military rivals.</p>
<p>Chivington was soon condemned for his part in the massacre, but he had already resigned from the Army. The general post-Civil War amnesty meant that criminal charges could not be filed against him. An Army judge publicly stated that the Sand Creek massacre was "a cowardly and cold-blooded slaughter, sufficient to cover its perpetrators with indelible infamy, and the face of every American with shame and indignation". Public outrage at the brutality of the massacre, particularly considering the mutilation of corpses, was intense. It was believed to have contributed to public pressure to change Indian policy. The Congress later rejected the idea of a general war against the Indians of the Middle West.</p>
<p>The panel of the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War declared:</p>
<p>As to Colonel Chivington, your committee can hardly find fitting terms to describe his conduct. Wearing the uniform of the United States, which should be the emblem of justice and humanity; holding the important position of commander of a military district, and therefore having the honor of the government to that extent in his keeping, he deliberately planned and executed a foul and dastardly massacre which would have disgraced the verist [sic] savage among those who were the victims of his cruelty. Having full knowledge of their friendly character, having himself been instrumental to some extent in placing them in their position of fancied security, he took advantage of their in-apprehension and defenceless [sic] condition to gratify the worst passions that ever cursed the heart of man. Whatever influence this may have had upon Colonel Chivington, the truth is that he surprised and murdered, in cold blood, the unsuspecting men, women, and children on Sand creek, who had every reason to believe they were under the protection of the United States authorities.</p>
<p>Chivington resigned from the army in February 1865. In 1865 his son, Thomas, drowned and Chivington returned to Nebraska to administer the estate. There he became an unsuccessful freight hauler. He seduced and then married his daughter-in-law, Sarah. In October 1871, she obtained a decree of divorce for non-support.</p>
<p>Public outrage forced Chivington to withdraw from politics and kept him out of Colorado's campaign for statehood. The editor of the Omaha Daily Herald tagged Chivington a "rotten, clerical hypocrite."</p>
<p>In July 1868, Chivington went to Washington, D.C. in an unsuccessful pursuit of a $37,000 claim for Indian depredations. He returned to Omaha, but journeyed to Troy, New York during 1869 to stay with Sarah's relatives. He borrowed money from them but did not repay. Sarah recalled that they returned to Washington in the spring of 1870 and Chivington "spent his time trying to get money without labor. ...</p>
<p>The early spring of 1871 he skipped as I heard afterward to Canada ... Left me without means of support. I had no desire to live with a criminal.</p>
<p>After living briefly in California, Chivington returned to Ohio to farm. Later he became editor of a local newspaper. In 1883, he campaigned for a seat in the Ohio legislature, but withdrew when his opponents drew attention to the Sand Creek Massacre.</p>
<p>He returned to Denver where he worked as a deputy sheriff until shortly before his death from cancer in 1894. His funeral took place at the city's Trinity United Methodist Church before his remains were interred at Fairmount Cemetery.</p>
<p>To the end of his life, Chivington maintained that Sand Creek had been a successful operation. He argued that his expedition was a response to Cheyenne and Arapaho raids and torture inflicted on wagon trains and white settlements in Colorado.</p>
<p>Chivington violated official agreements for protection of Black Kettle's friendly band. He also overlooked how the massacre caused the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Sioux to strengthen their alliance and to accelerate their raids on white settlers. Until he died, Chivington still claimed to have been justified in ordering the attack, consistently stating, "I stand by Sand Creek."</p>
<p>In 1887, the unincorporated settlement of Chivington, Colorado, was established and named after John Chivington. The railroad town on the Missouri Pacific Railroad line was fairly close to the site of the massacre. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was largely depopulated by the Dust Bowl, but some buildings still remain.</p>
<p>Because of Chivington's position as a lay preacher, in 1996 the General conference of the United Methodist Church expressed regret for the Sand Creek massacre. It issued an apology to the Southern Cheyenne for the "actions of a prominent Methodist".</p>
<p>In 2005, the City Council of Longmont, Colorado, agreed to change the name of Chivington Drive in the town following a two-decade campaign. Protesters had objected to Chivington being honored for the Sand Creek Massacre. The street was renamed Sunrise Drive.</p>
Wikipedia.org article for John Milton Chivington, viewed August 11, 2021
Born in Smith County, Kansas in 1880. Worked as a cowhand in northwestern Colorado.
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Wikipedia.org article for John Milton Chivington, viewed August 11, 2021
<p>Chivington was born in Lebanon, Ohio on January 27, 1821, the son of Isaac and Jane Chivington, who had fought under General William Henry Harrison against members of Tecumseh's Confederacy at the Battle of the Thames.</p> <p>Drawn to Methodism, Chivington became a minister. Following ordination in 1844, his first appointment was to Payson Circuit in the Illinois Conference. On the journey from Ohio to Illinois, Chivington contracted smallpox. He served the Illinois conference for ten years. In 1853, he worked in a Methodist missionary expedition to the Wyandot people in Kansas, a part of the Kansas–Nebraska Annual Conference. His outspoken views in favor of abolitionism put him in danger, and upon the advice of "Congressman Craig and other friends," Chivington was persuaded to leave the Kansas Territory for the Nebraska Territory.</p> <p>As a result, the Methodist Church transferred Chivington to a parish in Omaha, Nebraska. Chivington left this position after a year. Historian James Haynes said of Chivington's pastoral abilities: "Mr. Chivington was not as steady in his demeanor as becomes a man called of God to the work of the ministry, giving his ministerial friends regret and even trouble in their efforts to sustain his reputation."</p> <p>In May 1860, Chivington moved, with his family, to the Colorado Territory and settled in Denver. From there, he sought to establish missions in the South Park mining camps in Park County. He was elected Presiding Elder of the new Rocky Mountain District and served in that capacity until 1862. Controversy began to mar Chivington's appointment, who stopped performing his function as presiding elder. Chivington was not reappointed at the 1862 conference; rather, his name was recorded as "located." According to early Methodist polity, describing a minister as "located" means that the minister has effectively been retired. Historian of Methodism Isaac Beardsley, a personal friend of Chivington, suggested that Chivington was "thrown out" because of his involvement with the armed forces. Chivington's status as being "located" did not remove him completely from Methodist politics. His name appears as a member of the executive board of Colorado Seminary, the historic precursor of the University of Denver and the Iliff School of Theology. His name also appears in the incorporation document issued by the Council and House of Representatives of the Colorado Territory, which was approved by then governor John Evans.</p> <p>When the Civil War broke out, Colorado Territorial Governor William Gilpin offered him a commission as a chaplain, but Chivington refused it, saying he wanted to fight. He was commissioned a major in the 1st Colorado Volunteers under Colonel John P. Slough. During Confederate General Henry Hopkins Sibley's offensive in the East Arizona and New Mexico territories, Chivington led a 418-man detachment to Apache Canyon. On March 26, 1862, they surprised about 300 Confederate Texans under Major Charles L. Pyron. The startled Texans were routed with 4 killed, 20 wounded and 75 captured, while Chivington's men lost 5 killed and 14 wounded. This small victory raised morale in Slough's army. On March 28, Slough sent Chivington and his men on a circling movement, with orders to hit Sibley in the flank once Slough's main force had engaged his front at Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. Chivington got into position above the Pass, but waited in vain for either Slough or Sibley to arrive. While they waited, scouts reported that Sibley's entire supply train was nearby at Johnson's Ranch.</p> <p>Chivington's command, among whom there was a detail of Colorado Mounted Rangers, descended the slope and crept up on the supply train. They waited for an hour in concealment, then attacked, driving off or capturing the small Confederate guard detail without any casualties. Chivington ordered the supply wagons burned, and the horses and mules slaughtered. Meanwhile, the Battle of Glorieta Pass was raging at Pigeon's Ranch. Chivington returned to Slough's main force to find it rapidly falling back. The Confederates had won the Battle of Glorieta Pass, but because of Chivington and his forces, they had no supplies to sustain their advance and were forced to retreat. Chivington had completely reversed the result of the battle. Sibley's men reluctantly retreated back to Texas and never again threatened New Mexico.</p> <p>Chivington earned high praise for his decisive stroke at Johnson's Ranch, even though his discovery of the Confederate supply train was accidental. Critics have suggested that had Chivington returned quickly to reinforce Slough's army when he heard gunfire, his 400 extra men might have allowed the Union to win the battle.</p> <p>In April 1862, Chivington was appointed colonel of the 1st Colorado Volunteer Regiment of Cavalry. The darker side of Chivington was revealed in the complaints of a captured Confederate chaplain, who wrote that Chivington had threatened to kill the prisoners whom he took at Johnson's Ranch. In November 1862, Chivington was appointed brigadier general of volunteers, but the appointment was withdrawn in February 1863.</p> <p>Damn any man who sympathizes with Indians! ... I have come to kill Indians, and believe it is right and honorable to use any means under God's heaven to kill Indians. ... Kill and scalp all, big and little; nits make lice.</p> <p>— Col. John Milton Chivington</p> <p>In the fall of 1864, several events took place. Major Edward Wynkoop received a letter from Black Kettle requesting a peace council and an exchange of prisoners, and Wynkoop succeeded in holding a conference with multiple Cheyenne and Arapaho chiefs, including Black Kettle and Left Hand, and securing the release of some prisoners who had been taken during earlier Dog Soldier raids. Wynkoop and Captain Silas Soule, after the peace conference, traveled to Denver with both the returned prisoners and some of the chiefs. Wynkoop convinced a reluctant Territorial Governor John Evans to meet with the chiefs. Known as the Camp Weld Conference, it resulted in Evans making an offer of protection to those Indians who would surrender to Major Wynkoop at Fort Lyon. The chiefs agreed, and, after gathering their peaceful tribes, camped about 40 miles north of Fort Lyon, at Big Sandy Creek.</p> <p>Around the same time, Gov. Evans received permission from the War Department to found the 3rd Colorado Cavalry, which would consist of volunteers who would sign on for 100 days. The purported purpose of the regiment was to protect Denver and the Platte road, and it was assigned to the District of Colorado, commanded by Chivington. For political reasons, Evans had stoked the fears of the populace regarding Indian attacks, and he and Chivington had hoped successful military engagements against the Indians would further their careers. But most of the Indian war parties and attacks were occurring hundreds of miles away.</p> <p>In October 1864, the 100-day enlistment of the 3rd Colorado Cavalry volunteers was nearing an end, and Chivington's Civil War enlistment had expired, meaning he would soon lose his command position. After learning of the agreement reached with the chiefs, Chivington complained to the head of the Department of Kansas, Samuel R. Curtis, that Major Wynkoop was too conciliatory to the Indians. Curtis replaced Wynkoop with Major Scott Anthony, who agreed with Chivington's goal of Indian eradication. But Major Anthony requested that Wynkoop stay and advise him for a short period, despite being under orders from Curtis to end the protection of the Arapaho and Cheyenne encamped near Fort Lyon, and end the distribution of provisions that had also been promised.</p> <p>After resettling his mostly Southern Cheyenne people, and hearing from Major Anthony that the distribution of provisions was ended, Black Kettle sent most of his warriors to hunt, leaving only 60 men in the village, most of them too old or too young to hunt. Dog soldiers and other Indian warriors were not part of the Sand Creek encampment.</p> <p>In November, setting out from Fort Lyon, Colonel Chivington and his eight hundred troops of the First Colorado Cavalry, Third Colorado Cavalry and a company of First New Mexico Volunteers marched nearly to the reservation. On the night of November 28, after camping, soldiers and militia drank heavily and celebrated the anticipated fight. On the morning of November 29, 1864, Chivington ordered his troops to attack.</p> <p>Captain Silas Soule believed the Indians to be peaceful and refused to follow Chivington's order and told his men to hold fire. Other soldiers in Chivington's force, however, immediately attacked the village. Ignoring the U.S. flag, and a white flag they raised shortly after the soldiers began firing, Chivington's soldiers massacred the majority of the mostly unarmed Cheyenne, taking scalps and other body parts as battle trophies, including human fetuses and male and female genitalia. The attack became known as the Sand Creek Massacre.</p> <p>The Colorado forces lost 15 killed and more than 50 wounded, mostly due to friendly fire (likely caused by their heavy drinking). Between 150 and 200 Indians were estimated dead, nearly all women and children. Chivington testified before a Congressional committee that his forces had killed 500 to 600 Indians and that few of them were women or children. Others testified against him.</p> <p>A prominent mixed-race Cheyenne witness named Edmund Guerrier, said that about 53 men and 110 women and children were killed.</p> <p>With Chivington's declaring his forces had won a battle against hostile Cheyenne, the action was initially celebrated as a victory. Some soldiers displayed Indian body parts as trophies in Denver saloons. However, the testimony of Soule and his men resulted in a U.S. Congressional investigation into the incident, which concluded that Chivington had acted wrongly.</p> <p>Soule and some of the men whom he commanded testified against Chivington at his U.S. Army court martial. Chivington denounced Soule as a liar. Within three months, Soule was murdered by a soldier who had been under Chivington's command at Sand Creek. Some believed Chivington may have been involved.</p> <p>Irving Howbert, an 18-year-old cavalryman who later became one of the founders of Colorado Springs, long defended Chivington's role in the events. In his autobiographical Memories of a Lifetime in the Pike's Peak Region, Howbert argues that the Indian women and children were not attacked, but a few who did not leave the camp were killed once the fighting began. He said that the number of warriors in the village was about equal to the force of the Colorado cavalry. According to Howbert, Chivington was retaliating for Indian attacks on wagon trains and settlements in Colorado and for the torture and the killings of citizens during the preceding three years; evidence of attacks on the white settlers – including "more than a dozen scalps of white people, some of them from the heads of women and children" – was found in the Indian camp after the battle.</p> <p>Howbert also said that the account of the battle made to the United States Congress by Lieutenant Colonel Samuel F. Tappan was inaccurate. He accused Tappan of giving a false view of the battle because Tappan and Chivington had been military rivals.</p> <p>Chivington was soon condemned for his part in the massacre, but he had already resigned from the Army. The general post-Civil War amnesty meant that criminal charges could not be filed against him. An Army judge publicly stated that the Sand Creek massacre was "a cowardly and cold-blooded slaughter, sufficient to cover its perpetrators with indelible infamy, and the face of every American with shame and indignation". Public outrage at the brutality of the massacre, particularly considering the mutilation of corpses, was intense. It was believed to have contributed to public pressure to change Indian policy. The Congress later rejected the idea of a general war against the Indians of the Middle West.</p> <p>The panel of the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War declared:</p> <p>As to Colonel Chivington, your committee can hardly find fitting terms to describe his conduct. Wearing the uniform of the United States, which should be the emblem of justice and humanity; holding the important position of commander of a military district, and therefore having the honor of the government to that extent in his keeping, he deliberately planned and executed a foul and dastardly massacre which would have disgraced the verist [sic] savage among those who were the victims of his cruelty. Having full knowledge of their friendly character, having himself been instrumental to some extent in placing them in their position of fancied security, he took advantage of their in-apprehension and defenceless [sic] condition to gratify the worst passions that ever cursed the heart of man. Whatever influence this may have had upon Colonel Chivington, the truth is that he surprised and murdered, in cold blood, the unsuspecting men, women, and children on Sand creek, who had every reason to believe they were under the protection of the United States authorities.</p> <p>Chivington resigned from the army in February 1865. In 1865 his son, Thomas, drowned and Chivington returned to Nebraska to administer the estate. There he became an unsuccessful freight hauler. He seduced and then married his daughter-in-law, Sarah. In October 1871, she obtained a decree of divorce for non-support.</p> <p>Public outrage forced Chivington to withdraw from politics and kept him out of Colorado's campaign for statehood. The editor of the Omaha Daily Herald tagged Chivington a "rotten, clerical hypocrite."</p> <p>In July 1868, Chivington went to Washington, D.C. in an unsuccessful pursuit of a $37,000 claim for Indian depredations. He returned to Omaha, but journeyed to Troy, New York during 1869 to stay with Sarah's relatives. He borrowed money from them but did not repay. Sarah recalled that they returned to Washington in the spring of 1870 and Chivington "spent his time trying to get money without labor. ...</p> <p>The early spring of 1871 he skipped as I heard afterward to Canada ... Left me without means of support. I had no desire to live with a criminal.</p> <p>After living briefly in California, Chivington returned to Ohio to farm. Later he became editor of a local newspaper. In 1883, he campaigned for a seat in the Ohio legislature, but withdrew when his opponents drew attention to the Sand Creek Massacre.</p> <p>He returned to Denver where he worked as a deputy sheriff until shortly before his death from cancer in 1894. His funeral took place at the city's Trinity United Methodist Church before his remains were interred at Fairmount Cemetery.</p> <p>To the end of his life, Chivington maintained that Sand Creek had been a successful operation. He argued that his expedition was a response to Cheyenne and Arapaho raids and torture inflicted on wagon trains and white settlements in Colorado.</p> <p>Chivington violated official agreements for protection of Black Kettle's friendly band. He also overlooked how the massacre caused the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Sioux to strengthen their alliance and to accelerate their raids on white settlers. Until he died, Chivington still claimed to have been justified in ordering the attack, consistently stating, "I stand by Sand Creek."</p> <p>In 1887, the unincorporated settlement of Chivington, Colorado, was established and named after John Chivington. The railroad town on the Missouri Pacific Railroad line was fairly close to the site of the massacre. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was largely depopulated by the Dust Bowl, but some buildings still remain.</p> <p>Because of Chivington's position as a lay preacher, in 1996 the General conference of the United Methodist Church expressed regret for the Sand Creek massacre. It issued an apology to the Southern Cheyenne for the "actions of a prominent Methodist".</p> <p>In 2005, the City Council of Longmont, Colorado, agreed to change the name of Chivington Drive in the town following a two-decade campaign. Protesters had objected to Chivington being honored for the Sand Creek Massacre. The street was renamed Sunrise Drive.</p>
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- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Chivington
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52122072
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- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52122072
1863 - Chivington, J M - File No. C1188
Title:
1863 - Chivington, J M - File No. C1188
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Chivington, J M - Colorado - 1863
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Chivington, J M - Colorado - 1863
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Edward W. Wynkoop Collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891)
Title:
Edward W. Wynkoop Collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891)
ArchivalResource: .5 linear feet
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- Edward W. Wynkoop Collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891)
1864 - Chivington, J M - File No. K128
Title:
1864 - Chivington, J M - File No. K128
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Atkinson, J. W., 1846-. J.W. Atkinson statement : Aspen, Colorado, 1886.
Title:
J.W. Atkinson statement : Aspen, Colorado, 1886.
Brickmaker and builder at Denver and Central City, 1860-1865; anecdote of John M. Chivington; contractor for the Union Pacific, 1865-1868; freighter in Wyoming; at Aspen since 1880; the Twin Lake and Roaring Fork Toll Road; real estate and mining interests in Aspen; term as sheriff.
ArchivalResource: Originals : 3 leaves ; 27 cm.Copies : partial microfilm reel (3 exposures) : negative (Rich. 116:5) and positive.
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- Atkinson, J. W., 1846-. J.W. Atkinson statement : Aspen, Colorado, 1886.
Sayre, Hal, 1835-1926. Hal Sayre papers, 1859-1925.
Title:
Hal Sayre papers, 1859-1925.
The Hal Sayre papers are comprised mainly of personal and business correspondence (1864-1925), business documents, including 79 mining and abstract of title office books, and legal (1859-1892) and financial (1864-1920) files. The extensive business records reflect early mining activity in Gilpin, Clear Creek and Boulder counties. Included are abstract of title orders (1866-1873), mine and mining company documents, and numerous plats, maps and blueprints. Sayre's legal files hold original drafts of the Miners Court laws and regulations, Kansas Territory (1859-1861), Colorado Territory (1861- ), an estate settlement, a company liquidation, court cases involving Sayre and others, promissory notes, naturalization papers and several miscellaneous items. The 23 diaries of Hal and Elizabeth Sayre describe early mining life in Central City, their later years in Denver, and daily accounts of their travels in the U.S. and abroad. One diary details the Sand Creek campaign led by Colonel John Chivington in 1864. The collection also contains materials from 1869-1882, the years Sayre and Ed. C. Parmelee were survey and abstract business partners. Parmelee was also postmaster of the Georgetown Post Office. Publications, newspapers, photographs and miscellaneous personal items conclude the remainder of the collection.
ArchivalResource: 36 linear ft.
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- Sayre, Hal, 1835-1926. Hal Sayre papers, 1859-1925.
1862 - Chivington, J M - File No. C1530
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1862 - Chivington, J M - File No. C1530
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Colorado Prospector : historical highlights from early day newspapers, v. 24, n. 1, 1993 Jan.
Title:
Colorado Prospector : historical highlights from early day newspapers, v. 24, n. 1, 1993 Jan.
Reprints of early newspaper articles about the Sand Creek Massacre.
ArchivalResource: 1 issue.
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- Colorado Prospector : historical highlights from early day newspapers, v. 24, n. 1, 1993 Jan.
Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. The First Colorado Regiment ; The Prospective [microform] / by Col. Chivington, 1884.
Title:
The First Colorado Regiment ; The Prospective [microform] / by Col. Chivington, 1884.
The First Colorado Regiment, 1884 Oct. 18, includes recollections of his early life in the Midwest, service as a Methodist minister in Colorado, troop raising after the start of the Civil War, military action in New Mexico & Colorado, and damage inflicted by Native Americans. The Prospective, 1884, is an incomplete ms. containing recollections of Colorado, 1860; service in the Colorado Regiment; and action in New Mexico, March, 1862.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel (50 frames) ; 35 mm.
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- Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. The First Colorado Regiment ; The Prospective [microform] / by Col. Chivington, 1884.
Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. Sand Creek Papers, 1861-1864.
Title:
Sand Creek Papers, 1861-1864.
Letters and circulars related to the Battle of Sand Creek. Among the corrspondents are Governor John Evans, Samuel G. Colley, and Black Kettle.
ArchivalResource: 7 items (1 env.)
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- Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. Sand Creek Papers, 1861-1864.
Chivington, J M - Colorado - 1863
Title:
Chivington, J M - Colorado - 1863
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Inquiry-Chivington, J.M. -- Colonel, Colorado - 1st Cavalry
Title:
Inquiry-Chivington, J.M. -- Colonel, Colorado - 1st Cavalry
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Dunn, William R., 1916-. The Sand Creek affair : a reappraisal, ca. 1985.
Title:
The Sand Creek affair : a reappraisal, ca. 1985.
Typescript and galley proofs of a book "compiled, edited and analyzed by Lt. Colonel William R. Dunn." The item includes maps and an index. Dunn argues that Colonel Chivington and the Colorado Calvary were justified in killing the Indians at the Sand Creek Massacre in 1864.
ArchivalResource: 1 vol. (ca. 200 pages).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122497398 View
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- Dunn, William R., 1916-. The Sand Creek affair : a reappraisal, ca. 1985.
1864 - Chivington, J M - File No. C148
Title:
1864 - Chivington, J M - File No. C148
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John M. Chivington : [collection] : 1898-1991 ;.
Title:
John M. Chivington : [collection] : 1898-1991 ;.
Contains microfilm and miscellaneous documents.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box)
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- John M. Chivington : [collection] : 1898-1991 ;.
Bent, George, 1843-1918,. Samuel Forster Tappan : [collection] : 1861-1875 ;.
Title:
Samuel Forster Tappan : [collection] : 1861-1875 ;.
Contains correspondence, special orders, reports, and diary.
ArchivalResource: .5 linear ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28316501 View
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- Bent, George, 1843-1918,. Samuel Forster Tappan : [collection] : 1861-1875 ;.
Edward W. Wynkoop letter, 1863
Title:
Edward W. Wynkoop letter 1863
ArchivalResource: 2 items; (0.08 linear ft.)
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- Edward W. Wynkoop letter, 1863
Silas Soule : [collection] : 1865 / manuscript.
Title:
Silas Soule : [collection] : 1865 / manuscript.
Collection consists of a single letter, dated April 20, 1865, from Soule to the United States Army's District Headquarters, disputing a claim made by Col. John M. Chivington that Soule had stolen a bundle of robes from the Cheyennes during the Sand Creek Massacre.
ArchivalResource: [linear ft.].
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- Silas Soule : [collection] : 1865 / manuscript.
Keesee, Daniel, 1841-. Indian depredations : Prowers, Colorado, 1886.
Title:
Indian depredations : Prowers, Colorado, 1886.
To Denver, 1864, and to Bent County in 1867 after mining for a year near Central City; anecdotes of Indian depredations in 1864; criticism of John Chivington for Sand Creek Massacre.
ArchivalResource: Originals : 3 leaves ; 32 cm.Copies : partial microfilm reel (3 exposures) : negative (Rich. 116:4) and positive.
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- Keesee, Daniel, 1841-. Indian depredations : Prowers, Colorado, 1886.
Tappan, Samuel F. Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913).
Title:
Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913).
Manuscript and typescript carbon letters, clippings and other documents relating to the Massacre at Sand Creek, Colorado. Included in the papers is a holograph manuscript draft of a letter to the editor of the New York Times dated July 26, 1897, in which Tappan corrects statements made in the newspaper regarding the massacre; an undated typescript carbon letter to an unidentified recipient in which Tappan discusses the military commission that investigated the massacre; a photocopy of a notarized statement dated June 1, 1957, by Frank M. Wynkoop which describes a meeting with the commander of the Sand Creek troops, Colonel John M. Chivington; a photocopy of a broadside entitled The Indian Question; a clipping of Tappan's letter to the editor of the New York Tribune dated September 16, 1867, regarding the "origins of the Indian War"; and newspaper clippings relating to the Massacre and Tappan obituary notices.
ArchivalResource: 0.20 linear ft. (1 box)
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- Tappan, Samuel F. Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913).
Chivington, I M - Colorado - 1863
Title:
Chivington, I M - Colorado - 1863
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. John M. Chivington papers, 1863-1892.
Title:
John M. Chivington papers, 1863-1892.
Correspondence, reports, newspaper clipping concerning Chivington's ministerial, military and political careers; much of the correspondence was sent to General L.W. Colby who was investigating the Sand Creek Massacre for a court case in 1892.
ArchivalResource: 2 envelopes (9 folders)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13656220 View
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- Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. John M. Chivington papers, 1863-1892.
Dunn, William R., 1916-. "I stand by Sand Creek" : a defense of Colonel John M. Chivington and the Third Colorado Calvary, 1985.
Title:
"I stand by Sand Creek" : a defense of Colonel John M. Chivington and the Third Colorado Calvary, 1985.
Printed galley proofs with handwritten corrections of a book to be published. The thesis of the work is that Colonel Chivington and the Colorado Calvary were justified in killing the Indians at the Sand Creek Massacre in 1864.
ArchivalResource: 1 vol. (ca. 150 pages).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122486890 View
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- Dunn, William R., 1916-. "I stand by Sand Creek" : a defense of Colonel John M. Chivington and the Third Colorado Calvary, 1985.
First United Methodist Church history, [undated].
Title:
First United Methodist Church history, [undated].
Information about the First United Methodist Church, including a photocopy of the Sunday school records for 1894. Also included are excerpts from The Methodist, Evangelical, and United Brethren Churches in the Rockies, 1859-1976, published by the Rocky Mountain Conference of the United Methodist Church in 1977. There are references in the publication to Jacob Adriance, John M. Chivington, and various churches throughout Boulder County (Hygiene, Lafayette, Longmont, Louisville, and Lyons).
ArchivalResource: 11 items.
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- First United Methodist Church history, [undated].
Soule, Silas S., 1844-1865. Papers, 1861-1865.
Title:
Papers, 1861-1865.
Correspondence and military papers, mainly while he was stationed at Fort Lyon, Colo. Territory. Also a biographical sketch by Alma M. Brown: Silas Soule, a hero history forgot.
ArchivalResource: 1 box (.25 linear ft.), 1 oversize folio, 1 oversize folder.
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- Soule, Silas S., 1844-1865. Papers, 1861-1865.
Boulder Daily Camera. Focus Magazine 1973 December 2.
Title:
Focus Magazine 1973 December 2.
ArchivalResource: 1 issue.
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- Boulder Daily Camera. Focus Magazine 1973 December 2.
Wynkoop, Edward Wanshear, 1836-1891. Edward W. Wynkoop collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891).
Title:
Edward W. Wynkoop collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891).
Summary: Collection consists of materials by and about Wynkoop. Includes a scrapbook of newspaper clippings collected by Wynkoop from 1859 to 1891, certificates and letters received by Wynkoop from 1861 to 1883, and a photocopy and typescript of Wynkoop's memoirs. Much of the materials in this collection relate to the Civil War in the West, the Sand Creek Massacre of Indians in Colorado, and John Chivington, a rival of Wynkoop who was also the leader of the American forces responsible for the Sand Creek Massacre.
ArchivalResource: .5 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37434908 View
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- Wynkoop, Edward Wanshear, 1836-1891. Edward W. Wynkoop collection, 1859-1987 (bulk, 1859-1891).
Lyman, Clarence Augustus, 1871-. Clarence A. Lyman : [collection] : 1957 ;.
Title:
Clarence A. Lyman : [collection] : 1957 ;.
Contains a microfilm copy of a typescript manuscript.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28526286 View
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- Resource Relation
- Lyman, Clarence Augustus, 1871-. Clarence A. Lyman : [collection] : 1957 ;.
The commanding officer of the First Regiment of Cavalry of Colorado : to all who shall see these presents, greeting.
Title:
The commanding officer of the First Regiment of Cavalry of Colorado : to all who shall see these presents, greeting. 1863.
Document for D.R. Fisher, dated February 17, 1863; signed by J.M. Chivington, Commanding Officer, and Geo. H. Stillwell, Adjutant of the Regiment.
ArchivalResource: 1 sheet ; 25 x 38 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54087203 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- The commanding officer of the First Regiment of Cavalry of Colorado : to all who shall see these presents, greeting.
Lyman, Clarence Augustus, 1871-. Papers, 1939-1957.
Title:
Papers, 1939-1957.
Material concerning Civil War in Colorado, with emphasis on John M. Chivington and Sand Creek battle, includes photocopy of an article "Colorado Troops Won the Civil War (Battle of Glorieta)," published serially in the Denver Post, Mar. 12-21, 1939; photocopy of a letter to J. Francis Bell, Philadelphia, Oct. 6, 1943; summary of interview with Benjamin Draper, Mill Valley, Calif., July 30, 1957; microfilmed copy of typed manuscript, The Truth about Colonel John Milton Chivington.
ArchivalResource: 6 folders, 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18548545 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lyman, Clarence Augustus, 1871-. Papers, 1939-1957.
Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. Colorado military : civil war : [collection] 1861-1989 ; (bulk 1861-1890) ;.
Title:
Colorado military : civil war : [collection] 1861-1989 ; (bulk 1861-1890) ;.
Contains discharge papers, rosters, general and special orders, correspondence, transcripts, reports, printed matter, and a book.
ArchivalResource: .5 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28551328 View
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- Resource Relation
- Chivington, John M. (John Milton), 1821-1894. Colorado military : civil war : [collection] 1861-1989 ; (bulk 1861-1890) ;.
Carey, Raymond Giddens. Raymond G. Carey Sand Creek papers. 1950-1971.
Title:
Raymond G. Carey Sand Creek papers. 1950-1971.
Bibliographies, notes, maps, military records, regimental data, correspondence, journal articles, and copies of photographs related to University of Denver professor Raymond Carey's research on the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre in Colorado.
ArchivalResource: 3.5 linear ft. (7 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49850904 View
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- Resource Relation
- Carey, Raymond Giddens. Raymond G. Carey Sand Creek papers. 1950-1971.
Wynkoop, Edward Wanshear,. Letter, 1863.
Title:
Letter, 1863.
Handwritten and signed letter, dated 13 Aug. 1863, and addressed to Colonel John M. Chivington. Wynkoop writes from Camp Weld near Denver, Colorado concerning his scouting expedition on the heardwaters of the Bear, White, and Snake Rivers searching for Ute Indians after an attack on Fort Halleck on 7 July 1863. Also included is a hand-drawn map showing the locations of military posts in Colorado and the nearby areas.
ArchivalResource: 2 items (5 pages).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122462065 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Wynkoop, Edward Wanshear,. Letter, 1863.
Oral intervire typescript, Oral re-creation of William Bent of Bent's Fort and the Sand Creek massacre, 1981
Title:
Oral intervire typescript, Oral re-creation of William Bent of Bent's Fort and the Sand Creek massacre 1981
ArchivalResource: 19p., 7 leaves of plates; ill., map, ports. (28 cm.), Typescript (photocopy).
http://hdl.handle.net/10407/9863481278 View
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- Resource Relation
- Oral intervire typescript, Oral re-creation of William Bent of Bent's Fort and the Sand Creek massacre, 1981
Tappan, Samuel F. Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913)
Title:
Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913)
Manuscript and typescript carbon letters, clippings and other documents relating to the Massacre at Sand Creek, Colorado. Included in the papers is a holograph manuscript draft of a letter to the editor of the New York Times dated July 26, 1897, in which Tappan corrects statements made in the newspaper regarding the massacre; an undated typescript carbon letter to an unidentified recipient in which Tappan discusses the military commission that investigated the massacre; a photocopy of a notarized statement dated June 1, 1957, by Frank M. Wynkoop which describes a meeting with the commander of the Sand Creek troops, Colonel John M. Chivington; a photocopy of a broadside entitled The Indian Question; a clipping of Tappan's letter to the editor of the New York Tribune dated September 16, 1867, regarding the "origins of the Indian War"; and newspaper clippings relating to the Massacre and Tappan obituary notices.
ArchivalResource: 0.20 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/80748490 View
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- Resource Relation
- Tappan, Samuel F. Samuel F. Tappan papers relating to the Sand Creek Massacre, 1867-1953 (bulk 1867-1913)
Chivington, L. H. Papers, 192?.
Title:
Papers, 192?.
Bound photocopy of "The Last Guard, Memoirs of an Old Time Cowboy from 1901-1923."
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft. (1 box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52122072 View
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- Resource Relation
- Chivington, L. H. Papers, 192?.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Atkinson, J. W., 1846-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Balster, Carolyn E.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Black Kettle, Cheyenne chief, d. 1868.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Boulder Daily Camera.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carey, Raymond Giddens.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dunn, William R., 1916-
Iliff School of Theology
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founderOf
John Milton Chivington’s name appears as a member of the executive board of the Colorado Seminary, the historic precursor of Iliff School of Theology.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Iliff School of Theology
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Keesee, Daniel, 1841-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lyman, Clarence Augustus, 1871-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Methodist Episcopal Church
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sayre, Hal, 1835-1926.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Soule, Silas S., 1844-1865.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tappan, Samuel F.
United States. Army. Colorado Cavalry Regiment, 1st (1862-1865)
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leaderOf
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Colorado Cavalry Regiment, 1st (1862-1865)
United States. Army. Colorado Cavalry Regiment, 3rd (1864)
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leaderOf
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army. Colorado Cavalry Regiment, 3rd (1864)
University of Denver
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founderOf
John Milton Chivington’s name appears as a member of the executive board of the Colorado Seminary, the historic precursor of the University of Denver.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of Denver
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wetherell, W. B.,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wynkoop, Edward Wanshear, 1836-1891.
eng
Latn
Citation
- Language
- eng
Abolitionism
Citation
- Subject
- Abolitionism
Civil war
Citation
- Subject
- Civil war
Civil War, 1861-1865
Citation
- Subject
- Civil War, 1861-1865
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Methodist Church
Citation
- Subject
- Methodist Church
Methodist Episcopal Church
Citation
- Subject
- Methodist Episcopal Church
Sand Creek Massacre, Colo., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Sand Creek Massacre, Colo., 1864
Cowboys
Citation
- Subject
- Cowboys
Ranch life
Citation
- Subject
- Ranch life
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Soldiers
Citation
- Occupation
- Soldiers
Omaha
AssociatedPlace
Residence
John Milton Chivington was assigned a Parish in Omaha, Nebraska after threats on his life in Kansas.
Citation
- Place
Sand Creek
AssociatedPlace
Work
John Milton Chivington was involved in the Sand Creek Massacre.
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Denver
AssociatedPlace
Residence
John Milton Chivington moved to Denver, Colorado and help establish a couple of Colleges.
Citation
- Place
Glorieta Pass
AssociatedPlace
Work
John Milton Chivington was involved in the Battle of Glorieta Pass.
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
- Colorado
Colorado
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 88