FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013
Remember Killdeer Mountain
Photo by Valerie Blumle, Save Killdeer Mountain.
Killdeer - In the land of sky and wind Killdeer Mountain rises above the prairie like a step to heaven. The plateau is ancient, carved by rain and wind, gradually cracked and broken by ice and the sun for uncounted seasons. From the top of the step lies an unparalleled view of unending sky and vast rolling prairie.
Two-pronged antelope still scamper about the hills in a long forgotten race which gifted them with their fleet ability. Deer wander about the land in early morning or evening with the natural born caution that predators and humans grafted into them over thousands of years. Bison appear only in the imagination these days but a gange can be found in the Theodore Roosevelt National Park to the west.
Photo by Sage Brush Photography.
Archaeologists say that it’s a site that shows continuous cultural occupation for the past three thousand years. Young men travelled there on spiritual pilgrimage, a quest, to learn as much about themselves as to learn a good way to live in the natural world. They left little sign of their passage, but what they left was enough for anthropologists to date when they were there.
On a hot midsummer day, June 28, 1864, the long-held sanctity of the plateau was shattered when General Sully and his command of 4,000 soldiers engaged the Hunkpapa Lakota and Ihanktowana Dakota, commonly regarded as “Sioux.” These particular tribes of Sioux had nothing to do with the 1862 Minnesota Dakota Conflict. When the smoke of gunfire and cannon cleared and when the dust of combat settled on the broken encampment, all of the children who were left behind in the confusion of the raid were swiftly scalped and executed.
Photo by Sage Brush Photography.
A spiritual sanctum for untold generations of vision quest pilgrims became a violent memorial. The peace of the broken arrow, a sign never to raise war upon each other or an enemy, was replaced with bugle call to war.
Natural history on the Northern Great Plains has given way to industry. In the late nineteenth century it was railroads, in the middle of the twentieth century it was the interstate and highways. These days it’s the oil industry. North Dakota is the face of national energy development and independence. Industry has been changing the face of the prairie for over a hundred years and it’s changing at a greater pace than ever before.
Photo by Gerald Blank.
Photo of man descending into Medicine Hole, 1919. National Park Service, photo by Calvin Reed.
In 1919, three men, AA Liederbach, WL Richards and Col. CA Lounsberry working together as the Killdeer Mountain Park Commission, submitted their report to President Wilson, Secretary of the Interior FK Lane , Commissioner of National Parks ST Mather, North Dakota Senators McCumber and Gronna, and North Dakota Representatives Norton, Young and Baer.
Former President Roosevelt died on January 6, 1919 and people across the country were clamoring for a national park in his honor, but Congress had more important things to worry about like prohibition than preserving one battlefield in the heartland. Efforts to memorialize Roosevelt with a park didn’t prove successful until the 1940s.
There’s been talk, mostly inconsequential mumblings, of bringing the Killdeer Mountain conflict site into the fold of the Theodore Roosevelt National Park system. Hesitant talk, maybe wishful talk, perhaps from people who know about General Sully’s Punitive Campaign of 1864 and want to save it for the history or perhaps in the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt want to save it for the sake of saving an undeveloped natural landscape.
Photo by Valerie Blumle, Save Killdeer Mountain.
In recent years, the National Park Service published an update of a report about the nation’s Civil War battlefields, one of which focused on the Killdeer Mountain conflict. More talk is what the report amounted to. The report suggested all kinds of things that could be done to preserve North Dakota ’s Civil War battlefields. It was published in 2010.
Photo by myself, south looking north to the plateau where rests Medicine Hole.
In the spring I plan on taking my sons to Killdeer Mountain for a walk. We won’t talk about the oil wells. Instead we’ll talk of the mountain. We’ll talk of the conflict. We’ll probably take pictures. And it will remain a memory.
http://thefirstscout.blogspot.com/2013/03/remember-killdeer-mountain.html
http://thefirstscout.blogspot.com/2013/03/remember-killdeer-mountain.html
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