In a thorough review of the “West was violent” literature, Bruce Benson
(1998) discovered that many historians simply assume that violence
was pervasive—even more so than in modern-day America—and then theorize about
its likely causes. In addition, some authors assume that the West was very
violent and then assert, as Joe Franz does, that “American violence today
reflects our frontier heritage” (Franz 1969, qtd. in Benson 1998, 98). Thus, an
allegedly violent and stateless society of the nineteenth century is blamed for
at least some of the violence in the United States today.
In a book-length survey of the “West was violent” literature, historian
Roger McGrath echoes Benson’s skepticism about this theory when he writes that
“the frontier-was-violent authors are not, for the most part, attempting to
prove that the frontier was violent. Rather, they assume that it was violent
and then proffer explanations for that alleged violence” (1984, 270).
In contrast, an alternative literature based on actual history concludes
that the civil society of the American West in the nineteenth century was not very
violent. Eugene Hollon writes that the western frontier “was a far more
civilized, more peaceful and safer place than American society today” (1974,
x). Terry Anderson and P. J. Hill affirm that although “[t]he West . . . is
perceived as a place of great chaos, with little respect for property or life,”
their research “indicates that this was not the case; property rights were
protected and civil order prevailed. Private agencies provided the necessary
basis for an orderly society in which property was protected and conflicts were
resolved” (1979, 10).
What were these private protective agencies? They were not governments
because they did not have a legal monopoly on keeping order. Instead, they
included such organizations as land clubs, cattlemen’s associations, mining
camps, and wagon trains.
So-called land clubs were organizations established by settlers before the
U.S. government even surveyed the land, let alone started to sell it or give it
away. Because disputes over land titles are inevitable, the land clubs adopted
their own constitutions, laying out the “laws” that would define and protect
property rights in land (Anderson and Hill 1979, 15). They administered land
claims, protected them from outsiders, and arbitrated disputes. Social ostracism
was used effectively against those who violated the rules. Establishing
property rights in this way minimized disputes—and violence.
The wagon trains that transported thousands of people to the California
gold fields and other parts of the West usually established their own
constitutions before setting out. These constitutions often included detailed
judicial systems. As a consequence, writes Benson, “[t]here were few instances
of violence on the wagon trains even when food became extremely scarce and
starvation threatened. When crimes against persons or their property were
committed, the judicial system . . . would take effect” (1998, 102). Ostracism
and threats of banishment from the group, instead of threats of violence, were
usually sufficient to correct rule breakers’ behavior.
Dozens of movies have portrayed the nineteenth-century mining camps in the
West as hot beds of anarchy and violence, but John Umbeck discovered that,
beginning in 1848, the miners began forming contracts with one another to
restrain their own behavior (1981, 51). There was no government authority in
California at the time, apart from a few military posts. The miners’ contracts
established property rights in land (and in any gold found on the land) that
the miners themselves enforced. Miners who did not accept the rules the
majority adopted were free to mine elsewhere or to set up their own contractual
arrangements with other miners. The rules that were adopted were often
consequently established with unanimous consent (Anderson and Hill 1979, 19).
As long as a miner abided by the rules, the other miners defended his rights
under the community contract. If he did not abide by the agreed-on rules, his
claim would be regarded as “open to any [claim] jumpers” (Umbeck 1981, 53).
The mining camps hired “enforcement specialists”—justices of the peace and
arbitrators—and developed an extensive body of property and criminal law. As a
result, there was very little violence and theft. The fact that the miners were
usually armed also helps to explain why crime was relatively infrequent. Benson
concludes, “The contractual system of law effectively generated cooperation
rather than conflict, and on those occasions when conflict arose it was, by and
large, effectively quelled through nonviolent means” (1998, 105).
When government bureaucrats failed to police cattle rustling effectively,
ranchers established cattlemen’s associations that drew up their own
constitutions and hired private “protection agencies” that were often staffed
by expert gunmen. This action deterred cattle rustling. Some of these “gunmen”
did “drift in and out of a life of crime,” write Anderson and Hill (1979, 18),
but they were usually dealt with by the cattlemen’s associations and never
created any kind of large-scale criminal organization, as some have predicted
would occur under a regime of private law enforcement.
In sum, this work by Benson, Anderson and Hill, Umbeck, and others
challenges with solid historical research the claims made by the “West was
violent” authors. The civil society of the American West in the nineteenth
century was much more peaceful than American cities are today, and the evidence
suggests that in fact the Old West was not a very violent place at all. History
also reveals that the expanded presence of the U.S. government was the real
cause of a culture of violence in the American West. If there is anything to
the idea that a nineteenth-century culture of violence on the American frontier
is the genesis of much of the violence in the United States today, the main
source of that culture is therefore government, not civil society.
The Real Cause of Violence in the American West
The real culture of violence in the American West of the latter half of the
nineteenth century sprang from the U.S. government’s policies toward the Plains
Indians. It is untrue that white European settlers were always at
war with Indians, as popular folklore contends. After all, Indians assisted the
Pilgrims and celebrated the first Thanksgiving with them; John Smith married
Pocahontas; a white man (mostly Scots, with some Cherokee), John Ross, was the
chief of the Cherokees of Tennessee and North Carolina; and there was always a
great deal of trade with Indians, as opposed to violence. As Jennifer Roback
has written, “Europeans generally acknowledged that the Indians retained
possessory rights to their lands. More important, the English recognized the advantage
of being on friendly terms with the Indians. Trade with the Indians, especially
the fur trade, was profitable. War was costly” (1992, 9). Trade and cooperation
with the Indians were much more common than conflict and violence during the
first half of the nineteenth century.
Terry Anderson and Fred McChesney relate how Thomas Jefferson found that during his time negotiation was the Europeans’ predominant means of acquiring land from Indians (1994, 56). By the twentieth century, some $800 million had been paid for Indian lands. These authors also argue that various factors can alter the incentives for trade, as opposed to waging a war of conquest as a means of acquiring land. One of the most important factors is the existence of a standing army, as opposed to militias, which were used in the American West prior to the War Between the States. On this point, Anderson and McChesney quote Adam Smith, who wrote that “‘[i]n a militia, the character of the labourer, artificer, or tradesman, predominates over that of the soldier: in a standing army, that of the soldier predominates over every other character.’” (1994, 52). A standing army, according to Anderson and McChesney, “creates a class of professional soldiers whose personal welfare increases with warfare, even if fighting is a negative-sum act for the population as a whole” (52).
The change from militia to a standing army took place in the American West
immediately upon the conclusion of the War Between the States. The result, say
Anderson and McChesney, was that white settlers and railroad corporations were
able to socialize the costs of stealing Indian lands by using violence supplied
by the U.S. Army. On their own, they were much more likely to negotiate
peacefully. Thus, “raid” replaced “trade” in white–Indian relations. Congress
even voted in 1871 not to ratify any more Indian treaties, effectively
announcing that it no longer sought peaceful relations with the Plains Indians.
Anderson and McChesney do not consider why a standing army replaced
militias in 1865, but the reason is not difficult to discern. One has only to
read the official pronouncements of the soldiers and political figures who
launched a campaign of extermination against the Plains Indians.
On June 27, 1865, General William Tecumseh Sherman was given command of the
Military District of the Missouri, which was one of the five military divisions
into which the U.S. government had divided the country. Sherman received this
command for the purpose of commencing the twenty-five-year war against the
Plains Indians, primarily as a form of veiled subsidy to the
government-subsidized railroad corporations and other politically connected
corporations involved in building the transcontinental railroads. These
corporations were the financial backbone of the Republican Party. Indeed, in
June 1861, Abraham Lincoln, former legal counsel of the Illinois Central
Railroad, called a special emergency session of Congress not to deal with the
two-month-old Civil War, but to commence work on the Pacific Railway Act.
Subsidizing the transcontinental railroads was a primary (if not the primary)
objective of the new Republican Party. As Dee Brown writes in Hear That
Lonesome Whistle Blow, a history of the building of the transcontinental
railroads, Lincoln’s 1862 Pacific Railway Act “assured the fortunes of a
dynasty of American families . . . the Brewsters, Bushnells, Olcotts, Harkers,
Harrisons, Trowbridges, Lanworthys, Reids, Ogdens, Bradfords, Noyeses, Brooks,
Cornells, and dozens of others” (2001, 49), all of whom were tied to the
Republican Party.
The federal railroad subsidies enriched many Republican members of
Congress. Congressman Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania “received a block of
[Union Pacific] stock in exchange for his vote” on the Pacific Railroad bill,
writes Brown (2001, 58). The Pennsylvania iron manufacturer and congressman
also demanded a legal requirement that all iron used in constructing the
railroad be made in the United States.
Republican congressman Oakes Ames of Massachusetts was a shovel manufacturer
who became “a loyal ally” of the legislation after he was promised shovel
contracts (Brown 2001, 58). A great many shovels must have been required to dig
railroad beds from Iowa to California.
Sherman wrote in his memoirs that as soon as the war ended, “My thoughts
and feelings at once reverted to the construction of the great Pacific Railway.
. . . I put myself in communication with the parties engaged in the work,
visiting them in person, and assured them that I would afford them all possible
assistance and encouragement” (2005, 775). “We are not going to let a few
thieving, ragged Indians check and stop the progress [of the railroads],”
Sherman wrote to Ulysses S. Grant in 1867 (qtd. in Fellman 1995, 264).
The chief engineer of the government-subsidized transcontinental railroads
was Grenville Dodge, another of Lincoln’s generals during the war with whom
Sherman worked closely afterward. As Murray Rothbard points out, Dodge “helped
swing the Iowa delegation to Lincoln” at the 1860 Republican National
Convention, and “[i]n return, early in the Civil War, Lincoln appointed Dodge
to army general. Dodge’s task was to clear the Indians from the designated path
of the country’s first heavily subsidized federally chartered trans-continental
railroad, the Union Pacific.” In this way, Rothbard concludes, “conscripted
Union troops and hapless taxpayers were coerced into socializing the costs of
constructing and operating the Union Pacific” (1997, 130).
Immediately after the war, Dodge proposed enslaving the Plains Indians and
forcing them “to do the grading” on the railroad beds, “with the Army
furnishing a guard to make the Indians work, and keep them from running away”
(Brown 2001, 64). Union army veterans were to be the “overseers” of this new
class of slaves. Dodge’s proposal was rejected; the U.S. government decided
instead to try to kill as many Indians as possible.
In his memoirs, Sherman has high praise for Thomas Clark Durant, the vice
president of the Union Pacific Railroad, as “a person of ardent nature, of
great ability and energy, enthusiastic in his undertaking” (2005, 775). Durant
was also the chief instigator of the infamous Credit Mobilier scandal, one of
the most shocking examples of political corruption in U.S. history. Sherman
himself had invested in railroads before the war, and he was a consummate
political insider, along with Durant, Dodge, and his brother, Senator John
Sherman.
President Grant made his old friend Sherman the army’s commanding general,
and another Civil War luminary, General Phillip Sheridan, assumed command on
the ground in the West. “Thus the great triumvirate of the Union Civil War
effort,” writes Sherman biographer Michael Fellman, “formulated and enacted
military Indian policy until reaching, by the 1880s, what Sherman sometimes
referred to as ‘the final solution of the Indian problem’” (1995, 260).
What Sherman called the “final solution of the Indian problem” involved
“killing hostile Indians and segregating their pauperized survivors in remote
places.” “These men,” writes Fellman, “applied their shared ruthlessness, born
of their Civil War experiences, against a people all three [men] despised. . .
. Sherman’s overall policy was never accommodation and compromise, but vigorous
war against the Indians,” whom he regarded as “a less-than-human and savage
race” (1995, 260).
All of the other generals who took part in the Indian Wars were “like
Sherman [and Sheridan], Civil War luminaries,” writes Sherman biographer John
Marszalek. “Their names were familiar from Civil War battles: John Pope, O. O.
Howard, Nelson A. Miles, Alfred H. Terry, E. O. C. Ord, C. C. Augur . . .
Edward Canby . . . George Armstrong Custer and Benjamin Garrison” (1993, 380).
General Winfield Scott Hancock also belongs on this list.
Sherman and Sheridan’s biographers frequently point out that these men
apparently viewed the Indian Wars as a continuation of the job they had
performed during the Civil War. “Sherman viewed Indians as he viewed
recalcitrant Southerners during the war and newly freed people after: resisters
to the legitimate forces of an ordered society” (Marszalek 1993, 380).
Marszalek might well have written also that Southerners, former slaves, and
Indians were not so much opposed to an “ordered society,” but to being
ordered around by politicians in Washington, D.C., primarily for the
benefit of the politicians’ corporate benefactors.
“During the Civil War, Sherman and Sheridan had practiced a total war of
destruction of property. . . . Now the army, in its Indian warfare, often wiped
out entire villages” (Marszalek 1993, 382). Fellman writes that Sherman charged
Sheridan “to act with all the vigor he had shown in the Shenandoah Valley
during the final months of the Civil War” (1995, 270). Sheridan’s troops had
burned and plundered the Shenandoah Valley after the Confederate army had
evacuated the area and only women, children, and elderly men remained there
(Morris 1992, 183). Even Prussian army officers are said to have been shocked
when after the war Sheridan boasted to them of his exploits in the Shenandoah
Valley.
“[Sherman] insisted that the only answer to the Indian problem was all-out
war—of the kind he had utilized against the Confederacy,” writes Marszalek.
“Since the inferior Indians refused to step aside so superior American culture
could create success and progress, they had to be driven out of the way as the
Confederates had been driven back into the Union” (1993, 380).
Sherman’s compulsion for the “extermination” of anyone opposed to turning
the U.S. state into an empire expressed the same reasoning he had expressed
earlier with regard to his role in the War Between the States. In a letter to
his wife early in the war, he declared that his ultimate purpose was
“extermination, not of soldiers alone, that is the least part of the trouble,
but the people.” Mrs. Sherman responded by expressing her similar wish that the
conflict would be a “war of extermination, and that all [Southerners] would be
driven like the swine into the sea. May we carry fire and sword into their
states till not one habitation is left standing” (qtd. in Walters 1973, 61).
Sherman did his best to take his wife’s advice, especially during his famous
“march to the sea.” It is little wonder that Indian Wars historian S. L. A.
Marshall observes, “[M]ost of the Plains Indian bands were in sympathy with the
Southern cause” during the war (1972, 24).
One theme among all of these Union Civil War veterans is that they
considered Indians to be subhuman and racially inferior to whites and therefore
deserving of extermination if they could not be “controlled” by the white
population. Sherman himself thought of the former slaves in exactly the same
way. “The Indians give a fair illustration of the fate of the negroes if they
are released from the control of the whites,” he once said (qtd. in Kennett
2001, 296). He believed that intermarriage of whites and Indians would be
disastrous, as he claimed it was in New Mexico, where “the blending of races
had produced general equality, which led inevitably to Mexican anarchy” (qtd.
in Kennett 2001, 297).
Sherman described the inhabitants of New Mexico, many of whom were part
Mexican (Spanish), part Indian, and part Negro, as “mongrels.” His goal was to
eliminate the possibility that such racial amalgamation might occur elsewhere
in the United States, by undertaking to effect what Michael Fellman called a
“racial cleansing of the land” (1995, 264), beginning with extermination of the
Indians.
Sherman, Sheridan, and the other top military commanders were not shy about
announcing that their objective wasextermination, a term that Sherman
used literally on a number of occasions, as he had in reference to Southerners
only a few years earlier. He and Sheridan are forever associated with the
slogan “the only good Indian is a dead Indian.” “All the Indians will have to
be killed or be maintained as a species of paupers,” he said. Sherman announced
his objective as being “to prosecute the war with vindictive earnestness . . .
till [the Indians] are obliterated or beg for mercy” (qtd. in Fellman 1995,
270). According to Fellman, Sherman gave “Sheridan prior authorization to
slaughter as many women and children as well as men Sheridan or his
subordinates felt was necessary when they attacked Indian villages” (1995,
271).
In case the media back east got wind of such atrocities, Sherman promised
Sheridan that he would run interference against any complaints: “I will back
you with my whole authority, and stand between you and any efforts that may be
attempted in your rear to restrain your purpose or check your troops” (qtd. in
Fellman 1995, 271). In later correspondence, Sherman wrote to Sheridan, “I am
charmed at the handsome conduct of our troops in the field. They go in with the
relish that used to make our hearts glad in 1864–5” (qtd. in Fellman 1995,
272).
Sherman and Sheridan’s troops conducted more than one thousand attacks on
Indian villages, mostly in the winter months, when families were together. The
U.S. army’s actions matched its leaders’ rhetoric of extermination. As mentioned
earlier, Sherman gave orders to kill everyone and everything, including dogs,
and to burn everything that would burn so as to increase the likelihood that
any survivors would starve or freeze to death. The soldiers also waged a war of
extermination on the buffalo, which was the Indians’ chief source of food,
winter clothing, and other goods (the Indians even made fish hooks out of dried
buffalo bones and bow strings out of sinews).
By 1882, the buffalo were all but extinct, and the cause was not just the tragedy
of the commons. Because buffalo hides could be sold for as much as $3.50 each,
an individual hunter would kill more than a hundred a day for as many days as
he cared to hunt on the open plain. This exploitation of a “common property
resource” decimated the buffalo herds, but the decimation was also an integral
part of U.S. military policy aimed at starving the Plains Indians. When a group
of Texans asked Sheridan if he could not do something to stop the extermination
of the buffalo, he said: “Let them kill, skin, and sell until the buffalo is
exterminated, as it is the only way to bring lasting peace and allow
civilization to advance” (qtd. in Brown 1970, 265).
The escalation of violence against the Plains Indians actually began in
earnest during the War Between the States. Sherman and
Sheridan’s Indian policy was a continuation andescalation of
a policy that General Grenville Dodge, among others, had already commenced. In
1851, the Santee Sioux Indians in Minnesota sold 24 million acres of land to the
U.S. government for $1,410,000 in a typical “trade” (as opposed to raid)
scenario. The federal government once again did not keep its side of the
bargain, though, reneging on its payment to the Indians (Nichols 1978). By
1862, thousands of white settlers were moving onto the Indians’ land, and a
crop failure in that year caused the Santee Sioux to become desperate for food.
They attempted to take back their land by force with a short “war” in which
President Lincoln placed General John Pope in charge. Pope announced, “It is my
purpose to utterly exterminate the Sioux. . . . They are to be treated as
maniacs or wild beasts, and by no means as people with whom treaties or
compromises can be made” (qtd. in Nichols 1978, 87).
At the end of the month-long conflict, hundreds of Indians who had been
taken prisoner were subjected to military “trials” lasting about ten minutes
each, according to Nichols (1978). Most of the adult male prisoners were found
guilty and sentenced to death—not based on evidence of the commission of a
crime, but on their mere presence at the end of the fighting. Minnesota
authorities wanted to execute all 303 who were convicted, but the Lincoln
administration feared that the European powers would not view such an act
favorably and did not want to give them an excuse to assist the Confederacy in
any way. Therefore, “only” 38 of the Indians were hanged, making this travesty
of justice still the largest mass execution in U.S. history (Nichols 1978). To
appease the Minnesotans who wanted to execute all 303, Lincoln promised them $2
million and pledged that the U.S. Army would remove all Indians from the state
at some future date.
One of the most famous incidents of Indian extermination, known as the Sand
Creek Massacre, took place on November 29, 1864. There was a Cheyenne and
Arapaho village located on Sand Creek in southeastern Colorado. These Indians
had been assured by the U.S. government that they would be safe in Colorado.
The government instructed them to fly a U.S. flag over their village, which
they did, to assure their safety. However, another Civil War “luminary,”
Colonel John Chivington, had other plans for them as he raided the village with
750 heavily armed soldiers. One account of what happened appears in the
book Crimsoned Prairie: The Indian Wars (1972) by the renowned
military historian S. L. A. Marshall, who held the title of chief historian of
the European Theater in World War II and authored thirty books on American
military history.
Chivington’s orders were: “I want you to kill and scalp all, big and
little; nits make lice” (qtd. in Marshall 1972, 37). Then, despite the display
of the U.S. flag and white surrender flags by these peaceful Indians,
Chivington’s troops “began a full day given over to blood-lust, orgiastic
mutilation, rapine, and destruction—with Chivington . . . looking on and
approving” (Marshall 1972, 38). Marshall notes that the most reliable estimate
of the number of Indians killed is “163, of which 110 were women and children”
(39).
Upon returning to his fort, Chivington “and his raiders demonstrated around
Denver, waving their trophies, more than one hundred drying scalps. They were
acclaimed as conquering heroes, which was what they had sought mainly.” One
Republican Party newspaper announced, “Colorado soldiers have once again
covered themselves with glory” (qtd. in Marshall 1972, 39).
An even more detailed account of the Sand Creek Massacre, based on U.S.
Army records, biographies, and firsthand accounts, appears in Dee Brown’s
classic Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the
American West: “When the troops came up to [the squaws,] they ran out and
showed their persons to let the soldiers know they were squaws and begged for
mercy, but the soldiers shot them all. . . . There seemed to be indiscriminate
slaughter of men, women and children. . . . The squaws offered no resistance.
Every one . . . was scalped” (1970, 89). Brown’s narrative gets much more
graphic. The effect of such behavior was to eliminate forever the possibility
of peaceful relations with these Indian tribes. They understood that they had
become the objects of a campaign of extermination. As Brown writes, “In a few
hours of madness at Sand Creek, Chivington and his soldiers destroyed the lives
or the power of every Cheyenne and Arapaho chief who had held out for peace
with the white men” (92). For the next two decades, the Plains Indians would do
their best to return the barbarism in kind.
The books by Brown and Marshall show that the kind of barbarism that occurred
at Sand Creek, Colorado, was repeated many times during the next two decades.
For example, in 1868 General Winfield Scott Hancock ordered Custer to attack a
Cheyenne camp with infantry, which Custer did. The attack led Superintendent of
Indian Affairs Thomas Murphy to report to Washington that “General Hancock’s
expedition . . . has resulted in no good, but, on the contrary, has been
productive of much evil” (qtd. in Brown 1970, 157). A report of the attack
prepared for the U.S. secretary of the interior concluded: “For a mighty nation
like us to be carrying on a war with a few straggling nomads, under such
circumstances, is a spectacle most humiliating, and injustice unparalleled, a
national crime most revolting, that must, sooner or later, bring down upon us
or our posterity the judgment of Heaven” (qtd. in Brown 1970, 157).
As the war on the Cheyenne continued, Custer and his troops apparently
decided that to “kill or hang all the warriors,” as General Sheridan had
ordered, “meant separating them from the old men, women, and children. This
work was too slow and dangerous for the cavalrymen; they found it much more
efficient and safe to kill indiscriminately. They killed 103 Cheyenne, but only
eleven of them were warriors” (Brown 1970, 169).
Marshall calls Sheridan’s orders to Custer “the most brutal orders ever
published to American troops” (1972, 106). This is a powerful statement coming
from a man who wrote thirty books on American military history. In addition to
ordering Custer to shoot or hang all warriors, even those that surrendered,
Sheridan commanded him to slaughter all ponies and to burn all tepees and their
contents. “Sheridan held with but one solution to the Indian
problem—extermination—and Custer was his quite pliable instrument,” writes
Marshall (1972, 106).
One of the oddest facts about the Indian Wars is that Custer famously
instructed a band to play an Irish jig called “Garry Owens” during the attacks
on Indian villages. “This was Custer’s way of gentling war. It made killing
more rhythmic,” writes Marshall (1972, 107).
During an attack on a Kiowa village on September 26, 1874, soldiers killed
more than one thousand horses and forced 252 Kiowas to surrender. They were
thrown into prison cells, where “each day their captors threw chunks of raw
meat to them as if they were animals in a cage” (Brown 1970, 270). On numerous
occasions, fleeing Indians sought refuge in Canada, where they knew they would
be unmolested. Canadians built their own transcontinental railroad in the late
nineteenth century, but they did not commence a campaign of extermination
against the Indians living in that country as the government did in the United
States.
No one denies that the U.S. government killed tens of thousands of Indians,
including women and children, during the years from 1862 to 1890. There are
various estimates of the number of Indians killed, the highest being that of
historian Russell Thornton (1990), who used mostly military records to estimate
that about forty-five thousand Indians, including women and children, were
killed during the wars on the Plains Indians. It is reasonable to assume that
thousands more were maimed and disabled for life and received little or no
medical assistance. The thousands of soldiers who participated in the Indian Wars
lived in a culture of violence and death that was cultivated by the U.S.
government for a quarter of a century.
Conclusions
The culture of violence in the American West of the late nineteenth century
was created almost entirely by the U.S. government’s military interventions,
which were primarily a veiled subsidy to the government-subsidized
transcontinental railroad corporations. As scandals go, the war on the Plains
Indians makes the Credit Mobilier affair seem inconsequential.
There is such a thing as a culture of war, especially in
connection with a war as gruesome and bloody as the war on the Plains Indians.
On this topic, World War II combat veteran Paul Fussell has written: “The
culture of war . . . is not like the culture of ordinary peace-time life. It is
a culture dominated by fear, blood, and sadism, by irrational actions and
preposterous . . . results. It has more relation to science fiction or to
absurdist theater than to actual life” (1997, 354). Such was the “culture” the
U.S. Army created throughout much of the American West for the quarter century
after the War Between the States. It is the “culture” that all military
interventions at all times have created, and it contrasts sharply with the
predominantly peaceful culture of the stateless civil society on the American
frontier during much of the nineteenth century.
Fussell made this statement based on his personal experiences in combat,
but it echoes the scholarly writing of Ludwig von Mises (who, let us remember,
was also an Austrian army officer who had substantial combat experience during
World War I): “What distinguishes man from animals is the insight into the
advantages that can be derived from cooperation under the division of labor.
Man curbs his innate Instinct of aggression in order to cooperate with other
human beings. The more he wants to improve his material well being, the more he
must expand the system of the division of labor. Concomitantly he must more and
more restrict the sphere in which he resorts to military action.” Human cooperation
under the division of labor in the civil society “bursts asunder,” Mises wrote,
whenever “citizens turn into warriors” and resort to war (1998, 827).
It is not true that all whites waged a war of extermination against the
Plains Indians. As noted earlier and as noted throughout the literature of the
Indian Wars, many whites preferred the continuation of the peaceful trade and
relations with Indians that had been the norm during the first half of the
nineteenth century. (Conflicts sometimes occurred, of course, but “trade” dominated “raid”
during that era.) Canadians built a transcontinental railroad without a
Shermanesque campaign of “extermination” against the Indians in Canada. It is
telling that the Plains Indians often sought refuge in Canada when the U.S.
Army had them on the run.
The U.S. government dehumanized the Plains Indians, describing them as
“wild beasts,” in order to justify slaughtering them, just as Sherman and his
wife, among many others, dehumanized Southerners during and after the War
Between the States. The same dehumanization by the government’s propaganda
machine would eventually target Filipinos, who were killed by the hundreds of
thousands at the hands of the U.S. Army during their 1899–1902 revolt against
the U.S. conquest of their country barely a decade after the Indian Wars had
finally ended. President Theodore Roosevelt “justified” the slaughter of
hundreds of thousands of Filipinos by calling them “savages, half-breeds, a
wild and ignorant people” (qtd. in Powell 2006, 64). Dehumanization of certain
groups of “resisters” at the hands of the state’s propaganda apparatus is a
prerequisite for the culture of war and violence that has long been the main
preoccupation of the U.S. state.
It was not necessary to kill tens of thousands of Indians and imprison
thousands more in concentration camps (“reservations”) for generations in order
to build a transcontinental railroad. Nor were the wars on the Plains Indians a
matter of “the white population’s” waging a war of extermination. This war
stemmed from the policy of the relatively small group of white men who ran the
Republican Party (with assistance from some Democrats), which effectively
monopolized national politics for most of that time.
These men utilized the state’s latest technologies of mass killing
developed during the Civil War and its mercenary soldiers (including the former
slaves known as “buffalo soldiers”) to wage their war because they were in a
hurry to shovel subsidies to the railroad corporations and other related
business enterprises. Many of them profited handsomely, as the Credit Mobilier
scandal revealed. The railroad corporations were the Microsofts and IBMs of
their day, and the doctrines of neomercantilism defined the Republican
Party’s reason for existing (DiLorenzo 2006). The Republican Party was, after
all, the “Party of Lincoln,” the great railroad lawyer and a lobbyist for the
Illinois Central and other midwestern railroads during his day.
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