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Quannah
Parker
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The
Battles at Adobe Walls
By
Monty Rainey
During
the last half of the nineteenth
century, two famous battles took
place at a desolate outpost in
the Texas panhandle known as
Adobe Walls. The first
Battle of Adobe Walls, which
occurred on November 26, 1864,
was of little historical
consequence, other than the fact
that the famous Kit Carson
happened to be one of its
participants.
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The Comanche and
Kiowa of the Southern Plains had attacked several Santa Fe wagon trains on
their way to New Mexico. Determined to put a stop to these attacks,
Gen. James H. Carleton, the commander of the military units of New Mexico,
sent an expeditionary force led by Col. Christopher (Kit) Carson to locate
the tribes in their winter campgrounds. It was the custom of the
Kiowas and Comanches to make their winter camp in the Palo Duro Canyons of
the southern panhandle area.
Carson departed
Cimarron, NM in what was already a cold nasty winter, with some 300 soldiers
including Lt. Pettis’ platoon of mountain howitzers, and a compliment of
one hundred Utes and Jacarilla Apaches. Carson and his troops located
the Kiowa, led by Chief To-hausen (Dohausan) , in the area of Adobe Walls.
Kit
Carson.
(Courtesy of The Palace of The Governors, New Mexico's State History
Museum)
After sacking the
Kiowa village, the tide was turned and the soldiers were forced to retreat
to the safety of the howitzers. Carson pushed his force to Adobe
Walls, which he knew from his time as a buffalo hunter there some twenty
years earlier. What Carson did not know was, within a mile of Adobe
Walls was a Comanche camp of some 500 lodges and perhaps a force of as many
as 5,000 Comanche. Far greater opposition that Carson had anticipated.
Sporadic attacks
occurred throughout the day, but the Indians were disconcerted by the
howitzers. Carson and his men were able to make a retreat during the
night of the 26th and early morning of the 27th. In all,
Carson’s force lost 6 with twenty-five wounded. The Indian forces
were estimated to have lost between 100 and 150.
Though the first
battle at Adobe Walls is considered a military victory for the Calvary, it
is the second battle at Adobe Walls that is the thing of legend.
One hundred years earlier, Providence undoubtedly played a large part in
America’s war for Independence. Now one hundred years later, on the
desolate plains of the Texas panhandle, the hand of God seemed once again to
intervene.
When midnight
passed and in the pre-dawn hours of June 27, 1874, twenty-nine people (some
accounts say twenty-eight) were in the ‘town’ of Adobe Walls. This
was little more than an abandoned outpost, where enterprising businessmen
had attempted to re-kindle the old town and make a dollar off the buffalo
hunters. The settlement consisted of two stores, a blacksmith and a
saloon.
Those present at
Adobe Walls that night included James Hanrahan (the saloon owner), a
twenty year old by the name of Bat Masterson, and a buffalo hunter named
Billy Dixon. The only woman present was the wife of cook William Olds.
Around 2 a.m., the
lodge pole, holding up the sod roof of the saloon gave way with a loud
crack. The men in the saloon as well as the other inhabitants
immediately set about repairing the damage. It was this act of
Providence that caused the inhabitants of Adobe Walls to be wide awake when
the dawn attack began.

Just a few days
before, Billy Dixon had ridden into the tiny settlement and told of the
death of his two friends, Dudley and Williams. He recounted to the
saloon patrons how the Comanches had propped their heads up so they could
see what was happening to them. He told of how their tongues and ears
and been cut off, then their testicles removed and stuffed into their
mouths, before finally being sliced into ribbons and dying a slow, torturous
death.
Now, as the men
worked to repair the damaged roof, some 700 plains Indians, mostly Cheyenne,
Comanche and Kiowa, gathered nearby. The Indians were led by the
Comanche Chief, Quanah Parker, the son of a captured white woman, Cynthia
Ann Parker.
Since they were
already awake, Billy Dixon and Jim Hanrahan decided to get an early start on
the days buffalo hunting. Hanrahan sent Billy Ogg to retrieve the
horses that were picketed at nearby Adobe Walls creek. Ogg saw the
Indians emerge from the tree lined creek bank and ran back to the settlement
to alert the others. About the time he arrived, Dixon spotted the
Indians as well and fired a shot into the air.
At first, Dixon
believed the Indians to be after the horses, but then realized the Indians
were coming straight towards the settlement. Dixon and Ogg managed to
join the several others who had sought refuge inside the walls of the
saloon. Thus the surprise attack had failed. There were only two
deaths in the initial attack. That of the Sadler brothers who were
sleeping in their wagon. They were killed and scalped along with their
dog who was killed and patch of hide cut from the animals side.
The initial attack
very nearly carried the day. The buffalo hunters found themselves in a
close quarter combat, where their buffalo long guns were all but useless.
Miraculously, the inhabitants of Adobe Walls were able to stave off the
onslaught of Plains Indians with their pistols. Once the Indians had
killed all of the animals, leaving their victims helpless to escape, they
withdrew. The morning’s battle had resulted in 4 dead settlers and
an unknown number of Indians. The bodies of fifteen warriors were
found that were too close to the buildings for the Indians to have retrieved
their bodies.
The next few hours
saw the battle waged with rifle fire, which was to the buffalo hunters’
advantage. The Indians had moved far enough away from the settlement
to allow the nine men at Hanrahan’s saloon to send two men to Rath’s
store to resupply their depleted ammo.
Quanah Parker’s
medicine man, Esa-Tai, (literal name, coyote dung) was largely responsible
for the attack. The crazed medicine man has convinced Parker of their
invincibility for the attack. The attacks were sporadic thereafter and on
what is believed to have been the fourth day of siege, a small group of
Indians had ventured to the edge of distant ridge to plan their next attack.
Billy Dixon caught sight of them and asked Bat Masterson to hand him his
Sharps 50 caliber. The inhabitants laughed at Dixon, exclaiming,
“They’re a mile away!” Dixon drew down his aim, squeezed the
trigger and watched Esa-Tai, the medicine man, fall from his mount.
It was this act that caused the Indians to determine they could not compete
with such weapons and they withdrew from the fray.
Two weeks later, a
team of US Army surveyors would determine the distance of Dixon’s famed
shot to be 1,538 yards, or nine-tenths of a mile. Billy Dixon later
gave up buffalo hunting and became a scout for the US Army. As a scout
at the “Buffalo Wallow Fight” Dixon would earn the Congressional Medal
of Honor. In 1893, he retired and built a home on the Adobe Walls
site. He died there on March 9, 1913 at the age of 63.
On the fifth day,
more than 100 men arrived at Adobe Walls. The Indians never returned.
The main significance of this fight is that it led to the Red River War or
1874 – 75, which resulted in the final relocation of the Southern Plains
Indians into reservation in what is now Oklahoma.

Bibliography
The Rath Trail,
by Ida Ellen Rath
Ride the Wind (subtitled: The Story of Cynthia Ann Parker and the Last
Days of the Comanche, by Lucia St. Clair Robson, Ballantine Books,
1982.
The Battle of Adobe Walls, 1864, C. Boone McClure, 1948
Letters of Olive K. Dixon, White Deer Land Museum, Pampa, TX.
Indian Wars of Texas, Mildred Mayhall, 1965.

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