Wild West

WHITE BUFFALO

The scouts were starving. After the surprise attack on the morning of Sept. 17, 1868, they had retreated to a thicketed sandbar in the midst of a broad, mostly dry riverbed, killed their horses and mules for use as breastworks and fought off repeated charges by several hundred Plains Indians. The battle soon became a siege of attrition. After days without food they had resorted to eating putrid horsemeat sprinkled with gunpowder, choking it down with the little foul water that seeped into the rifle pits they had dug. Four scouts had volunteered to crawl out through the enemy cordon in search of help, but the remaining men despaired of their fate. Those unhurt fed the wounded the few wild plums discovered amid the thickets. Among the most severely wounded was their commanding officer, Major George “Sandy” Forsyth, whose gaping leg wound had become infested with maggots.

On the eighth morning of the siege 16-year-old Eli Zeigler, the youngest of the band of frontiersmen, spotted riders to the south. “There are some moving objects on the far hills!” he shouted, springing to his feet. All others able to stand shielded their eyes and gazed intently in that direction. Indians? Or white men? “By the Gods above us,” one cried out, “it’s an ambulance!” A wild cheer rose from parched throats.

The relief party soon came into focus. Leading them was J.J. “Jack” Peate, who had recruited nearly two dozen of the frontiersmen from the Saline River valley for Forsyth but had missed the battle when the force left Fort Wallace without him. Riding beside Peate was Jack Donovan, one of the four volunteers who had gone for help. Following their

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wild West

Wild West7 min read
Bravissimo, Buffalo Bill!
To this day virtually everyone in the United States has heard of William Frederick “Buffalo Bill” Cody. Even those not expert or passionate about the Western frontier era recognize him as one of the most iconic figures of American history. Buffalo Bi
Wild West3 min read
The Italian Connection
Virtually every Old West aficionado is familiar with Buffalo Bill Cody’s popular Wild West shows, which traveled the United States and across the Atlantic Ocean in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During Cody’s 1890 and 1906 European tours thr
Wild West4 min read
Riding With Sundance
Who was Etta Place? She was the lover and perhaps wife of Pennsylvania-born Harry Alonzo Longabaugh, aka the “Sundance Kid,” and a peripheral associate of the Wild Bunch, the outlaw gang headed up by Robert LeRoy Parker, aka “Butch Cassidy.” But litt

Related Books & Audiobooks