First used in 1865,
the Butterfield Overland Despatch (BOD) was touted as the best mail
route from Atchison to Denver, Colorado by its owner. You could
cross this great expanse of land for just $100. Stations were
approximately 15 miles apart and were given different jobs. One
station would be a "home" station that would feed the travelers while
"cattle" stations provided hay and "swing" stations provided fresh
mules and horses. The Smoky Hill Trail and the BOD greatly aided
settlers in traveling over hostile Indian country. However, Indian
raids became too frequent and there came a time when every wagon train
had at least 22 wagons and 30 armed men. Many of the stage stops
along the BOD route were connected to a fort for the safety and
security that the military provided..
Wallace County had several BOD Stage Stops of its
own. The most prominent, namely the Pond Creek Stage Station, was
situated 1 1/2 miles west of present day Wallace. A "home"
station renowned for its food, this little stage stop saw so many
Indian attacks that Camp Pond Creek, a military encampment, was
situated right next to it. When the BOD was sold to another
company in 1866 (the Indian raids were so numerous by this time that
the business had become unprofitable), Camp Pond Creek moved a few
miles east to the Smoky Hill river and was renamed Fort Wallace in
honor of W.H.L. Wallace, a general who died at the Battle of Shiloh.
Although Fort Wallace was no longer attached to the
Butterfield Overland Despatch, soldiers stationed at Fort Wallace still
had their hands full trying to protect those settlers who were moving
through
on their way west. Many of the most prominent trails that
pioneers used cut straight through the best buffalo hunting grounds.
Indians, whose livelihood depended on the buffalo, did not treat the
trespassers lightly. Instead, as buffalo began to scatter and become
scarce, Indians began to view their new neighbors with something less
than friendly eyes. This made the presence of Fort Wallace an absolute
necessity. Although according to official counts (details of the number
of men in each Company and Division were recorded every month, you can
see that count
here)
the number of men stationed at the Fort never exceeded 350, these
soldiers saw more encounters with Indians than any other Fort,
rightfully earning Fort Wallace the distinction of being the
"Fightin'est Fort in the West." General George Armstrong Custer
was stationed at Fort Wallace and saw his first battle with the Indians
not far from the fort. Other great frontier men, such as George
Forsyth, Buffalo Bill Cody, and Wild Bill Hickok, were also stationed
at Fort Wallace at various times.
The majority of the buildings at Fort Wallace were
made of native stone while the remaining buildings were wood.
Eventually 40 buildings were constructed, enough to house and support
four hundred men, even though the total number of troops topped 350
only a handful of times. Two Companies were usually enough to man
the fort, but in October of 1871 14 Divisions (most of them Infantry)
met at Fort Wallace. Despite the fact that Indian raids were constant
and expected, for a period of 4 years the total number of troops
stationed at Fort Wallace averaged just 75.
Despite the low population, the comfort level at
Fort Wallace was not very high. Everyone had complaints about the
food and soldiers spent a considerable portion of their pay to
supplement their diets. With Fort Wallace being stationed so far
from any major town, problems with the food deteriorating or rotting
were rampant. Diseases such as dysentery and diarrhea killed many
soldiers as did an outbreak of cholera in 1867.
Fort Wallace as it
stood in 1867
In June 1867, Lt. Lyman Kidder and ten men from the
7th Calvary of Fort Wallace started from Fort Sedgwick, Colorado with
messages for Lt. Col. George Custer who was camped at the forks of the
Republican River near where Benkelman, Nebraska is today. Custer had in
the meantime left for Ft. Sedgwick, and Kidder (missing Custer's trail)
assumed that Custer had headed to Fort Wallace. When the Kidder party
reached Beaver Creek in present day Sherman County on July 1, 1867,
they were attacked by Indians and no one survived. Custer sent out a
search party when he realized what had happened, and on July 11, ten
days after the massacre, the search party discovered the murdered
bodies of Kidder and his men. None could be readily identified except
for the Indian scout.
The morning September 11, 1874 was another sad time
in local history. One day's journey east of Fort Wallace, the John
German family, consisting of his wife and seven children, prepared to
continue on their way west when they were attacked by a band of
Cheyenne. Only the four youngest, all girls, were spared. After having
just witnessed the brutal murders of their family, the four young
children, Sophia, Catherine, Julia, and Adelaide were allowed to live.
All four girls were taken captive by the Cheyenne. Due to the
hard winter, however, the Cheyenne did not keep all the girls for long,
and the two youngest, Julia and Adelaide (aged 7 and 5) were left on
the prairie in what is now the Texas panhandle. They survived on
their own for 6 weeks until they were finally found by soldiers. They
were 7 and 5 years old respectively. Sophia and Catherine
continued traveling with the Cheyenne, although they were eventually
split up and traveled with different parties. Meanwhile, soldiers
at Fort Wallace received word of the massacre and began the search for
the remaining members of the German family, as well as negotiations
with the Indians. On February 26, 1875, largely due to efforts
made by soldiers stationed at Fort Wallace and elsewhere, the Cheyennes
released Catherine and Sophia German at an Indian reservation.
The two girls then traveled to Fort Leavenworth where they were
reunited with their sisters Julia and Adelaide. (For more
indepth information about the German Family Massacre, please read
The Moccassin Speaks by
Arlene Jauken or
Girl
Captives of the Cheyenne by Grace Meredith)
______________________________________________________
Fort Wallace was officially decommissioned on May
31, 1882, although a detachment of soldiers did remain for a time at
the fort in order to prevent settlers from using the Fort grounds. By
1886, however, settlers in the region began removing vital building
materials, and even entire buildings from the Fort. As there were
few trees for lumbar and little time to hew rock into bricks, the
ready-made materials that were Fort Wallace were especially desirable
to settlers. In 1888, the Fort Wallace Reservation was opened for
use to the settlers, but by this time there was little of the Fort
remaining. In just 6 years nearly everything except the
foundations had been removed. Absolutely no buildings are left
standing at the site of Fort Wallace, and very few of the original
materials remain.