FORT PHIL KEARNY is a State Historic Sites in a National
Historic Landmark located between Sheridan and Buffalo
, as well as the Bozeman Trail Sites, including the Fetterman and
Wagon Box Battle Sites.

ft-phil

 

HISTORY: 1866-1868Named for a popular Union general killed in the Civil War,Fort Phil Kearny was established at the forks of Big and Little Piney Creeks by Col. Henry B. Carrington of the 1st U.S. Infantry in July 1866.

The mission of the fort and two other posts along the Bozeman Trail, Forts Reno and C.F. Smith, was three-fold: to protect travelers on the Trail; to prevent intertribal warfare between Native Americans in the area; and to draw attention of Indian force opposed to Euro-American westward expansion away from the transcontinental
railroad construction corridor to the south.All three Bozeman Trail forts were
stockade fortifications, with Fort Phil Kearny being the largest. Enclosing 17 acres,
the fort wall was 8 feet high, 1,496 feet in length, and tapered in width from 600 feet
on the north to 240 feet on the south. More than 4,000 logs were used to erect the
stockade, while over 606,000 feet of lumber and 130,000 bricks were produced in 1867 alone for the extensive building construction.

During its two-year existence, Fort Phil Kearny was the focal point of a violent war between the U.S. Army and the Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians opposed to intrusions into the last greatFetterman Fight On December 21, 1866, Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors engaged a military force commanded by Captain William J. Fetterman. Ordered to rescue a besieged wagon train, Fetterman's men pursued Crazy Horse and other warriors acting as decoys over Lodge Trail Ridge where over two thousand Indians waited in ambush. The warriors attacked the soldiers, overwhelming the separated cavalry and infantry units. All eighty one men in Fetterman's command were killed within thirty minutes. Only the Battle of the Little Big Horn stands as a worse defeat for the United States Army and a greater victory for the Plains Indians.

Wagon Box Fight

Indian forces attempted to repeat the Fetterman victory in Summer 1867. On August 2 about eight hundred Sioux attacked woodcutters and soldiers camped at a cutting area five miles from Fort Phil Keamy. During initial stages of the battle, twenty-six soldiers and six civilians took cover inside an oval of wagon boxes used as a stock corral.

After burning another camp, Sioux warriors launched a series of attacks against the corral. Armed with breechloading rifles, the soldiers and civilians commanded by Captain James Powell held off the massed warriors until a relief force arrived from the fort. Three men were killed and two wounded inside of the corral, while Indian casualties were estimated at from five to sixty or more killed, and five to one hundred twenty or more wounded.

John "Portugee" PhillipsPhillips is known for his heroic 236 mile nde to Fort Laramie for reinforcements following the Fetterman Fight. Undertaken in the deep of winter in the midst of a blizzard, he hid during the day and rode only at night because he passed through enemy territory. He pushed his horse beyond its limit and sacrificed it in the process, completing the ride in just four days.

fortphilk

By 1868, the Union Pacific Railroad had reached a point to the west where travelers could bypass the Bozeman Trail forts' expensive liabilities. In the Treaty of 1868, the United States agreed to close the forts and the trail.

Fort Phil Kearny was abandoned by the Army in early August 1868, and burned soon afterwards by the Cheyenne.

In 1963, Fort Phil Kearny was designated a National Historic Landmark. Today, portions of the fort site and the Fetterman and Wagon Box battlefields are included within the Fort Phil Kearny State Historic Site boundaries.

HISTORY: 1866-1868Named for a popular Union general killed in the Civil War, Fort Phil Kearny was established at the forks of Big and Little Piney Creeks by Col. Henry B. Carrington of the 18th U.S. Infantry in July 1866.

The mission of the fort and two other posts along the Bozeman Trail, Forts Reno and C.F. Smith, was three-fold: to proteet travelers on the Trail; to prevent intertribal warfare between Native Americans in the area; and to draw attention of Indian forces opposed to Euro-American westward expansion away from the transcontinental railroad construction corridor to the south.

All three Bozeman Trail forts were stockade fortifications, with Fort Phil Kearny being the largest. Enclosing 17 acres, the fort wall was 8 feet high, 1,496 feet in length, and tapered in width from 600 feet on the north to 240 feet on the south. More than 4,000 logs were used to erect the stockade, \\ bile over 606,000 feet of lumber and 130,000 bricks were produced in 1867 alone for the extensive building construction.

During its two-year existence, Fort Phil Kearny was the focal point of a violent war between the U.S. Army and the Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians opposed to intrusions into the last great land.

Fetterman Fight

On December 21, 1866, Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors engaged a military force commanded by Captain William J. Fetterman. Ordered to rescue a besieged wagon train, Fetterman's men pursued Crazy Horse and other warriors acting as decoys over Lodge Trail Ridge where over two thousand Indians waited in ambush. The warriors attacked the soldiers, overwhelming the separated cavalry and infantry units. All eighty one men in Fetterman's command were killed within thirty minutes. Only the Battle of the Little Big Horn stands as a worse defeat for the United States Army and a greater victory for the Plains Indians.

(source: information on pamphlets on history at the battlefields.)

[WYOMING] [Abut WY.] [Reservations] [Sheep Eaters] [Battles] [BigHoleBattle] [History] [Treaties] [tribe list census1900] [Biographies] [Famous people] [Stage Coaches]

 

Phil Kearny
wyomingblue2smallk

WELCOME TO WYOMING, GENEALOGY TRAILS HISTORY GROUP. Dedicated to the pursuit of free genealogy.

We would like to help you find, preserve and remember your ancestors and record the role they played in creating Wyoming.. My name is Jo Ann Boyd Scott. *Note: Unless otherwise stated, ALL DATA and INFO are donated, transcribed and submitted by JoAnn Boyd Scott and the "Friends of Free Genealogy" I keep a folder in the computer which has all "Friends of Free Genealogy" which includes names, date, email and copy of the data sent. Maps are from Wikipedia, pictures are personal family photographers.Here at Genealogy Trails, we will always give contributors the credit they deserve when they contribute data to our sites. We will ALWAYS abide by a researcher's request to remove their contributed data if ever asked to do so. THIS APPLIES TO ALL COUNTIES AS WELL.

Because we are a new web site, we are looking for county hosts. If you would be interested in volunteering, please visit our Volunteer Information Page and get in touch with Kim. Enough html knowledge to build a basic web page is required, along with a desire to transcribe data. I will help you get started or help me as a co-host on any county.
I gratefully accept any data, bios, land deeds, obits, etc. All data belongs to the original submitter and is copyrighted here. E-MAILme. I would like to thank the many volunteers that have sent data. Thank for the continual help and support.

[WYOMING] [Abut WY.] [WY prison] [Reservations] [Sheep Eaters] [Battles] [BigHoleBattle] [Phil Kearny] [History] [Poaching] [Treaties] [Natural Resources] [tribe list census1900] [Biographies] [Famous people] [Stage Coaches] [Railroads]

 

anniversarylogo