Spirit Lake Relief Expedition
By Martin E. Nass
Transcribed for the IAGenWeb Project by Janelle Martin, with permission of Martin "Ed" Nass.
It was 1857, the year our community was named Webster City and our county was
named Hamilton County. Our city had about 400 residents at this time struggling
through a hard winter. On March 21, Major Williams, leader of the now closed
military fort at Fort Dodge received word that a renegade band of Sioux Indians
had attacked and killed settlers in Spirit Lake and Okoboji. He sent a messenger
to Border Plains, Homer, and Webster City the next day.
Judge J. D. Maxwell, Webster City, called a meeting of the people of Hamilton
County to organize a company of men to form a relief expedition. He requested
that all who were willing to go should step forward. All stepped out. Since this
was more than needed, Judge Maxwell selected a group of 32 men. The citizens of
our town went to work to provide food, clothing, arms, blankets, and a wagon.
Two yokes of oxen were also provided along with two horses. Those raising the
supplies were Walter and Sumler Willson, Charles Fenton, S. B. Rosenkrans, Jacob
and William Funk, and B. S. Mason.
John C. Johnson, of Bach Grove, was elected Captain of Company C of Webster
City. Other officers elected were John N. Maxwell, First Lieutenant; Frank R.
Mason, Second Lieutenant; Harris Hoover, Sergeant; and A. Newton Hathway,
Corporal. The party left in the afternoon of March 23 and arrived in Fort Dodge
that evening. They joined Companies A, headed by Capt. Charles Richards, and
Company B under the command of Capt. John F. Duncombe. Major Williams, now 60
years old, was elected Commanding Officer. The three companies now numbered
about 100 men. Major Williams appointed George Sherman as acting commissary, and
Dr. C. R. Bissell, surgeon.
The men left Fort Dodge on March 24. Since Fort Dodge had trouble procuring
transportation, they managed to move only five miles north, camping on Beaver
Creek in the snow. The next day, they resumed marching and camped at Dakota
City. After that they headed for what is now Algona, but the deep snow, two feet
on the prairie and up to ten feet deep in the ravines and ditches, made travel
very difficult. Many times when crossing a ravine, they had to stack arms, walk
back and forth across the snow to beat down a track, and then pull on ropes to
get the wagons across. It took them two days to make the twelve miles from
Dakota City. William Church joined the expedition at this point. Capt. Duncombe
was sent ahead to find McKnight's Point. He became very ill and returned so
exhausted that he had to be carried back to camp. He nearly lost his life.
The expedition moved on, arriving in Irish Colony (now Emmetsburg) on the
March 28 and were well cared for by the inhabitants. Williams purchased a cow
which was butchered. It was reported "It was not exactly porterhouse steak, but
it was food for very hungry men." Here they left their oxen and horses and
changed them for fresh ones. They continued their march and camped the next
night at Big Island Grove, where there was evidence that the Indians had kept a
lookout. The following day, March 31, Williams sent out a scouting party of ten
men. They had traveled about eight miles when they encountered a party of
survivors, including Mrs. William Church, her babies, and her sister, Drusilla
Swanger. Lt. Mason ran the eight miles back to camp to inform Williams.
Richards, Duncombe, and Mason, along with the surgeon, hurried back to help the
survivors reach the main party campgrounds. The scouting party continued their
western march, camping the next night at Granger's Point on the Minnesota state
line. Here the scouts learned that United States troops from Fort Ridgley,
Minnesota, reported that the Indians had fled the area and headed to Owl Lake,
about 18 miles away. Since the Indians were mounted and the expedition was on
foot, it was decided to give up chasing the Indians. The scouts returned to
Irish Colony to report to Major Williams.
In council it was decided that one party of 26 men volunteer to continue the
march to Spirit Lake to bury the dead. This party was led by Capt. Johnson and
Lt. Maxwell. The main group would remain at Irish Colony for their return.
It was warm and clear on April 2 as the burial party arrived at Spirit Lake.
At the Thatcher cabin they buried two men. At the Howe cabin they buried seven
bodies, all in a common grave. They next divided into two parties to bury eleven
bodies at the Mattock cabin, more at the Harriott cabin. They found Mr. Howe
dead out on the ice. He was buried on a bluff southwest of his cabin. Others
buried the victims at Granger's cabin. They found about 40 slain cattle, all
with parts removed by the Indians. The last place visited was the Gardner cabin
where they buried the dead. The men were tired and hungry by this time and had
nothing left to eat. One of the men remembered that Gardner had buried potatoes
under the floor of his cabin. Two bushels were found and were roasted over a
campfire.
On the morning of April 4 this party started back, hoping to reach Irish
Colony by dark. In the forenoon it was warm, the snow was melting and travel
became more difficult. Sometimes, they waded across streams waist deep. The men
were wet when the wind changed. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon, a blizzard
struck. The temperature quickly dropped to 20 degrees below zero. In a very
short time their wet clothing had frozen stiff. The men became afraid of losing
their way back. When they discovered a township corner stake, they marched back
and forth all night to keep from freezing. When one of the men would fall,
others would pick him up and march along with him to keep him moving. During the
night some men begged to be allowed to lie down, claiming it was useless to keep
moving. One man had taken his boots off and could not get them back on. He
wrapped his feet is strips of his blanket. This action sustained him until
morning. Then his wraps wore out and he became delirious. Maxwell, with help
from Henry Dalvey, succeeded in getting him to the river. A fire was started and
when the fire was going, they cut the remaining rags from his feet. Much of the
skin came off with them. Poles were laid across the thin ice, and the men
crawled across the river on them to get back to Irish Colony.
The next morning after the blizzard, the main party continued their way back
to Fort Dodge. At Cylinder Creek the expedition broke up into squads, some
heading directly for Fort Dodge, others heading to Webster City by a northern
route. C. C. Carpenter, later to become our state governor, got some men to go
with him to try to find his good friend, Burkholder. After searching for nearly
a day, the men gave up and returned to Fort Dodge. Mason came back through Fort
Dodge while Pvt. Laughlin and Maxwell came the northern route. These brave men
battled the weather and returned.
Captain Johnson's party found a trapper and decided to follow him. They, too,
faced the blizzard and their party broke up, some going one way, some another.
Captain Johnson and Private William E. Burkholder became lost in the blizzard
and froze to death. Their bodies were not found until eight months later.
Thirty years later, in 1887, it was decided to have a brass marker made
honoring those who marched on this expedition. It was dedicated on August 12,
1887, in a ceremony at the Hamilton County Courthouse. The crowd grew to over
2,000 people so the ceremony was moved to the east entrance. Governor William
Larrabee occupied the Chair. Other dignitaries were Board of Supervisor's
Chairman C. T. Fenton, Mayor McMurray and Charles Aldrich. Seven participants
accepted invitations to narrate their recollections. These men were Capt. John
F. Duncombe, Capt. Charles Richards, Lt. John N. Maxwell, Lt. Frank Mason,
Privates Cyrus C. Carpenter, W. K. Laughlin, and Michael Sweeney. This marker
was moved to the present courthouse in 1976 and is today located on the north
wall of the first floor lobby. As you view it, pause and reflect on the
difficulties these men endured for our community. Also note that the names of
Mrs. Church and her sister, Drusilla, are mentioned. They were saved by this
expedition.
Charles Aldrich, editor of the Freeman Journal, later became the curator of
the State Historical Society. He encouraged these seven men to write up their
accounts of the expedition. These were all published in the "Annals of Iowa"
over a period of years. A special grave marker was created for those serving on
the expedition. A picture of the marker is shown in this article.
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