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The following are extracts from a letter sent by George Gibbs, dated "Fort Vose, on Port Townsend, W. T., Jan. 7, 1857," to James Swan.
 George Gibbs, from the collections of the Washington State Historical Society.
hat the governor's treaties had a great deal to do in
fomenting this war there is no doubt. Those on the Sound
were too much hurried, and the reservations allowed them
were insufficient; but his grand blunder was in bringing
together the Nez Perces, Walla Wallas, Yakamas, and others
into one council, and cramming a treaty down their throats
in a hurry. Still, the treaties were only one item in the
reasons for disaffection. Treaties had been made with the
Willamette and Columbia River Indians, first by a board of
commissioners, then by a superintendent, and none of them
ratified, nor payments made under them. The Donation Law had
very unjustly given to settlers the lands before the title
was extinguished. The tribes whose country was occupied had
visibly perished, and the bolder tribes of the prairies east
of the mountains were determined that they would keep us
out, at all events till they were paid. They saw that the
troops were few, and scattered in distant and petty posts;
that they were not mounted, and only one station in their
country, which they could easily exterminate. The Sound
Indians, encouraged by hope of support from the Yakamas,
whom they feared themselves, thought that they, in like
manner, could clear the Sound, and they came pretty near
doing it. But for Captain Maloney's fortunate return, they
probably would have raised all the tribes, taken the
unguarded post at Steilacoom, supplied themselves with arms
and ammunition, and whipped us out. It needed only one
great success to have enabled them to do this. As to the
conduct of the war on this side (that is, west of the
Cascade range of mountains), it has been well managed.
Captain Keyes and Colonel Casey, who succeeded him in
command, acted with judgment and energy; but the war on the
other side, directed by Colonel Wright, has been a perfect
farce. He has proclaimed peace when it only exists because
the whites have been driven from the country. He left his
communications behind him unguarded, suffered the Cascades
to be taken and burned, ran back, gave up an expedition on
which he started, undertook another, sent back for more
troops, and finally, at the head of eleven companies of
regulars, after talking and feeding the hostiles on sugar
and flour, marched back without taking a single one of the
murderers, without killing an enemy in the field, without
dictating terms, or doing any thing whatever to chastise or
subdue those who were in arms. The result, is, that all
communication by way of the Plains is abandoned; that other
tribes, encouraged by the inefficiency of the troops, or,
rather, of their commander, have joined; and that the
Indians hold undisputed control over the country.
"Here the principal difficulty will arise from the non-
fulfillment of the treaties with the friendly tribes. The
treaty with the Nisquallies, &c., who took up arms, was the
only one ratified, and of course they will receive their
annuities; while the Lower Sound tribes, who have remained
peaceable, and have been compelled to suffer great though
necessary inconvenience, remain neglected. Whether the
treaties are good or not, they ought to be ratified, or at
least provision made by law to pay their annuities as
promised.
"The conduct of the government has been most
extraordinary. They have suffered a regular and a volunteer
war to go on for a whole year, and have neither authorized
nor stopped the latter. Governor Stevens and General Wool
have been quarreling, and they have not decided in favor of
either. In fact, the inaction or want of decision shown at
Washington has been most culpable.
"I can not stop to correct the above, or add what may,
perhaps, be necessary to give connection to the data. What I
have meant to show was that the war sprung partly from ill-
judged legislation, partly from previous unratified
treaties, and partly from recent blunders. Much is due to
the natural struggle between the hostile races for the
sovereignty of the soil. The land is at the root of the war.
Many outrages have been committed since it begun, it is
true, but it was not private wrongs that led to it. The
numerous outrages committed by Indians on whites have not
been taken into account by those who bleat about the 'poor
Indian.'"
Extracted from the Center for World Indigenous Studies website at http://www.cwis.org/fwdp/Americas/wwpugsnd.txt. The Gibbs letter is contained in a text document supporting a workshop developed and implemented by the Institute for the Development of Indian
Law, Inc. of Washington, D.C., and written by Robert Brockstedt Lane and Barbara Lane.
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