As I write this small posting in late September 2016
while camped near Spearfish and later in Custer State Park in western South Dakota, I am reminded that
George Armstrong Custer seems always present here in the Black Hills. Custer left behind the name of a town, a
mountain peak, city streets and numerous motels, cafes, bars—you name it and
Custer’s name will be affixed at some location in the Hills. Of course he also left behind the beginning of the end for a large group
of Native Americans who were soon to lose their ancestral hunting grounds and
their nomadic way of life. There seems
no middle ground here in the west for Custer—like him for opening the Black
Hills to mining and settlement or despise him for destroying the local
population of Native Americans. Not so
much killing the Natives in firefights, but in opening the Hills to settlement
which resulted in the resettlement of the Natives and their loss of a huge hunk
of land. The beginning of the end started with Custer’s expedition to the Hills
in 1874 and the end came only two
years later at the Battle of the Greasy Grass (AKA Battle of the Little Bighorn
or Custer’s Last Stand). Literally
hundreds of books and articles have been written about Custer in the West and
readers have their choice of authors.
Even today there are new tomes being published that win major
awards. It is tough for me to understand
how new information seems to appear and therefore offers authors a chance for
different interpretations.
At any rate, I am interested in the rocks and minerals
that seem associated with the Custer expedition of 1874. Thanks to authors like Ernest Grafe and Paul
Horsted (2002), campsites and trails covered by the Expedition are well known
and one can follow along the entire Black Hills’ route if desired. Like many geologists and rockhounds I am
greatly interested in the area around Custer City, the site of his “gold
discovery.”
Lt. Col. George A. Custer was a Civil War hero (at
least to the “North”) and at age 25 received the rank of Brevet Major General,
and accolades poured in from the press for the “Boy General.” At the conclusion of the War Custer remained
in the U.S. Army and in 1866 was awarded the rank of lieutenant-colonel and
assigned to a new regiment, the Seventh Cavalry. Most/all of the regiment referred to him as
General Custer.
Most Army officers thought the slaughter of Buffalo by meat and hide hunters, settlers, miners, etc. would signal the end of the nomadic Native Americans. |
It was hard for army officers to advance in rank after
the war and certainly “reconstruction duty” in one of the former Confederate
states was not a great stepping stone.
Custer viewed himself as a frontiersman and pathfinder and yearned to do
battle with Native Americans occupying much of the Plains States, especially
the loose confederation of the various Lakota bands (mostly Oglala and
Hunkpapa), the Northern Cheyenne and the Arapaho. Therefore, Custer was instrumental in
convincing General Philip Sheridan, Commander of the Division of the Missouri
and General Alfred Terry, Commander of the Department of Dakota, that a
military reconnaissance of the Black Hills of the Dakota Territory was
a necessity. All three officers wanted to
subdue, by whatever means (such as firefights, slaughtering the Buffalo [Bison]
herds, etc.), the Native Americans occupying the Hills and the Powder River
Basin to the west; however, an unpublicized argument was to confirm the
presence of minerals rumored to exist in the Black Hills. President Grant then approved the expedition
since after the Financial Panic of 1873 the country needed new resources such
as gold and timber, and any gold/mineral rush to the hills would also provide
“jobs” for the many unemployed men (and a few women).
So, off Custer went on July 2, 1974, from Fort Abraham
Lincoln across the Missouri River from Bismarck, North Dakota, with somewhere
close to 1200 men. Besides members of 10 companies of his 7th Calvary
(including a 16 piece band), the group included ~110 wagons and accompanying
teamsters, about 300 head of cattle for food in case the hunters could not
produce game, a medical staff, several newspaper correspondents, the
experienced miners Horatio Ross and William McKay (perhaps disguised as
teamsters), several Native American Scouts, at least two of Custer’s
staghounds, extra horses and mules, Chief Engineer Captain William Ludlow and
his assistant (who produced wonderful maps), and Scientist George Bird Grinnell,
a graduate student at Yale who later became a famous anthropologist, naturalist
and writer, assigned to describe the flora and fauna. Grinnell had three assistants: 1) Newton H. Winchell
later became the Director of the Minnesota State Geological Survey and authored
the six volume treatise entitled The Geology of Minnesota; 2) Luther North, a
jack-of-all-trades best remembered for leading a group of Pawnee Scouts, along
with his brother Frank, helping protect the Union Pacific Railroad and later
business partners with William (Buffalo Bill) Cody); and 3) A.B. Donaldson, a botanist
and newspaper “man” from Minnesota. William
Illingworth was the Expedition’s photographer who evidently was hired by Ludlow
to provide photos for the U.S. Army. The
Expedition also included at least one woman, a former slave known as Aunt Sally who cooked
for Sulter John Smith.
The Expedition passed very close to Sundance Mountain on on July 22. The isolated peak is a Tertiary laccolith described in a Post on Dec. 17, 2013. |
The botanist A.B. Donaldson also wrote dispatches for the St. Paul Pioneer. Thanks to Hollis at www.plantsandrocks.blogspot.com for sharing this article from South Dakota Historical Collections, Volume VII, 1914. |
After spending several days traversing the center of
the Hills (reaching the Needles-Harney Peak at the end of July) area the
Expedition reached the area a few miles east of Custer at a locality termed
Agnes Park and “Permanent Camp.”
The miners of the Expedition, Ross and McKay, had been looking for minerals, especially gold, during the last few days. It seems they found a few flakes near what is now Custer City and additional flakes and tiny nuggets along French Creek that runs through the "Permanent Camp" (known as Custer’s Gulch). Most of the gold found along French Creek came from prospectors digging a hole along the stream through the gravel and preferably down to bedrock. They then panned the gravel and sand lying on the bedrock surface and removed the tiny flakes. Altogether it was not a great find; however, the tiny bits of metal certainly caused “gold fever” among the members of the Expedition as noted by a reporter for the Inter-Ocean (as reported in Grafe and Horsted (2002): At daybreak there was a crowd around the ‘diggins,’ with every conceivable accoutrement. Shovels and spades, picks, axes, tent-pins, pot hooks, bowie knives, mess pans, kettles, plates, platters, tin cups, and everything within reach that could either lift dirt or hold it was put in service by the worshippers of that gold, gold…Officers and privates, mule whackers and scientists, all met on a common level, and the great equalizer was that insignificant yellow dust.
The miners of the Expedition, Ross and McKay, had been looking for minerals, especially gold, during the last few days. It seems they found a few flakes near what is now Custer City and additional flakes and tiny nuggets along French Creek that runs through the "Permanent Camp" (known as Custer’s Gulch). Most of the gold found along French Creek came from prospectors digging a hole along the stream through the gravel and preferably down to bedrock. They then panned the gravel and sand lying on the bedrock surface and removed the tiny flakes. Altogether it was not a great find; however, the tiny bits of metal certainly caused “gold fever” among the members of the Expedition as noted by a reporter for the Inter-Ocean (as reported in Grafe and Horsted (2002): At daybreak there was a crowd around the ‘diggins,’ with every conceivable accoutrement. Shovels and spades, picks, axes, tent-pins, pot hooks, bowie knives, mess pans, kettles, plates, platters, tin cups, and everything within reach that could either lift dirt or hold it was put in service by the worshippers of that gold, gold…Officers and privates, mule whackers and scientists, all met on a common level, and the great equalizer was that insignificant yellow dust.
On August 3 Custer, not wanting to wait with the news
of “gold in the Black Hills” until the Expedition returned to Ft. Lincoln, sent
scout Charley Reynolds with a dispatch to Ft. Laramie in east-central
Wyoming. In glowing terms Custer over-exaggerated
the gold discovery knowing full well that a rush would soon begin to the Black
Hills!
On August 5, 1874, 21 claim-holders from the
Expedition formed the District No. 1,
Custer Park Mining Company, Custer’s Gulch, Black Hills, D.T. Aug. 5, 1874. The discovery claim belonged to miner Ross while
one of the other claimants was Sarah Campbell (Aunt Sally who held title to
“No. 7 below Discovery”). In reality,
very few of the claim owners ever returned to the Black Hills, although
historical records point out that miner Ross and Aunt Sally did live out their
days in the Black Hills; neither became wealthy from the gold along French
Creek.
Bear Butte near where the Expedition camped after leaving the Hills. The Butte is an Eocene laccolith. See POST on June 12, 2012. |
The Expedition left the Custer City area with dreams
of gold and headed north leaving the Hills in mid-August at a locality known as
Custer’s Gap along Boxelder Creek north of Rapid City. Either good work by the scouts or sheer luck
allowed the Expedition to “discover” the gap through the upturned sedimentary
rocks that allowed movement onto the Plains.
Near Bear Butte the Expedition camped for a couple of days to retrofit
the wagons and then had a rather uneventful trip back to Ft. Lincoln arriving
July 30th.
By 1876 downtown Custer City was booming. Photo
Rlevse private collection, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4030996
|
What about the gold near Custer City? Did it ever produce in “paying amounts”? Gold
mining in the Custer area was never really very successful although many cubic
yards of soil and gravel were turned over and panned or sluiced for the
metal. Placer gold is never as lucrative
as lode gold and miners never really found the source of the flakes and small
nuggets retrieved from the Custer area.
Most likely the source is “upstream” somewhere near Rochford, perhaps
waiting for discovery. Or perhaps the
lode rock was eroded away!
Flakes of gold can be panned, with hard work, from
many streams in the Black Hills. And, one
runs into claim markers at numerous localities.
However, none of the placer deposits seem more than recreational
opportunities, but—hope springs eternal.
As for my panning attempts, I have a grand total of
two flakes from French Creek. However, I
nether dug down to bedrock nor worked very hard! I just wanted to see if the
early miners left a small tidbit for an ole geologist.
REFERENCES CITED
Grafe, E. and P. Horsted, 2002, Exploring with Custer; The 1874 Black Hills Expedition: Golden valley Press, Custer, SD.
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