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- Q4868792 subject Q15318047.
- Q4868792 subject Q6795192.
- Q4868792 subject Q8292940.
- Q4868792 subject Q8293221.
- Q4868792 subject Q8412280.
- Q4868792 subject Q8484523.
- Q4868792 subject Q8931653.
- Q4868792 abstract "The Bates Battlefield (Arapaho: Kóúwoo'óé' ) was the scene of an 1874 action in which an Arapaho encampment was attacked by U.S. Army forces under Captain Alfred E. Bates. The battlefield is a narrow valley in Hot Springs County, Wyoming near the junction of the Big Horn Mountains and the Owl Creek Mountains. Variously called the Bates Battle, the Battle of Young's Point, the Battle of Snake Mountain and the Nowood Battle, the action was part of a campaign by forces under the command of Lieutenant General Philip Sheridan to protect the comparatively sedentary Shoshone under Chief Washakie from raids by their traditional enemies, the Northern Cheyenne, the Sioux and the Northern Arapaho.In June 1874, "Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors decided to attack the Wind River Shoshones. As the invaders crossed the Big Horn Mountains, they had a disagreement about the purpose of their trip. Some claimed it was a raid for murder and the spoils of war; others said it was to steal horses. Because of the disagreement, the Arapahoes refused to participate."Sheridan ordered Bates to raid the Arapaho camp, reported to comprise between 40 and 112 lodges. On July 1, 1874, Bates set forth leading Company B, 2nd Cavalry with 63 cavalrymen, 20 white and Shoshone scouts under Lieutenant R.H. Young, and a party of 167 Shoshone under Washakie.Bates led thirty cavalrymen and twenty Shoshone against the encampment, occupied by Black Coal's people, at daybreak on July 4. Lt. Young took his scouts around to the other end of the village. Fighting went well at first for Bates' force, but the Arapaho moved to a nearby height and began to fire down onto Bates' raiders. Bates withdrew from the village without recovering his own dead., suffering four killed and five or six wounded, while reporting 25 Arapaho killed and 100 wounded. Other reports indicate the Arapaho suffered as few as ten casualties. Bates captured 350 horses of the 1200 to 1400 head associated with the village. Bates blamed his lack of overall success on the noise made by the Shoshone. Accounts of the battle by different parties reveal wide discrepancies in perceptions of the motivation, progress, and outcome of the fight.The Bates Battlefield was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.".
- Q4868792 added "1974-11-20".
- Q4868792 nearestCity Q1020393.
- Q4868792 nrhpReferenceNumber "74002286".
- Q4868792 wikiPageExternalLink Site.aspx?ID=184.
- Q4868792 wikiPageExternalLink 74002286.pdf.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q1020393.
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- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q15318047.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q2093821.
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- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q3457186.
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- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q3719.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q56417.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q626136.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q643243.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q6795192.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q7114850.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8292940.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8293221.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8412280.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8484523.
- Q4868792 wikiPageWikiLink Q8931653.
- Q4868792 yearOfConstruction "1874".
- Q4868792 added "1974-11-20".
- Q4868792 built "1874".
- Q4868792 name "Bates Battlefield".
- Q4868792 nearestCity Q1020393.
- Q4868792 refnum "74002286".
- Q4868792 point "43.54194444444445 -107.60472222222222".
- Q4868792 type Place.
- Q4868792 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q4868792 type Building.
- Q4868792 type Location.
- Q4868792 type Place.
- Q4868792 type Thing.
- Q4868792 type SpatialThing.
- Q4868792 type Q41176.
- Q4868792 comment "The Bates Battlefield (Arapaho: Kóúwoo'óé' ) was the scene of an 1874 action in which an Arapaho encampment was attacked by U.S. Army forces under Captain Alfred E. Bates. The battlefield is a narrow valley in Hot Springs County, Wyoming near the junction of the Big Horn Mountains and the Owl Creek Mountains.".
- Q4868792 label "Bates Battlefield".
- Q4868792 lat "43.54194444444445".
- Q4868792 long "-107.60472222222222".
- Q4868792 name "Bates Battlefield".