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A CENTURY OF DISHONOR.

the troops from the forts in the Indian Territory,” it left them “at the mercy of the rebels.” That is, we first broke the treaty; and then their subsequent failure to observe it “placed them at our mercy!"

“It is,” he says, “a well-known fact that in many instances self-preservation compelled them to make the best terms they could with the rebels; and that this is the case has been proved by a large number of them joining our army as soon as a sufficient force had penetrated their country to make it safe for them to do so.”

The Delawares enlisted, in 1862, one hundred and seventy men in the Union army, and this out of a population of only two hundred males between the ages of eighteen and forty-five. There was probably no instance in the whole country of such a ratio of volunteers as this. They were reported as being in the army “tractable, sober, watchful, and obedient to the commands of their superiors.” They officered their own companies, and the use of spirituous liquors was strictly prohibited among them—a fact the more remarkable, as drunkenness was one of their chief vices at home.

Already, however, the “interests” of the white settlers in Kansas were beginning to be clearly in opposition to the interests of the Indians. “Circumsecribed as they are, and closely surrounded by white settlements, I can see nothing in the future for them but destruction,” says the commissioner. “I think it is for the interest of the Indians that they be removed to some other locality as soon as possible.”

“Several of them have from fifty to one hundred acres of land in cultivation, with comfortable dwellings, barns, and outhouses. * * * All the families are domiciled in houses. * * * Their crops of corn will yield largely. Nearly every family will have a sufficiency for their own consumption, and many of the larger farmers a surplus. * * * There are but few Delaware children of the age of twelve or fourteen that cannot read.”