The Modoc War between 1872 and 1873 has a very important meaning in the Indian War. Because it was made public in the world, it was the last war of the era. Participants in this conflict include the leaders of the Modbach band, Klamath Indians, US Army, and settlers in the surrounding area. In the area of interest, there is Klamath Reserve on the border of Klamsburg south of Oregon and northern California. In this article we will focus on Modoc's young subhead, Captain Jack. Because he is wearing a unified beach with brass buttons.
However, after the blood conflict and the failure of negotiations on Good Friday, April 11, 1873, the Modoc War of regional problems became a national tragedy. When Captain Jack and his soldiers killed Camby and another peace commissioner, the only dead General in the Indian War, that violence shocked the surveillors of the United States and the world. Sherman and Grant urged Modok to "completely and completely extinct". At the end of the battle, soldiers captured, tried and executed some of Captain Jack and his followers later in the year. Shortly thereafter, the Army put the surviving Moroccans into a cow and sent it to Indian territory (now Oklahoma State) for reservation.
Most of the role as Sherman's commander was spent on secure exploitation of the western and plain countries through the continuation of the Indian war, including three important battles: the Modoc War, the Great Soviet War of 1876 And the development of the Nezper War Railroad and the removal of buffalo fostered the migration of Indians. Sherman believes that deliberate eradication of buffalo should be encouraged to weaken India's resistance to assimilation. He expressed this view in a speech at the Texas State Assembly affiliate conference in 1875. However, he has never actually been involved in any plan to eradicate Buffalo. Meanwhile, Sherman reorganized its border fortress to reflect changes in the boundary.
In 1872, a group of Modok tribes led by Kintrapuash, also known as Jack Captain, tried to return to their native state in Northern California after the US military forced them to shuffle and share their settlements in Oregon. The 53 revolt groups were surrounded by US military and Oregon militia and forced to evacuate to barren rugged lava floor near Mount Mountrassen which is part of the ancestral dwelling. More than 1,000 soldiers under the command of the general General Civil War General General Camby tried to occupy resistance but they did not succeed because they participated in an effective guerrilla warfare. Prior to the Civil War, Camby established his own military career in the Second Seminole War and later on Mexican invasion. He was sent to Utah on the eve of the Civil War, where he led the attack on the Navajo and then began civil servants in New Mexico.