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to go south if the army went and their disappointment was likely to be most keen in the event of its and their not going.221 It was under circumstances such as these that Commissioner Dole recommended to Secretary Smith, March 13, 1862, that he

      Procure an order from the War Department detailing two Regiment of Volunteers from Kansas to go with the Indians to their homes and to remain there for their protection as long (as) may be necessary, also to furnish two thousand stand of arms and ammunition to be placed in the hands of the loyal Indians.

      Jennison, so says the Daily Conservative, March 25, 1862, had been ordered with the First Cavalry to repair to Humboldt at the time the Indian Expedition was under consideration the first of the year and was brevetted acting brigadier for the purpose of furthering Dole's intentions.

      Daily Conservative, February 18, 1862.

      Congressional Globe, 37th congress, second session, part i, 835, 878.

      Dole to Smith, March 13, 1862 [Indian Office Report Book, no. 12, 331–332].

      Coffin to Dole, March 3, 1862 [ibid., Consolidated Files, Southern Superintendency, C 1544 of 1862; Letters Registered, no. 58].

      Daily Conservative, March 5, 1862.

      Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Report, 1862, 148.

      

      WAR DEPARTMENT,

      WASHINGTON CITY, D. C, March 19, 1862.

       MAJ. GEN.H.W. HALLECK,

      Commanding the Department of Mississippi:

      General: It is the desire of the President, on the application of the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, that you should detail two regiments to act in the Indian country, with a view to open the way for the friendly Indians who are now refugees in Southern Kansas to return to their homes and to protect them there. Five thousand friendly Indians will also be armed to aid in their own protection, and you will please furnish them with necessary subsistence.

      Please report your action in the premises to this Department. Prompt action is necessary.

      By order of the Secretary of War:

      Two thousand was most certainly the number, although the communication from the War Department gives it as five.

      Dole to Halleck, March 21, 1862 [Indian Office Letter Book, no. 67, 516–517].

      —Ibid., 517–518.

      Official Records, vol. viii, 624–625.

      

      Steele to Dole, March 27, 1862 [Indian Office General Files, Southern Superintendence, 1859–1862, S 537 of 1862].

      Robert B. Mitchell was colonel, first of the Second Kansas Infantry, then of the Second Kansas Cavalry. He raised the former, in answer to President Lincoln's first call, 1861 [Crawford, Kansas in the Sixties, 20], chiefly in Linn County, and the latter in 1862.

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