- Battle of Stone Houses
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=The Skirmish of Stone Houses
partof=
date=November 10 ,1837
place=near present-dayWindthorst, Texas
result=Kichai victory
combatant2=Kichai
combatant1=Texas Rangers
commander2=unknown
commander1=A. B. Van Benthusen
strength2=150 to 180
strength1=18
casualties2=2 killed
casualties1=10 killedThe Battle of Stone Houses was a skirmish between Texas Rangers and a band of Kichai Indians which took place on
November 10 ,1837 . The skirmish, which took place ten miles south of what is nowWindthorst, Texas , was named for three stone mounds near the battlefield which appeared to the Indians to be small houses.Background
A group of Kichai raided Fort Smith on the
Little River sometime early in October 1837. On the 13th, a company of Texas Rangers, led by CaptainWilliam Eastland , pursued them up theColorado River ; however, the Rangers soon lost the trail. Captain Eastland then began quarreling with LieutenantA. B. Van Benthusen , and as a result the company separated. Van Benthusen took seventeen men north with him, and located the Indians' trail onNovember 1 . They then continued north to theBrazos River .On
November 3 , near what was to becomeFort Belknap , the Rangers found a band ofCherokee and Delawares being led by a Kichai guide, who was immediately killed. The others were spared when they claimed to be friends to allTexan s and enemies of theComanche s.kirmish
On
November 10 , the Rangers encountered the Kichais, who had stopped fleeing and were primed instead for an attack. It is said that some of the Cherokee and Delawares who were present attempted to mediate peace, but one of the Rangers, Felix McClusky, attacked and killed an Indian. McClusky was immediately reprimanded, and replied that he would kill any Indian for a plug oftobacco ; he then proceeded to show one which he had taken from the dead man. This apparently infuriated the Indians, who attacked.The Rangers abandoned their horses and ran to a shallow
ravine , where they sought protection. The Kichais lost their leader in their first attack, but retired to elect a new one and soon took up the battle again. Fighting, often at close quarters, continued for two hours, after which the Kichais decided to set theprairie on fire and thus smoke out the Rangers. The Rangers charged through the smoke and the Indians, escaping into woods nearby. Four died in battle before the fire; six more were killed while fleeing. The eight that survived arrived at the settlement on theSabine River onNovember 27 . Having lost all of their horses and equipment, they had walked the entire way.The site of the Skirmish of Stone Houses received a historic marker in 1970.
References
[http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/SS/bts3.html Handbook of Texas entry]
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