Publication: University of Oklahoma Press, 1966, Norman
First edition. 8vo. Black cloth, titles stamped in gilt on the spine, xv [blank], 237 pp., preface, illustrated, portraits, map, bibliography, index. Accounts of the signing of the treaty and its affects. Douglas Jones, an army officer, tells the story of the negotiations that led to the Treaty of Medicine Lodge, primarily through the eyes of the newspapermen who were present. The negotiations were conducted by the peace commission appointed in 1867 to solve the Indian problem on the Western Plains. The peace commission was comprised of Senator John B. Henderson, Commissioner of Indian Affairs N.G. Taylor and General William T. Sherman. Altogether, nine newspapermen, including Henry M. Stanley, accompanied the peace commission to Medicine Lodge Creek in south central Kansas to report the negotiations with the Arapaho, Cheyenne, Comanches, and Kiowas. Among the newspapers represented were the New York Herald, the Chicago Times, the Chicago Tribune, two Cincinnati papers, and two from St. Louis. Harper’s Weekly and Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly were each represented by artists. A fine, bright copy in a lightly rubbed dust jacket with some very light wear to top of spine.
Inventory Number: 51739