KINTPUASH

The documented history behind the novel

The Record.

Captain Jack & The Original Renegades is fiction. The history beneath it is not. The war, the bounties, the prisoners, the exile, and the land all sit in the documented past, in congressional testimony, military files, court and land records, and the National Archives. This is where that record is gathered. The story is in the book.

What the record holds

Documented, not invented.

The bounty years · 1851–1856

chu'nuuks

California's leadership called openly for extermination, and a bounty was put on Native lives. At the Tule Lake place the Modoc call chu'nuuks, later renamed Bloody Point, Modoc people were killed in the violence tied to Ben Wright. The arrest of Eneas in 1856 belongs to the same record.

The treaty · 1864

Council Grove

The 1864 Council Grove treaty moved the Modoc onto the Klamath Reservation, away from their Lost River homeland. Hunger, unkept promises, and life under another nation drove Kintpuash's band to leave and go home — the refusal the government would answer with war. The treaty and the agency reports are on the record.

The Modoc War · 1872–1873

The Lava Beds

From Lost River to the lava beds, a small band held out against the U.S. Army. The Peace Commission, its collapse, and the testimony that followed were recorded at the time, much of it by Alfred Meacham, who survived the parley and testified before Congress.

Prisoners & exile · 1873 onward

Fort Klamath

The executions at Fort Klamath, the confirmation and handling of the Modoc prisoners of war in October 1873, and the exile of the people to Indian Territory are documented in military and federal records. The survivors endured there as the Modoc Nation of Oklahoma.

The land

How it changed hands

Deeds, certificates of sale, and tax records, including the 1864 Fairchild land papers, trace how the country around the war passed from one set of hands to another. Land is its own kind of testimony.

Assimilation · after the war

What the exile became

The survivors were sent to Indian Territory, and the next generations into the assimilation era — the boarding schools, the 1907 death of the Modoc boy Charlie Fiester at the Klamath Agency, and the federal failures named in the 1928 Meriam Report. The endurance is documented too.

The documents

Read the orders yourself.

Not paraphrases. Each of these is a real document from the public record of the Modoc War, quoted from the government's own correspondence and the press of the day.

Headquarters District of the Lakes, Fort Klamath, Oregon, October 2, 1873 — the document recording Captain Jack's mark the evening before his execution, attested by Lt. Col. Frank Wheaton

Headquarters, District of the Lakes · Fort Klamath, Oregon · October 2, 1873

"Signature of the Modoc Chief the evening before his execution."

Kintpuash signed with his mark — his × Captain Jack, Chief of Lost River Modocs — witnessed by the post adjutant and attested by Lt. Col. Frank Wheaton, commanding. He was hanged the next morning, October 3, 1873.

Telegram · Headquarters, Army of the United States · Washington, D.C. · March 13, 1873

To Gen. E.R.S. Canby, Fairchild's Ranch, via Yreka, Cal.

"It is manifestly desired by all in authority that this Modoc affair should be settled amicably… But should these peaceful measures fail, and should the Modocs presume too far on the forbearance of the Government, and again resort to deceit and treachery, I trust you will make such use of the military force that no other Indian tribe will imitate their example, and that no other reservation for them will be necessary except graves among their chosen lava-beds."
— W. T. Sherman, General

Telegram · Headquarters, Army of the United States · Washington, D.C. · April 13, 1873

To Gen. J. M. Schofield, San Francisco — two days after Gen. Canby was killed under a flag of truce

"The President now sanctions the most severe punishment of the Modocs, and I hope to hear that they have met the doom they so richly have earned by their insolence and perfidy."
— W. T. Sherman, General

Department of the Interior · March 1873

C. Delano, Secretary of the Interior, to the Secretary of War

"I do not think they ought to be required to go to 'Angel Island' as prisoners of war, provided their surrender can be obtained… it should not be insisted upon that the Modocs who have been indicted be surrendered to the civil authorities for trial."
— C. Delano, Secretary of the Interior

Message to the California Legislature · January 1851

"That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct must be expected."
— Gov. Peter H. Burnett, State of California

The Modoc answer · surrender, 1873

"I thought if we killed all the white men we saw, that no more would come. We killed all we could, yet they came more and more like the new grass in spring. I looked around and saw many of the young men were dead. My heart was sick. I threw down my gun."
— Schonchin John (Old Schonchin)

Drawn from Modoc War: Message from the President of the United States (1874), the contemporary press, and the recorded words of the Modoc people. What the documents cannot tell, the book does.

Selected sources

The sources.

A working bibliography of the documented record behind the book, from the primary correspondence to the standard histories.

Primary record

Histories & reference

The full story

The record is here. The story is in the book.

Everything above is the documented ground the novel stands on. What the record cannot tell, the book does.