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Nez Perce

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PBS - THE WEST - THE PURSUIT AND CAPTURE OF CHIEF JOSEPH

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--> RESOURCES Archives of THE WEST Episode One (to 1806) Episode Two (1806 to 1848) Episode Three (1848 to 1856) Episode Four (1856 to 1868) Episode Five (1868 to 1874) Episode Six (1874 to 1877) Episode Seven (1877 to 1887) Episode Eight (1887 to 1914) FAQ Links THE PURSUIT AND CAPTURE OF CHIEF JOSEPH By CHARLES ERSKINE SCOTT WOOD The battle in White Bird Canyon was the first armed conflict of the Nez Perce War. I helped bury the dead in that canyon. The next clash was the two-day battle on the north fork of the Clearwater, July 11 and 12, 1877. Then Chief Joseph's retreat through the Lolo Pass began, only to end at Bear Paw Mountain, Montana, within about thirty miles of the British line and safety. (Joseph could easily have made his escape by pushing his march a little further, but, as Read More
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The flag of the Nez Perce Nation

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Main The flag of the Nez Perce Nation The Nez Perce Nation Photo supplied by TME Co . For any student of the Native American, the name Nez Perce immediately brings to mind one name - Chief Joseph. His statement "I will fight no more, forever.", was the title of a book and movie about the gallant fight and flight of the Nez Perce across 1,700 miles through the far west (ENAT, 158-161). Their flight was in an attempt to escape the squalor and deprivation of an imposed relocation to the Nez Perce Reservation in Idaho. Their goal was sanctuary in Canada. This phrase was uttered by a defeated Chief Joseph at the end of that valiant but failed effort to take his people to freedom. It reflects the despair that engulfed many Native American peoples when they came to accept the numerical Read More
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