In 1836, missionary couple Marcus and Narcissa Whitman founded the Whitman or Waiilatpu Mission about seven miles west of present-day Walla Walla, Washington. Though the development of the mission was slow, it would eventually include a large adobe mission house, several residences, a shelter for immigrants, a gristmill, and a blacksmith shop. In addition to the primary role of converting Cayuse to Christianity, the mission served as a way-station and landmark along the Oregon Trail.


Despite the Whitmans’ energy and devotion, progress in educating and converting the Cayuse was slow, as the vast majority of them rejected the idea of farming, continuing their nomadic way of life, and were indifferent to their preaching. Tensions between the white settlers and the Indians were also increased by quarreling among the various missions, increasing white settlers, and numerous cultural misunderstandings. As tensions increased, the Whitmans began to devote more and more time to caring for immigrants and less to the Cayuse.


Worse, the new settlers brought diseases with them, and in 1847 a measles epidemic spread from the wagon trains to their villages and killed about half of them within two months. When Marcus Whitman, a practicing physician, was unable to check the epidemic, the Cayuse came to believe he was getting rid of them to make way for settlers.


Cayuse tribespeople seeking revenge attacked the Whitman Mission on November 29, 1847, killing fourteen settlers, including Marcus and Narcissa Whitman, and destroying most buildings. Afterward, the Indians held 53 women and children captive for ransom before eventually being released.


This event, which became known as the Whitman Massacre, started the Cayuse War. The following year, a force of over 500 militiamen, led by fundamentalist clergyman Cornelius Gilliam and supported by the United States Army, marched against the Cayuse and other native inhabitants of central Oregon, demanding the surrender of the warriors responsible for the Whitman Massacre.


But the Cayuse refused to make peace and began to raid isolated settlements. US troops and militiamen were then called in to suppress the Cayuse. In 1850, five Cayuse warriors were captured by the military and tried for the murder of the Whitmans. All five were convicted by a military commission and hanged on June 3, 1850.


However, the conflict did not end. The bloodshed continued until the Cayuse were finally defeated in 1855. With their numbers significantly reduced by the war, the Cayuse were placed on a reservation with the Umatilla Indians. Their tribal lands were confiscated.

The war had significant long-term consequences for the region, opening up the Cayuse territories to white settlement but wrecking relations between whites and the native tribes and setting the scene for a series of new wars over the following 40 years.




1.
Which of the following compelling questions does the above passage help answer?

Which key event led to decades of conflict between the Cayuse people and white settlers in Washington?

How did measles hurt the Cayuse people?

What were the consequences of the conflict between the Cayuse people and white settlers in Washington?

Why did the white people put the Cayuse people on the reservation?