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Frank North

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Years of service
  
1864 - 1877

Commands held
  
Pawnee Scouts

Name
  
Frank North

Other work
  
Politician


Frank North httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen668Maj

Buried at
  
Columbus Cemetery, Columbus, Nebraska

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Battles/wars
  
Indian Wars Powder River Expedition Crazy Woman's Fork Powder River Tongue River Comanche War Summit Springs

Died
  
1885, Columbus, Nebraska, United States

Place of burial
  
Columbus, Nebraska, United States

Books
  
The Journal of an Indian Fighter: The 1869 Diary of Frank J. North, Leader of the Pawnee Scouts

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Frank Joshua North (1840-1885), was an American interpreter, United States Army officer and politician. He is most well known for organizing and leading the Pawnee Scouts from 1865 to 1877. His brother Luther H. North also led the Scouts.

Contents

Frank North Sheldons History and Stories of Nebraska Major Frank North and

Early life

Frank Joshua North was born in Manhattan, New York on March 10, 1840. He had an older brother James E. North, born in Ohio, where their parents Thomas J. and Jane E. North had moved from their native Tompkins County, New York. His parents returned to Ohio, where his brother Luther H. North was born, followed by two younger sisters. In 1856, at the age of 16, Frank moved to Nebraska and worked as a transporter, moving goods between Omaha, Nebraska and Fort Kearny. During this time, North made contact with the Pawnee Indians, befriended them and learned the Pawnee language. In 1860, North was working as a clerk and interpreter at the Pawnee Agency trading post in Genoa, Nebraska.

Military

In 1864, Major General Samuel R. Curtis approached North to have him organize a company of Pawnee scouts to serve in the Union army. In 1865, he organized Company A of the Pawnee Scouts, and was appointed the rank of First Lieutenant and then Captain. While commanding the scouts, Captain North fought at Crazy Woman's Fork, participated in the Powder River Massacre, and fought in the Battle of Tongue River, all of which took place in August 1865 in Dakota Territory. On July 11, 1869, he fought with his scouts at the Battle of Summit Springs in Colorado Territory. After the battle, North claimed to have shot and killed the Cheyenne chief Tall Bull. He also participated in the Dull Knife Fight on November 25, 1876. Frank North was promoted to the rank of major and mustered out of the Army in 1877.

Later life

Frank North served one term in the Nebraska State Legislature from 1871 to 1872. He was then a ranching partner with William F. Cody in a cattle ranch in western Nebraska on the Dismal River. He disposed of his interest in 1882, and then joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West as manager of the American Indians. He sustained serious injuries (including seven broken ribs) in a horse accident in Hartford, Connecticut in 1884. As a result of his injuries and the following illness, Frank Joshua North died on March 15, 1885, in Columbus, Platte County, Nebraska.

References

Frank North Wikipedia