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WRITINGS OF SAM HOUSTON, 1855
please-not march through the Indian country, but send word to the chiefs ; let them know they had a force, and there is not a chief, who has had any relations with the United States, but would come forward willingly, make treaties, and maintain them in good faith. But you must establish trading-houses; you must protect them, and then you may command the Indians absolutely, and you will have no murders upon your roads. Sir, would it not be much wiser to send a few wagons with presents than to send an army? ·would not the object be effected much sooner by sending commissioners with presents? The Executive and Senate are the treaty-making power, and all that is necessary for Congress to do, is to make an appropriation for the purpose. Would it not be much easier to take presents to the Indians, and would not the object of attaining and preserving peace be much sooner effected in this way than by an army? While you were clothing and equipping your army, and marching it there, the Indians might kill half the people on the frontier. Your army would have to march thousands of miles to reach them; but commissioners could go quietly along, with four or five hundred troops, or as many as might be necessary; I would leave that to their discretion; I would select men of capacit· for•fighting as well as for treating. Send such men, and thei will be no trouble in bringing about peace. My life upon i $5,000,000 would suffice to civilize every Indian who has eve been in treaty with the United States, and settle him in a quiet, comfortable home. Some time since the present agent in Texas was ordered to lay off a section of country in that State for the use of the In- dians.0 He did so. He said to the fierce Comanches, "Come here, my brothers, and settle down." They have done so. The Indians to whom I before alluded, who were driven off by the former agent, after robbing them of their horses, upon the assurances given at the return of the present worthy and intelligent agent, faithful to his trust, came back in perfect confidence, and set themselves to building their houses to shelter their women, old men, and children, while the warriors went out to kill game. There they are. The southern Comanches went within the bor- der, and said, "Let us settle"; but they were immediately told, through the influence of the army, I suppose, that they must not settle there. I saw, not long since, a letter from a most intelli- gent gentleman, who said that the officer at Fort Belknap, with three companies of rangers, and two of regulars, was daily ex- pecting to make a descent on the poor Indians who had been
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