They Said It…………
“About early morning I was awakened. My father and Chief Yellow Bull were standing, talking low. They thought they saw soldiers across the creek. Next instant we heard shots from above the creek across the canyon, maybe a quarter mile away. I heard the loud call, “We are attacked!’……After these two or three shots there broke a heavy fighting. Soldiers soon came rushing among the tepees. Bullets flying everywhere.”
The Nez Perce, Red Elk, commenting on the beginning of the Battle of the Big Hole

– Colonel John Gibbon, Commander of the 7th U.S. Infantry at the Big Hole, describing his wounding in the battle and the threatened state of his force

“Just at dark we saw three bright lights go up, south of us, about a mile away on the bank, in the direction the squaws had taken the wounded. Immediately after we saw the three lights, there were twelve shots fired. The shots reached us, but did no damage, except wounding one horse in the foot, and stampeding all the horses that were not fastened. That was the last shot fired at us, and the last of the Indians around here.”
-Tom Sherrill, Civilian Volunteer, describing the official end of the battle on the evening of the August 10, 1877
