daboyleroy
Member
Right, there were not any large scale actions, but that does not mean the conflicts were over. I would count any discharge of weapons by combat Army personnel at Indian targets on CONUS soil as being an encounter. I hate Wikipedia, but here is the listing of the 1918 fight involving the Army and the Yaquis in AZ.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Bear_Valley
Was it big? No. Did it occur 26 years after Wounded Knee? Yes.
Check out
https://net.lib.byu.edu/estu/wwi/comment/huachuca/HI2-05.htm
Below is part of it
Reported from Douglas, Arizona, 'January 10, 1915, that a detachment of American Cavalry sent into Bear, Valley,' 25 miles west of Nogales to observe trails, clashed with a band of Yaqui Indians, captured ten, one of whom died in a hospital at Nogales of wound, according to a telegram from the commander at Nogales.(10)
This terse report from the commander of the Southern Department at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, to the War Department in Washington is the only official record of what some believe is the last fight between the U.S. Army and Indians.
Yaqui Indian Camp at Agua Prieta, Sonora, Mexico, in November 1915.
The Yaqui Indians of northern Sonora, Mexico, had for many years been fighting the Mexican government, insisting on their independence. They would commonly cross the border and migrate to Tucson where they would find work in the citrus groves. With their wages they would buy arms with which to fight their revolution and smuggle them back into Mexico. The military governor of Sonora, General Plutarco Elias Calles, had informally asked the U.S. government to help put a stop to that. gun-running.
The Indians route into the U.S. skirted the mining towns ot Ruby, Arivaca and Oro Blanco, not far from the U.S. Army's Camp Stephen D. Little at Nogales. The Indian presence had on several occasions alarmed miners and ranchers in the area who unexpectedly happened upon the Yaquis or found a cow or two butchered on the range. Accordingly, the Nogales subdistrict commander, Colonel J.C. Friers, 35th Infantry, ordered increased patrolling in this area.