On October 3, 1873, the United States military hangs four Native Americans found guilty of murdering the Civil War general Edward Canby during the Modoc War in Oregon. Canby was the highest ranking military official and one of the only generals ever killed by Native Americans.
As with most of the American military conflicts with Native people, the Modoc war began with a struggle over land. A treaty signed in 1864 had forced a band of Modoc people under the leadership of Kintpuash—known to Americans as Captain Jack—to move to a reservation in southeastern Oregon dominated by Klamath people, who viewed the Modoc as unwelcome intruders on their traditional lands. Frustrated with the ill-treatment they received at the hands of the Klamath, Kintpuash and his followers abandoned the reservation in 1870 and returned to their former territory and traditional hunter-gatherer life.