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Milton Cline

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</gallery> Milton William Cline (May 16, 1825 in Whitehall, New York – October 7, 1911 in Montrose County, Colorado) was a 19th-century American sailor, soldier, scout and pioneer. His name appears throughout the history of the United States Civil War and post-bellum period.

Cline began his career as a sailor aboard the whaling ship South Carolina in 1846.[1]

Military career

Picture of Milton W Cline (seated in center) 1864 provided by Library of Congress
Early photo of "Then Cline Ranch"

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cline_ranch.png

Prior to the US Civil War, Cline moved to Indiana, and during the War, he served as a scout with the 3rd Regiment Indiana Cavalry. Under the command of Major General Joseph Hooker, Cline was assigned to a newly formed core of scouts.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). One especially daring BMI scout, Sgt. Milton W. Cline, managed to attach himself to a Confederate cavalry captain and rode the entire length of Lee’s lines a few days before the Battle of Chancellorsville. Sharpe requested that Federal military authorities send him for tens of thousands of dollars in captured Confederate currency, for him to give to his military scouts and civilian spies to use. "NCOs: The MI Tradition" (PDF). p. 5.</ref> Cline's success with this group was mixed. On the one hand, he accomplished "the deepest and longest infiltration of the Confederation Army recorded during the war,",[2] and was instrumental in obtaining key intelligence about orders being sent by Jefferson Davis,[3] but on the other hand, he was later blamed for the failure of an infiltration mission in which all but one of the infiltrators was killed or captured.[2] This latter episode ended Cline's career in the 3rd Indiana.

After the Civil war Cline moved west. Historical records list Cline as one of the first prospectors and settlers of the town of Ouray Colorado. In addition to being a early prospector of Colorado Captain Milton W Cline is listed as Ouray's first postmaster, mayor and Sheriff  of Cimmerian. (Gunnison Daily Review Press notes that an election that was held to choose Cimarron’s town officers declared Captain Cline “chosen marshal and appointed deputy sheriff.”22). After several years of prospecting and owning mines such as "The Mickey Breen" Capt. Cline ultimately settling his home in Cimarron, Colorado and became a cattle rancher, at its peak, his ranch covered 450 acres (180 ha) and had 5400 head of cattle.[4] 

Cline had a close relationship with Chief Ouray and the Ute people who neighbored his range. He was known to intervene in local disputes between the Utes and the white settlers, specifically during the hostage crisis following the Meeker Massacre, when Cline was among the party sent by the US government to negotiate the release of hostages taken by the Utes.[5][6]

Picture of Mickey Breen Mine workers, candlesticks in hand ready to go underground to mine

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mickey_Breen_Mine-_co-owned_by_Milton_W._Cline.jpg

Death

Cline died on October 7, 1911, in Montrose County, Colorado. At the time, the Ouray County Plaindealer noted his death as "A famous old pioneer dead."

Milton W Cline 1911 Montrose County Newspaper Obituary Picture

References

  1. ^ "Crewlist for the voyage aboard the South Carolina". Whaling Project. City of New Bedford [Massachusetts] Free Public Library. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference NCOS was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Miller, John A. "Zora: The Pivotal Crossroad of the Civil War". The Civil War Along Tom's Creek and Waynesboro Pike. Emmitsburg Area Historical Society.
  4. ^ "Historic Cimarron". National Park Service. Retrieved February 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. ^ "The Meeker Massacre and the Battle of Milk Creek". Rio Blanco County Historical Society. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  6. ^ "Rescued: The White River Captives Released" (PDF). The Ouray Times. 25 October 1879.