Sitting Bull was the political and spiritual leader of the Sioux warriors who destroyed General George Armstrong Custer's force in the famous battle of Little Big Horn. Years later he joined Buffalo ...
Jumping badger -- Earning his name -- The strong heart society -- Jumping bull -- Wives and children -- Gazing at the sun: the first visions -- Encountering the Americans -- The leader of the Lakota - ...
FARGO — Paul Hedren grew up in a part of Minnesota where the Dakota War of 1862 was ignited when starving Dakota renegades raided the Lower Sioux Agency and white settlements along the Minnesota River ...
📜 Sitting Bull, the Origin of a Legend: Native American History - Sitting Bull was a Lakota War Chief and a man whose foresight and determination made him a symbol of indigenous resistance. As the US ...
NMAI copy purchased with funds from the Lloyd and Charlotte Wineland Library Endowment for Native American and Western Exploration Literature. Contents In which public enemy number one comes home -- ...
As the leader of the Great Sioux Nation, the name of Sitting Bull is often associated with the major role he played in the Battle of the Little Bighorn, which resulted in the annihilation of Lt. Col.
On June 25, 1876, George Armstrong Custer rode into legend—and oblivion. During this military engagement, all 210 soldiers under Custer's immediate command were killed along Montana's Little Bighorn ...
The famed western showman lamented the killing of Sitting Bull and the suffering of the Lakota tribe at Wounded Knee. The “Secretary of War” pretends it didn’t happen. Founded in 1969, the Washington ...