Inkpaduta, the renowned Dakota leader, has for years been viewed by history in a negative light, a savage who wantonly perpetuated the infamous Spirit Lake Massacre in 1857. Following the Dakota War in Minnesota in 1862, Inkpaduta made his way west among Nakota and finally Lakota brethren and in so doing became the scourge of the Plains, gaining a dark reputation wherever he went. Inkpaduta ended his career of resistance at the Battle of the Little Bighorn at either the age of sixty-one or seventy-six, depending on which disputed birth date one chooses. Paul Beck has written the most complete biography of Inkpaduta to date, taking issue with the idea that the Dakota leader was an embodiment of evil. Beck casts blame on Victorian-era histori...
Review of: "Dakota Prisoner of War Letters: Dakota Kaŝkapi Okicize Wowapi," by Clifford Canku and Mi...
The Nimiipuu are most associated with the Columbia Basin rather than the Great Plains. Yet some Nimi...
With only eighty-nine pages of text, Jerry Keenan\u27s The Great Sioux Uprising was not meant to be ...
Inkpaduta, the renowned Dakota leader, has for years been viewed by history in a negative light, a s...
Review of: "Little Paul: Christian Leader of the Dakota Peace Party," by Mark Diedrich
This readable narrative chronicles the life of the eastern Sioux leader whose name has been associat...
From 1869 to 1870 many Oglala and Brule Sioux lived together on their first reservation, the Whetsto...
Dubbed the Fighting Cock of the Sioux by the U.S. soldiers he confronted, the Hunkpapa warrior Gal...
Review of: The Chiefs Wapahasha: Three Generations of Dakota Leadership, 1740-1876. Diedrich, Mark
Gary Clayton Anderson\u27s objective, indicated in the subtitle, is to provide an account of the lon...
This brief narrative was written by DeWitt Clinton Poole, Indian agent at the Whetstone Agency in Da...
Review of: The Rise of the Wheat State: A History of Kansas Agriculture, 1861-1896. Ham, George E. a...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Increasingly historians who write about leadership in the American Indian resistance movements argue...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
Review of: "Dakota Prisoner of War Letters: Dakota Kaŝkapi Okicize Wowapi," by Clifford Canku and Mi...
The Nimiipuu are most associated with the Columbia Basin rather than the Great Plains. Yet some Nimi...
With only eighty-nine pages of text, Jerry Keenan\u27s The Great Sioux Uprising was not meant to be ...
Inkpaduta, the renowned Dakota leader, has for years been viewed by history in a negative light, a s...
Review of: "Little Paul: Christian Leader of the Dakota Peace Party," by Mark Diedrich
This readable narrative chronicles the life of the eastern Sioux leader whose name has been associat...
From 1869 to 1870 many Oglala and Brule Sioux lived together on their first reservation, the Whetsto...
Dubbed the Fighting Cock of the Sioux by the U.S. soldiers he confronted, the Hunkpapa warrior Gal...
Review of: The Chiefs Wapahasha: Three Generations of Dakota Leadership, 1740-1876. Diedrich, Mark
Gary Clayton Anderson\u27s objective, indicated in the subtitle, is to provide an account of the lon...
This brief narrative was written by DeWitt Clinton Poole, Indian agent at the Whetstone Agency in Da...
Review of: The Rise of the Wheat State: A History of Kansas Agriculture, 1861-1896. Ham, George E. a...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
Increasingly historians who write about leadership in the American Indian resistance movements argue...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
Review of: "Dakota Prisoner of War Letters: Dakota Kaŝkapi Okicize Wowapi," by Clifford Canku and Mi...
The Nimiipuu are most associated with the Columbia Basin rather than the Great Plains. Yet some Nimi...
With only eighty-nine pages of text, Jerry Keenan\u27s The Great Sioux Uprising was not meant to be ...