What happened at Wounded Knee Creek on 29 December 1890, was not a battle but a massacre by soldiers of the families comprising Big Foot\u27s band of Minneconjou Lakotas. Surrounded, desperately outnumbered and outgunned, provoked into a hopeless firefight, they ran and were slaughtered to the tiniest infant by mounted soldiers who hunted them for several hours (p. 19) and some three miles. About three hundred Lakotas were killed. Because Bigfoot\u27s men had engaged the soldiers, the atrocity has been masked as a battle. Indeed, twenty-eight soldiers received medals of honor for participating in the massacre and associated activities
This is an insider\u27s account of the attempt of the Oglala and Minneconjou tribes to establish the...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
Newspapers played a key role in disseminating information and, unfortunately, misinformation about t...
What happened at Wounded Knee Creek on 29 December 1890, was not a battle but a massacre by soldiers...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
Wounded Knee, Pine Ridge, the Ghost Dance are all phrases that invoke, perhaps more than any others,...
The meandering Wounded Knee Creek wanders timelessly through south central South Dakota on the Pine ...
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
When scholars have covered events like the Wounded Knee Massacre comprehensively, the record of an u...
I did not know then how much was ended. When I look back now from this high hill of my old age, I ca...
The occupation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1973 by members of the American Indian Movement (AI...
To tell the group\u27s story, Beasley has employed a kind of literary double helix-juxtaposing chapt...
Any student of the relations between Native Americans and the US government and anyone who has read ...
On the morning of June 25, 1876, soldiers of the famed U.S. Seventh Cavalry led by the flamboyant Ge...
This is an insider\u27s account of the attempt of the Oglala and Minneconjou tribes to establish the...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
Newspapers played a key role in disseminating information and, unfortunately, misinformation about t...
What happened at Wounded Knee Creek on 29 December 1890, was not a battle but a massacre by soldiers...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
In Native American history, no event is more pregnant with symbolism than the confrontation which oc...
Wounded Knee, Pine Ridge, the Ghost Dance are all phrases that invoke, perhaps more than any others,...
The meandering Wounded Knee Creek wanders timelessly through south central South Dakota on the Pine ...
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
When scholars have covered events like the Wounded Knee Massacre comprehensively, the record of an u...
I did not know then how much was ended. When I look back now from this high hill of my old age, I ca...
The occupation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1973 by members of the American Indian Movement (AI...
To tell the group\u27s story, Beasley has employed a kind of literary double helix-juxtaposing chapt...
Any student of the relations between Native Americans and the US government and anyone who has read ...
On the morning of June 25, 1876, soldiers of the famed U.S. Seventh Cavalry led by the flamboyant Ge...
This is an insider\u27s account of the attempt of the Oglala and Minneconjou tribes to establish the...
Colonialism becomes the lens through which Jeffrey Ostler both analyzes and interprets the history o...
Newspapers played a key role in disseminating information and, unfortunately, misinformation about t...