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mikekohr

(2,312 posts)
Sat Dec 28, 2013, 11:20 AM Dec 2013

Chief Bigfoot's Band was intercepted by the 7th Calvary on this day in 1890 [View all]

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After the murder of Tantanka Iyotake (Sitting Bull) and after eluding Custer's old unit, the 7th Calvary, for 12 days a band of Minniconjou Lakota, led by Spotted Elk ( Chief Bigfoot) was intercepted along the western rim of Porcupine Creek on this day in 1890. They were escorted to and camped in a hollow a few miles south near the creek called Wounded Knee.
In the early morning hours on December 29th, 1890, the men
were assembled in a semi-circle formation in front of the tipis
and disarmed.
Yellow Bird, a holy man fearing for the lives of his people stood up and beseeched the Creator and asked for protection.
A shot rang out and the soldiers fired en masse into the sitting
Lakota men, killing most of them instantly. The horror was only
beginning.
The women and children ran as the soldiers chased them
down and killed them one by one. The slaughter continued
for over three hours. Some of the dead were found over three miles
from the campsite.
In vol.3, issue 1, "The Lakota Journal" listed the names of the Lakota
victims of the massacre at Wounded Knee. Four-hundred and five were listed as killed. Of this number, 69 were identified as infants or young children, 133 were identified as women, the remaining 203 were identified as men or had no gender or age identification. Of the total dead, 39 were identified as elders.
The bodies were left to freeze onto the prairie. Over the next three
days survivors and relatives recovered nearly half of the dead. On
the third day a government burial detail arrived to bury the remaining
victims. The bodies were stripped of valuables and dropped into a
mass grave.
A 40 year old, named Last Man, lay gutshot, frozen
to the ground until he was discovered on the 5th of January, 8 days
after the slaughter of December 29th. Last Man died at 8am on
January 6th, 1891.
The United States government awarded 23 Medals of Honor to
members of the Seventh Calvary for their service to the nation at this
place, the creek called Wounded Knee. 45).
Chief Bigfoot's body was scalped and the trophy was sent to
the Seventh Cavalry's museum in Massachusetts. There it remained
over the protests of Chief Bigfoot's family until the summer of 2000.
The last remains of Chief Bigfoot were returned to the place of his
birth, 109 years after his murder.


"I did not know then how much had ended. When I look back
from this high hill of my old age I can still see the butchered
women and children lying heaped and scattered all along the
crooked gulch as plain as when I saw them with eyes still young.
And I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud
and was buried in the blizzard. A peoples dream died there. It
was a beautiful dream....the nation's hoop is broken and scattered.
There is no center any longer and the sacred tree is dead."

BLACK ELK
-Lakota-

http://www.brotherhooddays.com/woundedknee.html

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Lost Bird was seven months old on December 29th, 1890, the day her mother was shot down at Cankpi Opi Wakpala, the creek called Wounded Knee. Four days after the massacre, Lost Bird was discovered under the frozen body of her mother by General Leonard Colby. Colby took the child for his own and raised Lost Bird in White society. Lost Bird suffered greatly during her life, searching for her identity, subjected to sexual abuse by an adopted cousin and raped and impregnated by Colby, her adoptive father.
She led a tragic life and died on Valentine's Day, 1919, in California. Lost Bird's remains were repatriated to the Wounded Knee Cemetery in 1991. Her life remains a powerful symbol and has become a rallying point for Native People attempting to re-connect to their culture and families the thousands of Native children and their descendants that were removed from their culture and adopted into non-Indian society.

http://www.brotherhooddays.com/lost_bird.htm
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K&R n/t intaglio Dec 2013 #1
Murka! edhopper Dec 2013 #2
Such a devastating travesty... kdmorris Dec 2013 #3
The living back then knew from their own newspapers. But this subject has been buried even deeper jwirr Dec 2013 #8
Good point kdmorris Dec 2013 #11
Columbus awarded, and his men prefered girls between the ages of 9-10 mikekohr Dec 2013 #49
23 medals of "honor"? panader0 Dec 2013 #4
This country was founded in bloodshed tblue Dec 2013 #26
Upsets me just reading this. dipsydoodle Dec 2013 #5
The Ghost Dance riverwalker Dec 2013 #6
all of you who have not yet seen this video, please watch it. so horrible, so sad. the savagery niyad Dec 2013 #20
Robbie Robertson: tblue Dec 2013 #27
Which just goes to show how much a medal of honor is worth. Absolutely nothing unless the actions jwirr Dec 2013 #7
Bury my heart at Wounded Knee Berlum Dec 2013 #9
Thanks for posting this newfie11 Dec 2013 #10
the sand creek massacre--29 nov 1864 niyad Dec 2013 #12
After Custer's annihilation nilesobek Dec 2013 #13
welcome to DU. terrible, reprehensible and shameful, exactly. niyad Dec 2013 #22
Just yesterday ... CountAllVotes Dec 2013 #14
I've been to Pine Ridge many times. I've never experienced anything but hospitality and friendship mikekohr Dec 2013 #16
I've been to the Black Hills myself CountAllVotes Dec 2013 #17
I live in the Black Hills and that's news to me newfie11 Dec 2013 #31
that is a beautiful pic, mike, and thank you for sharing. niyad Dec 2013 #24
For 15 years I was on a medical mobile unit newfie11 Dec 2013 #32
I was there in 1970s at the time of the take over then. Even with the terrible events that were jwirr Dec 2013 #46
Absolutely horrific. DLevine Dec 2013 #15
Indeed, JEB Dec 2013 #18
General Nelson A Miles Letter regarding Wounded Knee- March 13, 1917 mikekohr Dec 2013 #19
It seems like the guilt nilesobek Dec 2013 #36
The myth of our nation's greatness and blessed nature yet remains. WinkyDink Dec 2013 #21
WARNING: Disturbing photographs Generic Other Dec 2013 #23
Disturbing indeed dipsydoodle Dec 2013 #25
K&R OmahaBlueDog Dec 2013 #28
Whoa!!!! heaven05 Dec 2013 #29
"What has happened has happened and can not be changed. We must find a way mikekohr Dec 2013 #35
why is that day darker than these days in August, 1862 hfojvt Dec 2013 #38
"If they are hungry let them eat grass or their own dung." Trader Andrew Myrick 1862 mikekohr Dec 2013 #39
It's good to know your own history heaven05 Dec 2013 #43
Having done some genealogy in that period of time in the NW Iowa area I will add that it was not jwirr Dec 2013 #44
There are a number of memorials regarding the insident all the way from Northern Iowa to the New jwirr Dec 2013 #45
War Within War: Lincoln and the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 . mikekohr Dec 2013 #48
of course, it simply MUST be mis-remembered every year hfojvt Dec 2013 #30
A very interesting account of a terrible day Generic Other Dec 2013 #33
4 of the wounded were Lakota men, the 47 remaining wounded were Lakota women and children mikekohr Dec 2013 #34
but isn't that really the point? hfojvt Dec 2013 #37
There is overwhelming evidence and testimony from both Native and Non-Native witness's mikekohr Dec 2013 #41
Now, we do it with drones. No horses, rifles, sabers, or conscious required. Tierra_y_Libertad Dec 2013 #40
1890: Dakota doctor witnesses Wounded Knee aftermath mikekohr Dec 2013 #42
Sadly... kicked RobertEarl Dec 2013 #47
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