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Sioux Indians |
Chief Red Cloud |
Sitting Bull |
Chief Sitting Bull in Harper's Weekly |
Map of Custer's Last Stand |
Sioux Indian Pictures |
Sioux, or
Dakota, Indians, a large and powerful tribe of Indians, who
were found by the French, in 1640, near the headwaters of the
Mississippi River. The Algonquiens called them Nadowessioux, whence they
came to be called Sioux. They occupied the vast domain extending from
the Arkansas River, in the south, to the western tributary of Lake
Winnipeg, in the north, and westward to the eastern slopes of the Rocky
Mountains. They have been classed into four grand divisions - namely,
the Winnebagoes, who inhabited the country between Lake Michigan as the
Mississippi, among the Algonquians; the Assiniboines, or Sioux proper
(the most northerly of the nation) ; the Minnetaree group, in Minnesota;
and the Southern Sioux, who dwelt in the country between the Arkansas
and Platte rivers, and whose hunting-grounds extended to the Rocky
Mountains. In 1679 Jean Duluth, a French officer, set up the Gallic
standard among them near Lake St. Peter, and next year he rescued from
them Father Hennepin, who first |

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explored the upper Mississippi. The
French took formal possession of the country in 1685, when they were
divided into seven eastern and nine western tribes. In wars with the
French and other Indians, they were pushed down the Mississippi, and,
driving off the inhabitants of the buffalo plains, took possession.
Others remained on the shores of the St.
Peter. Some of them wandered into the plains of Missouri, and there
joined the Southern Sioux.

A Sioux Village
In the War of 1812 the Sioux took sides
with the British. In 1822 the population of the two divisions of the
tribe was estimated at nearly 13,000. In 1837 they ceded to the United
States all their lands east of the Mississippi, and in 1851 they ceded
35,000,000 acres west of the Mississippi for $3,000,000. The neglect of
the government to carry out all the provisions of the treaties for these
cessions caused much bitter feeling, and a series of hostilities by some
of the Sioux ensued; but after being defeated by General Harney, in
1855, a treaty of peace was concluded. |
Enraged by the failure of the government
to perform its part of the bargain and the frauds practiced upon them,
there was a general uprising of the Upper Sioux, in 1862, and nearly
1,000 settlers were killed. The Lower Sioux, of the plains, also became
hostile, but all were finally subdued. Fully 1,000 were held captive,
and thirty-nine were hanged.
Many bands fled into what was then Dakota
Territory, and the strength of the nation was greatly reduced. The most
guilty bands fled into the British dominions, while others, from time to
time, attacked settlements and menaced forts. Loosely made treaties were
violated on both sides. By one of these the Black Hills were made part
of a reservation, but gold having been |

A Sioux Warrior
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discovered there, the United States
wished to purchase the tract, and induce the Indians to abandon that
region and emigrate to the
Indian Territory. They showed great
reluctance to treat. Sitting Bull, Spotted Tail, and
Red Cloud visited the national capital in 1875, but
President Grant could not induce them to sign a treaty. Commissioners met an immense number of
them at the Red Cloud agency, in September, but nothing was done. The
sending of surveyors under a military escort to the Black Hills excited
the jealousy of the Sioux, and they prepared for war. In the spring of
1876 a military force was sent against them, and
in June a severe battle was fought, in which
General Custer and all of his immediate command were slain. This
battle will live in infamy, popularly referred to as "The
Battle of Little Big Horn", or "Custer's
Last Stand". By whatever name it is called, it will be remembered as
one of the most significant victories of the Indian Nations. While
in the end their cause was lost, they demonstrated their superb bravery
and military skill in defeating Custer and humiliating the US Army. |

A Sioux Medicine Chief
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Later, after having been severely beaten
in several encounters, the Indians returned, under full pardon, to their
reservations.
The advancement made by the Christian or
progressive portion of the Sioux Indians in the present South Dakota had
long been regarded with disfavor by the pagan and conservative element
under the leadership of Sitting Bull,
Red Cloud, and Kicking Bear, and the latter eagerly waited for some
pretext to bring the question of civilization or non-civilization to a
decisive issue. In 1890 there was a failure on the part of the
government to meet promptly some of its obligations to the Sioux,
especially in the payment of annuities and of moneys due to the Indians
for certain lands which they had sold. The crops, too, had failed;
Congress had cut down the supplies; |
and there was naturally a feeling of
dissatisfaction among the half famished Indians. Inefficient agents also
had been sent out by the government who had little regard for anything save
their own personal gain, and not much was done by them to allay the
general discontent. All these circumstances combined to favor the
designs of Sitting Bull and his associates. A widespread conspiracy was
formed, and plans were made for a general uprising in the spring. |
In September a Shoshone Indian, a
medicine-man, began to predict the coming of an Indian Messiah. The
Great Manitou had taken pity upon his suffering children. The Messiah
would roll thirty feet of soil, timbered and sodded, upon their white
oppressors, and all who escaped being smothered thereby would become
buffaloes and catfish. But all the dead Indians would be restored to
life; their hunting-grounds would be as in former days; herds of
buffaloes and wild horses would again abound upon the prairies; the
Indian millennium would be inaugurated. These glowing predictions were
eagerly listened to and believed by large numbers of Indians. Late in
October they began a series of " ghost dances " in anticipation of the
Messiah's coming; and, to show their devotion, the dancing was |

Sioux
Chief Sitting Bull
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continued without intermission for five
days and nights. To this hope Sitting Bull gave every encouragement. His
adherents arrayed themselves in warpaint, and provided an ample supply
of guns and ammunition. They refused to report themselves at the
different agencies, and a few of the most desperate began burning and
pillaging near Wounded Knee, and afterwards escaped to the Bad Lands.
The Battle of Wounded Knee
On Dec. 15 a body of Indian police,
acting under orders from General Miles, attempted to arrest Sitting Bull
in his camp, about 40 miles northwest of Fort Yates, N. D. A skirmish
ensued, and in it the noted chieftain, together with his son Crowfoot
and six other Indians, was killed. The remnant of the band made its way
to the Bad Lands. On Dec. 28 a battle occurred near Wounded Knee, S. D.,
between a cavalry regiment and the men of Big Foot's band. Thirty of the
whites were killed, while the Indian dead numbered over 200, including
many of their women and children. Over 3,000 Indians then fled from the
agency and encamped near White Clay Creek, where, on the next day,
another encounter occurred. The result of this engagement was the
dispersal of the Indians with heavy loss, and the death of eight
soldiers of the 9th Cavalry. Several other skirmishes occurred during
the week which followed, with loss of life on both sides. On Jan. 14,
1891, two councils were held with General Miles, and the chiefs, seeing
the hopelessness of their cause, agreed to surrender their arms and
return to the agency.

Indian War Party
The war was practically ended, and on
Jan. 21 the greater part of the troops were withdrawn from the
neighborhood of the reservation. On the 29th, a delegation of Sioux
chiefs, under charge of Agent Lewis, arrived in Washington for the
purpose of conferring with the Secretary of the Interior. The conference
began on Feb. 7, and continued four days, at the close of which the
Indians were received by President Harrison at the White House. They
were assured that the cutting down of the congressional appropriation
was an accident, and that the government desired faithfully to carry out
every agreement made. On their return home the chiefs stopped for a
short time at Carlisle, Pa., where the children of several of them were
attending school. In 1899 the total number of Sioux was 27,215, divided
into nineteen bands, and located principally in South Dakota. |
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