On his first trip east of Dakota in March 1884, Sitting Bull rode an elevator in a St. Paul wholesale grocery store — selling autographs on the street for $1.50 a pop to onlookers who came to gawk at ...
BISMARCK--In 1889, an artist and activist living in New York journeyed to what is now the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, stretching across the Dakotas, where she befriended Sitting Bull and created ...
Sitting Bull has 2 graves. Will DNA from a lock of hair tell which holds his bones? DNA from a lock of hair taken from Sitting Bull's body before burial in 1890 has confirmed Ernie LaPointe is the ...
The western plains produced few nobler redskins than Chief Sitting Bull, last great leader of the Sioux tribes. It was Sitting Bull, driven to recklessness by the perfidy of the U.S. Government, who ...
The Lakota chief Sitting Bull and his starving band of followers ended nearly two decades of intermittent warfare with the United States on July 20, 1881, when they surrendered at Fort Buford, in ...
Sitting Bull did not fight that day, LaPointe asserts, despite all that has been said since. He took care of the women, children and elders in his camp, which was attacked in the early phase of the ...
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