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Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotanka)
Sitting Bull or Tatanka Iyotanka, as he was known in his language, was a Dakota Indian from the Hunkpapa Band of Sioux Indians, a respected medicine man, and one of the last free Sioux leaders.
On August 23, 1932, Mr. Z. M. Hamilton, a journalist for the "Leader Post"
newspaper of Regina, Saskatchewan, referred to the Battle of Little Big Horn
as "a massacre".
This term was very incorrect. The Sioux were defending their
territory, liberty, homes, and their own lives. Had they not been of Indian
descent, we would have most likely called them heros.
Their land was given to
them in a treaty made with the American Government.
They were situated by the
frontiers of South Dakota and Wyoming. In the early 1870's, gold was
discovered there and, thus, the Indian territory was invaded by prospectors
searching for treasures.
These "gold-diggers" established many villages
around their mines and some defied the laws of the land, stealing and killing
both Indians and white people in their crusade for wealth.
The affairs of the Sioux rested in the hands of a few Washington politicians,
one of whom described the tribe as "A band of the worst criminals ever."
Sitting Bull, the Sioux medicine man, and his followers argued with the Government.
Grant, one of the best soldiers but equally one of the worst politicians to
ever hold the power to decide the future of a nation, was President at that
time. He didn't do anything. The influence of the "Indian Circle" never
reached him.
Thus, the Sioux were obligated to exchange the Indian reserve
and fertile land of their forefathers for very poor and dry land further
west. The Sioux refused and were considered law breakers.
Pursued by the American army for having defied the authority of the
Government, the Sioux tribe occupied the important areas of the hills of
Montana.
During the summer of 1876, the army surrounded them by three sides.
In June, General Custer, leading the 7th Cavalry, encountered a large Indian
camp. Ordering many of his soldiers to position themselves near the Indians,
he and his 300 men began a direct attack.
To their surprise, Sitting Bull and
his tribe retaliated with great force and not one of Custer's soldiers
survived to recount the adventure.
Knowing strongly that the Indians would be punished severely for their
victory if they went south to the United States, Sitting Bull reassembled his
people and began the long trip to Canada and to protection.
The first of the Sioux tribe arrived in Canada in November of 1876. A dozen
scouts from "Little Knife" followed them until they arrived at Jean-Louis
Légaré's fur trading post in Wood Mountain.
They wanted to be able to sleep
in peace. Légaré, realizing the tribe's poverty, invited the Sioux to trade
with him. After accepting the merchandise and the thirty dollars that Légaré
offered to them to keep them in good spirits, they left.
The roads were free,
they reported. The next day, seventy Indian groups surrounded Légaré's store.
Following the arrival of the Sioux in Canada, the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police learned of Custer's bloody defeat. Major Walsh apprehended Sitting
Bull and his tribe with a detachment of 25 men on November 24, 1876.
With the
help of an interpretator, Walsh explained that Canada was not to be used as a
departing point for raids on the United States. A new team of Mounted Police
was deployed to Wood Mountain to "maintain the right" amidst the presence of
the Sioux.
Sitting Bull and most of his tribe explored the Canadian frontier in May of
1877. They followed the Frenchman river between Val Marie and where Mankota
is today.
Zachary and Marie Hamilton, in their book, "These are the
Prairies," wrote that Sitting Bull "was a man full of good sense, a man of
rules."
Before establishing himself, he warned the Cypress Hills Mounted
Police, which was 200 miles away, about his arrival in Canada and requested a
meeting with them. Irvine, two officers, and a few agents went to Wood
Mountain where they talked with the Sioux chief.
Sitting Bull produced a gold medal and said: "My Grandfather received this
medal in recognition of his battle for George III during the revolution.
Now
in this odd time, I direct my people here to reclaim a sanctuary of my
Grandfather." Irvine advised him that he and his tribe were welcome in
Canada, but, like other citizens, if they did not obey the laws of her
Majesty, the Mounted Police would deal with them.
In "These are the Prairies", the Hamiltons explain that "since his first day
in Canada, Sitting Bull was attracted to Légaré and trusted him. The Sioux
chief desired apparently to obey the Canadian law, but he never compromised
without first consulting the Canadian merchant."
During the weeks and months that followed, the state of the Sioux as well as
that of the Canadian Indian and Métis people was deteriorating due to
declining bison populations and food shortages.
Missionaries and officers of
the American army offered Sitting Bull, in the name of the American
Government, forgiveness if they returned to the United States.
Persistent,
Sitting Bull refused, although many of his people left for the United States
in 1879.
According to Zachary and Marie Hamilton, "Sitting Bull did all he
could do until his people could be recognized as Canadians and thus be
allowed reserves."
He firmly noted that they had never bowed to the American
Government and that their fidelity and love was still with England, who had
given them a sanctuary.
In the early fall of 1881, Sitting Bull, accompanied by a few followers, went
to the post of Hudson's Bay at Fort Qu'Appelle and visited the agent of the
Indians, Colonel Allen MacDonald, in search of food.
The company told the
Sioux that it needed all merchandise on hand, as it was already having
difficulty meeting the demands of its local Indian population.
While returning to Wood Mountain, the Sioux learned that during the preceding
fall, Father Hugonard had ordered a load of flour, which had been transported
on the Assiniboine river to Fort Ellice.
The Sioux, under the order of Sitting Bull, found Father Hugonard to claim
themselves some of that flour. After a few tender moments, Father Hugonard
persuaded Sitting Bull and his followers to exchange some tools for the
flour. Sitting Bull, the first to trade, offered him a beautiful navajo cover
and said, "How much will this buy?"
Colonel MacLeod of the Mounted Police was sent on behalf of the Canadian
Government to find a means of making the American proposition more attractive
and acceptable to Sitting Bull.
He invited the chief to a meeting, where he
asked Sitting Bull to name a man whom he trusted to negotiate his current
situation with the Canadian and American governments. Sitting Bull
unhesitatingly nominated his merchant friend, Légaré.
Colonel MacLeod recounted the events of the Battle of Little Big Horn to
Légaré. Légaré distorted this information while negotiating with government
officials at Fort Buford in order to satisfy the sincerity of the American
offer.
On his return, he invited Sitting Bull to a banquet where he suggested
that the chief return to the United States.
The Hamiltons state that "Sitting Bull kept his word, and during the summer
of 1881, him and his people, accompanied by Légaré and a few bison hunters,
went to Fort Buford where Sitting Bull handed himself over to the officer in
charge."
Sitting Bull and his tribe settled on the reserve that had been set aside for
them at Fort Buford. The Sioux lived there until the end of the decade, when
a messenger reported that, as medicine man, Sitting Bull was trying to raise
his people.
Concerned, the American Government sent an Indian police officer
to stop Sitting Bull. When the Sioux chief refused to give up his rifle, the officer shot him on
December 15, 1890.
A few days later, on December 28, many Sioux men, women
and children died at the hands of American soldiers during the Battle of
Wounded Knee.
The American army had finally avenged the death of General
Custer and his regiment.
SEE ALSO:
Sitting Bull Profile as told by Charles Alexander Eastman
How Sitting Bull got his names
Sitting Bull pictures
A Fine Sioux War Bonnet, Sewn with Twenty-Nine Eagle Feathers
Giclee Print
Buy at AllPosters.com
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