“Militant Indians in Wounded Knee lay down their arms today, signaling an end to the 70-day occupation of the historic South ...
The 2007 movie Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is a historical drama based on the book of the same name by Dee Brown. It ...
Nearly two weeks later, on the morning of December 28, 1890, a nervy U.S. Seventh Cavalry unit found Big Foot’s band at Porcupine Creek and escorted them to Wounded Knee Creek. The following ...
The repatriated artifacts had been taken from the mass graves of Wounded Knee Massacre victims killed in 1890. The military ...
The latest developments in the ongoing tribal dispute come on the heels of the backlash Noem faced for writing about killing ...
On December 29, 1890, around 300 Lakota men ... They chased some up to five miles from Wounded Knee Creek. The survivors’ stories live on today. Chase In Sight-Ribitsch, a citizen of the ...
So, in his The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America From 1890 to the Present, Treuer offers a stirring rejoinder to that idea. The book weaves together more than a century of history with ...
More than 200 Native Americans — including children and elderly people — were killed at Wounded Knee in 1890. The bloodshed marked a seminal moment in the frontier battles the U.S. Army waged ...
This essay recovers the newspaper writings of the Omaha journalist Susette Bright Eyes La Flesche as the first Indigenous woman to publish about the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre. Her eyewitness accounts ...
On December 29th, 1890, Chief Bigfoot's band of 300 unarmed ... Later, soldiers dug a mass grave and unceremoniously buried the dead at Wounded Knee. The survivors- four men and forty-seven ...
Then in 1973, a group of approximately 200 Oglala Lakota seized and occupied the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota. The group chose the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre site for symbolic value ...