Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Rosebud Indian Reservation was established in 1889 after the United States' partition of the Great Sioux Reservation, which was created by the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868). The Great Sioux Reservation had covered all of West River, South Dakota (the area west of the Missouri River), as well as part of northern Nebraska and eastern Montana.
She was the first American Indian woman to so serve since its formation in 1925. [24] Other Indians had been elected to the institution – MacArthur Fellow Patricia Locke, Lakota hoop dancer and flutist Kevin Locke, and Navajo artists and brothers Franklin and Chester Kahn. [10] She served as Chair through 2011. [25]
The Wolakota Buffalo Range is a nearly 28,000-acre native grassland (11,000 ha) for a bison herd on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, home of the federally recognized Sicangu Oyate (the Upper Brulé Sioux Nation) – also known as Sicangu Lakota, and the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, a branch of the Lakota people.
Leo Cordier ran away to home. After seven years in the foster care system, he left Colorado Springs at age 16 and drove to the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, where he was born, to ...
Spotted Tail was born about 1823 in the White River country west of the Missouri River in present-day South Dakota. He was given the birth name of Jumping Buffalo. [8] Two of his sisters, Iron Between Horns and Kills Enemy, were married to the elder Crazy Horse (later known as "Worm"), in what was traditional Sioux practice for elite men.
He was a major participant in the Rosebud campaign, and saw action in the Battle of the Rosebud. [17] General George Crook and his officers, having retreated from the Rosebud, were hunting in the foothills of the Bighorns when Grouard, known to the Brulé as 'One-Who-Catches' and to the Hunkpapa as 'Standing Bear', [11] was acting as
Yellow Robe was born in Sičháŋǧu Oyáte territory—known today as the Rosebud Indian Reservation—in southern South Dakota [1] possibly on January 15, 1867. [3] [5] [a]He was the firstborn child of Tahcawin (lit.
An Indian agent in November 1875 said the Indians living in the unceded areas numbered "a few hundred warriors." [ 29 ] General Crook estimated that he might face up to 2,000 warriors. [ 30 ] Most of the Sioux who remained in the unceded territory where the war would take place were Oglala and Hunkpapa , numbering about 5,500 in total. [ 31 ]