The Wagon Box fight originally spurred when the Sioux Indians learned that the U.S. government had plans to build the Bozeman Trail as a short cut for gold mining and to construct three forts along the trail. The plan stated the trails were to overlap parts of what earlier Indians had been using as a trade route. The government’s plan caused uproar with the Sioux Indians. “The Sioux Indians felt the trail would eventually run through the land, which was designated as the Sioux Indians’ land by means of a treaty.” (Encyclopedia, 2004) Tensions would eventually get so strong that a war would break out and lead to many historical battles including the Wagon Box Fight.…
Index cards should be created for the following key terms including time period relevant, definition, and significance in historical time period…
Crook lead a part of the army to attack the Indians.Sitting Bull had a vision of the army coming to attach the tribe then he warned the village to stay aware of the attack. June 17 Crook stopped thinking the Indians weren't going to attack then the Indians rode up on them then Crook and part of the army got blasted. On June 21 Custer meet up with at stone river with Cornell Gibson.There were 6,000 Indians and 1,800 were warriors.Then Custer order 110 men to go one side to scare them off but then they all get killed.All the men got killed…….…
The Battle of Little Bighorn was an intense, gory battle fought on June 25th, 1876. A group of federal troops led by George Custer were defeated by the Lakota tribe led by Crazy Horse and other Cheyenne warriors. George A. Custer was a United States Army officer and cavalry commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars. Crazy Horse was an Oglala Sioux Indian chief who fought for the removal of Indian reservations. He was born in Rapid City, South Dakota in 1840. George A. Custer and Crazy Horse fought against each other in the Battle Of Little Bighorn. Though they are famous historical enemies, they have much more in common than first meets the eye.…
George Armstrong Custer was considered a renowned All American Army general who famously lost his life at the hands of Native American warriors at the Battle of Little Bighorn. Philbrick notes that Custer was “a true prodigy of war—charismatic, quirky and fearless” (p.xvi). With these attributions he soared to become one of the youngest brigadier generals at the young age of 23. Lieutenant General Philip Sheridan wrote praising Custer to his wife. "Permit me to say, Madam," he wrote, "that there is scarcely an individual in our service who has contributed more to bring about this desirable result than your gallant husband" (Wert, 1996, p.225). However, Custer is known only for one day, the day he died, and the day his entire military career…
The reasons why The Battle of Little Bighorn had began was because the Americans heard that someone had discovered gold on the land of the Native Americans. There were other reasons why the battle had also began. Another reason the battle began was because the Native Americans were tired of how the Americans were treating them. They were…
In 1875 the Black Hills Gold Rush begun and white settlers crossed the hunting ground of the Sioux tribe. The natives were upset and gathered around. This affected the white settlers who were trying to moving the west. The government ordered the Natives American to go back to their reservations. The US army sent out military leader Lieutenant Colonel George Custer and 265 soldiers to go against the Indians. On June 25, 1876 the Custer’s Last Stand war broke through. The Sioux tribe led by Rain-in-the-Face, War Chief Crazy Horse and their medicine doctor Sitting Bull with 2,500 natives crushed and killed Custer and all of Custer’s 265 soldiers. This resulted in a nationwide revenge against the Sioux tribes. By 1876 in October, three thousand…
King of the wild frontier. That’s him. David Crockett was the King of the wild frontier. Davy Crockett fought in the Battle of Alamo. Because of his success in politics, he was favored by many people. Once he moved to Texas, he did not agree with the Mexican government, so he joined others to fight against the Mexican government.…
James Welch and Paul Stekler have done a magnificent job in researching and putting forth, a new book on this subject that has been so written about. Citing much of the new discoveries, that is archeology, and the Indian accounts, Welch was originally contacted by Stekler to do a script for a documentary for PBS’s “American Experience: Last Stand at Little Bighorn”. They worked on it together, and that particular one hour documentary was excellent. Feeling that he hadn’t exhausted the subject, Welch delved more deeply into it, and wished to write a book on the subject. “Killing Custer” was the result, and it is quite excellent indeed. It is a stunning and thrilling read from cover to cover. The information is not wholly new, but Welch and Stekler combine all of the newest discoveries into one stirring volume, and they stress the narratives, which in the past were…
Charles Eastman was a young Dokota physician who went to Dartmouth College and Boston University. In 1890 he moved his practice as a physician to the Pine Ridge reservation in western South Dakota. His was part of Wahpenton and Mdewakanton Dakota tribe rather than Oglala Lakota and took pride in being Native. Upon his arrival, he experienced a disastourous dust storm and later would come across the aftermath of a massacre. The massacre was due to altercations of warfare on the northern Plains. The tribes consisted of the following: the Lokotas who were known as the Sioux from the western portion and the Dakotas who were known as the mdewakantons, Sisseton, Wahpekute, and Wahpeton from the east. The western tribes, the Lakotas, had claimed most of the northern Plains country which consisted of an area known as the Black Hills. Later, conflicts began to arise from neighboring regions, such as the United States. The United States insisted that they be allowed to access all the the regions resources. That's is when the Treaty of Fort Laramine was negotiated. This guarenteed the Lakotas ownership of the Black Hills along with hunting rights in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. This promise lasted up until the discovery of gold was found in the Black Hills and therefore the United States broke all promises. They invaded the land of the Lakotas and reduced the portion of the land that was once theirs. None the less, the Lakotas felt cheated and were mortified by what the Americans had done to their homes, feed, and their families. Restricted in where they could set camp and where they could reside, many Lakotas, Yanktons, Yanktonais, and Santees began teaching the Native prophet in Nevada. Later, some of the Lakotas representitives met with Wovoka and brought back their own version of the Ghost Dance. " They believed that the shirts they wore in observing the ritual would make them invulnerable to bullets." In 1890 Daniel Royer, a federal agent, arrived at…
After 1850, Cheyenne – Us relations were conducted under the treaty of Fort Laramie. But the US government was unwilling to control the white expansion into his great plains especially after Pikes Peak Gold Rush began in 1859. European Americans displaced the Cheyenne from their lands in violation of the treaty, and consumed important resources of water and game. Increasing competition lead to armed conflict between the groups.…
The relationship between the Americans and the Native Americans had been tumultuous for some time. The Americans insisted on recklessly encroaching on Indian land and the Indians were forced to defend it. The Rocky Mountain Fur Company’s fur traders were licensed to trade only to do trade with the Indians, but they set out to trap and hunt instead. What they didn’t realize was that two Indians had been killed just a few weeks prior in a skirmish with the Missouri Fur Company and the situation in the area was hostile. For years, the Indians had only known tense relationships with the white men and the death of two of their own created a tense environment for the new Rocky Mountain Fur Company. When General Ashley and his men arrived, they believed…
In the American Indian war, America wanted to have the land that the Indians had, so they tricked and stole…
John Nichols once wrote that “Each person leaves a legacy --a single, small piece of herself, which makes richer each individual life and the collective life of humanity as a whole.” The legacy of William M. Caldwell is composed by his actions during and after the Battle of the Little Bighorn. William Caldwell, despite the stories passed down verbally as to how he watched the Battle of Little Bighorn, unable to help, is untrue.…
The knowledge that the government lacked to know was that the Bighorn Valley was the local gathering place for Indian tribe meetings and camped at Little Bighorn were seven to ten thousand Indians, mostly comprising of Sioux and Cheyennes. Sitting Bull and his allies among them. Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer’s army was defeated and Custer dies.…