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Tuesday, 20 June 2006 |
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Sitting Bull, a Hunkpapa Lakota chief, under whom the Lakota tribes united in their struggle for survival on the northern plains, Sitting Bull remained defiant toward American military power and contemptuous of American promises to the end. He was born in 1831 and died in 1890. Sitting Bull was born in the Grand River area in present-day South Dakota, at a place the Lakota called "Many Caches" for the number of food storage pits they had dug there; Sitting Bull was given the name Tatanka-Iyotanka, which describes a buffalo bull sitting intractably on its haunches. It was a name he would live up to throughout his life. Picture of Sitting Bull |
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Tuesday, 20 June 2006 |
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Red Cloud, also known as Makhpiya-Luta, was a warrior and a statesman. Red Cloud's success in confrontations with the United States government marked him as one of the most important Lakota leaders of the nineteenth century. He was born in 1822 and died in 1909. Although the details of his early life are unclear, Red Cloud was born near the forks of the Platte River, near what is now North Platte, Nebraska. His mother was an Oglala and his father, who died in Red Cloud's youth, was a Brul. Red Cloud was raised in the household of his maternal uncle, Chief Smoke. Much of Red Cloud's early life was spent at war, first and most often against the neighboring Pawnee and Crow, at times against other Oglala. In 1841 he killed one of his uncle's primary rivals, an event which divided the Oglala for the next fifty years. He gained enormous prominence within the Lakota nation for his leadership in territorial wars against the Pawnees, Crows, Utes and Shoshones. Photograph of Red Cloud  |
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Saturday, 17 June 2006 |
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Geronimo (means "one who yawns"), was born in 1829 in what is today western New Mexico, but was then still Mexican territory. He was a Bedonkohe Apache (grandson of Mahko) by birth and a Net'na during his youth and early manhood. His wife, Juh, Geronimo's cousin Ishton, and Asa Daklugie were members of the Nednhi band of the Chiricahua Apache. He was reportedly given the name Geronimo by Mexican soldiers, although few agree as to why. As leader of the Apaches at Arispe in Sonora, he performed such daring feats that the Mexicans singled him out with the sobriquet Geronimo (Spanish for "Jerome"). Some attributed his numerous raiding successes to powers conferred by supernatural beings, including a reputed invulnerability to bullets. Geronimo's war career was linked with that of his brother-in-law, Juh, a Chiricahua chief. Although he was not a hereditary leader, Geronimo appeared so to outsiders because he often acted as spokesman for Juh, who had a speech impediment. Geronimo was the leader of the last American Indian fighting force formally to capitulate to the United States. Because he fought against such daunting odds and held out the longest, he became the most famous Apache of all. To the pioneers and settlers of Arizona and New Mexico, he was a bloody-handed murderer and this image endured until the second half of this century. Photo of Geronimo  |
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Monday, 05 June 2006 |
Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation Chairman Marcia Flowers will be visiting the Oneida Indian Nation of New York for the first time in June as a featured speaker at the United South and Eastern Tribes' semiannual meeting.
The meeting will take place June 5 - 8 at Turning Stone Resort and Casino in Verona, N.Y. The Oneida Nation will host the event.
''I've known a lot of Oneida members over the years, but I've never gone to their home, so that will be good. I'm really looking forward to it,'' Flowers said.
This will be Flowers' fourth appearance at a USET conference, but the first since Columbus Day last year when Interior Associate Deputy Secretary and Acting Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs James Cason reversed the tribe's federal acknowledgement, which was granted in 2002 by former Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs Kevin Gover. The reversal followed a three-year appeal process and ferocious opposition from Connecticut officials. |
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