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The
Conditions Leading Up to Wounded Knee
Brigadier General L.W. Colby
was in command of The Nebraska National Guard, which was sent to
defend the Nebraska border at this time. General Colby is an
excellent source as he was in constant communication, privy to the
inside military information and scuttlebutt, and wrote the history
of his time. He says,
Colby :
"On November 19th, the telegraph dispatches contained rumors of
fighting. On the 20th, some of the newspapers had reports of an important
battle with the Indians, the sole function of which, however, was the
imaginative brain of the reporter. General Brooke immediately left Omaha
for the Pine Ridge Agency, taking command in person."
Colby :
"On November 27th," General Colby continued, "there was an issue of
beef to the Indians at Pine Ridge. The issue was made to about 2,600
Indians. The steers were all lean and in poor condition. Twelve hundred
soldiers were moved in near the agency, and four guns were planted in a
position to command the main avenues of approach to the agency, during the
afternoon of the same day."
The large Oglala boarding school became a virtual prison, "the
doors...were kept locked by day as well as by nights and the ground,
surrounded by a high fence of barbed wire, constantly patrolled by armed
guards," according to Elaine Goodale Eastman. "These boys and girls," she
said, were "held partly as hostages for the good behavior of their
parents..."
Eastman , who was Supervisor of Education in the two
Dakotas, witnessed the Ghost Dance "on a bright November night," the only
white person present. "No one with imagination could fail to see in the rite
a genuine religious ceremony, a faith which, illusory as it was, deserved to
be treated with respect," she wrote. Nearly every person familiar with the
Lakota people, from General Miles to the missionary Thomas Riggs, echoed the
same sentiment, whether or not they respected the religious worship it
represented: the Ghost Dance did not promote a war-like spirit among the
Indians, and it should not be interfered with.
The critical survival problems facing the Indians were of most concern to
the whites closest to the Indians.
Colby :
"The drought and consequent failure of crops were everywhere general
throughout the western states and territories and especially in the
Dakotas, Wyoming and Nebraska. This affected the Indians as well as the
white population in this section. This misfortune, to which was added the
failure on the part of the government to supply the customary rations,
produced actual suffering among the Indian tribes occupying the Pine
Ridge, Rosebud and other reservations in the northwest. They were in need
of the necessaries of life; a long cold winter was approaching, and
starvation menaced them."
General Nelson Miles , commander of the Military
Department of the Missouri, was the man in charge of the army in this area,
and therefore is the most important single non-Indian source of information
on Wounded Knee.
During this time, General Miles warned Washington:
"Discontent has been growing among the Indians for six months. The
causes are numerous. First was the total failure of their crops this year.
A good many of them put in crops and worked industriously; and were
greatly discouraged when they failed, as they did utterly in some
districts. Then the government cut down their rations, and the
Appropriation Bill was passed so late that what supplies they received
came unusually late. A good many of them have been on the verge of
starvation. They have seen the whites suffering, too, and in many cases
abandoning their farms."
Elaine Goodale Eastman , visiting Indian schools during
the fall of 1890, also was alarmed: "In persistent hot winds the pitiful
little gardens of the Indians curled up and died. Even the native hay crop
was a failure. I had never before seen so much sickness. The appearance of
the people shocked me. Lean and wiry in health, with glowing skins and the
look of mettle, many now displayed gaunt forms, lackluster faces, and sad,
deep-sunken eyes."
And then on December 15, what they all feared became reality. Sitting
Bull was killed, in what General Colby, characterized as a "gentleman's
agreement" to assassinate him.
Colby wrote that there was an
"understanding between the officers of the Indian and military
departments that it would be impossible to bring Sitting Bull to Standing
Rock alive, and even if successfully captured, it would be difficult to
tell what to do with him. It is therefore believed that there was a tacit
arrangement between the commanding officers and the Indian police, that
the death of the famous old Medicine man was much preferred to his
capture, and that the slightest attempt to rescue him should be the signal
for his destruction."
General Miles sent this telegraphic dispatch from Rapid
City to General Schofield in Washington, D.C. on December 19:
"The difficult Indian problem
cannot be solved permanently at this end of the line. It requires
the fulfillment of Congress of the treaty obligations which the
Indians were entreated and coerced into signing. They signed away
a valuable portion of their reservation, and it is now occupied by
white people, for which they have received nothing. They
understood that ample provision would be made for their support;
instead, their supplies have been reduced, and much of the time
they have been living on half and two-thirds rations. Their crops,
as well as the crops of the white people, for two years have been
almost total failures. The dissatisfaction is wide spread,
especially among the Sioux, while the Cheyennes have been on the
verge of starvation, and were forced to commit depredations to
sustain life. These facts are beyond question, and the evidence is
positive and sustained by thousands of witnesses."
General Miles :
"The trouble has been gathering for years. Congress has been in session
now for several weeks, and could in a single hour confirm the treaty and
appropriate the funds for its fulfillment; and, unless the officers of the
army can give positive assurance that the Government intends to act in
good faith with these people, the loyal element will be diminished, and
the hostile element increased."
The Commissioner of Indian Affairs took the same stand
in a letter to the Secretary of the Interior, dated December 26:
"I desire to ask your attention briefly to the situation as viewed from
the Indian standpoint."
The Commissioner of Indian Affairs :
"Prior to the agreement of 1876, buffalo and deer were the main support
of the Sioux. Food, tents and bedding were the direct outcome of hunting.
And with furs and pelts as articles of barter or exchange, it was easy for
the Sioux to procure whatever constituted for them the necessities, the
comforts, or even the luxuries of life. Within eight years from the
agreement of 1876 the buffalo had gone, and the Sioux had left to them
alkali land and Government rations."
Wounded Knee Hearing Testimony
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Aslan Heart / White Eagle Soaring of the
Little Shell Pembina Band,
a
Treaty
Tribe of the Ojibwe Nation
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