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Remember Sitting Bull: Killed by Police
December 15, 1890
After many years of successfully resisting
white efforts to destroy him and the Sioux people, the great Sioux chief and
holy man Sitting Bull is killed by Indian police at the Standing Rock reservation
in South Dakota.
One of the most famous Native Americans of the
19th century, Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake) was a fierce enemy of
Anglo-Americans from a young age. Deeply devoted to the traditional ways,
Sitting Bull believed that contact with non-Indians undermined the strength and
identity of the Sioux and would lead to their ultimate decline. However,
Sitting Bull’s tactics were generally more defensive than aggressive,
especially as he grew older and became a Sioux leader. Fundamentally, Sitting
Bull and those associated with his tribe wished only to be left alone to pursue
their traditional ways, but the Anglo settlers’ growing interest in the land
and the resulting confinement of Indians to government-controlled reservations
inevitably led to conflicts. Sitting Bull’s refusal to follow an 1875 order to
bring his people to the Sioux reservation directly led to the famous Battle of
the Little Bighorn, during which the Sioux and Cheyenne wiped out five troops
of Custer’s 7th Cavalry.
After the Battle of the Little Bighorn,
Sitting Bull and his followers fled to Canada for four years. Faced with mass
starvation among his people, Sitting Bull finally returned to the United States
and surrendered in 1883. Sitting Bull was assigned to the Standing Rock
reservation in present-day South Dakota, where he maintained considerable power
despite the best efforts of the Indian bureau agents to undermine his
influence. When the apocalyptic spiritual revival movement known as the Ghost
Dance began to grow in popularity among the Sioux in 1890, Indian agents feared
it might lead to an Indian uprising. Wrongly believing that Sitting Bull was
the driving force behind the Ghost Dance, agent James McLaughlin sent Indian
police to arrest the chief at his small cabin on the Grand River.
The Indian police rousted the naked chief from
his bed at 6:00 in the morning, hoping to spirit him away before his guards and
neighbors knew what had happened. When the fifty-nine-year-old chief refused to
go quietly, a crowd gathered and a few hotheaded young men threatened the
Indian police. Someone fired a shot that hit one of the Indian police; they
retaliated by shooting Sitting Bull in the chest and head. The great chief was
killed instantly. Before the ensuing gunfight ended, twelve other Indians were
dead and three were wounded.
The man who had nobly resisted the
encroachment of whites and their culture for nearly three decades was buried in
a far corner of the post cemetery at Fort Yates. Two weeks later, the army
brutally suppressed the Ghost Dance movement with the massacre of a band of
Sioux at Wounded Knee, the final act in the long and tragic history of the
American war against the Plains Indians.
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