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A headdress belonging to famed Sioux Indian chief Sitting Bull will be returned to Sitting Bull College during a special ceremony Sept. 21.
Where Sitting Bull slumbers is anyone's guess, though at the moment it's certainly under a blanket of snow. The mystery of where the famous Sioux chief's remains are buried and a renewed interest ...
In the tumultuous aftermath of President Grant's ultimatum in 1876, the Great Sioux War ignites as tensions between the US ...
The western plains produced few nobler redskins than Chief Sitting Bull, last great leader of the Sioux tribes. It was Sitting Bull, driven to recklessness by the perfidy of the U.S. Government, ...
Sitting Bull was allowed to travel with the permission of the reservation's Indian Agent, and on one of those trips in 1884 he met Annie Oakley, whose marksmanship so impressed the Sioux warrior ...
Sitting Bull (c. 1831-1890) was one of the greatest Lakota/Sioux warriors and chiefs who ever lived. From Sitting Bull's childhood -- killing his first buffalo at age 10 -- to being named war chief to ...
Ernie LaPointe of Lead, S.D., the spokesman for the family, said that for 50 years, Sitting Bull's grave on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation near Mobridge, S.D., has been neglected and dishonored.
WILL SITTING BULL SURRENDER?; PEACEFUL EXPRESSIONS OF THE SIOUX CHIEF --MOVEMENTS OF TROOPS SUSPENDED. Oct. 23, 1880 The New York Times Archives See the article in its original context from ...
A combined force of Lakota Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors, led by Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, and others, defeated the U.S. 7th Cavalry, led by George Armstrong Custer, a general and a ...
MEDORA, N.D. (AP) -- The headdress worn by Lakota Chief Sitting Bull is being displayed at the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame here, while renovations are made at Sitting ...