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Sitting Bull sat for this portrait while he was performing in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West. He reserved exclusive rights to his photograph, selling his portraits for one dollar each. In 1889, when the ...
The man we now remember as Sitting Bull grew up with a different name: Jumping Badger. One of the best aspects of Lakota traditions is their naming; the name given as a child could likely change ...
William F. Cody stars as the link between two projects – one in the works and the other completed – both led by the interim ...
Sitting Bull and William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody were both larger-than-life figures of the American West. And at the end of each of their lives respectively, they became prisoners of their own ...
Years later he joined Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West show. A portrait of Cody and Sitting Bull together bears the title "Foes in '76 — Friends in '85." The reality was a little more complicated.
Sitting Bull offers an overarching exploration of the remarkable life and accomplishments of the fiercely brave yet humble Lakota chief. In the mid-19th century, as American settlers continued ...
Sitting Bull's four surviving great-grandchildren want the bones of their famous ancestor moved from a cement-clad grave in South Dakota to Little Bighorn Battlefield in Montana.
Sitting Bull's four surviving great-grandchildren want the bones of their famous ancestor moved from a cement-clad grave in South Dakota to Little Bighorn Battlefield in Montana.
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