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The Boy Who Was Destined to Lead: The Unlikely Story of Sitting Bull's Origin.
Native American History - Sitting Bull was a Lakota War Chief and a man whose foresight and determination made him a symbol of indigenous resistance. As the US government pressured tribes to sign ...
His duties were limited — Sitting Bull rode in the show's opening procession — and he was well compensated, earning 50 dollars a week plus the money he made from selling autographs.
Gardner learned that after Sitting Bull was killed in 1890, his body was brought to Fort Yates, N.D., on his Standing Rock Indian Reservation.
The first chapter of Sitting Bull premieres Tuesday, May 27, on the History Channel, and the second one airs the following night. Check out an exclusive trailer right here.
One of the most renowned gospel singers was a great-granddaughter of Sitting Bull, the Sioux medicine man. Lillian "White Corn" Little Soldier Klaudt and her children formed the group the Klaudt ...
BILLINGS, Mont. - 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.
One of the refreshing things about “Sitting Bull,” the History Channel’s two-night, four-hour documentary on the Sioux leader, is its attempt at some kind of balance amid the hosannas.
According to a release from The History Channel, “‘Sitting Bull’ offers an overarching exploration of the remarkable life and accomplishments of the fiercely brave yet humble Lakota chief ...
The two-part Sitting Bull docuseries premieres on The History Channel on May 27 and May 28 at 9 p.m. ET. You can check out a trailer for the series now on the network’s YouTube channel.
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