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Topic ClosedTasunka Witko

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TasunkaWitko View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Tasunka Witko
    Posted: 24 January 2004 at 03:59

TasunkaWitko - Chinook, Montana

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 January 2004 at 08:05
What band of Souix was he?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 January 2004 at 08:25

oglala lakota oyate

otherwise known as the oglala band of the teton branch of the sioux nation



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TasunkaWitko - Chinook, Montana

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 April 2004 at 12:19
Tasunka Witko
"Crazy Horse"
Oglala Sioux
Born 1849 - September 5, 1877


Crazy Horse was born along Rapid Creek near present-day Rapid City, South Dakota, to the east of Paha Sapa, the Black Hills in 1849. He was the son of an Oglala medicine man of the same name and his Brule wife, the sister of Spotted Tail. His mother died when he was young, and his father took her sister as a wife, and she helped raise Crazy Horse. He spent time in both Oglala and Brule camps. His childhood name was Curly. Before he was 12, Curly had killed a buffalo and received his own horse.

His family was highly regarded by the Indians, and had been entrusted with the Sioux history, which was portrayed on buckskin, for some eight hundred years.

Crazy Horse was an imposing figure, about six feet tall. He married a Cheyenne woman, and this resulted in close ties between his band of the Sioux and the Cheyennes. He was also, by marriage, a relative of the famous Red Cloud.

Crazy Horse played an important part in the affairs of the Sioux, and was fearless in battle. Because of a dream during a vision quest in which he saw a rider in a storm on horseback, with long unbraided hair, a small stone in his ear, zigzag lightning decorating his cheek, and hail dotting his body, he believed that he could not be killed by a bullet, and was disdainful of all gunfire. People clutched at the rider, but could not hold him. The storm faded and a red-backed hawk flew over the rider’s head.

When Curly later related the dream to his father, the medicine man interpreted it as a sign of his son’s future greatness in battle. At about the age of 16, now bearing his father’s name, Crazy Horse rode for the first time as an adult warrior in a raid on Crows. Like the rider in his dream, he wore his hair free, a stone earring, and a headdress with a red hawk feather in it. His face was painted with a lightning bolt and his body with hail-like dots. The raid was successful, but Crazy Horse received a wound in the leg, because, his father interpreted, unlike the rider in the vision, he had taken two scalps. For the remainder of his career as a warrior, it is said that Crazy Horse never again took a scalp.

Crazy Horse became further known to many of the Sioux bands for his courage in the War for the BOZEMAN Trail of 1866-68 under the Oglala RED CLOUD, when the army began building a road in Powder River country from the Oregon Trail to the goldfields of Montana. He was one of the young chiefs, along with the Miniconjou HUMP and the Hunkpapas GALL and RAIN-IN-THE-FACE , who used decoy tactics against the soldiers. Near Fort Phil Kearny, Wyoming, Crazy Horse participated in the Indian victories known as the FETTERMAN Fight of December 21, 1866, and the Wagon Box Fight of August 2, 1867. With the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, in which the army agreed to abandon the posts along the Bozeman Trail, Red Cloud and Spotted Tail settled on reservation lands. Crazy Horse became war chief of the Oglalas, with some Brule followers as well. Moreover, he made friends and followers among the Northern Cheyennes through his first marriage to a Cheyenne woman. He later married an Oglala woman too. Crazy Horse again waged war in the early 1870s, leading his warriors in raids on Northern Pacific Railway surveyors. The Black Hills Gold Rush, which brought more whites to the region, increased tensions.

When the nomadic hunting bands ignored the order to report to their reservations by January 31, 1876, the military organized a campaign against them. Crazy Horse’s band fought in the opening engagement of the War for the Black Hills of 1876-77, the Battle of Powder River. In March 1876, when his scouts discovered an Indian trail, General GEORGE CROOK sent a detachment under Colonel Joseph Reynolds to locate the Indian camp along the Powder in southeastern Montana. At dawn on March 17, Reynolds ordered a charge. The Indians retreated to surrounding bluffs and fired at the troops who burned the village and rounded up the Indian horses. Crazy Horse regrouped his warriors and, during a snowstorm that night, recaptured the herd. Meanwhile, SITTING BULL of the Hunkpapas, who, during the 1860s, had been active in raids in northern Montana and North Dakota along the Yellowstone and Missouri rivers, came into prominence as the spiritual leader of the allied Northern Plains tribes. Gall acted as his leading war chief. Crazy Horse joined the Hunkpapas on the upper Rosebud. On June 17, 1876, at the Battle of the Rosebud, Crazy Horse, Gall, and other war chiefs led their warriors in repeated assaults that forced Crook’s troops to retreat. The Indians then moved their camp to the Bighorn River. On June 25, at the Battle of Little Bighorn, Crazy Horse led the victorious assault on GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER’s men from the north and west, while Gall’s warriors attacked from the south and west. Following Little Bighorn, the Indian bands split up, and Crazy Horse led his people back to the Rosebud. The next autumn and winter, Colonel NELSON A. MILES led the 5th Infantry from a base at the confluence of the Tongue and Yellowstone rivers in a relentless pursuit of the militants, wearing them down and making it difficult for them to obtain food. When the Indians attempted hit-and-run strikes, the soldiers responded with heavy artillery to repel them. On January 8, 1877, at Wolf Mountain on the Tongue River in southern Montana, Crazy Horse led 800 braves in a surprise attack. Miles had disguised his howitzers as wagons and opened fire with them. The Indians withdrew to bluffs and, when the soldiers counterattacked, retreated under the cover of a snowstorm. More and more of the fugitive bands were surrendering.

Crazy Horse received a promise from Crook through Red Cloud that if he surrendered, his people would have a reservation of their own in the Powder River country. His people weary and starving, Crazy Horse led some 800 followers to Fort Robinson on the Red Cloud Agency in northwestern Nebraska on May 5, 1877, but the promise of a reservation fell through.

Crazy Horse remained at the Red Cloud Agency, and his presence caused unrest among the Indians and suspicion among the whites. Older chiefs resented the adulation he received from young braves. He remained aloof from whites and refused Crook’s request to send him to Washington, D.C., for a meeting with President Rutherford Hayes.

Crazy Horse’s wife became sick and he planned a trip to take her to her family. As he was getting this trip ready ,a rumor started; that Crazy Horse was planning a rebellion so Crook ordered his arrest. Taking his family with him, Crazy Horse headed for the Spotted Tail Agency to the northwest. In a parley with troops sent to capture him, Crazy Horse agreed to return, and the next day, September 5, 1877, he was led back to Fort Robinson.

What exactly happened at the Red Cloud Agency is unknown. It is thought Crazy Horse had not expected to be imprisoned. On realizing he was being taken to the stockade, he resisted and, while the Indian police attempted to regain control, he was bayoneted in the abdomen by a soldier from behind.


With police clinging to his arms and his friends trying to help him, Crazy Horse said: "Let me go, my friends, you have hurt me enough." At ten o'clock that night he called Indian Agent Jesse M. Lee to his side and spoke to him privately , shortly after which he died.

His belief that he would not be killed by gunfire was good to the last as it was a bayonet thrust which ended his life. He was secretly buried by his parents somewhere in the hills in the vicinity of where he was camped when he was arrested. Crazy Horse was one of the greatest military geniuses of the Sioux Confederation.

TasunkaWitko - Chinook, Montana

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