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After Sitting Bull's
death, Big Foot feared for the safety of his band, which
consisted in large part of widows of the Plains wars, and
their children. Big Foot himself had been placed on the list
of "formentors of disturbances", and his arrest had been
ordered. He led his band toward Pine Ridfe, hoping for the
protection of Red Cloud. However, he fell ill from pneumonia
on the trip and was forced to travel in the back of a wagon.
As they neared Porcupine Creek on December 28th, the band
saw 4 troops of Calvalry approaching. A white flag was
immediately run up over Big Foot's wagon. When the two (2)
groups met, Big Foot raised up from his bed of blankets to
greet Major Samuel Whitside of the Seventh (7th) Cavalry.
His blankets were stained with blood, and blood dripped from
his nose as he spoke.
Whitside informed him
of his orders to take the band to their camp on Wounded Knee
Creek. Big Foot replied that they were going that way, to
Pine Ridge. The Major wanted to disarm the indians right
then, but was dissuaded by his scout John Shangreau, in
order to avoid a fight on the spot. They agreed to wait to
undertake this until they reached camp. Then in a moment of
sympathy, the Major ordered his army ambulance brought
forward to accept the ill Minneconjou Chief, providing a
warmer, and more comfortable ride. They then proceeded
toward the camp at Wounded Knee Creek, led by two (2)
cavalry troops with the other two (2) troops bringing up the
rear with their Hotchkiss guns. They reached the camp at
twilight.
At the camp, the
indians were carefully counted; there were 120 men, and 230
women and children. Major Whitside decided to wait until
morning to disarm the band. They were assigned a camp site
just to the south of the cavalry camp, given rations, and
provided with several tents, as there was a shortage of
tepee covers. A stove was provided for Big Foot's tent and
the doctor was sent to give aid to the Chief. To guarantee
against escape from the camp, two (2) troops of cavalry were
posted around the indian tents, and the Hotchkiss guns were
placed on the top of a rise overlooking the camp. The guns
were aimed directly at the lodges.
During the night the
rest of the Seventh (7th) Cavalry marched in and set up
north of Major Whitside's troops. Two (2) more Hotchkiss
guns were placed beside the two (2) aimed at the lodges.
Colonel John Forsyth took over command of the operation, and
informed Major Whitside that he had orders to take the band
to the railroad to be shipped to a military prison in
Omaha.
In the morning a bugle
call awakened the camp, and the men were told to come to the
center of the camp for a talk. After the talk they would
move to Pine Ridge. Big Foot was brought out and seated
before his tent. The older men of the band gathered around
him. Hardtack was issued for breakfast. Then the indians
were informed that they would be disarmed. They stacked
their guns in the center, but the soldiers were not
satisfied. The soldiers went through the tents, bringing out
bundles and tearing them open, throwing knives, axes, and
tent stakes into the pile. Then they ordered searches of the
individual warriors; the indians became very angry, but only
one spoke out; the medicine man, Yellow Bird. He danced a
few steps of the Ghost Dance, and chanted in Sioux, telling
the indians that the bullets would not hurt them; they would
go right by!
The search found only
two (2) rifles, one brand new, belonging to a young man
named Black Coyote. He raised it over his head, and cried
out that he had spent much money for the rifle, and that it
belonged to him. Black Coyote was deaf, and therefore did
not respond promptly to the demands of the soldiers. He
would have been convinced to put it down by the Sioux, but
that option was not possible. He was grabbed by the soldiers
and spun around. Then a shot was heard; its source is not
clear but it began the killing. The only arms the indians
had were what they could grab from the pile. When the
Hotchkiss guns opened up, shrapnel shredded the lodges,
killing men, women, and children, indiscriminately. They
tried to run, but were shot down "like buffalo" women and
children alike.
When the mass insanity
of the soldiers ended, 153 dead were counted, including Big
Foot; but many of the wounded had crawled off to die alone.
One estimate placed the final death toll at 350 indian men,
women, and children. Twenty-five (25) soldiers died, and
thirty-nine (39) were wounded, most by their own shrapnel
and bullets. The wounded soldiers were started back to Pine
Ridge agency. Then a detail of soldiers went over the
battlefield, gathering up any indians that were still alive,
and placing them in wagons. As a blizzard was approaching,
the dead were left where they had fallen. The wagons with
the wounded arrived at Pine Ridge after dark, they contained
only four (4) Sioux men, and forty-seven (47) women and
children. These people were left outside in wagons in the
bitter cold while a search was made for housing for them.
Finally the Episcopal mission was opened, the benches
removed and hay scattered over the floor as bedding for the
wounded Sioux; as they were brought in, those who were
conscious could see the Christmas decorations hanging from
the rafters.
 
A Second
View
(After the blizzard a
burial party returned to the battlefield, they found the
bodies including that of Big Foot, frozen into contorted
shapes.)
"I did not know then
how much was ended. When I look back now from this high hill
my old age, I can still see the butchered women, and
children lying heaped and scattered all along the crooked
gulch as plain as when I saw them with eyes still young. And
I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud,
and was buried in the blizzard. A people's dream died there!
It was a beautiful dream--the nation's hoop is broken, and
scattered, there is no center any longer, and the sacred
tree is dead.
~~Black
Elk~~
 
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