Life of Sitting Bull
, by Johnson, W. Fletcher- ISBN: 9781582181981 | 1582181985
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 11/1/2000
Autobiography | p. 19 |
A Unique History in Pictures | |
The Chief's Own Story of His Bloody and Lawless Career | |
Killing Enemies and Stealing Mules | |
Many Different Stories of His Life | |
Was He a West Point Graduate? | |
Startling Theory of an Army Officer | |
Medicine man and Warrior | p. 39 |
The True Story of Sitting Bull's Life | |
Son of a Rich Chief | |
A Buffalo Hunter at Ten Years Old | |
His Three Wives and Nine Children, Including Twins | |
How He Gained Supreme Sway Among the Sioux | |
What it is to be a Medicine Man | |
The Savage in Society | p. 49 |
His Visit to a Camp at Fargo | |
Ashamed of His Primitive Garb | |
His First Suit of White Man's Clothes | |
A Discomfited Young Clergyman | |
The Indian at Dinner | |
His First Look in a Mirror | |
Autograph Selling | |
The for of the White Man | p. 60 |
Fort Buford's Ghastly Tragedy | |
An Accomplished Cattle Thief | |
Contempt for Pale Faces | |
Opposing Invasion of His Territory | |
The Fort Ellis Episode | |
A Pen-and-Ink Sketch of the Savage Chief | |
The Little Big Horn | p. 66 |
Sitting Bull at the Height of His Power | |
The Rush for the Black Hills | |
Ineffectual Negotiations | |
Sitting Bull's Defiant Answer to a Summons | |
Preparations for a Great Struggle | |
How the Three Divisions of the Army Marched into the Indians' Country | |
Custer's Last Rally | p. 84 |
Departure of the Cavalry | |
March of the Infantry | |
First News of the Disaster | |
The Rescue | |
Story of the Battle | |
Reno's Force Rescued Twice | |
How Custer Fought to the End | |
The Death of Custer | p. 103 |
Two Stories of the Grim Tragedy | |
General Terry's Official Report | |
The Desperate March to the Relief of Reno | |
Narrative of Old Nick Genneiss | |
A Picture Record by Little Big Man | |
Custer | p. 116 |
The Beau Sabreur of the Army | |
Brilliant Services as a Cavalry Officer in Many Battles During the Rebellion | |
The Comrade of Phil. Kearney and Phil. Sheridan | |
His Work as an Indian Fighter | |
A Soldier Who Never Knew What Fear Was, and Who Never Lost a Gun or a Color Until His Last Battle | |
In Exile | p. 137 |
Unfounded Rumors of Sitting Bull's Death | |
His Retreat into Canada | |
Visited There by a Government Commission | |
His Defiant Refusal to Return Home | |
Speeches by the Chiefs | |
Sitting Bull's Own Words | |
The Mighty Fallen | p. 156 |
Sitting Bull Ruined by His Flight to Canada | |
His Followers Starved into Mutiny Against Him | |
The Return to Dakota | |
The Fate of His Daughter, Sleeping Water | |
A Vain Appeal | |
Taken to Fort Randall as a Prisoner of War | |
The Last Campaign | p. 168 |
Sitting Bull Involved in the Messiah Craze | |
His Hope of Regaining His Old Position | |
Plots and Disaffection | |
Visited by a Young Lady Missionary | |
Agent McLaughlin's Visit | |
The Ghost Dances | |
Sitting Bull's Remarkable Proposition | |
Death of the Great Chief | p. 178 |
General Miles Gave the Word for His Arrest | |
Was it Intended to Kill Him, Rather than Take Him Alive? | |
Indian Police Led the Way | |
The Arrest and Attempted Rescue | |
The Fatal Shot | |
Another Account of the Tragedy | |
Disposition of His Remains | |
Tributes to his Memory | p. 189 |
His Neice's Indignation and Grief | |
Senator's Attempt to be Funny over a Tragedy | |
"Buffalo Bill's" Tribute | |
General Schofield's Views | |
"Adirondack" Murray's Eloquent Protest and Rebuke | |
Sitting Bull Compared with Webster and with Gladstone | |
The Sioux Nation | p. 204 |
Mightiest of all the Native Tribes | |
Longfellow's "Minnehaha" | |
Subdivisions of the Tribe | |
Catlin's Account of Them Half a Century Ago | |
Not Drunken, nor Naked, nor Poor | |
A More Recent and Less Friendly View | |
Legends and Creeds | p. 213 |
The Indian Holy Land, the Mountains of the Prairies | |
The Sioux Story of the Flood | |
Origin of the Red Pipe Stone | |
Indian Love of the Mysterious | |
Their Ideas of the Future Life | |
Their Code of Worldly Ethics Vindicated | |
In Peace and War | p. 226 |
The Sioux Language | |
An Indian's Sense of Humor | |
"Old Hundred," "Come to Jesus," and the Lord's, Prayer in Sioux | |
War Paint on the Braves | |
A Battle with the Pawnees | |
The Value of a Scalp | |
Leisurely Interview with a Busy Secretary | |
Feasting and Dancing | p. 238 |
Conspicuous Features of Indian Public Life | |
A Grand Festival in the Olden Time | |
The Speech of Welcome | |
Stewed Dog the Leading Dish | |
The Grass Dance of the Two Kettles and its Accompanying Feast of Dog | |
Dancing Extraordinary | |
The Bear Dance, Beggar's Dance, Scalp Dance and Sun Dance | |
The Ghost Dances | p. 257 |
A Memorable Season in Indian History | |
Prophecies of the Coming of the Messiah | |
The Ghost Dances Intended to Prepare for His Advent, and to Bring the People into Communication with Him | |
Porcupine's Story of the Messiah and His Command for the Dance | |
The Indian Messiah | p. 267 |
Sincerity of the Belief in Him | |
When and Where He was First Heard of | |
Porcupine's Visit to Him | |
What He Said to the Indians | |
Bad Record of the "Messiah" | |
His Complicity in the White River Massacre | |
Another Account of Him | |
Indian Wars | p. 282 |
A Shameful Record | |
A Thousand Dollars Spent for Every Indian in the Country | |
The Long Catalogue of Conflicts and Expenses | |
Fearful Cost in Life and Limb as Well as Money and National Honor | |
The First Sioux War | p. 295 |
Provoked by White Men | |
Narrative of One Who Was There | |
Indescribable Outrages Perpetrated By the Savages Upon Women and Children | |
A City of Death | |
General Sibley's Campaign | |
Sentences of the Ringleaders | |
Causes of the Last War | p. 304 |
What the Indians Say | |
Father Jule's Interview with the Chiefs | |
The Census | |
Broken Faith and Diminished Supplies | |
Letter from American Horse | |
The Indians' Stories Confirmed by Government Reports | |
Efforts for Peace | p. 318 |
Mrs. Weldon's Remarkable Mission to the Camp of Sitting Bull | |
Her Desire to Confront the Prophet of the Messiah | |
Forced to Flee for Safety | |
Her Views of the Situation | |
Her Life in Dakota | |
The Seat of War | p. 332 |
Pine Ridge Reservation and Agency | |
The Gardens and the Buildings | |
Dr. McGillicudy's Administration | |
The Catholic Mission School | |
Some Account of the Bad Lands | |
A Truly Horrible Region | |
Life at Pine Ridge | p. 341 |
Experience of the War Correspondents | |
Trying to Take a Picture | |
The Squaw Dances | |
"Have You Got Christ in the Guard House?" | |
FireWater with a Vengeance | |
The Indian Boys | |
Married Life | |
Indians and Settlers | p. 353 |
Mixed Civilization at Rushville | |
The Cowboy at Home | |
Indian Loafers The Cigarette Habit | |
"Themdaminjuns" | |
Stories of a Veteran Frontiersman | |
Unappreciated Architecture | |
White Ghost | |
Badly Scared | |
Red Cloud | p. 367 |
A Leader of the Hostile Indians | |
His Treacherous Nature | |
Romantic Story of His Early Years | |
A Mission Teacher's Account of Him | |
His Deceitful Words to a Visitor and His Letter to a Friend | |
The Leaders of the Sioux | p. 376 |
Little Wound and His Lieutenants | |
Yellow Bear | |
Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses | |
Otti, the Shoshone | |
High Bear | |
American Horse | |
John Grass, the Indian Judge | |
Gall, the Greatest of the Sioux Warriors and Generals | |
Spotted Tail's Eloquent Speech | |
The Beginning of War | p. 386 |
Dakota Settlers Panic-Stricken | |
General Miles on the Situation | |
Pine Ridge Regarded as the Fatal Point | |
Rosebud Indians Break Loose | |
Troops Hurried to the Scene | |
A Coal Mine for a Fort | |
A Night's Alarm | |
A Much-Scared Saddler | |
Governor Mellette's Letter | |
From Bad to Worse | p. 401 |
An Ominous Thanksgiving | |
Scenes at an Issuing of Beef | |
"Buffalo Bill" | |
Plenty Bear's Report | |
Medicine That Was Not Bullet Proof | |
An Era of Uncertainty and Lies | |
Two Deeds Determined Upon | |
Delay and Disaster | p. 410 |
Waiting for Somthing to Turn Up | |
Increased Rations Come Too Late | |
Depredations by the Hostiles | |
A Fruitless Pow-Wow at Pine Ridge | |
The Indians Fighting Among Themselves | |
Troops Hurrying on to the Bad Lands | |
Catastrophe | p. 421 |
The Killing of Sitting Bull and the Results Thereof | |
Numerous Affrays | |
A Council at Pine Ridge | |
Sitting Bull's Ghost | |
Big Foot and His Men Come In | |
Arrest of a Pretended Messiah | |
Hemming in the Hostiles | |
The Whole Band Captured | |
Red War | p. 435 |
Colonel Forsythe Takes Command at Wounded Knee | |
The Indians Suspicious and Uneasy | |
Preparations to Disarm Them | |
A Desperate OUtbreak | |
The Indians Outnumbered and Slaughtered Without Mercy | |
Incidents of the Battle | |
Death of Captain Wallace | |
List of the Killed and Wounded | |
Elaine Goodale's Report | |
Father Craft and His Work | p. 458 |
A Devoted Priest | |
Descendant of a Seneca Chief and Successor of Spotted Tail as Chief of the Brules | |
His Interview With Red Cloud | |
Arraingment of the Government | |
After the Battle | p. 472 |
A Profound Sensation Caused | |
Varying Comments and Prophecies | |
Alarm at Pine Ridge | |
List of the Troops in Service | |
Murder of Lieut. Casey | |
Agent Royer Removed | |
Red Cloud's Flight | |
The Case of Col. Forsythe | |
Doubt and Fear | p. 479 |
Losing Faith in Indian Promises | |
Strange Scenes in Church | |
A Wagon Train Attacked | |
A Midnight Pow-wow | |
Two Dare-devil Brules | |
The Fortifications | |
An Unexpected Advance | |
Much Talk But Little Action | |
In at Last | p. 494 |
The Hostiles Come to Pine Ridge | |
A Motley Procession | |
Their Weapons Left Behind, Hidden Away | |
What the Chiefs Said | |
General Miles's Generous Conduct | |
Troops Returning Home | |
A Delegation of Indians on Their Way to Washington | |
Letter from "Buffalo Bill" | |
Who Shall be the Victim? | p. 507 |
Discussion of the Indian Question by the Rev. W. H. Hare, Missionary Bishop | |
How the Trouble Was Brought About, and Who Should Be Held Responsible For It | |
Reflections Inspired by the Conflict at Wounded Knee | |
The Indian in Congress | p. 519 |
Starved Into Hostilities | |
Crime Toward the Indians | |
Difficulty With the Indian Service | |
Went to His Grave Through Grief | |
The Bane and Curse of the Indians | |
They Have Nothing to Eat | |
Go Upon the War Path | |
Lack of Proper Provisions | |
Accept any Proposition | |
The Sioux are Starving | |
Solving the Indian Question | |
Most Pious Hypocrite | |
Propose an Investigation | |
Greatest Indian That Has Lived | |
The Indian Bureau | p. 537 |
Shall It Be Under Civil or Military Control? | |
Record of the Army? General Grant's Experiment | |
Improvements in Administration | |
Census of the Indians | |
Many Indians Civilized and Prosperous | |
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