1831-1890

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Person
Subfield: 
d
Alias: 
1831-1890

Sitting Bull

Covers Sitting Bull's rise from a typical Lakota child to a fierce warrior chief and then contextualizes Sitting Bull's leadership within the history of U.S. advances on indigenous territories.

Sitting Bull vs. George Armstrong Custer

the Battle of the Little Bighorn
2016
Discusses the Battle of Little Bighorn and the roles of Sitting Bull and George A. Custer.

Sitting Bull

eagles cannot be crows
2017
Profiles the life of Lakota Indian chief Sitting Bull.

Sitting Bull

2016
A biography of the Dakota Indian leader Sitting Bull.

Sitting Bull

Lakota tribal chief and leader of Native American resistance
2016
"Paints the story of the famous Lakota chief's life ... Covers Sitting Bull's rise from a typical Lakota child to a fierce warrior chief and then contextualizes Sitting Bull's leadership within the history of U.S. advances on indigenous territories."--Provided by publisher.

Sitting Bull

Lakota warrior and defender of his people
2015
Sitting Bull was one of the greatest Lakota/Sioux warriors and chiefs who ever lived. He was eventually named war chief, leader of the entire Sioux nation - a title never before bestowed on anyone. As a leader, Sitting Bull resisted the United States government's attempt to move the Lakota/Sioux to reservations for more than twenty-five years.

Who was Sitting Bull?

2014
A biography of Chief Sitting Bull, who led the Lakota Sioux against the forces of the United States government who were taking their land.

Sitting Bull in his own words

2015
Using his own words, creates a profile of the great Lakota chief Sitting Bull, who led a resistance against the U.S. government during the mid-nineteenth century.

The people and culture of the Sioux

2017
An in-depth view of the history of the Sioux, from their origins to the present day, offering a close look into the lives of the men, women, and children that made the Sioux tribe what it is today.

Little Bighorn

history and legend
2015
Few things stir the imagination more than ghosts and ghostly sightings. The prospect of experiencing spectral encounters with visitors from another plane or dimension draws some 400,000 tourists to the windswept ridges of the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument every year. As most ghost hunters know, there is arguably no better place to ply their trade than the scene of violent action and the irreversible loss of life - the very definition of a battlefield. And the greasy-grass knolls of the Little Bighorn killing fields stand high on the list of haunted battlegrounds. Supernatural tales of spectral sightings from visitors and park employees alike lend an irresistible mystique to the Custer legend and to the battlefield itself. Such tales go back a long way. The Crow people are thought to be the first to experience paranormal happenings. They once called the park superintendent the "ghost herder," because they believed the ghosts of the fallen arose from their graves at sundown and walked among the living until daybreak. If the stone grave markers at the Little Bighorn could talk, they would have many tales to tell. Are you ready to listen?.

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