Crazy Horse: Difference between revisions
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Lakota war leader (c. 1840–1877)}} |
|||
{{otheruses}} |
|||
{{Other uses}} |
|||
{{Infobox Person |
|||
{{pp-vandalism|small=yes}} |
|||
| name = Crazy Horse |
|||
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2022}} |
|||
| image = |
|||
{{Infobox Native American leader |
|||
| caption = |
|||
| name = Crazy Horse |
|||
| birth_name = '''''Thašųka Witko''''': "His-Horse-is-Crazy" |
|||
| image = Crazy_Horse_Drawing.svg |
|||
| birth_date = [[1840]] |
|||
| alt = 1934 sketch of Crazy Horse's face as described by his sister |
|||
| birth_place = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Rapid City]], [[South Dakota]] |
|||
| caption = A 1934 sketch of Crazy Horse made by a Mormon missionary after interviewing Crazy Horse's sister, who claimed the depiction was accurate.<ref>[https://www.pbs.org/opb/historydetectives/investigations/705_crazyhorse.html ''History Detectives''], PBS (2009)</ref> |
|||
| death_date = [[September 5]], [[1877]] |
|||
| tribe = [[Oglala]] |
|||
| death_place = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Fort Robinson]], [[Nebraska]] |
|||
| birth_date = {{circa|1840}} |
|||
| other_names = "In the Wilderness" or "Among the Trees," Curly |
|||
| birth_place = near [[Rapid Creek (South Dakota)|Rapid Creek]], Black Hills, [[Territories of the United States#Formerly unorganized territories|unorganized U.S. territory]] |
|||
| known_for = A famous Oglala Warrior |
|||
| death_date = {{death date and age|1877|9|5|1840}} |
|||
| occupation = |
|||
| death_place = [[Fort Robinson]], Nebraska, U.S. |
|||
| native_name = Tȟašúŋke Witkó |
|||
| native_name_lang = lkt |
|||
| birth_name = {{lang|lkt|Čháŋ Óhaŋ|italic=no}} ({{literal translation|'Among the Trees'}}) |
|||
| nicknames = {{hlist|{{lang|lkt|Pȟehíŋ Yuȟáȟa|italic=no}} (Curly Son)|{{lang|lkt|Žiží|italic=no}} (Light Hair)}} |
|||
| battles = {{ubl|[[Fetterman Fight]]|[[Battle of the Rosebud]]|[[Battle of the Little Bighorn]]}} |
|||
| death_cause = [[Bayonet]] wound |
|||
| rp_coordinates = |
|||
| religion = |
|||
| spouse = {{unbulleted list|{{marriage|{{lang|lkt|Tȟašína Sápa Wiŋ|italic=no}} ([[Black Shawl]])|1871}}|Nellie Larrabee (Laravie)}} |
|||
| children = 1 |
|||
| parents = {{ubli|{{#ifexist: Crazy Horse (the elder)|[[Crazy Horse (the elder)|Crazy Horse]], also known as {{lang|lkt|Waglúla|italic=no}} (Worm)}}|{{#if:{{is redirect|Rattling Blanket Woman}}||{{lang|lkt|Tȟašína Ȟlaȟlá Wiŋ|italic=no}} ([[Rattling Blanket Woman]])}}}} |
|||
| relations = {{unbulleted list|[[Little Hawk (Crazy Horse's brother)|Little Hawk]] (brother)|{{#ifexist: Laughing One|[[Laughing One]] (sister)}}}} |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Crazy Horse''' ( |
'''Crazy Horse''' ({{langx|lkt|Tȟašúŋke Witkó}}<ref>Lakota Language Consortium (2008). ''New Lakota Dictionary''</ref> {{IPA-sio|tˣaˈʃʊ̃kɛ witˈkɔ|}}, {{literal translation|His-Horse-Is-Crazy|lk=on}}; {{circa|1840}} – September 5, 1877)<ref>Bright, William (2004). ''Native American Place Names in the United States''. Norman, OK: [[University of Oklahoma Press]], p. 125</ref> was a [[Lakota people|Lakota]] war leader of the [[Oglala]] band in the 19th century. He took up arms against the United States federal government to fight against encroachment by [[White Americans|White American]] settlers on [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] territory and to preserve the traditional way of life of the Lakota people. His participation in several famous battles of the [[Black Hills War]] on the northern [[Great Plains]], among them the [[Fetterman Fight]] in 1866, in which he acted as a decoy, and the [[Battle of the Little Bighorn]] in 1876, in which he led a war party to victory, earned him great respect from both his enemies and his own people. |
||
In September 1877, four months after surrendering to U.S. troops under General [[George Crook]], Crazy Horse was fatally wounded by a bayonet-wielding military guard while allegedly<ref>{{Cite news | title=Book review: 'The Killing of Crazy Horse' by Thomas Powers| url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2010-dec-26-la-ca-thomas-powers-20101226-story.html| date=December 26, 2010| first=Susan| last=Salter Reynolds| work=[[Los Angeles Times]]| access-date=October 30, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | title=George Kills in Sight Describes the Death of Indian Leader Crazy Horse| url=http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/64| work=History Matters|publisher=[[George Mason University]]}}</ref> resisting imprisonment at [[Fort Robinson|Camp Robinson]] in [[Pine Ridge (region)|northwestern]] [[Nebraska]]. He was honored by the [[United States Postal Service|U.S. Postal Service]] in 1982 with a 13¢ [[Great Americans series]] postage stamp. |
|||
==Early life of crazy== |
|||
[[Image:Crazy horse c1877.jpg|thumb|right|350px|''Crazy Horse and his band of Oglala on their way from Camp Sheridan to surrender to [[General Crook]] at Red Cloud Agency'', Sunday, May 6, 1877 / Berghavy ; from sketches by Mr. Hottes.]] |
|||
The available evidence suggests that Crazy Horse was born in the fall of 1840. According to [[He Dog]], a close friend, he and Crazy Horse "were both born in the same year and at the same season of the year", which census records and other interviews place at about 1840.<ref>He Dog interview, July 7, 1930, published in: Eleanor H. Hinman (ed.), "Oglala Sources on the Life of Crazy Horse," ''Nebraska History'' 57(Spring 1976) p. 9.</ref> [[Encouraging Bear|Chips]], an Oglala medicine man and spiritual adviser to the Oglala war leader, reported that Crazy Horse was born "in the year in which the band to which he belonged, the Oglala, stole One Hundred Horses, and in the fall of the year", a reference to the annual Lakota calendar or [[winter count]].<ref>Chips Interview, Feb. 14, 1907, published in: Richard E. Jensen (ed.), ''The Indian Interviews of Eli S. Ricker, 1903-1919'' (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2005) p. 273.</ref> Among the Oglala wintercounts, the stealing of one hundred horses is noted by [[Cloud Shield]], and possibly by [[American Horse]] and Red Horse owner, equivalent to the year 1840-41.<ref>Cloud Shield count, published in: Garrick Mallery, Pictographs of the North American Indians, 4th Annual Report, Bureau of American Ethnology (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1886) p. 140. Richard G. Hardorff, "Stole-One-Hundred-Horses Winter: The Year the Oglala Crazy Horse was Born," ''Research Review'', vol. 1 no. 1 (June 1987) pp. 44-47.</ref> Oral history accounts from relatives on the Cheyenne River Reservation place his birth in the spring of 1840.<ref name="DVD">The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree. DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers.('' Reelcontact.com Productions'', 2006).</ref> Probably the most credible source, however, is Crazy Horse's own father. On the evening of his son's death, the elderly man told Lieutenant H. R. Lemly that his son "would soon have been thirty-seven, having been born on the South Cheyenne river in the fall of 1840."<ref>Lemly, "The Death of Crazy Horse," published in ''New York Sun'', September 14, 1877.</ref> |
|||
==Early life{{anchor|Genealogy}}== |
|||
Crazy Horse was born with the name 'In The Wilderness' or 'Among the Trees' (in Lakota the name is phonetically pronounced as Cha-O-Ha) meaning he was one with nature. His nickname was Curly. He had the same light curly hair of his mother.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
[[File:Crazy horse c1877.jpg|thumb|right|350px|''Crazy Horse and his band of Oglala on their way from Camp Sheridan to surrender to [[General Crook]] at Red Cloud Agency''; on Sunday, May 6, 1877. Berghavy, from sketches by Mr. Hottes]] |
|||
Sources differ on the precise year of Crazy Horse's birth, but most agree he was born between 1840 and 1845. According to Šúŋka Bloká ([[He Dog]]), he and Crazy Horse "were both born in the same year at the same season of the year," which census records and other interviews place in 1842.<ref>He Dog interview, July 7, 1930, in: Eleanor H. Hinman (ed.), "Oglala Sources on the Life of Crazy Horse," ''Nebraska History'' 57 (Spring 1976) p. 9.</ref> Ptehé Wóptuȟ’a ([[Encouraging Bear]]), an Oglala [[medicine man]] and spiritual adviser to Crazy Horse, reported that Crazy Horse was born "in the year in which the band to which he belonged, the Oglala, stole One Hundred Horses, and in the fall of the year," a reference to the annual Lakota calendar or [[winter count]].<ref>Chips Interview, February 14, 1907, in: Richard E. Jensen (ed.), ''The Indian Interviews of Eli S. Ricker, 1903–1919'' (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2005) p. 273.</ref> Among the Oglala winter counts, the stealing of 100 horses is noted by Cloud Shield, and possibly by [[American Horse]] and Red Horse owner, as equivalent to the year 1840–41.<ref>Cloud Shield count, in: Garrick Mallery, ''Pictographs of the North American Indians'', 4th Annual Report, Bureau of American Ethnology (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1886) p. 140. Richard G. Hardorff, "Stole-One-Hundred-Horses Winter: The Year the Oglala Crazy Horse was Born," ''Research Review'', vol. 1 no. 1 (June 1987) pp. 44–47.</ref> Oral history accounts from relatives on the [[Cheyenne River Reservation]] place his birth in the spring of 1840.<ref name="DVD">''The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree'', DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers.(Reelcontact.com Productions, 2006).</ref> On the evening of his son's death, the elder Crazy Horse told Lieutenant H.R. Lemly that the year of birth was 1840.<ref>Lemly, "The Death of Crazy Horse," ''[[New York Sun]]'', September 14, 1877.</ref> |
|||
===Family=== |
|||
Crazy Horse's father, a Lakota who was also named Crazy Horse (born 1810), passed the name to his son, taking the new name of Worm for himself thereafter. The mother of the younger Crazy Horse was [[Rattling Blanket Woman]] (born 1814), a Lakota as well. Rattling Blanket Woman was the daughter of [[Black Buffalo]] and [[White Cow]] (also known as Iron Cane). Black Buffalo is the one who stopped Lewis and Clark on the Bad River. She was the younger sister of One Horn (born 1794) and [[Lone Horn]] (born between 1790 and 1795, and died in 1875). She also had an older sister named Good Looking Woman (born 1810) and a younger sister named Looks At It (born 1815), later given the name They Are Afraid of Her.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
===Immediate family=== |
|||
Looks At It had a much bigger build than her two older sisters. She got her second name because she had married a man named Stands Up For Him. They had a child and when the child died of a disease, he tried to take her south away from her family. A fight ensued. She defeated him and thus the name They Are Afraid Of Her was bestowed on her.<ref name="DVD"/> Rattling Blanket Woman also had another older half-brother named [[Hump]] who was born in 1811. Hump's mother was Good Voice Woman and Black Buffalo's second wife.<ref name="DVD"/> Hump and Waglula became best friends. When Waglula began to court Hump's half sister, he presented three horses to the family head Lone Horn (the older sibling One Horn had died earlier after being gored by a buffalo, making Lone Horn the oldest male and head man of the family.<ref name="DVD"/> Their father, Black Buffalo, had died in about 1820 near [[Devil's Tower]] (Lakota called it Grey Horn Butte) of sickness.<ref name="DVD"/> In return for the three horses he hoped he could take Rattling Blanket Woman as his wife as was the custom. But the family's women wanted eight horses, and so Hump volunteered to go on a raiding party with Waglula to obtain more horses; they brought back 16 horses, four loaded with meat they had captured from a Crow hunting party and presented it to the family.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
{{anchor|Rattling Blanket Woman}} |
|||
Crazy Horse was born to parents from two different bands of the [[Lakota people|Lakota]] division of the [[Sioux]], his father being an [[Oglala]] and his mother a [[Miniconjou]]. His father, born in 1810, was also named Tȟašúŋke Witkó (Crazy Horse). Crazy Horse was named Čháŋ Óhaŋ (Among the Trees) at birth, meaning he was one with nature. His mother, Tȟašína Ȟlaȟlá Wiŋ (Rattling Blanket Woman, born 1814), gave him the nickname Pȟehíŋ Yuȟáȟa (Curly Son/Curly) or Žiží (Light Hair) as his light, curly hair resembled her own. She died when Crazy Horse was only four years old.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
One account said that after the son had reached maturity and shown his strength, his father gave him his name and took a new one, Waglúla (Worm). Another version of how the younger Crazy Horse acquired his name is that he took it after going through the [[vision quest|haŋbléčheya ceremony]]. Crazy Horse's cousin (son of Hewáŋžiča, [[Lone Horn]]) was Maȟpíya Ičáȟtagya ([[Touch the Clouds]]). He saved Crazy Horse's life at least once and was with him when he died.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
In 1844 Waglula (Worm) went on a buffalo hunt. He came across a Lakota village under attack by Crow warriors. He led his small contingent in and rescued the village. Corn who was the head man of the village (the famed painter, George Catlin painted his picture while visiting the tribe in 1832 entitled "Corn, [[Miniconjou]] Warrior") had lost his wife in the raid. In gratitude he gave Waglula his two eldest daughters Iron Between Horns (age 18) and Kills Enemy (age 17) as wives. Corn's youngest daughter, Red Leggins, who was 15 at the time requested to go with her sisters and all would become Waglula's wives.<ref name="DVD"/> When he got back to his village and his wife, Rattling Blanket Woman, found out about his new wives she became distraught. She and Waglula had been attempting to conceive another child, but had failed. The arrival of the new wives made her think she had lost favor with Waglula because she could not get pregnant. At the time they were camped along the White River. Without discussing it with Waglula she went out and hanged herself from a cottonwood tree.<ref name="DVD"/> Waglula mourned her death for four years and was celibate during that time. Upon hearing what had happened to her sister, Good Looking Woman, who also found she could not conceive, left her husband and came to Waglula to offer herself as a replacement wife for her sister. Waglula turned her down as a wife, but relented in allowing her to raise her sister's son, Crazy Horse. Later, Crazy Horse's other aunt They Are Afraid of Her helped in the raising of Crazy Horse. She helped teach him to hunt and take care of himself.<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
Rattling Blanket Woman or Tȟašína Ȟlaȟlá Wiŋ (1814–1844) was the daughter of Black Buffalo and White Cow (also known as Iron Cane).<ref name=":0" /> Her older siblings were [[Lone Horn]] (born 1790, died 1877) and Good Looking Woman (born 1810). Her younger sister was named Looks At It (born 1815), later given the name They Are Afraid of Her. The historian George Hyde wrote that Rattling Blanket Woman was [[Miniconjou]] and the sister of [[Spotted Tail]], who became a [[Brulé]] head chief.<ref name="HydeSpotted">{{cite book |title=Spotted Tail's Folk: A History of the Brulé Sioux |last=Hyde |first=George |series=Civilization of the American Indian |volume=57 |edition=2 |year=1974 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |location=Norman, OK |isbn=978-0-8061-1380-7 |page=15 }}</ref> She may have been a member of either of the family of [[Lone Horn]], one of the leaders of the [[Miniconjou]]. She was said to be beautiful and a fast runner.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book | last=Bray| first=Kingsley M.| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TKAkQV9vctAC&q=Rattling+Blanket+Woman&pg=PT31| title=Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life| date=2011| publisher=[[University of Oklahoma Press]]| isbn=978-0-8061-8376-3| language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | last = Bray| first = Kingsley M| title = Notes on the Crazy Horse Genealogy, Part 1| access-date = November 6, 2012| url = http://www.american-tribes.com/Lakota/BIO/CrazyHorse-Part1.htm}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite book | last=Rankin| first=Charles E.| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5IzU1liIYOUC&q=Rattling+Blanket+Woman&pg=PA42| title=Legacy: New Perspectives on the Battle of the Little Bighorn| date=1996| publisher=[[Montana Historical Society]]| isbn=978-0-917298-42-4| language=en}}</ref> |
|||
===Visions (see) === |
|||
Crazy Horse lived in the Lakota camp with his younger brother, High Horse (son of Iron Between Horns and Waglula<ref name="DVD"/>) and his cousin who he grew up with, [[Little Hawk]] (Little Hawk was actually the nephew of his maternal step grandfather, Corn<ref name="DVD"/>), when it was attacked by [[Lieutenant|Lt.]] Grattan and 28 other troopers during the [[Grattan massacre]].<ref name="DVD2">"The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part Two: Defending the Homeland Prior to the 1868 Treaty". DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers. (<i>Reelcontact.com Productions, <i/> 2007).</ref> After witnessing the death of Lakota leader [[Conquering Bear]], Crazy Horse began to get [[trance]] visions. His father Waglula (Worm) took him to what today is [[Sylvan Lake, South Dakota|Sylvan Lake]] where they both sat to hemblecha (vision quest).<ref name="DVD2"/> A red-tailed hawk led them to their respective spots in the hills as the trees are tall in the [[Black Hills]] and they could not always see where they were going. Crazy Horse sat in between two humps that were at the top of a hill just a bit north and to the east of the lake.<ref name="DVD2"/> Waglula sat just a little south of [[Harney Peak]] but north of his son. |
|||
In 1844, while out hunting buffalo, Waglula helped defend a Lakota village under attack by the [[Crow people|Crow]]. In gratitude he gave Waglula his two eldest daughters as wives: Iron Between Horns (age 18) and Kills Enemy (age 17). Corn's youngest daughter, Red Leggins, who was 15 at the time, requested to go with her sisters; all became Waglula's wives. When Waglula returned with the new wives, Rattling Blanket Woman, who had been unsuccessful in conceiving another child, thought she had lost favor with her husband and hanged herself.<ref name="DVD"/> Waglula went into mourning for four years. Rattling Blanket Woman's sister, Good Looking Woman, came to offer herself as a replacement wife and stayed on to raise Crazy Horse.<ref name="nativeusa">{{Cite web |title = Crazy Horse, Ta-sunko-witko 1842–1877 |publisher = [[NativeUSA.org]] |access-date = November 6, 2012 |url = http://www.nativeusa.org/crazy_horse.htm |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111114235815/http://www.nativeusa.org/crazy_horse.htm |archive-date = November 14, 2011}}</ref> Other versions of the legend posit that she was grief-stricken by the deaths of those she knew;<ref name=":0" /> that her husband accused her of running off with her brother-in-law;<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Gonzalez|first1=Mario|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xv8vNd6VgMMC&q=Rattling+Blanket+Woman&pg=PA188|title=The Politics of Hallowed Ground: Wounded Knee and the Struggle for Indian Sovereignty|last2=Cook-Lynn|first2=Elizabeth|date=1999|publisher=[[University of Illinois Press]]|isbn=978-0-252-06669-6|language=en}}</ref> or that she had an affair with a European-American man.<ref name=":1" /> |
|||
Crazy Horse's vision first took him to the South where in Lakota spirituality you go when you die. He was brought back and was taken to the west in the direction of the wakiyans or thunder beings and was given a medicine bundle which contained medicines that would protect him for life. One of his animal protectors would be the white owl, which according to Lakota spirituality would give extended life. He was also shown his face paint, which consisted of a yellow lightning strike down the left side of his face and white powder he would wet and with three fingers put marks over his vulnerable areas that when they dried resembled hail stones. His face paint was similar to his father's except his father used a red lightning strike down the right side of his face and three red hailstones on his forehead. Crazy Horse wore a yellow lightning strike down the left side of his face but put no make up on his forehead and did not wear a war bonnet. He was also given a sacred song that is still sung today and told he would be a protector of his people.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
According to Frederick Hoxie's ''Encyclopedia of North American Indians'', Crazy Horse was the third in his male line to bear the name of Crazy Horse. The love of his life was Tȟatȟáŋkasápawiŋ (Black Buffalo Woman), whom he courted, but she married another man named Mní Níča (No Water). At one point, Crazy Horse persuaded Black Buffalo Woman to run away with him. No Water borrowed a pistol and ran after his wife. When he found her with Crazy Horse, he fired at him, injuring him in the face and leaving a noticeable scar. Crazy Horse was married two times, first to Tȟašinásápawiŋ (Black Shawl) and second to Nellie Larrabee (Laravie). Nellie Larrabee was given the task of spying on Crazy Horse for the military, so the marriage is suspect. Only Black Shawl bore him any children, a daughter named Kȟokípȟapiwiŋ (They Are Afraid of Her), who died at age three. |
|||
Crazy Horse also received a black stone from a medicine man named Horn Chips to protect his horse, a black and white paint he had named 'Inyan' meaning rock or stone. He placed the stone behind the horse's ear so that the medicine he received from his visionquest and the medicine that Horn Chips had given him would combine to make his horse and himself to be as one in battle.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
=== |
===Visions=== |
||
Crazy Horse lived in a Lakota camp in present-day [[Wyoming]] with his younger half-brother, [[Little Hawk (Crazy Horse's brother)|Little Hawk]], son of Iron Between Horns and Waglula.<ref name="DVD"/> Little Hawk was the nephew of his maternal step-grandfather, Long Face, and a cousin, High Horse.<ref name="DVD"/> In 1854, the camp was entered by Lieutenant [[John Lawrence Grattan]] and 29 other U.S. troopers, who intended to arrest a Miniconjou man for having stolen a cow. The cow had wandered into the camp, and after a short time, someone butchered it and passed the meat out among the people. Grattan went to Conquering Bear, saying the Sioux should arrest the guilty party and turn him over. Conquering Bear refused but offered a horse as compensation for the cow. Ending the discussion, when Grattan began walking back to his soldiers and Conquering Bear had turned to walk back, one of Grattan's soldiers fatally shot Conquering Bear in the back. The Lakota killed all 30 soldiers and a civilian interpreter in what was later called the [[Grattan massacre]].<ref name="DVD2">''The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part Two: Defending the Homeland Prior to the 1868 Treaty'', DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers. Reelcontact.com Productions, 2007.</ref> |
|||
Through the late 1850s and early 1860s, Crazy Horse's reputation as a warrior grew, as did his fame among the Lakota. Little written record exists because the Lakota were oral historians and had no written language. His first kill was an enemy of the Lakota, a Shoshone raider who had killed a Lakota woman washing buffalo meat along the [[Powder River (Montana)|Powder River]],<ref name="DVD2"/>. He was in many battles between the Lakota and their enemies, the [[Crow Nation|Crow]], [[Shoshone]], [[Pawnee]], [[Blackfeet]], and [[Arikara]] among others. In 1864 after the [[Sand Creek Massacre]] of the [[Cheyenne]] in [[Colorado]], the Lakota joined forces with the Cheyenne against the military. Crazy Horse was present at the [[Battle of Red Buttes]] and the [[Fort Caspar|Platte River Bridge Station Battle]] in 1865.<ref name="DVD2"/> Because of his fighting ability, Crazy Horse was installed as an ''Ogle Tanka Un'' (Shirt Wearer or war leader) in 1865. |
|||
After witnessing the death of Conquering Bear at the Grattan massacre, Crazy Horse began to get [[trance]] visions. Curly went out on a [[vision quest]] to seek guidance but without going through the traditional procedures first. In his vision, a warrior on his horse rode out of a lake and the horse seemed to float and dance throughout the vision. He wore simple clothing, no face paint, his hair down with just a feather in it, and a small brown stone behind his ear. Bullets and arrows flew around him as he charged forward, but neither he nor his horse was hit. A thunderstorm came over the warrior, and his people grabbed hold of his arms trying to hold him back. The warrior broke their hold and then lightning struck him, leaving a lightning symbol on his cheek, and white marks like hailstones appeared on his body. The warrior told Curly that as long he dressed modestly, his tribesmen did not touch him, and he did not take any scalps or war trophies, he would not be harmed in battle. As the vision ended, he heard a red-tailed hawk shrieking off in the distance. Curly's father later interpreted the vision and said that the warrior was going to be him. The lightning bolt on his cheek and the hailstones on his body were to become his war paint. Curly was to follow the warrior's role to dress modestly and to do as the warrior's prophecy said so he would be unharmed in battle. For the most part, the vision was true and Crazy Horse was rarely harmed in battle, except for when he was struck by an arrow after taking two enemy scalps. He was shot in the face by No Water when Little Big Man tried to hold Crazy Horse back to prevent a fight from breaking out, and he was held back by one of his tribesmen—according to some reports, Little Big Man himself—when he was stabbed by a bayonet the night he died.<ref>{{cite book | last1=Sajna| first1=Mike| title=Crazy Horse; the Life Behind the Legend| url=https://archive.org/details/crazyhorselifebe0000sajn| url-access= registration| date=2000|publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Inc.| location=New york| pages=[https://archive.org/details/crazyhorselifebe0000sajn/page/104 104–109]}}</ref> |
|||
On [[December 21]], [[1866]], Crazy Horse and six other warriors, both Lakota and Cheyenne, decoyed Lt. [[William Fetterman]]'s 53 infantry men and 27 cavalry troopers under Lt Grummond from the safe confines of [[Fort Phil Kearny]] on the [[Bozeman Trail]] into an ambush. Crazy Horse personally led Fetterman's infantry up what [[Wyoming]] locals call Massacre Hill while Grummond's cavalry followed the other six decoys along Peno Head Ridge and down towards Peno Creek where some Cheyenne women were taunting the soldiers. At that moment, the Cheyenne leader [[Little Wolf]]'s and his warriors closed the return route to the fort. They had been hiding on the opposite side of Peno Head Ridge. Meanwhile, the Lakota warriors came over Massacre Hill and attacked the infantry. There were additional Cheyenne and Lakota hiding in the buckbrush along Peno Creek behind the taunting women, effectively surrounding the soldiers. Seeing they were surrounded, Grummond headed back to Fetterman to try to repel them in numbers --they were wiped out. The warrior contingent was comprised of nearly 1,000 warriors. In present day history books it is known as [[Red Cloud's War]] however [[Red Cloud]] was not present that day. The ambush was the worst Army defeat on the [[Great Plains]] at the time.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
His father ''Waglula'' took him to what today is [[Sylvan Lake, South Dakota|Sylvan Lake]], South Dakota, where they both sat to do a ''hemblecha'' or vision quest.<ref name="DVD2"/> A red-tailed hawk led them to their respective spots in the hills; as the trees are tall in the [[Black Hills]], they could not always see where they were going. Crazy Horse sat between two humps at the top of a hill north and to the east of the lake.<ref name="DVD2"/> Waglula sat south of [[Black Elk Peak]] but north of his son. |
|||
On August 2, 1867 Crazy Horse participated in the [[Wagon Box Fight]] near [[Fort Phil Kearny]]. He captured one of the army's new Second Allin breech-loading rifles from one of the soldiers on the wood cutting crew. However, most of the soldiers made it to a circle of wagon boxes that had no wheels and used them for cover as they fired at the Lakota. The Lakota took horrific losses in the fight as the new rifles could fire ten times a minute compared to the old muskets in prior battles at a rate of only three times a minute. The Lakota would charge after the soldiers fired, expecting them to still be using the muskets that took about 20 seconds to reload. But instead it took only about six seconds to reload the new rifles. The Lakota casualties numbered around 200 that day. Many are still buried in the hills that surround Fort Phil Kearny in Wyoming.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
Crazy Horse's vision first took him to the South where, in Lakota spirituality, one goes upon death. He was brought back and was taken to the West in the direction of the ''wakiyans'' (thunder beings). He was given a [[medicine bundle]] to protect him for life. One of his animal protectors would be the white owl which, according to Lakota spirituality, would give extended life. He was also shown his "face paint" for battle, to consist of a yellow lightning bolt down the left side of his face, and white powder. He would wet this and put marks over his vulnerable areas; when dried, the marks looked like [[hailstones]]. His face paint was similar to that of his father, who used a red lightning strike down the right side of his face and three red hailstones on his forehead. Crazy Horse put no make-up on his forehead and did not wear a war bonnet. Lastly, he was given a sacred song that is still sung by the Oglala people today and he was told he would be a protector of his people.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
=== First wife=== |
|||
[[Black Elk]], a contemporary and cousin of Crazy Horse, related the vision in ''[[Black Elk Speaks|Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux]]'', from talks with [[John G. Neihardt]]: |
|||
In the fall of 1867, Crazy Horse invited [[Black Buffalo Woman]] to accompany him on a buffalo hunt in the Slim Buttes area in what is now the northwestern corner of South Dakota. She was the wife of [[No Water]]. No Water had a reputation among the tribe at the time as someone who spent a lot of time near military installations drinking alcohol.<ref name="DVD"/> It was Lakota custom to allow a woman to divorce her husband at any time. She did so by moving in with relatives or with another man, or by placing the husband's belongings outside their lodge. Although some compensation might be required to smooth over hurt feelings, the rejected husband was expected to accept his wife's decision for the good of the tribe. No Water was away from camp when Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman took off on their trip. No Water tracked down Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman in the Slim Buttes area. When he found them in a [[tipi]], he called Crazy Horse's name from outside the tipi. When Crazy Horse answered, No Water stuck a pistol into the tipi and aimed for Crazy Horse's heart. Touch the Cloud, Crazy Horse's first cousin and son of Lone Horn, was sitting in the tipi nearest to the entry and knocked the pistol upward as it fired, causing the bullet to hit Crazy Horse in the upper jaw. No Water took off with Crazy Horse's relatives in hot pursuit. No Water ran his horse until it died and continued on foot until he reached the safety of his own village.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
{{Blockquote|When I was a man, my father told me something about that vision. Of course he did not know all of it; but he said that Crazy Horse dreamed and went into the world where there is nothing but the spirits of all things. That is the real world that is behind this one, and everything we see here is something like a shadow from that world. He was on his horse in that world, and the horse and himself on it and the trees and the grass and the stones and everything were made of spirit, and nothing was hard, and everything seemed to float. His horse was standing still there, and yet it danced around like a horse made only of shadow, and that is how he got his name, which does not mean that his horse was crazy or wild, but that in his vision it danced around in that queer way. |
|||
It was this vision that gave him his great power, for when he went into a fight, he had only to think of that world to be in it again so that he could go through anything and not be hurt. Until he was killed at the Soldiers' Town on White River, he was wounded only twice, once by accident and both times by someone of his own people when he was not expecting trouble and was not thinking; never by an enemy.}} |
|||
Several elders convinced Crazy Horse and No Water that no more blood should be shed and as compensation for the shooting, No Water gave Crazy Horse three horses. The elders also sent [[Black Shawl]], a relative of [[Spotted Tail]], to help heal Crazy Horse. When he saw that she cared for him he decided to make her his wife. She bore him a daughter, named They Are Afraid of Her, after his maternal aunt, in late summer of [[1872]]. His daughter later died at the age of two in [[1874]].<ref name="DVD"/> Because of the incident, Crazy Horse was stripped of his title as Shirt Wearer (leader). At about the same time, Little Hawk was killed by a group of miners in the Black Hills while escorting some women to the new agency created by the [[Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868)|Treaty of 1868]].<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
Crazy Horse received a black stone from a medicine man named Horn Chips to protect his horse, a black-and-white [[pinto horse|pinto]] he named ''Inyan'' (rock or stone). He placed the stone behind the horse's ear so that the medicine from his vision quest and Horn Chips would combine—he and his horse would be one in battle.<ref name="DVD2"/> The more accepted account, however, is that Horn Chips gave Crazy Horse a sacred stone that protected him from bullets.<ref>Bray, Kingsley M. ''Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life''. 2006, p. 67. University of Oklahoma Press.</ref> Subsequently, Crazy Horse was never wounded by a bullet. In addition, "Horn Chips" is not the correct name of this medicine man, though it has become a repeated error since its first publication in 1982. His Lakota name was ''Woptura'', and he was given the name "Chips" by the government and was referred to as Old Man Chips. Horn Chips was one of his sons, who was also known as Charles Chips.<ref>Lyon, William S. ''Spirit Talkers: North American Indian Medicine Power'', 2012, pp. 354–355.</ref> |
|||
On [[August 14]], [[1872]], Crazy Horse, along with [[Sitting Bull]] took part in the first attack by the Lakota on troops escorting a [[Northern Pacific Railroad]] survey crew. The [[Battle of Arrow Creek (1872)|Battle of Arrow Creek]] ended with minimal casualties on either side. |
|||
===Personality=== |
|||
==Great Sioux War of 1876-77 == |
|||
Crazy Horse was known to have a personality characterized by aloofness, shyness, modesty and lonesomeness. He was generous to the poor, the elderly, and children.<ref name="Chelsea House Publishers">{{cite book|last1=Guttmacher|first1=Peter|title=North American Indians of Achievement; Crazy Horse: Sioux War Chief|date=1994|publisher=Chelsea House Publishers|location=Philadelphia|pages=65–67}}</ref> In ''Black Elk Speaks,'' Neihardt relays: |
|||
{{Blockquote|...he was a queer man and would go about the village without noticing people or saying anything. In his own teepee he would joke, and when he was on the warpath with a small party, he would joke to make his warriors feel good. But around the village, he hardly ever noticed anybody, except little children. All the Lakotas like to dance and sing, but he never joined a dance, and they say nobody ever heard him sing. But everybody liked him, and they would do anything he wanted or go anywhere he said.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Neihardt|first1=John|title=Black Elk Speaks; The Complete Edition|date=2014|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|page=54}}</ref>}} |
|||
On [[June 17]], [[1876]], Crazy Horse led a combined group of approximately 1,500 Lakota and Cheyenne in a surprise attack against [[Brevet Brig. Gen.]] [[George Crook]]'s force of 1,000 [[cavalry]] and [[infantry]] and 300 [[Crow]] and [[Shoshone]] warriors in the [[Battle of the Rosebud]]. The battle, although not substantial in terms of human loss, delayed Crook from joining up with the [[U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment|7th Cavalry]] under [[George A. Custer]], ensuring Custer’s subsequent defeat at the [[Battle of the Little Bighorn]]. |
|||
Crazy Horse was said to have "deplored alcohol and its effect on tribes."<ref>{{cite news|last=Jarvis|first=Brooke|title=Who Speaks for Crazy Horse?|work=[[The New Yorker]]|date=16 September 2019|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/09/23/who-speaks-for-crazy-horse|access-date=13 September 2024}}</ref> |
|||
At 3:00 p.m. on [[June 25]], [[1876]], Custer's 7th Cavalry attacked the Lakota and Cheyenne village, marking the beginning of the [[Battle of the Little Big Horn]]. Crazy Horse's exact actions during the battle are unknown. Possibly Crazy Horse entered the battle by repelling the first attack led by [[Major|Maj.]] [[Marcus Reno]], but it is also possible that he was still in his lodge waiting for the larger battle with Custer. [[Lakota people|Hunkpapa Warriors]] led by [[Chief Gall]] led the main body of the attack, and once again Crazy Horse's role in the battle remains ambiguous. Some historians think that Crazy Horse led a flanking assault, assuring the death of Custer and his men, the only fact that can be proven is that Crazy Horse was a major participant in the battle. |
|||
==War leadership== |
|||
In [[September 10]], [[1876]] Captain Anson Mills and two battalions of the Third Cavalry captured a Minicoujou village of 36 lodges in the [[Battle of Slim Buttes]], SD.<ref>Richard G. Hardoff (ed.). "Lakota Recollections" (University of Nebraska Press, 1997) p 30 n. 16</ref> Crazy Horse and his followers attempted to rescue the camp and its headman, (Old Man) American Horse. He was unsuccessful and American Horse and nearly his entire family were killed by the soldiers after holing up in a cave for several hours. |
|||
===Title of "Shirt Wearer"=== |
|||
Through the late 1850s and early 1860s, Crazy Horse's reputation as a warrior grew, as did his fame among the Lakota. The Lakota told accounts of him in their oral histories. His first kill was a [[Shoshone]] raider who had murdered a Lakota woman washing buffalo meat along the [[Powder River (Montana)|Powder River]].<ref name="DVD2"/> Crazy Horse fought in numerous battles between the Lakota and their traditional enemies, the [[Crow Nation|Crow]], [[Shoshone]], [[Pawnee people|Pawnee]], [[Blackfoot Confederacy|Blackfeet]], and [[Arikara]], among the Plains tribes. |
|||
In 1864, after the [[Third Colorado Cavalry]] decimated [[Cheyenne]] and [[Arapaho]] in the [[Sand Creek Massacre]], Oglala and Minneconjou bands allied with them against the U.S. military. Crazy Horse was present at the [[Battle of Platte Bridge]] and the [[Battle of Platte Bridge|Battle of Red Buttes]] in July 1865.<ref name="DVD2"/> Because of his fighting ability and his generosity to the tribe, in 1865, Crazy Horse was named an ''Ogle Tanka Un'' ("Shirt Wearer", or war leader) by the tribe.<ref name="Chelsea House Publishers"/> |
|||
On [[January 8]], [[1877]], his warriors fought their last major battle, the [[Battle of Wolf Mountain]], with the [[United States Cavalry]] in the [[Montana Territory]]. On [[May 5]] of that year, knowing that his people were weakened by cold and hunger, Crazy Horse surrendered to [[United States]] troops at Camp Robinson in [[Nebraska]]. NOTE: As an indication of its permanent status, the designation "Camp" was changed to "Fort" in 1878. |
|||
===Battle of the Hundred in the Hand (Fetterman Fight)=== |
|||
==Surrender and death == |
|||
On December 21, 1866, Crazy Horse and six other warriors, both Lakota and Cheyenne, decoyed Capt. [[William Fetterman]]'s 53 infantrymen and 27 cavalry troopers under Lt. Grummond into an ambush. They had been sent out from [[Fort Phil Kearny]] to follow up on an earlier attack on a wood train. Crazy Horse lured Fetterman's infantry up a hill. Grummond's cavalry followed the other six decoys along Peno Head Ridge and down toward Peno Creek, where several Cheyenne women taunted the soldiers. Meanwhile, Cheyenne leader [[Little Wolf]] and his warriors, who had been hiding on the opposite side of Peno Head Ridge, blocked the return route to the fort. The Lakota warriors swept over the hill and attacked the infantry. Additional Cheyenne and Lakota hiding in the buckbrush along Peno Creek effectively surrounded the soldiers. Seeing that they were surrounded, Grummond headed his cavalry back to Fetterman. |
|||
Crazy Horse and other northern [[Oglala]] leaders arrived at the [[Red Cloud Agency]], located near [[Camp Robinson]], Nebraska, on May 5, 1877. Together with [[He Dog]], Little Big Man, Iron Crow and others, they met in a solemn ceremony with First Lieutenant William P. Clark as the first step in their formal surrender. |
|||
The combined warrior forces of nearly 1,000 killed all the US soldiers in what became known at the time to the white population as the [[Fetterman Massacre]].<ref>[https://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-205515/Fetterman-Massacre/ "Fetterman Massacre"]. ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' Online.</ref> It was the Army's worst defeat on the [[Great Plains]] up to that time.<ref name="DVD2"/> The Lakota and Cheyenne call it the Battle of the Hundred in the Hand.<ref name="Marshall">Joseph M. Marshall III, ''The Journey of Crazy Horse'', Penguin Books 2004.</ref> |
|||
For the next four months, Crazy Horse resided in his village near the Red Cloud Agency. The attention that Crazy Horse received from the Army elicited the jealousy of [[Red Cloud]] and [[Spotted Tail]], two Lakota who had long before come to the agencies and adopted the white ways. Rumors started to spread at the [[Red Cloud Agency]] and [[Spotted Tail Agency]] about Crazy Horse's desire to slip out of the agency and return to the old ways of life. In August 1877, officers at Camp Robinson received word that the [[Nez Perce]] of [[Chief Joseph]] had broken out of their reservations in [[Idaho]] and were fleeing north through Montana toward [[Canada]]. When asked by Lieutenant Clark to join the Army against the Nez Perce, Crazy Horse and the [[Miniconjou]] leader [[Touch the Clouds]] objected, saying that they had promised to remain at peace when they surrendered. According to one version of events, Crazy Horse finally agreed, saying that he would fight "till all the Nez Perce were killed". But his words were apparently misinterpreted by scout [[Frank Grouard]] who reported that Crazy Horse had said that he would "go north and fight until not a white man is left". When he was challenged over his interpretation, Grouard left the council. Another interpreter, [[William Garnett]], was brought in but quickly noted the growing tension. |
|||
===Wagon Box Fight=== |
|||
With the growing trouble at the Red Cloud Agency, General [[George Crook]] was ordered to stop at Camp Robinson. A council was called of the Oglala leadership, however, this was cancelled when Crook was informed that Crazy Horse had said the previous evening that he intended to kill the general during the proceedings. Crook ordered Crazy Horse's arrest and then departed, leaving the military action to the post commander at Camp Robinson, Lieutenant Colonel [[Luther P. Bradley]]. Additional troops were brought in from Fort Laramie and on the morning of September 4, 1877, two columns moved against Crazy Horse's village, only to find that it had scattered during the night. Crazy Horse fled to the nearby Spotted Tail Agency with his ill wife. After meeting with military officials at the adjacent military post of [[Camp Sheridan]], Crazy Horse agreed to return to Camp Robinson with Lieutenant [[Jesse M. Lee]], the Indian agent at Spotted Tail. |
|||
On August 2, 1867, Crazy Horse participated in the [[Wagon Box Fight]], also near Fort Phil Kearny. Lakota forces numbering between 1000 and 2000 attacked a wood-cutting crew near the fort. Most of the soldiers fled to a circle of wagon boxes without wheels, using them for cover as they fired at the Lakota. The Lakota took substantial losses as the soldiers were firing new [[Breech-loading weapon|breech-loading rifles]]. These could fire ten times a minute compared to the old [[Muzzle-loading rifle|muzzle-loading]] rate of three times a minute. The Lakota charged after the soldiers fired the first time, expecting the delay of their older muskets before being able to fire again. The soldiers suffered only five killed and two wounded, while the Lakota suffered between 50 and 120 casualties. Many Lakota were buried in the hills surrounding [[Fort Phil Kearny]] in Wyoming.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
===Controversy over Black Buffalo Woman=== |
|||
On the morning of September 5, 1877, Crazy Horse and Lieutenant Lee, accompanied by Touch the Clouds as well as a number of Indian scouts, departed for Camp Robinson. Arriving that evening outside the adjutant's office, Lieutenant Lee was informed that he was to turn Crazy Horse over to the Officer of the Day. Lee protested and hurried to Bradley's quarters to debate the issue, but without success. Bradley had received orders that Crazy Horse was to be arrested and forwarded under the cover of darkness to Division Headquarters. Lee turned the Oglala war chief over to Captain James Kennington, in charge of the post guard, who accompanied Crazy Horse to the post guardhouse. Once inside, no doubt realizing the fate that was about to befall him, Crazy Horse struggled with the guard and Little Big Man and attempted to escape. Just outside the door of the guardhouse, Crazy Horse was stabbed with a bayonet of one of the members of the guard. The mortally wounded war leader was taken to the adjutant's office where he was tended by the assistant post surgeon at the post, Dr. [[Valentine McGillycuddy]]. Crazy Horse died late that night. |
|||
In the fall of 1870, Crazy Horse invited Black Buffalo Woman to accompany him on a buffalo hunt in the Slim Buttes area of present-day northwestern South Dakota.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bray|first1=Kingsley M.|title=Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life|url=https://archive.org/details/crazyhorse00king|url-access=registration|date=2006|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press, Norman|location=Oklahoma|pages=[https://archive.org/details/crazyhorse00king/page/144 144–146]|isbn=978-0806137858}}</ref> She was the wife of No Water, who had a reputation for drinking too much.<ref name="DVD"/> It was the Lakota's custom to allow a woman to divorce her husband at any time. She did so by moving in with relatives or with another man, or by placing the husband's belongings outside their lodge. Although some compensation might be required to smooth over hurt feelings, the rejected husband was expected to accept his wife's decision. No Water was away from camp when Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman left for the buffalo hunt. |
|||
No Water tracked down Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman in the Slim Buttes area. When he found them in a [[teepee]], he called Crazy Horse's name from outside. When Crazy Horse answered, No Water stuck a pistol into the teepee and aimed for Crazy Horse. Touch the Clouds, Crazy Horse's first cousin and son of [[Lone Horn]], was sitting in the teepee nearest the entry. He knocked the pistol upward as No Water fired, deflecting the bullet to Crazy Horse's upper jaw. No Water left, with Crazy Horse's relatives in hot pursuit. No Water ran his horse until it died and continued on foot until he reached the safety of his own village.<ref name="DVD2"/> |
|||
The following morning, Crazy Horse's body was turned over to his elderly parents who took it to Camp Sheridan, placing it on a scaffold there. The following month when the Spotted Tail Agency was moved to the Missouri River, Crazy Horse's parents moved the body to an undisclosed location possibly somewhere on the present Pine Ridge Reservation. His final resting place remains a mystery to this day. |
|||
Several elders convinced Crazy Horse and No Water that no more blood should be shed. As compensation for the shooting, No Water gave Crazy Horse three horses. Because Crazy Horse was with a married woman, he was stripped of his title as Shirt Wearer (leader).<ref name="DVD"/> |
|||
===Controversy over his death === |
|||
[[John Gregory Bourke]]'s memoirs of his service in the Indian wars, "On the Border with Crook"' details an entirely different account of Crazy Horse's death. |
|||
Bourke's account was from a personal interview with Little Big Man, who was present at Crazy Horse's arrest and wounding. The interview took place over a year after Crazy Horse's death. |
|||
Little Big Man's account is that, as Crazy Horse was being escorted to the guardhouse he suddenly pulled from under his blanket two knives, one in each hand. One knife was reportedly fashioned from the end of an army bayonet. Little Big Man, standing immediately behind Crazy Horse and not wanting the soldiers to have any excuse to kill him, seized Crazy Horse by both elbows, pulling his arms up and behind him. As Crazy Horse struggled to get free, Little Big Man abruptly lost his grip on one elbow, and Crazy Horse's released arm drove his own knife deep into his own lower back. |
|||
===Black Shawl and Nellie Larrabee=== |
|||
When Bourke asked about the popular account of the Guard bayoneting Crazy Horse, Little Big Man explained that the guard had thrust with his bayonet, but that Crazy Horse's struggles resulted in the guard's thrust missing entirely and his bayonet being lodged into the frame of the guardhouse door, where the hole it made could still be seen at the time of the interview. |
|||
Crazy Horse married [[Black Shawl]], a member of the Oglala Lakota and a relative of [[Spotted Tail]]. The elders sent her to heal Crazy Horse after his altercation with No Water. Crazy Horse and Black Shawl Woman were married in 1871. Black Shawl gave birth to Crazy Horse's only child, a daughter named They Are Afraid Of Her, who died in 1873. Black Shawl outlived Crazy Horse. She died in 1927 during the [[influenza]] outbreaks of the 1920s.<ref>"The William Garnett Interview", in ''The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book'', Ed. Richard G Hardoff, 1998. p. 43</ref> |
|||
Red Cloud also arranged to send a young woman, Nellie Larrabee, to live in Crazy Horse's lodge. Interpreter William Garnett described Larrabee as "a half-blood, not of the best frontier variety, an invidious and evil woman".<ref>''Crazy Horse and Custer'' by Stephen Ambrose. "The Susan Bordeaux Bettelyoun Narrative". ''The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book'', Ed. Richard G. Hardoff, 1998. p. 126</ref> Larrabee, also referred to as Chi-Chi and Brown Eyes Woman, was the daughter of a French trader and a [[Cheyenne]] woman. Garnett's first-hand account of Crazy Horse's surrender alludes to Larrabee as the "half blood woman" who caused Crazy Horse to fall into a "domestic trap which insensibly led him by gradual steps to his destruction."<ref>"The William Garnett Interview", ''The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book'', Ed. Richard G. Hardoff, 1998. p. 26</ref> |
|||
Little Big Man related that, in the hours immediately following Crazy Horse's wounding, the camp Commander had suggested the story of the guard being responsible as a means of hiding Little Big Man's involvement in Crazy Horse's death, and thereby avoiding any inter-clan reprisals. |
|||
==Great Sioux War of 1876–77== |
|||
It has been suggested that Little Big Man's account, as related by Bourke, is questionable, as it is the only one of 17 eyewitness sources (aside from one other account that states the eyewitness was "not sure" of the identity of the perpetrator) from Lakota, US Army, and "mixed-blood" individuals which fails to attribute Crazy Horse's death to a soldier at the guardhouse. |
|||
On June 17, 1876, Crazy Horse led a combined group of approximately 1,500 Lakota and Cheyenne in a surprise attack against brevetted Brigadier General [[George Crook]]'s force of 1,000 [[cavalry]] and [[infantry]], and allied 300 [[Crow Nation|Crow]] and [[Shoshone]] warriors in the [[Battle of the Rosebud]]. The battle, although not substantial in terms of human losses, delayed Crook's joining the [[U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment|7th Cavalry]] under [[George A. Custer]]. It contributed to Custer's subsequent defeat at the [[Battle of the Little Bighorn]].{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
A week later at 3:00 p.m. on June 25, 1876, Custer's 7th Cavalry attacked a large encampment of Cheyenne and Lakota bands along the Little Bighorn River, marking the beginning of his last battle. Crazy Horse's actions during the battle are unknown.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
The "last words" often attributed to Crazy Horse contain as the second to last sentence a terse implication of the guard. This widely published account directly contradicts the prior, witnessed statement made to the Post Commander.: |
|||
[[Lakota people|Hunkpapa warriors]] led by [[Chief Gall]] led the main body of the attack. Crazy Horse's tactical and leadership role in the battle remains ambiguous. While some historians think that Crazy Horse led a flanking assault, ensuring the death of Custer and his men, the only proven fact is that Crazy Horse was a major participant in the battle. His personal courage was attested to by several eye-witness Indian accounts. Water Man, one of only five [[Arapaho]] warriors who fought, said Crazy Horse "was the bravest man I ever saw. He rode closest to the soldiers, yelling to his warriors. All the soldiers were shooting at him, but he was never hit."<ref>[http://www.astonisher.com/archives/museum/waterman_little_big_horn.html#brave "Water Man's Story of the Battle: An Arapahoe's account of the Battle of the Little Bighorn," as told to Col. Tim McCoy in 1920, reprinted from ''The Custer Myth: A Source Book of Custerania,'' written and compiled by Colonel W.A. Graham, Harrisburg, PA: The Stackpole Co., 1953, pp. 109–111, accessed 30 December 2010]</ref> Sioux battle participant Little Soldier said, "The greatest fighter in the whole battle was Crazy Horse."<ref>[http://www.astonisher.com/archives/museum/little_soldier_big_horn.html Sioux warrior Little Soldier's account]</ref> Crazy Horse is said to have exhorted his warriors before the fight with the battle cry "Hóka-héy! Today is a good day to die!" but the quotation is inaccurately attributed. The earliest published reference is from 1881, in which the phrase is attributed to [[Low Dog]]. The English version is not an accurate translation from the Lakota language, "Hóka-héy!" Both phrases are used in context by Black Elk in [[Black Elk Speaks]].<ref>Judson Elliott Walker, ''Campaigns of General Custer in the North-west, and the Final Surrender of Sitting Bull'' (1881), ''Black Elk Speaks'' (1932).</ref> |
|||
{{cquote|My friend, I do not blame you for this. Had I listened to you this trouble would not have happened to me. I was not hostile to the white men. Sometimes my young men would attack the Indians who were their enemies and took their ponies. They did it in return. We had buffalo for food, and their hides for clothing and for our teepees. We preferred hunting to a life of idleness on the reservation, where we were driven against our will. At times we did not get enough to eat and we were not allowed to leave the reservation to hunt. We preferred our own way of living. We were no expense to the government. All we wanted was peace and to be left alone. Soldiers were sent out in the winter, they destroyed our villages. The "Long Hair" [Custer] came in the same way. They say we massacred him, but he would have done the same thing to us had we not defended ourselves and fought to the last. Our first impulse was to escape with our squaws and papooses, but we were so hemmed in that we had to fight. After that I went up on the Tongue River with a few of my people and lived in peace. But the government would not let me alone. Finally, I came back to the Red Cloud Agency. Yet, I was not allowed to remain quiet. I was tired of fighting. I went to the Spotted Tail Agency and asked that chief and his agent to let me live there in peace. I came here with the agent [Lee] to talk with the Big White Chief but was not given a chance. They tried to confine me. I tried to escape, and a soldier ran his bayonet into me. I have spoken.}} |
|||
On September 10, 1876, Captain [[Anson Mills]] and two battalions of the Third Cavalry captured a [[Miniconjou]] village of 36 tipis in the [[Battle of Slim Buttes]], South Dakota.<ref>Richard G. Hardoff (ed.). ''Lakota Recollections'', University of Nebraska Press, 1997, p. 30 n.16.</ref> Crazy Horse and his followers attempted to rescue the camp and its headman, [[American Horse (elder)|(Old Man) American Horse]], but they were unsuccessful. The soldiers killed American Horse and much of his family after they holed up in a cave for several hours.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
The identity of the soldier accused of being responsible for the bayoneting of Crazy Horse is also debatable. Only one eye witness account actually identifies the soldier as Private [[William Gentles]]. Historian [[Walter M. Camp]] circulated copies of this account to individuals who had been present who questioned the identity of the soldier and provided two additional names. To this day, the identification remains questionable.<ref> "Crazy Horse: Who Really Wielded the Bayonet that Killed The Oglala Leader?", ''Greasy Grass'' 12(May 1996): 2-10.</ref> |
|||
On January 8, 1877, Crazy Horse's warriors fought their last major battle at [[Battle of Wolf Mountain|Wolf Mountain]], against the [[US Cavalry]] in the [[Montana Territory]]. His people struggled through the winter, weakened by hunger and the long cold. Crazy Horse decided to surrender with his band to protect them, and went to [[Fort Robinson]] in Nebraska.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
==Last Sun Dance of 1877== |
|||
The Last Sun Dance of 1877 is significant in Lakota history as the [[Sun_Dance|Sun Dance]] held to honor Crazy Horse one year after the victory at the [[Battle of the Little Big Horn]], and to offer prayers for him in the trying times ahead. Crazy Horse attended the Sun Dance as the honored guest but did not take part in the dancing.<ref>Edward Kadlecek and Mabell Kadlecek, ''To Kill An Eagle: Indian Views on the Last Days of Crazy Horse'', 1981, p. 40.</ref> Five warrior cousins sacrificed blood and flesh for Crazy Horse at the Last Sun Dance of 1877. The five warrior cousins were three brothers, [[Flying Hawk]], [[Kicking Bear]] and Black Fox II, all sons of Chief Black Fox, also known as Great Kicking Bear, and two other cousins, Eagle Thunder and Walking Eagle.<ref>"Young Black Fox was the half brother of Kicking Bear and Flying Hawk. On September 4, 1877, Young Black Fox commanded Crazy Horse's warriors in his absence. The courage displayed on that occasion earned him the respect of both Indians and whites alike. In the same year, Young Black Fox sought sanctuary in Canada, but he was killed on his return to the United States in 1881 by Indians of an enemy tribe." See McCreight, ''Firewater and Forked Tongues: A Sioux Chief Interprets U.S. History'', (1947), p. 4.</ref> The five warrior cousins were braves considered vigorous battle men of distinction.<ref>Kadlecek, p. 143. Also, see Kingsley M. Bray, ''Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life'', 2006, p. 314.</ref> |
|||
==Surrender and death== |
|||
{{more citations needed section|date=August 2022}} |
|||
Crazy Horse and other northern [[Oglala Lakota|Oglala]] leaders arrived at the [[Red Cloud Agency]], located near [[Fort Robinson]], Nebraska, on May 5, 1877. Together with [[He Dog]], [[Little Big Man]], Iron Crow and others, they met in a solemn ceremony with First Lieutenant William P. Clark as the first step in their formal surrender.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
For the next four months, Crazy Horse resided in his village near the [[Red Cloud Agency]]. The attention that Crazy Horse received from the Army drew the jealousy of [[Red Cloud]] and [[Spotted Tail]], two Lakota who had long before come to the agencies and adopted the white ways. Rumors of Crazy Horse's desire to slip away and return to the old ways of life started to spread at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail agencies. In August 1877 officers at Camp Robinson received word that the [[Nez Perce (tribe)|Nez Perce]] of [[Chief Joseph]] had broken out of their reservation in [[Idaho]] and were fleeing north through Montana toward Canada. When asked by Lieutenant Clark to join the Army against the Nez Perce, Crazy Horse and the [[Miniconjou]] leader Touch the Clouds objected, saying that they had promised to remain at peace when they surrendered. According to one version of events, Crazy Horse finally agreed, saying that he would fight "till all the Nez Perce were killed." But his words were apparently misinterpreted by a half-Tahitian scout, [[Frank Grouard]], a person not to be confused with [[Fred Gerard]], another [[U.S. Cavalry]] scout during the summer of 1876. Grouard reported that Crazy Horse had said that he would "go north and fight until not a white man is left." When he was challenged over his interpretation, Grouard left the council.<ref>DeBarthe, Joe. [http://www.astonisher.com/archives/museum/frank_grouard_crazy_horse.html Account by Frank Grouard of Crazy Horse], ''Life and Adventures of Frank Grouard'', University of Oklahoma Press, 1958, pp. 53–54; at Astonisher.com.</ref> Another interpreter, William Garnett, was brought in but quickly noted the growing tension.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
With the growing trouble at the Red Cloud Agency, General [[George Crook]] was ordered to stop at Fort Robinson. A council of the Oglala leadership was called, then canceled, when Crook was incorrectly informed that Crazy Horse had said the previous evening that he intended to kill the general during the proceedings. Crook ordered Crazy Horse's arrest and then departed; leaving the post commander at Fort Robinson, Lieutenant Colonel [[Luther P. Bradley]], to carry out his order. Additional troops were brought in from Fort Laramie. On the morning of September 4, 1877, two columns moved against Crazy Horse's village, only to find that it had scattered during the night. Crazy Horse had fled to the nearby Spotted Tail Agency with his wife, who had become ill with [[tuberculosis]]. After meeting with military officials at [[Camp Sheridan (Nebraska)|Camp Sheridan]], the adjacent military post, Crazy Horse agreed to return to Fort Robinson with Lieutenant Jesse M. Lee, the Indian agent at Spotted Tail.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
On the morning of September 5, 1877, Crazy Horse and Lieutenant Lee, accompanied by Touch the Clouds as well as a number of Indian scouts, departed for Fort Robinson. Arriving that evening outside the adjutant's office, Lieutenant Lee was informed that he was to turn Crazy Horse over to the Officer of the Day. Lee protested and hurried to Bradley's quarters to debate the issue, but without success. Bradley had received orders that Crazy Horse was to be arrested and taken under the cover of darkness to Division Headquarters. Lee turned the Oglala war chief over to Captain James Kennington, in charge of the post guard, who accompanied Crazy Horse to the post guardhouse. Once inside, Crazy Horse struggled with the guard and Little Big Man and attempted to escape. Just outside the door, Crazy Horse was stabbed with a bayonet by one of the members of the guard. He was taken to the adjutant's office, where he was tended by the assistant post surgeon at the post, [[Valentine McGillycuddy]], and died late that night.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
{{rquote|right| Crazy Horse, even when dying, refused to lie on the white man's cot. He insisted on being placed on the floor. Armed soldiers stood by until he died. And when he breathed his last, Touch the Clouds, Crazy Horse's seven-foot-tall Miniconjou friend, pointed to the blanket that covered the chief's body and said, "This is the lodge of Crazy Horse."<ref name = "Hedges" />}} |
|||
The following morning, Crazy Horse's body was turned over to his elderly parents, who took it to Camp Sheridan and placed it on a burial scaffold. The following month, when the Spotted Tail Agency was moved to the Missouri River, Crazy Horse's parents moved the remains to an undisclosed location. There are at least four possible locations as noted on a state highway memorial near [[Wounded Knee, South Dakota]].<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20160312182710/http://crazyhorseburial.com/ Crazy Horse Memorial]</ref> His final resting place remains unknown. |
|||
===Controversy over his death=== |
|||
{{more citations needed section|date=August 2022}} |
|||
[[File:ftrob ch.JPG|thumb|300px|A monument dedicated to Crazy Horse's memory. Although Crazy Horse was never named a Chief, he was honored as a Shirt Wearer.]] |
|||
McGillycuddy, who treated Crazy Horse after he was stabbed, wrote that Crazy Horse "died about midnight." According to military records, he died before midnight, making it September 5, 1877. |
|||
[[John Gregory Bourke]]'s memoir of his service in the Indian wars, ''On the Border with Crook'', describes a different account of Crazy Horse's death. He based his account on an interview with Crazy Horse's rival, Little Big Man, who was present at Crazy Horse's arrest and fatal wounding. The interview took place over a year after Crazy Horse's death. Little Big Man said that, as Crazy Horse was being escorted to the guardhouse, he suddenly pulled two knives from under his blanket and held one in each hand. One knife was reportedly fashioned from an army bayonet. Little Big Man, standing behind him, seized Crazy Horse by both elbows, pulling his arms up behind him. As Crazy Horse struggled, Little Big Man lost his grip on one elbow, and Crazy Horse drove his own knife deep into his own lower back. The guard stabbed Crazy Horse with his bayonet in the back, who then fell and surrendered to the guards.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
When Bourke asked about the popular account of the guard bayoneting Crazy Horse first, Little Big Man said that the guard had thrust with his bayonet, but that Crazy Horse's struggles resulted in the guard's thrust missing entirely and lodging his bayonet into the frame of the guardhouse door. Little Big Man said that in the hours immediately following Crazy Horse's wounding, the camp commander had suggested the story of the guard being responsible to hide Little Big Man's role in the death of Crazy Horse and avoid any inter-clan reprisals.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} |
|||
Little Big Man's account is questionable; it is the only one of 17 eyewitness sources (from Lakota, US Army, and "[[mixed-blood]]" individuals) that fails to attribute Crazy Horse's death to a soldier at the guardhouse. The author [[Thomas Powers]] cites various witnesses who said Crazy Horse was fatally wounded when his back was pierced by a guard's bayonet.<ref>{{cite book|last=Powers|first=Thomas|author-link=Thomas Powers|title=The Killing of Crazy Horse|location=New York|publisher=Knopf|year=2010|isbn=978-0-375-41446-6|pages=415–416}}</ref> |
|||
The identity of the soldier responsible for the bayoneting of Crazy Horse is also debated. Only one eyewitness account actually identifies the soldier as Private [[William Gentles]]. Historian [[Walter Mason Camp|Walter M. Camp]] circulated copies of this account to individuals who had been present who questioned the identity of the soldier and provided two additional names. To this day, the identification remains questioned.<ref>"Crazy Horse: Who Really Wielded the Bayonet that Killed The Oglala Leader?", ''Greasy Grass'', May 12, 1996, pp. 2–10.</ref> |
|||
==Photograph controversy== |
==Photograph controversy== |
||
[[File:Crazy Horse 1877.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Alleged photo of Crazy Horse in 1877]] |
|||
Most sources question whether Crazy Horse was ever photographed. Dr. [[Valentine McGillycuddy]], surgeon at Camp Robinson at the time of Crazy Horse's death, doubted any photograph of the war leader had been taken. In 1908, historian Walter Camp wrote to the agent for the [[Pine Ridge Reservation]] inquiring about a portrait. "I have never seen a photo of Crazy Horse," Agent Brennan replied, "nor am I able to find any one among our Sioux here who remembers having seen a picture of him. Crazy Horse had left the hostiles but a short time before he was killed and its more then likely he never had a picture taken of himself." <ref>Brennan to Camp, undated (probably Dec. 1908), Camp Collection, Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument.</ref> |
|||
Most sources question whether Crazy Horse was ever photographed. [[Valentine McGillycuddy]] doubted any photograph of the war leader had been taken. In 1908, [[Walter Camp]] wrote to the agent for the [[Pine Ridge Reservation]] inquiring about a portrait. "I have never seen a photo of Crazy Horse," Agent Brennan replied, "nor am I able to find any one among our Sioux here who remembers having seen a picture of him. Crazy Horse had left the hostiles but a short time before he was killed and it's more than likely he never had a picture taken of himself."<ref>Brennan to Camp, undated (probably December 1908), ''Camp Collection'', [[Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument]].</ref> |
|||
In 1956, a small tintype portrait purportedly of Crazy Horse was published by J. W. Vaughn in his book ''With Crook at the Rosebud''. The photograph had belonged to the family of the |
In 1956, a small [[tintype]] portrait purportedly of Crazy Horse was published by J. W. Vaughn in his book ''With Crook at the Rosebud''. The photograph had belonged to the family of the scout [[Little Bat|Baptiste "Little Bat" Garnier]]. Two decades later, the portrait was published with further details about how the photograph was produced at Fort Robinson, though the editor of the book "remained unconvinced of the authenticity of the photograph."<ref>Friswold, Carroll. ''The Killing of Crazy Horse'', Glendale, CA: A. H. Clark Co., 1976; reprinted Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1988.</ref> |
||
In the late 1990s the original tintype was on exhibit at the Custer Battlefield Museum in [[Garryowen, Montana]]. The museum says that it is the only authentic portrait of Crazy Horse. Historians continue to dispute the identification.<ref>Buecker, Tom. "The Search for the Elusive (and Improbable) Photo of Famous Oglala Chief," ''Greasy Grass'' May 14, 1998.</ref><ref>Heriard, Jack. "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the photo of the famous Oglala?", ''Whispering Wind Magazine'', vol. 34 no. 3 (2004) pp. 16–23.</ref> |
|||
[[Image:Crazy Horse 1877.jpg|thumb|right|250px| Crazy Horse in 1877 (authenticity of photo is [[#Photograph_Controversy|highly questionable]])]] |
|||
Recently, the original tintype was acquired by the [http://www.custermuseum.org/crazyhorse.htm Custer Battlefield Museum] in Garryowen, Montana, who have promoted the image as the only authentic portrait of Crazy Horse. Historians however continue to refute the identification.<ref>Tom Buecker, "The Search for the Elusive (and Improbable) Photo of Famous Oglala Chief," Greasy Grass 14 (May 1998). Jack Heriard, "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the photo of the famous Oglala?", Whispering Wind Magazine, vol. 34 no. 3 (2004) pp. 16-23.</ref> |
|||
Experts argue that the tintype was taken a decade or two after 1877. The evidence includes the |
Experts argue that the tintype was taken a decade or two after 1877. The evidence includes the individual's attire, the length of the [[hair pipe]] breastplate, and the [[ascot tie]], which closely resembles the attire of [[Buffalo Bill's Wild West]] Indian performers active from 1883 to the early 1900s. Other experts point out that the gradient lighting in the photo indicates a skylight studio portrait, common in larger cities.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/02/19/crazy-horse-investigating-indian-countrys-most-controversial-photo-159301?page=0%2C1 |title=Is This Crazy Horse? Investigating Indian Country's Most Controversial Photo |first1=Angela |last1=Aleiss |work=[[Indian Country Today Media Network]] |date=February 19, 2015 |access-date=March 1, 2015 |archive-date=February 24, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150224013715/http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2015/02/19/crazy-horse-investigating-indian-countrys-most-controversial-photo-159301?page=0%2C1 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In addition, no other photograph with the same painted backdrop has been found. Several photographers passed through Fort Robinson and the Red Cloud Agency in 1877—including James H. Hamilton, [[Charles Howard (photographer)|Charles Howard]], [[David Rodocker]] and possibly [[Daniel S. Mitchell]]—but none used the backdrop that appears in the tintype. After the death of Crazy Horse, Private [[Charles Howard (photographer)|Charles Howard]] produced at least two images of the famed war leader's alleged scaffold grave, located near [[Camp Sheridan (Nebraska)|Camp Sheridan]], Nebraska.<ref>Dickson, Ephriam D. III. "Crazy Horse's Grave: A Photograph by Private Charles Howard, 1877," ''Little Big Horn Associates Newsletter'' vol. XL no. 1 (February 2006) pp. 4–5.</ref><ref>Dickson, Ephriam D. III. "Capturing the Lakota Spirit: Photographers at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail Agencies," ''Nebraska History'', vol. 88 no. 1 & 2 (Spring–Summer 2007) pp. 2–25.</ref> |
||
==Legacy== |
|||
William Bordeaux made [http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?pid=2007524&iid=1039539 a sketch of Crazy Horse] for his book, based on a description of him by both Bordeaux's father, Louis Bordeaux, and Crazy Horse's relative, Julia Clown (aka Iron Cedar Woman). Both Bordeaux and Clown said he was never photographed, and they knew him personally. |
|||
{{blockquote|Even the most basic outline of his life shows how great he was, because he remained himself from the moment of his birth to the moment he died; because [though] he may have surrendered, ... he was never defeated in battle; because, although he was killed, even the Army admitted he was never captured. His dislike of the oncoming civilization was prophetic. Unlike many people all over the world, when he met white men he was not diminished by the encounter.| [[Ian Frazier]], ''Great Plains'' <ref name = "Hedges">[http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/10107-chris-hedges-time-to-get-crazy A Lesson From Crazy Horse] by [[Chris Hedges]], ''Truthdig'', July 2, 2012</ref>}} |
|||
In the view of author [[Chris Hedges]], "there are few resistance figures in American history as noble as Crazy Horse," while adding that "his ferocity of spirit remains a guiding light for all who seek lives of defiance."<ref name = "Hedges" /> |
|||
==Crazy Horse Memorial== |
|||
[[Image:Crazy Horse model.jpg|thumb|300px|Foreground: Model of [[Crazy Horse Memorial]]. In background: the partly-carved largest sculpture in the world, honoring the great Native American leader.]] |
|||
Crazy Horse is currently being commemorated with the [[Crazy Horse Memorial]] in the [[Black Hills]] of [[South Dakota]] — a monument carved into a mountain, in the tradition of the [[Mount Rushmore National Memorial]] (on which [[Korczak Ziółkowski]] had worked). The sculpture was begun by [[Korczak Ziółkowski|Ziółkowski]] in 1948. When completed, it will be 641 feet (195 meters) wide and 563 feet (172 meters) high. Though still incomplete due to funding issues, the sculpture has been criticized by some Native American activists (most notably [[Russell Means]] ) as exploitive of Lakota culture and Crazy Horse's memory . |
|||
== |
===Memorials=== |
||
====Memorial sculpture==== |
|||
{{reflist}} |
|||
Crazy Horse is commemorated by the incomplete [[Crazy Horse Memorial]] in the [[Black Hills]] of [[South Dakota]], near the town of Berne. Like the nearby [[Mount Rushmore National Memorial]], it is a monument carved out of a mountainside. The sculpture was begun by Polish-American sculptor [[Korczak Ziółkowski]], who had worked under [[Gutzon Borglum]] on Mount Rushmore, in 1948. Plans call for the completed monument to be {{convert|641|ft}} wide and {{convert|563|ft}} high.<ref>Robb, De Wall, ''Carving a dream: Crazy Horse Memorial now in progress in the Black Hills of South Dakota'' (Crazy Horse: Korczak's Heritage: 1995), 97</ref> |
|||
[[File:CrazyHorse.jpg|thumb|left|The Crazy Horse Memorial in 2020]] |
|||
Ziółkowski was inspired to create the Crazy Horse Memorial after receiving a letter from native Lakota chief [[Henry Standing Bear]], who asked if Ziółkowski would be interested in creating a monument for the native North Americans to show that the Indian nations also have their heroes. The Native Americans consider Thunderhead Mountain, where the monument is being carved, to be sacred ground. Thunderhead Mountain is situated between [[Custer, South Dakota|Custer]] and [[Hill City, South Dakota|Hill City]]. Upon completion, the head of Crazy Horse will be the world's largest sculpture of the human head, measuring approximately {{convert|87|ft|m}} tall, more than 27 feet taller than the 60-foot faces of the U.S. Presidents depicted on Mount Rushmore, and the Crazy Horse Memorial as a whole will be the largest sculpture in the world.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} |
|||
The memorial is funded entirely by private donations, with no assistance from the U.S. federal government.<ref name="Nell Jessup Newton 1995">Nell Jessup Newton, "Memory And Misrepresentation: Representing Crazy Horse," ''Connecticut Law Review'' (1995): 1003.</ref> There is no target completion date at this time; however, in 1998, the face of Crazy Horse was completed and dedicated. The Crazy Horse Memorial Foundation regularly takes the lead in cultural, social and educational events, including the Volksmarch, the occasion on which the public is allowed into the actual monument grounds. The foundation generates most of its funds from visitor fees, with visitors numbering more than one million annually.<ref name="Nell Jessup Newton 1995"/> |
|||
The monument has been the subject of controversy. In Ziółkowski's vision, the sculpted likeness of Crazy Horse is dedicated to the spirit of Crazy Horse and all Native Americans. It is well known that Crazy Horse did not want to be photographed during his lifetime and is reportedly buried in an undisclosed location. While Lakota chief Henry Standing Bear believed in the sincerity of the motives, many Native Americans still oppose the intended meaning of the memorial. Opponents of the monument have likened it to pollution and desecration of the landscape and environment of the Black Hills, and of the ideals of Crazy Horse himself.<ref>Thomas Powers, ''The Killing of Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life'' (Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma, 2008), 457</ref> |
|||
====Other==== |
|||
Crazy Horse has two highways named after him, both called the [[Crazy Horse Memorial Highway]]. In South Dakota, the designation has been applied to a portion of [[U.S. Route 16|US 16]]/[[U.S. Route 385|US 385]] between Custer and Hill City, which passes by the Crazy Horse Memorial. In November 2010, [[Nebraska]] Governor [[Dave Heineman]] approved designating [[U.S. Highway 20 in Nebraska|US 20]] from [[Hay Springs, Nebraska|Hay Springs]] to [[Fort Robinson]] in honor of Crazy Horse, capping a year-long effort by citizens of [[Chadron, Nebraska|Chadron]]. The designation may extend east another 100 miles through [[Cherry County, Nebraska|Cherry County]] to [[Valentine, Nebraska|Valentine]].<ref>{{Cite news|title=Nebraska highway to be named for Lakota leader|url=http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/article_67ad4e6e-f264-11df-9d09-001cc4c002e0.html|date=November 17, 2010|first=Kerri|last=Rempp|work=[[Rapid City Journal]]|access-date=March 23, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
[[Crazy Horse School]] in [[Wanblee, South Dakota]] is named after him.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.crazyhorse.k12.sd.us/history|title=History|publisher=[[Crazy Horse School]]|accessdate=August 1, 2021}}</ref> |
|||
===In popular culture=== |
|||
* In the film ''[[Chief Crazy Horse (film)|Chief Crazy Horse]]'' (1955), directed by [[George Sherman]], Crazy Horse is played by [[Victor Mature]]. |
|||
* In the film ''[[Crazy Horse (1996 film)|Crazy Horse]]'' (1995), Crazy Horse is played by Native American actor [[Michael Greyeyes]]. |
|||
* The middle-grade novel ''In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse'' (2015) by [[Joseph M. Marshall III|Joseph Marshall, III]] tells the story of a young Lakota boy who learns about Crazy Horse from his grandfather. |
|||
* An ''Excelsior''-class [[Starfleet]] starship named after Crazy Horse appears in two episodes of ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]].''<ref>''Crazy Horse,'' USS Startrek.com http://www.startrek.com/database_article/crazy-horse-u-s-s</ref> |
|||
*Crazy Horse's life was the subject of a four-part series of the podcast ''History on Fire'' by historian [[Daniele Bolelli]]. |
|||
==References== |
|||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
||
* [[Stephen E. Ambrose|Ambrose, Stephen E.]] ''Crazy Horse and Custer: The Parallel Lives of Two American Warriors''. 1975. |
|||
* ''Crazy Horse, the Strange Man of the Oglalas, a biography''. [[Mari Sandoz]]. 1942. ISBN 0-8032-9211-2 |
|||
* Bray, Kingsley M. ''Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life''. 2006. {{ISBN|0-8061-3785-1}} |
|||
* ''Crazy Horse and Custer: The epic clash of two great warriors at the Little Bighorn''. [[Stephen E. Ambrose]]. 1975 |
|||
* ''The Killing of Chief Crazy Horse: Three Eyewitness Views by the Indian, Chief He Dog the Indian White, William Garnett the White Doctor, Valentine McGillycuddy'' |
* Clark, Robert. ''The Killing of Chief Crazy Horse: Three Eyewitness Views by the Indian, Chief He Dog the Indian White, William Garnett the White Doctor, Valentine McGillycuddy''. 1988. {{ISBN|0-8032-6330-9}} |
||
* [[Joseph M. Marshall III|Marshall, Joseph M. III.]] ''The Journey of Crazy Horse: A Lakota History''. 2004. |
|||
* ''Crazy Horse (Penguin Lives)''. [[Larry McMurtry]]. Puffin Books. 1999. ISBN 0-670-88234-8 |
|||
* Guttmacher, Peter and David W. Baird. Ed. ''Crazy Horse: Sioux War Chief''. New York Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 1994. 0–120. {{ISBN|0-7910-1712-5}} |
|||
* "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the Famous Oglala". ''Whispering Wind magazine'', Vol 34 # 3, 2004. A discussion on the improbability of the Garryowen photo being that of Crazy Horse (the same photo shown here). The clothing, the studio setting all date the photo 1890-1910. |
|||
* |
* [[Larry McMurtry|McMurtry, Larry]]. ''Crazy Horse (Penguin Lives)''. Puffin Books. 1999. {{ISBN|0-670-88234-8}} |
||
* Pinn, Lionel Kitpu'se. ''Greengrass Pipe Dancers''. 2000. {{ISBN|0-87961-250-9}} |
|||
* ''Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life''. [[Kingsley M. Bray]]. 2006. ISBN 0-8061-3785-1 |
|||
* [[Thomas Powers|Powers, Thomas]]. ''The Killing of Crazy Horse''. Random House, Inc. 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-375-41446-6}}. |
|||
*''The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree''. DVD [[William Matson and Mark Frethem]], Producers. Documentary based on over 100 hours of footage shot of family oral history detailed interviews and all Crazy Horse sites. Family had final approval on end product. Reelcontact.com, 2006. |
|||
* [[Mari Sandoz|Sandoz, Mari]]. ''Crazy Horse, the Strange Man of the Oglalas, a biography''. 1942. {{ISBN|0-8032-9211-2}} |
|||
*''Crazy Horse: Sioux War Chief''. Guttmacher, Peter. Ed. David W. Baird. New York Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 1994. 0-120. ISBN 0-7910-1712-5 |
|||
* "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the Famous Oglala?" ''Whispering Wind magazine'', Vol 34 #3, 2004. A discussion on the improbability of the Garryowen photo being that of Crazy Horse (the same photo shown here). The clothing, the studio setting all date the photo 1890–1910. |
|||
*''Greengrass Pipe Dancers''. [[Lionel Little Eagle Pinn]]. 2000. ISBN 0-87961-250-9 |
|||
* |
* ''The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree''. DVD. William Matson and Mark Frethem, producers. Documentary based on over 100 hours of footage shot of family oral history detailed interviews and all Crazy Horse sites. Family had final approval on end product. Reelcontact.com, 2006. |
||
* ''The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part Two: Defending the Homeland Prior to the 1868 Treaty''. DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers. Reel Contact Productions, 2007. |
|||
* Russell Freedman, ''The Life and Death of Crazy Horse''. Holiday House. 1996. {{ISBN|978-0-8234-1219-8}} |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{Commons category|Crazy Horse}} |
|||
*[http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/people/a_c/crazyhorse.htm PBS Biography] |
|||
{{wikiquote}} |
|||
*[http://www.indians.org/welker/crazyhor.htm A sympathetic but detailed account of his life and death] |
|||
*[http:// |
* [http://friendslittlebighorn.com/crazyhorsedeath.htm The Final Days and Death of Crazy Horse] |
||
* [https://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/people/a_c/crazyhorse.htm PBS Biography of Crazy Horse] |
|||
*[http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096411323 Indian Country Today: Trimble: What did Crazy Horse look like?] |
|||
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20041022074314/http://www.emayzine.com/lectures/CRAZYHOR.html A timeline of Crazy Horse's life] |
|||
*[http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?pid=2007524&iid=1039539&srchtype= Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscript Library of William Bordeaux's Crazy Horse sketch at Yale University] |
|||
* [http://www.fortlaramie.org/store/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=90&products_id=286 Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part 1 DVD] |
|||
*[http://www.astonisher.com/archives/museum/crazy_horse_surrender.html Complete Crazy Horse Surrender Ledger] |
|||
* {{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Crazy Horse|year=1900 |short=x |notaref=x}} |
|||
{{Wild West}} |
|||
[[Category:1877 deaths|Crazy Horse]] |
|||
{{Native Americans in the Black Hills}} |
|||
[[Category:Lakota tribe]] |
|||
{{Black Hills, South Dakota}} |
|||
[[Category:Murdered Native Americans]] |
|||
{{Portal bar|Biography|United States}} |
|||
[[Category:Native American leaders]] |
|||
{{Authority control}} |
|||
[[Category:People from South Dakota]] |
|||
[[Category:People of the Black Hills War]] |
|||
[[Category:Red Cloud's War]] |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crazy Horse}} |
|||
{{Link FA|sl}} |
|||
[[Category:Crazy Horse| ]] |
|||
[[Category:19th-century Native American leaders]] |
|||
[[ca:Cavall Boig]] |
|||
[[Category:1840s births]] |
|||
[[cs:Splašený kůň]] |
|||
[[ |
[[Category:1877 deaths]] |
||
[[Category:1877 murders in the United States]] |
|||
[[da:Crazy Horse]] |
|||
[[ |
[[Category:Lakota leaders]] |
||
[[Category:Murdered Native American people]] |
|||
[[es:Caballo Loco]] |
|||
[[Category:Native American people of the Indian Wars]] |
|||
[[fr:Tashunca-Uitco]] |
|||
[[Category:People of the Great Sioux War of 1876]] |
|||
[[ko:크레이지 호스]] |
|||
[[ |
[[Category:Red Cloud's War]] |
||
[[Category:Deaths by stabbing in the United States]] |
|||
[[io:Fola Kavalo]] |
|||
[[Category:People murdered in Nebraska]] |
|||
[[it:Cavallo Pazzo]] |
|||
[[Category:Battle of the Little Bighorn]] |
|||
[[nl:Crazy Horse (indianenleider)]] |
|||
[[ja:クレイジー・ホース]] |
|||
[[no:Crazy Horse (indianer)]] |
|||
[[pl:Szalony Koń]] |
|||
[[pt:Cavalo Louco]] |
|||
[[simple:Crazy Horse]] |
|||
[[sl:Nori konj]] |
|||
[[fi:Hullu Hevonen]] |
|||
[[sv:Crazy Horse]] |
|||
[[zh:疯马]] |
Latest revision as of 03:13, 20 December 2024
Crazy Horse | |
---|---|
Tȟašúŋke Witkó | |
Oglala leader | |
Personal details | |
Born | Čháŋ Óhaŋ (lit. ''Among the Trees'') c. 1840 near Rapid Creek, Black Hills, unorganized U.S. territory |
Died | September 5, 1877 Fort Robinson, Nebraska, U.S. | (aged 36–37)
Cause of death | Bayonet wound |
Spouses |
|
Relations |
|
Children | 1 |
Nicknames |
|
Military service | |
Battles/wars | |
Crazy Horse (Lakota: Tȟašúŋke Witkó[2] [tˣaˈʃʊ̃kɛ witˈkɔ], lit. 'His-Horse-Is-Crazy'; c. 1840 – September 5, 1877)[3] was a Lakota war leader of the Oglala band in the 19th century. He took up arms against the United States federal government to fight against encroachment by White American settlers on Native American territory and to preserve the traditional way of life of the Lakota people. His participation in several famous battles of the Black Hills War on the northern Great Plains, among them the Fetterman Fight in 1866, in which he acted as a decoy, and the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876, in which he led a war party to victory, earned him great respect from both his enemies and his own people.
In September 1877, four months after surrendering to U.S. troops under General George Crook, Crazy Horse was fatally wounded by a bayonet-wielding military guard while allegedly[4][5] resisting imprisonment at Camp Robinson in northwestern Nebraska. He was honored by the U.S. Postal Service in 1982 with a 13¢ Great Americans series postage stamp.
Early life
Sources differ on the precise year of Crazy Horse's birth, but most agree he was born between 1840 and 1845. According to Šúŋka Bloká (He Dog), he and Crazy Horse "were both born in the same year at the same season of the year," which census records and other interviews place in 1842.[6] Ptehé Wóptuȟ’a (Encouraging Bear), an Oglala medicine man and spiritual adviser to Crazy Horse, reported that Crazy Horse was born "in the year in which the band to which he belonged, the Oglala, stole One Hundred Horses, and in the fall of the year," a reference to the annual Lakota calendar or winter count.[7] Among the Oglala winter counts, the stealing of 100 horses is noted by Cloud Shield, and possibly by American Horse and Red Horse owner, as equivalent to the year 1840–41.[8] Oral history accounts from relatives on the Cheyenne River Reservation place his birth in the spring of 1840.[9] On the evening of his son's death, the elder Crazy Horse told Lieutenant H.R. Lemly that the year of birth was 1840.[10]
Immediate family
Crazy Horse was born to parents from two different bands of the Lakota division of the Sioux, his father being an Oglala and his mother a Miniconjou. His father, born in 1810, was also named Tȟašúŋke Witkó (Crazy Horse). Crazy Horse was named Čháŋ Óhaŋ (Among the Trees) at birth, meaning he was one with nature. His mother, Tȟašína Ȟlaȟlá Wiŋ (Rattling Blanket Woman, born 1814), gave him the nickname Pȟehíŋ Yuȟáȟa (Curly Son/Curly) or Žiží (Light Hair) as his light, curly hair resembled her own. She died when Crazy Horse was only four years old.[9]
One account said that after the son had reached maturity and shown his strength, his father gave him his name and took a new one, Waglúla (Worm). Another version of how the younger Crazy Horse acquired his name is that he took it after going through the haŋbléčheya ceremony. Crazy Horse's cousin (son of Hewáŋžiča, Lone Horn) was Maȟpíya Ičáȟtagya (Touch the Clouds). He saved Crazy Horse's life at least once and was with him when he died.[9]
Rattling Blanket Woman or Tȟašína Ȟlaȟlá Wiŋ (1814–1844) was the daughter of Black Buffalo and White Cow (also known as Iron Cane).[11] Her older siblings were Lone Horn (born 1790, died 1877) and Good Looking Woman (born 1810). Her younger sister was named Looks At It (born 1815), later given the name They Are Afraid of Her. The historian George Hyde wrote that Rattling Blanket Woman was Miniconjou and the sister of Spotted Tail, who became a Brulé head chief.[12] She may have been a member of either of the family of Lone Horn, one of the leaders of the Miniconjou. She was said to be beautiful and a fast runner.[13][14][11]
In 1844, while out hunting buffalo, Waglula helped defend a Lakota village under attack by the Crow. In gratitude he gave Waglula his two eldest daughters as wives: Iron Between Horns (age 18) and Kills Enemy (age 17). Corn's youngest daughter, Red Leggins, who was 15 at the time, requested to go with her sisters; all became Waglula's wives. When Waglula returned with the new wives, Rattling Blanket Woman, who had been unsuccessful in conceiving another child, thought she had lost favor with her husband and hanged herself.[9] Waglula went into mourning for four years. Rattling Blanket Woman's sister, Good Looking Woman, came to offer herself as a replacement wife and stayed on to raise Crazy Horse.[15] Other versions of the legend posit that she was grief-stricken by the deaths of those she knew;[11] that her husband accused her of running off with her brother-in-law;[16] or that she had an affair with a European-American man.[13]
According to Frederick Hoxie's Encyclopedia of North American Indians, Crazy Horse was the third in his male line to bear the name of Crazy Horse. The love of his life was Tȟatȟáŋkasápawiŋ (Black Buffalo Woman), whom he courted, but she married another man named Mní Níča (No Water). At one point, Crazy Horse persuaded Black Buffalo Woman to run away with him. No Water borrowed a pistol and ran after his wife. When he found her with Crazy Horse, he fired at him, injuring him in the face and leaving a noticeable scar. Crazy Horse was married two times, first to Tȟašinásápawiŋ (Black Shawl) and second to Nellie Larrabee (Laravie). Nellie Larrabee was given the task of spying on Crazy Horse for the military, so the marriage is suspect. Only Black Shawl bore him any children, a daughter named Kȟokípȟapiwiŋ (They Are Afraid of Her), who died at age three.
Visions
Crazy Horse lived in a Lakota camp in present-day Wyoming with his younger half-brother, Little Hawk, son of Iron Between Horns and Waglula.[9] Little Hawk was the nephew of his maternal step-grandfather, Long Face, and a cousin, High Horse.[9] In 1854, the camp was entered by Lieutenant John Lawrence Grattan and 29 other U.S. troopers, who intended to arrest a Miniconjou man for having stolen a cow. The cow had wandered into the camp, and after a short time, someone butchered it and passed the meat out among the people. Grattan went to Conquering Bear, saying the Sioux should arrest the guilty party and turn him over. Conquering Bear refused but offered a horse as compensation for the cow. Ending the discussion, when Grattan began walking back to his soldiers and Conquering Bear had turned to walk back, one of Grattan's soldiers fatally shot Conquering Bear in the back. The Lakota killed all 30 soldiers and a civilian interpreter in what was later called the Grattan massacre.[17]
After witnessing the death of Conquering Bear at the Grattan massacre, Crazy Horse began to get trance visions. Curly went out on a vision quest to seek guidance but without going through the traditional procedures first. In his vision, a warrior on his horse rode out of a lake and the horse seemed to float and dance throughout the vision. He wore simple clothing, no face paint, his hair down with just a feather in it, and a small brown stone behind his ear. Bullets and arrows flew around him as he charged forward, but neither he nor his horse was hit. A thunderstorm came over the warrior, and his people grabbed hold of his arms trying to hold him back. The warrior broke their hold and then lightning struck him, leaving a lightning symbol on his cheek, and white marks like hailstones appeared on his body. The warrior told Curly that as long he dressed modestly, his tribesmen did not touch him, and he did not take any scalps or war trophies, he would not be harmed in battle. As the vision ended, he heard a red-tailed hawk shrieking off in the distance. Curly's father later interpreted the vision and said that the warrior was going to be him. The lightning bolt on his cheek and the hailstones on his body were to become his war paint. Curly was to follow the warrior's role to dress modestly and to do as the warrior's prophecy said so he would be unharmed in battle. For the most part, the vision was true and Crazy Horse was rarely harmed in battle, except for when he was struck by an arrow after taking two enemy scalps. He was shot in the face by No Water when Little Big Man tried to hold Crazy Horse back to prevent a fight from breaking out, and he was held back by one of his tribesmen—according to some reports, Little Big Man himself—when he was stabbed by a bayonet the night he died.[18]
His father Waglula took him to what today is Sylvan Lake, South Dakota, where they both sat to do a hemblecha or vision quest.[17] A red-tailed hawk led them to their respective spots in the hills; as the trees are tall in the Black Hills, they could not always see where they were going. Crazy Horse sat between two humps at the top of a hill north and to the east of the lake.[17] Waglula sat south of Black Elk Peak but north of his son.
Crazy Horse's vision first took him to the South where, in Lakota spirituality, one goes upon death. He was brought back and was taken to the West in the direction of the wakiyans (thunder beings). He was given a medicine bundle to protect him for life. One of his animal protectors would be the white owl which, according to Lakota spirituality, would give extended life. He was also shown his "face paint" for battle, to consist of a yellow lightning bolt down the left side of his face, and white powder. He would wet this and put marks over his vulnerable areas; when dried, the marks looked like hailstones. His face paint was similar to that of his father, who used a red lightning strike down the right side of his face and three red hailstones on his forehead. Crazy Horse put no make-up on his forehead and did not wear a war bonnet. Lastly, he was given a sacred song that is still sung by the Oglala people today and he was told he would be a protector of his people.[17]
Black Elk, a contemporary and cousin of Crazy Horse, related the vision in Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux, from talks with John G. Neihardt:
When I was a man, my father told me something about that vision. Of course he did not know all of it; but he said that Crazy Horse dreamed and went into the world where there is nothing but the spirits of all things. That is the real world that is behind this one, and everything we see here is something like a shadow from that world. He was on his horse in that world, and the horse and himself on it and the trees and the grass and the stones and everything were made of spirit, and nothing was hard, and everything seemed to float. His horse was standing still there, and yet it danced around like a horse made only of shadow, and that is how he got his name, which does not mean that his horse was crazy or wild, but that in his vision it danced around in that queer way. It was this vision that gave him his great power, for when he went into a fight, he had only to think of that world to be in it again so that he could go through anything and not be hurt. Until he was killed at the Soldiers' Town on White River, he was wounded only twice, once by accident and both times by someone of his own people when he was not expecting trouble and was not thinking; never by an enemy.
Crazy Horse received a black stone from a medicine man named Horn Chips to protect his horse, a black-and-white pinto he named Inyan (rock or stone). He placed the stone behind the horse's ear so that the medicine from his vision quest and Horn Chips would combine—he and his horse would be one in battle.[17] The more accepted account, however, is that Horn Chips gave Crazy Horse a sacred stone that protected him from bullets.[19] Subsequently, Crazy Horse was never wounded by a bullet. In addition, "Horn Chips" is not the correct name of this medicine man, though it has become a repeated error since its first publication in 1982. His Lakota name was Woptura, and he was given the name "Chips" by the government and was referred to as Old Man Chips. Horn Chips was one of his sons, who was also known as Charles Chips.[20]
Personality
Crazy Horse was known to have a personality characterized by aloofness, shyness, modesty and lonesomeness. He was generous to the poor, the elderly, and children.[21] In Black Elk Speaks, Neihardt relays:
...he was a queer man and would go about the village without noticing people or saying anything. In his own teepee he would joke, and when he was on the warpath with a small party, he would joke to make his warriors feel good. But around the village, he hardly ever noticed anybody, except little children. All the Lakotas like to dance and sing, but he never joined a dance, and they say nobody ever heard him sing. But everybody liked him, and they would do anything he wanted or go anywhere he said.[22]
Crazy Horse was said to have "deplored alcohol and its effect on tribes."[23]
War leadership
Title of "Shirt Wearer"
Through the late 1850s and early 1860s, Crazy Horse's reputation as a warrior grew, as did his fame among the Lakota. The Lakota told accounts of him in their oral histories. His first kill was a Shoshone raider who had murdered a Lakota woman washing buffalo meat along the Powder River.[17] Crazy Horse fought in numerous battles between the Lakota and their traditional enemies, the Crow, Shoshone, Pawnee, Blackfeet, and Arikara, among the Plains tribes.
In 1864, after the Third Colorado Cavalry decimated Cheyenne and Arapaho in the Sand Creek Massacre, Oglala and Minneconjou bands allied with them against the U.S. military. Crazy Horse was present at the Battle of Platte Bridge and the Battle of Red Buttes in July 1865.[17] Because of his fighting ability and his generosity to the tribe, in 1865, Crazy Horse was named an Ogle Tanka Un ("Shirt Wearer", or war leader) by the tribe.[21]
Battle of the Hundred in the Hand (Fetterman Fight)
On December 21, 1866, Crazy Horse and six other warriors, both Lakota and Cheyenne, decoyed Capt. William Fetterman's 53 infantrymen and 27 cavalry troopers under Lt. Grummond into an ambush. They had been sent out from Fort Phil Kearny to follow up on an earlier attack on a wood train. Crazy Horse lured Fetterman's infantry up a hill. Grummond's cavalry followed the other six decoys along Peno Head Ridge and down toward Peno Creek, where several Cheyenne women taunted the soldiers. Meanwhile, Cheyenne leader Little Wolf and his warriors, who had been hiding on the opposite side of Peno Head Ridge, blocked the return route to the fort. The Lakota warriors swept over the hill and attacked the infantry. Additional Cheyenne and Lakota hiding in the buckbrush along Peno Creek effectively surrounded the soldiers. Seeing that they were surrounded, Grummond headed his cavalry back to Fetterman.
The combined warrior forces of nearly 1,000 killed all the US soldiers in what became known at the time to the white population as the Fetterman Massacre.[24] It was the Army's worst defeat on the Great Plains up to that time.[17] The Lakota and Cheyenne call it the Battle of the Hundred in the Hand.[25]
Wagon Box Fight
On August 2, 1867, Crazy Horse participated in the Wagon Box Fight, also near Fort Phil Kearny. Lakota forces numbering between 1000 and 2000 attacked a wood-cutting crew near the fort. Most of the soldiers fled to a circle of wagon boxes without wheels, using them for cover as they fired at the Lakota. The Lakota took substantial losses as the soldiers were firing new breech-loading rifles. These could fire ten times a minute compared to the old muzzle-loading rate of three times a minute. The Lakota charged after the soldiers fired the first time, expecting the delay of their older muskets before being able to fire again. The soldiers suffered only five killed and two wounded, while the Lakota suffered between 50 and 120 casualties. Many Lakota were buried in the hills surrounding Fort Phil Kearny in Wyoming.[17]
Controversy over Black Buffalo Woman
In the fall of 1870, Crazy Horse invited Black Buffalo Woman to accompany him on a buffalo hunt in the Slim Buttes area of present-day northwestern South Dakota.[26] She was the wife of No Water, who had a reputation for drinking too much.[9] It was the Lakota's custom to allow a woman to divorce her husband at any time. She did so by moving in with relatives or with another man, or by placing the husband's belongings outside their lodge. Although some compensation might be required to smooth over hurt feelings, the rejected husband was expected to accept his wife's decision. No Water was away from camp when Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman left for the buffalo hunt.
No Water tracked down Crazy Horse and Black Buffalo Woman in the Slim Buttes area. When he found them in a teepee, he called Crazy Horse's name from outside. When Crazy Horse answered, No Water stuck a pistol into the teepee and aimed for Crazy Horse. Touch the Clouds, Crazy Horse's first cousin and son of Lone Horn, was sitting in the teepee nearest the entry. He knocked the pistol upward as No Water fired, deflecting the bullet to Crazy Horse's upper jaw. No Water left, with Crazy Horse's relatives in hot pursuit. No Water ran his horse until it died and continued on foot until he reached the safety of his own village.[17]
Several elders convinced Crazy Horse and No Water that no more blood should be shed. As compensation for the shooting, No Water gave Crazy Horse three horses. Because Crazy Horse was with a married woman, he was stripped of his title as Shirt Wearer (leader).[9]
Black Shawl and Nellie Larrabee
Crazy Horse married Black Shawl, a member of the Oglala Lakota and a relative of Spotted Tail. The elders sent her to heal Crazy Horse after his altercation with No Water. Crazy Horse and Black Shawl Woman were married in 1871. Black Shawl gave birth to Crazy Horse's only child, a daughter named They Are Afraid Of Her, who died in 1873. Black Shawl outlived Crazy Horse. She died in 1927 during the influenza outbreaks of the 1920s.[27]
Red Cloud also arranged to send a young woman, Nellie Larrabee, to live in Crazy Horse's lodge. Interpreter William Garnett described Larrabee as "a half-blood, not of the best frontier variety, an invidious and evil woman".[28] Larrabee, also referred to as Chi-Chi and Brown Eyes Woman, was the daughter of a French trader and a Cheyenne woman. Garnett's first-hand account of Crazy Horse's surrender alludes to Larrabee as the "half blood woman" who caused Crazy Horse to fall into a "domestic trap which insensibly led him by gradual steps to his destruction."[29]
Great Sioux War of 1876–77
On June 17, 1876, Crazy Horse led a combined group of approximately 1,500 Lakota and Cheyenne in a surprise attack against brevetted Brigadier General George Crook's force of 1,000 cavalry and infantry, and allied 300 Crow and Shoshone warriors in the Battle of the Rosebud. The battle, although not substantial in terms of human losses, delayed Crook's joining the 7th Cavalry under George A. Custer. It contributed to Custer's subsequent defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.[citation needed]
A week later at 3:00 p.m. on June 25, 1876, Custer's 7th Cavalry attacked a large encampment of Cheyenne and Lakota bands along the Little Bighorn River, marking the beginning of his last battle. Crazy Horse's actions during the battle are unknown.[citation needed]
Hunkpapa warriors led by Chief Gall led the main body of the attack. Crazy Horse's tactical and leadership role in the battle remains ambiguous. While some historians think that Crazy Horse led a flanking assault, ensuring the death of Custer and his men, the only proven fact is that Crazy Horse was a major participant in the battle. His personal courage was attested to by several eye-witness Indian accounts. Water Man, one of only five Arapaho warriors who fought, said Crazy Horse "was the bravest man I ever saw. He rode closest to the soldiers, yelling to his warriors. All the soldiers were shooting at him, but he was never hit."[30] Sioux battle participant Little Soldier said, "The greatest fighter in the whole battle was Crazy Horse."[31] Crazy Horse is said to have exhorted his warriors before the fight with the battle cry "Hóka-héy! Today is a good day to die!" but the quotation is inaccurately attributed. The earliest published reference is from 1881, in which the phrase is attributed to Low Dog. The English version is not an accurate translation from the Lakota language, "Hóka-héy!" Both phrases are used in context by Black Elk in Black Elk Speaks.[32]
On September 10, 1876, Captain Anson Mills and two battalions of the Third Cavalry captured a Miniconjou village of 36 tipis in the Battle of Slim Buttes, South Dakota.[33] Crazy Horse and his followers attempted to rescue the camp and its headman, (Old Man) American Horse, but they were unsuccessful. The soldiers killed American Horse and much of his family after they holed up in a cave for several hours.[citation needed]
On January 8, 1877, Crazy Horse's warriors fought their last major battle at Wolf Mountain, against the US Cavalry in the Montana Territory. His people struggled through the winter, weakened by hunger and the long cold. Crazy Horse decided to surrender with his band to protect them, and went to Fort Robinson in Nebraska.[citation needed]
Last Sun Dance of 1877
The Last Sun Dance of 1877 is significant in Lakota history as the Sun Dance held to honor Crazy Horse one year after the victory at the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and to offer prayers for him in the trying times ahead. Crazy Horse attended the Sun Dance as the honored guest but did not take part in the dancing.[34] Five warrior cousins sacrificed blood and flesh for Crazy Horse at the Last Sun Dance of 1877. The five warrior cousins were three brothers, Flying Hawk, Kicking Bear and Black Fox II, all sons of Chief Black Fox, also known as Great Kicking Bear, and two other cousins, Eagle Thunder and Walking Eagle.[35] The five warrior cousins were braves considered vigorous battle men of distinction.[36]
Surrender and death
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2022) |
Crazy Horse and other northern Oglala leaders arrived at the Red Cloud Agency, located near Fort Robinson, Nebraska, on May 5, 1877. Together with He Dog, Little Big Man, Iron Crow and others, they met in a solemn ceremony with First Lieutenant William P. Clark as the first step in their formal surrender.[citation needed]
For the next four months, Crazy Horse resided in his village near the Red Cloud Agency. The attention that Crazy Horse received from the Army drew the jealousy of Red Cloud and Spotted Tail, two Lakota who had long before come to the agencies and adopted the white ways. Rumors of Crazy Horse's desire to slip away and return to the old ways of life started to spread at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail agencies. In August 1877 officers at Camp Robinson received word that the Nez Perce of Chief Joseph had broken out of their reservation in Idaho and were fleeing north through Montana toward Canada. When asked by Lieutenant Clark to join the Army against the Nez Perce, Crazy Horse and the Miniconjou leader Touch the Clouds objected, saying that they had promised to remain at peace when they surrendered. According to one version of events, Crazy Horse finally agreed, saying that he would fight "till all the Nez Perce were killed." But his words were apparently misinterpreted by a half-Tahitian scout, Frank Grouard, a person not to be confused with Fred Gerard, another U.S. Cavalry scout during the summer of 1876. Grouard reported that Crazy Horse had said that he would "go north and fight until not a white man is left." When he was challenged over his interpretation, Grouard left the council.[37] Another interpreter, William Garnett, was brought in but quickly noted the growing tension.[citation needed]
With the growing trouble at the Red Cloud Agency, General George Crook was ordered to stop at Fort Robinson. A council of the Oglala leadership was called, then canceled, when Crook was incorrectly informed that Crazy Horse had said the previous evening that he intended to kill the general during the proceedings. Crook ordered Crazy Horse's arrest and then departed; leaving the post commander at Fort Robinson, Lieutenant Colonel Luther P. Bradley, to carry out his order. Additional troops were brought in from Fort Laramie. On the morning of September 4, 1877, two columns moved against Crazy Horse's village, only to find that it had scattered during the night. Crazy Horse had fled to the nearby Spotted Tail Agency with his wife, who had become ill with tuberculosis. After meeting with military officials at Camp Sheridan, the adjacent military post, Crazy Horse agreed to return to Fort Robinson with Lieutenant Jesse M. Lee, the Indian agent at Spotted Tail.[citation needed]
On the morning of September 5, 1877, Crazy Horse and Lieutenant Lee, accompanied by Touch the Clouds as well as a number of Indian scouts, departed for Fort Robinson. Arriving that evening outside the adjutant's office, Lieutenant Lee was informed that he was to turn Crazy Horse over to the Officer of the Day. Lee protested and hurried to Bradley's quarters to debate the issue, but without success. Bradley had received orders that Crazy Horse was to be arrested and taken under the cover of darkness to Division Headquarters. Lee turned the Oglala war chief over to Captain James Kennington, in charge of the post guard, who accompanied Crazy Horse to the post guardhouse. Once inside, Crazy Horse struggled with the guard and Little Big Man and attempted to escape. Just outside the door, Crazy Horse was stabbed with a bayonet by one of the members of the guard. He was taken to the adjutant's office, where he was tended by the assistant post surgeon at the post, Valentine McGillycuddy, and died late that night.[citation needed]
Crazy Horse, even when dying, refused to lie on the white man's cot. He insisted on being placed on the floor. Armed soldiers stood by until he died. And when he breathed his last, Touch the Clouds, Crazy Horse's seven-foot-tall Miniconjou friend, pointed to the blanket that covered the chief's body and said, "This is the lodge of Crazy Horse."[38]
The following morning, Crazy Horse's body was turned over to his elderly parents, who took it to Camp Sheridan and placed it on a burial scaffold. The following month, when the Spotted Tail Agency was moved to the Missouri River, Crazy Horse's parents moved the remains to an undisclosed location. There are at least four possible locations as noted on a state highway memorial near Wounded Knee, South Dakota.[39] His final resting place remains unknown.
Controversy over his death
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2022) |
McGillycuddy, who treated Crazy Horse after he was stabbed, wrote that Crazy Horse "died about midnight." According to military records, he died before midnight, making it September 5, 1877.
John Gregory Bourke's memoir of his service in the Indian wars, On the Border with Crook, describes a different account of Crazy Horse's death. He based his account on an interview with Crazy Horse's rival, Little Big Man, who was present at Crazy Horse's arrest and fatal wounding. The interview took place over a year after Crazy Horse's death. Little Big Man said that, as Crazy Horse was being escorted to the guardhouse, he suddenly pulled two knives from under his blanket and held one in each hand. One knife was reportedly fashioned from an army bayonet. Little Big Man, standing behind him, seized Crazy Horse by both elbows, pulling his arms up behind him. As Crazy Horse struggled, Little Big Man lost his grip on one elbow, and Crazy Horse drove his own knife deep into his own lower back. The guard stabbed Crazy Horse with his bayonet in the back, who then fell and surrendered to the guards.[citation needed]
When Bourke asked about the popular account of the guard bayoneting Crazy Horse first, Little Big Man said that the guard had thrust with his bayonet, but that Crazy Horse's struggles resulted in the guard's thrust missing entirely and lodging his bayonet into the frame of the guardhouse door. Little Big Man said that in the hours immediately following Crazy Horse's wounding, the camp commander had suggested the story of the guard being responsible to hide Little Big Man's role in the death of Crazy Horse and avoid any inter-clan reprisals.[citation needed]
Little Big Man's account is questionable; it is the only one of 17 eyewitness sources (from Lakota, US Army, and "mixed-blood" individuals) that fails to attribute Crazy Horse's death to a soldier at the guardhouse. The author Thomas Powers cites various witnesses who said Crazy Horse was fatally wounded when his back was pierced by a guard's bayonet.[40]
The identity of the soldier responsible for the bayoneting of Crazy Horse is also debated. Only one eyewitness account actually identifies the soldier as Private William Gentles. Historian Walter M. Camp circulated copies of this account to individuals who had been present who questioned the identity of the soldier and provided two additional names. To this day, the identification remains questioned.[41]
Photograph controversy
Most sources question whether Crazy Horse was ever photographed. Valentine McGillycuddy doubted any photograph of the war leader had been taken. In 1908, Walter Camp wrote to the agent for the Pine Ridge Reservation inquiring about a portrait. "I have never seen a photo of Crazy Horse," Agent Brennan replied, "nor am I able to find any one among our Sioux here who remembers having seen a picture of him. Crazy Horse had left the hostiles but a short time before he was killed and it's more than likely he never had a picture taken of himself."[42]
In 1956, a small tintype portrait purportedly of Crazy Horse was published by J. W. Vaughn in his book With Crook at the Rosebud. The photograph had belonged to the family of the scout Baptiste "Little Bat" Garnier. Two decades later, the portrait was published with further details about how the photograph was produced at Fort Robinson, though the editor of the book "remained unconvinced of the authenticity of the photograph."[43]
In the late 1990s the original tintype was on exhibit at the Custer Battlefield Museum in Garryowen, Montana. The museum says that it is the only authentic portrait of Crazy Horse. Historians continue to dispute the identification.[44][45]
Experts argue that the tintype was taken a decade or two after 1877. The evidence includes the individual's attire, the length of the hair pipe breastplate, and the ascot tie, which closely resembles the attire of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Indian performers active from 1883 to the early 1900s. Other experts point out that the gradient lighting in the photo indicates a skylight studio portrait, common in larger cities.[46] In addition, no other photograph with the same painted backdrop has been found. Several photographers passed through Fort Robinson and the Red Cloud Agency in 1877—including James H. Hamilton, Charles Howard, David Rodocker and possibly Daniel S. Mitchell—but none used the backdrop that appears in the tintype. After the death of Crazy Horse, Private Charles Howard produced at least two images of the famed war leader's alleged scaffold grave, located near Camp Sheridan, Nebraska.[47][48]
Legacy
Even the most basic outline of his life shows how great he was, because he remained himself from the moment of his birth to the moment he died; because [though] he may have surrendered, ... he was never defeated in battle; because, although he was killed, even the Army admitted he was never captured. His dislike of the oncoming civilization was prophetic. Unlike many people all over the world, when he met white men he was not diminished by the encounter.
— Ian Frazier, Great Plains [38]
In the view of author Chris Hedges, "there are few resistance figures in American history as noble as Crazy Horse," while adding that "his ferocity of spirit remains a guiding light for all who seek lives of defiance."[38]
Memorials
Memorial sculpture
Crazy Horse is commemorated by the incomplete Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills of South Dakota, near the town of Berne. Like the nearby Mount Rushmore National Memorial, it is a monument carved out of a mountainside. The sculpture was begun by Polish-American sculptor Korczak Ziółkowski, who had worked under Gutzon Borglum on Mount Rushmore, in 1948. Plans call for the completed monument to be 641 feet (195 m) wide and 563 feet (172 m) high.[49]
Ziółkowski was inspired to create the Crazy Horse Memorial after receiving a letter from native Lakota chief Henry Standing Bear, who asked if Ziółkowski would be interested in creating a monument for the native North Americans to show that the Indian nations also have their heroes. The Native Americans consider Thunderhead Mountain, where the monument is being carved, to be sacred ground. Thunderhead Mountain is situated between Custer and Hill City. Upon completion, the head of Crazy Horse will be the world's largest sculpture of the human head, measuring approximately 87 feet (27 m) tall, more than 27 feet taller than the 60-foot faces of the U.S. Presidents depicted on Mount Rushmore, and the Crazy Horse Memorial as a whole will be the largest sculpture in the world.[citation needed]
The memorial is funded entirely by private donations, with no assistance from the U.S. federal government.[50] There is no target completion date at this time; however, in 1998, the face of Crazy Horse was completed and dedicated. The Crazy Horse Memorial Foundation regularly takes the lead in cultural, social and educational events, including the Volksmarch, the occasion on which the public is allowed into the actual monument grounds. The foundation generates most of its funds from visitor fees, with visitors numbering more than one million annually.[50]
The monument has been the subject of controversy. In Ziółkowski's vision, the sculpted likeness of Crazy Horse is dedicated to the spirit of Crazy Horse and all Native Americans. It is well known that Crazy Horse did not want to be photographed during his lifetime and is reportedly buried in an undisclosed location. While Lakota chief Henry Standing Bear believed in the sincerity of the motives, many Native Americans still oppose the intended meaning of the memorial. Opponents of the monument have likened it to pollution and desecration of the landscape and environment of the Black Hills, and of the ideals of Crazy Horse himself.[51]
Other
Crazy Horse has two highways named after him, both called the Crazy Horse Memorial Highway. In South Dakota, the designation has been applied to a portion of US 16/US 385 between Custer and Hill City, which passes by the Crazy Horse Memorial. In November 2010, Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman approved designating US 20 from Hay Springs to Fort Robinson in honor of Crazy Horse, capping a year-long effort by citizens of Chadron. The designation may extend east another 100 miles through Cherry County to Valentine.[52]
Crazy Horse School in Wanblee, South Dakota is named after him.[53]
In popular culture
- In the film Chief Crazy Horse (1955), directed by George Sherman, Crazy Horse is played by Victor Mature.
- In the film Crazy Horse (1995), Crazy Horse is played by Native American actor Michael Greyeyes.
- The middle-grade novel In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse (2015) by Joseph Marshall, III tells the story of a young Lakota boy who learns about Crazy Horse from his grandfather.
- An Excelsior-class Starfleet starship named after Crazy Horse appears in two episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation.[54]
- Crazy Horse's life was the subject of a four-part series of the podcast History on Fire by historian Daniele Bolelli.
References
- ^ History Detectives, PBS (2009)
- ^ Lakota Language Consortium (2008). New Lakota Dictionary
- ^ Bright, William (2004). Native American Place Names in the United States. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, p. 125
- ^ Salter Reynolds, Susan (December 26, 2010). "Book review: 'The Killing of Crazy Horse' by Thomas Powers". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
- ^ "George Kills in Sight Describes the Death of Indian Leader Crazy Horse". History Matters. George Mason University.
- ^ He Dog interview, July 7, 1930, in: Eleanor H. Hinman (ed.), "Oglala Sources on the Life of Crazy Horse," Nebraska History 57 (Spring 1976) p. 9.
- ^ Chips Interview, February 14, 1907, in: Richard E. Jensen (ed.), The Indian Interviews of Eli S. Ricker, 1903–1919 (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2005) p. 273.
- ^ Cloud Shield count, in: Garrick Mallery, Pictographs of the North American Indians, 4th Annual Report, Bureau of American Ethnology (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1886) p. 140. Richard G. Hardorff, "Stole-One-Hundred-Horses Winter: The Year the Oglala Crazy Horse was Born," Research Review, vol. 1 no. 1 (June 1987) pp. 44–47.
- ^ a b c d e f g h The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree, DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers.(Reelcontact.com Productions, 2006).
- ^ Lemly, "The Death of Crazy Horse," New York Sun, September 14, 1877.
- ^ a b c Rankin, Charles E. (1996). Legacy: New Perspectives on the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Montana Historical Society. ISBN 978-0-917298-42-4.
- ^ Hyde, George (1974). Spotted Tail's Folk: A History of the Brulé Sioux. Civilization of the American Indian. Vol. 57 (2 ed.). Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-8061-1380-7.
- ^ a b Bray, Kingsley M. (2011). Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-8376-3.
- ^ Bray, Kingsley M. "Notes on the Crazy Horse Genealogy, Part 1". Retrieved November 6, 2012.
- ^ "Crazy Horse, Ta-sunko-witko 1842–1877". NativeUSA.org. Archived from the original on November 14, 2011. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
- ^ Gonzalez, Mario; Cook-Lynn, Elizabeth (1999). The Politics of Hallowed Ground: Wounded Knee and the Struggle for Indian Sovereignty. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-06669-6.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part Two: Defending the Homeland Prior to the 1868 Treaty, DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers. Reelcontact.com Productions, 2007.
- ^ Sajna, Mike (2000). Crazy Horse; the Life Behind the Legend. New york: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 104–109.
- ^ Bray, Kingsley M. Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life. 2006, p. 67. University of Oklahoma Press.
- ^ Lyon, William S. Spirit Talkers: North American Indian Medicine Power, 2012, pp. 354–355.
- ^ a b Guttmacher, Peter (1994). North American Indians of Achievement; Crazy Horse: Sioux War Chief. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers. pp. 65–67.
- ^ Neihardt, John (2014). Black Elk Speaks; The Complete Edition. University of Nebraska Press. p. 54.
- ^ Jarvis, Brooke (September 16, 2019). "Who Speaks for Crazy Horse?". The New Yorker. Retrieved September 13, 2024.
- ^ "Fetterman Massacre". Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
- ^ Joseph M. Marshall III, The Journey of Crazy Horse, Penguin Books 2004.
- ^ Bray, Kingsley M. (2006). Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life. Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. pp. 144–146. ISBN 978-0806137858.
- ^ "The William Garnett Interview", in The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book, Ed. Richard G Hardoff, 1998. p. 43
- ^ Crazy Horse and Custer by Stephen Ambrose. "The Susan Bordeaux Bettelyoun Narrative". The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book, Ed. Richard G. Hardoff, 1998. p. 126
- ^ "The William Garnett Interview", The Surrender and Death of Crazy Horse: A Source Book, Ed. Richard G. Hardoff, 1998. p. 26
- ^ "Water Man's Story of the Battle: An Arapahoe's account of the Battle of the Little Bighorn," as told to Col. Tim McCoy in 1920, reprinted from The Custer Myth: A Source Book of Custerania, written and compiled by Colonel W.A. Graham, Harrisburg, PA: The Stackpole Co., 1953, pp. 109–111, accessed 30 December 2010
- ^ Sioux warrior Little Soldier's account
- ^ Judson Elliott Walker, Campaigns of General Custer in the North-west, and the Final Surrender of Sitting Bull (1881), Black Elk Speaks (1932).
- ^ Richard G. Hardoff (ed.). Lakota Recollections, University of Nebraska Press, 1997, p. 30 n.16.
- ^ Edward Kadlecek and Mabell Kadlecek, To Kill An Eagle: Indian Views on the Last Days of Crazy Horse, 1981, p. 40.
- ^ "Young Black Fox was the half brother of Kicking Bear and Flying Hawk. On September 4, 1877, Young Black Fox commanded Crazy Horse's warriors in his absence. The courage displayed on that occasion earned him the respect of both Indians and whites alike. In the same year, Young Black Fox sought sanctuary in Canada, but he was killed on his return to the United States in 1881 by Indians of an enemy tribe." See McCreight, Firewater and Forked Tongues: A Sioux Chief Interprets U.S. History, (1947), p. 4.
- ^ Kadlecek, p. 143. Also, see Kingsley M. Bray, Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life, 2006, p. 314.
- ^ DeBarthe, Joe. Account by Frank Grouard of Crazy Horse, Life and Adventures of Frank Grouard, University of Oklahoma Press, 1958, pp. 53–54; at Astonisher.com.
- ^ a b c A Lesson From Crazy Horse by Chris Hedges, Truthdig, July 2, 2012
- ^ Crazy Horse Memorial
- ^ Powers, Thomas (2010). The Killing of Crazy Horse. New York: Knopf. pp. 415–416. ISBN 978-0-375-41446-6.
- ^ "Crazy Horse: Who Really Wielded the Bayonet that Killed The Oglala Leader?", Greasy Grass, May 12, 1996, pp. 2–10.
- ^ Brennan to Camp, undated (probably December 1908), Camp Collection, Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument.
- ^ Friswold, Carroll. The Killing of Crazy Horse, Glendale, CA: A. H. Clark Co., 1976; reprinted Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1988.
- ^ Buecker, Tom. "The Search for the Elusive (and Improbable) Photo of Famous Oglala Chief," Greasy Grass May 14, 1998.
- ^ Heriard, Jack. "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the photo of the famous Oglala?", Whispering Wind Magazine, vol. 34 no. 3 (2004) pp. 16–23.
- ^ Aleiss, Angela (February 19, 2015). "Is This Crazy Horse? Investigating Indian Country's Most Controversial Photo". Indian Country Today Media Network. Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
- ^ Dickson, Ephriam D. III. "Crazy Horse's Grave: A Photograph by Private Charles Howard, 1877," Little Big Horn Associates Newsletter vol. XL no. 1 (February 2006) pp. 4–5.
- ^ Dickson, Ephriam D. III. "Capturing the Lakota Spirit: Photographers at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail Agencies," Nebraska History, vol. 88 no. 1 & 2 (Spring–Summer 2007) pp. 2–25.
- ^ Robb, De Wall, Carving a dream: Crazy Horse Memorial now in progress in the Black Hills of South Dakota (Crazy Horse: Korczak's Heritage: 1995), 97
- ^ a b Nell Jessup Newton, "Memory And Misrepresentation: Representing Crazy Horse," Connecticut Law Review (1995): 1003.
- ^ Thomas Powers, The Killing of Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life (Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma, 2008), 457
- ^ Rempp, Kerri (November 17, 2010). "Nebraska highway to be named for Lakota leader". Rapid City Journal. Retrieved March 23, 2012.
- ^ "History". Crazy Horse School. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- ^ Crazy Horse, USS Startrek.com http://www.startrek.com/database_article/crazy-horse-u-s-s
Further reading
- Ambrose, Stephen E. Crazy Horse and Custer: The Parallel Lives of Two American Warriors. 1975.
- Bray, Kingsley M. Crazy Horse: A Lakota Life. 2006. ISBN 0-8061-3785-1
- Clark, Robert. The Killing of Chief Crazy Horse: Three Eyewitness Views by the Indian, Chief He Dog the Indian White, William Garnett the White Doctor, Valentine McGillycuddy. 1988. ISBN 0-8032-6330-9
- Marshall, Joseph M. III. The Journey of Crazy Horse: A Lakota History. 2004.
- Guttmacher, Peter and David W. Baird. Ed. Crazy Horse: Sioux War Chief. New York Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 1994. 0–120. ISBN 0-7910-1712-5
- McMurtry, Larry. Crazy Horse (Penguin Lives). Puffin Books. 1999. ISBN 0-670-88234-8
- Pinn, Lionel Kitpu'se. Greengrass Pipe Dancers. 2000. ISBN 0-87961-250-9
- Powers, Thomas. The Killing of Crazy Horse. Random House, Inc. 2010. ISBN 978-0-375-41446-6.
- Sandoz, Mari. Crazy Horse, the Strange Man of the Oglalas, a biography. 1942. ISBN 0-8032-9211-2
- "Debating Crazy Horse: Is this the Famous Oglala?" Whispering Wind magazine, Vol 34 #3, 2004. A discussion on the improbability of the Garryowen photo being that of Crazy Horse (the same photo shown here). The clothing, the studio setting all date the photo 1890–1910.
- The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part One: Creation, Spirituality, and the Family Tree. DVD. William Matson and Mark Frethem, producers. Documentary based on over 100 hours of footage shot of family oral history detailed interviews and all Crazy Horse sites. Family had final approval on end product. Reelcontact.com, 2006.
- The Authorized Biography of Crazy Horse and His Family Part Two: Defending the Homeland Prior to the 1868 Treaty. DVD William Matson and Mark Frethem, Producers. Reel Contact Productions, 2007.
- Russell Freedman, The Life and Death of Crazy Horse. Holiday House. 1996. ISBN 978-0-8234-1219-8
External links
- Crazy Horse
- 19th-century Native American leaders
- 1840s births
- 1877 deaths
- 1877 murders in the United States
- Lakota leaders
- Murdered Native American people
- Native American people of the Indian Wars
- People of the Great Sioux War of 1876
- Red Cloud's War
- Deaths by stabbing in the United States
- People murdered in Nebraska
- Battle of the Little Bighorn