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The cinematic scenes help tell the story with Kul Wičaša Lakota actor Michael Spears playing the legendary figure. This ...
This four-part documentary uses re-enactments and expert interviews to put the Native American chief’s life into its ...
A lock of hair from legendary Lakota chief Sitting Bull's head had been stored for over a century in Washington's Smithsonian Institution at room temperature in a glass box. Now, Sitting Bull's ...
In 1896, he loaned the items to the Smithsonian Institution. Sitting Bull’s hair was stored in a glass box for decades and forgotten. Records for loaned items during that era weren’t kept as ...
The brand new history documentary Sitting Bull premieres on the History Channel Tuesday, May 27 at 9/8c. The first part of the documentary premieres May 27 and the second part will follow ...
Sitting Bull was the political and spiritual leader of the Sioux warriors who destroyed General George Armstrong Custer's force in the famous battle of Little Big Horn. Years later he joined ...
A circa 1883 photograph of Lakota leader Sitting Bull Public domain via Wikimedia Commons On December 15, 1890, Major James McLaughlin of the United States Indian Service wired a telegram back to ...
The History Channel’s upcoming two-part docuseries Sitting Bull traces the epic life of the legendary Lakota chief as he fights for his people’s freedom, unifies warring Native nations against ...
The following graphic and reliable account of the death of Sitting Bull and of the circumstances attending it will be read with interest by many readers. It was written by Major James McLaughlin ...
One of the refreshing things about “Sitting Bull,” the History Channel’s two-night, four-hour documentary on the Sioux leader, is its attempt at some kind of balance amid the hosannas.
The story of Sitting Bull is inextricably linked to that of his immense, untamed homeland, which he fought to protect and preserve. Sitting Bull was feared as a villain to white settlers ...