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Sitting Bull remains a durable symbol of stubborn resistance in the face of daunting odds. In Germany, he's also an energy drink and a bicycle seat - a name still associated with rebellion, but ...
Sitting Bull and the others gave up their weapons ... unfenced horse ranch in southwest North Dakota. The Marquis de Mores, a French nobleman and former cavalry officer, is best known for his ...
After Sitting Bull was fatally shot by Native American police in 1890, his body was in the custody of a temporary army doctor at the Fort Yates military base in North Dakota. The doctor obtained ...
where she saw Sitting Bull signing autographs and the Deadwood stage roar into town. The first female student admitted at what then was North Dakota Agricultural College, she was honored when a ...
After his death in 1890 in a shootout with Indian police at his home on the Grand River, Sitting Bull's body was buried at Fort Yates on the North Dakota side of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.
Ron His-Horse-Is-Thunder, the chairman of Standing Rock, did not return repeated calls from The Associated Press over several weeks. But Tim Mentz Sr., who is enrolled at Standing ...
After his death in 1890 in a shootout with Indian police at his home on the Grand River, Sitting Bull's body was buried at Fort Yates on the North Dakota side of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.
After his death in 1890 in a shootout with Indian police at his home on the Grand River, Sitting Bull's body was buried at Fort Yates on the North Dakota end of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.
December 12th, 1890 To Commanding Officer, Fort Yates, North Dakota:-- The Division commander has directed that you make it your especial duty to secure the person of Sitting Bull. Call on Indian ...
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