Big_Foot

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Big Foot



Big Foot

Nose and Touch the Clouds – each of whom were to become leaders of Minneconjou bands.[2] Big Foot became the Chief of his tribe at his father’s death at age 85 in 1875.



Chief Big Foot

Skillful diplomat

As Chief, Big Foot (Sitȟáŋka) was considered a great man of peace and was best known among his people for his political and diplomatic successes. He was skilled at settling quarrels between rival parties, killing bears, and was often in great demand among other Teton bands.



Alliance with Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse

During the 1870s, he allied himself with Sitting Bull and his cousin, Crazy Horse (together with Touch the Clouds) against the U.S. Army, but saw no major action during the war in 1876-77. The Miniconjou Lakota suffered during the Great Sioux War of 1876-77, after which they surrendered. Big Foot (Si Tȟaŋka) Big Foot or Sitȟáŋka (1824? - December 29, 1890), also known as Heȟáka Glešká or Spotted Elk[1], was the name of a chief of the Miniconjou Lakota Sioux. He was son of chief Lone Horn, and became a chief upon the death of his father. He was a highly renowned chief, with skills in war and negotiations. He was killed in 1890 in South Dakota, along with almost 300 other members of his tribe, by the United States Army in what came to be known as the Wounded Knee Massacre.



Reservation placement

Following the Sioux Wars, the government placed the Minneconjou on the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Big Foot encouraged his people to adapt to life on the reservation by developing sustainable agriculture and building schools for Lakota children. Big Foot was among the first American Indians to raise corn in accordance with government standards. Big Foot also advocated that his people take a peaceful attitude toward white settlers.



Early life

Big Foot (Sitȟáŋka) was born the son of Lakota Sioux Chief Lone Horn between 1820 and 1825 into the Minneconjou ("Planters by the River") subgroup of the Teton Lakota (Sioux). He had three brothers – Frog, Roman



Participation in "the Ghost Dance" movement

New religious movement

Due to poor living conditions on the reservations (made worse by fraud and corruption on the part of Indian agents charged, by law,



1



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

with supplying the tribe with basic necessities), the Lakota were in a state of great despair; by 1889, they began to look to a radical solution to their on-going problems. The radical solution came in the form of "the Ghost Dance" movement; it was a new religion initiated by a Paiute prophet named Wovoka. Big Foot and the Lakota were among the most enthusiastic believers in the Ghost Dance ceremony when it arrived among them in the spring of 1890. Although government-imposed reservation rules outlawed the practice of the religion, the movement swept like a wild fire through their camps, causing local Indian agents to react with alarm. Some agents successfully suppressed the dancers; others called for federal troops to restore order.



Big Foot



The corpse of Big Foot at Wounded Knee (1890)



The invitation of Chief Red Cloud

After Sitting Bull was killed on the Standing Rock reservation in 1890, his followers fled to seek refuge with his half-brother, Chief Big Foot. In December 1890, fearing arrest and government reprisals against his band, Big Foot headed south to the Pine Ridge Reservation at the invitation of Chief Red Cloud. Red Cloud hoped that his fellow chief could help make peace. Hoping to find safety there, having no intention of fighting, and flying a white flag, Big Foot contracted pneumonia on the journey to Pine Ridge.



The corpse of Big Foot at Wounded Knee (1890)



Death at Wounded Knee

Peaceful surrender

On December 29, the 7th Cavalry intercepted them. Ill with pneumonia, Big Foot surrendered peacefully. The cavalry took him and his band into custody and escorted them to a site near Wounded Knee Creek, where they were to set up camp. The campsite was already established with a store and several log houses.



The corpse of Big Foot at Wounded Knee (1890) known as the ‘Wounded Knee Massacre’ took place. Soldiers, under the command of Colonel Forsyth, entered the camp and demand that the Native Americans gave up their weaponry. In the confrontation that ensued, a firearm was discharged, believed to be by a deaf Indian named Black Coyote. A large gun fight ensued and the end result was the



Wounded Knee massacre

The night before the ‘Wounded Knee Massacre’, Colonel James Forsyth had arrived at Wounded Knee Creek, and had ordered his men to place four Hotchkiss cannons in position around the area in which the Indians had been forced to camp. Morning arrived, and on 29 December 1890, what has become



2



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

massacre of at least 150 Indian men, women and children, Big Foot being among one of the killed.



Big Foot

[2] Hardorff, Richard G. (2001). The Death of Crazy Horse: A Tragic Episode in Lakota History. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 48. ISBN 0803273258.



See also

• • • • • • • Lone Horn Ghost Dance Sitting Bull Crazy Horse Touch the Clouds Red Cloud Wounded Knee Massacre



External links

• Lakota Chief Big Foot from u-shistory.com • Lakota Chief Big Foot at Indigenouspeople.net • Lakota Chief Big Foot and the Ghost Dance



References

[1] "Big Dick" by the Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center, undated, retrieved on 2008-10-13.



Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Foot" Categories: 1820s births, 1890 deaths, Native American leaders, Native American people of the Indian Wars, Murdered Native Americans, Lakota tribe, Pine Ridge Campaign, Sioux people, Lakota, Lakota leaders This page was last modified on 19 May 2009, at 16:53 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers



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