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<h1> INDIAN HEROES AND GREAT CHIEFTAINS </h1>
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<h2> RED CLOUD </h2>
<p>EVERY age, every race, has its leaders and heroes. There were over sixty
distinct tribes of Indians on this continent, each of which boasted its
notable men. The names and deeds of some of these men will live in
American history, yet in the true sense they are unknown, because
misunderstood. I should like to present some of the greatest chiefs of
modern times in the light of the native character and ideals, believing
that the American people will gladly do them tardy justice.</p>
<p>It is matter of history that the Sioux nation, to which I belong, was
originally friendly to the Caucasian peoples which it met in
succession-first, to the south the Spaniards; then the French, on the
Mississippi River and along the Great Lakes; later the English, and
finally the Americans. This powerful tribe then roamed over the whole
extent of the Mississippi valley, between that river and the Rockies.
Their usages and government united the various bands more closely than was
the case with many of the neighboring tribes.</p>
<p>During the early part of the nineteenth century, chiefs such as Wabashaw,
Redwing, and Little Six among the eastern Sioux, Conquering Bear,
Man-Afraid-of-His-Horse, and Hump of the western bands, were the last of
the old type. After these, we have a coterie of new leaders, products of
the new conditions brought about by close contact with the conquering
race.</p>
<p>This distinction must be borne in mind—that while the early chiefs
were spokesmen and leaders in the simplest sense, possessing no real
authority, those who headed their tribes during the transition period were
more or less rulers and more or less politicians. It is a singular fact
that many of the "chiefs", well known as such to the American public, were
not chiefs at all according to the accepted usages of their tribesmen.
Their prominence was simply the result of an abnormal situation, in which
representatives of the United States Government made use of them for a
definite purpose. In a few cases, where a chief met with a violent death,
some ambitious man has taken advantage of the confusion to thrust himself
upon the tribe and, perhaps with outside help, has succeeded in usurping
the leadership.</p>
<p>Red Cloud was born about 1820 near the forks of the Platte River. He was
one of a family of nine children whose father, an able and respected
warrior, reared his son under the old Spartan regime. The young Red Cloud
is said to have been a fine horseman, able to swim across the Missouri and
Yellowstone rivers, of high bearing and unquestionable courage, yet
invariably gentle and courteous in everyday life. This last trait,
together with a singularly musical and agreeable voice, has always been
characteristic of the man.</p>
<p>When he was about six years old, his father gave him a spirited colt, and
said to him:</p>
<p>"My son, when you are able to sit quietly upon the back of this colt
without saddle or bridle, I shall be glad, for the boy who can win a wild
creature and learn to use it will as a man be able to win and rule men."</p>
<p>The little fellow, instead of going for advice and help to his
grandfather, as most Indian boys would have done, began quietly to
practice throwing the lariat. In a little while he was able to lasso the
colt. He was dragged off his feet at once, but hung on, and finally
managed to picket him near the teepee. When the big boys drove the herd of
ponies to water, he drove his colt with the rest. Presently the pony
became used to him and allowed himself to be handled. The boy began to
ride him bareback; he was thrown many times, but persisted until he could
ride without even a lariat, sitting with arms folded and guiding the
animal by the movements of his body. From that time on he told me that he
broke all his own ponies, and before long his father's as well.</p>
<p>The old men, his contemporaries, have often related to me how Red Cloud
was always successful in the hunt because his horses were so well broken.
At the age of nine, he began to ride his father's pack pony upon the
buffalo hunt. He was twelve years old, he told me, when he was first
permitted to take part in the chase, and found to his great mortification
that none of his arrows penetrated more than a few inches. Excited to
recklessness, he whipped his horse nearer the fleeing buffalo, and before
his father knew what he was about, he had seized one of the protruding
arrows and tried to push it deeper. The furious animal tossed his massive
head sidewise, and boy and horse were whirled into the air. Fortunately,
the boy was thrown on the farther side of his pony, which received the
full force of the second attack. The thundering hoofs of the stampeded
herd soon passed them by, but the wounded and maddened buffalo refused to
move, and some critical moments passed before Red Cloud's father succeeded
in attracting its attention so that the boy might spring to his feet and
run for his life.</p>
<p>I once asked Red Cloud if he could recall having ever been afraid, and in
reply he told me this story. He was about sixteen years old and had
already been once or twice upon the warpath, when one fall his people were
hunting in the Big Horn country, where they might expect trouble at any
moment with the hostile Crows or Shoshones. Red Cloud had followed a
single buffalo bull into the Bad Lands and was out of sight and hearing of
his companions. When he had brought down his game, he noted carefully
every feature of his surroundings so that he might at once detect anything
unusual, and tied his horse with a long lariat to the horn of the dead
bison, while skinning and cutting up the meat so as to pack it to camp.
Every few minutes he paused in his work to scrutinize the landscape, for
he had a feeling that danger was not far off.</p>
<p>Suddenly, almost over his head, as it seemed, he heard a tremendous war
whoop, and glancing sidewise, thought he beheld the charge of an
overwhelming number of warriors. He tried desperately to give the usual
undaunted war whoop in reply, but instead a yell of terror burst from his
lips, his legs gave way under him, and he fell in a heap. When he
realized, the next instant, that the war whoop was merely the sudden loud
whinnying of his own horse, and the charging army a band of fleeing elk,
he was so ashamed of himself that he never forgot the incident, although
up to that time he had never mentioned it. His subsequent career would
indicate that the lesson was well learned.</p>
<p>The future leader was still a very young man when he joined a war party
against the Utes. Having pushed eagerly forward on the trail, he found
himself far in advance of his companions as night came on, and at the same
time rain began to fall heavily. Among the scattered scrub pines, the lone
warrior found a natural cave, and after a hasty examination, he decided to
shelter there for the night.</p>
<p>Scarcely had he rolled himself in his blanket when he heard a slight
rustling at the entrance, as if some creature were preparing to share his
retreat. It was pitch dark. He could see nothing, but judged that it must
be either a man or a grizzly. There was not room to draw a bow. It must be
between knife and knife, or between knife and claws, he said to himself.</p>
<p>The intruder made no search but quietly lay down in the opposite corner of
the cave. Red Cloud remained perfectly still, scarcely breathing, his hand
upon his knife. Hour after hour he lay broad awake, while many thoughts
passed through his brain. Suddenly, without warning, he sneezed, and
instantly a strong man sprang to a sitting posture opposite. The first
gray of morning was creeping into their rocky den, and behold! a Ute
hunter sat before him.</p>
<p>Desperate as the situation appeared, it was not without a grim humor.
Neither could afford to take his eyes from the other's; the tension was
great, till at last a smile wavered over the expressionless face of the
Ute. Red Cloud answered the smile, and in that instant a treaty of peace
was born between them.</p>
<p>"Put your knife in its sheath. I shall do so also, and we will smoke
together," signed Red Cloud. The other assented gladly, and they ratified
thus the truce which assured to each a safe return to his friends. Having
finished their smoke, they shook hands and separated. Neither had given
the other any information. Red Cloud returned to his party and told his
story, adding that he had divulged nothing and had nothing to report. Some
were inclined to censure him for not fighting, but he was sustained by a
majority of the warriors, who commended his self-restraint. In a day or
two they discovered the main camp of the enemy and fought a remarkable
battle, in which Red Cloud especially distinguished himself</p>
<p>The Sioux were now entering upon the most stormy period of their history.
The old things were fast giving place to new. The young men, for the first
time engaging in serious and destructive warfare with the neighboring
tribes, armed with the deadly weapons furnished by the white man, began to
realize that they must soon enter upon a desperate struggle for their
ancestral hunting grounds. The old men had been innocently cultivating the
friendship of the stranger, saying among themselves, "Surely there is land
enough for all!"</p>
<p>Red Cloud was a modest and little known man of about twenty-eight years,
when General Harney called all the western bands of Sioux together at Fort
Laramie, Wyoming, for the purpose of securing an agreement and right of
way through their territory. The Ogallalas held aloof from this proposal,
but Bear Bull, an Ogallala chief, after having been plied with whisky,
undertook to dictate submission to the rest of the clan. Enraged by
failure, he fired upon a group of his own tribesmen, and Red Cloud's
father and brother fell dead. According to Indian custom, it fell to him
to avenge the deed. Calmly, without uttering a word, he faced old Bear
Bull and his son, who attempted to defend his father, and shot them both.
He did what he believed to be his duty, and the whole band sustained him.
Indeed, the tragedy gave the young man at once a certain standing, as one
who not only defended his people against enemies from without, but against
injustice and aggression within the tribe. From this time on he was a
recognized leader.</p>
<p>Man-Afraid-of-His-Horse, then head chief of the Ogallalas, took council
with Red Cloud in all important matters, and the young warrior rapidly
advanced in authority and influence. In 1854, when he was barely
thirty-five years old, the various bands were again encamped near Fort
Laramie. A Mormon emigrant train, moving westward, left a footsore cow
behind, and the young men killed her for food. The next day, to their
astonishment, an officer with thirty men appeared at the Indian camp and
demanded of old Conquering Bear that they be given up. The chief in vain
protested that it was all a mistake and offered to make reparation. It
would seem that either the officer was under the influence of liquor, or
else had a mind to bully the Indians, for he would accept neither
explanation nor payment, but demanded point-blank that the young men who
had killed the cow be delivered up to summary punishment. The old chief
refused to be intimidated and was shot dead on the spot. Not one soldier
ever reached the gate of Fort Laramie! Here Red Cloud led the young
Ogallalas, and so intense was the feeling that they even killed the
half-breed interpreter.</p>
<p>Curiously enough, there was no attempt at retaliation on the part of the
army, and no serious break until 1860, when the Sioux were involved in
troubles with the Cheyennes and Arapahoes. In 1862, a grave outbreak was
precipitated by the eastern Sioux in Minnesota under Little Crow, in which
the western bands took no part. Yet this event ushered in a new period for
their race. The surveyors of the Union Pacific were laying out the
proposed road through the heart of the southern buffalo country, the
rendezvous of Ogallalas, Brules, Arapahoes, Comanches, and Pawnees, who
followed the buffalo as a means of livelihood. To be sure, most of these
tribes were at war with one another, yet during the summer months they met
often to proclaim a truce and hold joint councils and festivities, which
were now largely turned into discussions of the common enemy. It became
evident, however, that some of the smaller and weaker tribes were inclined
to welcome the new order of things, recognizing that it was the policy of
the government to put an end to tribal warfare.</p>
<p>Red Cloud's position was uncompromisingly against submission. He made some
noted speeches in this line, one of which was repeated to me by an old man
who had heard and remembered it with the remarkable verbal memory of an
Indian.</p>
<p>"Friends," said Red Cloud, "it has been our misfortune to welcome the
white man. We have been deceived. He brought with him some shining things
that pleased our eyes; he brought weapons more effective than our own:
above all, he brought the spirit water that makes one forget for a time
old age, weakness, and sorrow. But I wish to say to you that if you would
possess these things for yourselves, you must begin anew and put away the
wisdom of your fathers. You must lay up food, and forget the hungry. When
your house is built, your storeroom filled, then look around for a
neighbor whom you can take at a disadvantage, and seize all that he has!
Give away only what you do not want; or rather, do not part with any of
your possessions unless in exchange for another's.</p>
<p>"My countrymen, shall the glittering trinkets of this rich man, his
deceitful drink that overcomes the mind, shall these things tempt us to
give up our homes, our hunting grounds, and the honorable teaching of our
old men? Shall we permit ourselves to be driven to and fro—to be
herded like the cattle of the white man?"</p>
<p>His next speech that has been remembered was made in 1866, just before the
attack on Fort Phil Kearny. The tension of feeling against the invaders
had now reached its height. There was no dissenting voice in the council
upon the Powder River, when it was decided to oppose to the uttermost the
evident purpose of the government. Red Cloud was not altogether ignorant
of the numerical strength and the resourcefulness of the white man, but he
was determined to face any odds rather than submit.</p>
<p>"Hear ye, Dakotas!" he exclaimed. "When the Great Father at Washington
sent us his chief soldier [General Harney] to ask for a path through our
hunting grounds, a way for his iron road to the mountains and the western
sea, we were told that they wished merely to pass through our country, not
to tarry among us, but to seek for gold in the far west. Our old chiefs
thought to show their friendship and good will, when they allowed this
dangerous snake in our midst. They promised to protect the wayfarers.</p>
<p>"Yet before the ashes of the council fire are cold, the Great Father is
building his forts among us. You have heard the sound of the white
soldier's ax upon the Little Piney. His presence here is an insult and a
threat. It is an insult to the spirits of our ancestors. Are we then to
give up their sacred graves to be plowed for corn? Dakotas, I am for war!"</p>
<p>In less than a week after this speech, the Sioux advanced upon Fort Phil
Kearny, the new sentinel that had just taken her place upon the farthest
frontier, guarding the Oregon Trail. Every detail of the attack had been
planned with care, though not without heated discussion, and nearly every
well-known Sioux chief had agreed in striking the blow. The brilliant
young war leader, Crazy Horse, was appointed to lead the charge. His
lieutenants were Sword, Hump, and Dull Knife, with Little Chief of the
Cheyennes, while the older men acted as councilors. Their success was
instantaneous. In less than half an hour, they had cut down nearly a
hundred men under Captain Fetterman, whom they drew out of the fort by a
ruse and then annihilated.</p>
<p>Instead of sending troops to punish, the government sent a commission to
treat with the Sioux. The result was the famous treaty of 1868, which Red
Cloud was the last to sign, having refused to do so until all of the forts
within their territory should be vacated. All of his demands were acceded
to, the new road abandoned, the garrisons withdrawn, and in the new treaty
it was distinctly stated that the Black Hills and the Big Horn were Indian
country, set apart for their perpetual occupancy, and that no white man
should enter that region without the consent of the Sioux.</p>
<p>Scarcely was this treaty signed, however, when gold was discovered in the
Black Hills, and the popular cry was: "Remove the Indians!" This was
easier said than done. That very territory had just been solemnly
guaranteed to them forever: yet how stem the irresistible rush for gold?
The government, at first, entered some small protest, just enough to "save
its face" as the saying is; but there was no serious attempt to prevent
the wholesale violation of the treaty. It was this state of affairs that
led to the last great speech made by Red Cloud, at a gathering upon the
Little Rosebud River. It is brief, and touches upon the hopelessness of
their future as a race. He seems at about this time to have reached the
conclusion that resistance could not last much longer; in fact, the
greater part of the Sioux nation was already under government control.</p>
<p>"We are told," said he, "that Spotted Tail has consented to be the
Beggars' Chief. Those Indians who go over to the white man can be nothing
but beggars, for he respects only riches, and how can an Indian be a rich
man? He cannot without ceasing to be an Indian. As for me, I have listened
patiently to the promises of the Great Father, but his memory is short. I
am now done with him. This is all I have to say."</p>
<p>The wilder bands separated soon after this council, to follow the drift of
the buffalo, some in the vicinity of the Black Hills and others in the Big
Horn region. Small war parties came down from time to time upon stray
travelers, who received no mercy at their hands, or made dashes upon
neighboring forts. Red Cloud claimed the right to guard and hold by force,
if need be, all this territory which had been conceded to his people by
the treaty of 1868. The land became a very nest of outlawry. Aside from
organized parties of prospectors, there were bands of white horse thieves
and desperadoes who took advantage of the situation to plunder immigrants
and Indians alike.</p>
<p>An attempt was made by means of military camps to establish control and
force all the Indians upon reservations, and another commission was sent
to negotiate their removal to Indian Territory, but met with an absolute
refusal. After much guerrilla warfare, an important military campaign
against the Sioux was set on foot in 1876, ending in Custer's signal
defeat upon the Little Big Horn.</p>
<p>In this notable battle, Red Cloud did not participate in person, nor in
the earlier one with Crook upon the Little Rosebud, but he had a son in
both fights. He was now a councilor rather than a warrior, but his young
men were constantly in the field, while Spotted Tail had definitely
surrendered and was in close touch with representatives of the government.</p>
<p>But the inevitable end was near. One morning in the fall of 1876 Red Cloud
was surrounded by United States troops under the command of Colonel
McKenzie, who disarmed his people and brought them into Fort Robinson,
Nebraska. Thence they were removed to the Pine Ridge agency, where he
lived for more than thirty years as a "reservation Indian." In order to
humiliate him further, government authorities proclaimed the more
tractable Spotted Tail head chief of the Sioux. Of course, Red Cloud's own
people never recognized any other chief.</p>
<p>In 1880 he appealed to Professor Marsh, of Yale, head of a scientific
expedition to the Bad Lands, charging certain frauds at the agency and
apparently proving his case; at any rate the matter was considered worthy
of official investigation. In 1890-1891, during the "Ghost Dance craze"
and the difficulties that followed, he was suspected of collusion with the
hostiles, but he did not join them openly, and nothing could be proved
against him. He was already an old man, and became almost entirely blind
before his death in 1909 in his ninetieth year.</p>
<p>His private life was exemplary. He was faithful to one wife all his days,
and was a devoted father to his children. He was ambitious for his only
son, known as Jack Red Cloud, and much desired him to be a great warrior.
He started him on the warpath at the age of fifteen, not then realizing
that the days of Indian warfare were well-nigh at an end.</p>
<p>Among latter-day chiefs, Red Cloud was notable as a quiet man, simple and
direct in speech, courageous in action, an ardent lover of his country,
and possessed in a marked degree of the manly qualities characteristic of
the American Indian in his best days.</p>
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