|
Wounded
Knee
Unincorporated
community in South Dakota, on the Pine Ridge Indian
Reservation.
Wounded
Knee was the site of two conflicts between the local
Native American population and the United States government.
In the late 1880s the Sioux
began practicing a religion taught by Wovoka,
a Paiute prophet who promised that performing the
ritual ghost
dance would result in the return of native lands,
the rise of dead ancestors, the disappearance of the
whites, and a future of eternal peace and prosperity.
Nearby white settlers, frightened by the rituals,
called for federal intervention. The U.S. Army believed
Chief Sitting Bull to
be the instigator of an impending rebellion, and he
was arrested in December 1890. As he was being led
away over the objections of his supporters, a gunfight
erupted. Thirteen people, including Sitting Bull,
were killed.
His
followers then fled, some to the camp of Chief Big
Foot. The 7th Cavalry pursued the Sioux to an encampment
near Wounded Knee Creek. On December 29, 1890, a shot
was fired within the camp and the army began shooting.
Accounts of the precise events and the death toll
vary considerably but it is likely that the soldiers
killed between 150 and 370 Sioux men, women, and children,
the great majority of whom were unarmed bystanders.
Thirty-one U.S. soldiers were killed in action, many
of them from fire by their own troops.
The
second incident started on February 27, 1973, when
armed supporters of the American Indian Movement (AIM)
seized and held Wounded Knee, demanding a U.S. Senate
investigation of Native American problems. Federal
law enforcement officers were sent to the site, and
during gunfire exchanges, two Native Americans were
killed and several people on both sides were injured.
The siege ended 70 days later, when the Native Americans
were promised that negotiations concerning their grievances
would be considered. After one meeting with White
House representatives and a promise of a second one,
the Native Americans were informed that their treaty
grievances should be referred to Congress. No further
meetings took place.

UPI/THE
BETTMANN ARCHIVE |
The
practice of a Native American religious ritual
called the Ghost Dance on the Sioux reservation
led to the intervention of federal troops
and the arrest of Sioux leader Sitting Bull
in December 1890. Gunfire erupted and Sitting
Bull was shot along with a number of his supporters.
The U.S. Cavalry later killed several hundred
Sioux men, women, and children who had fled
to a camp along Wounded Knee Creek.
|
"Wounded
Knee," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
|