|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo Galleries
Roadside Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter
Facebook Fanpage
Twittering

Contact Us
Please report
broken
links, missing pictures, or
other problems online by
clicking
HERE or send us
an
email. Thanks!
| |
| |
|
NATIVE
AMERICAN LEGENDS
Cheyenne - Warriors of the Great Plains |
|

|
|

Cheyenne
Warriors by Edward S. Curtis
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
|
A
nation is not conquered
Until the hearts of its women are on the ground.
Then it is finished,
No matter how brave its warriors
Or how strong their weapons.
--
Cheyenne Proverb
|
|
The
Cheyenne are a tribe of Algonkian linguistic stock who were
closely allied with the
Arapaho
and loosely allied with the
Lakota Sioux.
One of the most prominent of the Plains tribes, they primarily lived
and hunted on hills and prairies alongside the
Missouri
and Red Rivers. They call themselves "Tsitsistas," which
translates several different ways to "people alike,” "our
people,” "red talker,” or "people of a different speech.”
Originally, the
Cheyenne
resided in the great lakes area in Minnesota and on the Missouri
River. Here, they lived in earth-covered log houses in permanent
settlements, farmed, and made pottery. However, in the late
1600’s they began a westward migration, most likely due to competition
and conflict with the Ojibwe, Ree, and Mandan
Indians.
As they migrated southwestward, their lifestyle changed to that of
nomadic hunters and gatherers. In the 1700s, the
Cheyenne
acquired horses from the Spanish and became expert
buffalo
hunters, which was the life they were leading when
Lewis and Clark
encountered them in 1804 in the
Black Hills
of
South
Dakota.
Pushed farther into the plains by the hostile
Sioux,
the
Cheyenne,
in turn drove the
Kiowa
tribe further south.
In 1832, the
Cheyenne
split into two groups, one inhabiting the Platte River near the
Black Hills, and the other living near the Arkansas River further
south in
Colorado. However, bands of the tribe were known to have inhabited every state
in the
American West
at various times.
Those who had moved to the
Arkansas River found themselves in conflict with the
Kiowa, who, with the
Comanche, claimed the territory. Numerous battles took place
between them up until 1840, when an alliance was formed with the
Kiowa,
Apache, and
Comanche.
By the
Fort Laramie
Treat of 1851, the first
Cheyenne territory was established in northern
Colorado consisting of the present-day sites of Ft Collins, Denver
and
Colorado
Springs.
Their peace with the
Kiowa
enabled them to extend their incursions farther to the south, and in
1853 they made their first raid into Mexico with disastrous results
losing all but three of their men in a battle with the Mexicans.
|
|
|
As more and more white settlers pushed west in the 1850s, the
Cheyenne,
along with their new allies, began to rebel against the pioneers, as
well as the U.S. Army. When gold was discovered in
Colorado,
the 1851 treaty was broken and the territory that had been ceded to
them was taken away. The
Pike's Peak
Gold Rush in 1858 brought the tension to a boiling point.
Indians
soon began to attack wagon trains, mining camps and stagecoach lines,
a practice that increased during the Civil War, when the number of
soldiers in the area was greatly decreased. Soon, this led to
what became known as the
Colorado
War of 1864-1865.
This
bloody battle reached its worst point at what is known as the
Sand Creek
Massacre, which occurred on November 29, 1864.
|

Cheyenne
Indians,
1910, photo by Edward S. Curtis
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
|
While the
Indians
were encamped under the promised protection of Fort Lyon, Chivington led
his 700 troops to
Sand Creek and positioned them, along with their four howitzers,
around the
Indian village. Despite the repeated attempts to surrender, the
troops slaughtered more than 150
Native
American men,
women, and children.
After the brutal massacre, the defensive battles against the encroaching
white settlers and the U.S. Army increased. The
Cheyenne
people were then forced to move to a reservation in
Oklahoma,
where another skirmish occurred in the early morning hours of November 27,
1868. After a number of communication break-downs,
Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer led the 7th U.S. Cavalry in
an attack on a band of peaceful
Cheyenne. Known as the Battle of Washita River, the
Indians
were legally encamped on reservation land with
Chief Black Kettle, when more than 100
Cheyenne were killed, mostly women and children. Though
Chief
Black Kettle
had a white flag flying above his teepee, he was killed in the battle.
In the
Battle
of the
Little Bighorn
on June 25, 1876, the
Cheyenne,
along with the
Lakota Sioux
and a small band of
Arapaho,
annihilated
George Armstrong Custer and his troops near the
Little Bighorn River.
Known as the greatest
Native
American
victory, 262 soldiers died in the battle, while only an estimated 60
Indian warriors were killed.
Following the Battle of
the
Little Big Horn, the attempts to force the
Cheyenne on to
a reservation in
Indian
Territory
intensified. In 1877, almost 1,000 Northern
Cheyenne
were
forced to march to
Oklahoma, where they found dire conditions and many became ill and died from
malaria.
|
|

Cheyenne
Chief Dull
Knife, 1873
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
|
Though the
Cheyenne from
the south grudgingly accepted the
Oklahoma reservation, many of the
Northern
Cheyenne,
unable to adapt to the hot weather, fled back to the north led by Chiefs
Dull Knife
and Little Wolf in 1878. The U.S. Army attempted to round up the
"escapees,” killing many of them en route. The band soon split with
one group led by
Little Wolf who made it back to
Montana
safely. The other group followed
Dull Knife
and were captured and escorted to
Fort Robinson,
Nebraska. Sequestered, the
Indians
steadfastly refused orders to return to the
Oklahoma
reservation. In January, 1879
Dull Knife
and his followers escaped from
Fort
Robinson. Though more than thirty of the escapees were shot as they ran from the
fort, an estimated 50, including
Dull Knife survived to be reunited with the Northern
Cheyenne.
An Executive Order in
1884 created a reservation for the
Northern
Cheyenne in southeast
Montana.
Today the
Cheyenne
occupy two reservations, one at Tongue River,
Montana
where some 6,500 people reside. The other reservation, in
southwestern
Oklahoma,
is shared with their long time allies, the
Arapaho,
and consists of about 11,000 members.
|
|
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated March, 2010.
Also
See:
Cheyenne Dog
Soldiers
Chief Black
Kettle - A Peaceful Leader
Dull Knife -
Northern Cheyenne Chief
Little Wolf -
Courageous Leader
of the
Cheyennes
|
|

Chief Black
Kettle
|

View of
Little
Bighorn River from Last Stand Hill, courtesy
National Park Service.
|
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
South
Dakota Postcards - If you're
like we are and can't get enough of
South Dakota,
take a virtual tour through our many
South Dakota Postcards. Each one of these is unique and some of
them, we have only one available, so don't wait. To see them all,
click
HERE!
|
| |
|