summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorwww-data <www-data@mail.pglaf.org>2026-04-09 23:59:49 -0700
committerwww-data <www-data@mail.pglaf.org>2026-04-09 23:59:49 -0700
commit75f9119eb7326adcf6c8aacd0d4b86dd9e17a519 (patch)
tree713e03e7610917017590651c11b018ae0f051215
Initial commit of ebook 78411 filesHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--78411-0.txt9453
-rw-r--r--78411-h/78411-h.htm12613
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/arrows.jpgbin0 -> 1169 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/colophon.jpgbin0 -> 27413 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 193290 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_028fp.jpgbin0 -> 195992 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_076fp.jpgbin0 -> 180884 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_112fp.jpgbin0 -> 150510 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_112fpb.jpgbin0 -> 104830 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_220fp.jpgbin0 -> 221719 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_240fp.jpgbin0 -> 116395 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_296fp.jpgbin0 -> 117438 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_360fp.jpgbin0 -> 187918 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_387.jpgbin0 -> 203472 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_389.jpgbin0 -> 137661 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpgbin0 -> 145861 bytes
-rw-r--r--78411-h/images/links.jpgbin0 -> 1963 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
20 files changed, 22082 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/78411-0.txt b/78411-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7f087ec
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9453 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78411 ***
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Note: Italicized text is surrounded by underscores:
+_italics_.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: WOODEN LEG, A WARRIOR WHO FOUGHT CUSTER, HOLDING A
+RIFLE CAPTURED BY A CHEYENNE COMPANION WARRIOR AT CUSTER’S LAST
+BATTLE]
+
+
+
+
+ A WARRIOR WHO
+ FOUGHT CUSTER
+
+ Interpreted by
+
+ THOMAS B. MARQUIS
+
+ _Illustrated_
+
+ [Illustration: (Colophon)]
+
+ MINNEAPOLIS
+ THE MIDWEST COMPANY
+ MCMXXXI
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1931, BY
+ THE MIDWEST COMPANY
+
+ Printed in the United States
+
+
+
+
+“I OFTEN THINK THAT IF I WERE AN INDIAN I WOULD GREATLY PREFER TO
+CAST MY LOT AMONG THOSE OF MY PEOPLE WHO ADHERED TO THE FREE OPEN
+PLAINS RATHER THAN SUBMIT TO THE CONFINED LIMITS OF A RESERVATION,
+THERE TO BE THE RECIPIENT OF THE BLESSED BENEFITS OF CIVILIZATION,
+WITH ITS VICES THROWN IN WITHOUT STINT OR MEASURE.”
+
+ --_From page 18 of General Custer’s book_, MY LIFE ON THE PLAINS,
+ _published 1876, a few months before his death_.
+
+
+
+
+_The Author’s Statement._
+
+
+The Indian story of Custer’s last battle has never been told, except
+in a few fragmentary interviews that have been distorted into
+extravagant fiction. There were no white men survivors of that most
+thrilling of American frontier tragedies, so the veteran hostile red
+warriors have exclusive possession of the key to the mystery as to
+how it happened.
+
+The present author, sixty-one years old and a resident of Montana
+throughout the past forty-one years, decided in 1922 to apply himself
+at probing into this matter. He served a few months as agency
+physician for the Northern Cheyennes, a tribe allied with the Sioux
+in the annihilation of Custer. Since then, the investigator has been
+in close association with these Indians. He has learned the old-time
+plains Indian sign-talk to a degree enabling him to dispense with
+interpreters, except in rare instances. He has held out continual
+invitation for Custer-battle veteran warriors to visit his home,
+partake of his food and smoke his tobacco. After a long siege, they
+began to come. Later, they began to talk, but only a little. Still
+later, after they had found out that this ingratiating white man
+was not scheming to entrap them into fatal admissions, they told the
+whole story. Not only did they answer all questions, but they added
+spontaneous information concerning every detail of the battle and of
+the entire hostile Indian movements during that eventful summer of
+1876.
+
+Sixteen hundred of these Montana Cheyennes were with the Sioux horde
+in the battle camps beside the Little Bighorn river. All of the
+Sioux were settled soon afterward in the Dakotas, and they stayed
+there. The Cheyennes were located on a reservation in the heart of
+the region where had been the conflicts. During the subsequent more
+than fifty years they have viewed over and over the central historic
+spots. Thus they have kept their memories fresh or have kept each
+other prompted into true recollections. This advantageous condition
+has rendered them the best of first-hand authorities. Up to late
+1930, seventeen Cheyennes who were adult warriors at Custer battle
+were yet alive.
+
+Wooden Leg became the author’s favorite narrator. It seemed that his
+lifetime biography should surround his special battle story, so that
+readers might learn what kind of people were the hostile Indians
+of that day. Hour after hour, on scores of different occasions in
+recent years, the elderly white man doctor has sat enthralled by
+the well-connected and vivid sign-talk recountings of this companion
+so congenial. Wooden Leg’s gestures often were supplemented by his
+dainty pencil drawings and by his sketched maps--papers now treasured
+as precious documents. A few stray English words from his extremely
+scant vocabulary of them were besprinkled through the efforts at full
+expression.
+
+The principal story-teller’s statements of essential facts have
+been amalgamated with those of his fellow tribesmen who fought as
+companions with him. Groups of them, with him as the leader, took the
+author many times into assemblage. Thus all points of importance have
+been checked and corroborated or corrected. The helpers have been
+Limpy, Pine, Bobtail Horse, Sun Bear, Black Horse, Two Feathers, Wolf
+Chief, Little Sun, Blackbird, Big Beaver, White Moon, White Wolf,
+Big Crow, Medicine Bull, the younger Little Wolf and other old men,
+as well as some old women and a few Sioux, all of whom were with the
+hostile Indians when Custer came.
+
+ THOMAS B. MARQUIS, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+_Contents._
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I BOYHOOD WILD DAYS 1
+
+ II ROAMERS IN THE GAME LANDS 20
+
+ III CHEYENNE WAYS OF LIFE 56
+
+ IV WORSHIPING THE GREAT MEDICINE 123
+
+ V OFF THE RESERVATION 155
+
+ VI SWARMING OF ANGERED INDIANS 177
+
+ VII SOLDIERS FROM THE SOUTHWARD 193
+
+ VIII ON THE LITTLE BIGHORN 208
+
+ IX THE COMING OF CUSTER 217
+
+ X THE SPOILS OF BATTLE 258
+
+ XI ROVINGS AFTER THE VICTORY 272
+
+ XII SURRENDER OF THE CHEYENNES 295
+
+ XIII TAKEN TO THE SOUTH 310
+
+ XIV HOME AGAIN ON TONGUE RIVER 325
+
+ XV A TAMED OLD MAN 348
+
+ XVI CLEARING THE DOCKET 375
+
+
+
+
+_Illustrations._
+
+
+ Wooden Leg, a warrior who fought Custer, holding a rifle
+ captured by a Cheyenne companion warrior at Custer’s
+ last battle _Frontispiece_
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ Stone pen used by old-time Indians as lookout shelter for
+ sentinel. This one is on a hill overlooking Tongue river,
+ near Ashland, Montana 28
+
+ Cheyenne women setting up a tepee 76
+
+ A Cheyenne sweat lodge 112
+
+ A Cheyenne woman tanning 112
+
+ Wooden Leg making Custer battle drawings for the author 220
+
+ Limpy, a Cheyenne veteran of Custer’s last battle, standing
+ at the Little Bighorn ford where the Indians crossed to
+ meet the Custer soldiers 240
+
+ Big Beaver, a veteran Cheyenne warrior, standing at the
+ spot where he saw the last Custer soldier killed, June
+ 25, 1876 296
+
+ Wooden Leg, his wife and their daughter, in 1914 360
+
+
+ MAPS
+
+ Camp sites and other salient points in vicinity of Custer
+ battlefield, Montana 387
+
+ Sketch map of hostile Indians’ course of travel in Montana,
+ 1876 389
+
+
+
+
+ A WARRIOR WHO FOUGHT CUSTER
+
+
+
+
+ I
+
+_Boyhood Wild Days._
+
+
+Seventy-three years ago (1858) I was born when my people were camped
+by the waters of the Cheyenne river, in the Black Hills. Both of my
+parents were of the Northern Cheyenne tribe of Indians. My father had
+two names, as often is the case among us. He sometimes was called
+Many Bullet Wounds, because of such marks of warfare on his body.
+But his preferred name was White Buffalo Shaking Off the Dust. My
+mother’s name was Eagle Feather on the Forehead. Marriage during the
+old Indian days did not change any woman’s name, so all through her
+lifetime this same term was used for her.
+
+My father’s father went to Washington, as a delegate from our tribe,
+before I was born. He was known as No Braids. The differing words
+to indicate my grandfather, my father, my mother, and myself show
+our old way of keeping individuality, regardless of parentage or
+marriage. My brothers and sisters each had a name different from
+mine and from our father and mother.
+
+I was known, during my boyhood, as Eats From the Hand. But this baby
+name was set aside during my youth. The change came about in this
+manner:
+
+On a certain occasion, many years before my birth, the Cheyennes
+were camped on the western side of the middle part of Powder river.
+At this same time the Crows were assembled on a branch of what now
+is known as the Mizpah river, which flows into the lower part of
+the Powder river. They were only two or three days of travel from
+our camp. The Cheyennes organized a war party and went to fight the
+Crows. As a result of the battle the Cheyennes captured five Crow
+women and one boy about ten years old. The women were made wives for
+their captors. The boy was adopted as a son of one of them. All of
+these captives stayed permanently thereafter with our people.
+
+The Crow boy liked Eagle Feather on the Forehead, who then was
+only a little older than he. He said, “This girl is my sister.”
+She accepted him as a brother. In later years the girl was married
+to White Buffalo Shakes Off the Dust, and these became my parents.
+The Crow boy came to manhood and married a Cheyenne girl. Myself
+and my brothers and sisters were taught to look upon him as our
+uncle, since he had been an adopted brother of my mother. He was an
+admirable man, brave and capable. All of the Cheyennes had a high
+regard for him. He knew he was born a Crow, but he never showed any
+desire to leave us for returning to them. He went, though, to the
+Southern Cheyennes, following the great warrior Roman Nose. He died
+there, in Oklahoma, a very old man.
+
+This Crow-Cheyenne Indian man was a wonderful traveler on foot.
+Even as a boy he could outwalk and wear down most of the young
+men who journeyed with him. His capabilities in this regard were
+so noticeable that people said: “His legs must be made of wood,
+since he never becomes tired.” Then they fixed upon him a name,
+Kum-mok-quiv-vi-ok-ta--Wooden Leg.
+
+I also was a youthful wonder in the matter of walking. By the time I
+was fifteen years old I could go all day following in the footsteps
+of my uncle Wooden Leg. I was tall and gaunt, and I grew yet taller
+in young manhood. Friends began jokingly to apply to me the name of
+this enduring uncle, who then had become a middle-aged or elderly
+man. I liked the name, I liked the man who bore it, and I liked the
+honor of comparison with him. I told my father I wished to be known
+as Wooden Leg. It was a common custom to pass down names to junior
+relatives. My father told me that when the right time came he would
+confer upon me the new name. The time came when I was about seventeen
+years old.
+
+The Cheyennes then were camped far up the Tongue river, on a small
+creek branch at its western side. It was in winter, there was deep
+snow and the weather was cold. One morning we discovered that twenty
+of our horses were missing. A blizzard was whirling, so we could only
+get glimpses of the trail of the thieves. We supposed them to be Crow
+Indians, of course. Thirteen Cheyennes, including myself, mounted
+ponies and set off in pursuit. We struggled all day through the
+blinding snowstorm. We got the general direction of the trail, so we
+kept on going during all of the succeeding night. None of us slept.
+The following morning was clear, but a cold north breeze was sifting
+the snow along as if it were sand. We then were far up the valley of
+the Little Bighorn river.
+
+We saw two Indians driving a band of horses out of the valley and
+upon the benches to the westward. It was evident they were Crows
+urging our lost animals toward their camp west of the Bighorn. We
+approached them as rapidly as possible while concealing our presence.
+When we arrived on the benchland we found the two men had stopped in
+a sheltered gulch, had dismounted and were preparing to light their
+pipe for a smoke. We charged upon them. One of them got to his horse
+and dashed away, but Black Eagle’s rifle brought him down dead. The
+other one was surrounded and cut to death with knives and hatchets.
+We got back all of our horses and their two horses in addition.
+
+My companions informed my father that I had shown great bravery in
+rushing upon and helping to dispatch our Crow enemy. My father gave a
+feast to honor me, and at this feast he proclaimed: “Henceforth the
+name of this son of mine is Wooden Leg.”
+
+As a little boy I used to ride in a travois basket when the tribe
+moved camp. Two long lodgepoles were crossed over the shoulders
+or tied to the sides of a horse. Thus they were dragged over the
+country. Buffalo skins were used to stretch across between the widely
+gaping poles behind the horse. Upon or into these bagging skins were
+placed all of the family property, in rawhide satchels or as separate
+loose articles. The smaller children also rode there. I have fond
+recollections of this kind of traveling. Many an hour I have slept
+in that kind of gentle bed. Roads were not needed for this kind of
+vehicle. A travois can be taken anywhere a horse will go, and there
+never is any jolting. The spring of the poles and the skin takes up
+all of the shocks.
+
+When I was six years old I asked my father: “Will you give me a
+horse?” “Yes, you may have any horse of mine that you want, but you
+must catch him,” he replied. He gave me a rawhide lariat rope. He
+and my mother and some other older people laughed about it, but I
+took the matter seriously. With the lariat looped and coiled I went
+out among the herd to search for horses belonging to my father. I
+selected a small pony as being my choice. I maneuvered a long time
+before I could get the loop about its neck. It struggled, but I hung
+on. When it quieted down I followed carefully along the line, talking
+soothingly, until it allowed me to pat its neck. After a while I
+got into its mouth and around its lower jaw a loop of the rawhide,
+according to the old Indian way of making a bridle. When it had
+calmed after this new advance I began to make strokes upon its back.
+Then I tucked the long coil into my belt, the same as I had seen men
+do, and I climbed quickly upon the little animal. It shied, and I
+fell off. But I still had my rope, this uncoiling from my belt as the
+pony moved away. I seized the tether and followed again its guidance
+to the coveted mount. More petting and soothing talk. Another attempt
+at riding. Off again. Before making a third try I spent a long
+time at the gentle taming procedures. Nevertheless, the pony shied
+and then bucked after I had mounted it. But I grabbed its mane and
+stuck to my seat. Within a few minutes I had control. I rode to my
+father’s lodge.
+
+“Yes, that is your pony, to keep,” he told me.
+
+Bands of us boys went out at times on horseback to hunt wolves. We
+had only the bows and arrows. We killed many wolves with the arrows.
+My father had given me a good bow and a supply of arrows when I was
+nine or ten years old. We then were in the Black Hills country.
+
+The only trading post I ever saw during those years was somewhere on
+the Geese river.[1] The trader was known to us as Big Nosed White
+Man. I was twelve years old the first time I went there, and I never
+was at any other trading place during those times. My father got
+me a rifle at this place. It used powder and bullets and caps, not
+cartridges. I learned how to make bullets for it.
+
+I recollect very clearly one certain boyhood hunting experience. We
+were camped on Otter creek about two miles from the present white
+man town of Ashland, Montana, situated by the Tongue river. It was
+midwinter, the snow was deep, the weather was cold. My mother said to
+me: “We have no meat.”
+
+Another boy and I set off for a hunt. We were about the same age,
+fifteen years old. We each had on a shirt, leggings and moccasins,
+all of buckskin or other skin. The leggings had no seat in them,
+as was the Indian way of clothing the lower limbs. We had no head
+coverings nor any mittens for our hands. Although we were accustomed
+to hardship, this was a cold day for us. We waded and wallowed
+through snow up to our knees and our thighs. I had my muzzle-loading
+rifle and a bow and arrows. My companion had only his bow and arrows.
+
+A brush rabbit sat huddled under a shelter in a brier patch. I
+fumbled out an arrow and placed it upon the bow. My numb fingers
+scarcely could hold the arrow alone, surely could not draw the bow to
+a tensity enough for accurate shooting. The arrow missed. I rubbed
+and slapped together my hands to make them warm and mobile. Then I
+strung another pointed missile and took a careful aim. This time the
+rabbit’s body was perforated. We laid it beside our trail and went on
+in pursuit of more game.
+
+We saw four buffaloes on the land where now stand the Mennonite
+missionary houses. They also saw us, and they ran away. They crossed
+Tongue river on the ice, and soon afterward we got a view of them
+clambering up the hillside beyond the river and going on to the
+timbered benchland out of our sight. No chance to shoot at them. We
+trudged on, though, rubbing and pounding our hands and our bodies in
+order to keep from freezing. We crossed the river on the ice and
+came out from the bordering timber near the present-day home of my
+friend Joe Crow.
+
+A deer jumped out and stood looking at us. The first shot from
+my rifle brought it down. We rushed to it and cut its throat. We
+hurriedly cut open the body and jammed our hands inside, to get them
+warm. Many a time I have done that same thing in other instances.
+After this limbering of the fingers we skinned the animal and cut off
+all of the meat from the bones. The meat was wrapped into the skin,
+then we set off on the back trail for the home camp. We took turns
+at carrying the burden. As we plodded along we paused to pick up the
+dead rabbit. About dark we arrived at our lodges, very tired but
+contented.
+
+On another winter hunt I went alone. My mother said, “We have no
+meat.” So I took a packhorse and started out. The snow was deep. I
+led the horse as I walked, to keep warm. It was a long and tiresome
+day. I was becoming discouraged when I found the tracks of a buffalo.
+I followed them, and finally I got into the right position and killed
+the animal with a rifle. It was hard work, me alone skinning off the
+hide, cutting off the meat, rolling the bundle and packing my horse.
+I got through with it, though, and set out for the home lodge. My
+legs carried me there, but it was after dark when I gave the horse’s
+leading rope to my mother. All of our family laughed in joy, for we
+had plenty of meat.
+
+But I was in great bodily distress. I was snow-blind and the soles
+of my feet were frozen. The firelight dazzled my eyes to the utmost
+painfulness. My feet tortured me as they began to get warm in the
+comfortable lodge. My mother sent for the doctor, a medicine man
+named Red Bear. He got snow and rubbed the soles of my feet. He took
+snowflakes between his lips, puffed flicks of them into my eyes,
+and also he flipped snowflakes from his fingertips into my eyes.
+Pretty soon I felt much better. Before he went away that night I was
+entirely cured. He was a wise medicine man for sick people. Many of
+our doctors in the old times made wonderful cures.
+
+One time when I was on a hunting trip with others in the Bighorn
+mountains I saw an eagle capture and carry away a buffalo calf.
+The big bird took the little animal far up to the top of a cliff,
+where there was an eagle nest. We sat on our horses and watched, to
+see what would happen. Ordinarily a capturing eagle would drop its
+prey from high in the air, so it would be killed by the fall to the
+ground. But this did not happen in this case. As long as we stayed
+there watching, we still could see the buffalo calf standing up there
+on the cliff and wiggling its tail.
+
+A band of soldiers fought our Cheyennes back and forth across a river
+one time when I was seven or eight years old. It was the Lodgepole
+river, near where it flows into Geese river. Members of our Crazy Dog
+warrior society did all of our fighting that day. The Elk warriors
+and the Fox warriors stayed back with the body of our people who were
+looking on. My father belonged to the Elk warriors, so he was an
+onlooker. Roman Nose and High-Backed Wolf were the specially brave
+Crazy Dogs on that day.
+
+The Shoshones, the Crows and the Pawnees were the tribes we fought
+most during my time of growing up to manhood. The Pawnees, though,
+were too far away from the regions where I spent a large part of
+my early life--the Black Hills, the Powder, Tongue and Bighorn
+countries. So my own youthful warrior experiences were mostly in
+combat against the Crows and the Shoshones. One incident out of many
+in this kind of warfare will show how it was carried on.
+
+A band of Shoshones came at night and stole some of our horses. We
+were camped on a divide between the upper part of Tongue river and
+the Little Bighorn. Deep snow and winter weather. I then was sixteen
+years old. I went with the party of Cheyennes who took the trail of
+the thieves. After traveling all day and into the night we found a
+small camp of Shoshones. Most of them, alarmed by their dogs, had
+fled when we made our attack upon them. But repeated shots kept
+coming from one certain lodge. We concentrated our assault upon this
+lodge. Two Cheyennes were killed and another one mortally wounded
+before we could suppress this destructive defense. White Wolf, eleven
+years older than I was and yet living as my neighbor on Tongue river,
+was the brave warrior who dealt the fatal blow to that Shoshone.
+White Wolf crept along the ground and into the lodge. He had in
+his right hand a six-shooter. It was totally dark in there, and he
+fumbled about the interior, seeking whomsoever he might find. His gun
+bumped into somebody, and he pulled the trigger. Later developments
+revealed this was the only occupant of the lodge. The victim was an
+old man. He was the only Shoshone we killed in that fight, so far as
+we could learn. But we won the battle and got back our horses.
+
+We cut up the body of the old Shoshone man. We cut off his hands,
+his feet, his head. We ripped open his breast and his belly. I stood
+there and looked at his heart and his liver. We tore down the lodge,
+built a bonfire of it and its contents and piled the remnants of the
+dead body upon this bonfire. We stayed there until nothing was left
+but ashes and coals.
+
+The Cheyennes during my youth associated much with the Ogallala
+Sioux, the Arapahoes and the Minneconjoux Sioux. Many Cheyennes
+learned the speech of these other tribes, and in turn they had many
+members who used ours. Most of my outside mingling was with the
+Ogallalas. By the time I was grown to full stature I could talk
+Sioux about as well as I could talk Cheyenne. I still can use either
+language.
+
+Forty army mules were brought into our camp on Rosebud creek when
+I was about nine years old. Three Cheyennes got them. These three
+were Wrapped Braids, Old Bear and Pipe, a half-man-and-half-woman
+Cheyenne. They had chased away a lone soldier herding the mules near
+a soldier fort on the Bighorn river.[2] There were many attacks on
+this and other forts by the Cheyennes and the Sioux, but I was too
+young to take part in them.
+
+Some Crow chiefs visited our camp on Rosebud creek. The Crows were
+our enemies, but our people treated these visitors well, as was the
+Indian custom when enemies came peaceably. After a feast and a smoke
+had been given them they told our chiefs that the big chief of the
+soldiers at the Bighorn fort had sent them to make peace with us and
+invite us to join the Crows and the soldiers in warring against the
+Sioux. They said the soldiers would give us lots of presents if
+we would be friendly with them. All of our camp moved over there.
+We were given some blankets, many boxes of crackers, and our women
+received beads and other gifts. We then went back to the Rosebud
+valley. I do not know what was done about making peace, but I know
+that our young men warriors kept on doing as they had been doing.
+
+Another soldier fort that was being fought by the Ogallala Sioux and
+some of the Cheyennes was on what we called Buffalo creek.[3] Little
+Wolf was then our most important old man chief. Crazy Head was next
+in importance among us. Red Cloud was the leading old man chief of
+the Ogallalas, with Crazy Horse as their principal warrior chief.
+At a time when our whole tribe were in camp on Rosebud creek, just
+below the mouth of Lame Deer creek, and when the Ogallalas were on
+Tongue river, just below where Birney, Montana, is now situated, some
+of their people came over the divide to us and asked the Cheyennes
+to join them in a great attack on the Buffalo creek fort. Our chiefs
+considered the matter. It was decided that whatever young men of us
+might wish to go would be allowed to do so. Our camp then was moved
+up Lame Deer creek to the base of the divide, a short day’s ride from
+the Ogallalas on Tongue river. Our great medicine man, Crazy Mule,
+showed that he could cause bullets shot at him to fall harmless at
+his feet. A hundred or more of our young men said they could go to
+fight the soldiers if Crazy Mule would go with them. He agreed to go.
+Our second chief, Crazy Head, led the band of warriors. Little Wolf
+stayed in our camp.
+
+My oldest brother, named Strong Wind Blowing, was killed in that
+midwinter battle with the soldiers.[4] He was about sixteen years
+old. Chief Little Wolf’s younger brother also was killed. These two
+were the only Cheyennes who fell that day. I do not know how many
+Sioux may have been cut down by the soldier bullets, but I believe
+there were not many. Our returning warriors said that more than a
+hundred white men lost their lives, that Crazy Mule’s medicine caused
+them to fall down dead without need for the Indians to kill them.[5]
+There was rejoicing in our camp on account of the victory. But our
+family and all relatives of the two dead Cheyennes were in mourning.
+We wept and prayed for the spirits of our lost ones.
+
+Some time after that battle a half-breed Indian came as a messenger
+from the soldier fort chief to the Cheyennes. He said, “Come,
+friends, and let us have peace.” Little Wolf told us we ought to go,
+so the whole tribe moved near to them. Little Wolf and others of our
+chiefs had a council with the soldier chiefs. The big chief of the
+soldiers said to Little Wolf: “We are going away from this country.
+I give to you all of these soldier houses. Your people may live in
+them and learn how to cultivate the land.” A separate council of our
+chiefs was held. They replied, “Yes, we will take the houses.”
+
+The Cheyennes were pleased. “That one will be my house,” some one of
+them would say, pointing out a certain building. “I want that one,”
+another would claim, indicating some other structure. But Little Wolf
+was not satisfied. He meditated and expressed his disapproval. “We
+can not live here,” he urged. “It is impossible for Indians to live
+in the same houses all the time and get enough buffalo and other meat
+to sustain them.” The women especially implored him to change his
+mind. The question was settled fully one morning when Little Wolf set
+fire to the fort. He went from building to building, carrying his
+firebrands. He did not cease his efforts until the entire evidence of
+white man occupation was in ashes.[6]
+
+Little Wolf had been a big tribal chief, the most influential one,
+for about two years before that time. In his earlier manhood years
+he was for a long time chosen over and over again as the leading
+chief of the Elk warrior society. If during his time any Cheyenne
+was looked upon as the bravest man of all, he was the man. He never
+was afraid to speak the truth. The people all believed him. He was
+a gentle and charitable man, but if insulted to anger he was likely
+to hurt somebody. In either disturbed or undisturbed mood everybody
+knew he meant just what he said. He was my uncle by marriage, one
+of his two wives being a sister of my father. He used to tell me
+many thrilling stories, both at his lodge and at my father’s lodge.
+I recall one in particular, when he had a hand-to-hand combat with
+a Shoshone. Each had a sheathknife. They grappled and wrestled and
+slashed one another. Finally Little Wolf pinioned the arms of the
+Shoshone, threw him to the ground, plunged upon him and stabbed
+him to death. He gave me a great deal of good advice, both as to
+warfare and as to how to carry myself uprightly as a man among my own
+people. My conduct all throughout my life has been influenced by his
+teachings, more than by those of any other preceptor except my own
+father.
+
+I think my body grew more rapidly than did my mind. By the time I
+was eighteen years old I was among the tallest men of the tribe. I
+believe there were but two who stood a little above me. Both of
+these two were killed in the great battle against the soldiers of
+Custer. Then remained myself and Tall Bull as the two topmost in
+stature. We were the same in height, were about the same age, but he
+was distinctly the heavier. We were close associates during youth and
+manhood. He died at Lame Deer eight or ten years ago. I do not know
+by any measurement just what was my height when I was a young man. I
+think I have grown shorter as old age has crept upon me. My friend
+the white man doctor measures me now at six feet two inches and
+weighs me at 235 pounds.
+
+Our tribe during my growing years moved here and there throughout
+the region between the Black Hills and the Bighorn mountains and
+Bighorn river. We never went north of the Elk river (the Yellowstone)
+except on two occasions when some of the tribe went across for only a
+few days each time. The places of crossing were just above and just
+below the mouth of the Bighorn. Only one time was the tribal camp
+circle made west of the Bighorn river. We considered that country as
+belonging to the Crows. Our war parties went there, but our campings
+were eastward from this stream. I do not know why we crossed to that
+side on this occasion. We had been having a series of ceremonial
+dances at successive camping places, and it may be that this
+invasion of Crow land was intended as a challenge.
+
+I was about fourteen years old, I believe. The season was what in
+later life I have come to know as June. It was the time for our usual
+early-summer religious devotions. A medicine dance had been led by
+White Horse, an old man, when we were just below where Greasy Grass
+creek flows into the Little Bighorn. We stayed there five sleeps.
+Then we moved a few miles down the Little Bighorn, where Crazy Mule
+led a buffalo dance. Camped there four sleeps. Moved again down the
+Little Bighorn, this time placing our camp circle on the exact spot
+where it was located four years later, at the time we killed all of
+the soldiers. Bear Sits Down gave a buffalo dance at this place. Four
+sleeps here. The movement was continued on down the Little Bighorn to
+its mouth, where we crossed the Bighorn and set up our camp circle on
+its west side. Here Brave Wolf led a Great Medicine or Great Spirit
+dance, the ceremony known to the white people as a sun dance. Four
+sleeps we stayed here, then we crossed back to the east side of the
+Bighorn. That was the only time our people as a tribe ever crossed
+that river.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] North Platte river.
+
+[2] Fort C. F. Smith.
+
+[3] Fort Phil Kearny, on Little Piney creek.
+
+[4] Fort Phil Kearny fight, December, 1866.
+
+[5] Suicidal acts, to avoid capture alive?--T. B. M.
+
+[6] Autumn, 1868.
+
+
+
+
+ II
+
+_Roamers in the Game Lands._
+
+
+The first agency for our Northern Cheyennes that I heard anything
+about was said to have been at the mouth of the Cheyenne river, east
+of the Black Hills. But I never was there. Afterward it was located
+south of the Black Hills, near the present Pine Ridge agency for
+the Ogallala Sioux. I have been told the white people called this
+the Red Cloud agency, but the Cheyennes knew it as the White River
+agency. I was at this place two times, but only for a few days in
+each instance. My father’s family was almost all of the time with
+other Cheyennes moving about over the country between the Black Hills
+and the Bighorn river. Here we hunted the game and the enemy Crows
+and Shoshones, and here we lived in every way the life of the plains
+Indians of those times. It was not an idle existence. We were busy
+much of the time, fighting our enemies or gathering food and clothing
+and sheltering skins.
+
+As we were camped on lower Tongue river, when I was about nine years
+old, one morning a herald startled the people by his cry:
+
+“Our horses all are gone!”
+
+There followed a lively stir among the young men. A party of them,
+mounted on a few horses that had been overlooked by the raiders,
+hurried away on the trail. A thin snow helped them. In the late
+afternoon they caught up with the lost herd, apparently abandoned.
+But after a search of the vicinity they discovered that somebody was
+in a canyon cave there. One of the Cheyennes crawled into the cave,
+in an endeavor to verify the supposition. The verification came in
+the form of an arrow that hit him in the right eye. He quickly backed
+out. “Everybody bring wood,” the Cheyenne leader ordered. They built
+a fire at the cave’s opening. With blankets they fanned the flames
+and the smoke into the hole. The prisoners fanned outward and thrust
+sticks at the fire heap to push it away. “Bring more wood,” the
+leader called. The one-sided contest went on until two Crow Indian
+men burst out from the cave almost suffocated and in desperation.
+The first one out was beaten and stabbed to death by the surrounding
+Cheyennes. The second one got past them, sprang upon one of their
+horses and dashed away. The Cheyennes pursued him. He happened to
+mount a slow animal, so it was not long before the chase developed
+into a beating by pony whip handles. The Crow suddenly jerked his
+mount to a standstill. At the same moment he flashed out his
+sheathknife and made a vicious sidewise stab. The blade buried itself
+in the breast of a Cheyenne, who fell dead. The other Cheyennes
+rushed upon the Crow. In a twinkling he had received many death blows
+from various weapons. Somebody scalped him, and then they cut off his
+feet, hands and head. I was not with this party, but I was in the
+camp. I heard all about it when they returned.
+
+I saw the killing of another Crow, though, when we were at this same
+camp on Tongue river. One morning a Cheyenne horse was discovered
+dragging a rawhide lariat looped about its lower jaw. This was
+peculiarly the Crow way of bridling a horse, the Sioux and Cheyennes
+ordinarily making a headstall and mouth bit with the rope. Evidently
+some Crow had captured our horse and it had escaped from him during
+the night. There was a scurrying out to inspect and count our herd.
+Apparently no others were missing. The inquiry was directed then
+toward an examination of the ground on the outskirts of the area
+where the ponies were grazing. Three strange horses had come from
+the hills to the westward and gone away in a gallop. Another trail
+was of human footprints, these imprinted as if the maker of them had
+been lame and had been using a stick for support. This trail led to a
+hillside cliff. There under the shelter of an overhanging stone roof
+lay a Crow Indian man apparently dead or sound asleep. A Cheyenne
+leveled his rifle at close range and fired. The Crow partly jumped up
+to a sitting attitude and then fell back dead. Investigation showed
+him to have a broken leg and a broken arm. The horse he had captured
+was not well tamed, and it had bucked him off. Perhaps it first had
+carried him away from his companions, and perhaps either he or the
+horse had made a noise that might have alarmed the camp, whereupon
+the two other marauders had abandoned him and fled. As I now reflect
+back sixty years, I pity that unfortunate Crow Indian. But at that
+time I felt no pity.
+
+Nine Crows came and stole a band of our horses at a time when we
+were camped far up the Tongue river. I then was about sixteen years
+old. I joined the pursuing party of Cheyennes. We rode fast and far,
+following the trail over hills and valleys toward the Bighorn river.
+Some of our horses, including mine, played out. Four of us turned
+to go back while the others went on after the Crows. Porcupine was
+the oldest of my returning group of four. Night was coming upon us,
+so we stopped to sleep and to rest our horses. During the night a
+sound of moving horses awakened us. We kept quiet, listening and
+looking. Porcupine saw someone on horseback about a hundred yards
+distant from us. He called out a challenge: “Cheyenne? Crow?” The
+rider lashed his mount to dash away. Porcupine fired his rifle in
+the direction of the fleeing prowler. We learned nothing then of the
+outcome of this incident. But several months later an Arapaho friend
+told us of the ending. He had been hunting in this region, and right
+where we had slept that night he found the dead body of a Crow shot
+through from back to front.
+
+The others who had gone on after the Crows driving our herd caught up
+with them just below the old soldier fort on the Bighorn river. My
+older brother was with them, and he told me what happened there. The
+horse band was across on the west side, and four Crows were having a
+playful time at bathing in the river. They were swimming, splashing,
+joking, laughing. The dozen or more Cheyennes kept themselves hidden
+and hurriedly dressed themselves for a fight while their horses
+rested a few minutes. Then they burst into their war-songs and
+charged into the water upon the surprised and defenseless bathers.
+Three Crows were killed, one escaped. All of our horses were
+recovered and three of theirs were added to the band. The third Crow
+killed was an old man, but he was very active. He dodged, jumped,
+dived. But the Cheyennes had too many spears jabbing at him and too
+many bullets flying toward him. My brother’s six-shooter put the
+fatal blow upon him.
+
+The following year, when our tepees were assembled on the west side
+of Tongue river just across from the mouth of Hanging Woman creek,
+my father and I went out one day to get an antelope. He was about to
+shoot at one when the animal and some others with it suddenly ran
+away. We were hidden, so it seemed certain their fright came from
+someone else. We crept and peeped. Pretty soon we saw a group of
+Indian hunters on horseback.
+
+“They are Crows,” my father excitedly whispered.
+
+Oh, what clever dodging we did! We got to our horses, mounted them,
+kept them moving through gullies and brushy spots until we reached
+the home camp. A band of Cheyennes joined us to attack the Crows. At
+a long distance off we followed them until our horses tired out. By
+this time we were at the upper branches of the Rosebud. We gave up
+the chase. Nobody hurt.
+
+Great herds of buffalo west of the Bighorn used to draw the Cheyennes
+over into that Crow country for the hunt. We camped on the eastern
+side, but our hunting parties crossed the river and went as far as
+Shooting at the Bank creek.[7] Each hunter led one or more pack
+horses to carry the meat and skins taken. Many times I have swam the
+Bighorn or some other river while holding in my teeth the leading
+rope of my riding pony. The pack horse rope would be held in the same
+way or might be tied to the tail of this leader. My clothing would be
+compressed into a bundle and strapped to the back of my head.
+
+As we were camped on the east side of the Bighorn, about two years
+before the great Custer battle, three Crows were seen one day chasing
+antelope on our side of the river. Report of their presence there
+was brought to our camp. An old man herald mounted his pony and went
+about the camp circle calling out:
+
+“Crows are after our antelope herds. They may steal our horses.”
+
+Six Cheyenne young men got their war clothing packs, mounted their
+war ponies and set out to find the bold Crows. I was not with them,
+but a special friend of mine was one of the pursuing party and he
+told me of their experience. They crossed the Bighorn river just
+below where had been the soldier fort. During the course of the
+pursuit they killed two Crows. The third one was followed on to the
+main Crow camp beside Shooting at the Bank creek. The six Cheyennes
+lingered there to spy upon the camp. The lingering was a little too
+extended, for soon they found themselves engaged in a fight with
+a much larger band of Crows. A Cheyenne wearing a double tailed
+warbonnet had his horse shot down, then the man himself was shot
+through the thigh, this disability rendering him an easy mark for
+fatal blows that soon fell upon him. A second Cheyenne was killed by
+arrows or bullets. A third one met death by the same means. The other
+three escaped and made their way back to our side of the river and to
+the home camp circle.
+
+During this same summer the Crows made a raid one night on our horse
+herd. Of course, when daylight revealed the situation a war party
+of Cheyennes went out for revengeful retaliation. I was not in camp
+at this time, being on a hunting trip toward the mountains, but
+Braid told me of what happened. He was one of the band of avenging
+Cheyennes. The Crows drove all of the horses to their camp on
+Shooting at the Bank creek. The Cheyennes hid themselves to watch
+for some opportunity for reprisal. But the crafty Crows evidently
+discovered them or had planned thus to entrap them. Notice came
+only when a horde of them charged out for a fight. Two of the Crows
+were killed and two Cheyennes also met death. Braid’s horse was
+shot down and he himself was hit by a bullet that broke the bones
+in the lower part of one of his legs. A companion on horseback took
+Braid up behind him and the two got away into safety. All of the
+Cheyennes then fled from the field. Braid is yet alive, at the age of
+eighty-nine years, his home being on the Rosebud side of this Tongue
+River reservation. The white people call him Arthur Brady.
+
+About a year before these events just related a big camp of Cheyennes
+was located on the Little Bighorn a short distance below where Greasy
+Grass creek empties into it. Fresh footprints of unknown horses
+near the camp site aroused suspicion. Crows? Shoshones? People
+conjectured. An old man herald rode about and notified everybody.
+That night all of the horses were brought into the camp circle and
+picketed among the lodges. Many watchful people slept lightly or
+awakened from time to time and peered out from the tepee flaps. Last
+Bull, asleep in a small tepee with his wife, was startled by the
+snorting of a mule he had picketed near by. The mule snorted again,
+then a third time. Last Bull saw a human form crawling along toward
+his mule. The aroused man had no gun, so he crept under his tepee
+wall and into the next one, there to borrow a six-shooter from an old
+woman.
+
+[Illustration: STONE PEN (IN FOREGROUND) USED BY OLD-TIME INDIANS
+AS LOOKOUT SHELTER FOR SENTINEL. THIS ONE IS ON A HILL OVERLOOKING
+TONGUE RIVER, NEAR ASHLAND, MONTANA]
+
+Fire Wolf saw the wriggling form cut the rope and move off leading
+the mule. He bravely jumped out, without any weapon, and seized the
+intruder. They grappled and struggled. The stranger had a rifle.
+During the scuffle it was discharged. The noise aroused the camp.
+Cheyennes came running. Cries rang out:
+
+“Kill the Crow! Kill the Crow!”
+
+The thief jerked out a sheathknife and stabbed Fire Wolf again and
+again until the Cheyenne had to let loose his hold. The freed man
+sprang to his feet and ran, leaving the mule. A shot from Last Bull’s
+borrowed six-shooter brought him down. A dozen Cheyennes closed in
+upon him and beat him to death. Fire Wolf had some bad knife wounds,
+but he recovered. The clothing, the bodily decorations in general
+and the mode of hair dressing revealed the dead Indian as being not
+a Crow. He was a Flathead, perhaps a visitor among the Crows or a
+member of a band visiting and hunting with them.
+
+A battle with the Shoshones was fought near the headwaters of Powder
+river when I was about fifteen years old (1873). A small band of
+Cheyennes had their lodges a day’s journey farther up the river from
+the main body of the tribe. I was with the small band. Four or five
+Shoshones came at night to our little camp and stole our horses. We
+walked to the main camp and told of the raid. All were for immediate
+war against the whole Shoshone tribe. “Kill all of the Shoshones,”
+was the common cry. The main camp moved on up the river to our small
+encampment. There preparations were made for the warfare. That very
+night thirty-two Shoshone warriors came into the view of our night
+sentinels. Evidently the enemies had planned to wipe out our little
+band, not knowing of the presence now of the whole tribe.
+
+The sentinels raised an alarm. Yet the Shoshones did not offer to
+retreat until they found themselves overwhelmed by a great body of
+our warriors. Their horses were tired from the journey to our camp
+while ours were just taken from their picket ropes. Perhaps the
+raiders had been saying, “We shall kill all of the Cheyennes here,”
+but now they plunged their horses into a long and deep canyon in
+their effort to get away from us. The Cheyennes strung themselves
+all along both sides of the canyon. Shooting was kept up during the
+balance of the night and until an hour or more after daylight. Two of
+the enemy escaped. Thirty of them were killed in the canyon. Seven of
+our Cheyennes also lost their lives. We recovered the horses the four
+had stolen. This fight was on a small creek flowing into the west
+side of Powder river from the mountains near by.
+
+White Bull was leading a hunting party one time in the Elk river
+country. I was yet a small boy, so I was not with them. Their scouts
+observed the distant herds of buffalo excited. Crows? Shoshones?
+White soldiers? The Cheyennes hid themselves for the night. In the
+early morning they found moccasin tracks by a creek. The moccasin
+trail led to a Blackfeet camp. There the Cheyennes stirred up a
+fight, but I believe nobody was killed. The great warrior Roman Nose
+rode back and forth in front of the Blackfeet and defied them. All of
+them were said to have shot at him without a bullet or arrow having
+harmed him. He had a powerful spirit or medicine protection for
+himself. White Bull had taught him this medicine.
+
+Soldiers got after a small band of mingled Cheyennes and Sioux near
+the Black Hills one time. We were running away when a Cheyenne was
+killed. Two Sioux, another Cheyenne and myself went back to recover
+his dead body. We got off our horses and crept over a hill. We four
+took our dead companion by his hands and feet and dragged him over
+the knoll. There we rolled him into a blanket and we took the four
+corners. Bullets were whistling all about us. The blanket ripped and
+the body fell through the opening. We again took hold of the hands
+and feet, and in this way we got him to our horses and delivered him
+to his own people.
+
+Several months before the great battle with Long Hair (General
+Custer) and his soldiers, some Cheyennes coming from the agency
+on White river told us that the white men were going to come out
+and fight us. As parties went out for hunting, a lookout was kept
+for these white enemies. My brother, myself and two other Cheyenne
+young men went on a special scouting journey. We were camped then
+far up the Powder river. At night we four slept out in the open
+country. Early in the morning a fifth Cheyenne came to us. “Soldiers
+are near us,” he said. We learned our horses were missing. The
+soldiers had taken them. We all ran away afoot. We scattered in
+different directions, except my brother and me, who went together
+into a canyon. Soldiers rode along on both sides of the canyon and
+shot at us. We shot back at them, first using up our bullets and
+then resorting to our arrows. We kept creeping along the canyon.
+The soldiers gradually dropped away. We were not harmed nor did
+we know of our having harmed any of them. When they left us we
+carefully worked our way on up the canyon and over a hill toward our
+camp. Breathing hard, almost exhausted, frightened to the verge of
+collapse, we stopped for a few minutes of rest. Then we hurried on.
+At the outskirts of the camp circle we paused to send a warning wolf
+howl. The people all gathered about us.
+
+“What has happened?” they asked.
+
+We told of our experience. At the same time the other returned young
+men were giving the same kind of information. The chiefs ordered
+everybody to pack up, and the camp was moved far on down the Powder
+river. Some of us stayed back to watch the soldiers. One night I saw
+them in their camp. Two sentinels were walking back and forth near
+their horses. I or any of my companions could have killed either or
+both of them. But this would have endangered our people, so we did
+nothing of that kind. We stole back our horses, though. I got the
+same horse they had taken from me a few nights before this. Our camp
+kept on moving, and the soldiers never found us on this hunt.
+
+A great band of Southern Cheyennes came for a visit to us in the
+Black Hills about two years before the Custer battle on the Little
+Bighorn. All of us joined together then for a long hunting journey to
+the westward, to the Powder river, the Tongue and the Little Bighorn.
+Many thousands of buffalo, deer, antelope. Many skins, much meat,
+everybody happy and prosperous and in health. On the Little Bighorn
+river we had one day of Great Medicine thanksgiving dancing just
+below the mouth of Greasy Grass creek. Further down the valley the
+camp divided, half of the people going northwestward to trouble the
+Crows while the other half took a southwestward course toward the
+country of the Shoshones.
+
+I went to the Shoshone country. We did not see any of those Indians,
+but a few of us saw their agency. We saw also the soldier houses
+there. We kept clear of the soldiers, and I think they never knew we
+were in that region until after we had gone. We rounded up and drove
+off a herd of white man cattle and killed every beef. Game was scarce
+there, and we needed the food.
+
+We followed the mountains to upper Powder river, where we joined
+again with the Cheyennes who had separated from us on the Little
+Bighorn. After a few days of feasting in the great combined camp,
+there began to be departures in bands, bands, bands, for return to
+the agency south of the Black Hills. My small remaining group went
+to Otter creek, a tributary of the lower Tongue river. Good hunting,
+lots of game, on this creek. We followed it to its head and moved
+on eastward to Powder river. We went up that stream and diverted to
+the Little Powder river. Here other Cheyennes came to us. Then more
+arrived, and yet more. Again a great band of us were roaming together.
+
+An early autumn snowstorm in the upper Powder river region put a
+check upon our great summer movements. Separations came again.
+Indians went back again to the agency for the winter. My band moved
+over to the upper Tongue river. Here, only a short distance down that
+stream from the present white man town of Sheridan, Wyoming, buffalo
+in great throngs were feeding. We had but to kill and eat. As I now
+think back upon those days, it seems that no people in the world ever
+were any richer than we were. That is all anybody actually needs--a
+good shelter, plenty of food, plenty of fuel, plenty of good water.
+We stayed all winter in this vicinity. My father and his family never
+cared to live at the agency.
+
+In every herd of buffaloes the adult males were about equal in size
+and of the same dark brown color. All buffalo cows likewise were
+about equal in size, smaller than the bulls. The sucking calves were
+of yellow color. At the age of one year they began to change to the
+darker yellow and then to brown and dark brown or black.
+
+A white buffalo was killed by the Cheyennes on a branch of the upper
+Powder river. That was when I was a boy, about the time the soldier
+fort was there. Many Cheyennes were after the animal, but Left Handed
+Shooter killed it. Such animal was regarded as a spirit being or a
+“medicine” animal. The assembled Cheyennes stood back from this one
+in respectful awe. Left Handed Shooter could not persuade anyone to
+help him in skinning it. He alone took the hide from the whole body,
+separating off the head and horns.
+
+Four medicine women were called to Left Handed Shooter’s lodge. They
+pegged down the sacred skin, dried it, scraped it with their elkhorn
+scrapers, did all of the work of tanning it as a robe with the hair
+left on it. An old medicine man then took it to his lodge. There he
+painted it. He put upon the smooth inside many black suns, many black
+moons, many stripes, all in groups of four, the Indian sacred number.
+
+The painted skin then was hung upon a tall pole. The horned head was
+put upon another pole near by. All of the spirit men or medicine men
+came, all of the people assembled. There were many long prayers, to
+the Great Medicine above and to the spirits below. Finally an old man
+announced:
+
+“We give this tanned white robe to the Great Medicine above. We give
+the head and horns to the spirits below.”
+
+The robe was taken down from the pole and was carefully folded.
+Medicine men and women then respectfully carried it with the head and
+horns to the top of a hill. There these revered objects were left
+as gifts to the unseen rulers of the Indian world. The meat of the
+animal was not considered as sacred. It was eaten, the same as if it
+were any other buffalo flesh.
+
+After that time another white buffalo was seen and chased by
+Cheyennes on Tongue river below the present town of Sheridan,
+Wyoming. It was a fleet-footed and long-winded animal. All of the
+Cheyenne horses were exhausted in the chase. The coveted buffalo
+escaped us, and I never heard of anyone having seen it afterward.
+
+I killed a buffalo cow having white hair covering the upper and inner
+thighs, the back part of the belly, the udder, and having white
+teats. My mother took great care in tanning it and made of it a fine
+robe for me. It either was taken or was burned by the soldiers who
+drove us from our camp on the Powder river a few months before the
+Custer soldiers came.
+
+A black buffalo calf was killed by Exhausted Elk far up the Tongue
+river. It being black instead of the usual yellow color of the
+calves caused it to be treated as a spirit animal. Four medicine
+women tanned its skin, assembled medicine men held ceremonies, the
+congregated people looked upon it with veneration. The skin was
+painted and placed upon a hill as a sacrifice gift to the Great
+Medicine, the same as was done with the skin of the white buffalo.
+Also, its flesh was eaten as if it were only an ordinary buffalo calf.
+
+A half-bull-half-cow buffalo was killed one time by the Cheyennes. My
+father helped in the killing of it. This animal was of enormous size.
+It was big, fat, had a tall back, long horns, and its hump was almost
+double the size of the average buffalo bull. My father called friends
+to his lodge for a feast upon this meat. It was not regarded as a
+medicine animal. The heart and the liver were cut into big slices
+to be eaten raw, as Indians usually ate these parts. Only the old
+medicine men ate of these slices at my father’s feast.
+
+There always was some danger mixed with the pleasures of wild game
+hunting. I remember a Cheyenne who was gored terribly by a buffalo
+bull. He recovered, though. After that he became known as Buffalo
+Not Kill Him. Walking Whirlwind, a young man about my age, had his
+shoulder torn by a bear. He also recovered.
+
+A bear attacked three old Cheyenne women as they were picking
+berries on Tongue river. One of the women was badly clawed. The
+two companions put her upon a horse and took her to camp. She died
+just after her arrival there. At that same time one of our men was
+out hunting. He saw a bear, shot it and killed it. As he approached
+the dead animal he observed dried blood all about its nose and its
+cheeks. This strange condition puzzled him. In skinning the bear he
+carefully preserved the bloody muzzle. When he arrived in camp with
+his meat packed in the skin he learned of the killing of the old
+woman. Everybody agreed this must have been the bear that killed her.
+
+Two Cheyenne men, Bear Dung and Sun Road, went buffalo hunting from
+a camp of ours on the lower Rosebud. As they were circling about a
+milling herd a bull sunk its horns into the belly of Bear Dung’s
+horse, ripped it open, lifted and tossed aside the animal. Bear Dung
+went sprawling to the ground. The bull immediately plunged at the man
+and gored him to death. Sun Road hurried into camp and told of the
+sad occurrence. The dead man’s women relatives took out a travois
+and brought him to camp. He was a brother of Buffalo Hump, an old
+Cheyenne now living on the Rosebud. Sun Road also is still alive, his
+home being on the Rosebud side of our reservation.
+
+Competitive sports used to interest us. Horse races, foot races,
+wrestling matches, target shooting with guns or with arrows, tossing
+the arrows by hand, swimming, jumping and other like contests were
+entered upon. In the tribe such competition usually was between
+men representing the three warrior societies. These were the Elk
+warriors, the Crazy Dog warriors and the Fox warriors. If any
+Sioux tribe or big band camped jointly with us the matches were
+between representative members of the two tribes. Bets were made on
+every kind of contest. The stakes were of guns, ammunition, bows
+and arrows, blankets, horses, robes, jewelry, shirts, leggings,
+moccasins, everything in the line of personal property. The betting
+always was on even terms. Articles were piled upon a blanket, matched
+articles in apposition to each other. The winners took all and
+shouted over the victory.
+
+The Elk warriors, the society to which I belonged, had the best
+runners. Our speediest man on foot was named Apache. He was almost as
+tall as I was and he was much heavier. He had remarkably big thighs.
+One time at a double camping with the Ogallalas on upper Powder
+river a foot race was arranged between the two tribal champions. The
+Ogallala fast man was tall and slender. His name was Black Legs. The
+distance they were to run was about a mile, I believe, although at
+that time we had no measurements for distance. Four friends of each
+man accompanied the two racers to the starting point. A revolver shot
+told them when to go. Near the finish the Sioux fell exhausted. Our
+man Apache was very tired, but he ran on to the end of the route. Of
+course, the Cheyennes took all of the stakes, let out a chorus of
+cheers and fired their guns into the air. “The Cheyenne medicine
+broke his legs,” the Sioux said when their man collapsed.
+
+The old Chief Little Wolf had been a great runner when he was a
+young man. The longer the distance the better it suited him. As the
+Cheyennes and the Ogallalas were traveling together in moving camp
+there was much bantering such as, “I think the Sioux can travel
+faster than the Cheyennes can,” or, “It appears the Cheyennes must go
+a little more slowly in order not to run away from their friends the
+Sioux.” Finally a young Sioux jokingly challenged Little Wolf to a
+foot race.
+
+“How,” assented Little Wolf, “I’ll run with you.”
+
+The caravan was stopped and arrangements were made for the race.
+Little Wolf then was past fifty years of age, while his Sioux
+challenger was just entering young manhood. Nevertheless, the
+Cheyennes backed their chief heavily. A great pile of bets were
+placed upon the containing blankets. Four Cheyennes and four Sioux
+went with the two men to the agreed starting point, which must have
+been three or four miles away. At the crack of a revolver shot the
+race began. Up to the last mile the young Sioux kept well in the
+lead. Then he began to move more slowly. It appeared Little Wolf
+never changed his pace. So he closed up toward the leader. In the
+last part of the last mile he went ahead, still running at what
+appeared to be his same rate while the other man’s speed continued to
+lessen. By a broad hundred yards Little Wolf won the contest. Many
+of the Sioux, even some who had lost bets, joined the Cheyennes in
+cheering for the old man.
+
+A good wrestler and general strong man was Little Hawk. He and
+Buffalo Hump and Brave Wolf made up a playful raiding group in the
+camp one time after a great hunting party had brought in lots of
+buffalo beef. All about the camp circle there were drying poles
+loaded with meat. The three young men had not been fortunate in the
+chase, so they decided to borrow from their friends. They went to a
+certain tepee.
+
+“We need meat,” they announced. “Your drying poles are too full, and
+we think our wants can be supplied there. But Little Hawk wants to
+wrestle for it. If anybody here can throw him we shall not take any
+food from this lodge.”
+
+Nobody there wanted to accept this challenge. The young men took some
+meat and went on to another tepee. There they made the same kind of
+announcement and proposition. There likewise all of the men present
+feared to grapple with Little Hawk, and there also the three joking
+robbers helped themselves from the bountiful store. At the next
+tepee the transaction was more complex. After some exchange of talk
+the spokesman of the lodge said:
+
+“Big Thigh is here. He says he will wrestle you.”
+
+The conditions of the match were agreed upon. The two men stripped to
+their breechcloths. A group of onlookers assembled. The group soon
+became a great crowd. Big Thigh and Little Hawk appeared equally
+confident. Both of them rushed into the grapple. They tugged and
+shoved and tripped. The advantage seemed to shift back and forth.
+The throng of spectators whooped and danced. There was some partisan
+cheering, but most of it was merely the expression of delight at
+witnessing this tribal championship battle. After several minutes
+of fierce and continuous struggling Little Hawk began to weaken and
+wilt. Big Thigh pinioned the arms of his antagonist and bore him
+face downward to the ground. The victor sat astride the back of the
+vanquished and sprinkled handfuls of dirt upon him. He also picked
+up a folded blanket lying near by and used this as a soft club in
+pretense at beating into complete submission the defeated Little
+Hawk. Shouts of congratulation greeted the conqueror while jeers
+were heaped upon the under dog and his two confederates. Brave Wolf
+and Buffalo Hump, ridiculed to complete embarrassment and compelled
+to replace their looted buffalo meat, quickly took themselves into
+hiding.
+
+Our target shooting was with rifles, revolvers and arrows. For the
+arrow contests an erect wooden figure of a man was the customary
+mark. Sometimes the arrows were shot from the bow, sometimes they
+were tossed by hand. Both accuracy and extent of penetration counted
+in either form of this archery. Shooting arrows for long distance was
+another test of capability. Here a strong bow and a powerful arm and
+hand were important elements for success. In all of these games the
+regular rule allowed four successive shots for each contestant. Fine
+points in the manipulation of arrows were brought out in the sidewise
+tossing of them at short distances, each toss being made in attempt
+at the exact crossing of another arrow thrown out by an opponent.
+
+Most of our few rifles were muzzle loaders and our revolvers usually
+were of the kind using caps and moulded bullets. The target for
+practice with them ordinarily was a black ring as broad as a large
+hand marked upon an animal’s dried shoulderblade or upon a barked
+tree. Teams of three or more men on each side often were arrayed
+against each other for either the arrow or gun contests. Usually
+the teams represented their respective warrior societies. On many
+occasions, though, there were personal engagements. In these there
+might be sought only an honorable distinction or there might be
+betting added as an incentive to achievement. An incident of this
+character that was much talked about among the Cheyennes came up at a
+time when we were camped on the Powder river.
+
+Jules Seminole brought a keg of whisky to the camp. He got it at
+some white man trading post. He was a southern half-breed married to
+one of our Northern Cheyenne women and accounted as belonging to our
+tribe. One of our young men solicited him:
+
+“Give me a drink of your whisky.”
+
+“No, but I’ll bet a drink that I can beat you at shooting,” Seminole
+proposed. “What have you to bet?”
+
+The young man feared defeat. But he went canvassing here and there in
+an effort to find someone who would take up Seminole’s challenge. One
+after another declined to contest. Finally, in jest rather than in
+earnest, he put the case before an old medicine man who was totally
+blind in one eye and partly blind in the other.
+
+“I’ll bet a good buffalo robe against the whole keg of whisky that I
+can beat you at shooting,” the old man declared to Seminole.
+
+Seminole evidently suspected some kind of trick. He hesitated, but
+the urgings of the gathered crowd carried him into acceptance of this
+counter proposition.
+
+A tree was barked and a black circle target drawn upon this clean
+surface. Seminole shot first. He had a cartridge rifle. The bullet
+imbedded itself an inch or so below the black circle.
+
+“Get me a pin,” the old medicine man requested of his young helper.
+
+The pin was brought. The aged Cheyenne placed it point forward upon
+his right palm. He held this palm upward in front of his eyes. His
+squint wrinkles deepened and his lips formed themselves into a
+pucker. A sudden puff of his breath caused the pin to vanish. Nobody
+knew what had become of it.
+
+“Examine the target,” the performer told them.
+
+There it was, buried to its head just inside the circle. The people
+all wondered. The keg of whisky was conceded to its new owner.
+
+“I’ll bet a horse against the whisky that you can’t do anything like
+that again,” Seminole dared him.
+
+“How,” came instantly a responsive agreement.
+
+The target was placed more distant, this at the request of Seminole
+and by assent of his competitor. Onlookers became involved in the
+betting. The medicine man found many backers of his mysterious
+powers. The half-breed adjusted his sights. He took an unusually
+long and careful and steady aim. “Bang!” His bullet struck within an
+inch of the circle’s center. His betting supporters were gleeful, the
+opposition were in doubt. They awaited anxiously the next move of
+their champion.
+
+“Bring me a claw of a redbird,” he calmly ordered.
+
+A dozen young men put themselves into his service. They wanted to
+help him in drinking the whisky. Within a minute he had the required
+object.
+
+The redbird claw was placed upon the same upturned palm where had
+been the pin. “The target is too far,” came a complaint. Then: “Yes,
+I can see it now.” Puff! The claw was gone. Where? Right into the
+central black spot of the black circle target!
+
+All comers had a drink of the whisky. A tin cup was brought and the
+old medicine man dipped in and passed out hot liquid mouthfuls to
+hundreds of Cheyennes. Nobody got enough to make him drunk. I spat
+out my mouthful. It did not taste good.
+
+Red Haired Bear and his wife were traveling with their lone lodge
+one time in the Black Hills. At their noon camp he saw deer tracks
+and set off to follow them. They led him up a dry coulee and into
+the timber. There a strong and disagreeable odor was wafted to him.
+He grasped his gun more firmly and went on. Just then a big snake
+stood up and flashed its tongue at him. Its head was above his
+head and its body resembled a tree. It struck him--one, two, three,
+four times. It backed off and poised as if to strike again. He was
+sickened, but he aimed his gun.
+
+“Great Medicine, help me,” he prayed.
+
+“Yes, be brave and I will help you,” a reply came from above.
+
+He bethought himself not to shoot at its head, since the bullet might
+glance off harmless. He shot it through the neck. The immense serpent
+threshed about in terrible fashion, crushing bushes and tearing up
+the earth. But it gradually quieted down, and finally it lay dead.
+
+The faint and terrified man took the back trail for his camp. He
+had four gullies to cross. He got over the first one without much
+difficulty. The second one troubled him. Just before he started
+across the third one he almost fainted. But he braced up and went
+over it. He was dizzy and wobbling as he approached the fourth gully.
+“Be brave now,” the Great Medicine said to him. He had dropped his
+gun, but the encouraging words led him to pick it up and go on. He
+staggered into and out of this fourth obstacle. At the camp he told
+his wife of what had occurred. She gave him a big dose of gunpowder
+in water. Then he vomited, the vomit having the same odor as had come
+from the snake. A second dose of gunpowder brought up more of the
+poison. A third treatment had the same effect, but the odor now was
+almost gone. The fourth time he took the mixture it stayed down in
+his stomach. Then he felt all right. Red Haired Bear himself told me
+of this experience. But he was not a reliable man, so I never was
+sure whether it was true or not.
+
+White Frog and Red Hat told a story of them having an adventure of
+this same kind. They had been to the trading post, where they had
+taken their pack horses loaded with skins of beaver, buffalo and
+antelope. While returning they arrived at Tongue river just above the
+mouth of Crow creek. The water was high. They dismounted, waded and
+led their horses to an island. For crossing the next channel they
+drove the horses ahead of them. The men were naked and were holding
+their clothing over their heads as they waded.
+
+A monstrous snake rose up from the water and threatened them. “It
+will eat up both of us,” they exclaimed together. They prayed the
+Great Medicine to pity them. At once there came a flood of rain and
+a whirling wind. The wind picked up the snake, dragged it along the
+water’s surface for a short distance, then lifted it into the air. It
+went up, up, up, and soon it was gone from their sight. White Frog
+and Red Hat agreed in their stories to us that the snake was so big
+it looked like a floating log. One Cheyenne who heard them said it
+might have been a floating log that looked like a snake.
+
+When Black Wolf went one time on a deer hunt he saw two women sitting
+on the edge of a cliff. Both women were beautiful in face and form.
+As they sat there dangling their feet over the cliff they beckoned
+to him. He went to them and sat down beside them. Pretty soon his
+nostrils perceived a strong odor of deer. At the foot of the cliff,
+in a pool of clear water, he saw a reflection of himself with two
+deer beside him. “You are only two deer,” he accused the women. At
+that they both jumped up. They changed instantly into deer and went
+bounding away into the timber.
+
+A Southern Cheyenne out hunting saw a lovely woman by a grove of
+trees, braiding her hair. She looked at him and smiled. That was
+enough to draw him straight to her. But when he took hold of her he
+smelled her flesh.
+
+“Oh, you deceitful deer!” he exclaimed.
+
+She struggled then to free herself from him. But he held firm. He
+tied her hands together and tied her feet together. The deer woman
+declared:
+
+“If you keep me thus tied you will die. If you let me go loose you
+will live to be old and always will be in good luck.”
+
+He decided to let her go free. She ran away as a doe deer. When the
+man arrived at his home lodge he was wildly insane. Medicine men were
+called. He told them the story of his meeting the deer woman. The
+medicine men prayed for him. His right mind soon came back to him.
+
+I had one time a strange adventure with a deer. I shot it with my
+rifle, the bullet passing through it from the rump forward. It ran
+away, I followed. I shot again, this time the bullet going through
+its chest, right to left. It turned around. Another shot made another
+hole through its chest, left to right. A fourth and a fifth bullet
+likewise was sent into and out of its front body. It ran to a bushy
+grove. In this grove I found it lying down. It was facing me. It
+was not only alive, but it appeared not to have been hurt at all. I
+hesitated and trembled a little as I drew my six-shooter. At close
+range I aimed at the middle of its forehead. The bullet brought
+blood from the exact point where I had aimed. But the deer appeared
+unharmed. I fired again, aiming at the same spot, and a new trickle
+of blood flowed out. Still the animal gave no sign of having been
+injured. I stood there and thought about the case. I decided to shoot
+once more--an eighth effort. That is two times the Indian sacred
+number four. I moved up close and put my revolver’s muzzle near the
+middle of the ridge above the deer’s right eye. Holding myself
+steady, I pulled the trigger. Instantly afterward the animal’s body
+became limp. It was dead.
+
+I do not entirely understand that. It may be I was dreaming, but it
+does not seem like a dream.[8] The Cheyennes consider all deer as
+having strong spirit powers. Medicine men like to get their medicine
+strength.
+
+An old Cheyenne man and his wife told me a story, when I was a boy,
+about a big stone that stands near Antelope creek west of the Black
+Hills. They said that at some time, long ago, some Indian girls were
+at play there. They were poking a forked stick into a hole, in search
+for beaver. They touched something, twisted, pulled, and brought out
+some hair on the end of the stick. They supposed it to be the hair
+of a wolf, a coyote or a porcupine. As they talked of it, a bear of
+immense size came from the hole. It chased the girls, capturing many
+of them and tearing them to pieces. Two sisters escaped. The bear
+followed them, going to their home tepee, but it did not harm them.
+When night came, the two girls crept out. They met two young men and
+told them of the frightful animal. “It can not be killed by any shot
+in its head nor its heart nor in other parts of its body,” they told
+the two young men, “but a shot through its foot, from the bottom
+upward, will kill it.” The young men considered the case. Then they
+said to the two girls: “All of us will hide here and wait.”
+
+When the bear awakened in the morning it learned the two girls were
+gone. It moved about inside and then outside, smelling of the ground.
+Sniff, sniff, sniff, sniff. It set off on the trail of the girls,
+following to the base of the great stone. There it sat down upon
+its haunches and looked upward toward the stone’s top. Pretty soon
+it began climbing up the steep side. A little distance up, its feet
+slipped and it slid down. It tried again, this time going higher, but
+it slid down again. Trials were made at many places. But always the
+effort was a failure.
+
+The two young men and the two girls were hidden close by. One of the
+young men shot an arrow at the bottom of the bear’s foot as it was
+clambering up the stone. When it went up again he shot another arrow.
+On another effort of the bear a third arrow was sent after it. The
+three arrows whizzed past the bear and went on high into the air.
+They came down without doing any damage. The fourth arrow flashed
+past very close to the bear’s left hind foot. The animal slid down
+and ran away. The arrow kept on going up, up, and it never came down.
+
+I have seen many times the long upright marks of the bear’s claws on
+this great column of stone. They are deep seams or furrows. It must
+have been a monster of a bear. As far back as I can remember, all of
+the Indians called this stone Bear Tepee or Bear Lodge.[9]
+
+An old Cheyenne man and I were traveling together one time past the
+Bear Tepee. He told me a story about it. He said that a long time
+ago--nobody knew how long--an Indian man journeying alone chose to
+sleep at the base of this tall stone. A buffalo head was lying near
+him. He slept four nights. During that time the Great Medicine took
+both him and the buffalo head to the top of the high rock. When the
+man awakened he could find no way to get down. He was hungry and
+thirsty, but he had neither food nor water. He was greatly distressed
+in mind. He thought of his wife and his children. He wept and prayed
+all day. At night, exhausted, he slept again. During that night the
+Great Medicine gently took him down again to his leaf bed on the
+ground. The buffalo head was left at the top, near the edge. That
+Indian man was said by some people to have been an Apache, others
+said he was a Shoshone, yet others declared he was a Cheyenne.
+
+I saw that buffalo head many times. The first time was when I was
+with the old man and he told me the story of it. He had a spyglass
+and we looked through it. We could see plainly that it was the head
+of a buffalo. I was a small boy at that time, eight or ten years old.
+The Bear Tepee is four or five hundred feet high, maybe higher, and
+its sides are straight up and down. How else could a buffalo head get
+up there except it be placed there by the Great Medicine?
+
+I have heard many old Cheyennes say that a long time ago the Great
+Medicine used to come down to the earth and talk with people.
+They said He had camped and visited and smoked with the old-time
+Cheyennes. Lots of times I have heard them talk about Him having
+given to our people the Black Hills and all of the gold there.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[7] Pryor creek.
+
+[8] In telling all of these fanciful stories. Wooden Leg exhibited a
+queer mingling of belief and doubt. They show an odd mental streak in
+a man having a large stock of level-headed common sense, and whose
+statements of fact as to genuine occurrences are worthy of full
+credit. He is the kind of man who could not tell a lie without at
+once retracting and correcting his misstatement, if he knew it to be
+such.--T. B. M.
+
+[9] Modern whites know this as “Devil’s Tower.”
+
+
+
+
+ III
+
+_Cheyenne Ways of Life._
+
+
+The warrior societies were the foundation of tribal government among
+the Cheyennes. That is, the members of the warrior societies elected
+the chiefs who governed the people. Every ten years the whole tribe
+would get together for the special purpose of choosing forty big
+chiefs. These forty then would select four past chiefs, or “old men”
+chiefs, to serve as supreme advisers to them and to the tribe. There
+were not any hereditary chiefs among the Cheyennes.
+
+The Elk warriors, the Crazy Dog warriors and the Fox warriors
+were the ruling societies of the Northern Cheyennes. Other like
+organizations had been in existence before my time, but during all
+of the period of my boyhood and manhood those three were the only
+active ones in our northern branch of the double tribe. Each warrior
+society had a leading war chief and nine little war chiefs. So, there
+were many men who might claim the title of chief. All together there
+were seventy-four such officials, counting both the tribal rulers
+and the warrior society rulers. There were four “old men” tribal
+chiefs, forty tribal big chiefs, three leading warrior chiefs and
+twenty-seven little warrior chiefs. Ordinarily they were ranked or
+held in respect in this order, the old men chiefs first, the little
+warrior chiefs last.
+
+The warrior chiefs had original authority only in their societies,
+each in his own special organization. By alternation, though, the
+tribal chiefs delegated governmental power to the warrior chiefs.
+That is, one group or another of the warrior chiefs and their
+followers were called upon to serve as active subordinate officials
+to carry out the orders promulgated by the big chiefs. Such warrior
+society group, when on this duty, were like the white man’s sheriffs,
+policemen, soldiers.
+
+Promotion in public life followed the line from private member of a
+warrior society to little chief of the same, then to leading chief,
+then to big chief of the tribe, finally to old man chief. Of course,
+all of the tribal and old men chiefs were members of one or another
+of the warrior societies. It often occurred that in time of battle or
+in organized great hunting expeditions a tribal big chief or an old
+man chief had, during such time, the low standing of a mere private
+person subordinate to the rule of the warrior chiefs. And, in many
+instances some man might be at the same time both a warrior chief and
+a tribal big chief or even an old man chief. Little Wolf had this
+honor put upon him. Even after he had become one of the four old men
+chiefs he was kept in office as leading chief of the Elk warriors.
+
+Four unmarried and virtuous young women were chosen as honorary
+members of each warrior society. If one of these entered into
+marriage or became unchaste she lost her membership and some other
+young woman was chosen in her place. The young women took no active
+part in the proceedings. They were allowed merely to sit inside the
+lodge of assemblage, there quietly looking on. At the society dances
+no women were permitted to do any of the work. Two little chiefs were
+appointed on each occasion to do the cooking, to serve the feast or
+to perform any other menial service necessary. The meetings or dances
+were held in privately owned lodges of members. The coverings were
+lifted or were removed so that spectators might view the affair from
+the outside. The three different societies had the same character of
+organization, and their social and military operations were carried
+out on the same general lines. A man could join only one of them.
+
+I joined the Elk warriors when I was fourteen years old. We were
+camped then at Antelope creek, near the Black Hills. Their herald
+chiefs were going about the camp circle calling, “All Elk warriors
+come for a dance and a feast.” They were gathering at a large tepee
+made of two family lodges combined into one. Left Handed Shooter, at
+that time leading chief of the Elks, came to my father’s lodge and
+said to me:
+
+“We want you to join the Elk warriors.”
+
+Oh, how important I felt at receiving this invitation! I had been
+longing for it, waiting to be asked, wishing I might grow older more
+rapidly in order to get this honorable standing already held by my
+father and my two older brothers. Seventy or more Elks were dancing.
+Occasionally one fired a gunshot into the air. As they danced they
+were scraping their “rattlesnake sticks,” the special emblem of Elk
+membership. Each of these sticks was made of hard wood, in the form
+of a stubby rattlesnake seven or eight inches long. On each stick was
+cut forty notches. Another stick was used for scraping back and forth
+along the notches. The combined operation of many instruments made a
+noise resembling the rattlesnake’s warning hum. Each member owned his
+personal wooden stick, but there was one made from an elkhorn that
+was kept always by someone as a trustee for the society. No payment
+nor gift was necessary for admission into a warrior organization.
+
+In the camp circles, in the tribal movings from place to place, in
+the great tribal hunts, in the times of Great Medicine or other
+general ceremonial dances--in fact, at all times of our lives some
+one or other warrior society was authorized or commanded by the
+tribal chiefs to take charge of the government. Ordinarily there was
+shift of the delegated authority by regular rotation, but such change
+in regular order was not always the case. The conclave of big chiefs
+decided which society should have it. A society might be appointed
+to act for one day, two days, three days, any stated length of time,
+or they might be appointed to serve during the continuation of some
+certain event. At any time their appointment might be revoked by the
+big chiefs and another society named in their stead. Anyhow, some one
+or other warrior band was on duty at all times to put into execution
+the will of the big chiefs.
+
+Perhaps at some time the Crazy Dog warriors might be acting as the
+policemen at this particular place of camping. Perhaps the four old
+men chiefs might determine that a general buffalo hunt ought to
+be entered upon. A herald on horseback was sent about the camp to
+proclaim:
+
+“All chiefs, open your ears and listen. Come to the council lodge.”
+
+There the matter was discussed. Perhaps it was decided first to move
+camp farther down the river, or up the river, or over to the next
+valley, or yet farther away. The big chiefs then considered which
+warrior society should conduct the camp movement. Perhaps they agreed
+upon the Fox warriors. The leading chief and the little chiefs of
+this society were notified there at the council. The old man herald
+went out to ride again about the camps and call out:
+
+“All Cheyennes, open your ears and listen. Tomorrow morning we move
+to Tongue river. Have your lodges down and yourselves and your horses
+ready. The Fox warriors will lead us.”
+
+The next morning, as all were preparing for the move, the Fox
+warriors assembled out forward in the direction of the intended
+movement. The old man herald instructed them: “You are the leaders
+today. Make all of the people obey you. Make them stay in their
+proper places. If any of them disobey our ordinary rules of travel
+you may pony-whip them, you may shoot their horses, you may kill
+their dogs, you may break their guns or their bows, you may punish
+them in any way that seems to you best, except you are not allowed to
+kill any Cheyenne.” The Crazy Dog warriors, who had been policemen in
+the camp, now went off duty and became merely Cheyenne individuals.
+The leading chief of the Fox warriors was the most important man
+of that day, his little chiefs and their subordinate warriors were
+his helpers. The tribal old men chiefs and big chiefs led the camp
+movement, the Fox warrior band immediately following them or sending
+their members from time to time back along the caravan to keep
+order. The big chiefs in front decided when it was time to stop
+for a rest, when to move on again, when and where to camp. The Fox
+soldiers transmitted and enforced their orders. When the big chiefs
+chose a spot for the camp their herald stationed himself where he
+could tell all of the oncoming people, “Camp here.” If there were any
+disputes about special location of lodges the Fox warriors settled
+the disputes. In fact, though, there rarely were any such disputes.
+Every camp circle of the Cheyennes was arranged very much like their
+preceding circles. Families or related families or clans set up their
+lodges at all times in about the same location with regard to each
+other. Always the horseshoe incomplete circle opened to the east.
+Always every individual lodge in the camp likewise had its entrance
+opening toward the east--toward the rising sun.
+
+To organize for the tribal buffalo hunt another council was called.
+This or any other council usually was held at and after darkness, by
+the light of a great bonfire. The big chiefs regularly would tell
+the leading warrior chiefs, “We want four good and reliable warriors
+to scout and discover the location of a buffalo herd.” When the
+warrior leaders had nominated these four the old man herald moved
+on horseback through the camp calling out their names and the duty
+put upon them. They went to the council and there received their
+instructions through their warrior chiefs. They performed the scout
+duty according to their orders--nobody ever dared refuse to go--and
+upon their return a report was made to the old man herald. Meantime,
+perhaps the big chiefs decided that the Elk warriors should conduct
+the buffalo hunting party. The herald went out and proclaimed:
+
+“All Cheyennes, open your ears and listen. Many buffalo have been
+discovered by our scouts. Sharpen your knives and your arrow points.
+See that your guns are in good order. Have your riding horses and
+your pack horses ready. Tomorrow morning we go. The Elk warriors will
+lead and conduct the hunt.”
+
+The Elks then actually led the party. Nobody but big chiefs were
+allowed to go in front of them. The Elk warriors did all of the
+scouting for game and watching for enemies while the party was on
+the move. Any non-Elk intruder would be pony-whipped, or worse. If
+any Elk himself disobeyed the orders of his warrior chiefs this
+disobedient one was punished, either by his fellow Elks upon their
+own initiative or by command of the warrior chiefs. The effort at all
+times was to carry out well whatever governmental task was placed
+upon the warriors, either on the hunts, at the camps, during a
+journey, in time of battle or under any conditions where they were
+vested with authority. The three societies competed against each
+other for efficiency in governmental action as well as in all other
+affairs appertaining to respectable manhood. There was competition
+also within each society, every ambitious member trying to outdo his
+fellows in all worthy activities.
+
+The Fox warriors were leading a buffalo hunt one time when I was
+about sixteen years old. We then were on Crow creek, northeast of
+where Sheridan, Wyoming, now stands. Last Bull was the leading chief
+of the Fox soldiers. I was riding with three other youths about my
+age.
+
+“Oh, lots of buffalo!” one boy suddenly exclaimed.
+
+We skirted around the band of hunters and got forward. A Fox warrior
+saw us crowding ahead. We also saw him, and we whirled our horses
+to go back. Two or three of the Foxes followed us. We scattered. I
+made a dash for Tongue river. It was frozen solid. My horse slipped
+and slid, but I got across. My pursuers stopped at the stream, but I
+kept on going away from them. I did not know what became of the other
+three boys. I was scared. My heart was thumping, thumping, pounding
+my breast. I expected to be pony-whipped, to have my horse killed
+and my clothing torn to pieces. But it appeared they never found out
+our identity.
+
+Another time, about a year later, I got into the same kind of
+trouble. This time we were moving camp. The Crazy Dog warriors were
+in the lead and conducting the movement. We were traveling up the
+Tongue river, far up, above the present Sheridan, and were about to
+go over the divide to the upper Powder river. Two other youths and
+myself forgot the rules. We rode forward from our proper place in the
+procession and went on out to a hilltop, there to have a look over
+the country, as every Indian naturally likes to do.
+
+Four Crazy Dog warriors were right after us. They were riding fast.
+The other two boys got away, but my pony played out on me. I had
+to stop and dismount. I was frightened to distraction, but my mind
+was made up to take bravely whatever punishment they might inflict.
+Nevertheless, I became mentally upset when four determined-looking
+Fox warrior policemen dashed up to me.
+
+“Do not whip me,” I begged. “Kill my horse. You may have all of my
+clothing. Here--take my gun and break it into pieces.”
+
+But after a talk among themselves they decided not to do any of these
+penal acts. They scolded me and said I was a foolish little boy.
+They asked my name, and I told them. That was the last time I ever
+flagrantly violated any of the laws of travel or the hunt.
+
+A guard line usually was thrown out by the warrior policemen when any
+buffalo herd was about to be attacked. It was required that all of
+the hunters remain behind this line until every preparation was made
+and until the appointed managers gave the word for a general advance.
+Of course, all were excited, anxious to get at the game. Or, somebody
+might think the policemen were too slow in completing the preparatory
+steps. So, occasionally an impatient hunter became obtrusive. This
+one was pretty sure to bring upon himself a lashing with pony whip
+thongs or a clubbing with the reversed heavy handle. Finally would
+come the signal:
+
+“Go!” Then the wild Indian chase was on.
+
+Special warrior society hunts often were engaged upon. For these only
+the members of the one particular organization were eligible. The
+societies contested against each other in this regard, each trying
+to beat the others in quantity of meat and skins brought back to
+camp. Left Handed Shooter, leading chief of the Elk warriors, one
+time appointed me as one of the four preliminary scouts to locate
+buffalo for an exclusively Elk warrior hunt. We went out at night.
+Winter weather, snow on the ground. Early in the morning we found a
+big herd. We returned to camp and reported the discovery. An old man
+herald called the Elk warriors and shouted out information of our
+report and of the proposed hunting party.
+
+Old Bear, a big chief, got four or five other Cheyennes to slip out
+with him for a premature raid upon the herd we had located for our
+Elk warrior adventure. Little Wolf, at that time a little warrior
+chief, took with him a band of Elks and followed the lawbreakers.
+Little Wolf opened the attack upon them by sending an arrow that
+killed Old Bear’s horse. The Elk band pony-whipped all of the Old
+Bear group, including the big chief himself, and made them go back
+and stay in camp.
+
+Feathered Wolf, an Elk warrior, one time attached himself uninvited
+to a hunting party of Crazy Dog warriors. He was leading two pack
+horses for carrying the meat he expected to get. Some Crazy Dogs
+warned him:
+
+“You do not belong with us. You ought to go back.”
+
+“But I am badly in need of meat,” he pleaded.
+
+Others came and urged him to return. They talked of punishing him by
+whipping, but they did nothing. They ended merely by telling him:
+
+“You are crazy.”
+
+He mingled with the hunters and shot away all of his arrows as they
+chased the herd. When the killing was done he said:
+
+“I killed one buffalo and helped in the killing of another. You
+should give me plenty of meat.”
+
+“Yes, we’ll give you some of it,” different ones promised him.
+
+But nobody gave him any. He had to go back to his home lodge with his
+two pack horses empty and himself hungry.
+
+At his lodge that evening he announced a smoking circle. He stood out
+in front of his tepee and called invitations to many members of the
+Crazy Dog society. It was supposed he hoped thus to lead them into
+making gifts of the appetizing food. But all of the invited ones were
+busy at something else, so he had to smoke alone and the drying poles
+beside his tepee remained bare. His wife brought him the smoking
+outfit. “Ah, kinnikinick,” he chuckled contentedly. He filled his
+pipe and smoked it to the last ashes. Pretty soon he became pale,
+weak, sick, then he vomited. His wife too had punished him. She had
+given him the strongest tobacco she could find in the camp.
+
+Two certain men were observed one time to have a big supply of
+buffalo meat hanging on the drying poles by their tepees. There had
+been a special warrior society hunt that day, but these men did not
+belong to that society. Investigation showed they had obtained their
+store from one of the animals killed in a side coulee and overlooked
+by the lawful hunters. The meat was taken from the two men, their
+guns were broken, their pack saddles were cut up, their lodges were
+torn down and burned.
+
+Half a dozen Sioux pushed themselves one time into an Elk warrior
+hunt. We always were friendly with the Sioux, about the same as if
+they were Cheyennes, but these were out of place at this particular
+time, and they knew it. Little Wolf led a party of his Elks in
+whipping them away. Two or three of the uninvited guests had blood
+running from head cuts made by the heavy handles of the pony whips.
+The Sioux--the plains Indians generally--had laws and customs similar
+to ours, so it was considered they had incurred our penalty. Often a
+disobedient Cheyenne or an intruding hunter might gain immunity from
+a whipping by prompt confession of guilt and by voluntary yielding of
+horses to be killed or of other property to be destroyed.
+
+The arrow was the preferred weapon when on a tribal hunt in a
+buffalo herd or when a large party were joined in the pursuit. Each
+rider shot arrow after arrow into whatever animal was convenient
+to him during the tumult of the running chase. When it was ended
+he had one or more arrows in various dead buffalo scattered over
+the area covered by the flight of the herd. Every man kept his own
+arrows always marked in some peculiar manner whereby they could be
+identified, so when the field was reviewed after the termination of
+the killing he could find out which buffalo he had killed or had
+helped to kill. It could be learned in each instance which arrow was
+the fatal one and which were of little or no importance. Thus the
+claims to skin and meat could be settled. In case of disagreement,
+the chiefs decided the question. Gun bullets could not be
+distinguished the one from the other, so the guns were used only when
+one man was hunting alone or when a small party of special friends
+hunted together. The guns also had to have powder and lead and caps,
+which we did not always have on hand. We could make the arrows, or we
+often recovered them from the dead animal.
+
+Different tribes had different ways of making their arrows. All
+arrows belonging to members of any certain tribe were made according
+to a certain general plan, so that by examination of any arrow it
+could be learned to what tribe the owner belonged. I used to be able
+to distinguish several different tribal forms from one another. I can
+recollect now the distinguishing features of four of them: The Crow,
+Sioux, Pawnee and Cheyenne.
+
+The Crow butt end was whittled to a sharp ridge and the notch was
+cut across this ridge, the same as was done by the Cheyennes. Their
+metal or stone point was a long triangle with its shortest side at
+the arrow’s shaft and with all three sides formed in exactly straight
+lines, these features likewise the same as in the Cheyenne arrows.
+Both of these had the slender neck whittled from the notch end in a
+long taper to the main shaft. But the distinction was in the size
+of the shaft. The Crow shaft always was fat and heavy. The Cheyenne
+shaft was slender.
+
+The Sioux arrow had its notch extremity cut flat across the end, in
+this respect differing from all of the others, which were beveled
+on two sides to make a sharp ridge for the notch. The neck of the
+Sioux arrow was begun just below the notch by a circular cut straight
+into the wood. Then, beginning further down, the neck was shaved
+and tapered carefully up to this straight cut. The Sioux metal or
+stone points differed from all others. The form in general was the
+same long triangle, but the short side at the arrow’s shaft had a
+deep concave curve. Thus it had two horns or barbs. Here was the
+particular brand of the Sioux arrow.
+
+The Pawnees had the flat butt end and its notch the same as the
+Sioux. But the neck below the notch was tapered like a Crow or a
+Cheyenne arrow. The triangle points were also the same as on the Crow
+and Cheyenne arrows, having no horns or barbs.
+
+The Cheyenne arrow was distinguished from the Pawnee by its notch
+cut into a sharp ridge instead of into a flat surface butt end. Its
+tapering neck, its sharp ridge butt end and its straight line point
+separated it from the Sioux. The diameter of the shaft rendered
+it readily distinguishable from the Crow. Moreover, the Cheyennes
+had one peculiar brand that plainly indicated their arrows. This
+characteristic was in the three wavy lines symmetrically spaced
+around the shaft and painted all the way along it from the feathers
+to the base of the hard point. These special wavy stripes were
+designed as having a spirit or medicine influence, to help in killing
+the buffalo. Communication with the Great Medicine above us is
+supposed to be made in wavy lines, not straight lines.
+
+All Indian arrows I ever saw have three rows of clipped feathers
+set symmetrically into slots in the neck and upper shaft for a
+distance of five or six inches. Between these feather rows are three
+straight lines painted in color, usually red. The shaft may be
+painted according to the fancy of the individual, or according to
+his personal mode of branding it. Old Cheyennes told me that in past
+times all Cheyenne arrows were painted blue. This was done by way
+of respectful regard for the blue waters of a certain highly revered
+lake in the Black Hills. During my days most arrow points were metal,
+although a few men, especially the older men, continued to make them
+of stone. All Indian arrows were of the same length--that is, every
+man made his own arrows to measure exactly from his armpit to the
+tips of his fingers.
+
+Other weapons differed in the different tribes, and sometimes a
+certain form of weapon was characteristic of a certain tribe. The
+Sioux were the only Indians I knew who made regular use of the stone
+war-club made by attaching an oval stone to the end of a stick
+wrapped with rawhide. The Cheyennes rarely carried one of these,
+while a Sioux appeared not fully equipped unless he had one tucked
+into his belt. Instead, the Cheyenne counterpart implement was a
+hatchet or small ax. Sometimes the hatchet was transformed into a
+fancy pipe for ceremonial smoking. The metal head was drilled for the
+bowl and a little round canal was burned through the central length
+of the handle to serve as a pipestem.
+
+Spears were used by the Cheyennes. The long and slender points
+might be of metal or they might be of stone or of bone, the rib of
+a buffalo or a bone from some other animal serving well for such
+purpose. The shaft was decorated, of course. Great care often was
+taken in its coloring and general design. A regular feature of the
+plan was the eagle feather attachments. One eagle feather having a
+black tip dangled from the shaft near the hard point’s base. Two
+eagle feathers floated from a slender buckskin thong tied to the
+upper end of the shaft.
+
+The Sioux had knife sticks for fighting. These had long shafts, the
+same as a spear. But instead of the attached point at the end there
+were three blades at the shaft’s side and near its end. The blades
+were in a row, close together, and were tied there by rawhide after
+having been set into a slot. They projected out three or four inches
+from the heavy shaft. Sometimes the edges were straight, sometimes
+they were pointed so that they resembled a section of sickle bar for
+a mowing machine. Always they were kept sharpened to a keen edge.
+
+The earrings of an Indian often indicated his tribal stock. A
+Cheyenne ear had but one piercing, only one ring, and this ring was
+looped directly through or close up to the ear. The Crow likewise
+had but one piercing and only one ring or shell disc, but this was
+suspended below the ear by an intervening strand. The one piercing
+of the Sioux ear had a long loop directly through it, and from the
+bottom of this long loop dangled another loop of the same kind. The
+Pawnees, Kiowas and Apaches had various piercings around the edge of
+the ear lobe, each piercing having in it a small ring. The Arapahoes
+and the Utes had ear decorations resembling the Cheyennes.
+
+The Sioux wore necklaces, regularly in single strands. The Crow
+necklaces ordinarily were in multiple strands. In the old times the
+Cheyennes did not wear decorative necklaces, but later they adopted
+the fashion to some extent. Mostly they designed them in single
+strands, like the Sioux standard plan. But the multiple curved loops
+of the Crows became also fashionable among us. Eagle feathers stuck
+up from the back hair of many a Sioux. The number of such feathers
+worn by any one man was supposed to denote the number of enemies he
+had killed. The Cheyennes never adopted this custom.
+
+All Indian lodges coming under my observation were built on the same
+general lines. The conical tepee was the standard form. Buffalo
+skin was the standard material for covering the poles. The size was
+regulated according to the quantity of skins available or according
+to the number of persons in the household or according to some other
+special condition. But there were tribal differences that enabled an
+informed observer to distinguish camps or even to classify a lone
+tepee.
+
+The Sioux lodge was unusually tall and was narrow at the base. Its
+flap opening at the top was large and long. The Pawnee lodge was the
+opposite of the Sioux. It was remarkably low and broad, and it had
+a short and small top flap opening. The Cheyennes and the Arapahoes
+had tepee plans alike, in general form midway between the Sioux and
+the Pawnee structure. The camp circle as a whole was in all cases
+the same--a horseshoe with its opening to the east. All Indians had
+also the same custom of placing each tepee with its entrance opening
+facing the rising sun.
+
+Inside the Cheyenne lodge an old woman slept just at the left side
+of the entrance. Next past her, still on the left side, the lodge’s
+owner and his wife had their bed. If the family was large the girls
+slept near the father and mother while the boys were located across
+on the opposite side of the earth floor. Other adults, or whatever
+guests might be there, were placed between the spaces allotted to the
+boys and the girls or were put between the boys and the right hand
+side of the entrance opening.
+
+An old woman was an important part of every household organization.
+This was the custom among all of the plains Indians, especially in
+families where girls were growing up. This old woman saw that each
+occupant of the lodge used only his or her own proper bed or place
+of waking repose. She compelled each to keep his or her personal
+belongings beside or at the head of the owner’s assigned space. She
+was at the same time the household policeman, the night watchman
+and the drudge. Ordinarily her badge of office was a club. She was
+conceded the authority to use this club in enforcing the rules of the
+lodge.
+
+[Illustration: CHEYENNE WOMEN SETTING UP A TEPEE]
+
+From fifteen to seventeen buffalo skins were united to make a
+covering for the usual Cheyenne lodge. When skins were plentiful not
+many lodges had less than fifteen, regardless of the condition that
+some of the tepees might have in each only a young married couple,
+with perhaps an old woman or some other one or two added people.
+On the other hand, rarely was a lodge larger than seventeen skins,
+even if twenty people were sheltered there. The larger lodges had
+to have heavier poles, and, in moving, these with the skins had to
+be transported by the horses. Too much of such burden hindered the
+progress of the camp movement. Big lodges made pleasant abodes, but
+they were troublesome in traveling. The average and usual Cheyenne
+tepee was twelve to fifteen feet in diameter across its earth floor.
+The height from the floor’s center to the tepee’s peak was the
+same as the diameter of the floor. That was the regular standard
+architectural plan of a Cheyenne lodge.
+
+The camp circle of the Northern Cheyenne tribe, all assembled,
+enclosed a space about one-fourth or one-third of a mile in
+diameter. It usually straddled a small stream of water. If the
+location permitted, a position was taken near to a larger stream
+into which the small one emptied. Hunting parties or war parties of
+men made themselves temporary night shelters of willow wands stuck
+into the ground, bent over and tied together for a dome roof, then
+covered with robes. Or, such parties crept into caves or sought the
+protection of heavy brush and thick foliage. The main camp never
+went into high mountains during the winter. Too much snow. Mountain
+campings were made during the summer season.
+
+For moving the village, the usual time for leaving the old site
+was about nine o’clock in the morning, I believe. Not much if any
+preparation was made until that morning came. The arrival at the next
+stop would be about the middle of the afternoon. Long before dark
+the whole village would be set up and everybody would be at home, as
+if this had been the dwelling place for many months. A thousand or
+several thousand people might travel along that way from day to day,
+actually moving their towns or cities, taking all of their property,
+their wives and children and old people, their horses and their dogs,
+everything that made up a full home life. I think that is better
+than the white people can do.
+
+The women did all of the work of moving. They took down the lodges,
+packed and attended to the transportation of them and all of the
+household effects, set up the lodges at the new location and put
+all of the furnishing and personal baggage in the right places in
+each lodge. The whole removal was accomplished during a part of
+one day. In such traveling we sometimes could outrun the soldiers,
+notwithstanding they had only themselves and their horses to
+care for. We often got our homes and all of our people and their
+belongings across rivers where the soldiers could not or did not
+follow us.
+
+The women brought wood, cut it, kept the fires burning, cooked the
+food, cared for the children, did all of the home work. The men took
+care of the horses, guarded against enemies and fought them when
+necessary or when desirable, hunted the wild game, brought in the
+meat and the skins. Ordinarily a man did not toil at domestic tasks
+nor did a woman hunt or fight. In emergency, though, either a man or
+a woman might aid or take the place of the other.
+
+Women used saddles for riding. They sat astride. The saddles were
+made by them, the tree of elkhorn or of hard wood, this wrapped with
+buffalo rawhide sewed in place with shredded tendon sinew thread.
+They also made pack saddles of the same material, but having a
+different form. Old men likewise used saddles. But young men always
+rode bareback. I learned to use a saddle as a scout at Fort Keogh
+after our Indian roaming and fighting days were past. The white
+people say we mount a horse from the wrong side, but I never changed
+that. They say too that we do not know how to sharpen a knife. In
+doing this we grind only one side of the knife’s edge. But we make
+them keen by that method. I see no need for grinding both sides of a
+knife’s blade.
+
+I did not smoke during my boyhood. As a youth I took occasional
+tastes, but the habit was not formed. The Cheyennes of those days did
+not chew tobacco. My father gave me a medicine pipe, for devotional
+or ceremonial smoking, when I was seventeen years old. He himself
+made it. The bowl was of red stone. My mother made me a long buckskin
+pouch and beaded it, this to contain my pipe and tobacco--or, the
+mixture that commonly is known as kinnikinick. This mixture was half
+tobacco--plug tobacco shaved off and dried--and half dried inner bark
+of the red willow. In the South our people used some other kind of
+bark, as our northern red willow did not grow there.
+
+Old-time pipes, before my days, were made of deer leg bone. The bone
+was wrapped with rawhide strips taken from the back of a buffalo’s
+head. This wrapping was partly for the spirit influence and partly to
+keep the bone from breaking when heated by the smoking.
+
+We wore clothing, winter and summer. We had light summer moccasins
+and heavy winter moccasins. These always were cut low and had but one
+string, whereas the Sioux moccasins were cut high, to lap around the
+legs, and had two or more strings. One time I saw some white children
+barefooted. I pitied them, supposing them to be very poor. When I was
+a small boy, a soldier at the fort on Buffalo creek gave me a hat.
+Not long afterward I lost it. I was eighteen years old before I got
+another one. It was not customary for men, except old men, to wear
+any special head covering. Women all went bareheaded or covered the
+head with a shawl or a blanket or a robe.
+
+The buffalo hat was worn by old men. It was made of buffalo rawhide.
+A broad oval segment of the skin was used. An irregular circle was
+marked on this surface, the drawing made to accord with the shape of
+the head. From the center to the outer rim of this circle several
+cuts were made. The cut flaps were lifted to stand upright. This left
+the crown wide open and its rim surrounded by the upstanding diamond
+points. A leather thong under the chin held the hat in place.
+
+Our people learned from the Crows this way of making hats. That
+is, we discovered the idea from them. One time, when the Cheyennes
+were camped on Tongue river above the present Sheridan, the Crows
+stole some horses from us. As the Cheyennes pursued them the Crows
+abandoned the horses and fled. They lost two hats, and the Cheyennes
+found these. They were used as patterns. My father used to wear a
+cloth over his open-top hat, to shield his head from the sun’s heat.
+Every old man made his own hat.
+
+Buffalo robes from adult animals served as overcoats for men or
+women. Buffalo calf or deer robes were used by the children. Buffalo
+hair sometimes was stuffed into the moccasins to keep the feet
+warm. Grease paint was used on the face for the principal purpose
+of shielding the skin from cold during the winter and from sunburn
+during the summer. The most common color was a brownish red, but
+personal fancy might choose some other color or some combination.
+Each warrior also had his particular mode of painting himself, his
+spirit or medicine ornamentation, when preparing for battle or for
+death or for social mingling.
+
+All of the best clothing was taken along with him when any warrior
+set out upon a search for conflict. The articles were put into a
+special bag--ordinarily a beautifully beaded buckskin pouch, but
+perhaps a rawhide one--and this was slung at one side of his horse.
+The bag also contained extra moccasins--beaded moccasins--warbonnet,
+paints, a mirror, special medicine objects, or anything else of
+this nature. If a battle seemed about to occur, the warrior’s first
+important preparatory act was to jerk off all his ordinary clothing.
+He then hurriedly got out his fine garments. If he had time to do
+so he rebraided his hair, painted his face in his own peculiar way,
+did everything needful to prepare himself for presenting his most
+splendid personal appearance. That is, he got himself ready to die.
+
+The idea of full dress in preparation for a battle comes not from a
+belief that it will add to the fighting ability. The preparation is
+for death, in case that should be the result of the conflict. Every
+Indian wants to look his best when he goes to meet the Great Spirit,
+so the dressing up is done whether the imminent danger is an oncoming
+battle or a sickness or injury at times of peace. Some Indian tribes
+did not pay full attention to this matter, some of them seeming not
+to care whether they took life risks while naked or while only partly
+clad or shabbily clad. But the Cheyennes and the Sioux were careful
+in following out the procedure. When any of them got into a fight not
+expected, with no opportunity to dress properly, they usually ran
+away and avoided close contact and its consequent risks. Enemy people
+not understanding their ways might suppose them to be cowards because
+of such flight. In fact, these same apparent cowards might be the
+bravest of the brave when they have on their good clothing and feel
+that they may present a respectable appearance if called from this
+life to meet the Great Spirit.
+
+The naked fighters, among the Cheyennes and the Sioux, were such
+warriors as specially fortified themselves by prayer and other
+devotional exercises. They had special instruction from medicine men.
+Their naked bodies were painted in peculiar ways, each according to
+the direction of his favorite spiritual guide, and each had his own
+medicine charms given to him by this guide. A warrior thus made ready
+for battle was supposed to be proof against the weapons of the enemy.
+He placed himself in the forefront of the attack or the defense. His
+thought was: “I am so protected by my medicine that I do not need to
+dress for death. No bullet nor arrow can harm me now.” On the other
+hand, a warrior not made ready by special religious exercise and
+appliances had in his heart the thought: “A bullet or an arrow may
+hit me and kill me. I must dress myself so as to please the Great
+Spirit if I should go now to Him.”
+
+Warbonnets were not worn by all warriors. In fact, there were only
+a few such distinguished men in each warrior society of our tribe.
+It was expected that one should be a student of the fighting art for
+several years, or else that he be an unusually apt learner, before
+he should put on the crown of eagle feathers. He then did so upon
+his own initiative, or perhaps because of the commendatory urgings
+of his seniors. The act meant a profession of fully acquired ability
+in warfare, a claim of special accomplishment in using cunning and
+common sense and cool calculation coupled with the bravery attributed
+to all warriors. The wearer was supposed never to ask mercy in
+battle. If some immature young man pretended to such high standing
+before it seemed to his companions that he ought to do so, he was
+twitted and shamed into awaiting his proper time. I first put on my
+warbonnet when I was thirty-three years old, fourteen years after
+I had quit the roaming life. After a man had been accepted as a
+warbonnet man he remained so throughout his lifetime. War chiefs
+and tribal chiefs ordinarily were warbonnet men, but this was not a
+requirement for these positions. Pure modesty might keep the bravest
+and most capable fighter from making the claim. Also, an admittedly
+worthy wearer of the warbonnet might not be chosen for or might
+refuse all official positions. The feathered headpiece, then, was not
+a sign of public office. It was a token of individual and personal
+feeling as to his own fighting capabilities.
+
+The warbonnet was made by the man who was to wear it. His wife,
+mother or sister made only the beaded band for the forehead. The
+man made also whatever spirit charm objects he might use, or he got
+a medicine man to make them for him. The women made all of the war
+shirts, leggings, moccasins and such clothing for the men. They also
+made all of the common clothing for the men, for themselves, and for
+all members of the household. The men made their own pipes, weapons,
+lariat ropes and such other articles as were used by men only.
+
+Our hand mirrors were not used entirely for dressing and painting. We
+made use of them for signaling. Two persons who understood each other
+could exchange thoughts in this way over long distances, and even
+when they could not see each other. Some kinds of such signals were
+understood by all of our people. The little glass was often useful
+in approaching a camp when the traveler was in doubt whether it was
+an assemblage of his own people or of an enemy or unknown people. In
+such cases, flashes of inquiry and flashes of response, or lack of
+responses, settled the doubt.
+
+My father bought me a rifle and a six-shooter when I was about
+sixteen years old. He got them at a trader’s store somewhere, when he
+went away on a journey to the place. He exchanged buffalo robes for
+them. The rifle was a muzzle loader, using powder, bullet and caps.
+The six-shooter also was loaded in the same way. Before that time I
+had learned to shoot with other people’s guns, but these were the
+first ones I ever owned.
+
+Some Indians used to cut off the rifle barrels, to make them lighter
+for carrying on horseback. It was supposed they would shoot just as
+well with the short barrel. We never cut off the stock. The shortened
+rifles were used in chasing buffalo on horseback. Such weapons could
+be handled with one hand while the horse was controlled with the
+other. They were known to us as the “buffalo gun.”
+
+An old-time way of killing buffalo was by chasing them in winter
+over a steep bluff into a deep snowdrift. As they floundered there
+they could be speared or beaten to death. A few times I was in that
+kind of hunt. I heard old people tell of having used snowshoes to go
+after buffalo, but I never saw any of that kind of hunting. We always
+stripped the meat from the bones while butchering. The only bones we
+took were the ribs. We sometimes used the legs as mauls to break up
+the ribs. Oh, how good was buffalo rib roast!
+
+Four arrows was the regular allowance for the killing of one buffalo
+during a horseback chase. The need of more than that number was
+discreditable to the skill of the bowman. Less than that was a matter
+for boasting. If one killed a buffalo with only one arrow, that was
+wonderful.
+
+I have helped in the chasing of antelope bands over a cliff. In the
+Black Hills was one special place where we worked for our meat in
+that manner. The creek near by was called Antelope creek. The first
+time I went there an old man accompanied me. We located ourselves
+in hiding near the base of the cliff, with women and old people and
+children. Two young men rounded up a herd and drove them over for us.
+Many of them were killed or got broken legs. We clubbed to death the
+injured ones.
+
+We could get food, clothing and shelter from the buffalo only.
+Saddles and harness, halters and bridles, were made by using their
+rawhide. Stout thongs for all purposes were cut from them. For a
+rawhide lariat rope, long strands were cut by following around the
+outside of a buffalo rawhide. Three or four of these strands were
+plaited together. Buffalo hair, particularly from the neck of a bull,
+also was spun into long strands and plaited to make a lariat. The
+buffalo, then, was very important to us in our mode of life. When any
+man went out specially hunting them he usually led two or three pack
+horses to bring in his gathered supply of food and skins.
+
+Fishing lines were made of horsehair. The hairs were tied to make
+long threads, and these were plaited together. We got metal hooks
+from the white men traders. I have caught rabbits also with baited
+hooks on the horsehair lines. I heard of eagles having been captured
+in that way. But I never tried it on an eagle. The Arapahoes used to
+be great eagle hunters. Old men told me the Cheyennes in past times
+had caught them from pits. The pit was covered with sticks, and a
+dead rabbit or some other tempting flesh bait was placed upon the
+sticks over the center of the pit. The hunter hid himself below the
+bait. When an eagle alighted he seized its legs, jerked it down,
+grabbed its head and wrung its neck.
+
+Twisting rabbits out of a hollow log, using a forked stick to get the
+hold for pulling them, was a boyhood game. I set my muzzle loader
+rifle one time on the upper Rosebud as a trap and caught a fox. I
+have caught coyotes by that same means. The taking of the bait pulled
+the trigger and shot the animal. A piece of fat meat was the best
+lure for them. I have poisoned lots of wolves and got their pelts.
+A good way is to put the poisoned meat upon the top of a stick stuck
+into the snow, the meat being about on a level with a wolf’s body.
+The trapper goes back next day and follows the trial of whatever wolf
+might have gone away from the stick.
+
+My first choice of meat was antelope. Buffalo was a close second
+choice. Deer and elk came next. It appeared, though, that no Indian
+ever got actually turned against buffalo flesh. Beaver, rabbit,
+prairie chickens, bear, fish and turtles are good. Otter or wolf are
+not good, except wolf pups taste good if one be hungry. Dogs are the
+same as wolves. An old dog or an old wolf being boiled sickens me.
+Boiling pups give out almost as bad an odor.
+
+Salt was in use by the Cheyennes before I was born. We used it when
+we had it, but we did not always have it. There was a stream known
+to the Indians as Salt creek somewhere in the South. From there the
+Southern Cheyennes used to bring to us great chunks of salt. We
+sometimes smoked our meat, partly to help in preserving it and partly
+because the flavor was an agreeable change at times.
+
+Steel and flint was the usual source of fire. Neither my older
+brother nor myself had these, but my father had a good pair. We used
+to borrow from him. In the usual personal traveling pack was a small
+box or bag containing steel, flint and kindling. Dried buffalo dung,
+usually known as “buffalo chips,” makes good kindling when it is
+pulverized. Spark, kindle, blow, spark, kindle, blow, until a small
+blaze is started. Then put on twigs or grass, then small wood, then
+large wood. Buffalo chips in their natural chunks made good wood.
+
+The Crows used to have a custom of making a pile of buffalo chips to
+be kicked to pieces by whoever might come to camp pretending to bear
+an important message. This was by way of oath that he would tell the
+truth. There was no such custom among the Cheyennes. Our way was to
+build a bonfire and call the chiefs. No oath of any kind was taken.
+It was supposed the truth would be told without special promise.
+Perhaps that was not the case with the Crows.
+
+I have heard of another Crow custom different from the Cheyenne way.
+I have been told that when a Crow stole a horse or found any article
+it was expected of him that he give it away. It was considered not
+right for him to keep it. A Cheyenne might present a stolen horse or
+a found article to a relative or a friend, but it was regarded as
+entirely fair and proper for him to keep it for himself if he chose
+to do so. Ordinarily he kept it. I admire the old Crow way of acting
+in that respect. Such conduct makes a good and unselfish heart.
+
+The Sioux often buried their dead on scaffolds, but I never saw
+any Cheyenne burials in that way. Sometimes our dead were put upon
+platforms on tree branches. Mostly, though, they were placed in small
+hillside rocky caves if these were convenient. In later times, and in
+many instances at the present day on our reservation, the dead body
+was deposited on the surface of the ground on a rocky hill or in some
+place out of the way of usual travel. The body was well wrapped in
+blankets or skins, and it may or may not have been put into a wooden
+box. In either case a heap of stones was piled over it to shield it
+from animals.
+
+Our women used to cut their legs and arms, usually in crosswise
+slashes, as an act of mourning. Some of them--the older ones--yet
+do this. A married woman cut off her hair, in ragged form, if her
+husband died. In mourning for other relatives the hair might be worn
+loose and uncombed for a long or a short time. Men did not cut the
+flesh in mourning. They let loose the hair or cut off their braids.
+Men who had lost relatives often cut off also the manes and the tails
+of their horses as a sign of mourning.
+
+There was no marriage ceremony among the Cheyennes. Such union was
+mainly a simple agreement between the two principal parties. In far
+back old times young men purchased their brides, but during my days
+this was not the custom among us. In our later practice presents
+might be given by the young man, these ordinarily to the girl’s
+brothers. But these were given after the marriage, as an indication
+of good will, not as a purchase price. Reciprocal gifts often were
+made to the newly married couple.
+
+The older way of entering upon the preliminary steps toward marriage
+was for the young man first to consult his own father. An old woman
+relative was enlisted as an emissary. “Tell the girl’s father I
+will give him four horses (or some other number of horses) for his
+daughter as a wife for my son.” The old woman went and negotiated
+with the father and his daughter. If the offer or some modification
+of it were agreed upon, the initiative father gathered together or
+borrowed from relatives such horses or blankets or other gifts as
+were required. These were taken to the lodge of the girl’s father.
+The prospective bride was put upon a blanket. Her personal belongings
+were put there with her or were wrapped in another package. She and
+her property were carried to the lodge of the young man’s father and
+placed inside, the carriers leaving her there and going elsewhere.
+The young man seized her as his wife. All of the supposed purchase
+gifts often were bestowed upon the young couple. Relatives of the two
+parties exchanged presents and compliments. The old woman emissary
+got a horse. Gifts all around were made in accordance with the
+ability of the people interested and in accordance with the degree of
+satisfaction felt because of the event.
+
+Our most common custom was for the young man to do all of his own
+managing of the affair. In the night time he crept stealthily to
+the vicinity of the loved one’s parental tepee. He looked and
+listened--listened long and intently. He crept closer, still closer,
+until he was at the outside wall of that side of the lodge where
+slept the one he was seeking. He whispered, perhaps had to whisper
+more loudly, to awaken her. They conversed in whispers, possibly the
+first time they ever had spoken directly to each other, although all
+their lives they had lived in the same camps.
+
+“Will--will--will you marry me?”
+
+“Y-y-yes.”
+
+She crept out and joined him. They went together to the lodge of
+the young man’s brother or sister or to a place where dwelt elder
+relatives of his.
+
+The next morning two intruders were discovered there, a young man and
+his young wife. The discovery was announced, all parties interested
+were informed. Not often was the information displeasing. Ordinarily
+all concerned were contented and manifested their contentment in the
+usual exchange of gifts.
+
+The newly married couple lived temporarily at the lodge of relatives
+on one or the other side, preferably with a brother or a sister of
+the husband. This was but a fleeting residence. The first important
+duty of the husband was to get skins for a tepee, either by borrowing
+them or by taking them in the hunt. Then it was the duty of the young
+wife to tan and sew together these skins and set up a home lodge.
+
+Plural wives were kept by many of the old Cheyennes. The one family
+lodge sheltered the entire combined family. Commonly the two or
+more wives were born sisters. This condition checked or prevented
+the jealous quarreling likely to occur were they from different
+families. Two wives ordinarily was the limit. But in my time I knew
+two different men who each had three wives living with him. In each
+of these instances the three wives were sisters. The two men were
+named Red Arms and Plum Tree. Both of them and their entire families
+were in the Cheyenne camp on the Little Bighorn when we had the great
+battle there. Plum Tree was the father of Sun Bear and Two Feathers.
+Both of these sons of his fought the soldiers at that time, and Two
+Feathers is yet living here on the Tongue river.
+
+Captive women from other tribes were made wives of our men. There
+were many of such among us. Spotted Hawk’s mother was a Ute woman
+captured by our people when she was a small girl. The old Chief
+Dull Knife, or Rabbit, or Morning Star, had as his wife a Pawnee
+captive woman. At the time she came to us, two other Pawnee women
+were brought and were taken into marriage for bringing up Cheyenne
+children. Crow women stolen long ago by our warriors in raids were
+mothers of some important Cheyennes, including Big Foot, Big Thigh
+and the Chiefs Crazy Head and Little Horse. I do not know of any
+Cheyenne women having been captured from us by the Crows. The Pawnees
+and the Shoshones got away with some of them.
+
+An unfaithful wife did not incur any public penalty, according to the
+laws of the Cheyennes and the Sioux. Her husband might inflict some
+penalty. That was permissible, but he was not conceded the right to
+kill her. I knew one man who cut a great gash in his wife’s forehead
+because of her going with another man. Ordinarily, though, the loss
+of his wife’s affection was looked upon as a joke on the husband, and
+he kept quiet about it or pretended that he did not bewail the loss.
+The Arapahoes had a tribal punishment for a wife’s unfaithfulness.
+They cut off the end of the woman’s nose. Then any future observer
+might have notice of her frailty when contemplating the taking of her
+as his wife.
+
+Fighting between Cheyennes, either men or women, was forbidden by
+the tribal laws. In case of a fight some chief near at hand would
+call out: “Warriors, separate these fighters and whip them.” The
+warrior policemen then on duty would respond to the call. A band
+of them would give such punishment as seemed to them fitting. If
+the fighters renewed their strife they might have punishment added,
+might have their tepees torn down, their horses killed, property
+damage done to them in some other way, any suitable and sufficient
+punishment--except, no policeman warrior nor anyone else lawfully
+could kill a Cheyenne.
+
+Pony whips, either the lashes or the heavy stick handles, were the
+customary attacking weapons in a personal fight. Cheyennes did not
+use fists as the white people do. Not often did any two women fight.
+If they did, they merely scratched and pulled hair. It was more of
+a comic show than an alarming sight to see two women clawing each
+other. I never heard of any Cheyenne woman killing another nor
+maliciously killing a man. Nor did the men kill women. I used to
+hear old people talk about a Cheyenne named Wounded Elk who had
+beaten his wife and then shot her, killing her. I never heard of any
+other like case. That incident happened before I was born.
+
+Suicides were not uncommon among us. Men shot themselves, women
+hung themselves. Foolish ones yet do such acts. Several years ago
+my neighbor and friend Whirlwind shot himself to death. Five or six
+years ago a woman hanged herself at Lame Deer. Many of these sad
+occurrences, particularly among the women, have come to pass during
+my lifetime.
+
+A sister of Bobtail Horse and Hollow Wood hung herself when I was
+yet a small boy and our people were camped on a branch of the Tongue
+river. Her mother had scolded and threatened her, but had not
+struck her, as the striking of any child was not customary among
+the Cheyennes. But the girl was ashamed and crestfallen because of
+the scolding. She brooded a while, then she disappeared. Searchers
+failed to find her. Two years later, a Cheyenne young man hunting
+deer in that vicinity found the remains of her body suspended by the
+neck from a tree limb. Several years before that time another young
+woman had done this same act near there on this same stream. From
+this first incident, and confirmed by the later one, the creek got
+a permanent name. It became known as Hanging Woman creek. It flows
+into Tongue river from the east side, just above the present white
+man village of Birney, Montana.
+
+As we were in camp one time on the Rosebud, below Lame Deer creek,
+another boy and I went rambling afoot among the timber by the stream.
+We suddenly came upon a woman dangling and strangling. I had no
+knife. The other boy had one.
+
+“Cut the rope,” I urged him.
+
+He already was about to do this. We let the woman down upon the
+ground. I ran to the creek near by, got a mouthful of water, hurried
+back and squirted the water into her face. I stayed beside her while
+my companion rushed into the camp to tell her people. A band of women
+came, bringing a blanket. They put the disabled one upon the blanket
+and carried her to her home lodge. A medicine man was called. The
+next day I saw the woman. She gave no indication then of having had
+any unusual experience.
+
+A widow Cheyenne woman was living in our camp at a time when we had
+stopped on the east side of the upper Little Bighorn river. Her
+husband had been killed three or four years before then, in the
+battle where Cheyennes and Sioux had won a great victory over the
+soldiers. (Fort Phil Kearny, 1866.) From this Little Bighorn camp
+my older brother and another boy and myself went out riding. I then
+was about twelve years old. Ahead of us, on a branching creek, we saw
+a woman walking rapidly afoot. She had a blanket over her head and
+shoulders. She turned into a thickly wooded gulch beside the creek
+and disappeared into the timber. We wondered a little at her strange
+actions, but we felt it not proper to follow her. Pretty soon three
+other boys came galloping their horses.
+
+“Did you see any lone woman around here?” they asked anxiously.
+
+“Yes, she went there,” and we indicated the wooded gulch.
+
+My two companions followed them. I went to a plum patch. As I stood
+there eating plums I saw a man and a woman hurrying up toward the
+gulch. Both of them were crying. I followed them.
+
+The five boys were trying to revive the woman being sought, who had
+hanged herself. But she now was dead. The body was rolled into the
+blanket she had been wearing and she was taken into camp.
+
+This widow had been dependent upon friends for her support since her
+husband’s death. She had a daughter eight or nine years old. One
+day the young widow asked her mother for a certain fine robe. The
+mother refused. The request was urged. Still the mother for some
+reason said, “No.” The aggrieved and disconsolate young woman was so
+downcast by this apparent coldness of her mother that she went out
+and hanged herself.
+
+My mother’s sister hung herself in their family lodge when we were
+in camp one time on Powder river. I was nine years old. Our family
+lodge was right beside the one where dwelt this aunt of mine. My
+mother heard the noise of the struggling and strangling. The sister’s
+tepee entrance flap was tied shut, but my mother burst through it.
+She found my aunt suspended by a rawhide rope tied high upon a pole
+of the lodge. She hastily cut the rope and cut it again from her
+sister’s neck. White Bull, a medicine man, was called. His medicine
+then was the tusks of a bear. He held these over and around my aunt
+while he got down upon his hands and knees and grunted like a bear.
+He kept this up until she suddenly had a hard coughing spell and
+brought up a chunk of something that had been choking her. She soon
+stood up and was all right. White Bull was a good medicine man. He
+saved the lives of lots of Cheyennes.
+
+Only one wildly insane Cheyenne person did I ever see. As I was
+out on a hill beside the camp one day I heard a woman screaming. I
+looked in the direction of the sound and saw a woman outside a lodge
+charging about here and there and tearing off her clothing. People
+were running to the scene. I hastened down there. A chief called out:
+
+“Warriors, come.”
+
+Warrior policemen rushed there from all parts of the camp. They
+seized the woman and held her while medicine men were summoned. I
+stood there among the surrounding crowd and watched the proceedings.
+Finally the medicine men caused her to gag and choke and cough
+out the tail of a deer. At once she came into her right mind. Our
+medicine men always could cure that kind of sickness.
+
+This woman had another attack of this same kind some months after
+that first one. The medicine men gave her the same kind of treatment.
+Again she spat out the tail of a deer and instantly became sane. Not
+long after that she got married. She had a third attack a month or
+so after the marriage. Her husband did not send for any medicine man
+this time. He himself tied her and whipped her. He beat and lashed
+his wife until she spat out a deer tail. This cured her right away. I
+never heard of her going insane after that time.
+
+The killing of any Cheyenne was the most serious offense against our
+tribal laws. The punishment was prompt. A council of the big chiefs
+and the warrior chiefs was called at once. The case was inquired
+into. If guilt was evident, the offender began without delay the
+payment of his penalty. Sometimes action was taken without the
+council being assembled, the situation being so clear that unanimity
+of feeling was expressed either for or against the person charged
+with the crime. The defendant was not permitted to be present at the
+trial council. When the decision was rendered he was notified at his
+lodge by the warrior policemen. If found guilty they proceeded at
+once to put into effect the regular fixed and standard punishment.
+
+“Get ready to go,” they ordered him.
+
+Banishment for four years was the main penalty. It had to be entered
+upon that same day. If the offender protested or dallied, he might
+suffer the additional infliction of being whipped, of having his
+horses killed or his tepee destroyed. If he acceded willingly, he was
+allowed to take along his possessions. In any case, he had to go.
+His wife or his children might go with him or remain with the tribe,
+as they might choose. If he had a medicine pipe, that sacred object
+regularly possessed by every adult male Cheyenne, his very first act
+of entrance upon the banishment was the smashing to fragments of this
+most revered talisman. Everything else he owned he might take along
+with him. But he must not have the devotional medicine pipe.
+
+Two or three miles from the main camp was considered a sufficient
+distance for the banished one. Relatives might visit him there or
+take food to him, but it was not allowable for them to remain long,
+and in no case should they remain after sundown. The chief spiritual
+guide or medicine man of the tribe withdrew the sacred protection,
+so the outlawed one was altogether out of touch with the Great
+Medicine. He kept watch of the camp movements, and he could follow
+at a distance with his lone tepee and set it up at a distance within
+sight of but out of convenient hearing of the new camp location. He
+hunted alone. If in the course of his hunting he accidentally came
+close to other Cheyennes, it was expected he should hasten away
+from them. The warrior policemen would whip him, or they might kill
+him, if he should offer to intrude himself. It was not permissible
+for anyone to speak to him nor in any other manner extend to him a
+friendly recognition. He was entirely avoided--or, it was required
+of him that he entirely avoid all other Cheyennes. Day after day,
+month after month, summer and winter, fair or foul weather, for four
+complete years he lived altogether the life of a scorned hermit. He
+was conceded the right to join some other tribe, but he did not do
+this. The great obstacle was, the people of the other tribe surely
+would ask: “Whence came you, and why?”
+
+When the four years ended, the absolved man came back and took
+temporary abode in the lodge of relatives. Soon he set up his own
+lodge. He was admitted then to the principal rights, privileges
+and immunities of a recognized member of the tribe. But to this
+rehabilitation there were some important exceptions. For one, he
+never thereafter was allowed to have a medicine pipe nor to take part
+in any smoking circle. He was tolerated in personal presence there,
+if he chose thus to place himself, but as the pipe was being moved
+along from one to another it always went on past him, just as if he
+were not there at all. Nobody abused him. They simply ignored him.
+Hence, he ordinarily kept entirely away from such gatherings.
+
+An insignificant little pipe having a short stem was conceded to him
+as an individual comfort. But he had to smoke always alone. Such
+little pipes were made of stone or of the leg bone of a deer or of
+some other material not used for making the venerated pipe used in
+formal smoking. When I was a little boy I used to see one certain
+very old man who smoked one of these little short-stemmed pipes. I
+did not understand why he should do this. I asked my father about it.
+He told me: “He killed a Cheyenne.”
+
+Social ostracism in various ways haunted the subsequent life of the
+murderer otherwise cleansed from his stain. If he came hungry to
+any lodge he was fed. But when he was gone, the spoon or dish he had
+used was destroyed. If he sat upon a robe, nobody else ever afterward
+would sit upon it. If he became needy, gifts were taken to his lodge,
+but this was done by way of pity rather than by way of friendly
+feeling. By exemplary conduct he might partly restore his standing,
+but it never was fully restored.
+
+One time, when I was a boy five or six years old, all of the Northern
+Cheyennes and all of the Southern Cheyennes were camped together by
+the Giving White Medal river.[10] Each of the tribes had its sacred
+medicine tepee, the Northern Cheyennes for their Buffalo Head and the
+Southern Cheyennes for their Medicine Arrows. The great double camps
+remained together several days. There were many ceremonies, many
+social dances and other affairs, much going back and forth between
+the two camps in the renewal of old acquaintance and the making of
+new acquaintance.
+
+Chief of Many Buffalo and Rolling Wheel were two men belonging
+then to our Northern Cheyenne tribe. Chief of Many Buffalo was not
+married. Rolling Wheel had a wife and a small boy. This wife was
+tempted by the single man, and she took her boy and went to live with
+him. Rolling Wheel complained to the chiefs. He asked that Chief of
+Many Buffalo be compelled to give him a certain running horse, the
+swiftest animal in the whole tribal herd.
+
+“Yes, he must give you that horse,” the chiefs decided.
+
+An old man was sent to notify Chief of Many Buffalo. The owner of the
+racer announced that he would keep it, that he had concluded he did
+not want the woman. He sent her away to her father’s lodge. “That
+makes no difference,” the old man said. “Rolling Wheel now owns that
+horse.”
+
+He went and informed the aggrieved husband of the situation. He told
+him:
+
+“The horse belongs to you. Go and get it.”
+
+“I go now,” Rolling Wheel replied.
+
+He took his lariat rope and went out among the herd. There on a
+little knoll stood Chief of Many Buffalo, armed with a rifle.
+
+“Go away,” the armed man commanded.
+
+But Rolling Wheel kept on after the horse. The rifle flashed and
+barked. The man with the lariat tumbled forward dead. Chief of Many
+Buffalo was a murderer.
+
+This banished man was not allowed to have any tepee. For four years
+he slept in caves or in other natural shelters he might find in
+the neighborhood of our camping places. At the end of his term of
+isolation he left us and went to the Southern Cheyennes. There he
+married a widow of that tribe. Soon afterward he brought her and her
+two children to join us. They made their permanent home with our
+people. I remember clearly the time of their arrival at our camp. I
+was ten years old. We were on Crow creek, a stream that flows into
+Tongue river just north of the present Sheridan.
+
+The misguided wife of the dead Rolling Wheel remained for several
+years an inhabitant of her father’s lodge. Finally she was married
+to another Cheyenne. She was my aunt, a sister of my father, White
+Buffalo Shaking Off the Dust.
+
+A Cheyenne named Hawk came to us when I was a small boy. I heard
+people talk of him. They said he had been away four years, in
+consequence of his having killed Sharp Nose. From the repeated
+stories I learned the details.
+
+The two men had been out together capturing wild horses or on a raid
+upon an enemy herd. They brought home three horses, one of them
+considered a specially good animal and the other two of inferior
+grade. Each one wanted to keep the first choice and give the two
+others to his companion. They quarreled. It appeared that Sharp Nose
+had the better claim to preference, but Hawk had possession of the
+disputed animal. He had it picketed beside his lodge.
+
+Sharp Nose on horseback and his father afoot went there to argue
+further about the matter. Hawk sat just outside his tepee entrance.
+He had his bow and arrows. As the two approached, he stood up and
+declared:
+
+“I am going to kill you right now.”
+
+His arrow went through the body of the young man on horseback.
+Sharp Nose plunged forward and fell dead to the ground. His father
+shouted imprecations upon the hot-headed killer. The father of Hawk
+intervened to take a part in the affair. This old man went into their
+tepee and came out with a muzzle-loading rifle in his hands. The
+father of the dead Sharp Nose turned and walked away toward the camp
+boundaries. The rifle was leveled and fired at him. He staggered,
+evidently wounded, but he did not fall. The shooter reloaded his
+rifle with powder, bullet and cap. By that time the retreating victim
+was far off and still walking away. A second shot was sent after him.
+This time the result was fatal.
+
+Hawk and his father were banished at once, not being allowed to take
+with them any property whatever. I used to gaze upon the returned
+Hawk with awe-stricken feelings. People whispered, “He killed a
+Cheyenne.” I do not remember ever having seen his father. I believe
+the old man died while they were in exile. The killing had been done
+somewhere between Cherry creek and the Arickaree river (northeastern
+Colorado). When Hawk joined the tribe again we were near the agency
+south of the Black Hills.
+
+No property indemnity payment nor any other substitute penalty could
+take the place of the four years of banishment put upon a willful
+killer. If a killing were accidental, the survivor might be compelled
+to give horses and other presents to the relatives of the deceased,
+or he voluntarily and promptly might do his best to make amends to
+them in that manner. If no blame whatever rested upon him, he need
+pay nothing. Yet, it was customary for him to show in some such way
+his sadness of heart because of the occurrence.
+
+Two youths, brothers, found one time a wolf’s den. One of them took
+his lariat and crawled into the hillside cave to get pups. He felt
+about in the darkness, got the rope about a pup’s hind feet and
+dragged it out. They knocked it in the head and he went back after
+another one. This time, either a pup or an old wolf bit his hand. He
+retreated. Outside he got a forked stick. With this projecting out in
+front of him, he returned to the attack upon the wolves. The forked
+end got engaged in the hair and skin of the wolf. The youth twisted
+and tugged, backing out and dragging after him the snarling and
+snapping animal. The brother stood with his rifle poised and ready
+to shoot. Limbs of brush diverted his aim, and the bullet crashed
+into the head of the other boy. The shocked and weeping brother put
+the dead body upon a horse and took it to their home lodge. People
+flocked there to see and to hear.
+
+“You killed him in anger,” somebody accused.
+
+“No, it was an accident,” he sobbed out. And he explained how it had
+occurred.
+
+A group of warrior policemen went with him out to the wolf’s den.
+There he rehearsed for their observation all of the incidents of the
+happening. They became fully satisfied that he had no intention to
+kill his brother, that it truly was entirely accidental. The youth
+was released with no penalty whatever.
+
+As we were camped one time on the upper Powder river, when I was
+about thirteen years old, Wolf Medicine and other men loaded their
+pack horses with buffalo robes and other skins and went to the trader
+post at the southward (Fort Laramie) for buying some supplies. They
+got tobacco, caps, powder, lead, sugar, and goods of that character.
+Wolf Medicine brought a sack of flour. Our women were just then
+learning how to make bread. Wolf Medicine’s wife knew how to make it
+so it tasted good. He was a little chief of the Elk warriors, and he
+wanted to give them a feast. He said to his wife:
+
+“Make plenty of bread. I shall invite all Elks to come.”
+
+“How,” she assented, and she went immediately at mixing flour and
+water. Then: “Oh, I have no soda.”
+
+A young woman there said: “My mother has soda. I will go and get
+some.” She went to her home lodge and told her mother. This woman
+rummaged among her packages, looking into one after another. “Here it
+is,” she finally announced. The young woman took the white powder to
+the wife of Wolf Medicine. As the good cook proceeded with her work,
+her proud husband went out to the front of his lodge and stood there
+calling:
+
+“All Elk warriors, come. Wolf Medicine has a feast of bread.”
+
+That brought them in droves. The wife engaged some helpers. They
+fried many slices of bacon and they boiled a great potful of coffee.
+When the food was being eaten everybody said: “Wolf Medicine’s wife
+can make good bread.” The hearts of the husband and the wife were
+made glad by the compliments showered upon them.
+
+[Illustration: A CHEYENNE SWEAT LODGE]
+
+[Illustration: A CHEYENNE WOMAN TANNING]
+
+After the feast, Wolf Medicine brought a supply of tobacco. The
+assemblage was converted into a grand smoking party. They passed the
+pipe and chatted and told stories. After a while somebody said: “I
+feel sick. My stomach pains me.” Just then the neighbor woman came
+running and screaming:
+
+“I gave you the wrong powder! It is the wolf poison!”
+
+The commotion aroused and brought the whole population of the camp.
+The victims were wallowing and groaning. An old man herald went
+among them calling out: “Make yourselves vomit.” Some already had
+done this, others began at once to gag their throats with fingers
+poked into them. Two men, Old Bear and White Elk, did not do this.
+Instead, they took doses of gunpowder in water. Both of these men had
+convulsions and were sick a long time, but they finally recovered
+full health. All of the others got relief soon after the gagging and
+vomiting. One of them was my father. As a test, some remnants of
+bread was given to two dogs. Both of the dogs went into convulsions
+and died. The woman who had provided the supposed soda was not
+punished. On the contrary, she was for a long time afterward so
+distressed in mind that people sympathized with and tried to console
+her.
+
+A certain half-Sioux-half-Cheyenne man was married to a Cheyenne
+woman and they lived with our tribe. He killed one of our Cheyennes,
+served his exile term of four years and returned to a small village
+of Cheyennes where were his relatives. That was considered right, but
+his next movement was considered not right. He went to visit another
+Cheyenne village where were many relatives of the man he had killed.
+Warning was sent to him not to come there, that he would be killed,
+but he heeded not the notice, or he designed to show special bravery
+that might win a good standing. Two Cheyenne men accompanied him to
+the visited camp.
+
+The three companions went from lodge to lodge, being received
+courteously and fed at the various stopping places. A brother of the
+man who had been killed sat in his own lodge, there meditating and
+saying nothing to anybody. He kept beside him a loaded rifle. From
+time to time, as the three men moved among the lodges he watched them
+from the interior of his tepee. People began to taunt him:
+
+“You are afraid.”
+
+“No, I will kill him today.”
+
+The Sioux-Cheyenne walked at all times between the two Cheyenne
+companions when the three went from any one lodge to another. But as
+they were passing across one open area the middle man stopped and
+bent himself forward to tie a loose moccasin string. In a moment
+the bang of a rifle shot rang out from the watcher’s tepee. The
+half-Sioux pitched headfirst to the ground. His death was regarded
+by all as an earned infliction. The chiefs agreed: “He ought not to
+have come so soon to this place where are his victim’s relatives. His
+slayer did right.”
+
+An Ogallala Sioux man had one of our women as his wife. They lived
+with our people. The couple had much domestic trouble. It was said
+the husband grossly abused his wife. The matter came to a climax as
+our Cheyennes were camped on the Giving White Medal river. I was a
+baby or a small child, and my knowledge of it comes only from hearsay
+stories. But in later times I knew the people involved.
+
+The maltreated wife had two brothers, Dirty Moccasins and Tall White
+Man--not the present old man Tall White Man, but another Cheyenne
+dead many years ago. These two brothers decided to end the continual
+humiliation of their sister. They got their bows and arrows and went
+man-hunting. Each of them sent an arrow through the body of the
+offending Sioux and put out the lights of his life. They were not
+banished. Besides their having the natural sympathy of the people,
+the dead man was a Sioux, not a Cheyenne. Nevertheless, ever after
+that, Dirty Moccasins smoked only a deer bone pipe and Tall White Man
+used always a little stone one. For many years I saw him as a scrawny
+and feeble old man smoking the tiny short-stemmed stone pipe.
+
+The Sioux and his wife had a ten-year-old daughter. When she grew to
+womanhood she married a Cheyenne man named Elk Creek. This couple
+had three daughters, grandchildren of the Sioux killed by the two
+brothers. One of these grandchildren married Round Stone, another
+married a Fort Keogh soldier named Thompson, the third is the wife of
+Willis Rowland, our present interpreter at the Lame Deer agency.
+
+I heard a story about two Sioux in a Sioux camp who quarreled
+concerning the ownership of a horse. One of them had possession
+of the animal. The other sat in his lodge and brooded over what
+he regarded as a wrong done to him. He planned an unusual mode of
+carrying out revenge. He went to a Cheyenne camp near by and inquired
+there for a medicine man. A Cheyenne led him to a certain lodge.
+
+“I have important business,” the Sioux announced. “Come out where
+nobody can hear us.”
+
+The three went out of the camp, to a hilltop. The young Cheyenne
+served as negotiator between the Sioux and the medicine man.
+
+“I want him to kill a Sioux,” the visitor proposed.
+
+There was some exchange of talk about the compensation to the
+medicine man. Finally, an agreement was reached. The medicine man
+received a blanket, some moccasins and clothing, some food and a
+keen-bladed and sharp-pointed sheathknife. A day was consumed in
+settling the conditions. While this was going on, the Sioux camp
+moved away and was set up elsewhere. The angry Sioux and the medicine
+man followed them. The lodge of the enemy was pointed out. The
+medicine man drew the figure of a man upon the outside wall of the
+lodge. At the right place he made a special picture of the heart.
+Then he told the angry Sioux:
+
+“Take this knife. At dawn tomorrow morning you must stab the heart
+picture I have drawn. Then bring to me the knife.”
+
+The commanded procedure was carried out. The wielder of the weapon
+was astonished when blood flowed freely from the stabbed picture
+heart. He ran away and told the medicine man, told him of the blood
+and returned to him the knife.
+
+“Good. He will die tonight,” came the assuring declaration.
+
+As the medicine man went back to the Cheyennes he congratulated
+himself on the clever trick he had played upon his confiding
+employer. “Good knife, good blanket, good clothing, all for me,” he
+chuckled. But: That same night the enemy Sioux man actually became
+ill. He vomited blood, and before morning he was dead. I do not
+like that kind of medicine actions. Such use of the powers makes bad
+Indians.
+
+The warrior days of a Cheyenne man began at the age of about sixteen
+or seventeen, or sometimes a little earlier for such activities
+as were not very difficult or risky. They ended somewhere between
+thirty-five and forty, according to particular circumstances. The
+regular rule was, every man was classed as a warrior and expected to
+serve as such until he had a son old enough to take his place. Then
+the father retired from aggressive fighting and the son took up the
+weapons for that family. If a man came into early middle age without
+any son, he adopted one. If he had more than one son, he might allow
+the additional one or more to be adopted by another man who had none.
+By following this system, all of the offensive fighting was done
+by young men, mostly the unmarried young men. The fathers and the
+older men ordinarily stayed in the background, to help or to shield
+the women and children. Or, if it was practicable, the fathers and
+old men and women followed out the young warriors and stayed at a
+safe distance behind, there to sing cheering songs and to call out
+advice and encouragement. If a warrior’s father or some other old
+person put himself unnecessarily forward in a battle he was likely
+to be criticised for his needless risk, and also the young warriors
+felt aggrieved at his taking from them whatever of honors might be
+gained in the combat. In general, the young men were supposed to
+be more valuable as fighters and less valuable as wise counselors,
+while the older men were estimated in the opposite way. It was
+considered as being not right for an important older man to place
+himself as a target for the missiles of the enemy, if he could avoid
+such exposure. Even in a surprise attack upon us, it was expected
+the seniors should run away, if they could get away, while the more
+lively and supposedly more ambitious young men met the attack.
+
+Our war chiefs--that is, the three leading chiefs and the
+twenty-seven little chiefs of our three warrior societies--were
+more useful as instructors in quiet assemblage than as directors
+of operation in times of battle. There were frequent gatherings of
+the warrior societies, each in its own gathering, where the chiefs
+exchanged ideas about methods of combat and about daily care of the
+personal self, and where the listening young warriors learned their
+lessons. If some aggressive war was contemplated, these chiefs agreed
+upon the plans. But when any battle actually began it was a case
+of every man for himself. There were then no ordered groupings, no
+systematic movements in concert, no compulsory goings and comings.
+Warriors of all societies mingled indiscriminately, every individual
+went where and when he chose, every one looked out for himself only,
+or each helped a friend if such help were needed and if the able
+one’s personal inclination just then was toward friendly helpfulness.
+The warrior chiefs called out advice, perhaps a reminder of some
+rule of action theretofore discussed in the gatherings, or perhaps
+some special suggestion that exactly fitted the immediate situation,
+such as, “Yonder is one whose horse is down; go right in after him.”
+Ordinarily the advice of the chiefs was heeded. But the obedience was
+a voluntary one. In battle, the chiefs had not authority to issue
+commands that must be obeyed.
+
+Special war parties made up of members of some certain warrior
+society often went out seeking conflict with the enemy. The warrior
+societies competed with each other for effectiveness in this kind of
+activity, as well as in all other activities regarded as commendable.
+At times, the members of some certain warrior society would be
+selected by the tribal chiefs to do all of the tribal fighting in
+some case where the opposition was looked upon as being not great
+enough to make necessary the use of the entire tribal military
+forces. If this appointed segment of our fighters did well they were
+acclaimed. If they did not do well, especially if other warriors had
+to go to their assistance, the original combatants were discredited.
+Ordinarily, whatever warrior society was on duty as camp policemen
+had also the duty as special camp defenders. It was their business
+to be the first ones out to meet any attack upon the camp. Members
+of the other societies added their help if necessary, refrained from
+doing so if they were not needed. If the enemy onset was sufficient
+to render needful the resistance of all of the warriors in the camp,
+all of them were called by the heralds of the tribal chiefs. In cases
+of extreme danger, even the old men and some of the women might use
+whatever weapons they could seize and wield.
+
+The Sioux tribes had ways closely resembling those of the Cheyennes.
+We traveled and visited much with them, particularly with the
+Ogallalas, sometimes with the Minneconjoux. The Sioux tribal
+governments were almost the same as ours. Each of them had numerous
+tribal chiefs, each had various warrior societies and chiefs of
+them. Their warriors dressed for death in battle, all of their
+people dressed for death in time of peace, according to the same
+customs among us. Their warrior training by precept and by discipline
+was similar to our system. They fought their battles as a band of
+individuals, the same as we fought ours, and the same as was the way
+of all Indians I ever knew. They had war dances and medicine dances
+differing only a little from our ceremonies of this kind. So when
+white people learn the ways of the Cheyennes they have learned also a
+great deal of the ways of the Sioux and of other Indians in this part
+of the world.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[10] Smoky Hill river (?).
+
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+_Worshiping The Great Medicine._
+
+
+I made medicine the first time when I was seventeen years old (1875).
+It was during the month of May, I believe, although we did not divide
+the years into months or weeks as the white people later taught us
+to divide them. Our family was in a camp of fourteen or fifteen
+lodges of Cheyennes in the hills at the head of Otter creek, a stream
+flowing into the eastern side of Tongue river. The main camp of the
+tribe was on Powder river, east of our location.
+
+To “make medicine” is to engage upon a special period of fasting,
+thanksgiving, prayer and self denial, even of self torture. The
+procedure is entirely a devotional exercise. The purpose is to subdue
+the passions of the flesh and to improve the spiritual self. The
+bodily abstinence and the mental concentration upon lofty thoughts
+cleanses both the body and the soul and puts them into or keeps them
+in health. Then the individual mind gets closer toward conformity
+with the mind of the Great Medicine above us.
+
+I said to my father: “All during my boyhood and youth the Great
+Medicine has been good to me. I have fond parents and kind brothers
+and sisters. I have had plenty of food and have had no bad sickness.
+No bullet nor arrow has hit me. No serious injury of any kind has
+fallen upon me. I ought to do something to show my gratitude for all
+of these favors.”
+
+“Yes, my son, you owe a debt for them,” my father agreed.
+
+Red Haired Bear, a good medicine man or spiritual adviser, was in our
+small camp. His wife was my mother’s sister. I went to him.
+
+“I want to make medicine,” I told him. “I think I have lived in a way
+good enough to render me worthy. I want to become still better. I
+want to thank the Great Medicine and ask His continued favor. I want
+to become able to kill all enemies I may meet and to be shielded from
+their assaults upon me. I do not want to die in any manner until I
+reach old age. I wish you would help me.”
+
+“How,” he responded encouragingly. “What number of days do you think
+you can endure?”
+
+“The whole four days,” I replied confidently.
+
+“How,” he glowed. “I will help you.”
+
+He warned me it was a difficult undertaking for any young man.
+He urged me to be brave. He said the bravest ones always got the
+greatest spiritual benefit. I asserted myself as feeling equal to any
+distress that might come to me.
+
+“That is good,” he cheered me on. “You shall have the strongest of
+trials. You shall stay out one night without any shelter, the next
+night you may have a little cone tepee, the third night you may build
+for yourself a willow dome lodge.”
+
+This proposition put a check upon my eagerness. I had not thought
+of being unprotected from bad weather during any part of the time.
+It occurred to my mind that a rainstorm might interfere with the
+devotions. Even with a little cone tepee over me, a strong wind might
+upset the entire programme. My medicine might be broken by accidents
+like these. I asked if a willow dome lodge could be used during the
+entire procedure.
+
+“How. It shall be as you desire.”
+
+He started me out to cut willow wands for making the medicine lodge.
+He told me I must get seventeen of them, each a clean and strong
+and long piece of pliable green wood. I carefully gathered them,
+selecting and rejecting. I tied them into a pack bundle. Throwing
+the bundle upon my back and taking a crowbar in my hands, I carried
+the burden far up a gulch and into the timber at the hilltop. I
+chose a spot for the lodge and put down my load. With the crowbar I
+punched in the ground sixteen holes around a circle about eight feet
+in diameter. Into these holes I set upright sixteen of the wands.
+I then bent their tops across, pairing them and tying together
+the pairs. The skeleton dome was completed by weaving through the
+coupled tops the seventeenth strand, this running from east to west.
+I returned then to Red Haired Bear for further instructions.
+
+“Get a buffalo head,” he ordered me.
+
+I searched the neighborhood until I found one. Under his directions
+I heaped up dirt into a low mound about eight feet due east from
+where was to be the eastern entrance opening of the lodge. Upon this
+mound was placed the buffalo head, it being set to face toward the
+lodge. I cleared off all grass and twigs to make a clean path between
+the buffalo head and the lodge opening. I gathered armfuls of sweet
+sagegrass and spread it as a carpet upon the floor of the enclosed
+circle. The two of us returned then to Red Haired Bear’s lodge.
+
+The medicine man painted my whole body. Red clay mixed into water,
+in a dish, was used for most of the painting. Four times he took
+portions of the powdered red earth, each separate time casting the
+portion upon the water’s surface and uttering low prayers as he
+stirred it into solution. After having put the red coloring upon the
+entire surface of my skin he got out from his medicine bag a package
+of pulverized black earth. Four different casts and four separate
+stirrings into water were made likewise with this coloring material.
+With the black paint he made first a circle about my face, including
+the forehead, the chin and the cheeks. Black wristlets and black
+anklets were next formed. On the middle of my breast he painted a
+black sun. On my left shoulderblade he put a black moon.
+
+My director then offered a prayer:
+
+“Great Medicine Above: You see Wooden Leg. He wants to be a good man.
+Look upon him and favor him. Make him brave and wise and kind. Make
+him generous to his people, to all Indians, even to his enemies if
+they come peaceably and in need. Help him to defeat all enemies who
+may beset him, and shield him from their efforts to take his life.
+Guide him so that he may be rich in food and skins and horses. Help
+him to find a good wife. Give to them many children. Keep them all in
+good health and make them live a long time.”
+
+He prayed also to the ground spirits. As he prayed to the Great
+Medicine he looked upward, and as he addressed the spirits below he
+looked down toward the ground. When the prayers were ended we walked
+together to the medicine lodge I had built in the hilltop forest.
+We sat down there beside the slender path I had made to connect the
+buffalo head and the entrance to the lodge. He talked to me:
+
+“This is going to be a hard trial for you, the hardest trial you ever
+have had. Throughout four days you will have neither food nor water.
+Your desires will distress you. Other distresses may be piled upon
+these. You may retreat now and postpone it to another time if you
+want to do so. What say you?”
+
+“I dread it,” I confessed, “but I know it will not kill me. I do not
+want to wait. I want to go on right now. I shall keep my courage from
+failing by fixing my thoughts upon being a good man.”
+
+“That is good,” he cheered me. Then he added: “Be brave.”
+
+The medicine man prayed again for me. He looked again upward and
+again downward, going through the same prayer for the below spirits
+as he had made to the Above Spirit. The praying was of the same kind
+as he had uttered just after the painting preparations, but he added
+some other solicitations for my welfare.
+
+After this prayer had ended I crept in upon the sagegrass floor of
+the skeleton willow dome. He covered the frame all over with many
+buffalo robes we had brought. Not even a faint ray of light could get
+inside. He then went away to our camp.
+
+I now was alone. For a little while I just sat there in the
+darkness--complete darkness, although it was about the middle of
+the afternoon. I was naked, except for the breechcloth and a buffalo
+robe. I had a supply of kinnikinick, some matches, and my medicine
+pipe that had been given to me by my father. I loaded and lit the
+pipe for a thoughtful smoke. The flash of the match dazzled my eyes.
+Time dragged along. I could not smoke continuously, so I just sat
+there and meditated, or tried to do so. I did not know when the sun
+went down nor when darkness came. It began to seem rather lonely.
+I grew sleepy, so I stretched myself out with the robe about me
+and drifted into a doze. But every little sound startled me. I sat
+up and had another smoke. Soon I had another, and then another. I
+slept again, this time more soundly. I had not the least notion as
+to how long I remained asleep. It seemed I had been there more than
+a day and night, that the medicine man had forgotten me. I listened
+intently to every slight rustle in the surrounding forest. My prayers
+all had been in thoughts, not in spoken words. I almost wished for
+some disturbing intrusion to break up the entire proceeding. Noise of
+a horse’s footsteps fell into my ears. Closer, closer, very close.
+
+“Hey, Wooden Leg!” It was the voice of Red Haired Bear. “One day has
+passed. It now is noon.”
+
+He dismounted and opened slightly the entrance covering. The light
+blinded me for a moment. Gradually he opened it wider, finally
+throwing it altogether aside. He allowed me to go outside for a few
+minutes, then I had to return to the interior.
+
+“Let us smoke together,” he invited.
+
+He sat just outside and I sat just inside. My smoking equipment was
+brought into use. He pointed the stem and sent a puff to each of the
+four principal directions, then to the above, to the below and to the
+buffalo head. We passed the pipe back and forth in many exchanges,
+until one loading of it was exhausted. He prayed again for me. Then
+he admonished me:
+
+“The next day will be more difficult. But, be not afraid. The Great
+Medicine sees you.”
+
+He shut up the lodge, mounted his horse and went away.
+
+Fitful slumbers, prayers, smoking, efforts at meditation, these
+alternated in my quiet activities. I was hungry and thirsty,
+especially thirsty. My body was hot. My heart was heavy. My ears
+constantly were listening, listening, to every faint whisper of
+Nature. All of the time appeared to be night, the blackest of night.
+Suddenly there came a stamp--stamp--stamp. Then:
+
+“Boo-o-o-o! Boo-o-o-o!”
+
+A buffalo bull! The animal snorted, stamped and bellowed again. It
+surely would charge upon my lodge and tear it to pieces, I thought. I
+did not move, but I prayed earnestly: “Great Medicine, shield me. I
+have tried to be a good young man. You have been kind to me in past
+times. Be kind to me now.” I heard the threatening beast move away.
+It did not return.
+
+Hours, hours, hours. I did not know whether it was day or night. I
+heard a horse coming. That was a welcome sound. I was all attention.
+
+“Hey, Wooden Leg!”
+
+“Hey!”
+
+“Two days have passed,” Red Haired Bear informed me. “The sun now is
+far toward the west on your third day.”
+
+Again he opened my dark retreat, gradually letting in more and more
+light. Again we smoked together. I told him of the buffalo bull. He
+listened with evident great interest.
+
+“That is a good sign,” he comforted me. “No buffalo ever will harm
+you. You and all other Cheyennes will get plenty of meat and skins
+from them. The bull was your friend, telling you all this.”
+
+Another prayer went from the medicine man to the Above and to the
+below. After a short allowance of time for me outside, he put me
+again into the enclosure and shut tightly the small hole.
+
+“Be brave,” were his parting words.
+
+“Yes,” I replied. But I was not sure.
+
+Hot, thirsty, yet more hot and more thirsty. I prayed particularly
+for strength of body and firmness of heart to carry me through to
+the end of the trial. I loaded my pipe for a solacing smoke. But
+it was not a solace. The heat burned my already parching tongue. I
+tried to sleep. Maybe I did sleep. I do not know. I made attempts
+to meditate quietly. I do not know whether I actually was thinking
+or was following dreams racing through my mind. All I could be sure
+about was that I either was sitting down or lying down all the time.
+I heard something that cleared my mind at once. My mother brought
+wood and stones and placed them out by the buffalo head. She did not
+speak nor make any sign of recognition, but I knew it was my mother.
+It seemed I could look right through the robes and see her there.
+After she had deposited her burden she went away.
+
+Oh, how lonely I was! I loaded and lit my pipe. No, it was not good.
+My mouth and throat were burning. Water! Water! But: “The Great
+Medicine sees me,” I kept thinking. My thoughts whirled and chased
+each other rapidly in circles. I dreamt that I heard the footsteps of
+a horse.
+
+“Hey, Wooden Leg!”
+
+“Hey!”
+
+“This is the day.”
+
+Happiness almost filled my heart. The only hindrance was in the
+thirst and the hot body. After I had been let out we smoked together.
+It was a torture to my tongue, but I did not complain. We went then
+to my father’s lodge in the camp. My father called out invitations to
+old men friends. They came and sat in a circle upon the robes spread
+over the lodge’s floor. I sat with them, by the side of my father. My
+mother brought a bucketful of water and set it off a little distance
+in front of me. I suppressed a strong desire to plunge my face into
+it, but I could not keep my eyes from staring at it. The medicine
+man sprinkled red powder upon the surface of the water, four small
+scatterings in four separate places. He passed his hands to and fro
+over it and prayed. It seemed I never in my life had heard so long a
+prayer. When it was ended he said to me:
+
+“Wooden Leg, you have been four days without water. Now you may drink
+four sups.”
+
+I seized the sides of the bucket. The four sups were four long-drawn
+mouthfuls. The water rumbled through my bowels. After a few minutes
+I was told, “Now you may have more, but do not take all you want.”
+I drank slowly, but I drew in big mouthfuls and took many of them.
+Not long afterward I was allowed to apply myself a third time at the
+bucket.
+
+My mother brought a potful of buffalo meat she had been boiling. All
+of the guests were given portions of it. A piece was put upon a tin
+plate and set before me. It looked good enough to grab and swallow
+immediately. But I waited for advice. My adviser did not long detain
+me.
+
+“Wooden Leg, you have been four days without meat. Take four
+sliced-off bites, one for each day of the fast.”
+
+I selected a long chunk from the plate. I stuck the end of it far
+into my mouth, and with a sheathknife I cut it off. The chewing was
+vigorous, and I soon had it swallowed. The chunk was pushed a second
+time into my mouth and its end cut off there. A third and a fourth
+mouthful were taken in the same manner. After a few minutes, more
+meat was allowed to me. Then still more, all I cared to eat. It was
+the best meat I ever tasted.
+
+The old men joined in asking me:
+
+“Tell us of your experience.”
+
+I told them--told them particularly of the coming of the buffalo
+bull. They complimented me, said I was brave, said the Great Medicine
+was my friend, assured me that no buffalo ever would harm me. Their
+approval and their assurances made me glad. My heart was like the sun
+coming up on a summer morning.
+
+All of these old men, some of their wives, my father and mother and
+the medicine man went with me to my medicine lodge. We were to have a
+sweat bath worship together. My mother carried a bucketful of water
+for sprinkling upon the hot stones inside the lodge. The medicine man
+piled the stones into a cone heap. He leaned sticks of wood up the
+sides of this stone structure and set a fire to going among them.
+The other men stripped themselves to breechcloth and crept into the
+lodge. When the stones had become well heated by the wood fire over
+them the medicine man passed them to one of the men inside. They were
+handled with forked sticks and were piled into a pit some of the men
+had made in the center of the lodge’s earth floor. When the pit was
+filled with the hot stones the medicine man set inside the bucketful
+of water. He himself then crept in, on hands and knees as we all had
+done. One man remained outside to close the opening, to ventilate
+temporarily when we might require, to wait upon us in whatever way
+our needs might demand. Not any of the women went into the lodge.
+Twelve men were in there.
+
+At the left inside of the entrance sat the medicine man. I was next
+at his left side. My father was third, at my left. The other men
+were seated on beyond, the row extending around the circle. All had
+backs to the wall. We had smoked together while the stones were being
+heated, but the pipe now had been placed outside. Its bowl rested on
+the ground beside the buffalo head and its stem projected upward past
+the nose and eyes of the hallowed object. A good spirit influence was
+coming from the nostrils of the head straight along the clean path
+and into the lodge. No knowing and worshipful Indian ever crossed
+that path. Such act would cut off the steady flow of healing virtue.
+
+The medicine man opened the interior proceedings with another prayer
+for my welfare. Once more he pleaded with the Great Medicine to make
+me good and generous, to give me success in hunting, to protect me
+from enemies and to enable me to kill them. Once more he asked that I
+might get a good wife, might have many children, and that myself and
+all of my family might keep good health and live to advanced years.
+He beseeched again that I might gather together many horses and not
+lose any of them. I believed his prayers would be heard. My hopes
+were high. My trust in the Being Above was strong.
+
+Water was squirted upon the hot stones in the central pit. The
+medicine man first gave each one in the lodge a drink of water.
+He took into his own mouth a chew of herb. After its mastication
+he supped and squirted four successive mouthfuls of water. Between
+the acts were short prayers. Thus he released from the stones the
+vitality put into them by the burning wood that had got it from the
+sun, the material representative of the Great Medicine. The stones
+hissed their protests as the water compelled them to release into
+the air the spiritual curative forces. Our bodies were enveloped
+by the steam wherein floated the vital energy. The vivifying and
+purifying influence soaked into our skins. Bad spirits were driven
+out of us and drowned in the water that dripped from us. The medicine
+man repeated from time to time the sprinkling of water upon the
+protesting stones.
+
+The soft whisperings of an eagle wing bone flute came into my ears.
+The sound seemed to come from the roof and from other points in the
+utterly dark interior of the lodge. After a few of the gentle blasts,
+I felt the instrument being placed in my hands. My father put it
+there. It now was mine, to keep. It was to be worn about my neck,
+suspended at the mid-breast by a buckskin thong, during all times of
+danger. If I were threatened with imminent harm I had but to put it
+to my lips and cause it to send out its soothing notes. That would
+ward off every evil design upon me. It was my mystic protector. It
+was my medicine.
+
+After an hour or more together in the devotional dome, all of us went
+to our respective lodge homes. There my father presented me also with
+a shield of rawhide taken from the rump of a buffalo bull. The hair
+had been removed and the piece of skin had been dried rapidly before
+a fire, to make it extremely tough. It was covered with antelope
+buckskin sewed in place. The cover had medicine designs drawn in
+color upon its surface. This shield would turn off any bullet or
+arrow or other missile coming toward me. My father made it. He
+delivered it into my left hand.
+
+My second medicine experience took place a month or so after that
+first one. Black White Man, a medicine man, took me through it. This
+time the plan was for but two days of self denial and worship. I made
+the dome lodge according to the same rules as had governed in making
+the first one, which was the regular way of making them. Black White
+Man painted me in the same way and with the same ceremony used by
+Red Haired Bear. I had the same kind of harassing sensations while
+alone, but they covered only two days instead of four. The resumption
+of water and food was carried out in a manner exactly like had been
+done in the previous proceedings. The sweat bath devotions had a
+like preparatory programme and followed a course like that of the
+other one and of all such affairs entered upon among the Cheyennes.
+But during this second time of spiritual upbuilding there was one
+intervening incident that marked it as different from all others.
+
+During the last part of my lonely vigil--I learned afterward it
+was during my second night--my quietude was broken by the tread of
+horses, many horses. I heard men talking. Gabble-gabble-gabble. It
+was not Cheyenne talk. It was not Sioux. This being the case, the
+horsemen necessarily must be enemies, either whites or Indians. It
+seemed now that the bellowing buffalo bull of my previous experience
+had been but a tame threat. It appeared I surely would be discovered
+or already had been discovered, by the gabbling strangers. It seemed
+that death threatened me. My hair raised itself and I could feel it
+standing upright. My heart thumped. It throbbed and pounded the inner
+wall of my breast. To my senses its noise was so boisterous as to
+notify the intruders and all the rest of the world that a human being
+frozen by fright awaited the fatal blow. I did not move--perhaps was
+not able to move. But I could think. I centered my thoughts upon
+whispering over and over, “The Great Medicine sees me.”
+
+“Hi-ye-e-e-e!” The war-cry!
+
+“Bang! Bang! Bang-bang!” Rifle shots.
+
+The horses near me clattered away. One of them bawled as if wounded
+by a bullet. The strange voices went out of my hearing. Other voices
+shouted. These were Cheyennes. I heard Cheyenne women and children
+crying as they ran past my retreat. But I could do nothing but just
+sit there with my buffalo robe over my head. The commotion gradually
+died down. My pious meditations were much disturbed by the alarming
+turmoil. I could not keep myself from wondering what had happened.
+I wondered if the Cheyennes had been driven from their camp and had
+left me there alone. This thought chilled me. But I stayed, waiting,
+waiting. Many hours later Black White Man came.
+
+“They were Crows trying to steal our horses,” he explained. The
+raiders had been repulsed, but one of our Cheyennes had been killed.
+“It shows that the Crows never can hurt you,” the medicine man
+assured me.
+
+For a third season of warrior discipline I went one morning at dawn
+to the top of a hill. There I fasted, prayed, meditated and dreamed
+all day. During the day I saw the lodges taken down and the whole
+camp move away down the valley. But I had to stay. When the sun had
+set I started out afoot to follow the trail of my people. I drank
+water along the way, but I got no food until my arrival at the home
+lodge at the end of my journey of ten or twelve miles.
+
+Another disciplinary means for subduing the flesh was to stand
+upright all day, from sunrise to sunset, on a hill. The devotee did
+not move during that time except to keep his face turned at all
+times toward the sun. He might keep his eyes closed or shaded, but
+his countenance had to be presented ever toward the venerated token
+of the Great Medicine’s existence. He prayed or otherwise kept his
+thoughts fixed on a high plane. This system of self denial was varied
+by the attitude taken. One might stand all day or sit in one position
+all day or lie down during all of the time. But the attitude assumed
+at the beginning must be kept to the end. My all-day supplications
+were made while sitting down.
+
+Standing upright in water from sunrise to sunset was one way of
+putting the body under the rule of the spirit. The water had to be
+up to the neck or the upper breast. Not any drink of it was taken.
+It was not permissible to move the body except for keeping the face
+toward the sun. The bodily torture incident to the full standard
+Great Medicine dance--what the white people call the sun dance--was
+the most severe test of hardihood, so it was looked upon as the
+highest form of self scourging. I never undertook this extreme step.
+
+Women did not make medicine by feats of endurance. Such was for men
+only. Sometimes two men would go together for the all-day hilltop
+fast or for some other similar performance. Ordinarily, though, only
+one man made up the vigil. I like best the solitary way. I think
+it is better to be alone at such times. At any of the occasions
+observable it was permissible for onlookers to view the act. Such
+scrutiny might aid greatly in spurring on to full compliance with the
+rules. Payment to any medicine man helper was due. This might be such
+as was agreed upon in advance--often paid in advance--or it might be
+in the form of subsequent free gifts to him. The standard fee was a
+horse.
+
+Our tribal Great Medicine dance was a ceremony of one, two or three
+days, the period depending upon immediate conditions. In times before
+mine the full period had been four days, but in my time three days
+was the maximum. It was not held at any regular time. Once every
+two or three years was the usual custom. It would be held, though,
+in successive years if the tribe was having misfortune or if enough
+special devotees wanted to undergo the trials. The summer season was
+the special time. The prime purpose was to ask the Great Medicine’s
+favorable attention to the tribe as a whole, not to any particular
+persons. The prayers were for good grass, new colts in the horse
+herds, plenty of berries and roots, many children, success in hunting
+game and in repelling enemies.
+
+The Cheyennes and the Arapahoes had their two Great Medicine ceremony
+dances together on one occasion when I was about twelve years old
+(1870). We were south of the mountains beyond the headwaters of
+Powder river. The two tribes camped as one, in one great camp circle,
+but all of the Cheyenne lodges were at one side of the camp and all
+of the Arapaho lodges at the opposite side. Each tribe had its Great
+Medicine lodge at its own side of the combined camp. I went back and
+forth looking on at both of them. The other people of both tribes did
+the same. I was not quite old enough during our free roaming days
+to take a part in the important tribal affairs. I merely looked,
+listened, kept quiet and thought about them. This double sacred dance
+of the Cheyennes and Arapahoes was for only one day. During that
+one day all of the participants and many other people took neither
+food nor water. After sunset they had a great feast. That was the
+regular way--the participants took neither food nor water while the
+ceremonies were being carried out, one, two, three or four days.
+
+Special invocation dances were held irregularly, often several times
+during one season. One or several or many persons would perform the
+rites. At a buffalo dance the intent was to obtain the aid of the
+Great Medicine in our efforts at getting the meat and skins of these
+animals. Deer dances, elk dances, antelope dances, were engaged
+upon by individuals, by parties or by the tribe. The object was to
+enlist spiritual forces to help us in gathering meat and skins. Berry
+dances, by few or by many people, had a like incentive. Always the
+dances were in summer, none of them in winter. Always there was self
+denial in various forms, sacrifices were made in various ways. At
+times the self denial was carried to the point of bodily torture.
+That was our way of paying in advance for the favors asked. That was
+all we could do by way of payment.
+
+The spirits of animals joined themselves often to assist or to hinder
+human beings. Sometimes one would give its medicine to a man, at
+other times some animal would break a man’s medicine, or would try to
+do so. At my father’s lodge an old man, Pockmarked Nose, told of a
+certain experience that came to him. My father afterward told me.
+
+Pockmarked Nose went one time with a young man to hunt buffalo. They
+were on horseback and were leading pack horses to bring back the
+meat and skins. They traveled up and down hills and over the level
+plains. Finally they found a band of buffalo. They got themselves
+ready and charged into the band. The young man had a bow and arrows,
+Pockmarked Nose had a flintlock gun. He killed a buffalo. Just
+afterward a shot came from somewhere aside and another buffalo went
+down. That shot from aside puzzled the two hunters, but they rode
+on. Each time the old man or the young man killed a buffalo the shot
+from aside brought down another to match it. But, who was doing this
+shooting? Was it a friend or an enemy? They could not see anybody.
+When six buffalo lay dead on the plain the old man applied himself
+at discovering the identity of the third hunter. Far off, on a
+slight elevation of the land, stood a dimly outlined human figure.
+Pockmarked Nose rode toward it.
+
+Was it the Above Spirit, the Great Medicine? Or was it a below
+spirit? Or was some powerful medicine man playing tricks? Pockmarked
+Nose did not know, and he never did find out to his satisfaction. The
+stranger had a wooden gun. He said: “Come, I give you this medicine
+gun. It never fails to kill.” Pockmarked Nose took and kept the
+offered gun. I do not know what use he may have made of it.
+
+My father himself saw a marvelous example of the spirit powers
+regularly belonging to the deer tribe. When he was a young man he
+and a companion were hunting near the medicine water[11] not far
+from the present town of Sheridan, Wyoming. They saw bubbles coming
+up and bursting upon the water’s surface. They went up close, to
+learn what was causing this agitation. As they peered down into the
+deep but clear lake they saw there a deer moving about and quietly
+grazing along the bottom. While they were watching the animal it
+stopped grazing and floated slowly up to the water’s surface. My
+father killed it with an arrow. He skinned it, cut the meat from the
+bones, wrapped the skin about the meat and loaded the bundle upon his
+packhorse. At his home lodge he stood out and called the names of
+various friends. He invited them:
+
+“Come, feast with me. Good deer meat.”
+
+But when he shouted these words the flesh and the skin all jumped
+together and formed again the same live deer he had killed. The
+animal went running away. It ran back to the medicine water, plunged
+into it and disappeared. My father searched for it, but he could not
+see it. He told me he did not understand how a deer could do such
+things except it were by the help of the Great Medicine.
+
+Three of our medicine men invited some of us young men into a tepee
+on one certain occasion when I was about fourteen or fifteen years
+old. They said, “We will show you how to make the winter go away
+so that the grass may grow, for the good of the young colts coming
+to our herds.” Just at that time there was a big snowstorm making
+the people and the horses shiver. But the three medicine men went
+confidently at their ceremonies.
+
+They sent a young woman out to gather some certain kind of sprigs of
+vegetation. It was not tobacco, but pretty soon the medicine men had
+it changed into tobacco. They formed a circle with us, loaded the
+pipe, and soon it was passing from one to another. To each of us in
+turn they said: “Draw in only a little of the smoke, but draw it in
+slowly and deeply. Hold it there a short time, then let it flow out
+from wide-open lips, not in puffs from firm lips.” We did as they
+directed. While the smoking was being done the three old men made
+prayers. After a while one of them said: “Look outside.” We looked.
+The storm had quit, the sky had cleared, the ground was wet but bare
+of snow, green grass was peeping up everywhere.
+
+Every Indian had, or tried to have, some special medicine or spirit
+power of his own, to bring him good fortune or to shield him from
+harm. He had some object or objects that held this helpful influence,
+or he had certain ways of doing certain acts, or he had both of
+these aids. I had my special protective possessions and my particular
+methods of using them. It was considered not prudent to reveal these
+things, and I never have done so, except in some features that I
+could not keep secret.
+
+A powerful spirit man during my boyhood was one whose name originally
+was Walks Above the Earth. He was known as a man whose mind was at
+all times on spiritual things, who gave little or no thought to
+ordinary earthly matters. His name got changed, though, in his later
+life. This came about because of his choice of a mule for his riding
+animal. One time when he and Little Chief were approaching a Sioux
+camp somebody remarked, in derision, “Here comes that crazy Cheyenne
+on his mule.” That fixed upon him the name Crazy Cheyenne on a Mule.
+This afterward was shortened to Crazy Mule.
+
+He had a variety of medicine powers. He put himself through many
+trials, so the spirits helped him. One time, when we were in camp
+far up the Powder river, he had four Cheyennes go up close to him
+and shoot at him, each in successive turn. They sent four bullets
+directly at his body. He was standing with his back against a tree.
+After the four shots had been fired he stooped forward and pulled off
+his moccasins. From them he poured out the four bullets. I saw this.
+I was eight years old. I saw him do the same feat at a time when our
+tribal camp was pitched on the Rosebud valley, just below where the
+present Forsythe road forks to go to Lame Deer and to Ashland. At
+another time he showed his powers when the tribe were on upper Lame
+Deer creek. This was just before our warriors joined the Ogallala
+Sioux to fight the soldiers in the fort[12] at the south of us.
+
+Roman Nose was, I believe, the most admired of all warriors I ever
+saw. He was killed when I yet was a boy, but I remember him, and as I
+grew older I heard much talk of him as an example for the young men.
+The water spirits told him not to marry, so he lived a single and
+pure life. At various Great Medicine dances he went bravely through
+the bodily tortures as a sacrifice of self for the good of the tribe.
+White Bull, sometimes known also as Ice, was his usual medicine man
+adviser. In later years White Bull and others told me a great many
+stories illustrative of the admirable qualities of Roman Nose.
+
+He made medicine one time when we were camped on Goose creek, a
+stream flowing into the upper Tongue river. The medicine water lake
+was not far away. At dawn Roman Nose stripped himself, made a raft of
+logs and went out upon the lake. He took with him his medicine pipe.
+He had a large buffalo robe for a bed and a small one for a pillow.
+No food, no water for drinking. He spent the day on his robe bed.
+He prayed, “Great Medicine, let me conquer all enemies,” and other
+prayers of this kind. He meditated upon the Above.
+
+That night a storm came. Lightning flashed and thunder shook the
+earth. Waves washed upon the raft and tossed it over the surface of
+the water. His friends were fearful he would be drowned. Early in
+the morning two men went to look for him. They saw him on the raft,
+floating safely. They told the people, “He was not harmed.”
+
+The second day he likewise prayed and meditated all day. His fast was
+continued. When that night arrived another storm came. The thunder
+and lightning were more active than they had been during the previous
+night. The waves lifted themselves higher. But when the calm morning
+dawned his watchers learned that nothing harmful had fallen upon him.
+The third day and night passed in the same manner, but the storm
+during the hours of darkness was yet more furious. “He surely will be
+killed by the water spirits tonight,” the people said. But he was not.
+
+The fourth night the storm was a terrible one, the worst any of the
+Cheyennes ever had seen. They were fearful for themselves as well
+as for the young man on the raft. Hailstones pelted our lodges and
+scattered our pony herds. “He will be beaten to death,” everybody
+agreed. When the quiet twilight of morning came, two men went upon a
+hill to search over the waters. There was Roman Nose still floating
+on his raft. They helped him to land it and to put himself upon the
+shore. Not a hailstone had hit him. The water had been angry, crazy,
+reaching for his body, but not a drop of it had touched him. The
+water spirits failed to devour him. The Great Medicine prevented
+them. At the camp all of the old men sat themselves in a circle and
+listened to his rehearsal of the events of his great devotional
+adventure.
+
+At a battle with soldiers on Powder river (1865) Roman Nose showed
+the people that he had special protection against enemies. He rode
+his horse several times back and forth in front of the white men. He
+rode slowly, not fast. The soldiers shot at him, but not a bullet
+went into him. They either missed him or fell back harmless. He had a
+strong medicine warbonnet. I did not see him defy the soldiers, but
+I heard a great deal of talk about it. Our camp was above the forks
+of Powder river and Little Powder river. The battle was down below,
+on Powder river. Both the Northern and the Southern Cheyenne tribes
+were in the upper valley, camping side by side. Both of the Great
+Medicine tribal lodges were in the camps, the one for our sacred
+Buffalo Head, and the other for the Medicine Arrows of the Southern
+Cheyennes.
+
+White Bull made many medicine fasts. He told me about them. He said
+that one time when he was fasting and praying on a hill, not in a
+lodge, on the third day a doe antelope came near to him. She lay
+down there on the ground and gave birth to twin fawns. White Bull
+reached out and seized the doe’s hind feet. She struggled, but he did
+not release her. She promised that if he would let her go free she
+would give to him the two fawns. But he told her he did not want the
+fawns, he wanted her medicine, her spirit powers. The doe groaned and
+protested, but finally she agreed:
+
+“Yes, I give you my medicine.”
+
+He got the bear medicine also in a manner like that. When he was
+fasting and praying on a hill the bear came sniffing, sniffing, on
+his trail. It stopped suddenly as it came into his view. Both of
+them were startled and frightened. White Bull trusted the Great
+Medicine, but the bear was altogether afraid. It said, “If you will
+not harm me I will give you my medicine, and then you can speak fire
+from your mouth.” It gave him then its power over spirits. He got
+also the medicine of a wild hog. Perhaps he had other medicines. I
+do not know. He had a good reputation for doctoring sick people. I
+have heard him “Blaa-a-a-a,” like a doe antelope, when he was making
+medicine for them. I have heard him, lots of times, grunting like a
+hog or whoofing like a bear. I never knew how much to believe of his
+stories. Lots of people said he told big lies.
+
+My father taught me some medicine practices for myself. He showed me
+where to gather the seed of certain grass that had power to shield
+me. A quantity of the seed was put into a buckskin pouch, and this
+I carried tied to my back hair. In the pouch was also a piece of
+loose buckskin. To prepare the medicine, a few seeds were pulverized
+between the fingers and the powder was allowed to fall upon the
+piece of buckskin spread out. A little saliva was mixed with it by
+the stirring of a finger. A slight spray of saliva then was put into
+the palms, after which the mixed seed and saliva medicine was taken
+into the palms and they were rubbed together. When they had been well
+rubbed they were passed all about my body or clothing, near the skin
+or clothing but not touching. Bullets then would be diverted and slip
+aside from me.
+
+My horse was protected by the same medicine. In the same way the
+palms were passed all over the body of the horse, close but not
+touching. This would turn aside bullets from him. The hoofs were
+lifted and the bottom of the feet treated by the palm passing. He
+then would be not easily tired, would be surefooted, would not step
+into a hole and fall down. The palms were passed across the front
+of the horse’s nose. The medicine made him have a keen sense of
+smell and a clear eyesight. This helped him to find his way without
+difficulty during darkness or at any time when running.
+
+The face painting as it was done for me by Red Haired Bear at
+my first medicine making was adopted as my fixed mode of battle
+preparation in this regard. It was a black ring about my face,
+including lower forehead, chin and cheeks in its circle. All of the
+surface enclosed in the circle was painted yellow. I kept at all
+times right at hand a supply of charcoal and yellow clay paint. It
+did not take long for me to apply them when an occasion for their
+need might come. With this preparation, with my best clothing, my
+shield, my eagle wing bone whistle, myself and my horse protected by
+the grass seed medicine, I was almost fearless. I was not entirely
+so, but almost. In every time of danger I tried to keep myself
+thinking:
+
+“The Great Medicine sees me.”
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[11] Lake DeSmet.
+
+[12] Fort Phil Kearny.
+
+
+
+
+ V
+
+_Off the Reservation._
+
+
+After we had been driven from the Black Hills and that country
+was given to the white people my father would not stay on any
+reservation. He said it was no use trying to make farms as the
+white people did. In the first place, that was not the Indian way
+of living. All of our teachings and beliefs were that land was not
+made to be owned in separate pieces by persons and that the plowing
+up and destruction of vegetation placed by the Great Medicine and
+the planting of other vegetation according to the ideas of men was
+an interference with the plans of the Above. In the second place, it
+seemed that if the white people could take away from us the Black
+Hills after that country had been given to us and accepted by us
+as ours forever, they might take away from us any other lands we
+should occupy whenever they might want these other lands. In the
+third place, the last great treaty had allowed us to use all of the
+country between the Black Hills and the Bighorn river and mountains
+as hunting grounds so long as we did not resist the traveling of
+white people through it on their way to or from their lands beyond
+its borders. My father decided to act upon this agreement to us. He
+decided we should spend all of our time in the hunting region. We
+could do this, gaining our own living in this way, or we could be
+supported by rations given to us at the agency. He chose to stay away
+from all white people. His family all agreed with him. So, for more
+than a year before the great battle at the Little Bighorn we were all
+the time in the hunting lands.
+
+Not all of the dissatisfied Indians stayed away from the
+reservations. Bands were moving to and from the hunting grounds
+at all times, even during the winter, but only a few remained
+here throughout the year. The Indians involved were both Sioux
+and Cheyennes, but there were many more Sioux than Cheyennes. A
+band of Uncpapas, led by Sitting Bull, remained entirely away from
+Dakota. There were at all times a big camp and some smaller camps
+of Ogallalas. Families or small bands of other Sioux came and went.
+The Cheyenne camps varied from thirty or forty lodges to two hundred
+or more. During the winter before the soldiers came after us the
+Cheyennes and Ogallalas kept near each other much of the time. We
+spent the earlier part of the cold weather season on Otter creek.
+Then we moved together over to Tongue river, setting our two camp
+circles near each other on the west side of the river where now is
+the home place of John Bigheadman, known also as All See Him.
+
+Sugar, coffee, tobacco, ammunition, everything of that kind, were
+scarce with us. We were not greatly distressed because of this, but
+we had learned to use and to like these additions to our old ways,
+so we were pleased when such things came to us. We liked to get
+ammunition, as that helped us to kill more game. But, best of all, we
+liked to get tobacco. We used the plug tobacco that most white people
+use for chewing. We shaved it off in thin layers, using a board to
+lay it upon while cutting it. It was mixed with willow bark. This
+bark we called kinnikinick. It was the dried inside layer.
+
+Red Haired Bear had some tobacco, just a little piece, at one time
+when a certain very old man came to visit him. The old man was feeble
+and shaky. He was a good man, so Red Haired Bear determined to give
+him a treat. The host got out his pipe. “Give me a knife,” he said to
+his woman. Then, “Get me the tobacco board.” She did as he had asked.
+He cut off only a little of the tobacco and mixed it with plenty of
+kinnikinick. He loaded his pipe and lit it. When he had sent puffs to
+the four directions, to the Above and to the below spirits, he handed
+the pipe to the guest. The old man drew in and let out one draft. He
+stopped a moment as if thinking intently about something. Then he
+drew in another draft. He let out a cloud through his nose.
+
+“Oh, tobacco!” he exclaimed in delight.
+
+He took deep and slow inhalations. He let them out slowly, by the
+mouth and by the nose. As Red Haired Bear took his turn at the pipe
+the old man grasped handfuls of the smoke, rubbed together his palms,
+sniffed them over and over, rubbed his face and his clothing. “Good,
+good,” he kept saying. When the pipeful had been burned he had Red
+Haired Bear empty very carefully the ashes, mix some more kinnikinick
+willow bark with them and fill the pipe with this mixture. They had a
+third smoke of this kind.
+
+Four men went to the lodge of a certain medicine man. He told them
+he had some tobacco, and that made their hearts glad. He had a chunk
+of wood that looked like a plug of tobacco. He put this piece of
+wood upon the tobacco board and pretended to shave off slices from
+it to mix with kinnikinick. Even while he was shaving the stick
+the men were sniffing and saying, “Oh, good tobacco.” They smoked
+four pipefuls. The ashes were saved carefully. They were mixed then
+with other kinnikinick and four more pipefuls were smoked. The four
+men went away praising their host for having given them such fine
+entertainment.
+
+As Cheyennes came to us from the agency they brought coffee, sugar
+and tobacco. Other articles were brought, but these were the
+most desired. The luxuries were distributed among friends, small
+quantities here and there. Someone and another then would go to
+the front of his tepee, call out the names of special friends and
+invite: “I have tobacco. Come and smoke with me.” Or: “I have coffee
+and sugar. Come and feast with me.” Sioux might make such gifts to
+Cheyennes or Cheyennes might provide them to the Sioux. Or, members
+of the two sets of Indians might invite each other to smoke or to
+eat. Usually, though, the givings and the invitings were within
+tribal bounds. Yet every Indian who might prosper in any way was
+expected to hold himself always willing to share and desirous of
+sharing his prosperity with his fellows, with all friendly people,
+even with avowed enemies if such should come peaceably and should be
+in want. A first principle of Indian conduct was: Be generous to all
+Indians.
+
+Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox warriors, came to us with his
+family at the last end of the winter.[13] He was the first one to
+disturb our peace of mind with the announcement:
+
+“Soldiers are coming to fight you.”
+
+He said that the whites would fight all Cheyennes and Sioux who were
+off the reservations. He did not know from what forts the soldiers
+would come. He had not heard who would be their chiefs. But this did
+not matter. He and his family stayed with us. Other Cheyennes came.
+
+We did not believe Last Bull’s report. We thought somebody had told
+him what was not true. The treaty allowed us to hunt here as we might
+wish, so long as we did not make war upon the whites. We were not
+making war upon them. I had not seen any white man for many months.
+We were not looking for them. We were trying to stay away from all
+white people, and we wanted them to stay away from us. Our old men
+said that the reason the white people wanted us to leave off the
+roaming and hunting was that we should stay near them, so they could
+sell us more of their goods and their whisky. Our old men ever were
+urging the young men not to drink the whisky. The advice often was
+disregarded, but it appeared to be given serious consideration. Up to
+that time in my life I never had swallowed a drink of it.
+
+Lots of buffalo were feeding on the grass at the upper Tongue and
+Powder rivers, on all of their branches and on the other lands in
+this whole region. Lots of elk, deer and antelope could be found
+almost anywhere the hunter might go to seek them. Lots of colts were
+being born in our horse herds this spring. We were rich, contented,
+at peace with the whites so far as we knew. Why should soldiers come
+out to seek for us and fight us? No, the report seemingly was a
+mistake.
+
+Spotted Wolf, Medicine Wolf and Twin, three Cheyenne chiefs, came to
+us as we camped on Powder river. They advised us to go to our agency.
+“Soldiers will come to fight you,” they assured us. We now believed
+this to be true. The chiefs in our band had a council. The next day
+they had another council.
+
+“No, we shall stay here,” they decided. “If soldiers come we shall
+steal their horses. Then they can not fight us.”
+
+Forty lodges of Cheyennes now were in camp on the west side of Powder
+river, forty or fifty miles above where Little Powder river flows
+into it. The report brought by the three chiefs aroused us into
+watchful activity. Every hunting party was on the lookout for white
+soldiers or for their trails. The women and old people in the camp
+kept themselves ever ready for immediate flight.
+
+My older brother Yellow Hair and I went scouting. We mounted our
+horses at night and went up the Powder river valley. As we were
+creeping and peeping over a hill our horses got away from us. But
+we kept on afoot. We saw camp fires in a dry gulch on the east side
+of Powder river. Some other groups of Cheyennes were scouting in the
+same vicinity. A figure on horseback showed for a moment on a ridge.
+White Man? Cheyenne? Other Indian? Must be a white man, a soldier.
+Somebody off aside from us acted quickly.
+
+“Bang!”
+
+The horse and rider went at once out of sight. My brother and I
+dropped down and lay quiet a long time. We talked of stealing soldier
+horses. Our own were gone, and we needed mounts. We crawled along
+further until we could see a soldier walking to and fro along the
+line of their horses, between us and the animals. He had a rifle. As
+we conferred together about what to do, other soldiers came to the
+horses. They were getting ready to move. Within a few minutes the
+entire body of them were gone. We went then close to the abandoned
+camp. We began to poke up the smoldering fires. Suddenly:
+
+“Bang!” The bullet whistled past us.
+
+We ran. Other shots were fired at us. We hurried into a narrow gulch
+or canyon. As we dodged from hiding place to hiding place up the
+gulch we could see soldiers on horseback following along the high
+sides. They were shooting down toward us. But they could not see us.
+There was a high wind blowing, the weather was of the blustering kind
+usual at that time of year. We hastened on to where the gulch led to
+the high bench land. Our pursuers had left us before we reached this
+broad area. We were tired, very tired. We wanted to stop and rest,
+but we feared our legs might grow stiff, so we trudged on. At dawn we
+heard barking of dogs at our camp. That was a welcome sound.
+
+“Waoo-oo-oo-oo,” we wolf-howled from a hilltop before we went into
+the camp. Our alarm brought out the people. They flocked to our
+lodge. A council of the old men was called. My brother and I were
+brought before it. Other young men who had been out also were at the
+council. “Young men, what do you know?” the chiefs asked us. We told
+them. We learned that the lone horseman shot during the night before
+was a Cheyenne. Another Cheyenne had sent the bullet. It had gone in
+at the wrist and out just below the elbow. The affair was entirely a
+case of mistaken identity.
+
+The council of old men decided we should keep away from the soldiers,
+not try to fight them. They sent out an old man herald to proclaim:
+
+“Soldiers have been seen. We think they are looking for us. Today we
+move camp far down the river.”
+
+Our hunters and scouts kept a lookout for the soldiers. Our camp was
+moved to a point just above where Little Powder river flows into
+Powder river and on the west side of the larger stream. The soldiers
+went over the hills to the headwaters of Hanging Woman creek. They
+followed this stream down to Tongue river. We felt safe then. Many of
+our people thought they were not seeking us at all.
+
+But one day some Cheyennes hunting antelope at the head of Otter
+creek, just over the hills west from our camp, saw the soldiers
+camped there. The hunters urged their horses back to warn us. Some
+of the horses became exhausted in the run, so their riders had to
+come on afoot. A herald notified the people. All was excitement. The
+council of old men appointed ten young men to go out that night and
+watch the movements of the soldiers. Others were out scouting or were
+awake and watching, but these ten had the special duty. Most of the
+people slept, feeling secure under the protection of the appointed
+outer sentinels. Early in the morning an old man arose and went to
+the top of a nearby knoll to observe or to pray, as old men were in
+the habit of doing. He had been there only a few moments when he
+began shouting toward the camp:
+
+“The soldiers are right here! The soldiers are right here!”
+
+Already the attacking white men were between the horse herd and the
+camp. The ten scouts during the hours of darkness and storm had
+missed meeting the soldiers. They found a trail, this trail going up
+the creek valley. They turned their horses and whipped them in the
+effort to get ahead of the invaders. But the tired horses played out.
+They did not catch up with the soldiers until these had arrived at
+the camp, or afterward.
+
+Women screamed. Children cried for their mothers. Old people tottered
+and hobbled away to get out of reach of the bullets singing among the
+lodges. Braves seized whatever weapons they had and tried to meet
+the attack. I owned a muzzle-loading rifle, but I had no bullets for
+it. I owned also a cap-and-ball six shooter, but I had loaned it to
+Star, a cousin who was one of the ten special scouts of the night
+before. In turn, he had let me have bow and arrows he had borrowed
+from Puffed Cheek. My armament then consisted of this bow and arrows
+belonging to Puffed Cheek.
+
+I skirted around afoot to get at our horse herd. I looped my lariat
+rope over the neck of the first convenient one. It belonged to Old
+Bear, the old man chief of our band. But just now it became my war
+pony. I quickly made a lariat bridle and mounted the recovered
+animal. A few other Cheyennes did the same as I had done. But most
+of them remained afoot. I shot arrows at the soldiers. Our people had
+not much else to shoot. Only a few had guns and also ammunition for
+them.
+
+All of the soldiers who first appeared had white horses. Another
+band of them who charged soon afterward from another direction had
+only bay horses. I started back to try to get to my home lodge. I
+wanted my shield, my other medicine objects and whatever else I might
+be able to carry away. Women were struggling along burdened with
+packs of precious belongings. Some were dragging or carrying their
+children. All were shrieking in fright. I came upon one woman who had
+a pack on her back, one little girl under an arm and an older girl
+clinging to her free right hand. She was crying, both of the girls
+were crying, and all three of them were almost exhausted. They had
+just dived into a thicket for a rest when I rode up to them. It was
+Last Bull’s wife and their two daughters.
+
+“Let me take one of the children,” I proposed.
+
+The older girl, age about ten years, was lifted up behind me. A
+little further on I picked up also an eight-year-old boy who was
+trudging along behind a mother carrying on her back a baby and under
+her arms two other children. The girl behind me clasped her arms
+about my waist. I wrapped an arm about the boy in front of me. With
+my free arm and hand I guided my horse as best I could. The animal
+too was excited by the tumult. It shied and plunged. But I got the
+two children out of danger. Then I went back to help in the fight.
+
+Two Moons, Bear Walks on a Ridge and myself were together. We
+centered an attack upon one certain soldier. Two Moons had a
+repeating rifle. As we stood in concealment he stood it upon end
+in front of him and passed his hands up and down the barrel, not
+touching it, while making medicine. Then he said: “My medicine is
+good; watch me kill that soldier.” He fired, but his bullet missed.
+Bear Walks on a Ridge then fired his muzzle-loading rifle. His bullet
+hit the soldier in the back of the head. We rushed upon the man and
+beat and stabbed him to death. Another Cheyenne joined us to help in
+the killing. He took the soldier’s rifle. I stripped off the blue
+coat and kept it. Two Moons and Bear Walks on a Ridge took whatever
+else he had and they wanted.
+
+One Cheyenne was killed by the soldiers. Another had his forearm
+badly shattered. Braided Locks, who is yet living, had the skin of
+one cheek furrowed by a bullet. The Cheyennes were beaten away from
+the camp. From a distance we saw the destruction of our village. Our
+tepees were burned, with everything in them except what the soldiers
+may have taken. Extra flares at times showed the explosion of powder,
+and there was the occasional pop of a cartridge from the fires.
+The Cheyennes were rendered very poor. I had nothing left but the
+clothing I had on, with the soldier coat added. My eagle wing bone
+flute, my medicine pipe, my rifle, everything else of mine, were gone.
+
+This was in the last part of the winter.[14] Melted snow water was
+running everywhere. We waded across the Powder river and set off to
+the eastward. All of the people except some of the warriors were
+afoot. The few young men on horseback stayed behind to guard the
+other people as they got away. One old woman, a blind person, was
+missing. All others were present except the Cheyenne who had been
+killed.
+
+The soldiers did not follow us. That night we who had horses went
+back to see what had become of them. At the destroyed camp we saw
+one lodge still standing. We went to it. There was the missing old
+blind woman. Her tepee and herself had been left entirely unharmed.
+We talked about this matter, all agreeing that the act showed the
+soldiers had good hearts.
+
+We found the soldier camp. We found also our horses they had taken.
+We crept toward the herd, out a little distance from the camp. One
+Cheyenne would whisper, “I see my horse.” Another would say, “There
+is mine.” Some could not see their own, but they took whichever ones
+they could get. I got my own favorite animal. We made some effort
+then to steal some of the horses of the white men. But they shot
+at us, so we went away with the part of our own herd that we could
+manage. When we returned with them and caught up with our people we
+let the women and some of the old people ride. I gave then to Chief
+Old Bear his horse I had captured when the soldiers first attacked
+us. He said, “Thank you, my friend,” and he gave the horse to his
+woman while he kept on afoot.
+
+We kept going eastward and northward. We forded the Little Powder
+river and went upon the benches beyond. Three nights we slept out.
+Only a few had robes. There was but little food, only a few women
+having little chunks of dry meat in their small packs. There was hard
+freezing at night and there was mud and water by day. But nobody
+appeared to become ill from the exposure. Early on the fourth day
+we arrived at where we had aimed, a camp of Ogallala Sioux far up
+a creek east of Powder river. Three or four Ogallala lodges had
+been beside our Cheyenne camp when the soldiers came. These people
+traveling with us led us to their main camp.
+
+The Ogallalas received us hospitably, as we knew they would do. Crazy
+Horse was their principal chief. Heads of lodges all about the camp
+were calling out to us:
+
+“Cheyennes, come and eat here.”
+
+They fed us to fullness and gave us temporary shelter and robes.
+At night a council was held by the chiefs of the two bands. At the
+council our people told about the soldier attack. It was decided that
+the Ogallalas and the Cheyennes should go together to the Uncpapa
+Sioux, located northeastward from us. The next forenoon all of us set
+out in that direction. Horses were loaned to the Cheyennes by the
+Ogallalas, so none of us had to walk.
+
+Buffalo Bull Sitting Down, known to the white people as Sitting Bull,
+was the principal chief of the Uncpapas in that camp. There were more
+of them than of Cheyennes and Ogallalas combined. When we arrived
+there they set up at once two big special lodges in the center of
+their camp circle. Our men were placed in one of these lodges, our
+women in the other. In each lodge sat a circle of Cheyennes about the
+inner wall. Uncpapa women had set their pots to boiling when first we
+had been seen. Now they came with meat. They kept on coming, coming,
+with more and more meat. We were filled up, and we had plenty extra
+to keep for another day. An Uncpapa herald went riding about the camp
+and calling out:
+
+“The Cheyennes are very poor. All who have blankets or robes or
+tepees to spare should give to them.”
+
+Crowds of women and girls came with gifts. A ten-year-old Uncpapa
+girl put a buffalo robe in front of me and left it there. It was mine
+now. An Uncpapa man gave my father a medicine pipe to replace his
+lost one. I did not receive that kind of present, but I was provided
+with every important comfort. Whoever needed any kind of clothing got
+it immediately. They flooded us with gifts of everything needful.
+Crowds of their men and women were going among us to find out and to
+supply our wants.
+
+“Who needs a blanket?”
+
+“I do.”
+
+“Take this one.”
+
+“Who wants this tepee?”
+
+“Give it to me.”
+
+“It is yours.”
+
+They brought horses--lots of horses.
+
+“Who wants a horse?”
+
+“I.”
+
+“You may have this one.”
+
+Oh, what good hearts they had! I never can forget the generosity of
+Sitting Bull’s Uncpapa Sioux on that day.
+
+Our women’s backs were burdened and our gift horses were loaded as we
+went to the nearby place assigned to us for the setting up of our own
+camp circle. Every household had a lodge, the same as had been the
+case at our lost camp. Some of the new tepees were small, but they
+served all necessary purposes until we could get buffalo skins for
+making larger ones.
+
+This triple camp was fifty or more miles east of Powder river, on
+east from a big and tall white stone which the white people call
+Chalk Butte. It was at the headwaters of a stream flowing westward
+into Powder river. The Cheyennes had been three sleeps on the way to
+the Ogallalas. One sleep there. Three sleeps of travel by Cheyennes
+and Ogallalas to the Uncpapa camp. Five or six sleeps the three
+tribes stayed together at this place.
+
+Various scouting parties went out to find out where were the
+soldiers. Eight or ten of us Cheyennes went to Tongue river and
+beyond. At Tongue river we stopped for a daytime rest. Our horses
+were picketed out to graze. After a while they began to show signs
+of alarm. A Cheyenne went out to look. He saw a lone white man afoot
+among the herd. Indian horses were afraid of white people, so they
+were snorting. The Cheyenne approached the white man and called out:
+
+“How!”
+
+“How,” the white man responded.
+
+They shook hands. The Cheyenne got his own horse, mounted it, and
+asked the white man to go with him to the other Indians. They set
+off, the Cheyenne on horseback, the white man afoot. The stranger
+had a six shooter in a scabbard at his belt, but he made no offer to
+use it. He appeared friendly. He was thin and hungry-looking. His
+clothing was very ragged. The other Cheyennes got their horses, and
+they all gathered about the newcomer. Some of them mounted their
+horses, others stood afoot holding them.
+
+“Who are you?” a Cheyenne signed.
+
+The white man could make signs, but not very well. He made us
+understand him, though. He said he had been a soldier, but he got
+lost from them. He told us he had not fought us, as he had been
+lost before that time. He said the ragged clothing he had on was
+taken from a dead Sioux, as he did not want to be seen with soldier
+clothing. One Cheyenne kept saying, in our language, “Let’s kill
+him.” But nobody agreed with him. Finally he jerked up his rifle and
+fired. The white man fell dead. Others then cut him and beat him, so
+that no one man could have the blame nor receive the honor.
+
+Robbing the body was the next step. About all he had was the six
+shooter, some cartridges for it, and a little package tied to his
+belt. It had meat in it. It was horse meat and had been cooked in an
+open blazing fire. We threw it away.
+
+This man was killed not many miles down the Tongue river from my
+present home place. The exact spot is on a ranch where now lives a
+white man named Wolf. The place is on Tongue river below the present
+town of Ashland, Montana.
+
+
+ HISTORICAL NOTE
+
+ A sketch of the military campaign of 1876 against the roaming
+ Sioux and Cheyennes is interposed here for the enlightenment of
+ such readers as may not be familiar with the frontier history of
+ that period. There is nothing new in this sketch; it is simply a
+ synopsis of what heretofore has been accepted and published.
+
+ After the Indian troubles during and immediately following our
+ civil war, in 1868 a treaty was made with the Sioux and Cheyenne
+ tribes of the northern plains country. A few of the Sioux, mainly
+ a band of Uncpapas led by Sitting Bull, refused to go into the
+ treaty council. Various reservations in the Dakotas were agreed
+ upon as belonging exclusively to the various tribes of Indians
+ involved. All lands lying westward of these reservations, as far
+ as the Bighorn river and Bighorn mountains, in Montana, were
+ to be hunting grounds for the Indians as long as wild game in
+ abundance remained there.
+
+ Bands of these Dakota red people were going out to the hunting
+ grounds and returning again from time to time. Some of them
+ elected to remain most of the time, or all of the time, in the
+ Montana open country. Sitting Bull and a few others like him
+ stayed entirely away from the agencies. They were actuated partly
+ by resentment and partly by a sincere desire to avoid conflict
+ that regularly resulted from prolonged contiguity of Indians and
+ whites.
+
+ The Cheyennes and the Ogallala Sioux were assigned to the Black
+ Hills country as their reservation--forever, according to the
+ terms of the treaty. Soon afterward it became apparent that rich
+ gold fields were hidden away somewhere in the lands conceded
+ to them. In 1874, obedient to orders from Washington, General
+ George A. Custer led his Seventh cavalry from Fort Lincoln,
+ Dakota, on an exploratory expedition into the Cheyenne-Ogallala
+ country. They found ample verification of the rumors as to the
+ presence of gold there. The news spread rapidly, and there was a
+ rush of white men fortune-seekers into the midst of these Indian
+ possessions.
+
+ The government made a weak effort to restrain the intruders.
+ But the eager migrants flooded in and burst through the flimsy
+ military barriers. The vexing problem was dodged by moving
+ the Indians to other lands. But not all of them went to the
+ designated new reservations. Many of them, angered at what they
+ deemed a wrongful ousting, took their tepees and their families
+ and went to live altogether in the open hunting regions. Indians
+ from other reservations did likewise. That was the beginning of
+ the “Indian uprising” of 1876.
+
+ In December, 1875, pursuant to our governmental policy, General
+ Sherman, then commander-in-chief of the United States army,
+ issued an important general order. He proclaimed that all Indians
+ found off their reservations after the last day of January,
+ 1876, would be regarded as hostiles to be fought by the military
+ forces. It being evident that not many of the Dakota roamers in
+ Montana would return to the reservations until they were forced
+ to do so, bodies of soldiers were set in motion for seeking
+ out and driving these wanderers back within their assigned
+ territorial bounds.
+
+ The active military field leaders in this campaign were
+ Brigadier-General Terry, Brigadier-General Crook, Colonel Gibbon
+ and Lieutenant-Colonel Custer. Each of these four officers had
+ been brevetted Major-General of Volunteers during the civil war,
+ but the contracting of the army after the war set each of them
+ back to a lower ranking. Terry had infantry from Fort Rice and
+ Custer’s Seventh cavalry, from Fort Lincoln, Dakota. Crook had a
+ force of cavalry and infantry at Fort Fetterman, Wyoming. Gibbon
+ had infantry from Fort Shaw and cavalry from Fort Ellis, Montana.
+
+ From their three basic points--in Dakota, in Wyoming and in
+ Montana--the three bodies of soldiers moved toward a common
+ central area between the Powder and Bighorn rivers, in Montana,
+ where the Indians being sought were roaming. Details of these
+ military movements are too extensive for review here. The most
+ thrilling phase of the campaign began when Custer and his Seventh
+ cavalry set off up the Rosebud valley to follow a recent Indian
+ trail. The result of this subsidiary proceeding was the supreme
+ tragedy in the annals of our American frontier warfare.
+
+ The first fight of that 1876 struggle was this attack upon the
+ Cheyenne camp on Powder river, March 17th. There have been
+ published many worthy books recounting the military operations
+ of that year. Reliable edification on this subject may be found
+ in General Godfrey’s magazine articles, in Colonel Graham’s
+ “The Story of the Little Bighorn,” in Grinnell’s “The Fighting
+ Cheyennes,” in Brininstool’s “A Trooper with Custer,” in the
+ diaries of Lieutenants Bradley and McClernand, and in some other
+ published writings.[15] These tell the stirring story of where
+ our soldiers went and what they did during that eventful summer.
+ Wooden Leg tells the equally stirring story of where the Indians
+ went and what they did during that same time.
+
+ THOMAS B. MARQUIS.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[13] February, 1876.
+
+[14] March 17th, 1876. Gen. J. J. Reynolds in command of soldiers.
+Historians mistakenly mention this incident as a victory over “Crazy
+Horse’s village.”--T. B. M.
+
+[15] EDITOR’S NOTE: The interested reader will find also much
+enlightenment in Dr. Marquis’ “Soldiering in the Old West,” to be
+published soon by The Midwest Company.
+
+
+
+
+ VI
+
+_Swarming of Angered Indians._
+
+
+A band of Minneconjoux Sioux arrived at the Uncpapa camp either just
+before or just after we got there. They had not been troubled by
+the soldiers, but they wanted to keep out of trouble. Lame Deer was
+their principal chief. The Cheyennes were well acquainted with the
+Minneconjoux. We had camped and hunted with them many times. There
+were some intermarriages with them, so there were a few Cheyennes
+among them and a few of their people belonging to our tribe. We had
+mingled with them almost as much as we had with the Ogallalas. We
+never had associated closely with the Uncpapas. They were almost
+strangers to us. We knew of them only by hearsay from the Ogallalas
+and the Minneconjoux.
+
+The movement to the Uncpapas was because they had a much larger
+band in the hunting grounds than had any of the other tribes. Some
+of them, with Sitting Bull as their leader, had been out all of the
+time for several years. At this first assembling, the Ogallala band
+was in number next to the Uncpapas. The Minneconjoux had not quite
+as many as had the Ogallalas. The Cheyenne band was the smallest.
+During past times, when the Cheyennes and the Ogallalas and the
+Burned Thighs (Brûlé Sioux) had fought the white soldiers many times
+in the country farther southward, not many of the Uncpapas had been
+with them. These people kept mostly at peace by staying away from
+all white settlements. Now it was becoming generally believed among
+Indians that this was the best plan.
+
+Sitting Bull had come into notice as the most consistent advocate
+of the idea of living out of all touch with white people. He would
+not go to the reservation nor would he accept any rations or other
+gifts coming from the white man government. He rarely went to the
+trading posts. Himself and his followers were wealthy in food and
+clothing and lodges, in everything needful to an Indian. They did
+not lose any horses nor other property in warfare, because they had
+not any warfare. He had come now into admiration by all Indians
+as a man whose medicine was good--that is, as a man having a kind
+heart and good judgment as to the best course of conduct. He was
+considered as being altogether brave, but peaceable. He was strong
+in religion--the Indian religion. He made medicine many times. He
+prayed and fasted and whipped his flesh into submission to the will
+of the Great Medicine. So, in attaching ourselves to the Uncpapas
+we other tribes were not moved by a desire to fight. They had not
+invited us. They simply welcomed us. We supposed that the combined
+camps would frighten off the soldiers. We hoped thus to be freed from
+their annoyance. Then we could separate again into the tribal bands
+and resume our quiet wandering and hunting.
+
+The four camps could not remain long together in any one location.
+The food game would become scarce there and the feed for our horses
+would be eaten away. We had to move on. A council of all of the
+tribal chiefs decided we should go northward to the head of the next
+stream flowing into the east side of Powder river. The next morning
+after the decision had been made, the four different bands set off in
+procession toward the appointed place.
+
+The Cheyennes were in the lead. The Ogallalas came next. Following
+them were the Minneconjoux. The Uncpapas were last. The order of
+movement was the result of an agreed plan. The Cheyennes and the
+Uncpapas had the specially dangerful positions. I do not know on just
+what grounds this was the arrangement, but I know that this was the
+intention. The Cheyennes kept scouts out in front looking forward
+from high points. The Uncpapas had always some of their young men
+staying back to observe if any enemies were following. The Ogallalas
+and the Minneconjoux sent guardians off to the hill points at the
+sides.
+
+Three sleeps, I believe, our four camp circles stood in this new
+location. The Cheyennes in advance had been allowed to choose first
+the spot for the encampment. The Ogallalas and the Minneconjoux then
+located themselves only a little distance from us and from each
+other. The Uncpapas placed their circle on whatever good ground
+was left and on ground most suitable for guarding that side of the
+combined body of Indians. In the camping as well as in the traveling,
+the Cheyennes and the Uncpapas occupied the specially exposed
+positions.
+
+The scarcity of feed for our horses led the council into a decision
+to move on yet farther northward. As I remember it, we spent one
+sleep in temporary camp during this movement as well as in the first
+combined shift of base. Our horses were weak for lack of food, so we
+had to travel slowly. We stopped at the upper regions of the next
+creek tributary to Powder river. I believe we stayed there three
+sleeps.
+
+The Arrows All Gone Sioux (the Sans Arcs) came to us at this camping
+place. Five camp circles now were in close communion. The number
+of people in this added band was about the same as in the Ogallala
+or the Minneconjoux organizations. In the case of each of the five
+tribes, only a part of their members were here. But in each case
+more were coming from time to time while few or none were going back
+to the reservations. I believe the number of Cheyenne lodges now must
+have been increased to fifty. The Ogallalas, Minneconjoux and Arrows
+All Gone each had more, perhaps sixty or seventy. The comparative
+size of the Uncpapa circle indicated they might have had as many as a
+hundred and fifty lodges.
+
+After three or four sleeps the five camps moved again. This time we
+swerved to the northwestward. Our stopping place now was lower down
+on the next creek flowing into Powder river. New grass was beginning
+to peep up here. Our hungry horses searched greedily for it. The
+herder boys were kept busy at keeping them from rambling too far.
+The tribal herds were kept separate, boys or youths from each tribe
+guarding their own bands.
+
+The Blackfeet Sioux joined us here, I believe. I am not sure of the
+exact place where they came, but I can not recollect any other point
+where they might have come. I recall clearly, though, that when we
+got to Powder river there were six camp circles, the Blackfeet Sioux
+making up the sixth one. Theirs was not a very large circle, but it
+was a separate one. They camped close to the Uncpapas.
+
+Many extra horses were brought in by some of the newly arriving
+Indians. I think most of them were brought by the Blackfeet Sioux,
+or perhaps by the Arrows All Gone. But wherever they were needed by
+members of other tribes they were distributed out as gifts.
+
+A few Waist and Skirt Indians[16] attached themselves to us. They
+were known also as No Clothing people, because their men had no
+clothing. They were extremely poor, having but little property and no
+horses. They had plenty of dogs--big dogs--to drag or to carry their
+tepees and other scant property. Their tribal name, as known to us,
+arose from their women having dresses made up in two parts. Other
+Indian women made up their dresses in one piece. I heard Cheyennes
+talk about Sitting Bull’s father being with these people. He may have
+been there, but I do not remember having seen him. These Indians had
+small tepees, and their lodge poles were placed with the butt ends
+up. They camped all the time in a little group beside the Uncpapa
+circle. Some Assiniboines also were mingled with the Uncpapas, and
+others of them were with the Blackfeet Sioux. A few Burned Thigh
+tepees were with the Ogallalas and the Blackfeet Sioux. Many of the
+incoming Indians talked of having been north of Elk river.[17] Some
+of the talk I had heard was that they had been searching there for
+us. As I remember it, the extra horse bands were brought from the
+north side of that stream.
+
+Chief Lame White Man and a big band of other Cheyennes came to us
+at Powder river. They had made a long journey out from the White
+River agency. They had been looking for us all about the heads of
+the Powder, Tongue and Rosebud rivers. They doubled back and found
+our trail east of Powder river. They had not learned of the soldier
+attack upon our Cheyenne camp.
+
+Lame White Man did not belong to the Northern Cheyenne tribe, but he
+had been much of the time with us. He was a big chief or an old man
+chief of the Southern Cheyennes. He was not a chief with us, but he
+was a wise and good man. For this reason he had much influence among
+us, even as an adviser to our chiefs. His wife and family were with
+him, and their lodge became a part of our growing camp circle.
+
+From Powder river our course was directed westward. We went over the
+hill country. The grass was coming up everywhere, and our horses were
+growing stronger. I believe we camped in two or three places between
+there and the Tongue river, one sleep at each place. Individual
+hunters and small hunting parties were gathering meat for their
+families. Even when we stopped for but one sleep at any place, all of
+the camp circles were formed and all of the lodges set up. It was the
+taking down, moving and setting up again every day of a little city.
+
+A big band of additional Cheyennes came to us on Tongue river. They
+were led by Dirty Moccasins, an old man chief. They had crossed
+Powder river, journeyed over the divide west of it to Otter creek
+and followed this stream down to Tongue river. Our camp was thirty
+or forty miles down from where Otter creek flows into the river.
+Straggling lodges had been reaching us, but this was the largest
+annexation in any one group. Our Cheyenne circle now was double what
+it had been when we first joined the Uncpapas. The other circles
+likewise were growing in the same way. These Cheyennes brought extra
+ammunition, sugar, coffee and tobacco.
+
+Going on west from Tongue river, we stopped several days, perhaps
+four or five sleeps, at the upper part of a stream we knew as Wood
+creek. It is the first creek of importance west of Tongue river and
+flowing, I believe, into Elk river. Our horses now were getting much
+grass. As the main part of the herds grazed, the men were hunting.
+Big parties of Indians killed lots of buffalo in this neighborhood.
+There were many thousands of these animals here. The Cheyennes made
+a special effort to get a plentiful supply of robes for making larger
+lodges. The smaller ones given to our people by the Uncpapas had been
+comfortable, but larger ones were more comfortable. We also got skins
+for robes. Men and women all were busy, the men at hunting and the
+women at tanning the skins.
+
+Councils of the chiefs of the six tribes assembled together were
+held at each place of camping. They talked of whatever might be of
+general interest. Particularly, a council settled where we should go
+next, at each move. We had not set out to go into any special region.
+The moves depended upon reports of hunting parties or scouts. They
+learned and reported where was most of such game as we were seeking.
+
+Many young men were anxious to go for fighting the soldiers. But the
+chiefs and old men all urged us to keep away from the white men. They
+said that fighting wasted energy that ought to be applied in looking
+only for food and clothing, trying only to feed and make comfortable
+ourselves and our families. Our combination of camps was simply for
+defense. We were within our treaty rights as hunters. We must keep
+ourselves so.
+
+From Wood creek we went yet westward to the upper part of what we
+called Sioux creek. Here we stayed but one sleep and followed the
+same direction the next day. All of the people were on horses or on
+lodgepole travois dragged by horses. All of the personal or family
+belongings were in travois baskets or on the backs of special pack
+horses. We had not any wagons. Such vehicles could not have been used
+in most of the country that Indians inhabited then.
+
+We arrived at the Rosebud river or large creek about the middle of
+May, I believe. I did not know then anything about a calendar, but
+judging from my recollection of the condition of the grass and the
+trees, about the weather and other natural conditions, that must have
+been about the time.[18] Many times during the later years of peace I
+have been up and down that valley, on my way to and fro between the
+reservation and the town of Forsythe, so I with other Cheyennes have
+kept exactly in mind all of the old camping places along this stream.
+
+The first Rosebud camping place of the six great circles of Indians
+was about seven or eight miles up from Elk river. The Uncpapa circle
+at that time was partly on the land where now is a ranch house
+occupied by white people. The place now is known as the James
+Kennedy place, as a white man having that name lived there during
+many years. The Uncpapa circle extended from the present location of
+this house out across the present highway road and upon the bench
+eastward. The Cheyennes were camped about a mile and a half up the
+valley from Sitting Bull’s Uncpapas. Our location included a line of
+trees such as yet are there extending from the creek across the road
+east of it. An old white man named Eugene Noyes was living there a
+few years ago, in a house just off a short distance southwest from
+that old Cheyenne camp site. The other four circles were at four
+different places between the Uncpapas and the Cheyennes. All of them
+were on the east side of the creek.
+
+Charcoal Bear, chief medicine man of the Northern Cheyennes, came to
+us at this first Rosebud camp. Lots of our people were with him. He
+brought the tribal medicine lodge and our sacred Buffalo Head and all
+other of our tribal medicine objects. The lodge was set up in the
+midst of our camp circle. It put good thoughts and good feeling into
+the hearts of all Cheyennes.
+
+I have heard in later years that soldiers from north of Elk river
+came across and saw our camp here. But I never knew of any soldiers
+having been seen by any of the Indians in this region. We did lots
+of buffalo hunting all across from Tongue river and continued to
+kill many of them on the hills west of the Rosebud. I did not hear
+any talk of the buffalo or other game showing signs of having been
+alarmed by any other people. Six or seven sleeps, I believe, we
+stayed here. Then we moved up the valley about twelve miles.
+
+At this second Rosebud camp the Uncpapa circle was on land just
+across the present highway road westward from and almost in front
+of a school house now standing east of the road. A mile and a half
+or more on up the valley was the Cheyenne circle. Between them, all
+on the east side of the creek, were the other four tribal circles.
+On this Cheyenne camping ground I had been in a camp of our people
+ten years before this, when I was a boy. Here Crazy Mule had made
+medicine and had done some wonderful acts. Here also at that past
+time a Cheyenne woman had gone out eastward up a wooded gulch and had
+hanged herself.
+
+While we now were at this second Rosebud combined camp a report was
+brought in that Crows had been seen in our vicinity. A herald rode
+about our camp circle making the announcement. It was agreed our
+Crazy Dog warriors should go out to find them. The Crazy Dogs built
+a bonfire and had a preparatory dance. All of them stripped naked
+and painted their bodies. All of them danced barefooted. It was
+considered wonderful that they could do this without getting cactus
+thorns into their feet. As the dance was going on it began to become
+known that the report of Crows was a mistake, that nobody had seen
+them. The war dance was ended and the bonfire died down. It may have
+been that Crows actually had been seen, as I have learned in later
+times that some of them were scouting as helpers for soldiers north
+of Elk river.
+
+After one sleep at the second Rosebud camp we traveled on up the
+valley another twelve or fifteen miles. This time the Uncpapas
+occupied land now on both sides of the highway road and to the west
+and south of a painted peak the white people now call Teat butte. The
+other camps were scattered irregularly on up the valley, all yet on
+the east side of the creek. It was about a mile and a half from the
+lower or last Uncpapa site to the upper or advanced Cheyenne site.
+Only one sleep here. The next forenoon the Cheyennes headed again a
+procession up the Rosebud valley.
+
+The fourth Rosebud camp was at and above the place where now the
+main highway from Forsythe forks to go toward Lame Deer and toward
+Ashland. The lower or northern end of the group, the site of Sitting
+Bull’s people, was on the benchland by the present roadside east and
+northeast from the forks. Four camp circles were, as usual, somewhere
+between them and the Cheyennes in front and the Uncpapas at the rear.
+One of the Sioux camps was on the west side of the creek, the first
+time any of the circles had been set up on that side. The Cheyennes
+were about a mile east of where a roadside trading store in late
+years has been managed by a white man named Parkins. We were at the
+mouth of a stream flowing into the Rosebud and known now as Greenleaf
+creek. Our circle was only about a mile southward from the Uncpapas.
+The others were in an irregular curve between us. All of the Indians
+had been using the dirty yellow water of Rosebud creek, but now the
+Cheyennes had better water from Greenleaf creek. While we were here,
+some more Cheyennes arrived from the reservation. They told us:
+
+“Lots of soldiers are being sent to fight the Indians.”
+
+Three sleeps I remained with our people at this camp. Great bands of
+Sioux went buffalo hunting among the hills and small mountains west
+of the Rosebud. I went hunting also, but I did not go there. Eleven
+Cheyennes, including myself, got our pack horses and set out over
+the low pass to Tongue river. We were on the lookout for soldiers or
+signs of them, but we did not want to fight them. We had our war
+bags, of course, but Indians did not take pack horses when going out
+to fight.
+
+Two or three days after we had left our people they moved on up the
+Rosebud. This time the camp circles extended from just above the
+present Toohey ranch to a point about a mile and a half up the valley
+from that place. As usual, the Uncpapas were at the last end while
+the Cheyennes were at the first or upper end. The Uncpapas were on
+the east side of the creek, just west of the present main highway.
+The Cheyennes at the upper end of the group were on the west side of
+the creek, on a bench, a mile or so across west from the road. I was
+not there at the time, but this place is only ten or twelve miles
+north of our present reservation, so I have learned all about it from
+other Cheyennes as we have traveled up and down the road now there.
+
+At this camp the Uncpapas had a Great Medicine dance. No other
+Indians took part in it, but great throngs of people from the other
+camp circles assembled to look on. This Great Medicine dance, or sun
+dance, as the white people call it, was held about a quarter of a
+mile west of the present highway that extends along the valley. The
+medicine lodge was pitched just north from the Uncpapa camp circle.
+Its exact site was on a flat bottom by the creek about a quarter of
+a mile south by southwest from the present Toohey ranch house. By the
+present roadside, just below the Toohey ranch house, is a signboard
+that tells people, “Custer camped here June 23, 1876.” The place
+where Sitting Bull’s people had their Great Medicine dance is only
+half a mile southwest from this roadside signboard.
+
+A few miles up the valley from this camp site are the deer medicine
+rocks. They are three or four miles below the present reservation
+northern gate. They may be seen about a mile west of the present
+road and off from the base of the hills. They are about half a mile
+or farther southwest from the big ranch house of a white man named
+Bailey. In the old times, both Cheyennes and Sioux had reverence for
+these separated cliff towers. As hunters were about to go for deer
+or antelope, they assembled on horseback and grouped around the deer
+medicine rocks. There they looked up to the tops and made prayers
+for success in the oncoming hunt. It is probable that the Indians at
+that camping time paid the usual respect to this old-time place of
+worship. But I do not know. I was not there. I then was traveling up
+the Tongue river valley, with ten other Cheyenne buffalo hunters.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[16] Santee Sioux, Wahpeton group, refugees from Minnesota, dwelling
+in Canada.
+
+[17] The universal Indian name for the Yellowstone river.
+
+[18] Thomas H. Leforge and his Crow scouts learned that the hostile
+Indians arrived on the Rosebud about May 19th, 1876. They observed a
+great camp there on May 26th. A few days later this camp was gone.
+Lieutenant Bradley’s diary records these facts. Bradley, Leforge and
+the Crow scouts were of the Gibbon forces, located then on the north
+side of the Yellowstone river.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ VII
+
+_Soldiers from the Southward._
+
+
+Our party of eleven buffalo hunters went over the same low pass that
+is traversed by the road now going from the Rosebud to Tongue river
+and Ashland. We did not find any big herd of buffalo. We had killed
+only four by the time we arrived at Hanging Woman creek. We decided
+then to go on over to Powder river. We followed Powder river almost
+up to the mouth of Lodgepole creek. On the way we came across a
+dead Indian on a burial scaffold. The body had been stripped of all
+wrappings and of clothing. We wondered if this had been a Sioux, a
+Crow or a Shoshone. We wondered also who had robbed the body.
+
+One of our men named Lame Sioux went out to a hill for a look over
+the country. Pretty soon he began to signal. He had seen a camp of
+soldiers. All of us got out to look. Yes, this was a soldier camp. We
+dropped back into hiding. Ourselves and our horses all were put into
+concealment until darkness came. Then we dressed ourselves, painted
+ourselves and went on a night scout for a closer view. We saw the
+camp fires burning. We worked our way carefully toward them. It was
+after the middle of the night when we arrived at a point where we
+could see well the entire scene. But all of the soldiers then were
+gone.
+
+We slept then until morning came. When we went to the abandoned
+camp site the first thing to arouse our special interest was a beef
+carcass having yet on the bones many fragments of meat. The next
+interesting object was a box of hard crackers. It had been raining,
+and they were wet, but this made them all the better. We ate what
+we wanted of them. We cooked pieces of the beef on the fire coals.
+We enjoyed a fine breakfast. Then we set out on the trail of the
+soldiers.
+
+The trail led us northwestward over the divide and down Crow creek.
+Near where Crow creek empties into Tongue river we saw the soldier
+camp.[19] The time was late in the afternoon. We retreated and
+skirted around up the river. At dusk we crossed it to the west side.
+The water was running high. We stripped and tied our clothing in
+bundles about our necks. We sat upon our riding horses and led our
+pack horses as they swam through the lively current. We hid ourselves
+among the trees on that side of the valley and slept until morning.
+
+From a cliff the next morning we saw first a band of about twenty
+Indians riding away from the soldier camp. Were they Crows? Were
+they Shoshones? We exchanged guesses, but we did not know. We talked
+among ourselves about making an attack upon them. There was some talk
+of trying to steal soldier horses. We were anxious to do something
+warlike, to get horses or to count coups. But the general agreement
+was that it was too risky. We considered it most important that we
+return and notify our people on the Rosebud. We did not want to tire
+out our horses in an effort to get others or to get fighting honors.
+But we lingered to do some more looking. We saw soldiers walking
+about their camp. It had been flooded by the high waters. They were
+splashing about here and there and appeared to be getting ready to
+travel. We decided it was time for us also to travel.
+
+Six of us, including myself, started out toward the hills between us
+and the uppermost Rosebud. The five other Cheyennes remained behind
+to see where the soldiers might go. During the day two of these came
+on and joined us. Before night the final three were with us. “They
+are coming in this direction,” the three reported. We then were on
+the upper small branches of Rosebud creek.
+
+We killed a buffalo there. We hurried in cutting from it some of
+the choice pieces. We quickly divided up the liver and ate the raw
+segments. Over a hastily built fire we scantily toasted little chunks
+of buffalo meat. As we devoured them we spoke but few words. Whatever
+speech was uttered was in jerky sputterings. Everybody was excited.
+Every minute or two somebody was jumping up to go somewhere and look
+for pursuing soldiers. After the food had been bolted we hastened to
+move on. When darkness had well advanced we stopped for the night.
+Our horses needed rest and food. We picketed them. We felt safe
+during the night, so we slept soundly.
+
+Before the sun was up we were several miles on down the Rosebud
+valley. We did not know just where our people were, but we knew they
+were somewhere on this stream. We found them strung along from the
+location of our present Indian dance hall there up almost to the
+present home of Porcupine. We wolf-howled and aroused the people.
+Cheyennes flocked to learn why we had given the alarm. We went on
+into camp and reported to an old man. Some Sioux were there, and they
+carried the news to their people. Soon all of the camp circles were
+in a fever of excitement. Heralds in all of them were riding about
+and shouting:
+
+“Soldiers have been seen. They are coming in this direction. Indians
+are with them.”
+
+Councils were called. Lots of young men wanted to go out and fight
+the soldiers, but the chiefs would not allow this. Our chiefs
+appointed Little Hawk, Crooked Nose and two or three others to go
+scouting and find out about the further movements of the white men.
+Maybe some Sioux scouts also were sent out. I do not know, but I
+think they depended upon the Cheyennes to do the work.
+
+The Indians all moved camp, going on up the valley about ten miles.
+Here the Cheyennes chose for their location a spot on the east side
+of the Rosebud, just across from the present Davis creek and on the
+land now occupied by Rising Sun. The Sioux following them set their
+circles on down the creek, the Uncpapas being below the present Busby
+school. My recollection is we stayed here more than one sleep, but
+I am not sure. When we left this place we went westward up Davis
+creek and across the hills beside it, going toward the dividing hills
+separating us from the Little Bighorn river. It was understood we
+were on our way to that valley.
+
+We camped that afternoon just east of the divide. The place is about
+a mile north of the present road there, the camps extending northward
+up a broad coulee full of plum thickets. Dry camp, no water, at this
+place. One sleep here. The next morning we went on over the divide
+and down the slopes to what we called Great Medicine Dance creek,
+but known now to the white people as Reno creek. We stopped where
+the main forks of the creek come together. Our circles were formed
+along the valley and on the bench. The Cheyennes were at the advance
+or west end, the Uncpapas at the rear or east end. From our camp to
+theirs the distance was about two miles. The grouped camps centered
+about where the present road crosses a bridge at the fork of the
+creek.[20]
+
+Little Hawk and the other scouts returned to us here. They reported
+the soldiers as being on the upper branches of the Rosebud. The Sioux
+were told of this report, or they may have had information from
+scouts of their own. Heralds in all six of the camps rode about and
+told the people. The news created an unusual stir. Women packed up
+all articles except such as were needed for immediate use. Some of
+them took down their tepees and got them ready for hurrying away if
+necessary. Additional watchers were put among the horse herds. Young
+men wanted to go out and meet the soldiers, to fight them. The chiefs
+of all camps met in one big council. After a while they sent heralds
+to call out:
+
+“Young men, leave the soldiers alone unless they attack us.”
+
+But as darkness came on we slipped away. Many bands of Cheyenne and
+Sioux young men, with some older ones, rode out up the south fork
+toward the head of Rosebud creek. Warriors came from every camp
+circle. We had our weapons, war clothing, paints and medicines. I had
+my six-shooter. We traveled all night.
+
+We found the soldiers[21] about seven or eight o’clock in the
+morning, I believe. We had slept only a little, our horses were very
+tired, so we did not hurry our attack. But always in such cases
+there are eager or foolish ones who begin too soon. Not long after
+we arrived there was fighting on the hillsides and on the little
+valley where was the soldier camp. In this early fighting, one young
+Cheyenne foolishly charged too far, and some Indians belonging to the
+soldiers got after him. They shot and crippled his horse. I and some
+other Cheyennes drove back the pursuers. I took the young man behind
+me on my horse, and we hurried away to our main body of warriors.
+
+Jack Red Cloud, son of the old Ogallala Chief Red Cloud, was wearing
+a warbonnet. His horse was killed. According to the Indian way, in
+such case the warrior was supposed to stop and take off the bridle
+from the killed horse, to show how cool he could conduct himself.
+But young Red Cloud forgot to do this. He went running as soon as
+his horse fell. Three Crows on horseback followed him, lashed him
+with their pony whips and jerked off and kept his warbonnet. They did
+not try to kill him. They only teased him, telling him he was a boy
+and ought not to be wearing a warbonnet. Some of his Sioux friends
+interfered, and the Crows went away. The Sioux told us that young Red
+Cloud was crying and asking mercy from the Crows. He was my same age,
+eighteen years old.[22]
+
+White Wolf, a Cheyenne almost thirty years old, had a repeating
+rifle. In drawing this weapon from its scabbard at his left side it
+was accidentally discharged. The bullet broke his left thigh bone. He
+finally recovered and is yet living (1930). He still limps on account
+of that accidental wound.
+
+Until the sun went far toward the west there were charges back and
+forth. Our Indians fought and ran away, fought and ran away. The
+soldiers and their Indian scouts did the same. Sometimes we chased
+them, sometimes they chased us. One time, as I was getting away from
+a charge, I caught up with a Cheyenne afoot and driving his tired
+horse ahead of him. My horse also was very tired, so I dismounted
+and we two drove our mounts into a brush thicket. There we rested a
+while. It appeared that all of the Cheyennes were in hiding just then.
+
+Chief Lame White Man, the old Southern Cheyenne, rode out into the
+open on horseback. He called to us for brave actions. Our young men
+had high regard for him. The Cheyennes came out from hiding and went
+flocking to him. I and my companion joined them. It then became the
+turn of the soldiers and their Indians to get out of our way.
+
+The soldiers finally left the field and went back southward, on the
+trail where they had come to this place. Some Sioux and Cheyennes
+followed them a short distance, but not far. The soldiers lost or
+left behind some of the packs from their mules.[23] We got crackers
+and bacon and other food material. I found a good white hat and a
+good pair of gloves. I picked up a little package of something and
+stuffed it under my belt. As I went riding away, the package rubbed
+between the belt and my body. The day was hot, and I was sweating
+freely. My nostrils perceived a pleasant odor. I traced it to the
+package. I took it from my belt, sniffed at it, then fumbled at the
+heavy paper and tore off a corner.
+
+“Oh, coffee!” My heart was glad. I had something good to take as a
+gift for my mother.
+
+The only naked Cheyenne in that battle was Black Sun. All of the
+rest of us had on whatever war clothing he owned. I do not recollect
+having seen there any Sioux who was not dressed in his best. But
+Black Sun had a special medicine painting for himself. He spent a
+long time at getting ready. All of his body was colored yellow. On
+his head he wore the stuffed skin of a weasel. He wrapped a blanket
+about his loins. The soldiers and enemy Indians fired many shots at
+him without harming him. Finally some one of them got behind him and
+shot him through the body. He fell, not dead, but unable to stand up.
+Some of his friends rescued him. I caught his horse. When we were
+ready to go back to our camps we put him upon a travois and had his
+horse drag this bed for him. He died that night, at his home lodge.
+He was the only Cheyenne killed that day. Limpy was shot in his left
+side and had his horse killed. Other Cheyennes had slight wounds.
+
+One Burned Thigh Sioux was killed during the battle, and one
+Minneconjoux died after arrival at the camps. I do not know how many
+other Sioux were killed, but some Cheyennes said there were twenty
+or more. I think the Uncpapas lost the most warriors. I remember
+that one of the dead Sioux was a boy about fourteen years old. Black
+Sun was buried in a hillside cave. I believe that all of the Sioux
+dead were left in burial tepees on the camp site when we left there.
+
+All camps were moved again early the next morning after the Rosebud
+battle. We followed a short distance down Medicine Dance creek and
+then turned southward across the benches to the Little Bighorn. In
+present times, where the Busby road joins the graveled highway there
+is a bridge over the river. About half a mile south of this bridge,
+on the west side of the highway and on the east side of the river,
+stood the camp circle of the Uncpapas. The Cheyennes were a mile or
+more farther up the river. The other four tribal camps were scattered
+here and there between the Uncpapas and the Cheyennes. There was
+not here nor at any other camping location a placing of the camp
+circles in line with one another. The groupings between Uncpapas and
+Cheyennes were according to the form of the land or the curves of the
+stream. The only strict rule of camp circle location was that none
+should be set up ahead of the Cheyennes nor behind the Uncpapas.
+
+Six sleeps we remained at this first camping place on the Little
+Bighorn. We had beaten the white men soldiers. Our scouts had
+followed them far enough to learn that they were going farther and
+farther away from us. We did not know of any other soldiers hunting
+for us. If there were any, they now would be afraid to come. There
+were feasts and dances in all of the camps. On the benchlands just
+east of us our horses found plenty of rich grass. Among the hills
+west of the river were great herds of buffalo. Every day, big hunting
+parties went among them. Men and women were at work providing for
+their families. That was why we killed these animals. Indians never
+did destroy any animal life as a mere pleasurable adventure.
+
+Six Arapaho men came to the Cheyenne camp while we were at this
+place. They said they were afraid of soldiers, as they had killed a
+white man on Powder river. Many Sioux and some Cheyennes suspected
+them as spies, but finally all of us were satisfied they wanted to
+stay with us as friends. They were invited into lodges of different
+ones of the Cheyennes. Some more of our own people from the
+reservation joined us here. It is likely some Sioux also arrived, but
+I am not sure about that.
+
+Our plans had been to go up the Little Bighorn valley. But our game
+scouts reported great herds of antelope west of the Bighorn river.
+Because of this, the chiefs decided we should turn and go down the
+Little Bighorn, to its mouth. From there our hunting parties would
+cross the Bighorn and get antelope skins and meat that we now wanted.
+
+These councils of chiefs of all of the tribal circles were held
+sometimes at one camp circle and sometimes at another. In each case,
+heralds announced the meeting and told where it would be held. Each
+tribe operated its own internal government, the same as if it were
+entirely separated from the others. The chiefs of the different
+tribes met together as equals. There was only one who was considered
+as being above all of the others. This was Sitting Bull. He was
+recognized as the one old man chief of all the camps combined.
+
+Almost all of our Northern Cheyenne tribe were with us on the Little
+Bighorn. Only a few of our forty big chiefs were absent. Two of our
+four old men chiefs, Old Bear and Dirty Moccasins, were here. Old
+Bear had been off the reservation throughout all of the past year,
+while Dirty Moccasins had come to us on the Rosebud. The absent two
+old men chiefs were Little Wolf and Rabbit, this last one known
+sometimes as Dull Knife, or Morning Star. Our tribal medicine tepee
+was at its place in our camp circle, and Charcoal Bear, its keeper,
+was with it. I believe all of the thirty chiefs of the three warrior
+societies were present, except Little Wolf, leading chief of the
+Elk warriors. I do not know how many Cheyennes in all were in the
+camp.[24] In fact, I do not know how many of us there were in our
+tribe at that time. I never knew of any count having been made during
+those times.
+
+We crossed the Little Bighorn river to its west side and set off down
+the valley. Cheyennes ahead, Uncpapas behind, in the usual order of
+march. The journey that day was not a long one. After eight or nine
+miles of travel the Cheyennes stopped and began to form their camp
+circle. The tribes following us chose their ground, and their women
+began to set up the villages taken down that forenoon. The last
+tribe, the biggest one, the Uncpapas, placed themselves behind the
+others.
+
+The Cheyenne location was about two miles north from the present
+railroad station at Garryowen, Montana. We were near the mouth of a
+small creek flowing from the southwestward into the river. Across the
+river east of us and a little upstream from us was a broad coulee, or
+little valley, having now the name Medicine Tail coulee.
+
+The Uncpapas, at the southern end of the group and most distant from
+us, put their circle just northeast of the present Garryowen station.
+The other four circles were placed here and there between us and the
+Uncpapas.
+
+Our trail during all of our movements throughout that summer could
+have been followed by a blind person. It was from a quarter to half
+a mile wide at all places where the form of the land allowed that
+width. Indians regularly made a broad trail when traveling in bands
+using travois. People behind often kept in the tracks of people in
+front, but when the party of travelers was a large one there were
+many of such tracks side by side.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[19] Prairie Dog creek? Finerty writes that the soldiers were camped
+there June 8th.--T. B. M.
+
+[20] Wooden Leg, Big Beaver and Limpy, each on a separate occasion,
+went with me and pointed out the exact locations of the 1876 Indian
+campings on the Rosebud and the Little Bighorn.--T. B. M.
+
+[21] General Crook’s soldiers, June 17th, 1876. Historians have
+copied each other in repetitions that the hostiles here were “Crazy
+Horse and his Ogallalas,” and that they were from the “Crazy Horse
+village” supposed to have been only a short distance down the
+Rosebud.--T. B. M.
+
+[22] The Crow aspect of this same story was told to me by Along the
+Hillside, an old Crow man who was a scout with Crook. He was one of
+the pursuers who jerked the warbonnet from the amateur Sioux.--T. B.
+M.
+
+[23] Finerty writes that Crook had 1,000 pack mules, and that the
+Crows and Shoshones joined him on June 14th, at the Goose Creek
+camp.--T. B. M.
+
+[24] At the Northern Cheyenne fair at Lame Deer in 1927 I estimated
+the encampment at about 1,100. Wooden Leg and some other old men
+were asked to compare this camp with the one on the Little Bighorn.
+After a consultation, it was generally agreed that there must have
+been 1,600 or more Cheyennes in their camp when the Custer soldiers
+came.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ VIII
+
+_On the Little Bighorn._
+
+
+Every one of the six separate camp circles had its open and
+unoccupied side toward the east. Every lodge in each of these camps
+was set up so that the entrance opening was at its east side. This
+was the arrangement at all of our campings in this entire summer of
+combined movement. This was the regular Indian way of putting up a
+lodge or arranging a camp.
+
+Some old Cheyennes talk of seven camp circles, and a few of them
+mention eight. But there were only six important ones. The extra one
+or two were not of tribal bands governing themselves as such. These
+additional Indians in considerable number were the Burned Thighs,
+Assiniboines and Waist and Skirt people. These kept themselves
+mainly in their own separated groups, but the groups would be placed
+close to some main camp circle and considered as belonging to it.
+At this particular camping place the Waist and Skirt Sioux were
+right beside the great Uncpapa circle, the Burned Thighs were partly
+with the Blackfeet Sioux and partly with the Ogallalas. Beginning
+with the Cheyennes at the north side and following up the river,
+four camp circles succeeded each other: Cheyennes, Arrows All Gone,
+Minneconjoux, Uncpapas. Away from the river and southwest of the
+Cheyennes and Arrows All Gone was the Ogallala camp. Between the
+Ogallalas and the Uncpapas, but nearer to the Uncpapas, was the
+Blackfeet Sioux camp, this also back a short distance from the river.
+A small and irregular camp of Burned Thigh Sioux was located by the
+river between the Cheyennes and the Arrows All Gone, or just east of
+the Ogallalas. All of the camps were east of the present railroad and
+highway.
+
+One big lodge of Southern Cheyennes was in our circle. In it were
+eight men, six women and some children. Lame White Man, the Southern
+Cheyenne chief, had his own family lodge. He and his family had been
+with our northern branch of the tribe so long that they were looked
+upon as belonging to us. The six Arapaho men were attached to the
+lodge of Two Moons, one of the little chiefs of the Fox warrior
+society. One of his two wives was an Arapaho woman. There was not any
+white person nor any mixed-breed person with us. I never heard of
+there being any such person there with any of the Sioux tribes.
+
+Our tribal medicine tepee, containing our sacred Buffalo Head and
+other revered objects, was in its place at the western part of the
+open space enclosed by our camp circle. The medicine arrows, which
+belong to the Southern Cheyennes, were not here. Ours was the only
+tribal medicine lodge in the whole camp. The Sioux tribes did not
+maintain this kind of institution. They had tribal medicine pipes,
+but no special lodges for them.
+
+Our family dwelling had in it seven people. These were my father and
+mother, my older brother Yellow Hair, my older sister Crooked Nose,
+myself Wooden Leg, a younger sister and a small boy brother. All of
+us together owned nine horses. I personally owned two of these. Other
+tepees had more people in them, some not as many. A few unmarried
+young men had little willow dome and robe shelters. Old couples
+likewise had this sort of temporary housing. These would be abandoned
+and built anew at each time of moving camp.
+
+Three hundred lodges seems to me now as being about the size of our
+Cheyenne camp. The Blackfeet Sioux had about the same number, or a
+few less. The Arrows All Gone had more. The Minneconjoux and the
+Ogallalas each had more than the Arrows All Gone. The Uncpapas had, I
+believe, twice as many as had the Cheyennes.[25]
+
+The principal chiefs of the various camp circles were:
+
+Uncpapas: Sitting Bull. He also was recognized as the one old man
+chief of the combined tribes. The Uncpapa medicine man chief was
+named Buffalo Calf Pipe.
+
+Ogallalas: Crazy Horse, old man chief.
+
+Minneconjoux: Lame Deer, old man chief.
+
+Arrows All Gone: Hump Nose, or Hump, important chief of some kind.
+
+Blackfeet: I do not know name of any chief there. Also, I do not know
+what chiefs may have been with the small irregular bands of other
+Indians.
+
+Cheyennes: Old Bear and Dirty Moccasins, old men chiefs. Next to
+them, Crazy Head was considered the most important tribal big chief.
+Lame White Man was regarded as the most capable warrior chief among
+us, although Last Bull and Old Man Coyote also were held in special
+high esteem.
+
+Our Cheyenne warrior society chiefs were these:[26]
+
+Elk warriors: Leading chief--Lame White Man. Nine little chiefs--Left
+Handed Shooter, Pig, Goes After Other Buffalo, Plenty Bears, Wolf
+Medicine, Broken Jaw, A Crow Cut His Nose, White Hawk and Tall White
+Man.
+
+Crazy Dog warriors: Leading chief--Old Man Coyote. Nine little
+chiefs--Black Knife, Beaver Claws, Iron Shirt, Little Creek, Snow
+Bird, Crazy Mule, Strong Left Arm, Red Owl and Crow Necklace.
+
+Fox warriors: Leading chief--Last Bull. Nine little chiefs--Wrapped
+Braids, Plenty of Buffalo Bull Meat, Little Horse, Sits Beside His
+Medicine, Two Moons, Bears Walks on a Ridge, Mosquito, Rattlesnake
+Nose and Weasel Bear.
+
+The Fox warriors were on duty as camp policemen at this time. It was
+their business, while remaining on duty, to watch for the approach of
+enemies as well as to enforce the tribal laws. A few of the little
+chiefs of the warrior societies, and various members of the different
+ones, were not in the camp.
+
+Our three leading warrior chiefs were allowed to talk in the tribal
+councils, where the tribal big chiefs and old men adviser chiefs
+assembled for the consideration of tribal affairs. The little warrior
+chiefs were expected to attend these councils, but they were not
+permitted to talk there. They were required to keep still and listen.
+The place for them to talk was in the warrior society meetings, where
+they were the instructors while the young warriors had to remain
+quiet and listening. The Sioux and other tribes had this same kind of
+system.
+
+Guns were not plentiful among us. Most of our hunting had been with
+bows and arrows. Of the Cheyennes, Two Moons and White Wolf each
+had a repeating rifle. Some others had single-shot breech-loading
+rifles. But there was not much ammunition for the good guns. The
+muzzle-loaders usually were preferred, because for these we could
+mold the bullets and put in whatever powder was desired, or according
+to the quantity on hand. I believe the Sioux had, in proportion to
+their numbers, about the same supply of firearm material that we had.
+The Waist and Skirt people had few or no guns, were in every way very
+poor. My muzzle-loading rifle had been lost with my other personal
+effects when we had been driven out and had our lodges burned on
+Powder river.
+
+Six or eight guns, I suppose, had been taken from soldiers at the
+Rosebud fight. I recall seeing only two, a rifle and a revolver,
+among the Cheyennes. Both of them used cartridges. The ammunition
+belt I saw taken there had a special piece of belting swung in a
+curve from the main girdle. Around the main circle were loops for
+forty rifle cartridges. The revolver cartridges were carried in
+twelve or fifteen loops on the suspended curve. On the surface of a
+revolver scabbard I saw were six other loops for its cartridges.
+I never heard of the Indians getting from the Rosebud soldiers any
+ammunition except what was in the belts captured.
+
+My cap-and-ball six shooter was my warring weapon. I had plenty
+of caps, powder and lead for it. I had a bullet mold to make its
+bullets from the lead. I kept the bullets and the caps in two small
+tin boxes. The powder I carried in a horn swung by a thong from my
+shoulder. For the gun I had a good scabbard. This was fastened to my
+leather belt.
+
+The Cheyenne horses were put out to graze on the valley below our
+camp. Horses belonging to other tribes were placed at other feeding
+areas on the valley and on the bench hills just west of the combined
+Indian camps. The tribal herds were kept separate from each other.
+Boys from each tribe guarded their horse bands. An occasional riding
+horse was picketed near to or within each camp circle. It could get
+better feed with the herd, and probably it felt better satisfied
+there, but always there was somebody here or there, particularly
+among the policemen, who picketed a horse for ready use.
+
+I had no thought then of any fighting to be done in the near future.
+We had driven away the soldiers, on the upper Rosebud, seven days
+ago. It seemed likely it would be a long time before they would
+trouble us again. My mind was occupied mostly by such thoughts as
+regularly are uppermost in the minds of young men. I was eighteen
+years old, and I liked girls.
+
+That night we had a dance. It was entirely a social affair for young
+people, not a ceremonial or war dance. In the midst of the open area
+within our camp circle the women and girls cleared off and leveled
+a broad surface of ground. The young men brought a tall pole and
+set it up at the center of the dancing ground. Charcoal Bear, the
+medicine chief, brought the buffalo skin that regularly hung from
+the top of the sacred tepee. He tied it to the top end of our long
+pole before we raised it. We built a big bonfire. The drums and the
+Cheyenne dance songs enlivened the assemblage. It seemed that peace
+and happiness was prevailing all over the world, that nowhere was any
+man planning to lift his hand against his fellow man.
+
+The same kind of amusement was going on in the Sioux camps. An
+occasional group from them came to our party. An occasional group of
+Cheyennes went visiting among them. I was enjoying myself in our own
+gathering. Finally, though, a young man friend of mine proposed:
+
+“Let’s go and dance a while with the Sioux girls.”
+
+Four of us went to the neighboring camp, that of the Arrows All Gone
+Sioux. Pretty soon the girls were asking us to dance.[27] The Sioux
+women gave us plenty of food. We were treated well, so we did not
+go elsewhere nor back to our own people. We stayed there and danced
+throughout the remainder of that night.
+
+At the first sign of dawn the dance ended. I walked wearily across
+to the Cheyenne camp. I did not go into our family lodge. Instead, I
+dropped down upon the ground behind it. I do not remember anything
+that might have happened during the two or three hours that followed.
+When I awoke I went into the family lodge. My mother prepared me a
+breakfast. Then she said: “You must go for a bath in the river.”
+
+My brother Yellow Hair and I went together. Other Indians, of all
+ages and both sexes, were splashing in the waters of the river. The
+sun was high, the weather was hot. The cool water felt good to my
+skin. When my brother and I had dabbled there a few minutes we came
+out and sought the shelter of some shade trees. We sat there a little
+while, talking of the good times each of us had enjoyed during the
+previous night. We sprawled out to lie down and talk. Before we knew
+it, both of us were sound asleep.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[25] Estimating the Cheyennes at 1,600, it appears the entire camp
+numbered about 12,000.--T. B. M.
+
+[26] List made up in various conferences wherein Wooden Leg was
+assisted by Sun Bear, White Wolf, Big Crow, Two Feathers and Big
+Beaver, all warriors at the battle.--T. B. M.
+
+[27] The customary Indian way is for the women to choose partners at
+the social dances.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ IX
+
+_The Coming of Custer._
+
+
+In my sleep I dreamed that a great crowd of people were making lots
+of noise. Something in the noise startled me. I found myself wide
+awake, sitting up and listening. My brother too awakened, and we both
+jumped to our feet. A great commotion was going on among the camps.
+We heard shooting. We hurried out from the trees so we might see as
+well as hear. The shooting was somewhere at the upper part of the
+camp circles. It looked as if all of the Indians there were running
+away toward the hills to the westward or down toward our end of the
+village. Women were screaming and men were letting out war cries.
+Through it all we could hear old men calling:
+
+“Soldiers are here! Young men, go out and fight them.”
+
+We ran to our camp and to our home lodge. Everybody there was
+excited. Women were hurriedly making up little packs for flight.
+Some were going off northward or across the river without any packs.
+Children were hunting for their mothers. Mothers were anxiously
+trying to find their children. I got my lariat and my six shooter. I
+hastened on down toward where had been our horse herd. I came across
+three of our herder boys. One of them was catching grasshoppers. The
+other two were cooking fish in the blaze of a little fire. I told
+them what was going on and asked them where were the horses. They
+jumped on their picketed ponies and dashed for the camp, without
+answering me. Just then I heard Bald Eagle calling out to hurry with
+the horses. Two other boys were driving them toward the camp circle.
+I was utterly winded from the running. I never was much for running.
+I could walk all day, but I could not run fast nor far. I walked on
+back to the home lodge.
+
+My father had caught my favorite horse from the herd brought in by
+the boys and Bald Eagle. I quickly emptied out my war bag and set
+myself at getting ready to go into battle. I jerked off my ordinary
+clothing. I jerked on a pair of new breeches that had been given
+to me by an Uncpapa Sioux. I had a good cloth shirt, and I put it
+on. My old moccasins were kicked off and a pair of beaded moccasins
+substituted for them. My father strapped a blanket upon my horse and
+arranged the rawhide lariat into a bridle. He stood holding my mount.
+
+“Hurry,” he urged me.
+
+I was hurrying, but I was not yet ready. I got my paints and my
+little mirror. The blue-black circle soon appeared around my face.
+The red and yellow colorings were applied on all of the skin inside
+the circle. I combed my hair. It properly should have been oiled and
+braided neatly, but my father again was saying, “Hurry,” so I just
+looped a buckskin thong about it and tied it close up against the
+back of my head, to float loose from there. My bullets, caps and
+powder horn put me into full readiness. In a moment afterward I was
+on my horse and was going as fast as it could run toward where all of
+the rest of the young men were going. My brother already had gone.
+He got his horse before I got mine, and his dressing was only a long
+buckskin shirt fringed with Crow Indian hair. The hair had been taken
+from a Crow at a past battle with them.
+
+The air was so full of dust I could not see where to go. But it
+was not needful that I see that far. I kept my horse headed in the
+direction of movement by the crowd of Indians on horseback. I was
+led out around and far beyond the Uncpapa camp circle. Many hundreds
+of Indians on horseback were dashing to and fro in front of a body
+of soldiers. The soldiers were on the level valley ground and were
+shooting with rifles. Not many bullets were being sent back at them,
+but thousands of arrows were falling among them. I went on with a
+throng of Sioux until we got beyond and behind the white men. By
+this time, though, they had mounted their horses and were hiding
+themselves in the timber. A band of Indians were with the soldiers.
+It appeared they were Crows or Shoshones. Most of these Indians had
+fled back up the valley. Some were across east of the river and were
+riding away over the hills beyond.
+
+Our Indians crowded down toward the timber where were the soldiers.
+More and more of our people kept coming. Almost all of them were
+Sioux. There were only a few Cheyennes. Arrows were showered into the
+timber. Bullets whistled out toward the Sioux and Cheyennes. But we
+stayed far back while we extended our curved line farther and farther
+around the big grove of trees. Some dead soldiers had been left among
+the grass and sagebrush where first they had fought us. It seemed to
+me the remainder of them would not live many hours longer. Sioux were
+creeping forward to set fire to the timber.
+
+Suddenly the hidden soldiers came tearing out on horseback, from
+the woods. I was around on that side where they came out. I whirled
+my horse and lashed it into a dash to escape from them. All others
+of my companions did the same. But soon we discovered they were not
+following us. They were running away from us. They were going as
+fast their tired horses could carry them across an open valley
+space and toward the river. We stopped, looked a moment, and then we
+whipped our ponies into swift pursuit. A great throng of Sioux also
+were coming after them. My distant position put me among the leaders
+in the chase. The soldier horses moved slowly, as if they were very
+tired. Ours were lively. We gained rapidly on them.
+
+[Illustration: WOODEN LEG MAKING CUSTER BATTLE DRAWINGS FOR THE
+AUTHOR]
+
+I fired four shots with my six shooter. I do not know whether or not
+any of my bullets did harm. I saw a Sioux put an arrow into the back
+of a soldier’s head. Another arrow went into his shoulder. He tumbled
+from his horse to the ground. Others fell dead either from arrows or
+from stabbings or jabbings or from blows by the stone war clubs of
+the Sioux. Horses limped or staggered or sprawled out dead or dying.
+Our war cries and war songs were mingled with many jeering calls,
+such as:
+
+“You are only boys. You ought not to be fighting. We whipped you on
+the Rosebud. You should have brought more Crows or Shoshones with you
+to do your fighting.”
+
+Little Bird and I were after one certain soldier. Little Bird was
+wearing a trailing warbonnet. He was at the right and I was at the
+left of the fleeing man. We were lashing him and his horse with our
+pony whips. It seemed not brave to shoot him. Besides, I did not
+want to waste my bullets. He pointed back his revolver, though, and
+sent a bullet into Little Bird’s thigh. Immediately I whacked the
+white man fighter on his head with the heavy elkhorn handle of my
+pony whip. The blow dazed him. I seized the rifle strapped on his
+back. I wrenched it and dragged the looping strap over his head. As
+I was getting possession of this weapon he fell to the ground. I did
+not harm him further. I do not know what became of him. The jam of
+oncoming Indians swept me on. But I had now a good soldier rifle.
+Yet, I had not any cartridges for it.
+
+Three soldiers on horses got separated from the others and started
+away up the valley, in the direction from where they had come. Three
+Cheyennes, Sun Bear, Eagle Tail Feather and Little Sun,[28] joined
+some Sioux in pursuit of the three white men. The Cheyennes told
+afterward about the outcome of this pursuit. One of the soldiers
+turned his horse eastward toward the river and escaped in the timber.
+The other two kept on southward. Of these two, one went off to the
+right, up a small gulch to the top of the bench. There he was caught
+and killed. The remaining one rode on toward the mouth of Reno creek.
+As he neared that point he swerved to the right. He made a circle
+out upon the valley and returned to the timber just across west from
+the mouth of Reno creek. Here he dismounted from his exhausted horse
+and got himself into the brush. The Sioux and Cheyennes surrounded
+him and killed him. They told that he fought bravely to the last,
+making use of his six shooter.
+
+A warbonnet Indian belonging with the soldiers was chased by Crooked
+Nose, a Cheyenne, and some Sioux. The chase was afoot, across a wet
+slough and into some timber northward from where the soldiers had
+been hidden for a few minutes. After many exchanges of shots, after
+much dodging and shifting of position, the enemy Indian was killed
+there.[29] I was told afterward about this killing. I did not see it.
+I was following the fleeing soldiers to and across the river.
+
+Indians mobbed the soldiers floundering afoot and on horseback in
+crossing the river. I do not know how many of our enemies might have
+been killed there. With my captured rifle as a club I knocked two of
+them from their horses into the flood waters. Most of the pursuing
+warriors stopped at the river, but many kept on after the men with
+the blue clothing. I remained in the pursuit and crossed the river.
+
+Whirlwind, a Cheyenne, charged after a warbonnet Indian belonging
+with the whites. The enemy Indian bravely charged also toward
+Whirlwind. The two men fired rifles at the same moment. Both of them
+fell dead. This was on the flat land just east of the river where the
+soldiers crossed.
+
+Another enemy Indian was behind a little sagebrush knoll and shooting
+at us. His shots were returned. I and some others went around and got
+behind him. We dismounted and crept toward him. As we came close up
+to him he fell. A bullet had hit him. He raised himself up, though,
+and swung his rifle around toward us. We rushed upon him. I crashed
+a blow of my rifle barrel upon his head. Others beat and stabbed
+him to death. I got also his gun. It was the same as the one I had
+taken from the soldier, but the Indian’s gun had a longer barrel.
+A Sioux said: “You have two guns. Let me have one of them.” I gave
+him the one I had taken from the Indian just killed. I liked better
+the shorter barreled one, so I kept it. The Sioux already had the
+Indian’s ammunition belt. He did not give me any of the cartridges.
+There were only a few of them. One of the Sioux scalped the dead man.
+Different ones took his clothing. I took nothing except the gun I had
+given away.
+
+I returned to the west side of the river. Lots of Indians were
+hunting around there for dead soldiers or for wounded ones to kill.
+I joined in this search. I got some tobacco from the pockets of one
+dead man. I got also a belt having in it a few cartridges. All of
+the weapons and clothing and all other possessions were being taken
+from the bodies. The warriors were doing this. No old people nor
+women were there. They all had run away to the hill benches to the
+westward. I went to a dead horse, to see what might be found there.
+Leather bags were on them, behind the saddles. I rummaged into one of
+these bags. I found there two pasteboard boxes. I broke open one of
+them.
+
+“Oh, cartridges!”
+
+There were twenty of them in each box, forty in all. Thirty of them
+were used to fill up the vacant places in my belt. The remaining ten
+I wrapped into a piece of cloth and dropped them down into my own
+little kit bag. Now I need not be so careful in expending ammunition.
+Now I felt very brave. I jumped upon my horse and went again to fight
+whatever soldiers I might find on the east side of the river.
+
+The soldiers had gone up gulches and a backbone ridge to the top of
+a steep and high hill. Indians were all about them. Shots were going
+toward them and coming from them. A friend here told me that Hump
+Nose, a Cheyenne two years younger than I was, had been killed on
+the west side of the river. My heart was made sad by this news, but I
+went on up the hill. I joined with others in going around to the left
+or north side of the place where were the soldiers. From our hilltop
+position I fired a few shots from my newly-obtained rifle. I aimed
+not at any particular ones, but only in the direction of all of them.
+I think I was too far away to do much harm to them. I had been there
+only a short time when somebody said to me:
+
+“Look! Yonder are other soldiers!”
+
+I saw them on distant hills down the river and on our same side of
+it. The news of them spread quickly among us. Indians began to ride
+in that direction. Some went along the hills, others went down to
+cross the river and follow the valley. I took this course. I guided
+my horse down the steep hillside and forded the river. Back again
+among the camps I rode on through them to our Cheyenne circle at the
+lower end of them. As I rode I could see lots of Indians out on the
+hills across on the east side of the river and fighting the other
+soldiers there. I do not know whether all of our warriors left the
+first soldiers or some of them stayed up there. I suppose, though,
+that all of them came away from there, as they would be afraid to
+stay if only a few remained.
+
+Not many people were in the lodges of our camp. Most of the women
+and children and old Cheyennes were gone to the west side of the
+valley or to the hills at that side. A few were hurrying back and
+forth to take away packs. My father was the only person at our lodge.
+I told him of the fight up the valley. I told him of my having helped
+in the killing of the enemy Indian and some soldiers in the river. I
+gave to him the tobacco I had taken. I showed him my gun and all of
+the cartridges.
+
+“You have been brave,” he cheered me. “You have done enough for one
+day. Now you should rest.”
+
+“No, I want to go and fight the other soldiers,” I said. “I can fight
+better now, with this gun.”
+
+“Your horse is too tired,” he argued.
+
+“Yes, but I want to ride the other one.”
+
+He turned loose my tired horse and roped my other one from the little
+herd being held inside the camp circle. He blanketed the new mount
+and arranged the lariat bridle. He applied the medicine treatment
+for protecting my mount. As he was doing this I was making some
+improvements in my appearance, making the medicine for myself. I
+added my sheathknife to my stock of weapons. Then I looked a few
+moments at the battling Indians and soldiers across the river on the
+hills to the northeastward. More and more Indians were flocking from
+the camps to that direction. Some were yet coming along the hills
+from where the first soldiers had stopped. The soldiers now in view
+were spreading themselves into lines along a ridge. The Indians were
+on lower ridges in front of them, between them and the river, and
+were moving on around up a long coulee to get behind the white men.
+
+“Remember, your older brother already is out there in the fight,” my
+father said to me. “I think there will be plenty of warriors to beat
+the soldiers, so it is not needful that I send both of my sons. You
+have not your shield nor your eagle wing bone flute. Stay back as far
+as you can and shoot from a long distance. Let your brother go ahead
+of you.”
+
+Two other young men were near us. They had their horses and were
+otherwise ready, but they told me they had decided not to go. I
+showed them my captured gun and the cartridges. I told them of the
+tobacco and the clothing and other things we had taken from the
+soldiers up the valley. This changed their minds. They mounted their
+horses and accompanied me.
+
+We forded the river where all of the Indians were crossing it, at
+the broad shallows immediately in front of the little valley or wide
+coulee on the east side. We fell in with others, many Sioux and a
+few Cheyennes, going in our same direction. We urged our horses on
+up the small valley. As we approached the place of battle each one
+chose his own personal course. All of the Indians had come out on
+horseback. Almost all of them dismounted and crept along the gullies
+afoot after the arrival near the soldiers. Still, there were hundreds
+of them riding here and there all the time, most of them merely
+changing position, but a few of them racing along back and forth in
+front of the soldiers, in daring movements to exhibit bravery.
+
+I swerved up a gulch to my left, where I saw some Cheyennes going
+ahead of me. Other Cheyennes were coming here from the east side of
+the soldiers. Although it was natural that tribal members should
+keep together, there was everywhere a mingling of the fighters from
+all of the tribes. The soldiers had come along a high ridge about
+two miles east from the Cheyenne camp. They had gone on past us and
+then swerved off the high ridge to the lower ridge where most of them
+afterward were killed. While they were yet on the far-out ridge a few
+Sioux and Cheyennes had exchanged shots with them at long distance,
+without anybody being hurt. Bobtail Horse, Roan Bear and Buffalo
+Calf, three Cheyennes, and four Sioux warriors with them, were said
+to have been the first of our Indians to cross the river and go to
+meet the soldiers. Bobtail Horse was an Elk warrior, Roan Bear a Fox
+warrior, and Buffalo Calf a Crazy Dog warrior. They had been joined
+soon afterward by other Indians from the valley camps and from the
+southward hills where the first soldiers had taken refuge.
+
+Most of the Indians were working around the ridge now occupied by
+the soldiers. We were lying down in gullies and behind sagebrush
+hillocks. The shooting at first was at a distance, but we kept
+creeping in closer all around the ridge. Bows and arrows were in
+use much more than guns. From the hiding-places of the Indians, the
+arrows could be shot in a high and long curve, to fall upon the
+soldiers or their horses. An Indian using a gun had to jump up and
+expose himself long enough to shoot. The arrows falling upon the
+horses stuck in their backs and caused them to go plunging here and
+there, knocking down the soldiers. The ponies of our warriors who
+were creeping along the gulches had been left in gulches farther
+back. Some of them were let loose, dragging their ropes, but most of
+them were tied to sagebrush. Only the old men and the boys stayed all
+the time on their ponies, and they stayed back on the surrounding
+ridges, out of reach of the bullets.
+
+The slow long-distance fighting was kept up for about an hour and a
+half, I believe. The Indians all the time could see where were the
+soldiers, because the white men were mostly on a ridge and their
+horses were with them. But the soldiers could not see our warriors,
+as they had left their ponies and were crawling in the gullies
+through the sagebrush. A warrior would jump up, shoot, jerk himself
+down quickly, and then crawl forward a little further. All around the
+soldier ridge our men were doing this. So not many of them got hit by
+the soldier bullets during this time of fighting.
+
+After the long time of the slow fighting, about forty of the
+soldiers[30] came galloping from the east part of the ridge down
+toward the river, toward where most of the Cheyennes and many
+Ogallalas were hidden. The Indians ran back to a deep gulch. The
+soldiers stopped and got off their horses when they arrived at a
+low ridge where the Indians had been. Lame White Man, the Southern
+Cheyenne chief, came on his horse and called us to come back and
+fight. In a few minutes the warriors were all around these soldiers.
+Then Lame White Man called out:
+
+“Come. We can kill all of them.”
+
+All around, the Indians began jumping up, running forward, dodging
+down, jumping up again, down again, all the time going toward the
+soldiers. Right away, all of the white men went crazy. Instead of
+shooting us, they turned their guns upon themselves. Almost before
+we could get to them, every one of them was dead. They killed
+themselves.
+
+The Indians took the guns of these soldiers and used them for
+shooting at the soldiers on the high ridge. I went back and got my
+horse and rode around beyond the east end of the ridge. By the time I
+got there, all of the soldiers there were dead. The Indians told me
+that they had killed only a few of those men, that the men had shot
+each other and shot themselves. A Cheyenne told me that four soldiers
+from that part of the ridge had turned their horses and tried to
+escape by going back over the trail where they had come. Three of
+these men were killed quickly. The fourth one got across a gulch and
+over a ridge eastward before the pursuing group of Sioux got close
+to him. His horse was very tired, and the Sioux were gaining on him.
+He was moving his right arm as though whipping his horse to make it
+go faster. Suddenly his right hand went up to his head. With his
+revolver he shot himself and fell dead from his horse.
+
+I raced my horse to hurry around to the hillside north of the soldier
+ridge. The Indians there were all around a band of soldiers on the
+north slope.[31] I got off my horse and fired two shots, at long
+distance, with my soldier gun. I did not shoot any more, because the
+sagebrush was full of Indians jumping up and down and crawling close
+to the soldiers, and I was afraid I might hit one of our own men.
+About that time, all of this band of soldiers went crazy and fired
+their guns at each other’s heads and breasts or at their own heads
+and breasts. All of them were dead before the Indians got to them.
+
+Many hundreds of boys on horseback were watching the battle. They
+were on the hills all around, far enough away to be out of reach of
+the soldier bullets. The ridge north of the soldier ridge was crowded
+with these boys and some old men. When the warriors were crowding in
+close to the soldiers on the north slope, one soldier there broke
+away and ran afoot across a gulch toward the northward hill. I
+suppose he thought there were no warriors in that direction, as all
+of them were hidden and creeping through the sagebrush and gullies.
+But several of them jumped up and ran after him. Just after he got
+across the gulch he stopped, stood still, and killed himself with his
+own revolver. A Cheyenne boy named Big Beaver lashed his pony into a
+dash down to the dead white man. The boy got the soldier’s revolver
+and his belt of cartridges, jumped back upon his pony, and hurried
+away again to the hilltop. A Cheyenne warrior scalped the soldier and
+hung the scalp on a bunch of sagebrush, leaving it there. While I
+was at this part of the field, a Waist and Skirt Indian said to me:
+
+“I think I see the big chief of the soldiers. I have been watching
+one certain man who appears to be telling all of the others what to
+do.”
+
+He tried to point out this man. But just then another bunch of
+soldier horses went running wildly among them, kicking up a great
+dust and knocking down or jostling the men. So I did not get to see
+the special man the Indian was trying to show me.
+
+I saw one Sioux walking slowly toward the gulch, going away from
+where were the soldiers. He wabbled dizzily as he moved along. He
+fell down, got up, fell down again, got up again. As he passed near
+to where I was I saw that his whole lower jaw was shot away. The
+sight of him made me sick. I had to vomit. I did not know him, and I
+did not learn whether he died or not.
+
+I had remained on my horse during most of the long time of the
+fighting at a distance. I rode from place to place around the
+soldiers, keeping myself back, as my father had urged me to do, while
+my older brother crept close with the other warriors. I got off and
+crept with them, though, for a little while at the place where the
+band of soldiers rode down toward the river. After they were dead I
+got my horse and mounted again. I stayed mounted until I got around
+into the gulch north from the west end of the soldier ridge. By this
+time all of the soldiers were gone except a band of them at the west
+end of the ridge. They were hidden behind dead horses. Hundreds or
+thousands of warriors were all around them, creeping closer all the
+time. From the gulch where I was I could see the north slope of the
+ridge covered by the hidden Indians. But the soldiers, from where
+they were, could not see the warriors, except as some Indian might
+jump up to shoot quickly and then duck down again. We could get only
+glimpses of the soldiers, but we knew all the time right where they
+were, because we could see their dead horses.
+
+I got down afoot in the gulch. I let out my long lariat rope for
+leading my horse while I joined the warriors creeping up the slope
+toward the soldiers. During all of the earlier fighting, when I had
+been most of the time going from place to place on horseback, I had
+fired several shots with my rifle captured from the soldier when we
+chased them across the river. I also had used my six-shooter. I had
+replaced the four bullets expended during the chase of the first
+soldiers in the valley. In this second battle I used up the six,
+reloaded the six-shooter, and fired all of these additional six shots
+at the soldiers. But it is hard to shoot straight when on horseback,
+especially when there is much noise and much shooting and excitement,
+as the horse will not stand still. When I went crawling up the slope
+I could lie down and shoot. I could not see any particular soldier
+to shoot at, but I could see their dead horses, where the men were
+hiding. So I just sent my bullets in that direction.
+
+A Sioux wearing a warbonnet was lying down behind a clump of
+sagebrush on the hillside only a short distance north of where now is
+the big stone having the iron fence around it. He was about half the
+length of my lariat rope up ahead of me. Many other Indians were near
+him. Some boys were mingled among them, to get in quickly for making
+coup blows on any dead soldiers they might find. A Cheyenne boy was
+lying down right behind the warbonnet Sioux. The Sioux was peeping up
+and firing a rifle from time to time. At one of these times a soldier
+bullet hit him exactly in the middle of the forehead. His arms and
+legs jumped in spasms for a few moments, then he died. The boy
+quickly slid back down into a gully, jumped to his feet and ran away.
+
+A soldier on a horse suddenly appeared in view back behind the
+warriors who were coming from the eastward along the ridge. He was
+riding away to the eastward, as fast as he could make his horse go.
+It seemed he must have been hidden somewhere back there until the
+Indians had passed him. A band of the Indians, all of them Sioux, I
+believe, got after him. I lost sight of them when they went beyond a
+curve of the hilltop. I suppose, though, they caught him and killed
+him.
+
+The shots quit coming from the soldiers. Warriors who had crept close
+to them began to call out that all of the white men were dead. All
+of the Indians then jumped up and rushed forward. All of the boys
+and old men on their horses came tearing into the crowd. The air was
+full of dust and smoke. Everybody was greatly excited. It looked like
+thousands of dogs might look if all of them were mixed together in a
+fight. All of the Indians were saying these soldiers also went crazy
+and killed themselves. I do not know. I could not see them. But I
+believe they did so.
+
+Seven of these last soldiers broke away and went running down the
+coulee sloping toward the river from the west end of the ridge. I was
+on the side opposite from them, and there was much smoke and dust,
+and many Indians were in front of me, so I did not see these men
+running, but I learned of them from the talk afterward. They did not
+get far, because many Indians were all around them. It was said that
+these seven men, or some of them, killed themselves. I do not know,
+as I did not see them.[32]
+
+After the great throng of Indians had crowded upon the little space
+where had been the last band of fighting soldiers, a strange incident
+happened: It appeared that all of the white men were dead. But there
+was one of them who raised himself to a support on his left elbow.
+He turned and looked over his left shoulder, and then I got a good
+view of him. His expression was wild, as if his mind was all tangled
+up and he was wondering what was going on here. In his right hand he
+held his six-shooter. Many of the Indians near him were scared by
+what seemed to have been a return from death to life. But a Sioux
+warrior jumped forward, grabbed the six-shooter and wrenched it from
+the soldier’s grasp. The gun was turned upon the white man, and he
+was shot through the head. Other Indians struck him or stabbed him.
+I think he must have been the last man killed in this great battle
+where not one of the enemy got away.
+
+This last man had a big and strong body. His cheeks were plump. All
+over his face was a stubby black beard. His mustache was much longer
+than his other beard, and it was curled up at the ends. The spot
+where he was killed is just above the middle of the big group of
+white stone slabs now standing on the slope southwest from the big
+stone. I do not know whether he was a soldier chief or an ordinary
+soldier. I did not notice any metal piece nor any special marks on
+the shoulders of his clothing, but it may be they were there. Some of
+the Cheyennes say now that he wore two white metal bars. But at that
+time we knew nothing about such things.
+
+One of the dead soldier bodies attracted special attention. This was
+one who was said to have been wearing a buckskin suit. I had not seen
+any such soldier during the fighting. When I saw the body it had been
+stripped and the head was cut off and gone. Across the breast was
+some writing made by blue and red coloring into the skin. On each arm
+was a picture drawn with the same kind of blue and red paint. One of
+the pictures was of an eagle having its wings spread out. Indians
+told me that on the left arm had been strapped a leather packet
+having in it some white paper and a lot of the same kind of green
+picture-paper found on all of the soldier bodies. Some of the Indians
+guessed that he must have been the big chief of the soldiers,
+because of the buckskin clothing and because of the paint markings on
+his breast and arms.[33] But none of the Indians knew then who had
+been the big chief. They were only guessing at it.
+
+The sun was just past the middle of the sky.[34] The first soldiers,
+up the valley, had come about the middle of the forenoon. The earlier
+part of the fighting against these second soldiers had been slow, all
+of the Indians staying back and approaching gradually. At each time
+of charging, though, the mixup lasted only a few minutes.
+
+I took one scalp. As I went walking and leading my horse among the
+dead I observed one face that interested me. The dead man had a long
+beard growing from both sides of his face and extending several
+inches below the chin. He had also a full mustache. All of the beard
+hair was of a light yellow color, as I new recall it. Most of the
+soldiers had beard growing, in different lengths, but this was the
+longest one I saw among them. I think the dead man may have been
+thirty or more years old. “Here is a new kind of scalp,” I said to a
+companion. I skinned one side of the face and half of the chin, so as
+to keep the long beard yet on the part removed.[35] I got an arrow
+shaft and tied the strange scalp to the end of it. This I carried in
+a hand as I went looking further.
+
+[Illustration: LIMPY, A CHEYENNE VETERAN OF CUSTER’S LAST BATTLE,
+STANDING AT THE LITTLE BIGHORN FORD WHERE THE INDIANS CROSSED TO MEET
+THE CUSTER SOLDIERS]
+
+Somebody told me Noisy Walking was badly wounded. I went to where he
+was said to be, down in the gulch where the band of soldiers nearest
+the river had been killed in the earlier part of the battle. He
+was my same age, and we often had been companions since our small
+boyhood. White Bull, an important medicine man, was his father. I
+asked the young man: “How are you?” He replied: “Good.” But he did
+not look well. He had been hit by three different bullets, one of
+them having passed through his body. He had also some stab wounds in
+his side. Word had been sent to his relatives in the camp west of the
+river, and it was said his women relatives were coming after him with
+a travois. I moved on eastward up the gulch coulee.
+
+I discovered almost hidden the dead body of an Indian. I did not go
+up close to it, but I could see the scalp was gone. That puzzled me.
+Could this be a Crow or a Shoshone? I had not known of there being
+any Indians belonging to these soldiers killed here. As I stood there
+looking, it seemed there was something familiar about the appearance
+of that body. I backed away and went to find my brother Yellow Hair.
+We two returned to the place. We got off our horses and walked to
+the dead Indian. We rolled the body over and looked closely.
+
+“Yes, it is Lame White Man,” my brother agreed.
+
+We called other Cheyennes. Several of them came. All of them promptly
+confirmed our identification. All of us were satisfied some Sioux
+had scalped him, or maybe had killed him, finding him in among the
+soldiers and supposing him to be a Crow or a Shoshone belonging to
+them. We knew he had gone with the young men in their charge upon
+the soldiers there. Perhaps he had gone farther than the others and
+was killed on his way back to us, the killer mistaking him for an
+attacking enemy Indian. A bullet had gone in at his right breast and
+out at his back. He also had many stab wounds. He was still dressed
+in his best clothing, none of it having been taken. The Cheyennes
+never made any inquiries among the Sioux concerning the case. We just
+kept quiet about it.
+
+My brother took the blanket from his horse and covered the body of
+the favorite Cheyenne warrior chief. A young man hurried away to go
+across the river and tell his people. When I came back to the place
+an hour or so afterward the dead man’s wife and three or four women
+helpers had come with a horse dragging a travois. Four of us young
+men rolled the body into the blanket and put it upon the buffalo
+hide stretched across the lodgepoles. The women set off with it
+toward the river.
+
+I helped likewise in putting my friend Noisy Walking upon the
+swinging bed when his father and mother and other women came after
+him. Judging by his appearance then, this was the last good act I
+ever should do for him. Various groups of women, many more of the
+Sioux than of the Cheyennes, were on the field searching for and
+taking away their dead and wounded men. Two Sioux had been killed
+in this same first charge upon the soldiers. I did not like to hear
+the weeping of the women. My heart that had been glad because of the
+victory was made sad by thoughts of our own dead and dying men and
+their mourning relatives left behind.
+
+I noticed decorations on the shoulders and stripes on the arms of
+some of the soldier coats. I did not think of their meanings. I did
+not hear any of the Indians there talk about any meanings for these
+special marks. If I thought about it at all, I may have thought
+these were particular medicine ways the soldiers had for preparing
+themselves. It was a long time after that day before I learned that
+the wearers of these were the soldier chiefs.
+
+Each Indian horse used for going into the battle had only a blanket
+strapped upon its back and a lariat rope about the neck. In riding,
+the lariat was looped into the horse’s mouth, or was looped over the
+head and then into the mouth, for a bridle. The surplus of the long
+rope was coiled and tucked into the rider’s belt. If a man fell from
+his horse the coil would be jerked from his belt, so he would not
+be dragged. Also, the uncoiling as the horse might move away would
+leave a long rope trailing after it, so it was easy to recapture the
+animal. That was the regular Indian way of riding.
+
+Warbonnets were worn by twelve Cheyennes among the three hundred or
+more of our warriors in the battle. It may be I have forgotten a few
+of them, but as I recollect it our warbonnet men on that day were
+these:[36] Crazy Head, Crow Necklace, Little Horse, Wolf Medicine,
+White Elk, Howling Wolf, Braided Locks, Chief Coming Up, Mad Wolf,
+Little Shield, Sun Bear and White Body. Three of these were little
+warrior chiefs. Ten of the warbonnets had trails. Sun Bear had a
+single buffalo horn projecting out from the front of his forehead
+band. Crazy Head was a big chief of the tribe, had been a great
+fighter in past times, but was not now a warrior chief. While he had
+on his warbonnet here, I suppose he stayed in the background and let
+the young men do the fighting. Chief Lame White Man was not wearing
+a warbonnet on this occasion. It was not usual for a man of his high
+standing to go into the battle as he did. I suppose he did so because
+he had not there any son to serve as a warrior.
+
+Not any Cheyenne fought naked in this battle. All of them who were in
+the fight were dressed in their best, according to the custom of both
+the Cheyennes and the Sioux. Of our warriors, Sun Bear was nearest to
+nakedness. He had on a special buffalo-horn head dress. I saw several
+naked Sioux, perhaps a dozen or more. Of course, these had special
+medicine painting on the body. Two different Sioux I saw wearing
+buffalo head skins and horns, and one of them had a bear’s skin over
+his head and body. These three were not dressed in the usual war
+clothing. It is likely there were others I did not see. Perhaps some
+of the naked ones were No Clothing Indians.
+
+A dead Uncpapa Sioux received something of the same kind of mistaken
+attention given to our Lame White Man. The dead Sioux was mixed in
+with dead bodies of the soldiers. An Arapaho and a No Clothing Indian
+supposed him to be a Crow or a Shoshone belonging to the white men
+fighters. They jabbed spears many times into the body. They were much
+embarrassed when they learned of their mistake.
+
+I found a metal bottle, as I was walking among the dead men. It was
+about half full of some kind of liquid. I opened it and found that
+the liquid was not water. Soon afterward I got hold of another bottle
+of the same kind that had in it the same kind of liquid. I showed
+these to some other Indians. Different ones of them smelled and
+sniffed. Finally a Sioux said:
+
+“Whisky.”
+
+Bottles of this kind were found by several other Indians. Some of
+them drank the contents. Others tried to drink, but had to spit out
+their mouthfuls. Bobtail Horse got sick and vomited soon after he
+had taken a big swallow of it. It became the talk that this whisky
+explained why the soldiers became crazy and shot each other and
+themselves instead of shooting us. One old Indian said, though, that
+there was not enough whisky gone from any of the bottles to make
+a white man soldier go crazy. We all agreed then that the foolish
+actions of the soldiers must have been caused by the prayers of our
+medicine men. I believed this was the true explanation. My belief
+became changed, though, in later years. I think now it was the
+whisky.[37]
+
+I took a folded leather package from a soldier having three stripes
+on the left arm of his coat. It had in it lots of flat pieces of
+paper having pictures or writing I did not then understand. The paper
+was of green color. I tore it all up and gave the leather holder to
+a Cheyenne friend. Others got packages of the same kind from other
+dead white men. Some of it was kept by the finders. But most of
+it was thrown away or was given to boys, for them to look at the
+pictures.[38]
+
+I rode away from the battle hill in the middle of the afternoon. Many
+warriors had gone back across the hills to the southward, there to
+fight again the first soldiers. But I went to the camps across on the
+west side of the river. I had on a soldier coat and breeches I had
+taken. I took with me the two metal bottles of whisky. At the end of
+the arrow shaft I carried the beard scalp.
+
+I waved my scalp as I rode among our people. The first person I met
+who took special interest in me was my mother’s mother. She was
+living in a little willow dome lodge of her own. “What is that?” she
+asked me when I flourished the scalp stick toward her. I told her.
+“I give it to you,” I said, and I held it out to her. She screamed
+and shrank away. “Take it,” I urged. “It will be good medicine for
+you.” Then I went on to tell her about my having killed the Crow
+or Shoshone at the first fight up the river, about my getting the
+two guns, about my knocking in the head two soldiers in the river,
+about what I had done in the next fight on the hill where all of
+the soldiers had been killed. We talked about my soldier clothing.
+She said I looked good dressed that way. I had thought so too, but
+neither the coat nor the breeches fit me well. The arms and legs were
+too short for me. Finally she decided she would take the scalp. She
+went then into her own little lodge.
+
+I passed one bottle of the whisky among friends. Each took a small
+drink of it until all of it was gone. The other bottle I gave to
+Little Hawk. He himself drank all of the whisky in it. Pretty soon,
+though, he became sick and he vomited up everything in his stomach.
+
+Some special excitement was going on over beyond the Arrows All
+Gone camp. A big crowd of Sioux were gathered there. I went to see
+what they were doing. They had surrounded some Indians just then
+arrived in the camp. “Kill them, every one of them,” some Sioux were
+shouting. Others were saying: “Wait. Let us be sure.” Above the
+confusion of threats and general noise of the excited throng I heard
+an angry thundering:
+
+“No. I had nothing to do with the soldiers. I am all Indian, all
+Cheyenne.”
+
+It was the voice of Little Wolf, most respected of the four old men
+chiefs of the Cheyennes. He was speaking in our language. He could
+not talk Sioux. He never had mingled much with them, so not many of
+them knew him.
+
+Yellow Horse, an old Southern Cheyenne man, was with me. He said to
+me: “Let us go to Little Wolf. You are his relative, you know the
+Sioux language, and you should talk for him.” We crowded our way
+through to the old chief. Both of us shook hands with him. The Sioux
+began talking to us about him. Some Cheyennes also were accusing him.
+One of these was White Bull. He knew Little Wolf, but he said the
+chief ought to have been with the Cheyennes long ago, that he ought
+not to have waited until after the fighting before joining us, that
+he stayed too long on the reservation. I knew that White Bull’s heart
+was troubled, though, about his own son, Noisy Walking. Finally,
+Yellow Horse called out: “Wait until this young man talks to Little
+Wolf. He will find out and tell everybody.”
+
+“Have you been with the soldiers?” I asked the chief.
+
+“No, you foolish boy,” he flared back at me. “Do these people think
+I am a crazy man? I have with me seven lodges of our people. There
+are families of women and children. They have their tepees, their
+packhorses, all of their property. Does anybody suppose that is the
+way to join the soldiers and help them? Not any part of me ever was
+white man. I am all Indian. I am willing to fight any man who says I
+am not.”
+
+He went on to tell all about the experiences of his little band of
+Cheyennes. On their way out from the reservation they saw soldiers
+camped on the upper Rosebud, just the afternoon before. They kept
+hidden back in the hills and watched the soldiers go on toward the
+divide leading to the Little Bighorn. His people did not set up
+their lodges that night. Instead, they traveled a while and rested a
+while, their scouts all the time watching the soldiers. Early in the
+morning, some of Little Wolf’s young men out in front found a box of
+something the soldiers had lost. Just then, some soldiers came back,
+shot at these young men, and they returned to Little Wolf.[39] The
+band continued to follow the soldiers, but kept themselves hidden.
+From the hilltops they heard the guns and saw some of the fighting.
+It appeared that all of the Indians in the camps were running away.
+Finally, the shooting mostly died down. The frightened little band
+peeped over the hilltops and saw that the camps and the Indians still
+were on the valley. Then they cautiously came on to join us.
+
+I repeated all of this story to a Sioux chief. He told the assembled
+Sioux warriors and I told the Cheyennes. Some grumbling continued,
+many saying that Little Wolf ought to have been with us long ago,
+but all of them became satisfied that neither he nor his companions
+deserved killing. The crowd scattered, and the newcomers moved on
+to join the Cheyenne camp. There were some additional scoldings of
+them on account of their having stayed so long at the reservation.
+But their women had plenty of sugar and coffee in their packs, and
+with gifts of these desirable extra foods they soon quieted all
+complaints. Little Wolf at that time was fifty-five years old.
+
+Burial parties of Cheyennes were going to the hill gulches west of
+our camps, to put our dead into rock crevices. Each warrior lost was
+disposed of by his women relatives and his young men friends. A big
+band of people went out to help bury Lame White Man. I accompanied
+the relatives of Limber Bones, one of our young men who had been
+killed. We took him far back up a long coulee. We found there a
+small hillside cliff. Four of us young men helped the women to clear
+out a sheltered cove. In there we placed the dead body, wrapped in
+blankets and a buffalo robe. We piled a wall of flat stones across
+the front of the grave. His mother and another woman sat down on the
+ground beside it to mourn for him. The rest of us returned to the
+valley.
+
+The Sioux likewise were disposing of their dead. Their customary way
+was to set up burial tepees. It appeared that in all of the Sioux
+camps these were being set up. They were placed where had been the
+dwelling lodges, or near them. In some cases the original dwelling
+lodges of the dead ones were left standing, in each case the body
+being all dressed for burial and left on a scaffold in the lodge
+or on the dirt floor, the dwelling being then abandoned by the
+inhabitants. This was a common mode of Sioux burial, and sometimes
+the Cheyennes did it in this way.
+
+All of the camps were being moved. This was in accordance with a
+regular custom among the Indian tribes. When any death occurred
+in a camp, either from battle or from other cause, right at once
+the people began to get ready to move camp to some other place.
+The Cheyennes selected a camping spot down the river about a mile
+northwestward. The Sioux all began moving northwestward and back
+from the Little Bighorn toward the base of the bench hills west
+from the river. In the new locations, all of the camps except the
+Cheyennes were west of the present railroad and highway.
+
+Most of the women and children and older people in the camps had fled
+toward the hills to the northward and westward when the first band
+of soldiers made the attack upon the Uncpapas at the upper part of
+the group of camps. I suppose there were very few people left in the
+camps at that end until after those soldiers had been chased away and
+across the river. When I rode up there and around the west and south
+sides of the Uncpapa and Blackfeet circles it was hard to keep from
+running over the Indians who were hurrying afoot toward the bench
+lands to the westward.
+
+Our Cheyenne people who were not active warriors started to go toward
+the north, down the valley, and some of them crossed the river. But
+when the second band of soldiers were seen on the high ridge far out
+eastward these Cheyennes who had crossed the river returned to the
+camping side. Of course, nobody knew how many soldiers were coming.
+Nobody knew what would be the outcome of their attack. They had
+surprised us by their sudden appearance. We were not prepared for
+battle.
+
+At the first time of the flight from the camps, many women and some
+of the men seized small packs of food or other precious possessions
+and carried them away. The fleeing ones stopped on the benchlands
+west of where had been their camp circles. They stayed there and
+watched the fighting. After a little while, since no more of the
+soldiers had come to that side of the river, people began hurrying
+to the camps, quickly gathering up other things, then hurrying back
+to the hilltops. Later, as none of our warriors were returning, it
+became evident that we were winning the contest. Our people then
+became more confident. The old men who were making medicine prayers
+for our success added words of encouragement to the waiting families.
+
+Throngs of women now were busy going back and forth between the
+old and the new camp positions. They were carrying water from the
+river and wood from the timber. All of the lodges not abandoned were
+taken down. Most of them were packed, not set up in the new spots of
+location. The poles were wrapped, the buffalo skin coverings were
+put into bundles, packs were made up, all put into readiness for
+quick movement elsewhere if need be. Only the cooking pots and other
+essential articles were left in use. The women went by hundreds to
+cut willows for making little skeleton dome shelters, in substitution
+for the regular tepee lodges kept packed. It had not rained here
+during all of that day, but rain might come at any time. Not all of
+the Indians, though, prepared shelters. Many depended only upon robes
+for shielding them if shielding should become needful. The lodges
+of mourning Cheyennes were torn or cut to pieces or burned, and
+their furnishings were cast away. These bereft people, according to
+our customs, now had to live during their time of mourning without
+any lodge or any property of their own. They dwelt outside or with
+hospitable friends. The poles and skins of any travois used to carry
+dead bodies were also thrown away. Sometimes the horses used to drag
+the travois of a dead person were killed or were turned loose to be
+captured by whoever might want them.
+
+After sundown I visited Noisy Walking. He was lying on a ground bed
+of buffalo robes under a willow dome shelter. His father White Bull
+was with him. His mother sat just outside the entrance. I asked my
+friend: “How are you?” He replied: “Good, only I want water.” I did
+not know what else to say, but I wanted him to know that I was his
+friend and willing to do whatever I could for him. I sat down upon
+the ground beside him. After a little while I said: “You were very
+brave.” Nothing else was said for several minutes. He was weak. His
+hands trembled at every move he made. Finally he said to his father:
+
+“I wish I could have some water--just a little of it.”
+
+“No. Water will kill you.”
+
+White Bull almost choked as he said this to his son. But he was a
+good medicine man, and he knew what was best. As I sat there looking
+at Noisy Walking I knew he was going to die. My heart was heavy. But
+I could not do him any good, so I excused myself and went away.
+
+There was no dancing nor celebrating of any kind in any of the camps
+that night. Too many people were in mourning, among all of the Sioux
+as well as among the Cheyennes. Too many Cheyenne and Sioux women
+had gashed their arms and legs, in token of their grief. The people
+generally were praying, not cheering. There was much noise and
+confusion, but this was from other causes. Young men were going out
+to fight the first soldiers now hiding themselves on the hill across
+the river from where had been the first fighting during the morning.
+Other young men were coming back to camp after having been over there
+shooting at these soldiers. Movements of this kind had been going on
+all the time since the final blows fell upon all of the soldiers in
+the second and greatest battle. Old men heralds were riding about all
+of the camps, singing the braveheart songs and calling out: “Young
+men, be brave.” The only fires anywhere among us were little camp
+fires for cooking. Or, there may have been at times a larger blaze
+coming from some mourning family’s lodge being burned.
+
+I did not go back that afternoon nor that night to help in fighting
+the first soldiers. Late in the night, though, I went as a scout.
+Five young men of the Cheyennes were appointed to guard our camp
+while other people slept. These were Big Nose, Yellow Horse, Little
+Shield, Horse Road and Wooden Leg. One or other of us was out
+somewhere looking over the country all the time. Two of us went once
+over to the place where the soldiers were hidden. We got upon hill
+points higher than they were. We could look down among them. We could
+have shot among them, but we did not do this. We just saw that they
+yet were there.
+
+Five other young men took our duties in the last part of the night. I
+was glad to be relieved. I did not go to my family group for rest. I
+let loose my horse and dropped myself down upon a thick pad of grassy
+sod.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[28] Little Sun, in the presence of Wooden Leg and other veteran
+Cheyennes, told me of this incident.--T. B. M.
+
+[29] This apparently was Bloody Knife, Custer’s favorite Arikara
+scout.--T. B. M.
+
+[30] The Indians differ as to the color of the horses ridden by these
+soldiers, but military students of the case believe this to have been
+Lieutenant Smith’s troop.--T. B. M.
+
+[31] Captain Keogh or Captain Tom Custer, or both troops.--T. B. M.
+
+[32] The story of wholesale suiciding is such a reversal of our
+accepted conceptions that some reader may exclaim: “That is a
+villifying falsehood!” _But it is the truth._ Most of the Seventh
+cavalry enlisted men on that occasion were recent recruits. Only a
+few of them ever had been in an Indian battle, or in any kind of
+battle. It is evident, though, that they fought well through an hour
+and a half or two hours. Then, finding themselves vastly outnumbered,
+they “went crazy,” as the Indians tell. They put into panicky
+practice the old frontiersman rule, “When fighting Indians keep the
+last bullet for yourself.” A great mass of circumstantial evidence
+supports this explanation of the military disaster. The author hopes
+to attain publication, at some future time, of his own full analysis
+of the entire case.--T. B. M.
+
+[33] Evidently this was Captain Tom Custer.--T. B. M.
+
+[34] All old Cheyennes insist the battle ended about noon.--T. B. M.
+
+[35] This unfortunate soldier probably was Lieutenant Cook.--T. B. M.
+
+[36] Various old Cheyennes helped Wooden Leg in making this list.--T.
+B. M.
+
+[37] The whisky explanation is regularly advanced by the warrior
+veterans nowadays. It appears none of them have any conception of
+suicide to avoid capture.--T. B. M.
+
+[38] Paper money. The soldiers received two months’ pay after they
+had left Fort Lincoln. There had been no opportunity for them to
+spend a cent, except among themselves, since that time.--T. B. M.
+
+[39] Here appears to have been the key incident that misled Custer
+into supposing his presence revealed to the camps and that caused
+him to attack at once, lest they escape. Big Crow, Black Horse and
+Medicine Bull, all of them with the Little Wolf band, told me the
+details of this experience.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ X
+
+_The Spoils of Battle._
+
+
+I slept late that next morning after the great battle. The sun had
+been up an hour before I awoke. I went to the willow lodge of my
+father and mother. When I had eaten the breakfast given to me by my
+mother I got myself ready again to risk death in an effort to kill
+other white men who had come to kill us. I combed and braided my
+hair. My braids in those days were full and long, reaching down my
+breast beyond the waist belt. I painted anew the black circle around
+my face and the red and yellow space enclosed within the circle. I
+was in doubt about which clothing to wear, but my father said the
+soldier clothing looked the best, even though the coat sleeves ended
+far above my wrists and the legs of the breeches left long bare spots
+between them and the tops of my moccasins. I put on my big white hat
+captured at the Rosebud fight. My sister Crooked Nose got my horse
+for me. Soon afterward I was on my way up and across the valley
+and on through the river to the hill where the first soldiers were
+staying.
+
+I had both my rifle and my six shooter. I still was without my
+medicine shield and my other medicine protectors that had been lost
+on Powder river. Most of the other Cheyennes and Sioux had theirs.
+The shields all were of specially shrunken and toughened buffalo skin
+covered with buckskin fringed and painted, each with his own choice
+of designs, for the medicine influence. I went with other young men
+to the higher hills around the soldiers. I stayed at a distance from
+them and shot bullets from my new rifle. I did not shoot many times,
+as it appeared I was too far away, and I did not want to waste any of
+my cartridges. So I went down and hid in a gulch near the river.
+
+Some soldiers came to get water from the river, just as our old
+men had said they likely would do. The white men crept down a deep
+gulch and then ran across an open space to the water. Each one had a
+bucket, and each would dip his bucket for water and run back into the
+gulch. I put myself, with others, where we could watch for these men.
+I shot at one of them just as he straightened up after having dipped
+his bucket into the water. He pitched forward into the edge of the
+river. He went wallowing along the stream, trying to swim, but having
+a hard time at it. I jumped out from my hiding place and ran toward
+him. Two Sioux warriors got ahead of me. One of them waded after
+the man and struck him with a rifle barrel. Finally he grabbed the
+man, hit him again, and then dragged him dead to the shore, quite a
+distance down the river. I kept after them, following down the east
+bank. Some other Sioux warriors came. I was the only Cheyenne there.
+The Sioux agreed that my bullet had been the first blow upon the
+white soldier, so they allowed me to choose whatever I might want of
+his belongings.[40]
+
+I searched into the man’s pockets. In one I found a folding knife and
+a plug of chewing tobacco that was soaked and spoiled. In another
+pocket was a wad of the same kind of green paper taken from the
+soldiers the day before. It too was wet through. I threw it aside.
+In this same pocket were four white metal pieces of money. I knew
+they were of value in trading, but I did not know how much was their
+value. In later times I have learned they were four silver dollars.
+A young Cheyenne there said: “Give the money to me.” I did not care
+for it, so I gave it to him. He thanked me and said: “I shall use
+it to buy for myself a gun.” I do not remember now his name, but he
+was a son of One Horn. A Sioux picked up the wad of green paper I
+had thrown upon the ground. It was almost falling to pieces, but he
+began to spread out some of the wet sheets that still held together.
+Pretty soon he said:
+
+“This is money. This is what white men use to buy things from the
+traders.”
+
+I had seen much other paper like it during the afternoon before. Wolf
+Medicine had offered to give me a handful of it. But I did not take
+it. I already had thrown away some of it I had found. But even after
+I was told it could be used for buying things from the traders, I did
+not want it. I was thinking then it would be a long time before I
+should see or care to see any white man trader.
+
+I went riding over the ground where we had fought the first soldiers
+during the morning of the day before. I saw by the river, on the west
+side, a dead black man. He was a big man. All of his clothing was
+gone when I saw him, but he had not been scalped nor cut up like the
+white men had been. Some Sioux told me he belonged to their people
+but was with the soldiers.[41]
+
+As some of us were looking at the body of an Indian who had been with
+the soldiers, an old Sioux said:
+
+“This is a Corn[42] Indian, not a Crow nor Shoshone.”
+
+He showed us the differences in appearance, especially the earrings
+and the hair dressing. The Crow men wore their hair cut off above
+the forehead and roached up. The Shoshones had almost the same way
+of placing this foretop. The Corn Indians kept their hair in braids,
+parted like that of the Sioux and Cheyennes, but the Corn Indian
+parting was not in the middle of the top, as ours was. I examined
+again the one I had helped in beating to death. I learned he also was
+a Corn Indian. I found yet a third one. We who had killed them were
+young men, and there was great excitement at the time, so we had not
+observed their tribal connection. We had supposed them to be the same
+Crows and Shoshones we had fought on the upper Rosebud creek a few
+days before. Now there began to be talk that maybe these soldiers
+were not the same ones we had fought there. Or, perhaps they had
+added the Corn Indians to their forces since that time. There were
+different opinions on the matter.
+
+Some Sioux caught a mule that wandered out from the place where the
+soldiers were together on the hilltop. The animal was going down
+toward the river when the Indians got it. They tried to lead it
+toward their sheltered place behind a knoll, but it would not go.
+It appeared to be wanting a drink of water. One Sioux got behind it
+and whipped it, while a companion pulled at the leading strap. But
+the mule just stood there, would not move. On its back were packs of
+cartridges. The Sioux took these and let the mule go.
+
+I went with other Cheyennes along the hills northward to the ground
+where we had killed all of the soldiers. Lots of women and boys were
+there. The boys were going about making coups by stabbing or shooting
+arrows into the dead men. Some of the bodies had many arrows sticking
+in them. Many hands and feet had been cut off, and the limbs and
+bodies and heads had many stabs and slashes. Some of this had been
+done by the warriors, during and immediately after the battle. More
+was added, though, by enraged and weeping women relatives of the
+Sioux and Cheyennes who had been killed. The women used sheathknives
+and hatchets.
+
+A dog was following one of the Sioux women among the dead soldiers. I
+did not see any other dog there, neither on that day nor on the day
+before, when the fight was on. There were some Indian dogs tangling
+among the feet of the horses at the time of the fighting of the first
+soldiers, on the valley above the camps. But even here most of them
+were called away by the women and old people going to the western
+hilltops.
+
+Three different soldiers, among all of the dead in both places of
+battle, attracted special notice from the Indians. The first was the
+man wearing the buckskin suit and who had the colored writing and
+pictures on his breast and arms. Another was the black man killed
+among the first soldiers on the valley. The third was one having gold
+among his teeth. We did not understand how this metal got there, nor
+why it was there.
+
+Paper boxes of ammunition were in the leather bags carried on the
+saddles of the soldiers. Besides, in all of the belts taken from the
+dead men there were cartridges. Some belts had only a few left in
+them. In others the loops still contained many, an occasional one
+almost full. I did not see nor hear of any belt entirely emptied of
+its cartridges.
+
+All during that forenoon, as well as during the afternoon and night
+before, both in the camps and on the battle grounds, Indians were
+saying to each other: “I got some tobacco.” “I got coffee.” “I got
+two horses.” “I got a soldier saddle.” “I got a good gun.” Some got
+things they did not understand.
+
+One young Cheyenne took something from a dead soldier just after all
+of them had been killed. He was puzzled by it. Some others looked at
+it. I was with them. It was made of white metal and had glass on one
+side. On this side were marks of some kind. While the Cheyenne was
+looking at it he got it up toward his ear. Then he put it up close.
+
+“It is alive!” he said.
+
+Others put it to their ears and listened. I put it up to mine.
+
+“Tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick,” it was saying.
+
+We talked about its use. We agreed generally it was that soldier’s
+special medicine. Many Indians came and wondered about it. The young
+man decided to keep it for his own medicine.
+
+When I was getting ready the next morning to go and fight again the
+soldiers staying on the hilltop, the Cheyenne young man had a crowd
+around him again examining his strange white man medicine. They were
+listening, but it made no sound. After different ones had studied it,
+he finally threw it away as far as he could throw it.
+
+“It is not good medicine for me,” he said. “It is dead.”
+
+I saw another soldier medicine thing something like this one, but the
+other one was larger and it did not make the ticking noise. It acted,
+though, like it was alive. When it was held with the glass side up
+a little arrow fluttered around. When it was held quiet for a while
+the arrow gradually stopped fluttering. Every time it stopped the
+point of the arrow was toward the north, down the valley. There was
+talk then of other soldiers coming from that direction, so it was
+decided this medicine object was useful for finding out at any time
+where might be soldiers. Little Shield had it when I saw it. He gave
+it to High Walking. Another Cheyenne got a pair of field glasses. We
+understood them. This was a big pair.
+
+Cleaners for the rifles puzzled us a while. They were in joints and
+were carried in a long hole in the end of the wooden stock. Pretty
+soon we learned what was their use. I saw one rifle that had a shell
+of cartridge in its barrel. A Sioux had it. He could not put into the
+gun any other cartridge, so he threw it into the river.
+
+Yellow Weasel, a Cheyenne, got a bugle. He tried to make a noise with
+it, but he could not. Others tried. Different ones puffed and blowed
+at it. But nobody could make it sound out. After a while we heard a
+bugle making a big noise somewhere among the Sioux. The Cheyennes
+said: “The Sioux got a good one. This one Yellow Weasel has is no
+good. He might as well throw it away.” But he kept it, and it was not
+long until he was making it sound.
+
+One Cheyenne got a flag. There were several others among the Sioux. I
+do not know just how many they got, but I believe I saw nine of them.
+
+Bridle bits were thrown away, but the leather parts were kept. I
+got two sets of bridle reins, but no other parts of the bridles. A
+Cheyenne gave them to me. All of the soldier boots were taken from
+them. But they were not worn by the Indians. The bottoms were cut off
+and discarded. Only the tops used. These made good leather pouches,
+or the leather was cut up to make something else. Old men were
+allowed to have all of the saddles. But only a few of the Cheyenne
+old men got them. I saw lots of Sioux old men riding around on
+soldier saddles, either on the soldier horses or the Indian horses.
+
+All of the soldier horses taken by the Indians were good. They were
+fat and sleek and strong and lively. They were better than any of the
+Indian horses. Some were killed or were so badly wounded we did not
+want them. But when we could scare them away from the soldiers as the
+fighting was going on, we did this. Any time that horses got among
+us we turned them toward the river, for the old men or the boys to
+capture. It was easy to do this, as they were very thirsty. One big
+band of them went down from the west end of the ridge.
+
+Noisy Walking died during the night after the great battle. Six
+Cheyennes now had been killed. Another man, Open Belly, was badly
+wounded and was expected to die. He was about thirty years old, but
+he had neither wife nor children. The six dead were:
+
+Lame White Man, age about thirty-eight, wife and two children.
+
+Limber Bones, age twenty, not married.
+
+Black Bear, age twenty, not married.
+
+Noisy Walking, age eighteen, not married.
+
+Hump Nose, age sixteen, not married.
+
+Whirlwind, age sixteen, not married.
+
+Others had wounds that crippled them but did not threaten to kill
+them. Little Bird got a bullet through a thigh. Many had scratch
+wounds. Sun Bear almost got killed. He went into the first great
+Cheyenne charge. A bullet glanced off his forehead. He was dazed and
+he fell down. But he got up right away and went on fighting.
+
+Hump Nose and Whirlwind were killed during the first battle, above
+the camps. Hump Nose fell on the west side of the river, in the
+valley fighting. Whirlwind’s death took place on the east side,
+when he had the fight with the Corn Indian, who also was killed.
+Lame White Man and Noisy Walking received their bullets at the time
+of the first charge among the Custer soldiers who rode down toward
+the river. Open Belly, our man who died after we arrived east of
+Powder river, was hit by a soldier bullet when he was riding across
+the bench where the stone house of the Custer Battlefield National
+Cemetery now is standing. Limber Bones and Black Bear were killed on
+the steep slope just north of the present Custer stone monument. Both
+Limber Bones and Black Bear were a little taller than I was. After
+they were gone I was the tallest young man in the tribe, I believe.
+I heard of a few women riding out to watch the fighting, but I did
+not see any women there during that time. None of them was doing any
+fighting. All of them kept far back.
+
+The Indians supposed all the time that these were the same soldiers
+we had fought on the upper Rosebud valley. Little Wolf and his
+people, arriving just after the fight ended, explained to us that
+these men just killed came from another direction. Then, when we
+learned that the Indians with these soldiers at the Little Bighorn
+were Corn Indians, not Crows or Shoshones, it began to appear that
+the Little Wolf band had it right, that these really were not the
+Rosebud battle soldiers.
+
+During the afternoon it was learned that yet another band of white
+men were coming up the Little Bighorn valley.[43] All of the young
+men wanted to fight them. A council of chiefs was held. They decided
+we should continue in our same course--not fight any soldiers if we
+could get away without doing so. All of the Indians then got ready to
+move.
+
+Mourning families abandoned and left behind their meat, robes,
+cooking pots and everything else they owned, as well as their vacated
+or destroyed lodges. That was a custom among all of the Sioux tribes
+the same as with the Cheyennes. I saw several Sioux tepees left
+standing. I supposed there were dead warriors in some of them, or
+perhaps in all of them. Some Cheyenne tepees were left standing.
+These had belonged to families wherein a member had been killed. But,
+except the lodges and property abandoned by mourning people, all of
+the possessions of the Indians were taken with us.
+
+Late in the afternoon the procession of tribes was in movement.
+Again, as at all other times, the Cheyennes went ahead and the
+Uncpapas came last. Several parties of young men went aside to go
+across the river and shoot again among the soldiers camped on the
+high hill. A few stayed there until darkness came. Uncpapa scouts
+watched behind, observing particularly the new band of soldiers
+coming up the Little Bighorn valley.
+
+We set out southwestward up the small valley of a creek just south
+of the present Garryowen railroad station. Soon we mounted to the
+benchland and traveled southward. Late in the night, the whole
+caravan stopped and rested a few hours, all sleeping in the open,
+with no lodges. At daylight we traveled on, now following up the
+Little Bighorn valley. During the afternoon we stopped for camping.
+The Cheyenne circle, at the leading or southern end, was about two
+miles below the mouth of Greasy Grass creek, below the place where
+now is located the town of Lodge Grass, Montana.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[40] In a letter published in Brady’s book, Private Wm. E. Morris
+tells of the death of Tanner, of Troop M, while he was after water
+for the Reno wounded men.--T. B. M.
+
+[41] Isaiah, a negro, Sioux interpreter for the Seventh cavalry.--T.
+B. M.
+
+[42] The Arikaras were known as Corn people.--T. B. M.
+
+[43] The Terry-Gibbon forces. They camped that night on the site of
+the present Crow Agency.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ XI
+
+_Rovings after the Victory._
+
+
+All of the lodges were set up here below the mouth of Greasy Grass
+creek. All of the six tribal camp circles were arranged as they had
+been before the soldiers came and troubled us. The Cheyennes again
+were on one of their favorite old camping spots. They still were at
+the advance side of the group of circles. The Uncpapas still were at
+the opposite side.
+
+I was stationed as a wolf to keep lookout from a hill near our camp.
+As I sat there, an Indian young man rode up to me. He asked me, in
+Sioux language, “Who are you?” I said, “I am a Cheyenne.” He got
+down from his horse. He had tobacco and a pipe, and we had a smoke
+together. He told me he belonged to the Waist and Skirt people, but I
+already could see that, by his earrings. All of the Waist and Skirt
+men wore elk teeth hanging from their ears. After we had smoked and
+visited a while, he said:
+
+“I think the big chief of the soldiers we killed was named Long Hair.
+One of my people killed him. He has known Long Hair many years, and
+he is sure this was him. He could tell him by the long and wavy
+yellow hair.”
+
+This was the first time I ever had heard of any such person as Long
+Hair. The news was interesting to me at first, but after I had
+thought a few moments about it the story seemed not very important. I
+recalled myself having seen at least three soldiers having long and
+light-colored hair. One of these I had shot after he was dead. Just
+after the end of the fighting I saw this long-haired soldier lying
+there without any appearance of wounds on him. So I put the muzzle
+of my rifle against the side of his head and sent a bullet through
+it. This man’s clothing was gone when I first saw him. I had not any
+thought about whether or not he was a chief.
+
+A great council was held at the Greasy Grass camp that night. Chiefs
+of all of the tribes were there. It was out of doors, in the midst of
+the camp circles. I believe it was at the Ogallala camp, but I am not
+sure. At this council I heard an Uncpapa Sioux war chief say:
+
+“Long Hair was big chief of the soldiers. I saw him there, and I
+killed him. I know it was him. I could not mistake the long and wavy
+yellow hair.”[44]
+
+I did not hear anyone else during that time make claims of knowing
+who was the soldier big chief. There was some talk, though, that all
+of those soldiers had been chosen specially for their bravery and had
+been sent out direct from Washington. It was generally agreed that
+whoever was the big chief of them, he must have been the big chief of
+all of the white man soldiers in the world.
+
+At this council I heard chiefs of the different tribes announce the
+number of their killed. The Cheyennes had lost 6. Uncpapas, 7. Arrows
+All Gone, 4. Minneconjoux, 3. Ogallalas, 2. I have forgotten the
+numbers from the Waist and Skirt, Burned Thigh and Blackfeet Sioux.
+I think, though, that all of these three tribes together might have
+lost 7 or 8. Total deaths, about 30.[45]
+
+The Cheyenne warriors had a dance at this Greasy Grass camp.
+Charcoal Bear, our medicine chief, brought the buffalo skin from
+the sacred tepee and put it upon the top of a pole in the center of
+our camp circle. We danced around this pole. No women took part in
+the dancing. Many of them had sore legs from the mourning cuts. Our
+dance was not carried very far into the night. It was mostly a short
+telling of experiences, a counting of coups. My father told, in a few
+words, what his two sons had done. When he had ended the telling of
+my warrior acts, he said: “The name of this son of mine is Wooden
+Leg.” Up to this time some people still used my boyhood name, Eats
+From His Hand. But now this old name was entirely gone.
+
+Some of the Sioux people had little dances here, the same as the
+Cheyennes were having. But not all of them did this. The Uncpapas did
+not dance. They said it was not time, that we ought to mourn yet a
+while. Some of them came to look on quietly at our gathering.
+
+Only one sleep we stayed at the Greasy Grass location. The great band
+of Indians trailed from there on up the Little Bighorn valley. Our
+next stop was near where is the present town of Wyola.
+
+An accidental killing took place during the time we were at this next
+camp. That afternoon, as we were traveling, a Cheyenne named Coffee
+was among the men who hunted buffalo along the way. He got a load of
+meat on his pack horse and joined us just after the camp had been set
+up. He belonged to our tribal medicine lodge, as a helper for the
+chief medicine man. He rode to the medicine lodge and made a movement
+to dismount from his horse. He had a rifle strapped in front of his
+body. As he swung himself from the horse, his rifle accidentally was
+discharged. Coffee originally had been a Southern Cheyenne, but for
+many years he had been a member of our tribe. He was an old man, but
+he never was married. He said that one having his position as helper
+to the medicine chief ought not to have a wife. But Charcoal Bear,
+the medicine chief, had a wife and two children.
+
+After one sleep at this place we turned eastward and went over the
+hills to the extreme upper Rosebud. One sleep at this place. We moved
+on down, going past the ground where we had fought the soldiers on
+this creek. We camped a few miles below where this fight had taken
+place. One sleep here. The movement was kept up down this valley. The
+next camp was pitched near the present Busby. After one sleep here
+we traveled on northward. This time we stopped at our favorite old
+camping place on the Rosebud above the mouth of Muddy creek.
+
+I was not with the camps at all of these stopping places. Like many
+others, I was out a part of the time looking for meat. I took it to
+my people when I could get any. Buffalo were scarce along the line of
+travel, so most of the game killed was elk, deer or antelope. Many
+people among the Indians were hungry for more food. Partly because of
+the fast traveling and partly because the hunters were not going far
+on account of soldiers in the country, the food demands of the people
+could not be supplied to their full satisfaction.
+
+I went out with one party, though, as far as the present town of
+Sheridan, Wyoming. We found there plenty of buffalo. We loaded our
+pack horses and started to return to the moving Indians. But somebody
+saw soldiers, or it was said they had been seen. I did not see them.
+But I quickly threw off the meat from my pack horse, the same as the
+others did, and we rode away southward as fast as our horses could
+go. Not far off we got into a wooded canyon and hid there until
+darkness came. At night we went back and picked up all of our meat.
+We then traveled on, and the next day we got to our people.
+
+We Cheyennes had a dance at our camp near the mouth of Muddy creek,
+on the Rosebud. I do not recollect any dance in any other tribal
+circle at this place. Our warriors again talked in public of acts
+at the great battle. One would dance, flourish a gun, and say, “I
+killed a white man soldier.” Another would do the same. Each one who
+did this had to have witnesses to verify his claims. A few women
+took part in the dance. My grandmother was one of them. She had the
+bearded face scalp I gave to her, and she told of my doings in the
+fight with the first soldiers. After this dance, she threw away the
+scalp.
+
+One sleep we stayed here. Then we continued down the Rosebud. The
+next stop was below the mouth of Lame Deer creek, as it now is
+known. We moved from there on down to the mouth of the stream now
+called Greenleaf creek. All along the Rosebud we had seen the trail
+of the soldiers we had killed at the Little Bighorn. We now had full
+proof that they had come up this valley from the Yellowstone. After
+one sleep at the Greenleaf camping place we left the Rosebud valley.
+
+The direction of movement was turned eastward. We followed the little
+branch stream to its head and went on over the divide to Tongue
+river. Stopped there, one sleep. Next day, traveled up this valley
+to Otter creek and on up this little valley several miles. One sleep
+in the camp on Otter creek. The next camp was set up at the head of
+Otter creek. The day after that our great band of tribes went over
+another divide and camped on what the white people call Pumpkin
+creek. One sleep, then eastward to a branch of Powder river. Next,
+to Powder river. Following, one day of travel down Powder river and
+one more camping beside this stream. Crossed the river and went up a
+creek flowing into its east side. This creek is the next one south
+of that one where the combined Indians had traveled in starting from
+east of Powder river toward the valleys westward from there.
+
+We now were in the same region where all of the tribes had come
+together three months before this time. In coming back to the
+gathering place all of the Indians traveled together, as we had done
+in going westward from it. The Cheyennes still were moving in the
+advance and camping in the advance. The Uncpapas still were following
+last and camping last. On the return we hurried from place to place.
+There was no stopping for special hunting. I believe we remained
+only one sleep at each of the camps. I may have forgotten one or two
+places of our camping. I think, though, that it was sixteen or more
+sleeps from the battle camp on the Little Bighorn back to this place
+on the creek east of Powder river.
+
+Open Belly, our badly wounded man, died here east of Powder river.
+One wounded Sioux had died along the way. This brought the Cheyenne
+loss from the battle up to seven. Some Sioux count also was increased
+by one. All of the Indians then had lost about thirty-two warriors as
+a result of the great battle. The wounded men had been carried during
+all of the journey on travois beds. That makes easier riding than any
+other way I know. But it may have been they could have become well if
+during all the time they had been quiet in a lodge.
+
+The Indians were hungry. Our meat was all gone. The horses had been
+traveling hard every day and were tired. The fat and sleek soldier
+horses we had were more tired than the Indian ponies. It was said
+this was because they were not used to living on grass alone, as the
+Indian ponies were.
+
+We stayed four or five sleeps at this camping place. Every day the
+chiefs met in council. Finally, they decided on a separation of the
+tribes. It seemed there was no danger just now from soldiers. By
+traveling separately, or in small bands, more meat and skins could be
+taken by each tribe or band. The horses all could get more grass when
+scattered. Everybody agreed it was best to separate. I think this
+was the intention of the chiefs all the time, but we were staying
+together for yet a few days of final visiting in a quiet camp before
+the separation.
+
+The Cheyennes went first down the Powder river. We followed it to
+where it flows into Elk river. We found a big pile of corn in sacks
+by Elk river. We fed some of it to our soldier horses. Some people
+cooked a little and ate it. We emptied out most of the remainder and
+took the sacks.
+
+By Powder river we saw lying dead an old man and an old woman. They
+were Sioux. Both of the bodies were humped down close together among
+some brush as if they had been in hiding there when they had been
+shot. Many bullet wounds were in both of them, all of the holes in
+the back of the head and back of the body. There were lots of tracks
+of soldier horses there. The old man was scalped, but the woman was
+not.
+
+We saw a steamboat on Elk river. Soldiers were on the boat. As they
+passed along, some of the Cheyennes shot at them. I do not know
+whether or not any soldier was hit by the shots. They did not shoot
+back at us. The boat did not stop.
+
+We moved back up Powder river. We camped and hunted all along far
+above the forks of the Powder and the Little Powder. We went over
+to Tongue river, to the upper Rosebud, to the upper Little Bighorn
+branches. We moved back and forth among the valleys of these higher
+regions. We got plenty of game and our horses had plenty of grass.
+
+Four Cheyennes, Bear Man, Bullets Not Harm Him, Big Nose and myself
+Wooden Leg, went out from a camp on the upper Rosebud to get buffalo
+meat. We went far out southward. We got our pack horses loaded and
+started back. We heard many shots following close after each other.
+
+“Soldiers are after somebody,” we agreed.
+
+We hurried away from that neighborhood. None of us went to look. The
+next day at camp we learned what had happened. Some soldiers had been
+after a mixed hunting party of Sioux and Cheyennes. Tall Bear, a
+Cheyenne, had been killed.
+
+All during the remainder of the summer the Cheyennes traveled and
+hunted. We kept mostly in the upper parts of the valleys. Not many
+of our people went to the reservation. But some more came out and
+joined us. Dull Knife, the old man chief, was with us soon after the
+separation of the tribes. All of the four old men chiefs now were
+here. Charcoal Bear kept our tribal medicine lodge set up at every
+place of camping. When the leaves began to fall we were on Powder
+river. We camped and hunted along up its valley. As the snows of
+winter began to fall we moved farther up.
+
+Ten of us young men decided to go on a war party against the Crows.
+Black Hawk and Yellow Weasel were the big men or leaders of this
+party. We left the tribal camp on a small creek flowing into the west
+side of Powder river. It was located then almost in the Big Horn
+mountains, far up beyond where now is Buffalo, Wyoming.
+
+Six sleeps we ten Cheyenne warriors traveled westward and northward,
+looking all the time for Crows. We would kill any Crow found, if we
+could, or whatever horses of theirs we might find would be made ours
+if we could get them. Our sixth sleep was on the west side of the
+Bighorn river, just below the place where in past times had been the
+soldier fort.[46] We now were in Crow land. But we had not yet seen
+any Crow Indian.
+
+We followed on down the west side of the Bighorn to its mouth. We
+crossed there to its east side and went a little distance down the
+Elk river. There we saw a Crow man, woman and some children traveling
+up the valley with only their one lodge. We hid back. They did not
+see us. We decided not to harm them. We turned back and set off
+up the east side of the Bighorn. When we got to the mouth of the
+Little Bighorn we followed up this valley. Our tenth sleep of the
+war journey found us camping where now is Crow Agency, only a short
+distance down the river from where had been the great combined camp
+when we had fought the soldiers during the early summer.
+
+We rode next morning all about the camping places of the Indians when
+the soldiers had come. We looked where had been the little shelter
+camps after the battle with them. We went then across the river
+and over to the ridge where we had killed all of the soldiers. The
+weather was clear and chilly, but not cold. There was no snow on the
+ground. We led our horses as we walked all over the battle field.
+Each man told the others of his own experiences during the fight. I
+showed them where Noisy Walking had been found and where my brother
+and I came upon the body of Lame White Man. The places where all of
+the killed Cheyennes and many of the Sioux had fallen were known by
+some one or other of us. We visited all of these places and talked of
+the dead Indian friends.
+
+Dirt and sagebrush mounds now were at the places where had been the
+dead soldiers. In a few places we could see some parts of their
+bodies exposed. But mostly the graves were good, except they had no
+stones piled over them. At one end of many different ones of the
+graves was a straight board stuck into the ground, to stand up there.
+They were straight boards, not crosses. Dead horses were lying in
+decay here and there among the graves. Wolves had been eating at the
+horses. I did not notice any place where it appeared wolves had been
+at the graves.
+
+I found a folding knife that had belonged to some soldier. Another of
+our party found a Sioux sheathknife. Soldier boot bottoms and other
+pieces of soldier belongings were scattered here and there. I saw
+some broken Cheyenne spears. There were many hundreds of arrows lying
+all along the ridge and on its sides. Some were Cheyenne arrows, but
+mostly they were from the bows of the Sioux.
+
+I hunted specially for cartridges. The others also picked them up,
+but they were getting them to give to friends. I was the only one of
+this party having a soldier rifle. There were lots of empty shells,
+and from place to place we picked up loaded ones. Near a dead horse
+I found a whole pasteboard boxful of good cartridges. There were
+forty of them in the box. The box had been rotted by rain and had
+fallen apart, but the cartridges were good. They only needed to be
+wiped dry. I filled my belt and put the remainder into my pockets.
+Others found other boxfuls.
+
+We went on southward over the hills to the place where the first
+soldiers had hidden themselves on the hilltop. We found other
+cartridges here. After having looked a while at this place we forded
+the river to the west side and walked about over the valley where the
+first fight had taken place. One other man and myself were the only
+two in this party who had been in this battle. We told our companions
+about how we chased the soldiers and killed them. I showed them right
+where I had taken my rifle from the soldier and where I had helped in
+killing the Corn Indian. I pointed out to them the place where I was
+hidden and where was the soldier when I shot him as he was dipping up
+water. I told of my getting the wet tobacco from a hip pocket and the
+metal money from another pocket. They laughed when I told of having
+thrown aside the wet paper money the soldier had folded and laid into
+a little paper box.
+
+We slept this night only a little distance up the valley from this
+first battle ground. Here we made for ourselves the same kind of
+little brush shelters we had been making each night. We slept by twos
+or in groups, to keep warm.
+
+The next morning we set out over the divide eastward toward the
+Rosebud. We followed the same trail regularly used by the Indians
+traveling this region, the same that had been used by the soldiers
+in coming to us. Four more sleep camps we made in going on eastward
+to Tongue river and up this valley. Somewhere below the mouth of
+Hanging Woman creek our scouts caught sight of Indians coming down
+the valley. All of us got to where we might see. Most of the Indians
+were afoot. Only a few had horses. We watched and wondered. Who were
+these people?
+
+The band of walking Indians were our Cheyennes, the whole tribe. They
+had but little food. Many of them had no blankets nor robes. They had
+no lodges. Only here and there was one wearing moccasins. The others
+had their feet wrapped in loose pieces of skin or of cloth. Women,
+children and old people were straggling along over the snow-covered
+trail down the valley. The Cheyennes were very poor.
+
+Our people told us of soldiers and Pawnee Indians having come to the
+camp far up Powder river where we had left them. The Cheyennes had
+to run away with only a few small packs, as our small band had done
+on lower Powder river during the late winter before this time. The
+same as we had done, they had to see all of their lodges burned and
+most of their horses taken. Many of our men, women and children had
+been killed. Others had died of wounds or had starved and frozen to
+death on the journey through the mountain snow to Tongue river. Three
+Cheyenne women and a boy had been captured by the Pawnees.[47]
+
+The tribe were hunting now for the Ogallala Sioux, where Crazy Horse
+was the principal chief. These Sioux were somewhere in this region.
+We crossed to the east side of Tongue river just above the present
+white man town of Ashland, Montana, and went over the benches to
+Otter creek. After a night of sleep here we moved on eastward over
+the little mountains. Travel and sleep, travel and sleep, we kept
+going. Eleven sleeps the tribe had journeyed when we arrived at the
+place on Beaver creek where now is a white man trading store and a
+postoffice called Stacey. Here we found the Ogallalas.
+
+The Ogallala Sioux received us hospitably. They had not been
+disturbed by soldiers, so they had good lodges and plenty of meat and
+robes. They first assembled us in a great body and fed us all we
+wanted to eat. To all of the women who needed other food they gave a
+supply. They gave us robes and blankets. They shared with us their
+tobacco. Gift horses came to us. Every married woman got skins enough
+to make some kind of lodge for her household. Oh, how generous were
+the Ogallalas! Not any Cheyenne was allowed to go to sleep hungry or
+cold that night.
+
+We had traveled and hunted much during past times with these Sioux
+people. At all times there was some one or more families of them with
+us or some of our Cheyennes with them. Of our friendly intermarrying,
+there was more connection with the Ogallalas than with any other
+tribe. Their people during the summer and fall had been going to and
+from the agency more than ours had been. Our few incoming Cheyennes
+had brought us some news about the soldiers we had fought on the
+Little Bighorn. But the Ogallalas informed us more fully. From them
+we learned that the big chief of the soldiers was Long Hair, the
+same man who several years before this time had fought the Southern
+Cheyennes.
+
+After we had rested with the Ogallalas a few days the chiefs
+counciled together and decided that the tribes should join in
+movement up the Tongue river. All of us then followed our back trail
+over to Otter creek and on to Tongue river. We moved slowly and
+hunted along the way. The Cheyennes got a new supply of buffalo meat
+and many more skins for enlarging their lodges. We crossed Tongue
+river on the ice, to the east side. Not far up the valley we went
+back over the ice, to the west side. We traveled then on up the
+benchland trails, to Hanging Woman creek. The Ogallalas had some
+cattle they had taken from white people or from soldiers. These
+were butchered along the way. They had yet also a few of the horses
+taken at the battle on the Little Bighorn. But these horses that had
+been so fat and strong were now poor and weak. Most of them already
+had died. They did not know how to find winter food like the Indian
+ponies could find it.
+
+At Hanging Woman creek it was decided the two tribes would separate.
+The Ogallalas would go eastward up this stream. The Cheyennes would
+continue on up the Tongue river valley. As usual, a few Cheyennes
+joined the Sioux and a few of their people decided to come with us.
+My sister Crooked Nose started with the other people. Chiefs Crazy
+Horse and Water All Gone and a few other Ogallalas came to us. Just
+as the tribes were about to separate, some scouts brought in the
+report:
+
+“Soldiers are coming!”
+
+The two bands of Indians began to come again together. The warriors
+mingled themselves as being of one tribe. The women and children and
+older men of both sets of people moved together up the Tongue river.
+The young men put themselves behind their fleeing people. Somebody
+said to me:
+
+“They have captured some women. Your sister is one of them.”
+
+My heart jumped when this news came to me. I lashed my horse into
+a run toward where it was said they had been captured. There I saw
+tracks of soldier horses. The trail led to the river ice. On the
+opposite side of the river, the west side, were soldiers. They began
+shooting at me. I had to get away. I did not see any of the women, so
+I supposed they had been killed. My heart then became bitter toward
+these white men.
+
+I hid my horse in the brush at the foot of a ridge where some
+warriors were on its top. I walked up there. Many Indians were hidden
+behind rocks and were shooting toward the soldiers. I chose for
+myself a hiding place and did the same. I had my soldier rifle and
+plenty of cartridges. Many soldiers were coming across on the ice, to
+fight us. But we had the advantage of them because of our position on
+the high and rocky ridge.
+
+Big Crow, a Cheyenne, kept walking back and forth along the ridge
+on the side toward the soldiers. He was wearing a warbonnet. He had
+a gun taken from the soldiers at the Little Bighorn battle. He used
+up his cartridges and came back to us hidden behind the rocks, to ask
+for more. Cheyennes and Sioux here and there each gave him one or two
+or three. He soon got enough to fill his belt. He went out again to
+walk along the ridge, to shoot at the soldiers and to defy them in
+their efforts to hit him with a bullet. All of us others kept behind
+the rocks, only peeping around at times to shoot. Crazy Horse, the
+Ogallala chief, was near me. Bullets glanced off the shielding rocks,
+but none hit us. One came close to me. It whizzed through the folds
+of my blanket at my side.
+
+Big Crow finally dropped down. He lay there alive, but apparently in
+great distress. A Sioux went with me to crawl down to where he was
+and bring him into shelter. Another Sioux came after us. When we got
+to the wounded man I took hold of his feet and the two Sioux grasped
+his hands. The three of us crawled and dragged him along on the snow.
+Bullets began to shower around us. We let loose our holds and dodged
+behind rocks. When the firing quieted, we crept out and again got
+him. My brother just then called out to me: “Wooden Leg, come, we
+are going away from here.” I let loose again and went to my brother.
+The two Sioux continued to drag Big Crow.
+
+The Indians moved back and forth, down and up, fighting the soldiers
+at different times all day. After darkness came, the fighting
+stopped. The group where I was built a little fire, so we might warm
+ourselves. As soon as the light of it showed, the bullets began to
+sing over our heads. We quickly threw snow upon the fire. Then we
+moved to another place. I got down where I had left my horse. It was
+still there. I mounted and joined my friends. All of the Indians left
+there during the night. Some of the Ogallalas already had gone on up
+Hanging Woman creek. Chiefs Crazy Horse and Water All Gone, with many
+lodges of their people, attached themselves to the Cheyennes. We went
+up Tongue river. We traveled all night and all the next day before we
+stopped to camp.
+
+We did not know where these soldiers had come from.[48] We did not
+know either how far they might follow us. But our scouts remaining
+behind saw them go back down Tongue river. At the camp, Big Crow’s
+relatives went about inquiring for him. I told where I last had seen
+him. Finally, they found the two Sioux who had been with him when I
+left him. These men said he was dead. That was our one man lost in
+the battle. Two Sioux were killed.
+
+The missing Cheyennes were: Sweet Woman, an old woman, age fifty or
+older. Lame White Man’s widow and her two girls. Little Chief’s wife,
+their girl and their boy. My sister Crooked Nose, past twenty-one
+years old. A boy belonging to some other family. There were four
+women and five children. These were said to be in one group together,
+and all were captured by the soldiers. We were not sure, though, but
+some of them or all of them might have been wounded or killed.
+
+The Cheyennes and the few Ogallalas now with us traveled far up
+Tongue river. We found plenty of buffalo there. We went on west to
+the upper Little Bighorn. After camping and hunting there, we went
+farther west to the Bighorn at the mouth of Rotten Grass creek. We
+did not stay here long. We returned to the Little Bighorn. Most of
+the last part of the winter was spent in camp on this valley. All of
+the time during the next few months we had good hunting. Soldiers did
+not trouble us nor we did not trouble them.
+
+Almost the entire Northern Cheyenne tribe was in this winter camp on
+the upper Little Bighorn. Little Wolf, Dull Knife, Dirty Moccasins
+and Old Bear, our four old men chiefs, were here. Charcoal Bear,
+the medicine chief, had kept possession of the sacred buffalo head
+through all of our distress. We had now as good a medicine lodge for
+it as we ordinarily had. This lodge was at its usual place at the
+back part of the space within our horseshoe camp circle. All of the
+people had good lodges. In every way we were living yet according to
+our customary habits. We were not bothering any white people. We did
+not want to see any of them. We felt we were on our own land. We had
+killed only such people as had come for driving us away from it. So,
+our hearts were clean from any feeling of guilt.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[44] In fact, his wife and others to whom he was well known assert
+that General Custer was not wearing his hair long at the time he was
+killed. For some time before that occasion he had kept his hair cut
+short.--T. B. M.
+
+[45] The small loss is explainable by the extensive suiciding among
+the soldiers.--T. B. M.
+
+[46] Fort C. F. Smith.
+
+[47] This Powder river fight was on November 26th, 1876.--T. B. M.
+
+[48] These soldiers were commanded by Colonel Nelson A. Miles. They
+had come from Fort Keogh, which he had established on the Yellowstone
+just above the mouth of Tongue river. This fight was on January 1,
+1877.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ XII
+
+_Surrender of the Cheyennes._
+
+
+Just before the grass began to show itself in the early part of the
+spring, two visitors arrived at our camp on the Little Bighorn. One
+of these was our captured old woman, Sweet Woman. The other was a
+half-breed Sioux we called White.[49] Each had a horse to ride and
+each was leading a pack horse. In their packs were tobacco and other
+things, for gifts to the principal chiefs. The visitors said they had
+been sent out from the soldier fort at the mouth of Tongue river,
+to invite us to come there and surrender peaceably. They brought a
+promise from Bear Coat,[50] the soldier chief there, that we should
+not be harmed and should be given plenty of food.
+
+Sweet Woman told us all of the captives were well. She said they had
+been treated well, that they had a lodge for themselves and that Bear
+Coat had a soldier guard near their lodge at all times to keep other
+soldiers from bothering them. This Sweet Woman was a sister of White
+Bull’s wife. She was a widow. Her husband had been dead many years.
+He had been a black man, and the name for him was Black Man. As a
+boy he had been captured by the Cheyennes. She was a tall and thin
+woman, but she was healthy.
+
+Our chiefs counciled about this proposal. It was decided quickly that
+we might as well go in that direction. The final decision could be
+made at some other place. We moved then eastward by camps and sleeps
+of one night each. We stopped one night at the mouth of Hanging Woman
+creek, where we had fought the soldiers in the middle of the winter
+before. Some other young men and I climbed up among the rocks where
+we had fought. We searched for Big Crow’s body. We found it. It was
+lying with the back partly propped up against a bush in a thin group
+of small pines. The right hand was up and behind the head. The left
+hand was over the breast. We could not decide whether he had been
+dead when left there or had put himself into this position and had
+frozen to death. We stretched out the dead man and covered him with
+stones. His people felt better when we told them what we had done.
+
+The half-breed Sioux traveled with us to Tongue river. Some of the
+chiefs decided to go with him to the soldier fort and find out what
+might happen to the Cheyennes if all should go there. They left us
+and went down the valley. The Cheyennes going on this journey of
+peacemaking were: Old Wolf and Crazy Head, tribal big chiefs.
+Little Creek and Two Moons, little chiefs of the Crazy Dog and Fox
+warrior societies. White Bull, a medicine man but not a chief. The
+Elk warriors did not send any chief.
+
+[Illustration: BIG BEAVER, A VETERAN CHEYENNE WARRIOR, STANDING AT
+THE SPOT WHERE HE SAW THE LAST CUSTER SOLDIER KILLED JUNE 25, 1876]
+
+The tribe and the Ogallalas with us kept on moving eastward. At
+Powder river it was decided to wait for the return of the chiefs
+who had gone to the fort. The Ogallalas with us separated from us
+and traveled on. Most of them said they were going to the agency.
+A little band of them went down Powder river. All of the Cheyennes
+remained in tribal circle camp on the west side of Powder river,
+above the mouth of Little Powder river, only a short distance above
+the place where we had been burned out a year before this time.
+
+The four chiefs came back to us at this Powder river camp. White Bull
+was not with them. They told us he had stayed with the soldiers, to
+scout for them in hunting for Indians. This news did not please us.
+As we looked at it, the surrendering to the soldiers was good if
+one felt like doing this. But an offer to help them to kill friends
+showed a bad heart.
+
+I was affected more, though, by other news the chiefs brought. It
+was concerning my sister Crooked Nose, one of the captives. When the
+chiefs were only a part of the first day out in coming back from the
+fort, somebody followed them to tell them about her. She had been
+very sad in heart because of a belief she never again would see her
+people. She had felt better when the chiefs came, but when they went
+away again she fell into deep grief. Her sorrow was so great that she
+got out her hidden six-shooter I had given to her and shot herself
+dead. My heart almost stopped beating when I heard about her death in
+this way. She had been a good sister, kind to everybody.
+
+Seven Cheyennes from the agency came to the camp on Powder river.
+They had one tepee lodge but no women were with them. They came only
+to tell us we ought to surrender at the agency. They said all of
+the Indians there were being fed well, were being treated well in
+every way. Nobody was being punished in any manner for past conduct
+in warfare against the soldiers. To my father and to most of the
+Cheyennes this sounded more attractive than the invitation to go
+to the Elk river fort.[51] Our people were better acquainted with
+conditions at the agency. Besides, the Ogallalas had the same agency
+with us, so these people also would be there. Our old men counciled
+about whether the tribe should surrender. And, if so, where they
+should go. It was decided to let every Cheyenne choose for himself.
+
+Little Wolf and the other principal chiefs chose to go to the agency.
+Charcoal Bear, the medicine chief, said the sacred buffalo head and
+the medicine lodge should follow them. Their choice influenced the
+course of most of the tribe. My father said we ought to go with them.
+For two or three days, I believe, the chiefs and the people talked
+about the matter. Finally, the main body of the tribe set off toward
+the agency. A smaller part of it determined to go to the Elk river
+soldier fort. These were convinced by Two Moons and White Bull’s
+relatives that they would receive better treatment there.
+
+But not all of the Cheyennes were ready yet to surrender at any
+place. Fourteen or fifteen men, six or seven of them having wives and
+children, separated off to go westward. White Hawk, a little chief
+of the Elk warriors, was with them. They said they were going to
+join the Minneconjoux Sioux, who then were in camp on Rosebud creek
+or on a branch of it that afterward was called Lame Deer creek. The
+principal chief of these Minneconjoux Sioux was Lame Deer.
+
+I joined another band still desiring most the freedom we considered
+to be ours by right. Thirty-four Cheyennes made up this band. Last
+Bull, leading chief of the Fox warrior society, was the big man of
+our party. His warrior followers at this time were from all three
+of the societies. The people making up this group of further hunters
+were these:
+
+Last Bull, his wife and two daughters.
+
+Many-Colored Braids, his wife, two daughters and a son.
+
+Little Horse, his wife, two daughters and a son.
+
+Black Coyote, his wife and small daughter.
+
+Dog Growing Up, his wife and one small boy.
+
+Fire Wolf, Yellow Eagle, Spotted Wolf, Chief Going Up a Hill, White
+Bird, Buffalo Paunch, Big Nose, Meat, Medicine Wolf, Horse Road,
+Little Shield, Yellow Horse, my brother Yellow Hair and myself Wooden
+Leg. All of these were unmarried young men.
+
+Five tepee lodges were taken along and set up at each camping place,
+by the wives of the five married men. The unmarried young men slept
+mostly unsheltered, or at each camping they made for themselves
+little willow or tree branch lodges. They did their own cooking, most
+of the time, but often some young man would give a part of his meat
+to some woman as payment to her for cooking his meat for him. I dwelt
+all the time in the lodge of Last Bull, as a member of his family.
+He felt very friendly to me because of my having helped his wife and
+children at the time the soldiers came to the Cheyenne camp the year
+before, on Powder river.
+
+Every man in this band had a good gun of some kind. I had my rifle
+taken from the soldier. I had not used up much of the ammunition I
+had found on the battle grounds at that time and afterward. I did not
+do any more shooting than was necessary in getting plenty of meat. I
+was saving my cartridges for fighting whatever soldiers might come.
+
+We traveled and hunted all about the country on the upper Powder
+river and the upper Tongue river. We had to be moving often, because
+game was not plentiful. Every day scouts were out trying to locate
+buffalo. All of the time they were on the lookout too for soldiers or
+for Crows or Shoshones. We were not loafing idly. We were working and
+earning our living.
+
+A baby boy was born to the wife of Black Coyote at one of the camps.
+The wife of Many-Colored Braids took care of her, as medicine woman.
+As we moved from place to place, the young woman and her baby were
+put into a travois bed. The other women helped in taking down and
+setting up her lodge. Her personal name was Calf Road. She was
+specially famous because she had fought as a warrior with her husband
+Black Coyote at the battle with the soldiers on the upper Rosebud.
+Now there were thirty-five people in our band.
+
+I was sent alone from this band one time to scout for buffalo. I
+took with me a pack horse to bring back whatever meat I might get. I
+had on the led horse a soldier pack saddle belonging to Last Bull. I
+stayed out three sleeps. I saw a few deer and antelope but no buffalo.
+
+We were having a good many days of hunger. Our horses had plenty of
+grass, but our own ribs were becoming thin. Our clothing was wearing
+out, and we could not get enough of skins to renew them and to keep
+our beds and our lodges in good order. My soldier coat and breeches
+were gone, and my last shirt and cloth breeches were almost in
+tatters. The only good article of wear I had now was my big white hat
+I had captured at the Rosebud battle.
+
+A Cheyenne named Yellow Eagle added himself to us. He had been at
+the agency not long before. We decided to have him and White Bird go
+there together and spy out the conditions. They went. In a week or so
+they were back among us.
+
+“Good treatment, plenty of food, blankets, everything, nobody
+punished,” they reported.
+
+We started right away for the agency. But not all of us yet were
+ready to go there. Medicine Wolf, Growing Dog, Meat and my brother
+Yellow Hair said they were going to stay out hunting. They said it
+would not be long before lots of Indians would be back out here, the
+same as had been here during the year before. I was almost persuaded
+to remain with them, but Last Bull said he now was convinced the
+Indians would not come back to this country. So I kept with the main
+part of our band. We traveled southeastward toward the White River
+agency of the Cheyennes and the Ogallalas.
+
+At a white man house far along our way we stopped to see if the
+people there might give us some food. The only people there were two
+white men. They acted as if they were badly frightened, but we made
+peace signs to them, and only two of us went to their door. We made
+signs that our Indians all were very hungry, and we asked them for
+something to eat. They gave us a little beef meat and some sugar and
+coffee. We were glad to get this, and we told them our hearts were
+good toward them.
+
+Three strange Indians on horseback approached us from our front as
+we arrived about a day’s journey from the agency. We could see they
+were Indians, but they had on soldier clothing. This alarmed us. All
+of our men cocked their guns and went out in front of the women and
+children. We watched and waited. The three Indians stopped. At a
+distance they made signs to us. They told us they were soldier scouts
+come out to help us find our way to the agency. We allowed them to
+join us and remain with us the remainder of the way. One of them was
+a Cheyenne, another was a Sioux, the third was a Cheyenne-Sioux
+named Fire Crow.
+
+It made all of us feel good to see the hundreds of Indian lodges
+as we came near to the agency.[52] We galloped our horses forward.
+We cheered and fired gunshots into the air. Some soldiers came
+running out from their tents, but they soon saw we were friendly
+and were only celebrating and notifying our people we had come. We
+saw great camps of Arapahoes and Ogallalas as well as the tribal
+camp circle of our own Cheyennes. Many soldiers also were there,
+in their own separate camp. Several of the soldier chiefs came and
+shook hands with our men and said, “How.” One of these soldier chiefs
+we specially liked. We learned from a Cheyenne his name among the
+Indians was White Hat.[53] He could make good sign-talk. It appeared
+he understood Indians better than any white man soldier I ever had
+seen. I suppose that was why we liked him.
+
+A white man married to a Cheyenne woman was acting as interpreter for
+the soldiers. His name was Rowland. But White Hat did not need any
+interpreter in talking to us, he could make the sign-talk so well.
+After the general handshaking, White Hat said:
+
+“Now, you men must give to me your guns and your horses.”
+
+We were not expecting this, but we trusted him, so we began to do as
+he had asked. But Black Coyote jumped back and said he would not give
+up his gun. He cocked it and stood there. He was much excited. Just
+then three Sioux dressed in soldier clothing came riding toward us.
+Black Coyote aimed his gun at them. Last Bull pushed the gun aside
+and said:
+
+“Don’t shoot. You are crazy.”
+
+He talked to Black Coyote, telling him that a shot just now might
+cause all of us to get killed. White Hat motioned the three Sioux to
+go away, and they did so. Black Coyote then quieted down. He gave his
+gun to Last Bull, and this leader gave it to a soldier with White
+Hat. I was the only one among us having a gun captured from the
+soldiers at the battle on the Little Bighorn. When I handed it to a
+soldier he gave it to White Hat. White Hat examined it with apparent
+great interest. He then called other soldier chiefs to look. Finally
+he asked me:
+
+“Where did you get this gun?”
+
+I did not answer him at once. He asked me again, making signs so
+clear that I could not help but make some kind of answer. I told him
+the truth. I showed him just how I had seized it and wrenched it away
+from a soldier riding toward the river during the first part of the
+great battle a year before this time. The way they talked about it,
+it appeared the Indians had not been giving them these guns taken
+from the soldiers. After a little while, White Hat shook hands again
+with me and made signs to me: “You are a brave man. Do not be afraid
+any soldier will want to kill you.”
+
+The next morning all of us went to the agency buildings for gifts we
+had been told would be there for us. Wagons came with the presents.
+They were unloaded in piles. Blankets, clothing and different kinds
+of food were in the piles. Two of our people were appointed to divide
+up and distribute the articles among all of us. Our hearts now were
+glad. It seemed good to be here with plenty and not be in fear of
+soldiers.
+
+I received other gifts. An Ogallala Sioux presented me with a
+medicine pipe, the first one I had owned since the loss of mine when
+the soldiers burned out our forty lodges on lower Powder river. A
+Cheyenne young man gave me a wad of paper money like I had seen at
+the time of the great battle. He said: “You can buy things at the
+trader’s store with this paper.” I put it into my pocket. After a
+while I got a Sioux young man friend to go with me to the agency
+trader’s store. I took out my money and gave it all to the trader.
+He counted it over and over. Then he asked me, in Sioux speech:
+
+“Where did you get all of this money?”
+
+My Sioux friend quickly answered:
+
+“He got it from Custer.”
+
+The trader said to me:
+
+“The soldiers are going to hang you.” This startled me at first, but
+both he and my Sioux friend laughed, so I knew he was only joking.
+
+“Now, what all do you want?” the trader asked, after they had joked
+me a little while.
+
+I got first a red and yellow shirt. Then I got some breeches that
+fitted me much better than the pair that had been given to me by
+the agency people. I picked out a fine red blanket, a hat and a big
+silk scarf. I got plenty of tobacco. I bought coffee, sugar, meat
+and other things. I did not want all of the goods I bought, but the
+trader kept telling me of what I ought to have. After each time he
+brought me what I asked for, he took from the money some part of it.
+Then he would ask:
+
+“And what else?”
+
+I did not know how much the different articles were worth. I kept on
+choosing some other until finally the trader said:
+
+“Your money is all gone.”
+
+My friend helped me to carry all of my property to my home lodge. I
+wore the new hat just bought. But I took along the old white hat I
+had captured from the soldiers. I gave this old one to my father. He
+was much pleased to get it. It was the first white man hat he ever
+owned. He threw away then the old Indian buffalo hat he had been
+wearing.
+
+Some of the Cheyennes who had gone to the Elk river soldier fort were
+here now. They had been sent here by the soldiers. Other Cheyennes
+had stayed at that fort, the men joining the soldiers as scouts for
+them. All of these Cheyennes brought here were dwelling in soldier
+tents. Many other Indians, Cheyennes, Ogallalas and Arapahoes, also
+had the soldier tents. These were larger than most of the Indian
+tepees then in use. The tepees were smaller than usual because only a
+few buffalo skins had been taken during this summer.
+
+There was some dissatisfaction among the Cheyennes on account of talk
+of them being taken to the South. The agent and the soldier chiefs
+had said we ought to go there and be joined as one tribe with the
+Southern Cheyennes. Our people did not like this talk. All of us
+wanted to stay in this country near the Black Hills. But we had one
+big chief, Standing Elk, who kept saying it would be better if we
+should go there. I think there were not as many as ten Cheyennes in
+our whole tribe who agreed with him. There was a feeling that he was
+talking this way only to make himself a big Indian among the white
+people. The white men chiefs would not talk much to any Cheyenne
+chief but him. They gave him extra presents and treated him as if he
+were the only chief in the tribe, when he was but one of our forty
+tribal big chiefs. One day he went about telling everybody:
+
+“All get ready to move. The soldiers are going to take us from here
+tomorrow.”
+
+Lots of Cheyennes were angry. We had understood that when we
+surrendered we were to live on our same White River reservation. We
+had given up our guns and our horses and had quit fighting because
+of this promise. Now, after we had put ourselves at this great
+disadvantage, the promise was to be broken. But we could not do
+anything except obey him. So, three sleeps after my small band had
+come to what we thought was to be our home, the whole tribe was on
+its way to what we now call Oklahoma.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[49] Bruyère, a Frenchman-Sioux scout for Miles.
+
+[50] The Cheyenne name for General Miles.
+
+[51] Fort Keogh, at the mouth of Tongue river.
+
+[52] White River agency, Fort Robinson, Nebraska.
+
+[53] Lieutenant W. P. Clark, who wrote a book on sign language.
+
+
+
+
+ XIII
+
+_Taken to the South._
+
+
+The soldier leader of our movement to the South was known to us as
+Tall White Man. He was a good man, always kind to the Indians. We had
+to do whatever he said we must do, but he talked good to our chiefs,
+so all of us were pleased to have him guiding us. He had with him a
+band of soldiers. I do not know how many, but I think there may have
+been almost a hundred of them.
+
+Our horses that had been taken away from us at the agency were now
+returned to us. Still, many Cheyennes did not own any. Old people
+who had no animal to ride were provided with them from the soldier
+herd. Or, very old or sick people were allowed to ride in the soldier
+wagons. Young men who owned no horses had to walk or borrow from
+friends. I owned four. I had three of them loaned out most of the
+time.
+
+Soldier tents were used by the Indians as well as by the soldiers. I
+think the Indians had a few canvas cone tepees, but I do not remember
+seeing among us any buffalo skin lodges. We had not killed for a
+long time enough buffaloes to renew the old dwelling shelters we
+liked so well. Wagons were used to haul the tents. Other wagons were
+loaded with bread, crackers, coffee, sugar and other food. Every day,
+rations were issued to all of the soldiers and all of the Indians.[54]
+
+A drove of cattle was kept moving along behind us. Some of them were
+butchered every day for meat. This was good, but the Indians liked
+better the wild meat when it could be found. Our chiefs talked to
+Tall White Man about this. He listened to their talk. He said it was
+good. He told them how it would be arranged for some of the Indians
+to hunt along the way.
+
+Thirty men, ten from each of the three warrior societies, were chosen
+by our warrior chiefs to do the hunting. Each of these thirty was
+given a rifle. At every time of hunting, each of them was allowed to
+have five cartridges for his gun. Other Indians were allowed also to
+hunt, but they had to use the bows and arrows or whatever else they
+might have for use. A few took out guns they had kept hidden when we
+had surrendered at the agency, but they had to be sly about this so
+the soldiers would not find out about them.
+
+We traveled slowly and camped often, so there was plenty of time for
+hunting at distances from the moving people. The soldiers went always
+ahead. The Indians followed them. The wagons came behind the Indians.
+The drove of cattle were last. We kept mostly along the old trails of
+the Cheyennes as they had gone back and forth between the Black Hills
+and the South. These were across the high lands at the headwaters of
+the rivers. Not yet were many white people living here.
+
+Buffalo and antelope were plentiful. There were a few deer, but no
+elk. I rode out at times with the hunters, but I had neither gun nor
+bow and arrows. I could do nothing but look on and wish I could do
+some killing. I knew of one certain Cheyenne who had a rifle hidden.
+One night in camp I said to him:
+
+“I see every day lots of antelope. Let me take your gun tomorrow.”
+
+I killed a buffalo the next day with his gun. I killed also two
+antelope. I gave him half of the meat. Both of us had plenty to
+distribute among our friends. The soldiers never knew anything about
+it. Or, none of them said anything to me.
+
+Soldiers hunted with the Indians. All of the soldiers were friendly
+and good to us. They were good shooters and they killed lots of game.
+They gave us most of the meat. I became specially friendly with two
+or three of them. I liked to be with them, and they appeared to like
+me. I went at times to their camp in the evening and visited with
+them. When we were about half along our journey I asked one of them:
+
+“Let me take your gun tomorrow.”
+
+“Yes, you may take it,” he told me.
+
+He let me have five cartridges when I got the gun the next morning.
+Oh, how good I felt--on horseback, having a good rifle, and after
+buffalo! I killed one and brought in the best parts of its meat. I
+gave the soldier his choice of it and all he wanted, when I returned
+his gun that night in camp.
+
+Either a rifle or a six shooter was loaned to me for a day at other
+later times. Each time, with the rifle came five cartridges. Each
+time, with the six shooter came six loads for it. Each time, I
+returned the borrowed gun at the night camp and gave the friendly
+soldier whatever meat he might want. Most of them did not want much
+of it, so I had at all times plenty of the food we liked most, for
+our family group and for our friends who might need it.
+
+We camped near one certain big town far along on our journey. None of
+us were allowed to go into the town, but I went walking all about the
+outside of it to look at it. As I walked I found a big piece of wood
+that I wanted. I had seen at past times this same kind of wood, and I
+knew its usefulness to us. It was the heavy piece that lays across
+the necks of cattle when they draw a wagon. The Indians liked to get
+these, because they made the best kind of bows and arrows. I picked
+it up and lifted it over a shoulder. I went right away to my home
+tent lodge.
+
+I made a good bow. My mother had in her packs some dried sinew from
+buffalo back tendons. This I used to string my bow. I made then ten
+arrows. I got here and there some pieces of metal for the points. My
+mother made a pouch for the bow and arrows. She made it of a calfskin
+she had tanned as we were moving. I was glad now, with the full pouch
+slung from my shoulder and dangling at my left side. Two days I spent
+most of our camping time at this work.
+
+On the first day out with my new bow and arrows I killed a buffalo.
+I could have killed more, but I did not want any more. There were
+not so many of them here as we had found farther north, but we still
+were finding a few. There were yet plenty of antelope feeding out on
+the rolling hills and level lands. An antelope, though, is hard to
+hit with arrows. It can run fast and can dodge quickly. Still, if
+one be chased a long time it becomes tired. Any ordinary horse then
+can catch up with it. It is easy enough then to shoot arrows into
+its body. One arrow often is enough to kill it. I killed several of
+them, as many as I wanted to kill, while we were going on our way. I
+killed also a few more buffalo.
+
+One sleep before we got to the Southern Cheyenne agency we had some
+special doings. The agent there came out to see us. He had with him
+a half-breed Cheyenne as interpreter. They went to every tent of the
+Indians. At each place the interpreter asked the names and he wrote
+them on paper. We were in camp beside a soldier fort. That evening I
+saw some of the soldiers there trying to rope loose horses. I went
+to them and asked them to let me try it. They did. I could loop the
+lariat noose over a running horse almost every time I tried. The
+soldiers cheered. They were very friendly to me.
+
+The thirty Cheyennes who had been allowed to have soldier guns for
+hunting were told now they must give back these guns. But Little Wolf
+and Standing Elk talked to Tall White Man about this. They said: “Let
+us keep these guns for hunting, or we might need them for protecting
+ourselves.” But the good soldier chief replied: “No, I cannot do
+that. They must be returned to us.” Others of our chiefs joined
+Little Wolf and Standing Elk. Tall White Man sat in a long council
+with them. Finally, he agreed:
+
+“Yes, the Cheyennes may keep the few guns they have.”
+
+I learned in the South the white man name of Long Hair, the soldier
+big chief we had killed on the Little Bighorn. I was told he was
+called General Custer. I had heard this name spoken at the White
+River agency, but I did not understand clearly who was meant by it.
+The Southern Cheyennes knew of him because of his having fought
+against them before he had come into our northern country. They had
+surrendered to him.
+
+A few of our Northern Cheyennes had not yet joined us before we left
+the White River agency, at the North. Or, some of these fled from us
+as soon as it was decided we must go to the South. My brother Yellow
+Hair had not yet come in to surrender. He stayed hunting or he went
+to the Ogallalas. Not long after we became settled in the new home
+the news came to us that he had been killed. He was hunting on Crow
+creek, a stream flowing into the east side of upper Tongue river,
+when some white men not soldiers shot him. Our family now was made up
+of my father and mother, myself, my younger sister and the small boy
+brother.
+
+My first shoes were given to me at the southern agency. They were too
+big, but I wore them a part of the time. All of my life before this,
+I had worn only the moccasins made by Indians. I yet liked best the
+moccasins, but we did not have skins enough to make all of them we
+needed.
+
+I did some hunting in the southern country. But the hunting was
+not for the large food game animals. Very few of these got on the
+reservation, and we were not allowed to go off the reservation for
+hunting. So, my searching for something to shoot at with bow and
+arrows or with gun was for whatever small game could be found there.
+
+On one certain bow and arrow hunt I was afoot and alone. The weather
+was hot. I was tired and sweating. I went to the shade of two big
+trees. As I rested there, a fluttering noise attracted my attention
+to the tops of two trees. I looked. There sat an eagle perched high
+up. I aimed an arrow and shot. No harm done. I drew out another arrow
+and fitted it to my bowstring. I aimed more carefully this time. In a
+moment after the second shot, the eagle fluttered and tumbled to the
+ground out a little distance from the trees. I ran out there. The big
+bird flopped and hobbled along away from me. Before I could get hold
+of it the eagle had lifted itself into the air. It flew on and up,
+farther and higher. I watched it until it was gone entirely from my
+view.
+
+I learned how to hunt specially for eagles. Their regular sleeping
+places were at the tops of big trees. I would go out on horseback and
+locate myself under a big tree just as darkness was about to come.
+One night I sat under a tree waiting. I had both a rifle and a six
+shooter. Two eagles came. I shot and killed one with the rifle. I
+jerked out the six shooter and fired at the other one. It too tumbled
+down dead. That was good shooting, considering that the light was
+dim. But always in shooting eagles at night the dark body against the
+sky made a good enough target.
+
+On another eagle hunt at night, when I shot up into the tree the
+eagle fell to the ground wounded but not dead. It lay there moving
+about a little but not much. I ran to it and seized it, to hold it
+while I might beat it with the handle of my pony whip. It grasped in
+its two taloned feet my left forearm and my right thigh just above
+the knee. I struck it with the whip handle, but this only made it
+sink the talons in more deeply. I had to pry them loose. Then I beat
+it to death. I still own and make regular use of a fan made from a
+wing of that eagle.
+
+I shot one certain eagle in a tree above my head one night. Right
+after I fired the shot it tumbled. But it did not fall to the ground.
+I looked up among the branches, but I could not see it. I began to
+look about me on the ground. Just then a heavy thump on top of my
+head almost knocked me down. The eagle had lodged somewhere and then
+had fallen. It seized my hat in its talons and bounced off my head to
+the ground. There I killed it with my six shooter.
+
+One night, as I stood watching under a tree I saw something moving
+along on a branch high up. It did not appear to be an eagle, but
+when it stopped on the branch I aimed my rifle and fired. It dropped
+straight down and plumped hard upon the ground. It was dead. It was
+to me a strange animal. It looked somewhat like the badgers of the
+northern country, except this animal I had killed was smaller. I
+remembered, too, that badgers do not live in trees. When I took it to
+the home lodge I found out what it was. The white people call this
+kind of animal a coon. I afterward saw others. I saw also what the
+white people call possums. We ate these little animals when we could
+get them.
+
+The tallest Indian I ever saw was a Southern Cheyenne young woman.
+I first saw her at one of our Omaha dances. I stood beside her, for
+measurement. The top of my head came just above the level of her
+shoulders. She was extremely slender and she stood up straight, not
+stooping. Her name was Slit Eyes. I did not see her father, but I saw
+her mother. The mother was a short woman. This very tall young woman
+died when she was about twenty years old.
+
+After we had been a year on this reservation, many of our people
+began to ask to be taken back to the North. There was no game here,
+we were not allowed to go off the reservation for hunting, and we
+were not given food as it had been promised we should be given. At
+times, some of our young men would violate the orders and would slip
+away from the reservation to get a buffalo or some other animal
+good to eat. Some white people said the Indians were killing their
+cattle. I do not know. I did not do this. I stayed all the time on
+the reservation. But if any Indians did kill the white men cattle
+they did so because they were very hungry and could not find any wild
+game. We ate the beef because it was the best we could get. We always
+liked better the wild game.
+
+There was much sickness among the Northern Cheyennes. To us it was
+a new kind of sickness. Chills and fever and aching of the bones
+dragged down most of us to thin and weak bodies. Our people died,
+died, died, kept following one another out of this world. Finally,
+Chief Little Wolf declared that he for one was going to move back
+North, whether the white people consented or not. Others said they
+would follow him. The agent told them that soldiers would go on their
+trail and would kill them. They were promised more food. They waited
+for it, but it did not come. More people flocked to Little Wolf’s
+side. Dull Knife said he too would go. Late in the summer, more than
+half of the tribe started out. Little Wolf’s last message to the
+agent was:
+
+“The soldiers may kill all of us, but they cannot make us stay in
+this country.”
+
+Soldiers went after them. Other soldiers from other places were sent
+out to head them off. The Cheyennes were hunted from all directions.
+They were found many times, but each time the Cheyennes fought off
+their pursuers and kept on going northward. Many of our people were
+killed, but the most of them got back to their old home country and
+were allowed to stay there.
+
+My father and I considered joining Little Wolf. But we had managed in
+one way and another to keep our family from starving, and we believed
+that after a while the food would be more plentiful. Some of us had
+been sick at times, but none of us yet had come near to death. We
+sympathized fully with our deceived and suffering people, and both of
+us had a high admiration for Little Wolf. But we settled our minds to
+stay here and keep out of trouble.
+
+From the Southern Cheyennes I learned a great deal about General
+Custer’s dealing with them in that country. All of them said he had
+smoked the peace pipe with them at the time they had surrendered to
+him, seven years before he was killed. According to the custom among
+us, this was understood as a promise by him that never again would
+he fight against the Cheyennes. When they learned that he had been
+killed by our people and the Sioux, they considered him as having
+deserved that kind of death, on account of his failure to keep his
+peace pipe oath.
+
+They told us also about the band of Southern Cheyennes who started
+out for the North, to join us, during the summer when we fought the
+great battle. Their medicine man chief was with the band, and he had
+the tribal medicine arrows and its tepee with him. Soldiers got after
+them. The medicine man chief and his wife separated themselves in the
+scattering flight from the soldiers, each of the two taking two of
+the four sacred arrows. After a few days the band all got together
+again, on upper Powder river. But there were so many soldiers in the
+country that they decided to go back to the South.
+
+An assemblage of army officers asked me to tell them about the Custer
+battle. When they sent for me my heart said thump--thump--thump. I
+was afraid they might hang me. I went, but I told only a little. They
+asked for more talk. They assured me their hearts were good toward
+me. They gave me lots of money, about five dollars, I believe. Good!
+My heart quit thumping. I told them all they asked, answering many
+questions. Some things I kept to myself, but all that I told them was
+true.
+
+I got a wife from the Southern Cheyennes. She was my same age, twenty
+years old. All of my people and all of her people appeared to be
+pleased at our marriage. They gave us presents and we set up our own
+lodge. She had been a girl in the Cheyenne camp at the Washita river
+when Custer and his soldiers came there and killed many Cheyennes and
+burned their lodges (November, 1868). Chief Black Pot was one of the
+killed.
+
+The women and children fled, the same as ours had done at the Powder
+river. It was winter, and there was at that time a deep snow for
+that country. Soldiers chased the women and children and killed
+many of them as well as the men. My wife, at that time a girl, was
+barefooted, as others also were. They had been surprised early in the
+morning. She stopped and cut off pieces of buffalo robe to tie about
+her feet, to keep them warm as she ran. They went to a camp of Snake
+Indians (Comanches), farther down the river.
+
+My wife told me she also was with the Cheyennes when they surrendered
+to General Custer (1869) after he had smoked the pipe with their
+chiefs. When they surrendered, some of the chiefs were put into
+prison and had chains put upon their ankles. When I heard all of this
+from my wife, as well from many others of the Southern Cheyennes, it
+seemed the Great Medicine may have directed Custer to his death, as a
+punishment for having broken his promise to the Cheyennes.
+
+When I had been six years in the South, the Northern Cheyennes were
+told they might go back now to their old country. The Little Wolf
+people had been given lands on the Rosebud and Tongue rivers. We
+could go to them or back to the White river, where the agency had
+become known as Pine Ridge.
+
+My father had died while we were in the land of the southern Indians.
+My wife and myself, my mother and her two remaining children all
+agreed we would move. A few of our tribal people decided to remain as
+members of the Southern Cheyenne tribe. We who left them went first
+to Pine Ridge. After not a very long stay there we were located in a
+region I always liked, the Tongue river country in Montana.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[54] The movement to the South began in early May, 1877. Seventy days
+were spent in the journey.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ XIV
+
+_Home Again on Tongue River._
+
+
+Many changes had taken place in the affairs of our tribe when I got
+back among the principal body of them in Montana. Most of the men who
+had surrendered at Fort Keogh went into service there as scouts for
+the soldiers of General Miles, whose Indian name was Bear Coat. They
+had many stories to tell of these experiences. They helped in finding
+and in fighting some bands of our old friends the Sioux, who remained
+hunting through the country after we had gone from it. I did not like
+to hear these stories. I could not help but think these tribesmen of
+mine had done wrong in this kind of warfare. That was the way the
+Pawnees, Crows and Shoshones had done in past times, and we had been
+enemies to them because of their having done so. There came into my
+heart thoughts that possibly the death of my own brother Yellow Hair
+had been brought about by reason of some Cheyenne having guided the
+white men who killed him.
+
+The Nez Perces had come through the country soon after the part of
+our tribe had surrendered at the Elk river fort. The Cheyennes went
+with the soldiers to fight these other Indians. They had a battle
+far to the northward. Most of the Cheyennes were not in special
+danger during this battle, but two of them were said to have been
+very brave. These two were White Wolf and All See Him. White Wolf
+received a bullet wound across his scalp. He was stunned and he fell,
+but he was not killed. A Sioux scout dragged him into safety. The
+white soldiers gave money to the Sioux for his action. This was the
+same White Wolf who shot himself through the left thigh at our battle
+with the soldiers on the Rosebud and had to lie in his bed while his
+companion warriors fought the soldiers of Custer. All See Him had
+been a brave man in the Custer battle. He has another name, John
+Bighead Man. White Wolf also got another name after the Nez Perces
+bullet had hit him. His new name was Shot in the Head.
+
+Two Moons and White Moon were two Cheyenne scouts of that time who
+were not in the Nez Perces fight. They were out with some Cheyennes
+chasing buffalo as the soldier and Indian army traveled in their hunt
+for the Nez Perces. In the course of the chase Two Moons accidentally
+shot White Moon through the body. White Moon was entirely disabled,
+and Two Moons did not feel then like fighting anybody. He helped in
+taking care of White Moon, and he paid the Indian doctor a horse for
+curing him.
+
+People told me all about the journey of Little Wolf’s band from the
+South, with the soldiers after them all along the way. They had come
+to Fort Keogh and had surrendered to General Miles. Many of their men
+also enlisted as scouts. The Cheyennes at this place stayed a part of
+the time about the fort and a part of the time were allowed to live
+on the Rosebud and the Tongue rivers, near the fort. These combined
+Fort Keogh Cheyennes had been the beginning of our Tongue River
+reservation.
+
+The Little Wolf people had some trouble among themselves on their
+way from the southern country. One case was where a man who had
+become angered to craziness about something went at beating his whole
+family. He clubbed every one of them he could reach. All of them
+were put into an insane fright. An adult daughter, screaming and
+struggling to get away from him, stabbed him with her sheathknife.
+He let loose of her, walked away staggering, and soon fell dead. The
+young woman was in great grief because of her having killed her own
+father. The chiefs and all of the people sympathized with her. She
+was not punished. That was the only case I ever knew of a Cheyenne
+woman having killed anyone.
+
+Black Coyote was the cause of one big trouble. He was the same man
+of our little band who was about to shoot when we were giving up our
+guns at the time of our surrender at the White River agency. At a
+camp east of Powder river, during the last part of this flight with
+the Little Wolf people, an old chief said to him:
+
+“Black Coyote, you have been riding during all of the journey. Many
+women are walking. You should let some one of them have your horse.”
+
+“No, it is my horse, and I want to ride,” Black Coyote answered.
+
+“But some of the women are old, and they are very tired,” the chief
+persisted.
+
+“It is my horse, and I intend to ride it,” the young man stubbornly
+responded.
+
+“Black Coyote, you are crazy.”
+
+“No. You are the crazy one.”
+
+The chief flourished his pony whip and lashed Black Coyote. He laid
+on stroke after stroke, many of them. The humiliated man humped his
+body and stubbornly hugged his rifle. He was sitting in front of his
+lodge. Suddenly he jumped up and ran away. A short distance off he
+turned and fired at the chief. The old man fell dead.
+
+Black Coyote ran on out of the camp. Some Cheyennes shot at him, but
+he was not injured. He kept on going, and he never returned. His
+wife at once gathered a few of their belongings and followed out to
+join him. Her two children and an old woman went with her. Whetstone,
+another Cheyenne man, also left the camp and stayed away with the
+outcast people.
+
+The two men went, just after dark one night, to a camp on Powder
+river, where were a few soldiers having a Sergeant with them. The
+Indians said, “How,” and approached the campfire in a friendly way.
+The soldiers were fearful and were on the lookout, but they replied,
+“How.” After the Indians had warmed themselves a little, Black Coyote
+said:
+
+“Give us some bread.”
+
+“How,” the Sergeant answered, and he gave them bread.
+
+As the two walked away, for some reason Black Coyote jerked up his
+rifle and killed the Sergeant. Then they rushed off into the darkness.
+
+The soldiers took the body of their Sergeant and went to Fort Keogh.
+Soldiers and Cheyennes from there went out to search for the bad
+Indians. They captured them and brought them to the fort. The two men
+were put into jail with chains upon their ankles. A soldier chief
+known to the Cheyennes as Little Chief talked to them:
+
+“Did you kill the Sergeant?” he asked them.
+
+“No,” they answered him.
+
+The next day Little Chief again asked them: “Did you kill the
+Sergeant?” Still they said: “No.” After a few days, Black Coyote
+said: “Yes, I killed him.”
+
+Both of the men were hanged. I was told their bodies were not taken
+by the Cheyennes, but were buried by the white people. The hanging
+was at Miles City, I believe.
+
+Black Coyote’s wife, the woman warrior at the Rosebud battle, died
+while he was in jail. Cheyennes made signs to him from a distance,
+through the jail windows, and told him she was sick. Every day he
+asked: “How is my wife today?” She was dying, but to cheer him they
+told him, “She is better now.” When finally somebody told him she was
+dead, he went entirely crazy. He would take no food, and he fought
+every white man who came to him. He had to be beaten and tied first
+when they went to hang him. His relatives said it was her death that
+caused him to say he had killed the Sergeant. They say the Sergeant
+and the soldiers were trying to kill him at the time. But I know that
+Black Coyote was a very excitable man. Bad Indians like him made lots
+of trouble for the whole tribe.
+
+The most sorrowful new condition we found in coming back to our
+Cheyenne country was in the case of Little Wolf himself. Some white
+men about the fort were selling or giving whisky to the Indians. One
+night, Little Wolf got a bottle of whisky and right away he drank
+all of it. He went into the fort trader’s store and leaned forward
+upon the counter. He was quiet, but he was dizzy and stumbling here
+and there. The trader said: “Little Wolf, you had better go to your
+lodge.” But he said: “No, I want to stay here.”
+
+Some Cheyenne men and women were playing cards at a table in the
+store. Famished Elk, a young man Sergeant of the scouts, was with
+them. He talked to Little Wolf. But the old chief paid no attention
+to his talk. Famished Elk took hold of Little Wolf’s arm and said:
+“Come, I will help you to get to your lodge.” He spoke and acted
+respectfully, but Little Wolf was angered because of the taking hold
+of him. He pulled himself away. His eyes blazed like fire. He stood a
+moment looking at the young man. Then he said:
+
+“I will kill you.”
+
+He staggered on alone out from the store. Famished Elk returned to
+sit in the card game. Nobody was expecting any further trouble. But
+not long afterward the door was opened and Little Wolf stumbled
+into the room. He straightened himself, leveled a rifle and fired.
+Famished Elk sank down dead upon the floor.
+
+The old chief went back to his lodge and told his two wives what he
+had done. “We must go,” he added. The three of them went out into the
+darkness of the night. Soldiers and Cheyennes searched for them. They
+searched during the next day and the next. The missing man and his
+two wives appeared in Miles City and sat themselves down at a place
+in plain view of the people there. A Captain and some soldiers went
+to him. This Captain we knew as Little Chief. He told Little Wolf
+what it was said he had done. He further told him:
+
+“You are no more chief of the Cheyennes.”
+
+“That is true and just,” Little Wolf agreed.
+
+All of the Cheyennes said: “How. It is right. Little Wolf shall be
+not any more a chief among us.” But their hearts were sad, not angry,
+when they said this. He was not punished in any other way. But he
+further punished himself. Before he and his wives had left their
+lodge he smashed into pieces his medicine pipe. Our old tribal laws
+required this. It was allowable for him afterward to smoke alone
+any small and short-stemmed pipe, such as might be made from a deer
+leg bone. But he did not do this. He denied himself all smoking. He
+never made any offer even to sit in the company of other Cheyennes
+smoking together. White men sometimes offered him cigarettes, but
+he always refused them. After a time he learned to chew tobacco, a
+habit never followed by the old-time Cheyennes. It seemed he did this
+deliberately, for self-humiliation. He never tried to intrude himself
+into any tribal public affairs. The people remembered his great
+services in past times. But nobody consulted him on tribal matters in
+present times. Truly, in every way he never more was chief among the
+Cheyennes.
+
+Some Cheyennes who had run away or who could not be found, when
+we had been told we must go to the South, joined other tribes. Of
+these, some stayed away, others finally came back to us. Two of them
+came back to us on Tongue river. One was Joseph Tall White Man. He
+had dodged from the southern movement by escaping and joining the
+Blackfeet Sioux. The other was Little Crow. He had joined some tribe
+of the Sioux.
+
+When I was thirty-one years old (1889) I enlisted with other
+Cheyennes to form a new band of scouts for the soldiers at Fort
+Keogh. For a long time we did not do much except to drill and work at
+getting out logs from the timber and building houses for ourselves.
+The soldier officers bought horses for us to ride. All of the new
+horses were wild. We had to break them. I got bucked off at times.
+But finally, all of us had horses that would not buck.
+
+I learned to drink whisky at Fort Keogh. The trader at the fort
+sold whisky and beer to the soldiers, but he was not allowed to
+sell anything of this kind to the Indians. That made only a little
+difference. White men not soldiers would get whisky for us whenever
+we had money to give to them. They may have bought it at the fort
+trader’s store or it may have come from Miles City. I spent most
+of my scout pay for whisky. I never got into any trouble for being
+drunk, but sometimes an Indian did get into trouble.
+
+Tall Bull and some other scouts got drunk and went at night to where
+some soldiers were sleeping. The Cheyennes pointed their six-shooters
+at the soldiers and said: “Give us blankets.” The soldiers were
+scared, so blankets were given the Indians. A Sergeant went to tell
+the officers. A Lieutenant officer came back with him. But the
+Lieutenant was as drunk as were the Indians. He went away without
+doing anything about the matter.
+
+We had plenty to eat at the fort. A soldier named Jules Chaudel was
+the cook for our thirty Cheyennes. A part of my work was to haul
+water in barrels for him. I never got so drunk that I forgot to keep
+the barrels filled. He often gave me meat when it was not time for
+the Indians to eat.
+
+All of the scouts went for making war the next year after I enlisted.
+We were taken to Pine Ridge reservation. We were told the Sioux were
+going to fight against the Cheyennes in that country, so we were
+willing to help our own people. Our scouts were led by an officer we
+knew as Big Red Nose.[55] Willis Rowland, the half-Cheyenne, was our
+Sergeant. Soldiers from some other fort came to Fort Keogh and went
+with us to Pine Ridge.
+
+When we got to Pine Ridge we learned that it was mostly the other
+Sioux tribes, not the Ogallalas, who were wanting to fight against
+the white people. The Cheyennes living there did not want any
+trouble, so the bad Sioux were angered also at the Cheyennes. Some
+Ogallalas joined the bad Indians. Our Cheyenne relatives had their
+lodges torn down and burned. Big Foot was the principal chief of the
+Sioux making the trouble. We knew him, and we were sorry at having
+to fight against him, but we were willing to be on the side of the
+whites and our own Cheyennes.
+
+We Cheyenne scouts did not get into any battle. At one time we were
+all dressed and ready, but the officers made us stop behind a hill
+while the soldiers went on and killed many Sioux at a camp on a
+little valley just over the hill. A Sioux started that fight by
+killing an officer who was taking all guns from them. The soldiers
+then began to shoot, and many women and children as well as men were
+killed. This trouble was on Wounded Knee creek. At the time of our
+advance up the hill I was wearing a warbonnet for the first time at
+any battle.
+
+Big Red Nose, our officer, was killed by a Sioux before this fight.
+White Moon and Rock Roads, two of our scouts, were out riding
+somewhere with him. They saw four or five Sioux coming on horseback.
+The Sioux were riding slowly, and it appeared they did not intend any
+harm. But while Big Red Nose had his head turned in another direction
+one of the Sioux fired his rifle. The bullet went through the head of
+the officer, from back to front, and he fell dead from his horse. The
+two Cheyennes whipped their horses and got away. The Sioux scalped
+Big Red Nose and took all of his clothing.
+
+As the Wounded Knee fight was going on, the Sioux fled in all
+directions. The soldier officer now leading us was White Hat. He sent
+me out to a little hilltop to watch where the people running away
+might go. I saw one Sioux man ride to a big house. He limped when
+he got off and walked into the house. I told White Hat about him.
+After a while he got some soldiers, and all of us went to the place.
+From a distance, I called out in Sioux language for all people in
+the house to come out and surrender. Nobody came out. We went close
+to the door. I called to ask how many people were in there. A man’s
+voice answered me that there were three of them. I told him they must
+come out, but he did not answer me. White Hat knocked on the door.
+He knocked a second time and a third time. Then he and the soldiers
+smashed the door and went into the house. I followed them.
+
+A Sioux man was lying on a floor bed. A boy was lying on another
+floor bed. A woman was sitting beside the boy. The man had a sheet
+covering all of him but his head and neck. I did not know what else
+might be under the sheet, but I said:
+
+“You must give up your gun. You will be treated kindly.”
+
+He at once drew a rifle out from under the sheet and handed it to
+me. We learned that he had bullet holes through both legs, but no
+bones were broken. The boy had been shot through the left arm. The
+woman was not injured. The soldiers got a wagon and took them to the
+agency. A soldier doctor there took care of them.
+
+The troublesome Sioux were gathered out in what the Indians knew as
+the Bad Lands. It was a very rough country having no trees and not
+much grass. The Cheyennes went out with soldiers and camped between
+the agency and that country. We kept watching to try to find out how
+many were there and how many were going there or coming back to the
+reservation. It was winter, and the wind blows hard there much of the
+time. We had some cold rides.
+
+One night our officer gave me a writing on paper and told me to
+take it to the agency. He had the interpreter explain to me which
+officer there was to receive it. The air was full of whirling snow.
+The gusts of wind appeared to come from everywhere except behind me.
+I wrapped my blanket tightly about me and kept my body humped up as
+my horse moved along the trail. At first I was not afraid, as it
+seemed the night was too stormy for any Sioux to be traveling. Then
+I began thinking that perhaps the Sioux might suppose the same thing
+about the Cheyennes and the soldiers, and so there might be many of
+them along the way. I was startled and my heart was jumping at every
+little doubtful sight or noise. But I could not do anything but keep
+on going. I tried to make myself feel better by thinking of what a
+good sleep I should have after so hard a ride.
+
+At the agency I found the officer and gave to him the paper. Then I
+lay down on the floor behind his stove and went to sleep. Pretty
+soon the interpreter awakened me. The officer wanted me. He said:
+“You are a good scout. I want you now to take a message for me back
+to your officer.” I was yet half asleep. But right away I became all
+awake again and got myself ready to go. I was as much afraid on the
+way back as I had been in coming. The snow and the wind whirling
+it were the same. I did not freeze, though, and I got to our camp
+and gave this paper to my officer. He said: “Good. Now you may go
+and sleep.” It was almost morning. I slept far into the day. Nobody
+awakened me this time.
+
+All of the scouts and Long Yellow Neck, the officer now with us,
+were out one night after some Sioux who had been seen. The Cheyennes
+were afraid. We thought there might be many more Sioux not seen. I
+went off a little distance aside from the others, to look and listen
+where there was more quietude. I saw the flash of a match. I went
+cautiously in that direction. I got down into a deep gulch. I could
+hear Sioux voices talking above me. My heart seemed to be jumping all
+around in my breast. I kept still until the sound of the voices went
+beyond my hearing. I could not see anybody, but the sounds told me
+the direction the Sioux were traveling. I went back to the band and
+told of what had occurred. All of us then followed a trail along the
+rim of the gulch. It led us to two lodges. We surrounded them and
+then let them know we were there. They did not fight us. We captured
+ten Sioux. We made them give us their guns. I was one of ten scouts
+appointed to take them to the agency.
+
+Some Ogallalas were with the Cheyennes as scouts. All together our
+band must have numbered sixty or more. I do not know exactly how many
+there were of either Cheyennes or Ogallalas, but I know there were
+more of the Cheyennes. Three Cheyennes and three Ogallalas were sent
+out one night to watch the trails. I was one of the three Cheyennes.
+Long Yellow Neck said: “I want you to find out how many bad Indians
+are going out from the reservation.”
+
+The six of us got upon our horses and rode away together into the
+night storm. One Ogallala and I separated off and dismounted, to look
+and listen. We watched particularly for match lighting, as any Indian
+who had tobacco was likely to stop long enough to light a match for
+smoking. After a little while, we saw what we were looking for. We
+moved quickly, but carefully, toward where we had seen the flash. We
+heard voices.
+
+“Yes, they are Sioux,” we whispered in agreement.
+
+We rejoined our companions and told them. Everybody said we ought
+to go back and tell the officer. All of us went then to our camp.
+An Ogallala knocked on the post at our officer’s tent. “Come in,”
+he said. All of us went into the warm shelter. Long Yellow Neck was
+writing. He put aside his paper and called the interpreter. We told
+what we had seen.
+
+“How many of them were there?” the officer asked one of the Ogallalas.
+
+“I don’t know,” the Indian replied.
+
+“You are foolish,” the officer told him.
+
+He asked others. Each one said: “I don’t know.” I said the same. But
+we explained that it was too dark to see anybody, that only the flash
+of the match had been seen and the voices had been heard. The officer
+said:
+
+“Good. Now, all of you go out again. If you see any Sioux, count
+them.”
+
+We found a fresh trail of horses going toward the Bad Lands. By a
+creek we saw that different campings had been made. Many carcasses of
+cattle were there. They were white men cattle that had been stolen
+and butchered by the Sioux.
+
+We three Cheyennes separated off from the three Ogallalas. The two
+parties scouted at a little distance from each other. After our three
+had traveled only a short while, I left my horse to be held by one
+of the others while I crept to the top of a bluff for looking and
+listening. A commonly traveled trail followed along past this bluff.
+Pretty soon I heard horses coming. I hugged close to the ground
+behind a rock. Four Sioux men rode past me toward the Bad Lands. They
+were almost close enough to reach out and strike me. I kept as still
+as the rock, except for my shivering from fright. When they were gone
+far enough I slid back a little distance and then jumped up and ran
+to my two companions. We found the three Ogallalas. They also had
+seen the four men. All six of us hurried back to our camp. The others
+appointed me to do the talking for our report. I told of how I had
+hidden behind the rock and counted them as they had passed by me.
+“There were four of them,” I said. Long Yellow Neck wrote my name on
+a piece of paper. Then he said:
+
+“Good. All of you may go now and sleep.”
+
+I believe I slept, but I am not sure whether I was sleeping and
+dreaming or was only lying there and thinking. I kept my cartridge
+belt buckled on me and I hugged my rifle to my body. It seemed that
+angry Sioux Indians were all about me. They were searching for me, to
+kill me. Some of them were striking at me with war clubs and slashing
+at me with knives. I heard calling of my name: “Wooden Leg.” I jumped
+up and stood there wide awake.
+
+Long Yellow Neck and a soldier with him were in our tent. The
+soldier was reading off our names from a paper he had in his hands.
+
+“The same six are to go and scout again,” he said.
+
+Another Cheyenne was added to us. The seven of us got our horses. We
+were about to go when an Ogallala rode into camp. He had come from
+the agency. We wondered what was his errand. We waited to find out.
+He went to Long Yellow Neck’s tent. Pretty soon everybody was saying:
+
+“All of the scouts and soldiers go back to Pine Ridge.”
+
+I do not know how the others felt, but my own heart fluttered in
+pleasure. I did not want then to fight any Sioux. We were only a
+short time in getting all of the camp ready to move. When we were
+about to start on our way, Long Yellow Neck said: “Now, I want
+someone to stay behind and watch, to see if any of the Sioux are
+following us.” He asked if I would stay. I said, “No, I do not want
+to stay behind.” He asked Bad Horses, Foolish Man, White Bird, Sweet
+Grass and others. Some Ogallalas were asked. Everybody asked said,
+“No.” While this was going on, three of the Ogallalas slipped away
+afoot, leaving their three horses. Long Yellow Neck told us he had
+thought all of us were brave men, but he had learned now that we were
+not brave. Finally I said: “I will stay behind and watch.” Little
+Thunder, an Ogallala, then said he would stay with me.
+
+We two caught the three horses left by the Ogallalas who had run away
+afoot. Little Thunder said: “I am hungry.” I too was hungry, but
+we had no food. We drove the three horses ahead of us and hurried
+forward. Soon we caught up with the scouts and soldiers. “Give us
+something to eat,” we asked. A soldier took a big box of crackers
+from a pack mule and gave it to us. He gave us also plenty of bread.
+We ate until we were full up, and then we put what was left upon one
+of the three horses we had been driving. We led the three now and
+followed on far behind the other people.
+
+The three Ogallalas afoot came to us. They asked us for bread and
+crackers. “If you will stay with us we will give you some,” we told
+them. They agreed. We gave them all they wanted. We let them have
+their horses. They rode with us all of the remainder of the way to
+the agency, helping us in watching back to see if any Sioux were
+following. We kept ourselves far behind. None of us saw any of the
+bad Indians anywhere along the way. When we rode into the agency
+camp, all of the soldiers and scouts were already there. We told Long
+Yellow Neck that we had not seen any Sioux following us. He said:
+
+“Good. Now you may sleep.”
+
+During the time we were scouting for the soldiers at Pine Ridge I got
+a Sioux head dress. It was a cap of some kind of skin having at its
+front a buffalo horn. I got it while the soldiers and scouts were
+camped on lower Wounded Knee creek. I was wearing it as I rode into
+camp. A soldier Sergeant said to me: “I wish you would give that to
+me.” “What would you give to me?” I asked him. “Five dollars,” he
+said. He gave me the five dollars and I gave him the buffalo horn
+head dress.
+
+About four hundred Cheyennes came with us when we left Pine Ridge to
+return to Fort Keogh. These were people of ours who had fled from the
+South with Little Wolf and Dull Knife, and who had been staying since
+then among the Ogallalas on the Pine Ridge reservation. But now they
+were allowed to come and join the main body of Cheyennes in Montana.
+A few Cheyennes still remained with the Ogallalas, but this movement
+of the big band brought together what was considered to be the entire
+Northern Cheyenne tribe. An officer known to us as Small Chief[56]
+brought us back.
+
+Cheyenne visitors from the Rosebud and Tongue river lands were camped
+at all times near Fort Keogh. We scouts who had families kept lodges
+for them among the visiting campers. Relatives and friends were
+shifting constantly to or from the fort, Miles City and our Cheyenne
+country seventy miles south of us. I had my food with the other
+scouts, from the soldier supplies and at our eating room at the fort.
+But I spent much of my time at the home lodge. One day I saw the old
+man Little Wolf at the camp. I said to my wife:
+
+“I see Little Wolf. He is my relative. One of his wives is a sister
+of my father. I think I ought to invite him to eat at our lodge.”
+
+“I am glad to hear you say that,” she answered me. “Tell him to come
+now.” Right away she began to prepare bread and meat and coffee.
+
+When I brought Little Wolf I found he was partly drunk. He fumbled
+the food as he sat and ate. He ate freely, as though he were very
+hungry. He kept quiet and kept looking downward during all of the
+time. When he was done eating, I told him of my sympathy with him in
+his great trouble. He then told me all about the affair. “I loved the
+young man and all of his people,” he said. “I was crazy when I shot
+him.” At this time of conversation, Little Wolf was about seventy
+years old.
+
+This man gave away all of his horses after he had been put out of
+his position as our greatest chief. After that, all of his traveling
+was done afoot. Sometimes he went alone, sometimes one or both of
+his wives accompanied him. They took along whatever packs they could
+carry, and they slept in temporary shelters or with no shelter. He
+went at times to visit the Crows. He visited also the Arapahoes, in
+Wyoming, walking two hundred miles or more and back again. He died in
+1904, at the age of eighty-three years. His wives and close friends
+stood his dead body upright on a high hill overlooking the Rosebud
+valley, where many Cheyennes had their reservation homes. A great
+heap of stones was built up to enclose him thus standing upright.
+Twenty-four years later, his bones were brought to the agency
+cemetery and put into a grave there. Bird,[57] the old-time Indian
+story white man who lives in New York, had a stone put at the head of
+this agency grave.
+
+Even the nearest relatives of Famished Elk never kept bad hearts
+against Little Wolf. At different times I have heard talk of him from
+Bald Eagle, a brother of the young man killed. Bald Eagle said:
+
+“Little Wolf did not kill my brother. It was the white man whisky
+that did it.”
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[55] Lieutenant Casey.
+
+[56] Lieutenant McEniney.
+
+[57] Dr. George Bird Grinnell, the author.
+
+
+
+
+ XV
+
+_A Tamed Old Man._
+
+
+Thirty years after the great battle against Custer, there was a
+gathering of Indians and white people at the Little Bighorn. Besides
+a few of our people, there were Crows, Sioux, Arapahoes, Shoshones,
+Nez Perces, Kiowas, Piegans, Gros Ventres and Paiutes, these last
+known to us as Fish-Eaters.
+
+All Cheyennes who had fought in the battle were asked to come and
+join the other Indians and the white people in a peace feast. The
+place is only two short days of wagon traveling from our Lame Deer
+agency. But only a few Cheyennes would go there for the gathering.
+Among us there was much of such talk as: “Soldiers will be there.
+Seeing us might anger them so much as to make them want to kill
+us.”[58] Seven of us decided to go. These were the younger Chief
+Little Wolf, White Elk, Bobtail Horse, Two Moons, Buffalo Calf,
+myself Wooden Leg, and Brave Bear, a Southern Cheyenne. Four of the
+seven men took along their wives and their lodges.
+
+In a big council lodge of the Crows a white man medicine doctor[59]
+asked different ones to tell something of the great battle. He said
+he had heard the white people say that Two Moons was a great warrior
+there, and he asked Two Moons to make a speech. This Cheyenne stood
+up and talked a long time. He said he had been the big chief of all
+the Cheyennes during the fight. He filled the ears of his hearers
+with lots of other lies, while the rest of us laughed among ourselves
+about what he was saying. Other Cheyennes and Sioux were asked to get
+up and talk, but none of them would do so.
+
+The medicine doctor looked at my cousin, the younger Chief Little
+Wolf, and asked him:
+
+“Were you at the Custer battle?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Were you in the first fight above the camps?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Who took the soldier horses?”
+
+“The Sioux took most of them. The Cheyennes got a few. There were
+many Sioux and only a few Cheyennes in the fight.”
+
+“Who took the soldier guns?”
+
+“The same--the Sioux got many, the Cheyennes got a few.”
+
+“Did you see Custer, either before or after he was killed?”
+
+“I do not know. Nobody knew anything about Custer.”
+
+“Our soldiers afterward could not find the bodies of all the white
+men killed. What became of them?”
+
+“I do not know.”
+
+“Were any of them taken away and hidden?”
+
+“I think not, but I do not know.”
+
+“Were any of them, either dead or alive, taken to the camps?”
+
+“I think not. I never heard of any taken there.”
+
+“Tell me all about what you saw and what you did at the battle.”
+
+But Little Wolf would not tell. I said to him: “Go on, tell the
+truth, but do not talk like Two Moons did.” He was afraid, though.
+There were many white people and soldiers all around us, and he
+feared they might become angry.
+
+White Elk, Bobtail Horse, Two Moons, Brave Bear, Buffalo Calf and the
+Sioux men all answered the same kind of questions in the same way.
+But none of them except Two Moons would say anything further about
+the fight. Bobtail Horse was either nervous or scared, so he got
+tangled a little. The doctor asked him the same kind of questions.
+Then he asked:
+
+“How old are you?”
+
+Bobtail Horse sat there as though he did not understand what was
+being asked. Pretty soon he began to count on his fingers. He counted
+them over and over. Finally he said: “I do not know.” All of us knew
+exactly one another’s age, but none of us interfered to help him
+in answering the question. The doctor did not ask him any further
+questions.
+
+In my turn at the talking I was asked the same kind of questions:
+
+“Wooden Leg, were you in the Custer battle?”
+
+“Yes, I was there.”
+
+“Were you in the first fight up above the camps?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Good. How old were you at that time?”
+
+“Eighteen winters.”
+
+“How old are you now?”
+
+“Forty-eight.”
+
+“Good. Tell me where you were during all of the time. Tell me what
+you saw and what you did.”
+
+I told him. It happened I was the only Indian at this gathering who
+had been in the first fight with what the white people call the
+Reno soldiers. It began with my brother and I being awakened by the
+shooting and our running to get our horses. I followed my own doings
+up the valley and into the chase after the soldiers through the river
+and up the hill. I showed how I had taken a rifle from a soldier. I
+described the killing of the Corn Indian and my taking his gun. The
+doctor wrote on a piece of paper as I talked. My cousin Little Wolf
+interrupted me: “You tell too much. Stop talking.”
+
+But I did not stop. It appeared none of the soldiers nor other white
+people listening to me were angry. This medicine doctor looked to
+me like a good man, one who understood that we had killed soldiers
+who had come to kill us. I described to him the way I had helped
+to kill the soldier getting water at the river. I told about the
+Indians surrounding the Custer soldiers on the long ridge and about
+many things that happened there. The doctor still was writing on the
+paper. He broke in with some questions and I answered each one as
+straight as I knew how to answer it. Little Wolf said to me: “Tell
+him Custer killed himself, and see if he becomes angry.” But I did
+not say anything about that. Other Indians, at other times, had tried
+to tell of the soldiers killing themselves, but the white people
+listening always became angry and said the Indians were liars, so I
+thought it best to keep quiet. Other questions came:
+
+“Did you see Custer?”
+
+“I suppose I did, but I do not know. I think that no Indians there
+knew anything about him being with the soldiers.”
+
+“Did you see soldiers having special marks on the shoulders of their
+coats?”
+
+“Yes, I noticed some of them.”
+
+“Did you know they were chiefs among the soldiers?”
+
+“I did not know then, but I know now.”
+
+“How many soldiers did you see having the markings on the shoulders?”
+
+“I do not know. When we were fighting them they all looked alike to
+us, the same as a herd of buffalo.”
+
+“How many Indians were killed?”
+
+I told him the number of dead Cheyennes, Uncpapas and others.
+
+“Good,” he said, and he wrote the numbers on his paper.
+
+The Cheyennes and some other Indians went with a few soldiers to Fort
+Custer, not far from the place where had been the great battle. The
+soldier officers at the fort shook hands with all of us. We gathered
+together, and some friendly speeches were made by officers and by
+Indians. All I said there was: “A long time ago we were enemies.
+Today we are friends.” The medicine doctor rode beside me as we were
+going to and from the fort. We made sign-talk together along the way.
+I showed him the only place where the Cheyenne tribe ever camped west
+of the Bighorn river. From the top of the Fort Custer hill we could
+see the place, just across from the mouth of the Little Bighorn.
+
+Many pictures were made of Cheyennes, Sioux, Nez Perces and Crows.
+Some were made on the valley and by the river where had been the
+first fight, others were made on the battle ridge and at its northern
+side. Pictures were made at night when the Indians were dancing. The
+bright flashes scared some of the Indians, but soon it was learned
+what was being done.
+
+Wagons came loaded with rations. We were given plenty of beef, bacon,
+bread, crackers, coffee, sugar, meat in cans, and other food. We were
+on the valley by the river, where had been the fight with the Reno
+soldiers. A soldier officer rode about, saying:
+
+“All Indians who were in the Custer battle get rations. No others are
+to be given any food.”
+
+But when the distribution began, lots of Crows came running. They
+crowded forward saying:
+
+“Oh, meat! Give some to us.”
+
+Their actions made me angry. I let loose my tongue:
+
+“You--Crows--you are like children. All Crows are babies. You are not
+brave. You never helped us to fight against the white people. You
+helped them in fighting against us. You were afraid, so you joined
+yourselves to the soldiers. You are not Indians.”
+
+Bobtail Horse said to me: “Ssh, keep your temper.” My cousin Little
+Wolf said: “You are doing right. Tell them what we think of them.”
+The Crows stopped asking for the rations. All of them went back and
+kept quiet.
+
+Besides the rations given to us every day, each of us was paid three
+dollars at the end of each day, for four days. When the gathering
+ended and we were getting ready to go back to our reservation, we
+were given plenty of extra food to eat along the way. Some of it was
+eaten by ourselves and our friends after we arrived home.
+
+Another great gathering of whites and Indians assembled there fifty
+years after the battle. All of the Cheyennes, particularly the men
+who had been in the battle, were invited to go. Many lodges of our
+people traveled over the divide to that place and camped there, but
+I stayed at my home. Two times I was called to our Ashland district
+telephone for a talk from the agency. “We want you to go to the
+great peace celebration,” I was told. At each time of this talking
+I made reply: “I will think about it.” The more I thought about it,
+the more I felt like staying away. The battlefield is on the present
+Crow Indian reservation. I do not want to go upon their lands. I
+have made up my mind never again to go to any place where I might be
+called upon to shake hands with a Crow.
+
+The younger Chief Little Wolf, my cousin, had the boyhood name Thorny
+Tree. His mother was a sister of my father and of the older Little
+Wolf’s first wife. The young nephew Thorny Tree showed special
+bravery at a battle with the Shoshones. The old chief was so pleased
+at this manly conduct of his wife’s relative that he told the young
+warrior:
+
+“I give you my name. From this day on you shall be Little Wolf.”
+
+This younger man stayed with the Cheyennes at the Pine Ridge
+reservation, after the peaceful times came. Among them he was made a
+tribal chief. When the band of them were moved to our Tongue River
+reservation he was made a chief of the entire tribe. A few years
+later he was accepted as the principal old man chief. He told me that
+during the years he was living at Pine Ridge he often was mistaken
+for the same Little Wolf who led the Cheyennes in their flight from
+the South. In fact, he was with that band of fleeing Cheyennes, but
+he joined that group of them who went to Pine Ridge. The older Little
+Wolf and his last followers came to Powder river and on to Fort
+Keogh. The old chief never was at Pine Ridge after that time.
+
+My cousin told me that white people often embarrassed him also in
+supposing him to have been famed as Chief Little Wolf at the Custer
+battle. In this case, the older man was not in the fight, he and a
+small band of Cheyennes having followed on the trail of the soldiers
+and having arrived at the camps after the white men all had been
+killed. The younger Little Wolf was already there with the great
+tribal assemblage. The family lodge of his father, Big Left Hand, was
+near to my own father’s family lodge. This last Chief Little Wolf, my
+cousin, died in 1927, at the age of 76 years.
+
+I visited the Arapahoes and the Shoshones, in Wyoming, several years
+ago. Eight Cheyenne men, some of us with our wives and our tepees
+went on this trip. I had a Custer gun, borrowed from a Cheyenne
+who kept it in hiding. We saw a big band of elk in a valley of the
+Bighorn mountains. I was chosen to lead the hunters in getting
+ourselves close to them. I said: “Yes, I will lead, but you others
+must stay back until I tell you it is time for all to show themselves
+and begin to shoot.” As we got well toward the elk band they suddenly
+ran away into a forest. I soon learned that one of our men had pushed
+on ahead and frightened them. “You are foolish,” was all I could say
+to him. We saw trails of other elk, plenty of them, but we did not
+see any others of the elk themselves.
+
+High up on the top of a rocky bluff we saw a bighorn, what the white
+people call a mountain sheep. Different ones of us shot at it and
+missed it. Another man and I then shot, at the same moment. The
+animal tumbled down the mountain. When we got to it we found that
+both of our bullets had struck the front part of its body. We enjoyed
+that meat. It was the first bighorn meat I had eaten for several
+years.
+
+Nine sleeps we made on our way to the reservation where we were
+going. We stopped with the Arapahoes, good friends of the Cheyennes
+all during the old times. There had been friendly intermarriages
+between our people and theirs. There was much of inquiring about
+Arapahoes living among us on our reservation. These people made gifts
+to us. They could not give much, because they were as poor as the
+Cheyennes.
+
+We moved camp for a visit with the Shoshones. In the old times they
+and the Cheyennes were constantly on terms of enmity. But now they
+received us cordially. From all sides came, “How,” “How,” “How.”
+An old chief of theirs went riding among them and calling out:
+“Everybody come and shake hands with our guests, the Cheyennes. Let
+them know we are glad they came to visit us.”
+
+Men, women, old people, boys, girls, all moved along past our group
+and greeted us with handshakes. They brought food. There were big
+piles of all kinds of things the Indians like to eat. After a while,
+they began to bring horses. One after another they kept giving these
+to us. Every Cheyenne among us had more horses than he could lead,
+when we parted from the Shoshones. I had nine of them presented to
+me. When we got back among our own people at home we were the richest
+Indians in our tribe. We had horses to give away to our friends. All
+of the Cheyennes agreed that the Shoshones have good hearts, that
+they are a good people.
+
+An Arickaree Indian visited me at my place on Tongue river a few
+years ago. We talked of the Custer battle. He told me one of their
+chiefs had been killed there. He described him. The special features
+of his war clothing were a fine buckskin shirt and a necklace made of
+bear claws. I described to him the Arickaree I had helped to kill.
+This one had on a buckskin shirt. An eagle feather stood up from his
+back hair. A red string tied his hair together behind. If he had
+a bear-claw necklace I did not see it. I did not see this kind of
+necklace on any of the three Arickarees I saw dead. It may be one of
+the other two had one and it had been taken from him before I saw the
+dead body.
+
+I went to Washington when I was fifty-five years old. Little Wolf,
+Two Moons and Black Wolf were old men with me as delegates to speak
+for our tribe. Three younger men who could talk the white man
+language went with us. They were Willis Rowland, Ben Shoulderblade
+and Milton Little White Man. At a meeting with white men, there were
+some speeches made. Two Moons did most of the talking for us. The
+rest of us did not care to make any long talks. Two Moons told these
+people he was a big chief leading all of the Cheyennes at the Custer
+battle. None of us said anything in dispute of him at the meeting,
+but when we got away to ourselves Black Wolf said to him: “You are
+the biggest liar in the whole Cheyenne tribe.” Two Moons laughed and
+replied: “I think it is not wrong to tell lies to white people.”
+
+The same white man medicine doctor who had been at the gathering by
+the Little Bighorn was in Washington. He was good to us, helping us
+to see the strange sights in the big city. He could make good signs,
+so he and I talked much together. We went up to the top of a very
+tall stone he said was Washington’s monument. We rode up to the top
+and walked a long and winding stairway to the bottom.
+
+[Illustration: Photo by Hogan
+
+WOODEN LEG, HIS WIFE AND THEIR DAUGHTER, IN 1914]
+
+A big ship took us Cheyennes out upon the great water. All of us
+became sick and vomited. “It is the same as whisky,” we said to each
+other. The ship took us to New York. There we visited our friend
+Bird, the old-time Indian story white man. The white man medicine
+doctor was traveling with us. He went with us on to Philadelphia,
+where we visited the biggest trader store I ever saw. In a theater
+in this city we sat upon a platform before a great crowd of white
+people. I was asked to make a speech. I talked, but only for a short
+time. One of our interpreters repeated to them what I said. This
+visit to the great cities was at some time during the spring (1913),
+in March or April, I believe.
+
+I lied to one man in New York. He asked me many questions. For a
+while I answered them as best I could. But it began to appear he was
+trying to show the old-time Indians as being low and mean people. I
+had told him a great deal about the fighting, about the taking of
+horses and saddles and guns, about other matters of this kind. I
+found I did not like him, so I decided to end our talk.
+
+“What time of day was it when all of the Custer soldiers had been
+killed?” he asked me.
+
+“I don’t know,” I answered him.
+
+“Did the Indians keep the money they took from the soldiers?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+“Did you get any of it?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+After these answers he quit talking to me and went away.
+
+The medicine doctor friend came several years afterward from
+Washington to our Lame Deer agency. I saw and talked with him here. I
+still keep a big flag he gave to me. I liked him. He was a good man,
+one having a heart good toward Indians.
+
+The guns taken by Cheyennes from the Custer soldiers were given up or
+had been thrown away by those of our people who surrendered at the
+White River agency. I think that all of the Sioux also had to give
+their guns of all kinds to the soldiers chiefs at their reservations.
+But at Fort Keogh General Miles was good to the Cheyennes. He allowed
+them to keep their guns. I suppose that many Indians threw away their
+Custer guns, for fear of being found out and punished for having
+killed those soldiers. But the Fort Keogh Cheyennes kept theirs
+hidden. A few of these have been buried with the owners who died. But
+even to this day, I know of several of the Custer rifle guns hidden
+among the people on our reservation. White Elk and Spotted Wolf used
+to have Custer soldier six-shooters. These two men are dead. I do
+not know what became of their six-shooters. The Cheyennes also have
+yet some of the Custer soldier ammunition belts and saddle-bags. They
+do not like to tell of having these captured war things, because
+there are some white people who become angry when they talk of the
+old times of warfare between the whites and the Indians.[60]
+
+I have yet four of the ten arrows I made from the cattle neckyoke
+picked up at the town when we were on our way to the South. For
+keeping my comb and paints I have a flat pouch made from a bootleg.
+The boots I got at the White River agency the next day after my
+hunting party went there to surrender. Another young man and I were
+walking in the neighborhood of the soldier tents there. I found a
+pair of soldier boots among some other articles also cast aside by
+the white men. The soles were worn, but the tops were good. I knew
+how to make use of them. I cut off the worn bottom parts and kept
+the tops. My mother sewed one of them into the pouch. I know of some
+Cheyennes who still have such carriers made from bootlegs of Custer
+soldiers.
+
+I lost the medicine pipe given to me by the Ogallala Sioux man at
+the White River agency. That was my second medicine pipe. The third
+one came to me when I was somewhere past forty years old. An Uncpapa
+Sioux visiting me at my place gave it to me. I still have it. It
+is made of the red stone found in their part of the country. After
+he had given to me this pipe I went on a journey into the Bighorn
+mountains. There I got some blue stone of the kind used for making
+Indian pipes. I made two of them. I now have three pipes, one red one
+and two blue ones. I have kept all three of them for several years,
+and I do not expect to sell any of them.
+
+I was baptized by the priest at the Tongue river mission when I was
+almost fifty years old. My wife and our two daughters were baptized
+too. I think the white people pray to the same Great Medicine we do
+in our old Cheyenne way. I do not go often to the church, but I go
+sometimes. I think the white church people are good, but I do not
+believe all of the stories they tell about what happened a long time
+ago. The way they tell us, all of the good people in the old times
+were white people. I am glad to have the white man churches among
+us, but I feel more satisfied when I make my prayers in the way I
+was taught to make them. My heart is much more contented when I sit
+alone with my medicine pipe and talk with the Great Medicine about
+whatever may be troubling me.
+
+Our old ways of worship were kept up through several years after
+we came to this reservation. Our Great Medicine dances and other
+old ceremonies were carried out as we had them in the days when we
+traveled over the whole hunting region. Then the government compelled
+us to quit them. I think this was not right. Lately, though, the
+conditions have changed. We were allowed to have our Great Medicine
+dance in 1927, again in 1928 and in 1929.
+
+We had good medicine men in the old times. It may be they did not
+know as much about sickness as the white men doctors know, but our
+doctors knew more about Indians and how to talk to them. Our people
+then did not die young so much as they do now. In present times our
+Indian doctors are put into jail if they make medicine for our sick
+people. Whoever of us may become sick or injured must have the agency
+white man doctor or none at all. But he can not always come, and
+there are some who do not like him. I think it is best and right if
+each sick one be allowed to choose which doctor he wants. When Eddy
+was agent he let us keep our own old ways in all these matters. Our
+people liked him the best of all the agents we have had.
+
+A policeman came to my place, one time, and told me that Eddy wanted
+to see me at the agency office. He did not say what was wanted. I
+thought: “What have I done?” I went right away. I never had been much
+about the agency, and I did not know Eddy very well. But the people
+all the time were saying he was a good man, so I was not afraid. When
+I got there, a strange white man was at the office. The interpreter
+told me this man was from Washington. Eddy and the other man talked
+to me a little while, about nothing of importance. Then Eddy said:
+
+“We want you to be judge.”
+
+The Indian court was held at the agency. My home place was where
+it now is, over a divide from the agency and on the Tongue river
+side of the reservation. I accepted the appointment. I was paid ten
+dollars each month for going to the agency and attending to the court
+business one or two times each month. Not long after I had been
+serving as judge, Eddy called me into his office. He said:
+
+“A letter from Washington tells me that Indians having two or more
+wives must send away all but one. You, as judge, must do your part
+toward seeing that the Cheyennes do this.”
+
+My heart jumped around in my breast when he told me this. He went on
+talking further about the matter, but I could not pay close attention
+to him. My thoughts were racing and whirling. When I could get them
+steady enough for speech, I said to him:
+
+“I have two wives. You must get some other man to serve as judge.”
+
+He sat there and looked straight at me, saying nothing for a little
+while. Then he began talking again:
+
+“Somebody else as judge would make you send away one of your wives.
+It would be better if you yourself managed it. All of the Indians in
+the United States are going to be compelled to put aside their extra
+wives. Washington has sent the order.”
+
+I decided to keep the office of judge. It appeared there was no
+getting around the order, so I made up my mind to be the first one to
+send away my extra wife, then I should talk to the other Cheyennes
+about the matter. I took plenty of time to think about how I should
+let my wives know about what was coming. Then I allowed the released
+one some further time to make arrangements as to where she should go.
+The first wife, the older one, had two daughters. The younger wife
+had no children. It seemed this younger one ought to leave me. I was
+in very low spirits. When a wagon came to get her and her personal
+packs I went out and sat on a knoll about a hundred yards away. I
+could not speak to her. It seemed I could not move. All I could do
+was just sit there and look down at the ground. She went back to her
+own people, on another reservation. A few years later I heard that
+she was married to a good husband. Oh, how glad it made my heart to
+hear that!
+
+I sent a policeman to tell all Cheyennes having more than one wife to
+come and see me. One of them came that same afternoon. After we had
+smoked together, I said:
+
+“The agent tells me that I as the judge must order all Cheyennes to
+have only one wife. You must send away one of yours.”
+
+“I shall not obey that order,” he answered me.
+
+“Yes, it will have to be that way,” I insisted.
+
+“But who will be the father to the children?” he asked.
+
+“I do not know, but I suppose that will be arranged.”
+
+“Wooden Leg, you are crazy. Eddy is crazy.”
+
+“No. If anybody is crazy, it is somebody in Washington. All of the
+Indians in the United States have this order. If we resist it, our
+policemen will put us into jail. If much trouble is made about it,
+soldiers may come to fight us. Whatever man does not put aside his
+extra wife may be the cause of the whole tribe being killed.”
+
+Many of our men were angered by the order. My heart sympathized with
+them, so I never became offended at the strong words they sometimes
+used. Finally, though, all of them sent away their extra wives.
+Afterward, from time to time, somebody would tell me about some man
+living a part of the time at one place with one wife and a part of
+the time at another place with another wife. I just listened, said
+nothing, and did nothing. These were old men, and I considered it
+enough of change for them that they be prevented from having two
+wives at the same place. At this present time I know of only one old
+Cheyenne man who has two wives. They are extremely old, are sisters,
+and they have been his two wives for sixty or more years. He stays
+a part of the time with one of them and a part of the time with the
+other. The sister-wives visit each other, but they have different
+homes, several miles apart.
+
+Throughout ten years I kept the position of judge. I rode my horse or
+went in my wagon to the agency once or twice each month. It became
+tiresome to me. Eddy went away, and we had another agent. I decided
+to resign, and I did so. After I had been out of the office a few
+years there was another change in agents. The man we now have, the
+one we have named Sioux Agent, was put in charge of our reservation.
+One day, Sioux Agent sent a message calling me to his office.
+
+“I want you to be judge again,” he said. “You will be paid
+twenty-five dollars each month.”
+
+That was better than the ten dollars each month I had been paid
+during the ten years of my first service. I took his offer. So now,
+in my old age, I am helping my people to learn the ways of the white
+man government. For the old people, it is a great change, so I try
+to apply my thoughts at teaching the young Cheyennes whatever I am
+expected to teach.
+
+I was chosen two times as a little chief of the Elk warriors, in the
+old times. But in each instance I got somebody else to take my place.
+Also, at two different times of election of tribal chiefs, since
+we have been on the reservation, a band of warriors came to me and
+said: “We want you to be a big chief of the tribe.” But I did not
+want to have that position, so in each instance I told my friends to
+choose some other man, some one who would like to have it. Some white
+people, at different times, have called me, “Chief Wooden Leg.” But I
+never was a chief, neither of my warrior society nor of the tribe.
+
+My younger brother’s name was Twin. When he grew up to manhood he
+went from here to the Minneconjoux Sioux. There he was appointed a
+policeman. He continued in that duty until his death, a few years
+ago. My mother died here at my home, on the Tongue river reservation.
+My younger sister and myself are the only members of my father’s
+family yet living. This sister is the wife of Little Eagle. Their
+farm place is only a few miles down the valley from mine.
+
+Both of my daughters went to school at the Tongue river mission. They
+lived there during the school months. Each Sunday we were allowed to
+take them to our home. At other times we might go to the mission and
+see them for a few minutes. Later, I built a house only a quarter of
+a mile from the Mission, and on a sloping hillside above it. We could
+look from our front door and see the children at any time when they
+might be outside of the school buildings. My wife and I were pleased
+at their situation in life. “They will have more of comfort and
+happiness than we have had,” we said to each other.
+
+But the younger daughter fell into an illness when she was about
+fourteen years old. We expected she soon would be herself again, but
+she grew worse instead of better. She became so weak she could not
+stay any longer at the school. She continued to go on downward after
+we brought her to our home. Finally, her spirit went back to the
+Great Medicine.
+
+All of our love now was fixed upon the other daughter. She advanced
+to full young womanhood. She could read the white man books, and
+she could write letters to our friends far away. But she too became
+ill, the same as her younger sister. During all of one winter she
+gradually wasted away. Every afternoon her body burned with fever.
+Every night her bed was soaked with the sweating. Every morning she
+coughed almost to strangling. Neither the medicines of the agency
+physician nor the prayers of our own medicine men could help her.
+Just when the spring grass was coming up, she was buried in our
+mission cemetery.
+
+My heart fell down to the ground. I decided then that the white man
+school is not good for Indian children. I think they do not get
+enough of meat at the boarding schools. I think too that they are
+kept in school too much during each year. They ought to be out and
+free to go as they please during all of the good weather of the
+autumn and the spring. It may be that white children can stand it to
+be in school most of the year. I do not believe, though, that Indian
+children can stand it. It is not good sense to have the whites and
+the Indians living by the same rules.
+
+My sister’s daughter and her husband had pity for me and my wife.
+They gave to us their oldest son. He makes his home with us. On the
+agency roll his name is Joseph White Wolf. But according to the
+Indian way he is our boy, our grandson. He is a good boy, comforting
+and helpful to us. I pray often that he may become a good man, may
+get a good wife, may have many children and may live far into old age.
+
+My farming land is back from the valley, on a creek flowing into
+Tongue river. Each year I have some alfalfa hay and some oats or
+wheat, or both. I have a garden of vegetables, including an acre or
+more of corn for our own food. All together, twenty-one acres was the
+most land I had in cultivation in one season. That was a few years
+ago. I do not have that much now. I become tired more quickly than I
+did in past times. It appears my legs are not now made of wood, as
+they used to be.
+
+I get pension money each month because of my service as a scout at
+Fort Keogh. For a while it was twenty dollars monthly. Then it was
+increased to thirty dollars. Now it is forty dollars. As I grow older
+it will be further increased. My pay as judge added to this pension
+money makes enough for me to buy food and clothing for my wife and
+boy, without need for farming. But I like to have more than I need,
+so I can help my friends. I can not do this many more years.
+
+A few other old Cheyennes get the pension money. We few are the rich
+men of our tribe of very poor people. Many of our old men and women
+have a hard time getting enough food. Some white people say to them:
+“You have good land, so you ought to be prosperous.” They appear not
+to understand that Indians are not born farmers. Besides, many among
+us are older than I am. Even if these did know how to farm, they have
+not the strength to do it.
+
+Another thing the white people appear not to understand: The old
+Indian teaching was that it is wrong to tear loose from its place
+on the earth anything that may be growing there. It may be cut off,
+but it should not be uprooted. The trees and the grass have spirits.
+Whatever one of such growths may be destroyed by some good Indian,
+his act is done in sadness and with a prayer for forgiveness because
+of his necessities, the same as we were taught to do in killing
+animals for food or skins. We revere especially the places where our
+old camp circles used to be set up and where we had our old places
+of worship. There are many of such spots on our reservation. White
+people look at them and say: “These Indians are foolish. There is
+good land not plowed.” But we like to see these places as they were
+in the old times. They help to keep in our hearts a remembrance of
+the virtues of the good Cheyennes dead and gone from us.
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[58] A few old Cheyennes still talked this way in 1926. Fear kept
+them from attending the fiftieth anniversary of the battle.--T. B. M.
+
+[59] The Cheyenne interpreter for them on that occasion informed me
+this man was Doctor Dixon.--T. B. M.
+
+[60] During 1926 and 1927 I came into possession of six carbines,
+three ammunition belts, one full pair of saddle-bags and one
+half-pair of same, that these Fort Keogh Cheyennes had kept hidden
+ever since their having been taken from the Custer soldiers in
+1876.--T. B. M.
+
+
+
+
+ XVI
+
+_Clearing the Docket._
+
+
+Cheyennes still disagree among themselves about the number of sleeps
+the combined tribes stayed at different camps along the way from
+east of Powder river to the Little Bighorn and back again to the
+Powder river country. For a long time there was disagreement as to
+the length of time we had been at the battle camp before the Custer
+soldiers came. Some said we had been there only one sleep, others
+said two sleeps. This dispute was settled, though, several years
+ago, when a band of Ogallalas visited us on this reservation. In
+a great gathering with them at our Lame Deer agency there was a
+general rehearsing of the battle at the Little Bighorn. Little Hawk,
+a Cheyenne, spoke of us having slept there two nights before the
+soldiers came. Somebody corrected him:
+
+“We had slept there only one night.”
+
+“I bet you we had been there two sleeps,” Little Hawk replied. He
+spread out a blanket and laid upon it some money.
+
+His money was matched. Other bets were made, by other Indians
+differing in their beliefs on the subject. Old men then were
+called upon, one after another, to tell what was in their memories
+concerning the question. White Elk, young Chief Little Wolf, Wooden
+Leg, various other old Cheyennes and several of the old Sioux, all
+were asked for expressions of their beliefs. Each one of them said:
+
+“One sleep.”
+
+Little Hawk and his supporters finally had to admit themselves
+mistaken. In the general exchange of talk, many corroborating
+incidents were mentioned. There came then a full agreement that we
+had been in this camp only one night, that the soldiers attacked us
+the next morning, that after the fighting had ended we moved our
+camps a short distance northwestward and stayed there all of this
+night, and that in the late afternoon of the day after the great
+battle we left the place and traveled all night and all the next day
+up the Little Bighorn valley. Of the two nights at the battle place,
+one had been at the first camping spot where the soldiers attacked us
+and the other had been at the second camping spot, a short distance
+away, where we moved on account of our death losses.
+
+For fifty years we old Cheyennes talked of Bear Coat, or General
+Miles, as having been big chief of the soldiers who came up the
+Little Bighorn valley the next day after the Custer battle.[61]
+We have been corrected by our present white man doctor friend. He
+informs us that General Miles did not come into this country until
+more than a month after that time. He says that a General Terry and a
+General Gibbon were the chiefs of these soldiers. I never before had
+heard of either of these two men.
+
+I never had heard of any of General Custer’s relatives having been
+killed with him, until our present white man doctor friend told us
+about the two brothers and the brother-in-law and the nephew. He
+tells us also that General Custer’s body was not cut up. I do not
+know why he was spared, if such was the case. I never heard of any
+favorings of any dead man there. I do not know of any reason for
+intentional difference in treatment of them.
+
+It was not then known to us who was the chief of these white men
+soldiers. It was not known to us where they had come from. We
+supposed them to be the same men we had fought on the Rosebud, eight
+days before. We had not known who was the chief of those soldiers on
+the Rosebud. I never heard any Indians at that time guessing as to
+who he may have been. It made no difference to us.
+
+I have been told that certain different ones of Indians have claimed
+special honor for having killed Custer himself. All such men are only
+boasting to get attention. There was no talk of this kind during the
+hours and days right after the battle. If there had been, all of us
+would have known of it. I tell you again: None of us knew anything
+about Custer being there. The few Southern Cheyennes and the few
+Sioux warriors who had seen him in earlier times did not learn until
+many weeks later that he had been killed in this battle. It was weeks
+or months later when the most of us first learned that there ever was
+such a man. The white people, not the Indians, told us.
+
+Even if some white man soldier in the battle had been well known to
+all of the Indians it would have been hard to recognize him there.
+During the first hour or two of the fighting we were too far away to
+single out and recognize any particular one. As we got close, the air
+became more and more full of smoke and dust. The Indians were greatly
+excited. All of the white men went crazy. It must have been that not
+any one of them looked like his natural self. I believe that not any
+warrior then was thinking of trying to find out which one was the
+chief of the soldiers nor which soldier might be a past acquaintance.
+Every fighter, on both sides, was sweating and dust-covered. The
+dead soldiers were dirty and bloody. Very soon, they were much worse
+than that. Their best friends would not have known them.
+
+Of the thirty Indians killed in both fights, I believe about half
+fell from the bullets of the Custer men. Of these fifteen or so
+killed by the Custer men, there were more of them fell during the
+first close fighting, when Lame White Man led us and himself was
+killed, down toward the river, than fell at any other one section
+of the field. The soldiers in the entire battle with the Custer men
+could have killed a great many more of us, or we should have gone
+away and left them after some further fighting, if their whisky had
+not made them go crazy and shoot themselves. I do not know just how
+many of them we killed, but I believe the number was not more than
+twenty or thirty, all together. Some of these were during the slow
+distant shooting time and some were after we had gone among them
+and found badly wounded men to kill at once. There was no capturing
+alive. I did not hear any Indian talk of wanting to make such capture.
+
+All of our dead Cheyennes were found, were taken away and were
+buried. I am not sure about all of the Sioux dead, but it seems
+they all must have been found, as there was the remainder of that
+afternoon and much of the next day to make search. The three dead
+Corn Indians I saw were left where they had been killed.
+
+None of the Custer soldiers came any closer to the river than they
+were at the time they died. When the first Indians went out and met
+them, and exchanged shots with them, these soldiers were riding along
+the ridge far out northeastward.[62] They kept moving westward along
+its crest until they spread out on the ridge lower down, the ridge
+where the most of the battle took place. After about an hour and
+a half of the slow fighting at long distances, the group of forty
+soldiers who rode down from the ridge along a broad coulee and toward
+the river were charged upon by Lame White Man, followed at once by
+many Cheyennes and Sioux. This place of the first Indian charge and
+the first sudden great victory is inside of the present fence around
+the battlefield and at its lower side.
+
+The most important warrior among the Cheyennes was Lame White Man.
+I believe all of our old men consider him so. Next in importance
+and usefulness were Old Man Coyote, leading chief of the Crazy Dog
+warriors, Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox warriors, and Crazy
+Head, one of our tribal chiefs who had been a warrior society chief
+when he was a younger man. The first Indians to go across the river
+and fire upon the Custer soldiers far out on the ridge were two Sioux
+and three Cheyennes. These three Cheyennes were Roan Bear, Buffalo
+Calf and Bobtail Horse. This last named man is still living, his home
+being on the Rosebud side of our reservation.
+
+Two Moons used to tell white people of his own great importance in
+the battle. I believe he was brave, like many others there, but he
+was not thought of as being very important. He was one of the nine
+little chiefs of the Fox warriors. The only special way I heard
+him talked about was concerning his having a repeating rifle, the
+only one of such guns among the Cheyennes in this battle. When the
+smaller part of our Cheyenne tribe surrendered to General Miles, at
+Fort Keogh, Two Moons was chosen by him as their one big chief. For
+several years those Indians were governed by General Miles. From time
+to time, in the years following, others of our people were added to
+these. The coming of Little Wolf made a difference, but he lost his
+place when he killed the Cheyenne. When all of the tribe finally
+were assembled on the present reservation, the Fort Keogh officers
+and the government agents still kept Two Moons as the one big chief
+over all of us. I do not know of there being among us any great
+dissatisfaction because of this, but I do know that it was General
+Miles, not the Cheyennes, who selected him as our leader.
+
+There are yet living (1930) among the Cheyennes more than twenty men
+and about the same number of women who were full-grown people with us
+in the camp beside the Little Bighorn. I suppose that each tribe of
+the Sioux have, in proportion, the same numbers. We have many more
+who were children in the camp and who remember much of what was done
+at that time. Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox warriors, took his
+family and joined the Crows after the days of peace came. His two
+daughters married Crow men. The scared and screaming girl I took upon
+my horse when the soldiers burned our forty lodges on Powder river
+has become an old woman, a Cheyenne-Crow woman. She is known to the
+white people as Mrs. Passes.
+
+Every time I have been where white people have been asking questions
+about the Custer battle, somebody has wanted to know:
+
+“Where was Sitting Bull during the fight?”
+
+For a long time I did not understand why this question was pressed so
+strongly. Then I learned that white people had been saying: “Sitting
+Bull was a coward. He was not with the warriors in the fighting.”
+
+I do not know where he was. I had not thought about trying to find
+out. I suppose he was helping the women and children and old people,
+where he belonged. He had a son in the fight. Any man having a son
+serving as a warrior was expected to stay out of battles and give the
+son his chance to get warrior honors. Lame White Man, the Southern
+Cheyenne tribal chief who was killed, went into the fight because of
+his having no son there. I suppose it was the same with Chief Crazy
+Horse, of the Ogallalas, and Chief Hump Nose, of the Arrows All Gone.
+I do not know of any other tribal chiefs or old men having mixed into
+the battle. My father stayed in the camps, but his staying there was
+not on account of personal fear.
+
+I am not ashamed to tell that I was a follower of Sitting Bull. I
+have no ears for hearing anybody say he was not a brave man. He had a
+big brain and a good one, a strong heart and a generous one. In the
+old times I never heard of any Indian having spoken otherwise of him.
+If any of them changed their talk in later days, the change must have
+been brought about by lies of agents and soldier chiefs who schemed
+to make themselves appear as good men by making him appear as a bad
+man.
+
+It is comfortable to live in peace on the reservation. It is pleasant
+to be situated where I can sleep soundly every night, without fear
+that my horses may be stolen or that myself or my friends may be
+crept upon and killed. But I like to think about the old times, when
+every man had to be brave. I wish I could live again through some
+of the past days when it was the first thought of every prospering
+Indian to send out the call:
+
+“Hoh-oh-oh-oh, friends: Come. Come. Come. I have plenty of buffalo
+meat. I have coffee. I have sugar. I have tobacco. Come, friends,
+feast and smoke with me.”
+
+
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+[61] This mistake of the old Cheyennes arose from their having found
+Miles in command of the soldiers at Fort Keogh when they surrendered
+there in 1877. They supposed, and kept right on supposing, that he
+had been the leader of the Yellowstone river soldiers who came up the
+Bighorn and the Little Bighorn in June, 1876.--T. B. M.
+
+[62] Many Custer rifle shells have been found scattered along this
+high far-out ridge, by J. A. Blummer and other residents.--T. B. M.
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ Legend for opposite map: A.--Near the present-day Crow Agency,
+ Montana.
+
+ 1. Uncpapa camp circle.
+
+ 2. Blackfeet Sioux camp circle.
+
+ 3. Minneconjoux camp circle.
+
+ 4. Arrows All Gone camp circle.
+
+ 5. Ogallala camp circle.
+
+ 6. Cheyenne camp circle.
+
+ Arrows ➝ ➝ show Reno troops’ advance and
+ retreat.
+
+ 7. Reno battle line, for a few minutes.
+
+ 8. Present Garryowen railroad station.
+
+ 9. Reno entrenchment hill, after retreat across the river.
+
+ 10. Present Custer monument, in field enclosed by fence.
+
+ 11. Broad coulee of Medicine Tail creek just across east from
+ Cheyenne camp circle.
+
+ The long links, ⬭ ⬭ show approach of Custer troops,
+ moving northwestward, along a high ridge.
+
+ Scattered crossmarks, x x x, show where irregular second camps
+ of Indians were placed.
+
+ Little Bighorn river flowing northwestward.
+
+ Indians forded river at Medicine Tail coulee and also went
+ along hills from Reno hill, 9, to intercept Custer soldiers.
+
+[Illustration: CAMP SITES AND OTHER SALIENT POINTS IN VICINITY OF
+CUSTER BATTLEFIELD, MONTANA.]
+
+
+
+
+ Legend for opposite map: A.--Present-day Miles City, Montana.
+ B.--Present-day Hardin, Montana. C.--Near the present-day
+ Sheridan, Wyoming.
+
+ 1. Cheyenne camp whipped out and burned, on Powder river, just
+ above mouth of Little Powder river, March 17, 1876.
+
+ 2. Where Cheyennes joined the Ogallala band.
+
+ 3. Where Ogallalas and Cheyennes together joined Sitting Bull’s
+ Uncpapas. Minneconjoux Sioux also came here, making four separate
+ camp circles.
+
+ 4. Arrows All Gone Sioux joined here, making five camp circles.
+
+ 5. Powder river. Blackfeet Sioux made here the sixth camp circle.
+ Other small bands had come, but not enough for tribal camp
+ circles.
+
+ 6. Camp at Tongue river.
+
+ 7. Upper Wood creek, where they stayed five or six days, for a
+ great buffalo hunt.
+
+ 8. The six camp circles on the Rosebud river, about May 19th.
+
+ 9. Where the Uncpapas had their sun dance, in early June.
+
+ 10. Reno creek camp, from which the Indians went out at night to
+ fight Crook’s soldiers, on the upper Rosebud.
+
+ 11. Site of the Crook fight, on the upper Rosebud, June 17th.
+
+ 12. Custer battle, June 25th.
+
+ All moved away together, in the same six tribal camp circles,
+ until they arrived back at 3, east of Powder river. Here the
+ great combined camp was broken up, and the tribes separated,
+ about July 15th.
+
+[Illustration: SKETCH MAP OF HOSTILE INDIANS’ COURSE OF TRAVEL IN
+MONTANA, 1876.]
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+
+
+Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
+silently corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences
+within the text and consultation of external sources. Some hyphens
+in words have been silently removed and some silently added when
+a predominant preference was found in the original book. Except
+for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text and
+inconsistent usage have been retained.
+
+ Table of Contents: “Roving after the Victory” replaced by
+ “Rovings after the Victory”.
+
+ Page 146: “They sa. bubbles” replaced by “They saw bubbles”.
+
+ Page 180: “in the Ogallalla” replaced by “in the Ogallala”.
+
+ Page 334: “wheneven we had” replaced by “whenever we had”.
+
+ Page 371: “few years age” replaced by “few years ago”.
+
+Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+public domain.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78411 ***
diff --git a/78411-h/78411-h.htm b/78411-h/78411-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7ef8b64
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/78411-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,12613 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
+ <title>
+ A warrior who fought Custer | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+h1,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+h2 {clear: both;text-align: left;
+}
+h3 {clear: both;text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 110%;
+}
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+}
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: 33.5%;
+ margin-right: 33.5%;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
+@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} }
+
+hr.r5 {width: 13%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: .1em; margin-left: 43.5%; margin-right: 43.5%; color: black;
+ background-color: black;}
+hr.r5thick {width: 13%; margin-top: .1em; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 43.5%; margin-right: 43.5%; color: black;
+ background-color: black; height: .4em; }
+hr.r5bot {width: 13%; margin-top: .1em; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 43.5%; margin-right: 43.5%; color: black;
+ background-color: black;}
+hr.r5thickbot {width: 13%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: .1em; margin-left: 43.5%; margin-right: 43.5%; color: black;
+ background-color: black; height: .4em; }
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
+h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
+
+
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+table.autotable { border-collapse: collapse; }
+table.autotable td { padding: 0.25em; }
+table.autotable th { padding: 0.1em; font-size: 70%; font-weight: normal;}
+
+.tdl {text-align: left;}
+.tdr {text-align: right;}
+.tdc {text-align: center;}
+.tdj {text-align: justify; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -.4em;}
+
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-style: normal;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+ text-indent: 0;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+
+blockquote {
+ margin-top: 0;
+ margin-bottom: 0;
+ margin-left: 5%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.right {text-align: right;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
+
+figcaption {font-weight: normal;}
+figcaption p {margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: .2em; text-align: inherit; text-indent: 0em;}
+
+/* Images */
+
+img {
+ max-width: 100%;
+ height: auto;
+}
+img.w100 {width: 100%;}
+
+
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ max-width: 100%;
+}
+
+
+/* Footnotes */
+.footnotes {border: 1px dashed;}
+
+.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+
+.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+
+.fnanchor {
+ vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration:
+ none;
+}
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ color: black;
+ font-size:small;
+ padding:0.5em;
+ margin-bottom:5em;
+ font-family:sans-serif, serif;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+}
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ color: black;
+ font-size:small;
+ padding: 2em;
+ margin-bottom:2em;
+ font-family:sans-serif, serif;
+}
+
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ color: #A9A9A9;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-style: normal;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+ text-indent: 0;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+
+/*spacing between words and letters */
+.letter-sp1 {letter-spacing: .1em;}
+.letter-sp2 {letter-spacing: .2em;}
+.word-sp {word-spacing: .4em;}
+.word-sp1 {word-spacing: .3em;}
+
+/* spacing */
+.phalfb {padding-bottom: .5em;}
+.p1b {padding-bottom: 1em;}
+.p1t {padding-top: 1em;}
+.p2t {padding-top: 2em;}
+.p4b {padding-bottom: 4em;}
+.p50l {padding-left: 50%;}
+.p2r {padding-right: 2em;}
+.phalfl {padding-left: .5em;}
+.p1l {padding-left: 1em;}
+
+.linesp {line-height: 1.5em;} /*this is to make more space between lines in a span*/
+
+
+/* font size */
+.fs275 {font-size: 275%;}
+.fs175 {font-size: 175%;}
+.fs150 {font-size: 150%;}
+.fs125 {font-size: 125%;}
+.fs110 {font-size: 110%;}
+.fs100 {font-size: 100%;}
+.fs90 {font-size: 90%;}
+.fs80 {font-size: 80%;}
+.fs75 {font-size: 75%;}
+.fs60 {font-size: 60%;}
+
+/*tables*/
+.botalign {vertical-align: bottom;}
+
+/* font style */
+.fnormal {font-weight: normal;}
+.boldfont {font-family: Impact, sans-serif;}
+
+
+/* width */
+.wd100 {width: 100%;}
+
+/* Illustration classes */
+.illowe5 {width: 5em;}
+.illowp60 {width: 60%;}
+
+/* hovers */
+.corr {
+ text-decoration: none;
+ border-bottom: thin dashed blue
+ }
+
+
+/* paragraphs */
+.hanging {
+ padding-left: 2em;
+ text-indent: -2em
+ }
+
+.left {text-align: left;}
+.noindent {text-indent:0em;}
+
+/*ebook */
+.x-ebookmaker .illowp60 {width: 80%;}
+.illowp100 {width: 100%;}
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78411 ***</div>
+
+
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_frontispiece" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="Wooden Leg holding a rifle">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Wooden Leg, a warrior who fought Custer, holding a
+ rifle captured by a Cheyenne companion warrior at
+ Custer’s last battle</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1 class="boldfont fs275 letter-sp1 word-sp">
+A WARRIOR WHO<br>
+FOUGHT CUSTER</h1>
+<p class="noindent center boldfont letter-sp1 word-sp">
+Interpreted by</p>
+<p class="noindent center boldfont fs150 letter-sp1 word-sp">
+THOMAS B. MARQUIS</p>
+<hr class="r5">
+<hr class="r5thick">
+<p class="noindent center boldfont letter-sp2 fs125 p1b p1t">
+<i>Illustrated</i></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe5" id="colophon">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/colophon.jpg" alt="Colophon">
+</figure>
+<p class="noindent center boldfont fs150 letter-sp1 word-sp p1t">
+MINNEAPOLIS<br>
+THE MIDWEST COMPANY<br>
+MCMXXXI
+</p>
+<hr class="r5thickbot">
+<hr class="r5bot">
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center p4b linesp">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1931, by</span><br>
+THE MIDWEST COMPANY</p>
+<p class="center">
+Printed in the United States
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <p class="word-sp1 noindent allsmcap phalfb">
+ “I OFTEN THINK THAT IF I WERE AN INDIAN I WOULD GREATLY
+ PREFER TO CAST MY LOT AMONG THOSE OF MY PEOPLE WHO
+ ADHERED TO THE FREE OPEN PLAINS RATHER THAN SUBMIT TO THE
+ CONFINED LIMITS OF A RESERVATION, THERE TO BE THE RECIPIENT
+ OF THE BLESSED BENEFITS OF CIVILIZATION, WITH ITS VICES
+ THROWN IN WITHOUT STINT OR MEASURE.”
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="noindent fs80 word-sp1">—<i>From page 18 of General Custer’s book</i>, <span class="smcap">My Life on the Plains</span>,
+<i>published 1876, a few months before his death</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak left fnormal fs110" id="The_Authors_Statement">
+ <i>The Author’s Statement.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The Indian story of Custer’s last battle has never
+been told, except in a few fragmentary interviews
+that have been distorted into extravagant fiction.
+There were no white men survivors of that most
+thrilling of American frontier tragedies, so the
+veteran hostile red warriors have exclusive possession
+of the key to the mystery as to how it happened.</p>
+
+<p>The present author, sixty-one years old and a resident
+of Montana throughout the past forty-one
+years, decided in 1922 to apply himself at probing
+into this matter. He served a few months as
+agency physician for the Northern Cheyennes, a
+tribe allied with the Sioux in the annihilation of
+Custer. Since then, the investigator has been in
+close association with these Indians. He has learned
+the old-time plains Indian sign-talk to a degree enabling
+him to dispense with interpreters, except in
+rare instances. He has held out continual invitation
+for Custer-battle veteran warriors to visit his
+home, partake of his food and smoke his tobacco.
+After a long siege, they began to come. Later, they
+began to talk, but only a little. Still later, after they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</span>had found out that this ingratiating white man was
+not scheming to entrap them into fatal admissions,
+they told the whole story. Not only did they answer
+all questions, but they added spontaneous information
+concerning every detail of the battle and of the
+entire hostile Indian movements during that eventful
+summer of 1876.</p>
+
+<p>Sixteen hundred of these Montana Cheyennes
+were with the Sioux horde in the battle camps beside
+the Little Bighorn river. All of the Sioux were
+settled soon afterward in the Dakotas, and they
+stayed there. The Cheyennes were located on a reservation
+in the heart of the region where had been
+the conflicts. During the subsequent more than fifty
+years they have viewed over and over the central
+historic spots. Thus they have kept their memories
+fresh or have kept each other prompted into true
+recollections. This advantageous condition has rendered
+them the best of first-hand authorities. Up to
+late 1930, seventeen Cheyennes who were adult
+warriors at Custer battle were yet alive.</p>
+
+<p>Wooden Leg became the author’s favorite narrator.
+It seemed that his lifetime biography should
+surround his special battle story, so that readers
+might learn what kind of people were the hostile Indians
+of that day. Hour after hour, on scores of
+different occasions in recent years, the elderly white
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</span>man doctor has sat enthralled by the well-connected
+and vivid sign-talk recountings of this companion so
+congenial. Wooden Leg’s gestures often were supplemented
+by his dainty pencil drawings and by his
+sketched maps—papers now treasured as precious
+documents. A few stray English words from his extremely
+scant vocabulary of them were besprinkled
+through the efforts at full expression.</p>
+
+<p>The principal story-teller’s statements of essential
+facts have been amalgamated with those of his fellow
+tribesmen who fought as companions with him.
+Groups of them, with him as the leader, took the
+author many times into assemblage. Thus all points
+of importance have been checked and corroborated
+or corrected. The helpers have been Limpy, Pine,
+Bobtail Horse, Sun Bear, Black Horse, Two Feathers,
+Wolf Chief, Little Sun, Blackbird, Big Beaver, White
+Moon, White Wolf, Big Crow, Medicine Bull, the
+younger Little Wolf and other old men, as well as
+some old women and a few Sioux, all of whom were
+with the hostile Indians when Custer came.</p>
+
+<p class="right p2r">
+ <span class="smcap">Thomas B. Marquis</span>, M.D.
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal left fs110" id="Contents">
+ <i>Contents.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<table class="autotable wd100">
+<tr>
+<th class="tdr" style="width:4em">CHAPTER</th>
+<th class="tdl"></th>
+<th class="tdr">PAGE</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#I">I</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Boyhood Wild Days</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">1</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr p2r"><a href="#II">II</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Roamers in the Game Lands</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">20</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#III">III</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Cheyenne Ways of Life</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">56</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#IV">IV</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Worshiping the Great Medicine</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">123</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#V">V</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Off the Reservation</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">155</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#VI">VI</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Swarming of Angered Indians</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">177</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#VII">VII</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Soldiers from the Southward</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">193</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#VIII">VIII</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">On the Little Bighorn</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">208</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#IX">IX</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">The Coming of Custer</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">217</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#X">X</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">The Spoils of Battle</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">258</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XI">XI</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l"><ins class="corr" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Roving after the Victory'" id="tn-toc">Rovings after the Victory</ins></span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">272</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XII">XII</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Surrender of the Cheyennes</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">295</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XIII">XIII</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Taken to the South</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">310</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XIV">XIV</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Home Again on Tongue River</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">325</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XV">XV</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">A Tamed Old Man</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">348</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#XVI">XVI</a></td>
+<td class="tdl"> <span class="smcap p1l">Clearing the Docket</span></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign">375</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal left fs110" id="Illustrations">
+ <i>Illustrations.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<table class="autotable fs90 wd100">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Wooden Leg, a warrior who fought Custer, holding a rifle
+captured by a Cheyenne companion warrior at Custer’s last battle</td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><i><a href="#i_frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr" colspan="2"><span class="fs75">FACING PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Stone pen used by old-time Indians as lookout shelter for
+sentinel. This one is on a hill overlooking Tongue river, near Ashland, Montana</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_028fp">28</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Cheyenne women setting up a tepee</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_076fp">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">A Cheyenne sweat lodge</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_112fp">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">A Cheyenne woman tanning</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_112fpb">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Wooden Leg making Custer battle drawings for the author</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_220fp">220</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Limpy, a Cheyenne veteran of Custer’s last battle, standing
+at the Little Bighorn ford where the Indians crossed to meet the Custer soldiers</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_240fp">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Big Beaver, a veteran Cheyenne warrior, standing at the
+spot where he saw the last Custer soldier killed, June 25, 1876</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_296fp">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+
+<td class="tdj">Wooden Leg, his wife and their daughter, in 1914</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_360fp">360</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc fs110" colspan="3">MAPS</td>
+
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+
+<td class="tdj">Camp sites and other salient points in vicinity of Custer battlefield, Montana</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_387">387</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdj">Sketch map of hostile Indians’ course of travel in Montana, 1876</td>
+<td class="tdr"></td>
+<td class="tdr botalign"><a href="#i_389">389</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+
+
+ <p class="center fs175" >
+ <b>A WARRIOR WHO FOUGHT
+ CUSTER</b>
+ </p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="I">
+ <span class="p50l">I</span><br>
+ <i>Boyhood Wild Days.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Seventy-three years ago (1858) I was born when
+my people were camped by the waters of the Cheyenne
+river, in the Black Hills. Both of my parents
+were of the Northern Cheyenne tribe of Indians. My
+father had two names, as often is the case among us.
+He sometimes was called Many Bullet Wounds, because
+of such marks of warfare on his body. But
+his preferred name was White Buffalo Shaking Off the
+Dust. My mother’s name was Eagle Feather on the
+Forehead. Marriage during the old Indian days did
+not change any woman’s name, so all through her
+lifetime this same term was used for her.</p>
+
+<p>My father’s father went to Washington, as a delegate
+from our tribe, before I was born. He was known
+as No Braids. The differing words to indicate my
+grandfather, my father, my mother, and myself show
+our old way of keeping individuality, regardless of
+parentage or marriage. My brothers and sisters each
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>had a name different from mine and from our father
+and mother.</p>
+
+<p>I was known, during my boyhood, as Eats From
+the Hand. But this baby name was set aside during
+my youth. The change came about in this manner:</p>
+
+<p>On a certain occasion, many years before my birth,
+the Cheyennes were camped on the western side of
+the middle part of Powder river. At this same time
+the Crows were assembled on a branch of what now
+is known as the Mizpah river, which flows into the
+lower part of the Powder river. They were only two
+or three days of travel from our camp. The Cheyennes
+organized a war party and went to fight the
+Crows. As a result of the battle the Cheyennes
+captured five Crow women and one boy about ten
+years old. The women were made wives for their
+captors. The boy was adopted as a son of one of
+them. All of these captives stayed permanently thereafter
+with our people.</p>
+
+<p>The Crow boy liked Eagle Feather on the Forehead,
+who then was only a little older than he. He
+said, “This girl is my sister.” She accepted him as
+a brother. In later years the girl was married to
+White Buffalo Shakes Off the Dust, and these became
+my parents. The Crow boy came to manhood and
+married a Cheyenne girl. Myself and my brothers
+and sisters were taught to look upon him as our uncle,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>since he had been an adopted brother of my mother.
+He was an admirable man, brave and capable. All of
+the Cheyennes had a high regard for him. He knew
+he was born a Crow, but he never showed any desire
+to leave us for returning to them. He went, though,
+to the Southern Cheyennes, following the great warrior
+Roman Nose. He died there, in Oklahoma, a
+very old man.</p>
+
+<p>This Crow-Cheyenne Indian man was a wonderful
+traveler on foot. Even as a boy he could outwalk
+and wear down most of the young men who journeyed
+with him. His capabilities in this regard were so
+noticeable that people said: “His legs must be made
+of wood, since he never becomes tired.” Then they
+fixed upon him a name, Kum-mok-quiv-vi-ok-ta—Wooden
+Leg.</p>
+
+<p>I also was a youthful wonder in the matter of
+walking. By the time I was fifteen years old I could
+go all day following in the footsteps of my uncle
+Wooden Leg. I was tall and gaunt, and I grew yet
+taller in young manhood. Friends began jokingly
+to apply to me the name of this enduring uncle, who
+then had become a middle-aged or elderly man. I
+liked the name, I liked the man who bore it, and I
+liked the honor of comparison with him. I told my
+father I wished to be known as Wooden Leg. It was
+a common custom to pass down names to junior relatives.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>My father told me that when the right time
+came he would confer upon me the new name. The
+time came when I was about seventeen years old.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes then were camped far up the
+Tongue river, on a small creek branch at its western
+side. It was in winter, there was deep snow and the
+weather was cold. One morning we discovered that
+twenty of our horses were missing. A blizzard was
+whirling, so we could only get glimpses of the trail
+of the thieves. We supposed them to be Crow Indians,
+of course. Thirteen Cheyennes, including
+myself, mounted ponies and set off in pursuit. We
+struggled all day through the blinding snowstorm.
+We got the general direction of the trail, so we kept
+on going during all of the succeeding night. None
+of us slept. The following morning was clear, but
+a cold north breeze was sifting the snow along as if
+it were sand. We then were far up the valley of the
+Little Bighorn river.</p>
+
+<p>We saw two Indians driving a band of horses out
+of the valley and upon the benches to the westward.
+It was evident they were Crows urging our lost animals
+toward their camp west of the Bighorn. We approached
+them as rapidly as possible while concealing
+our presence. When we arrived on the benchland
+we found the two men had stopped in a sheltered
+gulch, had dismounted and were preparing to light
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>their pipe for a smoke. We charged upon them.
+One of them got to his horse and dashed away, but
+Black Eagle’s rifle brought him down dead. The
+other one was surrounded and cut to death with
+knives and hatchets. We got back all of our horses
+and their two horses in addition.</p>
+
+<p>My companions informed my father that I had
+shown great bravery in rushing upon and helping to
+dispatch our Crow enemy. My father gave a feast
+to honor me, and at this feast he proclaimed: “Henceforth
+the name of this son of mine is Wooden Leg.”</p>
+
+<p>As a little boy I used to ride in a travois basket
+when the tribe moved camp. Two long lodgepoles
+were crossed over the shoulders or tied to the sides
+of a horse. Thus they were dragged over the country.
+Buffalo skins were used to stretch across between the
+widely gaping poles behind the horse. Upon or into
+these bagging skins were placed all of the family
+property, in rawhide satchels or as separate loose
+articles. The smaller children also rode there. I
+have fond recollections of this kind of traveling.
+Many an hour I have slept in that kind of gentle bed.
+Roads were not needed for this kind of vehicle. A
+travois can be taken anywhere a horse will go, and
+there never is any jolting. The spring of the poles
+and the skin takes up all of the shocks.</p>
+
+<p>When I was six years old I asked my father: “Will
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>you give me a horse?” “Yes, you may have any
+horse of mine that you want, but you must catch
+him,” he replied. He gave me a rawhide lariat rope.
+He and my mother and some other older people
+laughed about it, but I took the matter seriously.
+With the lariat looped and coiled I went out among
+the herd to search for horses belonging to my father.
+I selected a small pony as being my choice. I maneuvered
+a long time before I could get the loop about
+its neck. It struggled, but I hung on. When it
+quieted down I followed carefully along the line, talking
+soothingly, until it allowed me to pat its neck.
+After a while I got into its mouth and around its
+lower jaw a loop of the rawhide, according to the old
+Indian way of making a bridle. When it had calmed
+after this new advance I began to make strokes upon
+its back. Then I tucked the long coil into my belt,
+the same as I had seen men do, and I climbed quickly
+upon the little animal. It shied, and I fell off. But
+I still had my rope, this uncoiling from my belt as
+the pony moved away. I seized the tether and followed
+again its guidance to the coveted mount.
+More petting and soothing talk. Another attempt at
+riding. Off again. Before making a third try I spent
+a long time at the gentle taming procedures. Nevertheless,
+the pony shied and then bucked after I had
+mounted it. But I grabbed its mane and stuck to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>my seat. Within a few minutes I had control. I rode
+to my father’s lodge.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that is your pony, to keep,” he told me.</p>
+
+<p>Bands of us boys went out at times on horseback
+to hunt wolves. We had only the bows and arrows.
+We killed many wolves with the arrows. My father
+had given me a good bow and a supply of arrows when
+I was nine or ten years old. We then were in the
+Black Hills country.</p>
+
+<p>The only trading post I ever saw during those years
+was somewhere on the Geese river.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> The trader
+was known to us as Big Nosed White Man. I was
+twelve years old the first time I went there, and I
+never was at any other trading place during those
+times. My father got me a rifle at this place. It
+used powder and bullets and caps, not cartridges.
+I learned how to make bullets for it.</p>
+
+<p>I recollect very clearly one certain boyhood hunting
+experience. We were camped on Otter creek
+about two miles from the present white man town of
+Ashland, Montana, situated by the Tongue river. It
+was midwinter, the snow was deep, the weather was
+cold. My mother said to me: “We have no meat.”</p>
+
+<p>Another boy and I set off for a hunt. We were
+about the same age, fifteen years old. We each had
+on a shirt, leggings and moccasins, all of buckskin
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>or other skin. The leggings had no seat in them, as
+was the Indian way of clothing the lower limbs. We
+had no head coverings nor any mittens for our hands.
+Although we were accustomed to hardship, this was
+a cold day for us. We waded and wallowed through
+snow up to our knees and our thighs. I had my
+muzzle-loading rifle and a bow and arrows. My companion
+had only his bow and arrows.</p>
+
+<p>A brush rabbit sat huddled under a shelter in a
+brier patch. I fumbled out an arrow and placed it
+upon the bow. My numb fingers scarcely could hold
+the arrow alone, surely could not draw the bow to
+a tensity enough for accurate shooting. The arrow
+missed. I rubbed and slapped together my hands to
+make them warm and mobile. Then I strung another
+pointed missile and took a careful aim. This time
+the rabbit’s body was perforated. We laid it beside
+our trail and went on in pursuit of more game.</p>
+
+<p>We saw four buffaloes on the land where now
+stand the Mennonite missionary houses. They also
+saw us, and they ran away. They crossed Tongue
+river on the ice, and soon afterward we got a view of
+them clambering up the hillside beyond the river and
+going on to the timbered benchland out of our sight.
+No chance to shoot at them. We trudged on, though,
+rubbing and pounding our hands and our bodies in
+order to keep from freezing. We crossed the river
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>on the ice and came out from the bordering timber
+near the present-day home of my friend Joe Crow.</p>
+
+<p>A deer jumped out and stood looking at us. The
+first shot from my rifle brought it down. We rushed
+to it and cut its throat. We hurriedly cut open the
+body and jammed our hands inside, to get them warm.
+Many a time I have done that same thing in other instances.
+After this limbering of the fingers we
+skinned the animal and cut off all of the meat from
+the bones. The meat was wrapped into the skin, then
+we set off on the back trail for the home camp. We
+took turns at carrying the burden. As we plodded
+along we paused to pick up the dead rabbit. About
+dark we arrived at our lodges, very tired but contented.</p>
+
+<p>On another winter hunt I went alone. My mother
+said, “We have no meat.” So I took a packhorse
+and started out. The snow was deep. I led the
+horse as I walked, to keep warm. It was a long and
+tiresome day. I was becoming discouraged when I
+found the tracks of a buffalo. I followed them, and
+finally I got into the right position and killed the animal
+with a rifle. It was hard work, me alone skinning
+off the hide, cutting off the meat, rolling the
+bundle and packing my horse. I got through with it,
+though, and set out for the home lodge. My legs
+carried me there, but it was after dark when I gave
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>the horse’s leading rope to my mother. All of our
+family laughed in joy, for we had plenty of meat.</p>
+
+<p>But I was in great bodily distress. I was snow-blind
+and the soles of my feet were frozen. The firelight
+dazzled my eyes to the utmost painfulness. My
+feet tortured me as they began to get warm in the
+comfortable lodge. My mother sent for the doctor,
+a medicine man named Red Bear. He got snow and
+rubbed the soles of my feet. He took snowflakes between
+his lips, puffed flicks of them into my eyes,
+and also he flipped snowflakes from his fingertips
+into my eyes. Pretty soon I felt much better. Before
+he went away that night I was entirely cured. He
+was a wise medicine man for sick people. Many of
+our doctors in the old times made wonderful cures.</p>
+
+<p>One time when I was on a hunting trip with others
+in the Bighorn mountains I saw an eagle capture and
+carry away a buffalo calf. The big bird took the
+little animal far up to the top of a cliff, where there
+was an eagle nest. We sat on our horses and
+watched, to see what would happen. Ordinarily a
+capturing eagle would drop its prey from high in the
+air, so it would be killed by the fall to the ground.
+But this did not happen in this case. As long as
+we stayed there watching, we still could see the
+buffalo calf standing up there on the cliff and wiggling
+its tail.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
+
+<p>A band of soldiers fought our Cheyennes back and
+forth across a river one time when I was seven or
+eight years old. It was the Lodgepole river, near
+where it flows into Geese river. Members of our
+Crazy Dog warrior society did all of our fighting that
+day. The Elk warriors and the Fox warriors stayed
+back with the body of our people who were looking
+on. My father belonged to the Elk warriors, so he
+was an onlooker. Roman Nose and High-Backed
+Wolf were the specially brave Crazy Dogs on that
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The Shoshones, the Crows and the Pawnees were
+the tribes we fought most during my time of growing
+up to manhood. The Pawnees, though, were too
+far away from the regions where I spent a large part
+of my early life—the Black Hills, the Powder,
+Tongue and Bighorn countries. So my own youthful
+warrior experiences were mostly in combat against
+the Crows and the Shoshones. One incident out of
+many in this kind of warfare will show how it was
+carried on.</p>
+
+<p>A band of Shoshones came at night and stole some
+of our horses. We were camped on a divide between
+the upper part of Tongue river and the Little Bighorn.
+Deep snow and winter weather. I then was
+sixteen years old. I went with the party of Cheyennes
+who took the trail of the thieves. After traveling
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>all day and into the night we found a small camp
+of Shoshones. Most of them, alarmed by their dogs,
+had fled when we made our attack upon them. But
+repeated shots kept coming from one certain lodge.
+We concentrated our assault upon this lodge. Two
+Cheyennes were killed and another one mortally
+wounded before we could suppress this destructive
+defense. White Wolf, eleven years older than I was
+and yet living as my neighbor on Tongue river, was
+the brave warrior who dealt the fatal blow to that
+Shoshone. White Wolf crept along the ground and
+into the lodge. He had in his right hand a six-shooter.
+It was totally dark in there, and he
+fumbled about the interior, seeking whomsoever he
+might find. His gun bumped into somebody, and he
+pulled the trigger. Later developments revealed
+this was the only occupant of the lodge. The victim
+was an old man. He was the only Shoshone we killed
+in that fight, so far as we could learn. But we won
+the battle and got back our horses.</p>
+
+<p>We cut up the body of the old Shoshone man. We
+cut off his hands, his feet, his head. We ripped open
+his breast and his belly. I stood there and looked at
+his heart and his liver. We tore down the lodge, built
+a bonfire of it and its contents and piled the remnants
+of the dead body upon this bonfire. We stayed there
+until nothing was left but ashes and coals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes during my youth associated much
+with the Ogallala Sioux, the Arapahoes and the
+Minneconjoux Sioux. Many Cheyennes learned the
+speech of these other tribes, and in turn they had
+many members who used ours. Most of my outside
+mingling was with the Ogallalas. By the time I was
+grown to full stature I could talk Sioux about as well
+as I could talk Cheyenne. I still can use either language.</p>
+
+<p>Forty army mules were brought into our camp on
+Rosebud creek when I was about nine years old.
+Three Cheyennes got them. These three were
+Wrapped Braids, Old Bear and Pipe, a half-man-and-half-woman
+Cheyenne. They had chased away a lone
+soldier herding the mules near a soldier fort on the
+Bighorn river.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> There were many attacks on this
+and other forts by the Cheyennes and the Sioux, but
+I was too young to take part in them.</p>
+
+<p>Some Crow chiefs visited our camp on Rosebud
+creek. The Crows were our enemies, but our people
+treated these visitors well, as was the Indian custom
+when enemies came peaceably. After a feast and a
+smoke had been given them they told our chiefs that
+the big chief of the soldiers at the Bighorn fort had
+sent them to make peace with us and invite us to join
+the Crows and the soldiers in warring against the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>Sioux. They said the soldiers would give us lots of
+presents if we would be friendly with them. All of
+our camp moved over there. We were given some
+blankets, many boxes of crackers, and our women
+received beads and other gifts. We then went back
+to the Rosebud valley. I do not know what was done
+about making peace, but I know that our young men
+warriors kept on doing as they had been doing.</p>
+
+<p>Another soldier fort that was being fought by the
+Ogallala Sioux and some of the Cheyennes was on
+what we called Buffalo creek.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Little Wolf was
+then our most important old man chief. Crazy Head
+was next in importance among us. Red Cloud was
+the leading old man chief of the Ogallalas, with Crazy
+Horse as their principal warrior chief. At a time
+when our whole tribe were in camp on Rosebud creek,
+just below the mouth of Lame Deer creek, and when
+the Ogallalas were on Tongue river, just below where
+Birney, Montana, is now situated, some of their
+people came over the divide to us and asked the
+Cheyennes to join them in a great attack on the Buffalo
+creek fort. Our chiefs considered the matter.
+It was decided that whatever young men of us might
+wish to go would be allowed to do so. Our camp
+then was moved up Lame Deer creek to the base
+of the divide, a short day’s ride from the Ogallalas
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>on Tongue river. Our great medicine man, Crazy
+Mule, showed that he could cause bullets shot at him
+to fall harmless at his feet. A hundred or more of
+our young men said they could go to fight the soldiers
+if Crazy Mule would go with them. He agreed to
+go. Our second chief, Crazy Head, led the band of
+warriors. Little Wolf stayed in our camp.</p>
+
+<p>My oldest brother, named Strong Wind Blowing,
+was killed in that midwinter battle with the soldiers.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+He was about sixteen years old. Chief Little Wolf’s
+younger brother also was killed. These two were the
+only Cheyennes who fell that day. I do not know
+how many Sioux may have been cut down by the
+soldier bullets, but I believe there were not many.
+Our returning warriors said that more than a hundred
+white men lost their lives, that Crazy Mule’s
+medicine caused them to fall down dead without need
+for the Indians to kill them.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> There was rejoicing
+in our camp on account of the victory. But our
+family and all relatives of the two dead Cheyennes
+were in mourning. We wept and prayed for the
+spirits of our lost ones.</p>
+
+<p>Some time after that battle a half-breed Indian
+came as a messenger from the soldier fort chief to
+the Cheyennes. He said, “Come, friends, and let us
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>have peace.” Little Wolf told us we ought to go, so
+the whole tribe moved near to them. Little Wolf
+and others of our chiefs had a council with the soldier
+chiefs. The big chief of the soldiers said to Little
+Wolf: “We are going away from this country. I
+give to you all of these soldier houses. Your people
+may live in them and learn how to cultivate the
+land.” A separate council of our chiefs was held.
+They replied, “Yes, we will take the houses.”</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes were pleased. “That one will be
+my house,” some one of them would say, pointing
+out a certain building. “I want that one,” another
+would claim, indicating some other structure. But
+Little Wolf was not satisfied. He meditated and expressed
+his disapproval. “We can not live here,”
+he urged. “It is impossible for Indians to live in the
+same houses all the time and get enough buffalo and
+other meat to sustain them.” The women especially
+implored him to change his mind. The question was
+settled fully one morning when Little Wolf set fire
+to the fort. He went from building to building,
+carrying his firebrands. He did not cease his efforts
+until the entire evidence of white man occupation was
+in ashes.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>Little Wolf had been a big tribal chief, the most
+influential one, for about two years before that time.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>In his earlier manhood years he was for a long time
+chosen over and over again as the leading chief of
+the Elk warrior society. If during his time any
+Cheyenne was looked upon as the bravest man of all,
+he was the man. He never was afraid to speak the
+truth. The people all believed him. He was a gentle
+and charitable man, but if insulted to anger he was
+likely to hurt somebody. In either disturbed or undisturbed
+mood everybody knew he meant just what
+he said. He was my uncle by marriage, one of his
+two wives being a sister of my father. He used to
+tell me many thrilling stories, both at his lodge and
+at my father’s lodge. I recall one in particular,
+when he had a hand-to-hand combat with a Shoshone.
+Each had a sheathknife. They grappled and
+wrestled and slashed one another. Finally Little
+Wolf pinioned the arms of the Shoshone, threw him
+to the ground, plunged upon him and stabbed him to
+death. He gave me a great deal of good advice, both
+as to warfare and as to how to carry myself uprightly
+as a man among my own people. My conduct all
+throughout my life has been influenced by his teachings,
+more than by those of any other preceptor except
+my own father.</p>
+
+<p>I think my body grew more rapidly than did my
+mind. By the time I was eighteen years old I was
+among the tallest men of the tribe. I believe there
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>were but two who stood a little above me. Both of
+these two were killed in the great battle against the
+soldiers of Custer. Then remained myself and Tall
+Bull as the two topmost in stature. We were the same
+in height, were about the same age, but he was distinctly
+the heavier. We were close associates during
+youth and manhood. He died at Lame Deer eight or
+ten years ago. I do not know by any measurement
+just what was my height when I was a young man.
+I think I have grown shorter as old age has crept
+upon me. My friend the white man doctor measures
+me now at six feet two inches and weighs me at 235
+pounds.</p>
+
+<p>Our tribe during my growing years moved here
+and there throughout the region between the Black
+Hills and the Bighorn mountains and Bighorn river.
+We never went north of the Elk river (the Yellowstone)
+except on two occasions when some of the
+tribe went across for only a few days each time. The
+places of crossing were just above and just below
+the mouth of the Bighorn. Only one time was the
+tribal camp circle made west of the Bighorn river.
+We considered that country as belonging to the
+Crows. Our war parties went there, but our campings
+were eastward from this stream. I do not know
+why we crossed to that side on this occasion. We
+had been having a series of ceremonial dances at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>successive camping places, and it may be that this
+invasion of Crow land was intended as a challenge.</p>
+
+<p>I was about fourteen years old, I believe. The
+season was what in later life I have come to know
+as June. It was the time for our usual early-summer
+religious devotions. A medicine dance had been led
+by White Horse, an old man, when we were just below
+where Greasy Grass creek flows into the Little
+Bighorn. We stayed there five sleeps. Then we
+moved a few miles down the Little Bighorn, where
+Crazy Mule led a buffalo dance. Camped there four
+sleeps. Moved again down the Little Bighorn, this
+time placing our camp circle on the exact spot where
+it was located four years later, at the time we killed
+all of the soldiers. Bear Sits Down gave a buffalo
+dance at this place. Four sleeps here. The movement
+was continued on down the Little Bighorn to
+its mouth, where we crossed the Bighorn and set up
+our camp circle on its west side. Here Brave Wolf
+led a Great Medicine or Great Spirit dance, the ceremony
+known to the white people as a sun dance.
+Four sleeps we stayed here, then we crossed back to
+the east side of the Bighorn. That was the only
+time our people as a tribe ever crossed that river.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> North Platte river.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">[2]</a> Fort C.&nbsp;F. Smith.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">[3]</a> Fort Phil Kearny, on Little Piney creek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">[4]</a> Fort Phil Kearny fight, December, 1866.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">[5]</a> Suicidal acts, to avoid capture alive?—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">[6]</a> Autumn, 1868.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="II">
+ <span class="p50l">II</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Roamers in the Game Lands.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The first agency for our Northern Cheyennes that
+I heard anything about was said to have been at
+the mouth of the Cheyenne river, east of the Black
+Hills. But I never was there. Afterward it was
+located south of the Black Hills, near the present
+Pine Ridge agency for the Ogallala Sioux. I have
+been told the white people called this the Red Cloud
+agency, but the Cheyennes knew it as the White
+River agency. I was at this place two times, but
+only for a few days in each instance. My father’s
+family was almost all of the time with other Cheyennes
+moving about over the country between the
+Black Hills and the Bighorn river. Here we hunted
+the game and the enemy Crows and Shoshones, and
+here we lived in every way the life of the plains Indians
+of those times. It was not an idle existence.
+We were busy much of the time, fighting our enemies
+or gathering food and clothing and sheltering
+skins.</p>
+
+<p>As we were camped on lower Tongue river, when
+I was about nine years old, one morning a herald
+startled the people by his cry:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Our horses all are gone!”</p>
+
+<p>There followed a lively stir among the young men.
+A party of them, mounted on a few horses that had
+been overlooked by the raiders, hurried away on the
+trail. A thin snow helped them. In the late afternoon
+they caught up with the lost herd, apparently
+abandoned. But after a search of the vicinity they
+discovered that somebody was in a canyon cave there.
+One of the Cheyennes crawled into the cave, in an
+endeavor to verify the supposition. The verification
+came in the form of an arrow that hit him in the
+right eye. He quickly backed out. “Everybody
+bring wood,” the Cheyenne leader ordered. They
+built a fire at the cave’s opening. With blankets
+they fanned the flames and the smoke into the hole.
+The prisoners fanned outward and thrust sticks at
+the fire heap to push it away. “Bring more wood,”
+the leader called. The one-sided contest went on
+until two Crow Indian men burst out from the cave
+almost suffocated and in desperation. The first one
+out was beaten and stabbed to death by the surrounding
+Cheyennes. The second one got past
+them, sprang upon one of their horses and dashed
+away. The Cheyennes pursued him. He happened
+to mount a slow animal, so it was not long before
+the chase developed into a beating by pony whip
+handles. The Crow suddenly jerked his mount to a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>standstill. At the same moment he flashed out his
+sheathknife and made a vicious sidewise stab. The
+blade buried itself in the breast of a Cheyenne, who
+fell dead. The other Cheyennes rushed upon the
+Crow. In a twinkling he had received many death
+blows from various weapons. Somebody scalped
+him, and then they cut off his feet, hands and head.
+I was not with this party, but I was in the camp.
+I heard all about it when they returned.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the killing of another Crow, though, when
+we were at this same camp on Tongue river. One
+morning a Cheyenne horse was discovered dragging
+a rawhide lariat looped about its lower jaw. This
+was peculiarly the Crow way of bridling a horse, the
+Sioux and Cheyennes ordinarily making a headstall
+and mouth bit with the rope. Evidently some Crow
+had captured our horse and it had escaped from
+him during the night. There was a scurrying out to
+inspect and count our herd. Apparently no others
+were missing. The inquiry was directed then toward
+an examination of the ground on the outskirts
+of the area where the ponies were grazing. Three
+strange horses had come from the hills to the westward
+and gone away in a gallop. Another trail was
+of human footprints, these imprinted as if the maker
+of them had been lame and had been using a stick
+for support. This trail led to a hillside cliff. There
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>under the shelter of an overhanging stone roof lay
+a Crow Indian man apparently dead or sound asleep.
+A Cheyenne leveled his rifle at close range and fired.
+The Crow partly jumped up to a sitting attitude and
+then fell back dead. Investigation showed him to
+have a broken leg and a broken arm. The horse
+he had captured was not well tamed, and it had
+bucked him off. Perhaps it first had carried him
+away from his companions, and perhaps either he
+or the horse had made a noise that might have
+alarmed the camp, whereupon the two other marauders
+had abandoned him and fled. As I now reflect
+back sixty years, I pity that unfortunate Crow
+Indian. But at that time I felt no pity.</p>
+
+<p>Nine Crows came and stole a band of our horses
+at a time when we were camped far up the Tongue
+river. I then was about sixteen years old. I joined
+the pursuing party of Cheyennes. We rode fast and
+far, following the trail over hills and valleys toward
+the Bighorn river. Some of our horses, including
+mine, played out. Four of us turned to go back
+while the others went on after the Crows. Porcupine
+was the oldest of my returning group of four. Night
+was coming upon us, so we stopped to sleep and to
+rest our horses. During the night a sound of moving
+horses awakened us. We kept quiet, listening
+and looking. Porcupine saw someone on horseback
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>about a hundred yards distant from us. He called
+out a challenge: “Cheyenne? Crow?” The rider
+lashed his mount to dash away. Porcupine fired his
+rifle in the direction of the fleeing prowler. We
+learned nothing then of the outcome of this incident.
+But several months later an Arapaho friend told us
+of the ending. He had been hunting in this region,
+and right where we had slept that night he found
+the dead body of a Crow shot through from back
+to front.</p>
+
+<p>The others who had gone on after the Crows driving
+our herd caught up with them just below the old
+soldier fort on the Bighorn river. My older brother
+was with them, and he told me what happened there.
+The horse band was across on the west side, and four
+Crows were having a playful time at bathing in the
+river. They were swimming, splashing, joking,
+laughing. The dozen or more Cheyennes kept themselves
+hidden and hurriedly dressed themselves for
+a fight while their horses rested a few minutes. Then
+they burst into their war-songs and charged into the
+water upon the surprised and defenseless bathers.
+Three Crows were killed, one escaped. All of our
+horses were recovered and three of theirs were added
+to the band. The third Crow killed was an old man,
+but he was very active. He dodged, jumped, dived.
+But the Cheyennes had too many spears jabbing at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>him and too many bullets flying toward him. My
+brother’s six-shooter put the fatal blow upon him.</p>
+
+<p>The following year, when our tepees were assembled
+on the west side of Tongue river just across
+from the mouth of Hanging Woman creek, my father
+and I went out one day to get an antelope. He was
+about to shoot at one when the animal and some
+others with it suddenly ran away. We were hidden,
+so it seemed certain their fright came from someone
+else. We crept and peeped. Pretty soon we saw a
+group of Indian hunters on horseback.</p>
+
+<p>“They are Crows,” my father excitedly whispered.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, what clever dodging we did! We got to our
+horses, mounted them, kept them moving through
+gullies and brushy spots until we reached the home
+camp. A band of Cheyennes joined us to attack the
+Crows. At a long distance off we followed them
+until our horses tired out. By this time we were
+at the upper branches of the Rosebud. We gave up
+the chase. Nobody hurt.</p>
+
+<p>Great herds of buffalo west of the Bighorn used
+to draw the Cheyennes over into that Crow country
+for the hunt. We camped on the eastern side, but
+our hunting parties crossed the river and went as
+far as Shooting at the Bank creek.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Each hunter led
+one or more pack horses to carry the meat and skins
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>taken. Many times I have swam the Bighorn or
+some other river while holding in my teeth the leading
+rope of my riding pony. The pack horse rope
+would be held in the same way or might be tied to
+the tail of this leader. My clothing would be compressed
+into a bundle and strapped to the back of
+my head.</p>
+
+<p>As we were camped on the east side of the Bighorn,
+about two years before the great Custer battle, three
+Crows were seen one day chasing antelope on our
+side of the river. Report of their presence there was
+brought to our camp. An old man herald mounted
+his pony and went about the camp circle calling out:</p>
+
+<p>“Crows are after our antelope herds. They may
+steal our horses.”</p>
+
+<p>Six Cheyenne young men got their war clothing
+packs, mounted their war ponies and set out to find
+the bold Crows. I was not with them, but a special
+friend of mine was one of the pursuing party and
+he told me of their experience. They crossed the
+Bighorn river just below where had been the soldier
+fort. During the course of the pursuit they killed
+two Crows. The third one was followed on to the
+main Crow camp beside Shooting at the Bank creek.
+The six Cheyennes lingered there to spy upon the
+camp. The lingering was a little too extended, for
+soon they found themselves engaged in a fight with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>a much larger band of Crows. A Cheyenne wearing
+a double tailed warbonnet had his horse shot down,
+then the man himself was shot through the thigh,
+this disability rendering him an easy mark for fatal
+blows that soon fell upon him. A second Cheyenne
+was killed by arrows or bullets. A third one met
+death by the same means. The other three escaped
+and made their way back to our side of the river and
+to the home camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>During this same summer the Crows made a raid
+one night on our horse herd. Of course, when daylight
+revealed the situation a war party of Cheyennes
+went out for revengeful retaliation. I was not in
+camp at this time, being on a hunting trip toward
+the mountains, but Braid told me of what happened.
+He was one of the band of avenging Cheyennes. The
+Crows drove all of the horses to their camp on Shooting
+at the Bank creek. The Cheyennes hid themselves
+to watch for some opportunity for reprisal.
+But the crafty Crows evidently discovered them or
+had planned thus to entrap them. Notice came only
+when a horde of them charged out for a fight. Two
+of the Crows were killed and two Cheyennes also met
+death. Braid’s horse was shot down and he himself
+was hit by a bullet that broke the bones in the lower
+part of one of his legs. A companion on horseback
+took Braid up behind him and the two got away into
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>safety. All of the Cheyennes then fled from the field.
+Braid is yet alive, at the age of eighty-nine years, his
+home being on the Rosebud side of this Tongue River
+reservation. The white people call him Arthur
+Brady.</p>
+
+<p>About a year before these events just related a
+big camp of Cheyennes was located on the Little Bighorn
+a short distance below where Greasy Grass creek
+empties into it. Fresh footprints of unknown horses
+near the camp site aroused suspicion. Crows? Shoshones?
+People conjectured. An old man herald
+rode about and notified everybody. That night all
+of the horses were brought into the camp circle and
+picketed among the lodges. Many watchful people
+slept lightly or awakened from time to time and
+peered out from the tepee flaps. Last Bull, asleep
+in a small tepee with his wife, was startled by the
+snorting of a mule he had picketed near by. The
+mule snorted again, then a third time. Last Bull
+saw a human form crawling along toward his mule.
+The aroused man had no gun, so he crept under his
+tepee wall and into the next one, there to borrow a
+six-shooter from an old woman.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_028fp">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_028fp.jpg" alt="A stone pen overlooking the Tongue river">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Stone pen (in foreground) used by old-time Indians
+ as lookout shelter for sentinel. This one is on a hill
+ overlooking Tongue river, near Ashland, Montana</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Fire Wolf saw the wriggling form cut the rope and
+move off leading the mule. He bravely jumped out,
+without any weapon, and seized the intruder. They
+grappled and struggled. The stranger had a rifle.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>During the scuffle it was discharged. The noise
+aroused the camp. Cheyennes came running. Cries
+rang out:</p>
+
+<p>“Kill the Crow! Kill the Crow!”</p>
+
+<p>The thief jerked out a sheathknife and stabbed
+Fire Wolf again and again until the Cheyenne had
+to let loose his hold. The freed man sprang to
+his feet and ran, leaving the mule. A shot from Last
+Bull’s borrowed six-shooter brought him down. A
+dozen Cheyennes closed in upon him and beat him
+to death. Fire Wolf had some bad knife wounds,
+but he recovered. The clothing, the bodily decorations
+in general and the mode of hair dressing revealed
+the dead Indian as being not a Crow. He
+was a Flathead, perhaps a visitor among the Crows
+or a member of a band visiting and hunting with
+them.</p>
+
+<p>A battle with the Shoshones was fought near the
+headwaters of Powder river when I was about fifteen
+years old (1873). A small band of Cheyennes had
+their lodges a day’s journey farther up the river from
+the main body of the tribe. I was with the small
+band. Four or five Shoshones came at night to our
+little camp and stole our horses. We walked to the
+main camp and told of the raid. All were for immediate
+war against the whole Shoshone tribe. “Kill
+all of the Shoshones,” was the common cry. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>main camp moved on up the river to our small encampment.
+There preparations were made for the
+warfare. That very night thirty-two Shoshone warriors
+came into the view of our night sentinels. Evidently
+the enemies had planned to wipe out our little
+band, not knowing of the presence now of the whole
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>The sentinels raised an alarm. Yet the Shoshones
+did not offer to retreat until they found themselves
+overwhelmed by a great body of our warriors. Their
+horses were tired from the journey to our camp while
+ours were just taken from their picket ropes. Perhaps
+the raiders had been saying, “We shall kill all
+of the Cheyennes here,” but now they plunged their
+horses into a long and deep canyon in their effort to
+get away from us. The Cheyennes strung themselves
+all along both sides of the canyon. Shooting was
+kept up during the balance of the night and until
+an hour or more after daylight. Two of the enemy
+escaped. Thirty of them were killed in the canyon.
+Seven of our Cheyennes also lost their lives. We
+recovered the horses the four had stolen. This fight
+was on a small creek flowing into the west side of
+Powder river from the mountains near by.</p>
+
+<p>White Bull was leading a hunting party one time
+in the Elk river country. I was yet a small boy, so
+I was not with them. Their scouts observed the distant
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>herds of buffalo excited. Crows? Shoshones?
+White soldiers? The Cheyennes hid themselves for
+the night. In the early morning they found moccasin
+tracks by a creek. The moccasin trail led to
+a Blackfeet camp. There the Cheyennes stirred up
+a fight, but I believe nobody was killed. The great
+warrior Roman Nose rode back and forth in front
+of the Blackfeet and defied them. All of them were
+said to have shot at him without a bullet or arrow
+having harmed him. He had a powerful spirit or
+medicine protection for himself. White Bull had
+taught him this medicine.</p>
+
+<p>Soldiers got after a small band of mingled Cheyennes
+and Sioux near the Black Hills one time. We
+were running away when a Cheyenne was killed.
+Two Sioux, another Cheyenne and myself went back
+to recover his dead body. We got off our horses and
+crept over a hill. We four took our dead companion
+by his hands and feet and dragged him over the knoll.
+There we rolled him into a blanket and we took the
+four corners. Bullets were whistling all about us.
+The blanket ripped and the body fell through the
+opening. We again took hold of the hands and feet,
+and in this way we got him to our horses and delivered
+him to his own people.</p>
+
+<p>Several months before the great battle with Long
+Hair (General Custer) and his soldiers, some Cheyennes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>coming from the agency on White river told
+us that the white men were going to come out and
+fight us. As parties went out for hunting, a lookout
+was kept for these white enemies. My brother, myself
+and two other Cheyenne young men went on a
+special scouting journey. We were camped then far
+up the Powder river. At night we four slept out
+in the open country. Early in the morning a fifth
+Cheyenne came to us. “Soldiers are near us,” he
+said. We learned our horses were missing. The
+soldiers had taken them. We all ran away afoot.
+We scattered in different directions, except my
+brother and me, who went together into a canyon.
+Soldiers rode along on both sides of the canyon and
+shot at us. We shot back at them, first using up our
+bullets and then resorting to our arrows. We kept
+creeping along the canyon. The soldiers gradually
+dropped away. We were not harmed nor did we
+know of our having harmed any of them. When
+they left us we carefully worked our way on up the
+canyon and over a hill toward our camp. Breathing
+hard, almost exhausted, frightened to the verge of
+collapse, we stopped for a few minutes of rest. Then
+we hurried on. At the outskirts of the camp circle
+we paused to send a warning wolf howl. The people
+all gathered about us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
+
+<p>“What has happened?” they asked.</p>
+
+<p>We told of our experience. At the same time the
+other returned young men were giving the same kind
+of information. The chiefs ordered everybody to
+pack up, and the camp was moved far on down the
+Powder river. Some of us stayed back to watch the
+soldiers. One night I saw them in their camp. Two
+sentinels were walking back and forth near their
+horses. I or any of my companions could have killed
+either or both of them. But this would have endangered
+our people, so we did nothing of that kind.
+We stole back our horses, though. I got the same
+horse they had taken from me a few nights before
+this. Our camp kept on moving, and the soldiers
+never found us on this hunt.</p>
+
+<p>A great band of Southern Cheyennes came for a
+visit to us in the Black Hills about two years before
+the Custer battle on the Little Bighorn. All of us
+joined together then for a long hunting journey to the
+westward, to the Powder river, the Tongue and the
+Little Bighorn. Many thousands of buffalo, deer,
+antelope. Many skins, much meat, everybody happy
+and prosperous and in health. On the Little Bighorn
+river we had one day of Great Medicine thanksgiving
+dancing just below the mouth of Greasy Grass
+creek. Further down the valley the camp divided,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>half of the people going northwestward to trouble the
+Crows while the other half took a southwestward
+course toward the country of the Shoshones.</p>
+
+<p>I went to the Shoshone country. We did not see
+any of those Indians, but a few of us saw their agency.
+We saw also the soldier houses there. We kept clear
+of the soldiers, and I think they never knew we were
+in that region until after we had gone. We rounded
+up and drove off a herd of white man cattle and killed
+every beef. Game was scarce there, and we needed
+the food.</p>
+
+<p>We followed the mountains to upper Powder river,
+where we joined again with the Cheyennes who had
+separated from us on the Little Bighorn. After a
+few days of feasting in the great combined camp,
+there began to be departures in bands, bands, bands,
+for return to the agency south of the Black Hills.
+My small remaining group went to Otter creek, a
+tributary of the lower Tongue river. Good hunting,
+lots of game, on this creek. We followed it to its
+head and moved on eastward to Powder river. We
+went up that stream and diverted to the Little Powder
+river. Here other Cheyennes came to us. Then
+more arrived, and yet more. Again a great band of
+us were roaming together.</p>
+
+<p>An early autumn snowstorm in the upper Powder
+river region put a check upon our great summer
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>movements. Separations came again. Indians went
+back again to the agency for the winter. My band
+moved over to the upper Tongue river. Here, only a
+short distance down that stream from the present
+white man town of Sheridan, Wyoming, buffalo in
+great throngs were feeding. We had but to kill and
+eat. As I now think back upon those days, it seems
+that no people in the world ever were any richer than
+we were. That is all anybody actually needs—a good
+shelter, plenty of food, plenty of fuel, plenty of good
+water. We stayed all winter in this vicinity. My
+father and his family never cared to live at the agency.</p>
+
+<p>In every herd of buffaloes the adult males were
+about equal in size and of the same dark brown color.
+All buffalo cows likewise were about equal in size,
+smaller than the bulls. The sucking calves were of
+yellow color. At the age of one year they began to
+change to the darker yellow and then to brown and
+dark brown or black.</p>
+
+<p>A white buffalo was killed by the Cheyennes on a
+branch of the upper Powder river. That was when
+I was a boy, about the time the soldier fort was there.
+Many Cheyennes were after the animal, but Left
+Handed Shooter killed it. Such animal was regarded
+as a spirit being or a “medicine” animal. The assembled
+Cheyennes stood back from this one in respectful
+awe. Left Handed Shooter could not persuade
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>anyone to help him in skinning it. He alone
+took the hide from the whole body, separating off
+the head and horns.</p>
+
+<p>Four medicine women were called to Left Handed
+Shooter’s lodge. They pegged down the sacred skin,
+dried it, scraped it with their elkhorn scrapers, did
+all of the work of tanning it as a robe with the hair
+left on it. An old medicine man then took it to his
+lodge. There he painted it. He put upon the smooth
+inside many black suns, many black moons, many
+stripes, all in groups of four, the Indian sacred
+number.</p>
+
+<p>The painted skin then was hung upon a tall pole.
+The horned head was put upon another pole near
+by. All of the spirit men or medicine men came, all
+of the people assembled. There were many long
+prayers, to the Great Medicine above and to the spirits
+below. Finally an old man announced:</p>
+
+<p>“We give this tanned white robe to the Great Medicine
+above. We give the head and horns to the spirits
+below.”</p>
+
+<p>The robe was taken down from the pole and was
+carefully folded. Medicine men and women then respectfully
+carried it with the head and horns to the
+top of a hill. There these revered objects were left
+as gifts to the unseen rulers of the Indian world. The
+meat of the animal was not considered as sacred. It
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>was eaten, the same as if it were any other buffalo
+flesh.</p>
+
+<p>After that time another white buffalo was seen and
+chased by Cheyennes on Tongue river below the present
+town of Sheridan, Wyoming. It was a fleet-footed
+and long-winded animal. All of the Cheyenne horses
+were exhausted in the chase. The coveted buffalo
+escaped us, and I never heard of anyone having seen
+it afterward.</p>
+
+<p>I killed a buffalo cow having white hair covering
+the upper and inner thighs, the back part of the belly,
+the udder, and having white teats. My mother took
+great care in tanning it and made of it a fine robe
+for me. It either was taken or was burned by the
+soldiers who drove us from our camp on the Powder
+river a few months before the Custer soldiers came.</p>
+
+<p>A black buffalo calf was killed by Exhausted Elk
+far up the Tongue river. It being black instead of
+the usual yellow color of the calves caused it to be
+treated as a spirit animal. Four medicine women
+tanned its skin, assembled medicine men held ceremonies,
+the congregated people looked upon it with
+veneration. The skin was painted and placed upon
+a hill as a sacrifice gift to the Great Medicine, the
+same as was done with the skin of the white buffalo.
+Also, its flesh was eaten as if it were only an ordinary
+buffalo calf.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
+
+<p>A half-bull-half-cow buffalo was killed one time
+by the Cheyennes. My father helped in the killing
+of it. This animal was of enormous size. It was big,
+fat, had a tall back, long horns, and its hump was
+almost double the size of the average buffalo bull.
+My father called friends to his lodge for a feast upon
+this meat. It was not regarded as a medicine animal.
+The heart and the liver were cut into big slices to be
+eaten raw, as Indians usually ate these parts. Only
+the old medicine men ate of these slices at my father’s
+feast.</p>
+
+<p>There always was some danger mixed with the
+pleasures of wild game hunting. I remember a Cheyenne
+who was gored terribly by a buffalo bull. He
+recovered, though. After that he became known as
+Buffalo Not Kill Him. Walking Whirlwind, a young
+man about my age, had his shoulder torn by a bear.
+He also recovered.</p>
+
+<p>A bear attacked three old Cheyenne women as they
+were picking berries on Tongue river. One of the
+women was badly clawed. The two companions put
+her upon a horse and took her to camp. She died just
+after her arrival there. At that same time one of
+our men was out hunting. He saw a bear, shot it
+and killed it. As he approached the dead animal he
+observed dried blood all about its nose and its cheeks.
+This strange condition puzzled him. In skinning the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>bear he carefully preserved the bloody muzzle. When
+he arrived in camp with his meat packed in the skin
+he learned of the killing of the old woman. Everybody
+agreed this must have been the bear that killed
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Two Cheyenne men, Bear Dung and Sun Road,
+went buffalo hunting from a camp of ours on the
+lower Rosebud. As they were circling about a milling
+herd a bull sunk its horns into the belly of Bear
+Dung’s horse, ripped it open, lifted and tossed aside
+the animal. Bear Dung went sprawling to the ground.
+The bull immediately plunged at the man and gored
+him to death. Sun Road hurried into camp and told
+of the sad occurrence. The dead man’s women relatives
+took out a travois and brought him to camp.
+He was a brother of Buffalo Hump, an old Cheyenne
+now living on the Rosebud. Sun Road also is still
+alive, his home being on the Rosebud side of our
+reservation.</p>
+
+<p>Competitive sports used to interest us. Horse
+races, foot races, wrestling matches, target shooting
+with guns or with arrows, tossing the arrows by hand,
+swimming, jumping and other like contests were entered
+upon. In the tribe such competition usually
+was between men representing the three warrior
+societies. These were the Elk warriors, the Crazy
+Dog warriors and the Fox warriors. If any Sioux
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>tribe or big band camped jointly with us the matches
+were between representative members of the two
+tribes. Bets were made on every kind of contest.
+The stakes were of guns, ammunition, bows and arrows,
+blankets, horses, robes, jewelry, shirts, leggings,
+moccasins, everything in the line of personal property.
+The betting always was on even terms. Articles
+were piled upon a blanket, matched articles in
+apposition to each other. The winners took all and
+shouted over the victory.</p>
+
+<p>The Elk warriors, the society to which I belonged,
+had the best runners. Our speediest man on foot
+was named Apache. He was almost as tall as I was
+and he was much heavier. He had remarkably big
+thighs. One time at a double camping with the Ogallalas
+on upper Powder river a foot race was arranged
+between the two tribal champions. The Ogallala fast
+man was tall and slender. His name was Black Legs.
+The distance they were to run was about a mile, I
+believe, although at that time we had no measurements
+for distance. Four friends of each man accompanied
+the two racers to the starting point. A
+revolver shot told them when to go. Near the finish
+the Sioux fell exhausted. Our man Apache was very
+tired, but he ran on to the end of the route. Of
+course, the Cheyennes took all of the stakes, let out
+a chorus of cheers and fired their guns into the air.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>“The Cheyenne medicine broke his legs,” the Sioux
+said when their man collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>The old Chief Little Wolf had been a great runner
+when he was a young man. The longer the distance
+the better it suited him. As the Cheyennes and the
+Ogallalas were traveling together in moving camp
+there was much bantering such as, “I think the Sioux
+can travel faster than the Cheyennes can,” or, “It
+appears the Cheyennes must go a little more slowly
+in order not to run away from their friends the
+Sioux.” Finally a young Sioux jokingly challenged
+Little Wolf to a foot race.</p>
+
+<p>“How,” assented Little Wolf, “I’ll run with you.”</p>
+
+<p>The caravan was stopped and arrangements were
+made for the race. Little Wolf then was past fifty
+years of age, while his Sioux challenger was just entering
+young manhood. Nevertheless, the Cheyennes
+backed their chief heavily. A great pile of bets were
+placed upon the containing blankets. Four Cheyennes
+and four Sioux went with the two men to the
+agreed starting point, which must have been three
+or four miles away. At the crack of a revolver shot
+the race began. Up to the last mile the young Sioux
+kept well in the lead. Then he began to move more
+slowly. It appeared Little Wolf never changed his
+pace. So he closed up toward the leader. In the
+last part of the last mile he went ahead, still running
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>at what appeared to be his same rate while the other
+man’s speed continued to lessen. By a broad hundred
+yards Little Wolf won the contest. Many of the
+Sioux, even some who had lost bets, joined the Cheyennes
+in cheering for the old man.</p>
+
+<p>A good wrestler and general strong man was Little
+Hawk. He and Buffalo Hump and Brave Wolf made
+up a playful raiding group in the camp one time
+after a great hunting party had brought in lots of
+buffalo beef. All about the camp circle there were
+drying poles loaded with meat. The three young
+men had not been fortunate in the chase, so they decided
+to borrow from their friends. They went to
+a certain tepee.</p>
+
+<p>“We need meat,” they announced. “Your drying
+poles are too full, and we think our wants can be
+supplied there. But Little Hawk wants to wrestle
+for it. If anybody here can throw him we shall not
+take any food from this lodge.”</p>
+
+<p>Nobody there wanted to accept this challenge.
+The young men took some meat and went on to another
+tepee. There they made the same kind of
+announcement and proposition. There likewise all
+of the men present feared to grapple with Little
+Hawk, and there also the three joking robbers helped
+themselves from the bountiful store. At the next
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>tepee the transaction was more complex. After some
+exchange of talk the spokesman of the lodge said:</p>
+
+<p>“Big Thigh is here. He says he will wrestle you.”</p>
+
+<p>The conditions of the match were agreed upon.
+The two men stripped to their breechcloths. A group
+of onlookers assembled. The group soon became a
+great crowd. Big Thigh and Little Hawk appeared
+equally confident. Both of them rushed into the
+grapple. They tugged and shoved and tripped. The
+advantage seemed to shift back and forth. The
+throng of spectators whooped and danced. There
+was some partisan cheering, but most of it was merely
+the expression of delight at witnessing this tribal
+championship battle. After several minutes of fierce
+and continuous struggling Little Hawk began to
+weaken and wilt. Big Thigh pinioned the arms of
+his antagonist and bore him face downward to the
+ground. The victor sat astride the back of the vanquished
+and sprinkled handfuls of dirt upon him.
+He also picked up a folded blanket lying near by and
+used this as a soft club in pretense at beating into
+complete submission the defeated Little Hawk.
+Shouts of congratulation greeted the conqueror while
+jeers were heaped upon the under dog and his two
+confederates. Brave Wolf and Buffalo Hump, ridiculed
+to complete embarrassment and compelled to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>replace their looted buffalo meat, quickly took themselves
+into hiding.</p>
+
+<p>Our target shooting was with rifles, revolvers and
+arrows. For the arrow contests an erect wooden
+figure of a man was the customary mark. Sometimes
+the arrows were shot from the bow, sometimes they
+were tossed by hand. Both accuracy and extent of
+penetration counted in either form of this archery.
+Shooting arrows for long distance was another test
+of capability. Here a strong bow and a powerful
+arm and hand were important elements for success.
+In all of these games the regular rule allowed four
+successive shots for each contestant. Fine points in
+the manipulation of arrows were brought out in the
+sidewise tossing of them at short distances, each toss
+being made in attempt at the exact crossing of another
+arrow thrown out by an opponent.</p>
+
+<p>Most of our few rifles were muzzle loaders and our
+revolvers usually were of the kind using caps and
+moulded bullets. The target for practice with them
+ordinarily was a black ring as broad as a large hand
+marked upon an animal’s dried shoulderblade or
+upon a barked tree. Teams of three or more men
+on each side often were arrayed against each other
+for either the arrow or gun contests. Usually the
+teams represented their respective warrior societies.
+On many occasions, though, there were personal engagements.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>In these there might be sought only
+an honorable distinction or there might be betting
+added as an incentive to achievement. An incident
+of this character that was much talked about among
+the Cheyennes came up at a time when we were
+camped on the Powder river.</p>
+
+<p>Jules Seminole brought a keg of whisky to the
+camp. He got it at some white man trading post.
+He was a southern half-breed married to one of our
+Northern Cheyenne women and accounted as belonging
+to our tribe. One of our young men solicited
+him:</p>
+
+<p>“Give me a drink of your whisky.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but I’ll bet a drink that I can beat you at
+shooting,” Seminole proposed. “What have you
+to bet?”</p>
+
+<p>The young man feared defeat. But he went canvassing
+here and there in an effort to find someone
+who would take up Seminole’s challenge. One after
+another declined to contest. Finally, in jest rather
+than in earnest, he put the case before an old medicine
+man who was totally blind in one eye and partly
+blind in the other.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bet a good buffalo robe against the whole keg
+of whisky that I can beat you at shooting,” the old
+man declared to Seminole.</p>
+
+<p>Seminole evidently suspected some kind of trick.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>He hesitated, but the urgings of the gathered crowd
+carried him into acceptance of this counter proposition.</p>
+
+<p>A tree was barked and a black circle target drawn
+upon this clean surface. Seminole shot first. He
+had a cartridge rifle. The bullet imbedded itself
+an inch or so below the black circle.</p>
+
+<p>“Get me a pin,” the old medicine man requested
+of his young helper.</p>
+
+<p>The pin was brought. The aged Cheyenne placed
+it point forward upon his right palm. He held this
+palm upward in front of his eyes. His squint wrinkles
+deepened and his lips formed themselves into a
+pucker. A sudden puff of his breath caused the pin
+to vanish. Nobody knew what had become of it.</p>
+
+<p>“Examine the target,” the performer told them.</p>
+
+<p>There it was, buried to its head just inside the circle.
+The people all wondered. The keg of whisky
+was conceded to its new owner.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bet a horse against the whisky that you can’t
+do anything like that again,” Seminole dared him.</p>
+
+<p>“How,” came instantly a responsive agreement.</p>
+
+<p>The target was placed more distant, this at the
+request of Seminole and by assent of his competitor.
+Onlookers became involved in the betting. The
+medicine man found many backers of his mysterious
+powers. The half-breed adjusted his sights. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>took an unusually long and careful and steady aim.
+“Bang!” His bullet struck within an inch of the
+circle’s center. His betting supporters were gleeful,
+the opposition were in doubt. They awaited anxiously
+the next move of their champion.</p>
+
+<p>“Bring me a claw of a redbird,” he calmly ordered.</p>
+
+<p>A dozen young men put themselves into his service.
+They wanted to help him in drinking the
+whisky. Within a minute he had the required object.</p>
+
+<p>The redbird claw was placed upon the same upturned
+palm where had been the pin. “The target
+is too far,” came a complaint. Then: “Yes, I can
+see it now.” Puff! The claw was gone. Where?
+Right into the central black spot of the black circle
+target!</p>
+
+<p>All comers had a drink of the whisky. A tin cup
+was brought and the old medicine man dipped in
+and passed out hot liquid mouthfuls to hundreds of
+Cheyennes. Nobody got enough to make him drunk.
+I spat out my mouthful. It did not taste good.</p>
+
+<p>Red Haired Bear and his wife were traveling with
+their lone lodge one time in the Black Hills. At their
+noon camp he saw deer tracks and set off to follow
+them. They led him up a dry coulee and into the
+timber. There a strong and disagreeable odor was
+wafted to him. He grasped his gun more firmly and
+went on. Just then a big snake stood up and flashed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>its tongue at him. Its head was above his head and
+its body resembled a tree. It struck him—one, two,
+three, four times. It backed off and poised as if to
+strike again. He was sickened, but he aimed his gun.</p>
+
+<p>“Great Medicine, help me,” he prayed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, be brave and I will help you,” a reply came
+from above.</p>
+
+<p>He bethought himself not to shoot at its head, since
+the bullet might glance off harmless. He shot it
+through the neck. The immense serpent threshed
+about in terrible fashion, crushing bushes and tearing
+up the earth. But it gradually quieted down, and
+finally it lay dead.</p>
+
+<p>The faint and terrified man took the back trail for
+his camp. He had four gullies to cross. He got over
+the first one without much difficulty. The second
+one troubled him. Just before he started across the
+third one he almost fainted. But he braced up and
+went over it. He was dizzy and wobbling as he approached
+the fourth gully. “Be brave now,” the
+Great Medicine said to him. He had dropped his
+gun, but the encouraging words led him to pick it
+up and go on. He staggered into and out of this
+fourth obstacle. At the camp he told his wife of
+what had occurred. She gave him a big dose of
+gunpowder in water. Then he vomited, the vomit
+having the same odor as had come from the snake.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>A second dose of gunpowder brought up more of the
+poison. A third treatment had the same effect, but
+the odor now was almost gone. The fourth time he
+took the mixture it stayed down in his stomach. Then
+he felt all right. Red Haired Bear himself told me
+of this experience. But he was not a reliable man,
+so I never was sure whether it was true or not.</p>
+
+<p>White Frog and Red Hat told a story of them
+having an adventure of this same kind. They had
+been to the trading post, where they had taken their
+pack horses loaded with skins of beaver, buffalo and
+antelope. While returning they arrived at Tongue
+river just above the mouth of Crow creek. The water
+was high. They dismounted, waded and led their
+horses to an island. For crossing the next channel
+they drove the horses ahead of them. The men were
+naked and were holding their clothing over their
+heads as they waded.</p>
+
+<p>A monstrous snake rose up from the water and
+threatened them. “It will eat up both of us,” they
+exclaimed together. They prayed the Great Medicine
+to pity them. At once there came a flood of
+rain and a whirling wind. The wind picked up the
+snake, dragged it along the water’s surface for a short
+distance, then lifted it into the air. It went up, up,
+up, and soon it was gone from their sight. White
+Frog and Red Hat agreed in their stories to us that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>the snake was so big it looked like a floating log.
+One Cheyenne who heard them said it might have
+been a floating log that looked like a snake.</p>
+
+<p>When Black Wolf went one time on a deer hunt
+he saw two women sitting on the edge of a cliff. Both
+women were beautiful in face and form. As they
+sat there dangling their feet over the cliff they beckoned
+to him. He went to them and sat down beside
+them. Pretty soon his nostrils perceived a strong
+odor of deer. At the foot of the cliff, in a pool of
+clear water, he saw a reflection of himself with two
+deer beside him. “You are only two deer,” he accused
+the women. At that they both jumped up.
+They changed instantly into deer and went bounding
+away into the timber.</p>
+
+<p>A Southern Cheyenne out hunting saw a lovely
+woman by a grove of trees, braiding her hair. She
+looked at him and smiled. That was enough to draw
+him straight to her. But when he took hold of her
+he smelled her flesh.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you deceitful deer!” he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>She struggled then to free herself from him. But
+he held firm. He tied her hands together and tied
+her feet together. The deer woman declared:</p>
+
+<p>“If you keep me thus tied you will die. If you let
+me go loose you will live to be old and always will
+be in good luck.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span></p>
+
+<p>He decided to let her go free. She ran away as a
+doe deer. When the man arrived at his home lodge
+he was wildly insane. Medicine men were called.
+He told them the story of his meeting the deer
+woman. The medicine men prayed for him. His
+right mind soon came back to him.</p>
+
+<p>I had one time a strange adventure with a deer.
+I shot it with my rifle, the bullet passing through it
+from the rump forward. It ran away, I followed. I
+shot again, this time the bullet going through its
+chest, right to left. It turned around. Another shot
+made another hole through its chest, left to right. A
+fourth and a fifth bullet likewise was sent into and
+out of its front body. It ran to a bushy grove. In
+this grove I found it lying down. It was facing me.
+It was not only alive, but it appeared not to have been
+hurt at all. I hesitated and trembled a little as I
+drew my six-shooter. At close range I aimed at the
+middle of its forehead. The bullet brought blood
+from the exact point where I had aimed. But the
+deer appeared unharmed. I fired again, aiming at
+the same spot, and a new trickle of blood flowed out.
+Still the animal gave no sign of having been injured.
+I stood there and thought about the case. I decided
+to shoot once more—an eighth effort. That is two
+times the Indian sacred number four. I moved up
+close and put my revolver’s muzzle near the middle
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>of the ridge above the deer’s right eye. Holding myself
+steady, I pulled the trigger. Instantly afterward
+the animal’s body became limp. It was dead.</p>
+
+<p>I do not entirely understand that. It may be I
+was dreaming, but it does not seem like a dream.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+The Cheyennes consider all deer as having strong
+spirit powers. Medicine men like to get their medicine
+strength.</p>
+
+<p>An old Cheyenne man and his wife told me a story,
+when I was a boy, about a big stone that stands near
+Antelope creek west of the Black Hills. They said
+that at some time, long ago, some Indian girls were
+at play there. They were poking a forked stick into
+a hole, in search for beaver. They touched something,
+twisted, pulled, and brought out some hair
+on the end of the stick. They supposed it to be the
+hair of a wolf, a coyote or a porcupine. As they
+talked of it, a bear of immense size came from the
+hole. It chased the girls, capturing many of them
+and tearing them to pieces. Two sisters escaped.
+The bear followed them, going to their home tepee,
+but it did not harm them. When night came, the
+two girls crept out. They met two young men and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>told them of the frightful animal. “It can not be
+killed by any shot in its head nor its heart nor in
+other parts of its body,” they told the two young men,
+“but a shot through its foot, from the bottom upward,
+will kill it.” The young men considered the
+case. Then they said to the two girls: “All of us
+will hide here and wait.”</p>
+
+<p>When the bear awakened in the morning it learned
+the two girls were gone. It moved about inside and
+then outside, smelling of the ground. Sniff, sniff,
+sniff, sniff. It set off on the trail of the girls, following
+to the base of the great stone. There it sat
+down upon its haunches and looked upward toward
+the stone’s top. Pretty soon it began climbing up
+the steep side. A little distance up, its feet slipped
+and it slid down. It tried again, this time going
+higher, but it slid down again. Trials were made at
+many places. But always the effort was a failure.</p>
+
+<p>The two young men and the two girls were hidden
+close by. One of the young men shot an arrow at
+the bottom of the bear’s foot as it was clambering up
+the stone. When it went up again he shot another
+arrow. On another effort of the bear a third arrow
+was sent after it. The three arrows whizzed past
+the bear and went on high into the air. They came
+down without doing any damage. The fourth arrow
+flashed past very close to the bear’s left hind foot.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>The animal slid down and ran away. The arrow
+kept on going up, up, and it never came down.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen many times the long upright marks
+of the bear’s claws on this great column of stone.
+They are deep seams or furrows. It must have been
+a monster of a bear. As far back as I can remember,
+all of the Indians called this stone Bear Tepee or
+Bear Lodge.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>An old Cheyenne man and I were traveling together
+one time past the Bear Tepee. He told me a
+story about it. He said that a long time ago—nobody
+knew how long—an Indian man journeying alone
+chose to sleep at the base of this tall stone. A buffalo
+head was lying near him. He slept four nights.
+During that time the Great Medicine took both him
+and the buffalo head to the top of the high rock.
+When the man awakened he could find no way to get
+down. He was hungry and thirsty, but he had neither
+food nor water. He was greatly distressed in mind.
+He thought of his wife and his children. He wept
+and prayed all day. At night, exhausted, he slept
+again. During that night the Great Medicine gently
+took him down again to his leaf bed on the ground.
+The buffalo head was left at the top, near the edge.
+That Indian man was said by some people to have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>been an Apache, others said he was a Shoshone, yet
+others declared he was a Cheyenne.</p>
+
+<p>I saw that buffalo head many times. The first
+time was when I was with the old man and he told
+me the story of it. He had a spyglass and we looked
+through it. We could see plainly that it was the
+head of a buffalo. I was a small boy at that time,
+eight or ten years old. The Bear Tepee is four or
+five hundred feet high, maybe higher, and its sides
+are straight up and down. How else could a buffalo
+head get up there except it be placed there by the
+Great Medicine?</p>
+
+<p>I have heard many old Cheyennes say that a long
+time ago the Great Medicine used to come down to
+the earth and talk with people. They said He had
+camped and visited and smoked with the old-time
+Cheyennes. Lots of times I have heard them talk
+about Him having given to our people the Black
+Hills and all of the gold there.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">[7]</a> Pryor creek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">[8]</a> In telling all of these fanciful stories. Wooden Leg exhibited a
+queer mingling of belief and doubt. They show an odd mental streak
+in a man having a large stock of level-headed common sense, and whose
+statements of fact as to genuine occurrences are worthy of full credit.
+He is the kind of man who could not tell a lie without at once retracting
+and correcting his misstatement, if he knew it to be such.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">[9]</a> Modern whites know this as “Devil’s Tower.”</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="III">
+ <span class="p50l">III</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Cheyenne Ways of Life.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The warrior societies were the foundation of tribal
+government among the Cheyennes. That is, the
+members of the warrior societies elected the chiefs
+who governed the people. Every ten years the whole
+tribe would get together for the special purpose of
+choosing forty big chiefs. These forty then would
+select four past chiefs, or “old men” chiefs, to serve
+as supreme advisers to them and to the tribe. There
+were not any hereditary chiefs among the Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>The Elk warriors, the Crazy Dog warriors and the
+Fox warriors were the ruling societies of the Northern
+Cheyennes. Other like organizations had been in
+existence before my time, but during all of the period
+of my boyhood and manhood those three were the
+only active ones in our northern branch of the double
+tribe. Each warrior society had a leading war chief
+and nine little war chiefs. So, there were many
+men who might claim the title of chief. All together
+there were seventy-four such officials, counting both
+the tribal rulers and the warrior society rulers. There
+were four “old men” tribal chiefs, forty tribal big
+chiefs, three leading warrior chiefs and twenty-seven
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>little warrior chiefs. Ordinarily they were ranked or
+held in respect in this order, the old men chiefs first,
+the little warrior chiefs last.</p>
+
+<p>The warrior chiefs had original authority only in
+their societies, each in his own special organization.
+By alternation, though, the tribal chiefs delegated
+governmental power to the warrior chiefs. That is,
+one group or another of the warrior chiefs and their
+followers were called upon to serve as active subordinate
+officials to carry out the orders promulgated by
+the big chiefs. Such warrior society group, when on
+this duty, were like the white man’s sheriffs, policemen,
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>Promotion in public life followed the line from
+private member of a warrior society to little chief of
+the same, then to leading chief, then to big chief of
+the tribe, finally to old man chief. Of course, all of
+the tribal and old men chiefs were members of one
+or another of the warrior societies. It often occurred
+that in time of battle or in organized great hunting
+expeditions a tribal big chief or an old man chief had,
+during such time, the low standing of a mere private
+person subordinate to the rule of the warrior chiefs.
+And, in many instances some man might be at the
+same time both a warrior chief and a tribal big chief
+or even an old man chief. Little Wolf had this honor
+put upon him. Even after he had become one of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>the four old men chiefs he was kept in office as leading
+chief of the Elk warriors.</p>
+
+<p>Four unmarried and virtuous young women were
+chosen as honorary members of each warrior society.
+If one of these entered into marriage or became unchaste
+she lost her membership and some other young
+woman was chosen in her place. The young women
+took no active part in the proceedings. They were
+allowed merely to sit inside the lodge of assemblage,
+there quietly looking on. At the society dances no
+women were permitted to do any of the work. Two
+little chiefs were appointed on each occasion to do
+the cooking, to serve the feast or to perform any
+other menial service necessary. The meetings or
+dances were held in privately owned lodges of members.
+The coverings were lifted or were removed so
+that spectators might view the affair from the outside.
+The three different societies had the same
+character of organization, and their social and military
+operations were carried out on the same general
+lines. A man could join only one of them.</p>
+
+<p>I joined the Elk warriors when I was fourteen
+years old. We were camped then at Antelope creek,
+near the Black Hills. Their herald chiefs were going
+about the camp circle calling, “All Elk warriors come
+for a dance and a feast.” They were gathering at a
+large tepee made of two family lodges combined into
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>one. Left Handed Shooter, at that time leading chief
+of the Elks, came to my father’s lodge and said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“We want you to join the Elk warriors.”</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how important I felt at receiving this invitation!
+I had been longing for it, waiting to be asked,
+wishing I might grow older more rapidly in order
+to get this honorable standing already held by my
+father and my two older brothers. Seventy or more
+Elks were dancing. Occasionally one fired a gunshot
+into the air. As they danced they were scraping
+their “rattlesnake sticks,” the special emblem of Elk
+membership. Each of these sticks was made of hard
+wood, in the form of a stubby rattlesnake seven or
+eight inches long. On each stick was cut forty
+notches. Another stick was used for scraping back
+and forth along the notches. The combined operation
+of many instruments made a noise resembling
+the rattlesnake’s warning hum. Each member owned
+his personal wooden stick, but there was one made
+from an elkhorn that was kept always by someone
+as a trustee for the society. No payment nor gift was
+necessary for admission into a warrior organization.</p>
+
+<p>In the camp circles, in the tribal movings from
+place to place, in the great tribal hunts, in the times
+of Great Medicine or other general ceremonial dances—in
+fact, at all times of our lives some one or other
+warrior society was authorized or commanded by the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>tribal chiefs to take charge of the government. Ordinarily
+there was shift of the delegated authority by
+regular rotation, but such change in regular order
+was not always the case. The conclave of big chiefs
+decided which society should have it. A society might
+be appointed to act for one day, two days, three
+days, any stated length of time, or they might be
+appointed to serve during the continuation of some
+certain event. At any time their appointment might
+be revoked by the big chiefs and another society
+named in their stead. Anyhow, some one or other
+warrior band was on duty at all times to put into
+execution the will of the big chiefs.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps at some time the Crazy Dog warriors
+might be acting as the policemen at this particular
+place of camping. Perhaps the four old men chiefs
+might determine that a general buffalo hunt ought
+to be entered upon. A herald on horseback was sent
+about the camp to proclaim:</p>
+
+<p>“All chiefs, open your ears and listen. Come to
+the council lodge.”</p>
+
+<p>There the matter was discussed. Perhaps it was
+decided first to move camp farther down the river, or
+up the river, or over to the next valley, or yet farther
+away. The big chiefs then considered which warrior
+society should conduct the camp movement. Perhaps
+they agreed upon the Fox warriors. The leading
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>chief and the little chiefs of this society were notified
+there at the council. The old man herald went out to
+ride again about the camps and call out:</p>
+
+<p>“All Cheyennes, open your ears and listen. Tomorrow
+morning we move to Tongue river. Have
+your lodges down and yourselves and your horses
+ready. The Fox warriors will lead us.”</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, as all were preparing for the
+move, the Fox warriors assembled out forward in
+the direction of the intended movement. The old
+man herald instructed them: “You are the leaders
+today. Make all of the people obey you. Make
+them stay in their proper places. If any of them disobey
+our ordinary rules of travel you may pony-whip
+them, you may shoot their horses, you may kill their
+dogs, you may break their guns or their bows, you
+may punish them in any way that seems to you best,
+except you are not allowed to kill any Cheyenne.”
+The Crazy Dog warriors, who had been policemen in
+the camp, now went off duty and became merely
+Cheyenne individuals. The leading chief of the Fox
+warriors was the most important man of that day,
+his little chiefs and their subordinate warriors were
+his helpers. The tribal old men chiefs and big chiefs
+led the camp movement, the Fox warrior band immediately
+following them or sending their members
+from time to time back along the caravan to keep
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>order. The big chiefs in front decided when it was
+time to stop for a rest, when to move on again, when
+and where to camp. The Fox soldiers transmitted
+and enforced their orders. When the big chiefs chose
+a spot for the camp their herald stationed himself
+where he could tell all of the oncoming people,
+“Camp here.” If there were any disputes about
+special location of lodges the Fox warriors settled the
+disputes. In fact, though, there rarely were any such
+disputes. Every camp circle of the Cheyennes was
+arranged very much like their preceding circles.
+Families or related families or clans set up their
+lodges at all times in about the same location with
+regard to each other. Always the horseshoe incomplete
+circle opened to the east. Always every individual
+lodge in the camp likewise had its entrance
+opening toward the east—toward the rising sun.</p>
+
+<p>To organize for the tribal buffalo hunt another
+council was called. This or any other council usually
+was held at and after darkness, by the light of a great
+bonfire. The big chiefs regularly would tell the leading
+warrior chiefs, “We want four good and reliable
+warriors to scout and discover the location of a buffalo
+herd.” When the warrior leaders had nominated
+these four the old man herald moved on horseback
+through the camp calling out their names and the
+duty put upon them. They went to the council and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>there received their instructions through their warrior
+chiefs. They performed the scout duty according
+to their orders—nobody ever dared refuse to go—and
+upon their return a report was made to the
+old man herald. Meantime, perhaps the big chiefs
+decided that the Elk warriors should conduct the
+buffalo hunting party. The herald went out and
+proclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>“All Cheyennes, open your ears and listen. Many
+buffalo have been discovered by our scouts. Sharpen
+your knives and your arrow points. See that your
+guns are in good order. Have your riding horses and
+your pack horses ready. Tomorrow morning we go.
+The Elk warriors will lead and conduct the hunt.”</p>
+
+<p>The Elks then actually led the party. Nobody
+but big chiefs were allowed to go in front of them.
+The Elk warriors did all of the scouting for game
+and watching for enemies while the party was on
+the move. Any non-Elk intruder would be pony-whipped,
+or worse. If any Elk himself disobeyed
+the orders of his warrior chiefs this disobedient one
+was punished, either by his fellow Elks upon their
+own initiative or by command of the warrior chiefs.
+The effort at all times was to carry out well whatever
+governmental task was placed upon the warriors,
+either on the hunts, at the camps, during a journey,
+in time of battle or under any conditions where
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>they were vested with authority. The three societies
+competed against each other for efficiency in governmental
+action as well as in all other affairs appertaining
+to respectable manhood. There was competition
+also within each society, every ambitious
+member trying to outdo his fellows in all worthy
+activities.</p>
+
+<p>The Fox warriors were leading a buffalo hunt one
+time when I was about sixteen years old. We then
+were on Crow creek, northeast of where Sheridan,
+Wyoming, now stands. Last Bull was the leading
+chief of the Fox soldiers. I was riding with three
+other youths about my age.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, lots of buffalo!” one boy suddenly exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>We skirted around the band of hunters and got
+forward. A Fox warrior saw us crowding ahead.
+We also saw him, and we whirled our horses to go
+back. Two or three of the Foxes followed us. We
+scattered. I made a dash for Tongue river. It was
+frozen solid. My horse slipped and slid, but I got
+across. My pursuers stopped at the stream, but I
+kept on going away from them. I did not know what
+became of the other three boys. I was scared. My
+heart was thumping, thumping, pounding my breast.
+I expected to be pony-whipped, to have my horse
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>killed and my clothing torn to pieces. But it appeared
+they never found out our identity.</p>
+
+<p>Another time, about a year later, I got into the
+same kind of trouble. This time we were moving
+camp. The Crazy Dog warriors were in the lead
+and conducting the movement. We were traveling
+up the Tongue river, far up, above the present Sheridan,
+and were about to go over the divide to the upper
+Powder river. Two other youths and myself
+forgot the rules. We rode forward from our proper
+place in the procession and went on out to a hilltop,
+there to have a look over the country, as every Indian
+naturally likes to do.</p>
+
+<p>Four Crazy Dog warriors were right after us. They
+were riding fast. The other two boys got away, but
+my pony played out on me. I had to stop and dismount.
+I was frightened to distraction, but my mind
+was made up to take bravely whatever punishment
+they might inflict. Nevertheless, I became mentally
+upset when four determined-looking Fox warrior policemen
+dashed up to me.</p>
+
+<p>“Do not whip me,” I begged. “Kill my horse.
+You may have all of my clothing. Here—take my
+gun and break it into pieces.”</p>
+
+<p>But after a talk among themselves they decided
+not to do any of these penal acts. They scolded me
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>and said I was a foolish little boy. They asked my
+name, and I told them. That was the last time I
+ever flagrantly violated any of the laws of travel or
+the hunt.</p>
+
+<p>A guard line usually was thrown out by the warrior
+policemen when any buffalo herd was about to
+be attacked. It was required that all of the hunters
+remain behind this line until every preparation was
+made and until the appointed managers gave the word
+for a general advance. Of course, all were excited,
+anxious to get at the game. Or, somebody might
+think the policemen were too slow in completing the
+preparatory steps. So, occasionally an impatient
+hunter became obtrusive. This one was pretty sure
+to bring upon himself a lashing with pony whip
+thongs or a clubbing with the reversed heavy handle.
+Finally would come the signal:</p>
+
+<p>“Go!” Then the wild Indian chase was on.</p>
+
+<p>Special warrior society hunts often were engaged
+upon. For these only the members of the one particular
+organization were eligible. The societies
+contested against each other in this regard, each trying
+to beat the others in quantity of meat and skins
+brought back to camp. Left Handed Shooter, leading
+chief of the Elk warriors, one time appointed me
+as one of the four preliminary scouts to locate buffalo
+for an exclusively Elk warrior hunt. We went out
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>at night. Winter weather, snow on the ground.
+Early in the morning we found a big herd. We returned
+to camp and reported the discovery. An
+old man herald called the Elk warriors and shouted
+out information of our report and of the proposed
+hunting party.</p>
+
+<p>Old Bear, a big chief, got four or five other Cheyennes
+to slip out with him for a premature raid upon
+the herd we had located for our Elk warrior adventure.
+Little Wolf, at that time a little warrior chief,
+took with him a band of Elks and followed the lawbreakers.
+Little Wolf opened the attack upon them
+by sending an arrow that killed Old Bear’s horse.
+The Elk band pony-whipped all of the Old Bear
+group, including the big chief himself, and made
+them go back and stay in camp.</p>
+
+<p>Feathered Wolf, an Elk warrior, one time attached
+himself uninvited to a hunting party of Crazy
+Dog warriors. He was leading two pack horses for
+carrying the meat he expected to get. Some Crazy
+Dogs warned him:</p>
+
+<p>“You do not belong with us. You ought to go
+back.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am badly in need of meat,” he pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>Others came and urged him to return. They talked
+of punishing him by whipping, but they did nothing.
+They ended merely by telling him:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You are crazy.”</p>
+
+<p>He mingled with the hunters and shot away all of
+his arrows as they chased the herd. When the killing
+was done he said:</p>
+
+<p>“I killed one buffalo and helped in the killing of
+another. You should give me plenty of meat.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, we’ll give you some of it,” different ones
+promised him.</p>
+
+<p>But nobody gave him any. He had to go back
+to his home lodge with his two pack horses empty
+and himself hungry.</p>
+
+<p>At his lodge that evening he announced a smoking
+circle. He stood out in front of his tepee and called
+invitations to many members of the Crazy Dog society.
+It was supposed he hoped thus to lead them
+into making gifts of the appetizing food. But all
+of the invited ones were busy at something else, so
+he had to smoke alone and the drying poles beside
+his tepee remained bare. His wife brought him the
+smoking outfit. “Ah, kinnikinick,” he chuckled contentedly.
+He filled his pipe and smoked it to the
+last ashes. Pretty soon he became pale, weak, sick,
+then he vomited. His wife too had punished him.
+She had given him the strongest tobacco she could
+find in the camp.</p>
+
+<p>Two certain men were observed one time to have
+a big supply of buffalo meat hanging on the drying
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>poles by their tepees. There had been a special warrior
+society hunt that day, but these men did not belong
+to that society. Investigation showed they had
+obtained their store from one of the animals killed
+in a side coulee and overlooked by the lawful hunters.
+The meat was taken from the two men, their guns
+were broken, their pack saddles were cut up, their
+lodges were torn down and burned.</p>
+
+<p>Half a dozen Sioux pushed themselves one time
+into an Elk warrior hunt. We always were friendly
+with the Sioux, about the same as if they were Cheyennes,
+but these were out of place at this particular
+time, and they knew it. Little Wolf led a party of
+his Elks in whipping them away. Two or three of
+the uninvited guests had blood running from head
+cuts made by the heavy handles of the pony whips.
+The Sioux—the plains Indians generally—had laws
+and customs similar to ours, so it was considered
+they had incurred our penalty. Often a disobedient
+Cheyenne or an intruding hunter might gain immunity
+from a whipping by prompt confession of
+guilt and by voluntary yielding of horses to be killed
+or of other property to be destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>The arrow was the preferred weapon when on a
+tribal hunt in a buffalo herd or when a large party
+were joined in the pursuit. Each rider shot arrow
+after arrow into whatever animal was convenient to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>him during the tumult of the running chase. When
+it was ended he had one or more arrows in various
+dead buffalo scattered over the area covered by the
+flight of the herd. Every man kept his own arrows
+always marked in some peculiar manner whereby they
+could be identified, so when the field was reviewed
+after the termination of the killing he could find out
+which buffalo he had killed or had helped to kill. It
+could be learned in each instance which arrow was
+the fatal one and which were of little or no importance.
+Thus the claims to skin and meat could be
+settled. In case of disagreement, the chiefs decided
+the question. Gun bullets could not be distinguished
+the one from the other, so the guns were used only
+when one man was hunting alone or when a small
+party of special friends hunted together. The guns
+also had to have powder and lead and caps, which
+we did not always have on hand. We could make
+the arrows, or we often recovered them from the dead
+animal.</p>
+
+<p>Different tribes had different ways of making their
+arrows. All arrows belonging to members of any
+certain tribe were made according to a certain general
+plan, so that by examination of any arrow it
+could be learned to what tribe the owner belonged.
+I used to be able to distinguish several different tribal
+forms from one another. I can recollect now the distinguishing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>features of four of them: The Crow,
+Sioux, Pawnee and Cheyenne.</p>
+
+<p>The Crow butt end was whittled to a sharp ridge
+and the notch was cut across this ridge, the same as
+was done by the Cheyennes. Their metal or stone
+point was a long triangle with its shortest side at
+the arrow’s shaft and with all three sides formed
+in exactly straight lines, these features likewise the
+same as in the Cheyenne arrows. Both of these had
+the slender neck whittled from the notch end in a
+long taper to the main shaft. But the distinction
+was in the size of the shaft. The Crow shaft always
+was fat and heavy. The Cheyenne shaft was slender.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux arrow had its notch extremity cut flat
+across the end, in this respect differing from all of
+the others, which were beveled on two sides to make
+a sharp ridge for the notch. The neck of the Sioux
+arrow was begun just below the notch by a circular
+cut straight into the wood. Then, beginning further
+down, the neck was shaved and tapered carefully up
+to this straight cut. The Sioux metal or stone points
+differed from all others. The form in general was
+the same long triangle, but the short side at the arrow’s
+shaft had a deep concave curve. Thus it had
+two horns or barbs. Here was the particular brand
+of the Sioux arrow.</p>
+
+<p>The Pawnees had the flat butt end and its notch
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>the same as the Sioux. But the neck below the notch
+was tapered like a Crow or a Cheyenne arrow. The
+triangle points were also the same as on the Crow and
+Cheyenne arrows, having no horns or barbs.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyenne arrow was distinguished from the
+Pawnee by its notch cut into a sharp ridge instead
+of into a flat surface butt end. Its tapering neck, its
+sharp ridge butt end and its straight line point separated
+it from the Sioux. The diameter of the shaft
+rendered it readily distinguishable from the Crow.
+Moreover, the Cheyennes had one peculiar brand
+that plainly indicated their arrows. This characteristic
+was in the three wavy lines symmetrically spaced
+around the shaft and painted all the way along it
+from the feathers to the base of the hard point. These
+special wavy stripes were designed as having a spirit
+or medicine influence, to help in killing the buffalo.
+Communication with the Great Medicine above us is
+supposed to be made in wavy lines, not straight lines.</p>
+
+<p>All Indian arrows I ever saw have three rows of
+clipped feathers set symmetrically into slots in the
+neck and upper shaft for a distance of five or six
+inches. Between these feather rows are three straight
+lines painted in color, usually red. The shaft may
+be painted according to the fancy of the individual,
+or according to his personal mode of branding it.
+Old Cheyennes told me that in past times all Cheyenne
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>arrows were painted blue. This was done by
+way of respectful regard for the blue waters of a
+certain highly revered lake in the Black Hills. During
+my days most arrow points were metal, although
+a few men, especially the older men, continued to
+make them of stone. All Indian arrows were of the
+same length—that is, every man made his own arrows
+to measure exactly from his armpit to the tips
+of his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Other weapons differed in the different tribes, and
+sometimes a certain form of weapon was characteristic
+of a certain tribe. The Sioux were the only Indians
+I knew who made regular use of the stone war-club
+made by attaching an oval stone to the end of
+a stick wrapped with rawhide. The Cheyennes rarely
+carried one of these, while a Sioux appeared not
+fully equipped unless he had one tucked into his belt.
+Instead, the Cheyenne counterpart implement was
+a hatchet or small ax. Sometimes the hatchet was
+transformed into a fancy pipe for ceremonial smoking.
+The metal head was drilled for the bowl and
+a little round canal was burned through the central
+length of the handle to serve as a pipestem.</p>
+
+<p>Spears were used by the Cheyennes. The long
+and slender points might be of metal or they might
+be of stone or of bone, the rib of a buffalo or a bone
+from some other animal serving well for such purpose.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>The shaft was decorated, of course. Great
+care often was taken in its coloring and general design.
+A regular feature of the plan was the eagle
+feather attachments. One eagle feather having a
+black tip dangled from the shaft near the hard point’s
+base. Two eagle feathers floated from a slender
+buckskin thong tied to the upper end of the shaft.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux had knife sticks for fighting. These
+had long shafts, the same as a spear. But instead of
+the attached point at the end there were three blades
+at the shaft’s side and near its end. The blades were
+in a row, close together, and were tied there by rawhide
+after having been set into a slot. They projected
+out three or four inches from the heavy shaft.
+Sometimes the edges were straight, sometimes they
+were pointed so that they resembled a section of sickle
+bar for a mowing machine. Always they were kept
+sharpened to a keen edge.</p>
+
+<p>The earrings of an Indian often indicated his tribal
+stock. A Cheyenne ear had but one piercing, only
+one ring, and this ring was looped directly through
+or close up to the ear. The Crow likewise had but
+one piercing and only one ring or shell disc, but this
+was suspended below the ear by an intervening
+strand. The one piercing of the Sioux ear had a long
+loop directly through it, and from the bottom of this
+long loop dangled another loop of the same kind.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>The Pawnees, Kiowas and Apaches had various piercings
+around the edge of the ear lobe, each piercing
+having in it a small ring. The Arapahoes and the
+Utes had ear decorations resembling the Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux wore necklaces, regularly in single
+strands. The Crow necklaces ordinarily were in multiple
+strands. In the old times the Cheyennes did
+not wear decorative necklaces, but later they adopted
+the fashion to some extent. Mostly they designed
+them in single strands, like the Sioux standard plan.
+But the multiple curved loops of the Crows became
+also fashionable among us. Eagle feathers stuck up
+from the back hair of many a Sioux. The number of
+such feathers worn by any one man was supposed to
+denote the number of enemies he had killed. The
+Cheyennes never adopted this custom.</p>
+
+<p>All Indian lodges coming under my observation
+were built on the same general lines. The conical
+tepee was the standard form. Buffalo skin was the
+standard material for covering the poles. The size
+was regulated according to the quantity of skins available
+or according to the number of persons in the
+household or according to some other special condition.
+But there were tribal differences that enabled
+an informed observer to distinguish camps or even to
+classify a lone tepee.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux lodge was unusually tall and was narrow
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>at the base. Its flap opening at the top was large
+and long. The Pawnee lodge was the opposite of
+the Sioux. It was remarkably low and broad, and
+it had a short and small top flap opening. The Cheyennes
+and the Arapahoes had tepee plans alike, in
+general form midway between the Sioux and the
+Pawnee structure. The camp circle as a whole was
+in all cases the same—a horseshoe with its opening
+to the east. All Indians had also the same custom
+of placing each tepee with its entrance opening facing
+the rising sun.</p>
+
+<p>Inside the Cheyenne lodge an old woman slept just
+at the left side of the entrance. Next past her, still
+on the left side, the lodge’s owner and his wife had
+their bed. If the family was large the girls slept
+near the father and mother while the boys were located
+across on the opposite side of the earth floor.
+Other adults, or whatever guests might be there,
+were placed between the spaces allotted to the boys
+and the girls or were put between the boys and the
+right hand side of the entrance opening.</p>
+
+<p>An old woman was an important part of every
+household organization. This was the custom among
+all of the plains Indians, especially in families where
+girls were growing up. This old woman saw that
+each occupant of the lodge used only his or her own
+proper bed or place of waking repose. She compelled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>each to keep his or her personal belongings
+beside or at the head of the owner’s assigned space.
+She was at the same time the household policeman,
+the night watchman and the drudge. Ordinarily her
+badge of office was a club. She was conceded the
+authority to use this club in enforcing the rules of
+the lodge.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_076fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_076fp.jpg" alt="Two women setting up a teepee">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Cheyenne women setting up a tepee</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>From fifteen to seventeen buffalo skins were united
+to make a covering for the usual Cheyenne lodge.
+When skins were plentiful not many lodges had less
+than fifteen, regardless of the condition that some
+of the tepees might have in each only a young married
+couple, with perhaps an old woman or some
+other one or two added people. On the other hand,
+rarely was a lodge larger than seventeen skins, even
+if twenty people were sheltered there. The larger
+lodges had to have heavier poles, and, in moving,
+these with the skins had to be transported by the
+horses. Too much of such burden hindered the progress
+of the camp movement. Big lodges made pleasant
+abodes, but they were troublesome in traveling.
+The average and usual Cheyenne tepee was twelve to
+fifteen feet in diameter across its earth floor. The
+height from the floor’s center to the tepee’s peak was
+the same as the diameter of the floor. That was
+the regular standard architectural plan of a Cheyenne
+lodge.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span></p>
+
+<p>The camp circle of the Northern Cheyenne tribe,
+all assembled, enclosed a space about one-fourth or
+one-third of a mile in diameter. It usually straddled
+a small stream of water. If the location permitted, a
+position was taken near to a larger stream into which
+the small one emptied. Hunting parties or war
+parties of men made themselves temporary night
+shelters of willow wands stuck into the ground, bent
+over and tied together for a dome roof, then covered
+with robes. Or, such parties crept into caves or
+sought the protection of heavy brush and thick foliage.
+The main camp never went into high mountains
+during the winter. Too much snow. Mountain
+campings were made during the summer season.</p>
+
+<p>For moving the village, the usual time for leaving
+the old site was about nine o’clock in the morning, I
+believe. Not much if any preparation was made until
+that morning came. The arrival at the next stop
+would be about the middle of the afternoon. Long
+before dark the whole village would be set up and
+everybody would be at home, as if this had been the
+dwelling place for many months. A thousand or
+several thousand people might travel along that way
+from day to day, actually moving their towns or cities,
+taking all of their property, their wives and children
+and old people, their horses and their dogs, everything
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>that made up a full home life. I think that is
+better than the white people can do.</p>
+
+<p>The women did all of the work of moving. They
+took down the lodges, packed and attended to the
+transportation of them and all of the household effects,
+set up the lodges at the new location and put
+all of the furnishing and personal baggage in the
+right places in each lodge. The whole removal was
+accomplished during a part of one day. In such traveling
+we sometimes could outrun the soldiers, notwithstanding
+they had only themselves and their
+horses to care for. We often got our homes and all
+of our people and their belongings across rivers where
+the soldiers could not or did not follow us.</p>
+
+<p>The women brought wood, cut it, kept the fires
+burning, cooked the food, cared for the children, did
+all of the home work. The men took care of the
+horses, guarded against enemies and fought them
+when necessary or when desirable, hunted the wild
+game, brought in the meat and the skins. Ordinarily
+a man did not toil at domestic tasks nor did a woman
+hunt or fight. In emergency, though, either a man
+or a woman might aid or take the place of the other.</p>
+
+<p>Women used saddles for riding. They sat astride.
+The saddles were made by them, the tree of elkhorn
+or of hard wood, this wrapped with buffalo rawhide
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>sewed in place with shredded tendon sinew thread.
+They also made pack saddles of the same material,
+but having a different form. Old men likewise used
+saddles. But young men always rode bareback. I
+learned to use a saddle as a scout at Fort Keogh after
+our Indian roaming and fighting days were past.
+The white people say we mount a horse from the
+wrong side, but I never changed that. They say too
+that we do not know how to sharpen a knife. In
+doing this we grind only one side of the knife’s edge.
+But we make them keen by that method. I see no
+need for grinding both sides of a knife’s blade.</p>
+
+<p>I did not smoke during my boyhood. As a youth I
+took occasional tastes, but the habit was not formed.
+The Cheyennes of those days did not chew tobacco.
+My father gave me a medicine pipe, for devotional or
+ceremonial smoking, when I was seventeen years
+old. He himself made it. The bowl was of red stone.
+My mother made me a long buckskin pouch and
+beaded it, this to contain my pipe and tobacco—or,
+the mixture that commonly is known as kinnikinick.
+This mixture was half tobacco—plug tobacco shaved
+off and dried—and half dried inner bark of the red
+willow. In the South our people used some other
+kind of bark, as our northern red willow did not grow
+there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span></p>
+
+<p>Old-time pipes, before my days, were made of deer
+leg bone. The bone was wrapped with rawhide strips
+taken from the back of a buffalo’s head. This wrapping
+was partly for the spirit influence and partly to
+keep the bone from breaking when heated by the
+smoking.</p>
+
+<p>We wore clothing, winter and summer. We had
+light summer moccasins and heavy winter moccasins.
+These always were cut low and had but one string,
+whereas the Sioux moccasins were cut high, to lap
+around the legs, and had two or more strings. One
+time I saw some white children barefooted. I pitied
+them, supposing them to be very poor. When I was
+a small boy, a soldier at the fort on Buffalo creek gave
+me a hat. Not long afterward I lost it. I was eighteen
+years old before I got another one. It was not customary
+for men, except old men, to wear any special
+head covering. Women all went bareheaded or covered
+the head with a shawl or a blanket or a robe.</p>
+
+<p>The buffalo hat was worn by old men. It was
+made of buffalo rawhide. A broad oval segment of
+the skin was used. An irregular circle was marked
+on this surface, the drawing made to accord with the
+shape of the head. From the center to the outer rim
+of this circle several cuts were made. The cut flaps
+were lifted to stand upright. This left the crown
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>wide open and its rim surrounded by the upstanding
+diamond points. A leather thong under the chin held
+the hat in place.</p>
+
+<p>Our people learned from the Crows this way of
+making hats. That is, we discovered the idea from
+them. One time, when the Cheyennes were camped
+on Tongue river above the present Sheridan, the
+Crows stole some horses from us. As the Cheyennes
+pursued them the Crows abandoned the horses and
+fled. They lost two hats, and the Cheyennes found
+these. They were used as patterns. My father used
+to wear a cloth over his open-top hat, to shield his
+head from the sun’s heat. Every old man made his
+own hat.</p>
+
+<p>Buffalo robes from adult animals served as overcoats
+for men or women. Buffalo calf or deer robes
+were used by the children. Buffalo hair sometimes
+was stuffed into the moccasins to keep the feet warm.
+Grease paint was used on the face for the principal
+purpose of shielding the skin from cold during the
+winter and from sunburn during the summer. The
+most common color was a brownish red, but personal
+fancy might choose some other color or some combination.
+Each warrior also had his particular mode
+of painting himself, his spirit or medicine ornamentation,
+when preparing for battle or for death or for
+social mingling.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span></p>
+
+<p>All of the best clothing was taken along with him
+when any warrior set out upon a search for conflict.
+The articles were put into a special bag—ordinarily
+a beautifully beaded buckskin pouch, but perhaps
+a rawhide one—and this was slung at one side of his
+horse. The bag also contained extra moccasins—beaded
+moccasins—warbonnet, paints, a mirror, special
+medicine objects, or anything else of this nature.
+If a battle seemed about to occur, the warrior’s first
+important preparatory act was to jerk off all his ordinary
+clothing. He then hurriedly got out his fine
+garments. If he had time to do so he rebraided his
+hair, painted his face in his own peculiar way, did
+everything needful to prepare himself for presenting
+his most splendid personal appearance. That is, he
+got himself ready to die.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of full dress in preparation for a battle
+comes not from a belief that it will add to the fighting
+ability. The preparation is for death, in case
+that should be the result of the conflict. Every
+Indian wants to look his best when he goes to meet
+the Great Spirit, so the dressing up is done whether
+the imminent danger is an oncoming battle or a sickness
+or injury at times of peace. Some Indian tribes
+did not pay full attention to this matter, some of
+them seeming not to care whether they took life risks
+while naked or while only partly clad or shabbily
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>clad. But the Cheyennes and the Sioux were careful
+in following out the procedure. When any of them
+got into a fight not expected, with no opportunity
+to dress properly, they usually ran away and avoided
+close contact and its consequent risks. Enemy people
+not understanding their ways might suppose
+them to be cowards because of such flight. In fact,
+these same apparent cowards might be the bravest
+of the brave when they have on their good clothing
+and feel that they may present a respectable appearance
+if called from this life to meet the Great Spirit.</p>
+
+<p>The naked fighters, among the Cheyennes and the
+Sioux, were such warriors as specially fortified themselves
+by prayer and other devotional exercises.
+They had special instruction from medicine men.
+Their naked bodies were painted in peculiar ways,
+each according to the direction of his favorite spiritual
+guide, and each had his own medicine charms
+given to him by this guide. A warrior thus made
+ready for battle was supposed to be proof against the
+weapons of the enemy. He placed himself in the
+forefront of the attack or the defense. His thought
+was: “I am so protected by my medicine that I do not
+need to dress for death. No bullet nor arrow can
+harm me now.” On the other hand, a warrior not
+made ready by special religious exercise and appliances
+had in his heart the thought: “A bullet or an
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>arrow may hit me and kill me. I must dress myself
+so as to please the Great Spirit if I should go now to
+Him.”</p>
+
+<p>Warbonnets were not worn by all warriors. In
+fact, there were only a few such distinguished men in
+each warrior society of our tribe. It was expected
+that one should be a student of the fighting art for
+several years, or else that he be an unusually apt
+learner, before he should put on the crown of eagle
+feathers. He then did so upon his own initiative, or
+perhaps because of the commendatory urgings of his
+seniors. The act meant a profession of fully acquired
+ability in warfare, a claim of special accomplishment
+in using cunning and common sense and
+cool calculation coupled with the bravery attributed
+to all warriors. The wearer was supposed never to
+ask mercy in battle. If some immature young man
+pretended to such high standing before it seemed to
+his companions that he ought to do so, he was twitted
+and shamed into awaiting his proper time. I first
+put on my warbonnet when I was thirty-three years
+old, fourteen years after I had quit the roaming life.
+After a man had been accepted as a warbonnet man
+he remained so throughout his lifetime. War chiefs
+and tribal chiefs ordinarily were warbonnet men, but
+this was not a requirement for these positions. Pure
+modesty might keep the bravest and most capable
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>fighter from making the claim. Also, an admittedly
+worthy wearer of the warbonnet might not be chosen
+for or might refuse all official positions. The
+feathered headpiece, then, was not a sign of public
+office. It was a token of individual and personal feeling
+as to his own fighting capabilities.</p>
+
+<p>The warbonnet was made by the man who was to
+wear it. His wife, mother or sister made only the
+beaded band for the forehead. The man made also
+whatever spirit charm objects he might use, or he got
+a medicine man to make them for him. The women
+made all of the war shirts, leggings, moccasins and
+such clothing for the men. They also made all of
+the common clothing for the men, for themselves,
+and for all members of the household. The men
+made their own pipes, weapons, lariat ropes and such
+other articles as were used by men only.</p>
+
+<p>Our hand mirrors were not used entirely for dressing
+and painting. We made use of them for signaling.
+Two persons who understood each other could
+exchange thoughts in this way over long distances,
+and even when they could not see each other. Some
+kinds of such signals were understood by all of our
+people. The little glass was often useful in approaching
+a camp when the traveler was in doubt
+whether it was an assemblage of his own people or
+of an enemy or unknown people. In such cases,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>flashes of inquiry and flashes of response, or lack
+of responses, settled the doubt.</p>
+
+<p>My father bought me a rifle and a six-shooter when
+I was about sixteen years old. He got them at a
+trader’s store somewhere, when he went away on a
+journey to the place. He exchanged buffalo robes
+for them. The rifle was a muzzle loader, using powder,
+bullet and caps. The six-shooter also was loaded
+in the same way. Before that time I had learned to
+shoot with other people’s guns, but these were the
+first ones I ever owned.</p>
+
+<p>Some Indians used to cut off the rifle barrels, to
+make them lighter for carrying on horseback. It was
+supposed they would shoot just as well with the short
+barrel. We never cut off the stock. The shortened
+rifles were used in chasing buffalo on horseback.
+Such weapons could be handled with one hand while
+the horse was controlled with the other. They were
+known to us as the “buffalo gun.”</p>
+
+<p>An old-time way of killing buffalo was by chasing
+them in winter over a steep bluff into a deep snowdrift.
+As they floundered there they could be speared
+or beaten to death. A few times I was in that kind of
+hunt. I heard old people tell of having used snowshoes
+to go after buffalo, but I never saw any of that
+kind of hunting. We always stripped the meat from
+the bones while butchering. The only bones we took
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>were the ribs. We sometimes used the legs as mauls
+to break up the ribs. Oh, how good was buffalo rib
+roast!</p>
+
+<p>Four arrows was the regular allowance for the
+killing of one buffalo during a horseback chase. The
+need of more than that number was discreditable to
+the skill of the bowman. Less than that was a matter
+for boasting. If one killed a buffalo with only one
+arrow, that was wonderful.</p>
+
+<p>I have helped in the chasing of antelope bands
+over a cliff. In the Black Hills was one special place
+where we worked for our meat in that manner. The
+creek near by was called Antelope creek. The first
+time I went there an old man accompanied me. We
+located ourselves in hiding near the base of the cliff,
+with women and old people and children. Two young
+men rounded up a herd and drove them over for us.
+Many of them were killed or got broken legs. We
+clubbed to death the injured ones.</p>
+
+<p>We could get food, clothing and shelter from the
+buffalo only. Saddles and harness, halters and bridles,
+were made by using their rawhide. Stout thongs
+for all purposes were cut from them. For a rawhide
+lariat rope, long strands were cut by following
+around the outside of a buffalo rawhide. Three or
+four of these strands were plaited together. Buffalo
+hair, particularly from the neck of a bull, also was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>spun into long strands and plaited to make a lariat.
+The buffalo, then, was very important to us in our
+mode of life. When any man went out specially hunting
+them he usually led two or three pack horses to
+bring in his gathered supply of food and skins.</p>
+
+<p>Fishing lines were made of horsehair. The hairs
+were tied to make long threads, and these were
+plaited together. We got metal hooks from the white
+men traders. I have caught rabbits also with baited
+hooks on the horsehair lines. I heard of eagles having
+been captured in that way. But I never tried it
+on an eagle. The Arapahoes used to be great eagle
+hunters. Old men told me the Cheyennes in past
+times had caught them from pits. The pit was covered
+with sticks, and a dead rabbit or some other
+tempting flesh bait was placed upon the sticks over
+the center of the pit. The hunter hid himself below
+the bait. When an eagle alighted he seized its
+legs, jerked it down, grabbed its head and wrung
+its neck.</p>
+
+<p>Twisting rabbits out of a hollow log, using a forked
+stick to get the hold for pulling them, was a boyhood
+game. I set my muzzle loader rifle one time
+on the upper Rosebud as a trap and caught a fox.
+I have caught coyotes by that same means. The taking
+of the bait pulled the trigger and shot the animal.
+A piece of fat meat was the best lure for them. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>have poisoned lots of wolves and got their pelts.
+A good way is to put the poisoned meat upon the top
+of a stick stuck into the snow, the meat being about
+on a level with a wolf’s body. The trapper goes back
+next day and follows the trial of whatever wolf might
+have gone away from the stick.</p>
+
+<p>My first choice of meat was antelope. Buffalo
+was a close second choice. Deer and elk came next.
+It appeared, though, that no Indian ever got actually
+turned against buffalo flesh. Beaver, rabbit, prairie
+chickens, bear, fish and turtles are good. Otter or
+wolf are not good, except wolf pups taste good if one
+be hungry. Dogs are the same as wolves. An old
+dog or an old wolf being boiled sickens me. Boiling
+pups give out almost as bad an odor.</p>
+
+<p>Salt was in use by the Cheyennes before I was
+born. We used it when we had it, but we did not always
+have it. There was a stream known to the
+Indians as Salt creek somewhere in the South. From
+there the Southern Cheyennes used to bring to us
+great chunks of salt. We sometimes smoked our
+meat, partly to help in preserving it and partly because
+the flavor was an agreeable change at times.</p>
+
+<p>Steel and flint was the usual source of fire.
+Neither my older brother nor myself had these, but
+my father had a good pair. We used to borrow from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>him. In the usual personal traveling pack was a
+small box or bag containing steel, flint and kindling.
+Dried buffalo dung, usually known as “buffalo
+chips,” makes good kindling when it is pulverized.
+Spark, kindle, blow, spark, kindle, blow, until a
+small blaze is started. Then put on twigs or grass,
+then small wood, then large wood. Buffalo chips
+in their natural chunks made good wood.</p>
+
+<p>The Crows used to have a custom of making a pile
+of buffalo chips to be kicked to pieces by whoever
+might come to camp pretending to bear an important
+message. This was by way of oath that he would
+tell the truth. There was no such custom among the
+Cheyennes. Our way was to build a bonfire and
+call the chiefs. No oath of any kind was taken. It
+was supposed the truth would be told without special
+promise. Perhaps that was not the case with the
+Crows.</p>
+
+<p>I have heard of another Crow custom different
+from the Cheyenne way. I have been told that when
+a Crow stole a horse or found any article it was expected
+of him that he give it away. It was considered
+not right for him to keep it. A Cheyenne might present
+a stolen horse or a found article to a relative or
+a friend, but it was regarded as entirely fair and
+proper for him to keep it for himself if he chose to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>do so. Ordinarily he kept it. I admire the old Crow
+way of acting in that respect. Such conduct makes
+a good and unselfish heart.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux often buried their dead on scaffolds,
+but I never saw any Cheyenne burials in that way.
+Sometimes our dead were put upon platforms on tree
+branches. Mostly, though, they were placed in small
+hillside rocky caves if these were convenient. In
+later times, and in many instances at the present day
+on our reservation, the dead body was deposited on
+the surface of the ground on a rocky hill or in some
+place out of the way of usual travel. The body was
+well wrapped in blankets or skins, and it may or may
+not have been put into a wooden box. In either case
+a heap of stones was piled over it to shield it from
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>Our women used to cut their legs and arms, usually
+in crosswise slashes, as an act of mourning. Some
+of them—the older ones—yet do this. A married
+woman cut off her hair, in ragged form, if her husband
+died. In mourning for other relatives the hair
+might be worn loose and uncombed for a long or a
+short time. Men did not cut the flesh in mourning.
+They let loose the hair or cut off their braids. Men
+who had lost relatives often cut off also the manes
+and the tails of their horses as a sign of mourning.</p>
+
+<p>There was no marriage ceremony among the Cheyennes.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>Such union was mainly a simple agreement
+between the two principal parties. In far back old
+times young men purchased their brides, but during
+my days this was not the custom among us. In our
+later practice presents might be given by the young
+man, these ordinarily to the girl’s brothers. But
+these were given after the marriage, as an indication
+of good will, not as a purchase price. Reciprocal
+gifts often were made to the newly married couple.</p>
+
+<p>The older way of entering upon the preliminary
+steps toward marriage was for the young man first to
+consult his own father. An old woman relative was
+enlisted as an emissary. “Tell the girl’s father I will
+give him four horses (or some other number of
+horses) for his daughter as a wife for my son.” The
+old woman went and negotiated with the father and
+his daughter. If the offer or some modification of it
+were agreed upon, the initiative father gathered together
+or borrowed from relatives such horses or
+blankets or other gifts as were required. These were
+taken to the lodge of the girl’s father. The prospective
+bride was put upon a blanket. Her personal
+belongings were put there with her or were wrapped
+in another package. She and her property were
+carried to the lodge of the young man’s father and
+placed inside, the carriers leaving her there and going
+elsewhere. The young man seized her as his wife.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>All of the supposed purchase gifts often were bestowed
+upon the young couple. Relatives of the two
+parties exchanged presents and compliments. The
+old woman emissary got a horse. Gifts all around
+were made in accordance with the ability of the people
+interested and in accordance with the degree of
+satisfaction felt because of the event.</p>
+
+<p>Our most common custom was for the young man
+to do all of his own managing of the affair. In the
+night time he crept stealthily to the vicinity of the
+loved one’s parental tepee. He looked and listened—listened
+long and intently. He crept closer, still
+closer, until he was at the outside wall of that side
+of the lodge where slept the one he was seeking. He
+whispered, perhaps had to whisper more loudly, to
+awaken her. They conversed in whispers, possibly
+the first time they ever had spoken directly to each
+other, although all their lives they had lived in the
+same camps.</p>
+
+<p>“Will—will—will you marry me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Y-y-yes.”</p>
+
+<p>She crept out and joined him. They went together
+to the lodge of the young man’s brother or sister or
+to a place where dwelt elder relatives of his.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning two intruders were discovered
+there, a young man and his young wife. The discovery
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>was announced, all parties interested were informed.
+Not often was the information displeasing.
+Ordinarily all concerned were contented and manifested
+their contentment in the usual exchange of
+gifts.</p>
+
+<p>The newly married couple lived temporarily at the
+lodge of relatives on one or the other side, preferably
+with a brother or a sister of the husband. This
+was but a fleeting residence. The first important duty
+of the husband was to get skins for a tepee, either by
+borrowing them or by taking them in the hunt. Then
+it was the duty of the young wife to tan and sew together
+these skins and set up a home lodge.</p>
+
+<p>Plural wives were kept by many of the old Cheyennes.
+The one family lodge sheltered the entire
+combined family. Commonly the two or more wives
+were born sisters. This condition checked or prevented
+the jealous quarreling likely to occur were
+they from different families. Two wives ordinarily
+was the limit. But in my time I knew two different
+men who each had three wives living with him. In
+each of these instances the three wives were sisters.
+The two men were named Red Arms and Plum Tree.
+Both of them and their entire families were in the
+Cheyenne camp on the Little Bighorn when we had
+the great battle there. Plum Tree was the father of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>Sun Bear and Two Feathers. Both of these sons of
+his fought the soldiers at that time, and Two Feathers
+is yet living here on the Tongue river.</p>
+
+<p>Captive women from other tribes were made wives
+of our men. There were many of such among us.
+Spotted Hawk’s mother was a Ute woman captured
+by our people when she was a small girl. The old
+Chief Dull Knife, or Rabbit, or Morning Star, had as
+his wife a Pawnee captive woman. At the time she
+came to us, two other Pawnee women were brought
+and were taken into marriage for bringing up Cheyenne
+children. Crow women stolen long ago by our
+warriors in raids were mothers of some important
+Cheyennes, including Big Foot, Big Thigh and the
+Chiefs Crazy Head and Little Horse. I do not know
+of any Cheyenne women having been captured from
+us by the Crows. The Pawnees and the Shoshones
+got away with some of them.</p>
+
+<p>An unfaithful wife did not incur any public
+penalty, according to the laws of the Cheyennes and
+the Sioux. Her husband might inflict some penalty.
+That was permissible, but he was not conceded the
+right to kill her. I knew one man who cut a great
+gash in his wife’s forehead because of her going with
+another man. Ordinarily, though, the loss of his
+wife’s affection was looked upon as a joke on the
+husband, and he kept quiet about it or pretended that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>he did not bewail the loss. The Arapahoes had a
+tribal punishment for a wife’s unfaithfulness. They
+cut off the end of the woman’s nose. Then any
+future observer might have notice of her frailty when
+contemplating the taking of her as his wife.</p>
+
+<p>Fighting between Cheyennes, either men or
+women, was forbidden by the tribal laws. In case
+of a fight some chief near at hand would call out:
+“Warriors, separate these fighters and whip them.”
+The warrior policemen then on duty would respond
+to the call. A band of them would give such punishment
+as seemed to them fitting. If the fighters renewed
+their strife they might have punishment added,
+might have their tepees torn down, their horses
+killed, property damage done to them in some other
+way, any suitable and sufficient punishment—except,
+no policeman warrior nor anyone else lawfully could
+kill a Cheyenne.</p>
+
+<p>Pony whips, either the lashes or the heavy stick
+handles, were the customary attacking weapons in a
+personal fight. Cheyennes did not use fists as the
+white people do. Not often did any two women fight.
+If they did, they merely scratched and pulled hair.
+It was more of a comic show than an alarming sight
+to see two women clawing each other. I never
+heard of any Cheyenne woman killing another nor
+maliciously killing a man. Nor did the men kill
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>women. I used to hear old people talk about a Cheyenne
+named Wounded Elk who had beaten his wife
+and then shot her, killing her. I never heard of any
+other like case. That incident happened before I
+was born.</p>
+
+<p>Suicides were not uncommon among us. Men shot
+themselves, women hung themselves. Foolish ones
+yet do such acts. Several years ago my neighbor and
+friend Whirlwind shot himself to death. Five or six
+years ago a woman hanged herself at Lame Deer.
+Many of these sad occurrences, particularly among the
+women, have come to pass during my lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>A sister of Bobtail Horse and Hollow Wood hung
+herself when I was yet a small boy and our people
+were camped on a branch of the Tongue river. Her
+mother had scolded and threatened her, but had not
+struck her, as the striking of any child was not customary
+among the Cheyennes. But the girl was
+ashamed and crestfallen because of the scolding.
+She brooded a while, then she disappeared. Searchers
+failed to find her. Two years later, a Cheyenne
+young man hunting deer in that vicinity found the
+remains of her body suspended by the neck from a
+tree limb. Several years before that time another
+young woman had done this same act near there on
+this same stream. From this first incident, and confirmed
+by the later one, the creek got a permanent
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>name. It became known as Hanging Woman creek.
+It flows into Tongue river from the east side, just
+above the present white man village of Birney,
+Montana.</p>
+
+<p>As we were in camp one time on the Rosebud, below
+Lame Deer creek, another boy and I went rambling
+afoot among the timber by the stream. We
+suddenly came upon a woman dangling and strangling.
+I had no knife. The other boy had one.</p>
+
+<p>“Cut the rope,” I urged him.</p>
+
+<p>He already was about to do this. We let the
+woman down upon the ground. I ran to the creek
+near by, got a mouthful of water, hurried back and
+squirted the water into her face. I stayed beside her
+while my companion rushed into the camp to tell her
+people. A band of women came, bringing a blanket.
+They put the disabled one upon the blanket and
+carried her to her home lodge. A medicine man was
+called. The next day I saw the woman. She gave
+no indication then of having had any unusual experience.</p>
+
+<p>A widow Cheyenne woman was living in our camp
+at a time when we had stopped on the east side of the
+upper Little Bighorn river. Her husband had been
+killed three or four years before then, in the battle
+where Cheyennes and Sioux had won a great victory
+over the soldiers. (Fort Phil Kearny, 1866.) From
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>this Little Bighorn camp my older brother and another
+boy and myself went out riding. I then was
+about twelve years old. Ahead of us, on a branching
+creek, we saw a woman walking rapidly afoot.
+She had a blanket over her head and shoulders.
+She turned into a thickly wooded gulch beside the
+creek and disappeared into the timber. We wondered
+a little at her strange actions, but we felt it not proper
+to follow her. Pretty soon three other boys came
+galloping their horses.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you see any lone woman around here?” they
+asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, she went there,” and we indicated the
+wooded gulch.</p>
+
+<p>My two companions followed them. I went to a
+plum patch. As I stood there eating plums I saw a
+man and a woman hurrying up toward the gulch.
+Both of them were crying. I followed them.</p>
+
+<p>The five boys were trying to revive the woman being
+sought, who had hanged herself. But she now
+was dead. The body was rolled into the blanket she
+had been wearing and she was taken into camp.</p>
+
+<p>This widow had been dependent upon friends for
+her support since her husband’s death. She had a
+daughter eight or nine years old. One day the young
+widow asked her mother for a certain fine robe. The
+mother refused. The request was urged. Still the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>mother for some reason said, “No.” The aggrieved
+and disconsolate young woman was so downcast by
+this apparent coldness of her mother that she went
+out and hanged herself.</p>
+
+<p>My mother’s sister hung herself in their family
+lodge when we were in camp one time on Powder
+river. I was nine years old. Our family lodge was
+right beside the one where dwelt this aunt of mine.
+My mother heard the noise of the struggling and
+strangling. The sister’s tepee entrance flap was tied
+shut, but my mother burst through it. She found
+my aunt suspended by a rawhide rope tied high upon
+a pole of the lodge. She hastily cut the rope and
+cut it again from her sister’s neck. White Bull, a
+medicine man, was called. His medicine then was
+the tusks of a bear. He held these over and around
+my aunt while he got down upon his hands and knees
+and grunted like a bear. He kept this up until she
+suddenly had a hard coughing spell and brought up
+a chunk of something that had been choking her.
+She soon stood up and was all right. White Bull was
+a good medicine man. He saved the lives of lots of
+Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>Only one wildly insane Cheyenne person did I ever
+see. As I was out on a hill beside the camp one day
+I heard a woman screaming. I looked in the direction
+of the sound and saw a woman outside a lodge
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>charging about here and there and tearing off her
+clothing. People were running to the scene. I
+hastened down there. A chief called out:</p>
+
+<p>“Warriors, come.”</p>
+
+<p>Warrior policemen rushed there from all parts of
+the camp. They seized the woman and held her while
+medicine men were summoned. I stood there among
+the surrounding crowd and watched the proceedings.
+Finally the medicine men caused her to gag and
+choke and cough out the tail of a deer. At once she
+came into her right mind. Our medicine men always
+could cure that kind of sickness.</p>
+
+<p>This woman had another attack of this same kind
+some months after that first one. The medicine men
+gave her the same kind of treatment. Again she spat
+out the tail of a deer and instantly became sane. Not
+long after that she got married. She had a third
+attack a month or so after the marriage. Her husband
+did not send for any medicine man this time.
+He himself tied her and whipped her. He beat and
+lashed his wife until she spat out a deer tail. This
+cured her right away. I never heard of her going insane
+after that time.</p>
+
+<p>The killing of any Cheyenne was the most serious
+offense against our tribal laws. The punishment was
+prompt. A council of the big chiefs and the warrior
+chiefs was called at once. The case was inquired
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>into. If guilt was evident, the offender began without
+delay the payment of his penalty. Sometimes action
+was taken without the council being assembled,
+the situation being so clear that unanimity of feeling
+was expressed either for or against the person charged
+with the crime. The defendant was not permitted to
+be present at the trial council. When the decision
+was rendered he was notified at his lodge by the warrior
+policemen. If found guilty they proceeded at
+once to put into effect the regular fixed and standard
+punishment.</p>
+
+<p>“Get ready to go,” they ordered him.</p>
+
+<p>Banishment for four years was the main penalty.
+It had to be entered upon that same day. If the
+offender protested or dallied, he might suffer the additional
+infliction of being whipped, of having his
+horses killed or his tepee destroyed. If he acceded
+willingly, he was allowed to take along his possessions.
+In any case, he had to go. His wife or his
+children might go with him or remain with the tribe,
+as they might choose. If he had a medicine pipe, that
+sacred object regularly possessed by every adult male
+Cheyenne, his very first act of entrance upon the
+banishment was the smashing to fragments of this
+most revered talisman. Everything else he owned
+he might take along with him. But he must not have
+the devotional medicine pipe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
+
+<p>Two or three miles from the main camp was considered
+a sufficient distance for the banished one.
+Relatives might visit him there or take food to him,
+but it was not allowable for them to remain long,
+and in no case should they remain after sundown.
+The chief spiritual guide or medicine man of the
+tribe withdrew the sacred protection, so the outlawed
+one was altogether out of touch with the Great Medicine.
+He kept watch of the camp movements, and he
+could follow at a distance with his lone tepee and set
+it up at a distance within sight of but out of convenient
+hearing of the new camp location. He hunted
+alone. If in the course of his hunting he accidentally
+came close to other Cheyennes, it was expected he
+should hasten away from them. The warrior policemen
+would whip him, or they might kill him, if he
+should offer to intrude himself. It was not permissible
+for anyone to speak to him nor in any other
+manner extend to him a friendly recognition. He was
+entirely avoided—or, it was required of him that he
+entirely avoid all other Cheyennes. Day after day,
+month after month, summer and winter, fair or foul
+weather, for four complete years he lived altogether
+the life of a scorned hermit. He was conceded the
+right to join some other tribe, but he did not do this.
+The great obstacle was, the people of the other tribe
+surely would ask: “Whence came you, and why?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
+
+<p>When the four years ended, the absolved man came
+back and took temporary abode in the lodge of relatives.
+Soon he set up his own lodge. He was admitted
+then to the principal rights, privileges and
+immunities of a recognized member of the tribe. But
+to this rehabilitation there were some important exceptions.
+For one, he never thereafter was allowed
+to have a medicine pipe nor to take part in any smoking
+circle. He was tolerated in personal presence
+there, if he chose thus to place himself, but as the
+pipe was being moved along from one to another it
+always went on past him, just as if he were not there
+at all. Nobody abused him. They simply ignored
+him. Hence, he ordinarily kept entirely away from
+such gatherings.</p>
+
+<p>An insignificant little pipe having a short stem
+was conceded to him as an individual comfort. But
+he had to smoke always alone. Such little pipes were
+made of stone or of the leg bone of a deer or of some
+other material not used for making the venerated
+pipe used in formal smoking. When I was a little boy
+I used to see one certain very old man who smoked
+one of these little short-stemmed pipes. I did not
+understand why he should do this. I asked my father
+about it. He told me: “He killed a Cheyenne.”</p>
+
+<p>Social ostracism in various ways haunted the subsequent
+life of the murderer otherwise cleansed from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>his stain. If he came hungry to any lodge he was
+fed. But when he was gone, the spoon or dish he had
+used was destroyed. If he sat upon a robe, nobody
+else ever afterward would sit upon it. If he became
+needy, gifts were taken to his lodge, but this was
+done by way of pity rather than by way of friendly
+feeling. By exemplary conduct he might partly restore
+his standing, but it never was fully restored.</p>
+
+<p>One time, when I was a boy five or six years old,
+all of the Northern Cheyennes and all of the Southern
+Cheyennes were camped together by the Giving
+White Medal river.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Each of the tribes had its
+sacred medicine tepee, the Northern Cheyennes for
+their Buffalo Head and the Southern Cheyennes for
+their Medicine Arrows. The great double camps remained
+together several days. There were many ceremonies,
+many social dances and other affairs, much
+going back and forth between the two camps in the
+renewal of old acquaintance and the making of new
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>Chief of Many Buffalo and Rolling Wheel were
+two men belonging then to our Northern Cheyenne
+tribe. Chief of Many Buffalo was not married. Rolling
+Wheel had a wife and a small boy. This wife was
+tempted by the single man, and she took her boy and
+went to live with him. Rolling Wheel complained to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>the chiefs. He asked that Chief of Many Buffalo
+be compelled to give him a certain running horse, the
+swiftest animal in the whole tribal herd.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, he must give you that horse,” the chiefs decided.</p>
+
+<p>An old man was sent to notify Chief of Many Buffalo.
+The owner of the racer announced that he
+would keep it, that he had concluded he did not want
+the woman. He sent her away to her father’s lodge.
+“That makes no difference,” the old man said.
+“Rolling Wheel now owns that horse.”</p>
+
+<p>He went and informed the aggrieved husband of
+the situation. He told him:</p>
+
+<p>“The horse belongs to you. Go and get it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I go now,” Rolling Wheel replied.</p>
+
+<p>He took his lariat rope and went out among the
+herd. There on a little knoll stood Chief of Many
+Buffalo, armed with a rifle.</p>
+
+<p>“Go away,” the armed man commanded.</p>
+
+<p>But Rolling Wheel kept on after the horse. The
+rifle flashed and barked. The man with the lariat
+tumbled forward dead. Chief of Many Buffalo was
+a murderer.</p>
+
+<p>This banished man was not allowed to have any
+tepee. For four years he slept in caves or in other
+natural shelters he might find in the neighborhood of
+our camping places. At the end of his term of isolation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>he left us and went to the Southern Cheyennes.
+There he married a widow of that tribe. Soon afterward
+he brought her and her two children to join us.
+They made their permanent home with our people.
+I remember clearly the time of their arrival at our
+camp. I was ten years old. We were on Crow creek,
+a stream that flows into Tongue river just north of
+the present Sheridan.</p>
+
+<p>The misguided wife of the dead Rolling Wheel remained
+for several years an inhabitant of her father’s
+lodge. Finally she was married to another Cheyenne.
+She was my aunt, a sister of my father, White
+Buffalo Shaking Off the Dust.</p>
+
+<p>A Cheyenne named Hawk came to us when I was
+a small boy. I heard people talk of him. They said
+he had been away four years, in consequence of his
+having killed Sharp Nose. From the repeated stories
+I learned the details.</p>
+
+<p>The two men had been out together capturing wild
+horses or on a raid upon an enemy herd. They
+brought home three horses, one of them considered a
+specially good animal and the other two of inferior
+grade. Each one wanted to keep the first choice and
+give the two others to his companion. They quarreled.
+It appeared that Sharp Nose had the better
+claim to preference, but Hawk had possession of the
+disputed animal. He had it picketed beside his lodge.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
+
+<p>Sharp Nose on horseback and his father afoot went
+there to argue further about the matter. Hawk sat
+just outside his tepee entrance. He had his bow and
+arrows. As the two approached, he stood up and
+declared:</p>
+
+<p>“I am going to kill you right now.”</p>
+
+<p>His arrow went through the body of the young man
+on horseback. Sharp Nose plunged forward and fell
+dead to the ground. His father shouted imprecations
+upon the hot-headed killer. The father of Hawk
+intervened to take a part in the affair. This old man
+went into their tepee and came out with a muzzle-loading
+rifle in his hands. The father of the dead
+Sharp Nose turned and walked away toward the
+camp boundaries. The rifle was leveled and fired at
+him. He staggered, evidently wounded, but he did
+not fall. The shooter reloaded his rifle with powder,
+bullet and cap. By that time the retreating victim
+was far off and still walking away. A second shot
+was sent after him. This time the result was fatal.</p>
+
+<p>Hawk and his father were banished at once, not
+being allowed to take with them any property whatever.
+I used to gaze upon the returned Hawk with
+awe-stricken feelings. People whispered, “He killed
+a Cheyenne.” I do not remember ever having seen
+his father. I believe the old man died while they
+were in exile. The killing had been done somewhere
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>between Cherry creek and the Arickaree river (northeastern
+Colorado). When Hawk joined the tribe
+again we were near the agency south of the Black
+Hills.</p>
+
+<p>No property indemnity payment nor any other
+substitute penalty could take the place of the four
+years of banishment put upon a willful killer. If a
+killing were accidental, the survivor might be compelled
+to give horses and other presents to the relatives
+of the deceased, or he voluntarily and promptly
+might do his best to make amends to them in that
+manner. If no blame whatever rested upon him, he
+need pay nothing. Yet, it was customary for him to
+show in some such way his sadness of heart because
+of the occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>Two youths, brothers, found one time a wolf’s den.
+One of them took his lariat and crawled into the hillside
+cave to get pups. He felt about in the darkness,
+got the rope about a pup’s hind feet and dragged it
+out. They knocked it in the head and he went back
+after another one. This time, either a pup or an old
+wolf bit his hand. He retreated. Outside he got a
+forked stick. With this projecting out in front of
+him, he returned to the attack upon the wolves. The
+forked end got engaged in the hair and skin of the
+wolf. The youth twisted and tugged, backing out
+and dragging after him the snarling and snapping
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>animal. The brother stood with his rifle poised and
+ready to shoot. Limbs of brush diverted his aim, and
+the bullet crashed into the head of the other boy.
+The shocked and weeping brother put the dead body
+upon a horse and took it to their home lodge. People
+flocked there to see and to hear.</p>
+
+<p>“You killed him in anger,” somebody accused.</p>
+
+<p>“No, it was an accident,” he sobbed out. And he
+explained how it had occurred.</p>
+
+<p>A group of warrior policemen went with him out
+to the wolf’s den. There he rehearsed for their observation
+all of the incidents of the happening. They
+became fully satisfied that he had no intention to kill
+his brother, that it truly was entirely accidental. The
+youth was released with no penalty whatever.</p>
+
+<p>As we were camped one time on the upper Powder
+river, when I was about thirteen years old, Wolf Medicine
+and other men loaded their pack horses with
+buffalo robes and other skins and went to the trader
+post at the southward (Fort Laramie) for buying
+some supplies. They got tobacco, caps, powder, lead,
+sugar, and goods of that character. Wolf Medicine
+brought a sack of flour. Our women were just then
+learning how to make bread. Wolf Medicine’s wife
+knew how to make it so it tasted good. He was a
+little chief of the Elk warriors, and he wanted to give
+them a feast. He said to his wife:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Make plenty of bread. I shall invite all Elks to
+come.”</p>
+
+<p>“How,” she assented, and she went immediately
+at mixing flour and water. Then: “Oh, I have no
+soda.”</p>
+
+<p>A young woman there said: “My mother has soda.
+I will go and get some.” She went to her home
+lodge and told her mother. This woman rummaged
+among her packages, looking into one after another.
+“Here it is,” she finally announced. The young
+woman took the white powder to the wife of Wolf
+Medicine. As the good cook proceeded with her
+work, her proud husband went out to the front of his
+lodge and stood there calling:</p>
+
+<p>“All Elk warriors, come. Wolf Medicine has a
+feast of bread.”</p>
+
+<p>That brought them in droves. The wife engaged
+some helpers. They fried many slices of bacon and
+they boiled a great potful of coffee. When the food
+was being eaten everybody said: “Wolf Medicine’s
+wife can make good bread.” The hearts of the husband
+and the wife were made glad by the compliments
+showered upon them.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_112fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_112fp.jpg" alt="A Cheyenne sweat lodge">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A Cheyenne sweat lodge</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_112fpb" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_112fpb.jpg" alt="A Cheyenne woman tanning">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A Cheyenne woman tanning</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>After the feast, Wolf Medicine brought a supply
+of tobacco. The assemblage was converted into a
+grand smoking party. They passed the pipe and
+chatted and told stories. After a while somebody
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>said: “I feel sick. My stomach pains me.” Just
+then the neighbor woman came running and screaming:</p>
+
+<p>“I gave you the wrong powder! It is the wolf
+poison!”</p>
+
+<p>The commotion aroused and brought the whole
+population of the camp. The victims were wallowing
+and groaning. An old man herald went among
+them calling out: “Make yourselves vomit.” Some
+already had done this, others began at once to gag
+their throats with fingers poked into them. Two
+men, Old Bear and White Elk, did not do this. Instead,
+they took doses of gunpowder in water. Both
+of these men had convulsions and were sick a long
+time, but they finally recovered full health. All of
+the others got relief soon after the gagging and vomiting.
+One of them was my father. As a test, some
+remnants of bread was given to two dogs. Both of
+the dogs went into convulsions and died. The woman
+who had provided the supposed soda was not
+punished. On the contrary, she was for a long time
+afterward so distressed in mind that people sympathized
+with and tried to console her.</p>
+
+<p>A certain half-Sioux-half-Cheyenne man was
+married to a Cheyenne woman and they lived with
+our tribe. He killed one of our Cheyennes, served
+his exile term of four years and returned to a small
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>village of Cheyennes where were his relatives. That
+was considered right, but his next movement was considered
+not right. He went to visit another Cheyenne
+village where were many relatives of the man
+he had killed. Warning was sent to him not to come
+there, that he would be killed, but he heeded not the
+notice, or he designed to show special bravery that
+might win a good standing. Two Cheyenne men accompanied
+him to the visited camp.</p>
+
+<p>The three companions went from lodge to lodge,
+being received courteously and fed at the various stopping
+places. A brother of the man who had been
+killed sat in his own lodge, there meditating and saying
+nothing to anybody. He kept beside him a loaded
+rifle. From time to time, as the three men moved
+among the lodges he watched them from the interior
+of his tepee. People began to taunt him:</p>
+
+<p>“You are afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I will kill him today.”</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux-Cheyenne walked at all times between
+the two Cheyenne companions when the three went
+from any one lodge to another. But as they were
+passing across one open area the middle man stopped
+and bent himself forward to tie a loose moccasin
+string. In a moment the bang of a rifle shot rang out
+from the watcher’s tepee. The half-Sioux pitched
+headfirst to the ground. His death was regarded by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>all as an earned infliction. The chiefs agreed: “He
+ought not to have come so soon to this place where
+are his victim’s relatives. His slayer did right.”</p>
+
+<p>An Ogallala Sioux man had one of our women as
+his wife. They lived with our people. The couple
+had much domestic trouble. It was said the husband
+grossly abused his wife. The matter came to a climax
+as our Cheyennes were camped on the Giving
+White Medal river. I was a baby or a small child,
+and my knowledge of it comes only from hearsay
+stories. But in later times I knew the people involved.</p>
+
+<p>The maltreated wife had two brothers, Dirty Moccasins
+and Tall White Man—not the present old man
+Tall White Man, but another Cheyenne dead many
+years ago. These two brothers decided to end the
+continual humiliation of their sister. They got their
+bows and arrows and went man-hunting. Each of
+them sent an arrow through the body of the offending
+Sioux and put out the lights of his life. They were
+not banished. Besides their having the natural sympathy
+of the people, the dead man was a Sioux, not
+a Cheyenne. Nevertheless, ever after that, Dirty
+Moccasins smoked only a deer bone pipe and Tall
+White Man used always a little stone one. For many
+years I saw him as a scrawny and feeble old man
+smoking the tiny short-stemmed stone pipe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Sioux and his wife had a ten-year-old daughter.
+When she grew to womanhood she married a
+Cheyenne man named Elk Creek. This couple had
+three daughters, grandchildren of the Sioux killed
+by the two brothers. One of these grandchildren
+married Round Stone, another married a Fort Keogh
+soldier named Thompson, the third is the wife of
+Willis Rowland, our present interpreter at the Lame
+Deer agency.</p>
+
+<p>I heard a story about two Sioux in a Sioux camp
+who quarreled concerning the ownership of a horse.
+One of them had possession of the animal. The other
+sat in his lodge and brooded over what he regarded
+as a wrong done to him. He planned an unusual
+mode of carrying out revenge. He went to a Cheyenne
+camp near by and inquired there for a medicine
+man. A Cheyenne led him to a certain lodge.</p>
+
+<p>“I have important business,” the Sioux announced.
+“Come out where nobody can hear us.”</p>
+
+<p>The three went out of the camp, to a hilltop. The
+young Cheyenne served as negotiator between the
+Sioux and the medicine man.</p>
+
+<p>“I want him to kill a Sioux,” the visitor proposed.</p>
+
+<p>There was some exchange of talk about the compensation
+to the medicine man. Finally, an agreement
+was reached. The medicine man received a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>blanket, some moccasins and clothing, some food and
+a keen-bladed and sharp-pointed sheathknife. A day
+was consumed in settling the conditions. While this
+was going on, the Sioux camp moved away and was
+set up elsewhere. The angry Sioux and the medicine
+man followed them. The lodge of the enemy was
+pointed out. The medicine man drew the figure of a
+man upon the outside wall of the lodge. At the right
+place he made a special picture of the heart. Then
+he told the angry Sioux:</p>
+
+<p>“Take this knife. At dawn tomorrow morning
+you must stab the heart picture I have drawn. Then
+bring to me the knife.”</p>
+
+<p>The commanded procedure was carried out. The
+wielder of the weapon was astonished when blood
+flowed freely from the stabbed picture heart. He
+ran away and told the medicine man, told him of the
+blood and returned to him the knife.</p>
+
+<p>“Good. He will die tonight,” came the assuring
+declaration.</p>
+
+<p>As the medicine man went back to the Cheyennes
+he congratulated himself on the clever trick he had
+played upon his confiding employer. “Good knife,
+good blanket, good clothing, all for me,” he
+chuckled. But: That same night the enemy Sioux
+man actually became ill. He vomited blood, and before
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>morning he was dead. I do not like that kind
+of medicine actions. Such use of the powers makes
+bad Indians.</p>
+
+<p>The warrior days of a Cheyenne man began at the
+age of about sixteen or seventeen, or sometimes a
+little earlier for such activities as were not very difficult
+or risky. They ended somewhere between thirty-five
+and forty, according to particular circumstances.
+The regular rule was, every man was classed as a
+warrior and expected to serve as such until he had a
+son old enough to take his place. Then the father retired
+from aggressive fighting and the son took up
+the weapons for that family. If a man came into
+early middle age without any son, he adopted one.
+If he had more than one son, he might allow the additional
+one or more to be adopted by another man who
+had none. By following this system, all of the offensive
+fighting was done by young men, mostly the unmarried
+young men. The fathers and the older men
+ordinarily stayed in the background, to help or to
+shield the women and children. Or, if it was practicable,
+the fathers and old men and women followed
+out the young warriors and stayed at a safe distance
+behind, there to sing cheering songs and to call out
+advice and encouragement. If a warrior’s father or
+some other old person put himself unnecessarily forward
+in a battle he was likely to be criticised for his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>needless risk, and also the young warriors felt aggrieved
+at his taking from them whatever of honors
+might be gained in the combat. In general, the
+young men were supposed to be more valuable as
+fighters and less valuable as wise counselors, while
+the older men were estimated in the opposite way.
+It was considered as being not right for an important
+older man to place himself as a target for the missiles
+of the enemy, if he could avoid such exposure.
+Even in a surprise attack upon us, it was expected
+the seniors should run away, if they could get away,
+while the more lively and supposedly more ambitious
+young men met the attack.</p>
+
+<p>Our war chiefs—that is, the three leading chiefs
+and the twenty-seven little chiefs of our three warrior
+societies—were more useful as instructors in
+quiet assemblage than as directors of operation in
+times of battle. There were frequent gatherings of
+the warrior societies, each in its own gathering,
+where the chiefs exchanged ideas about methods of
+combat and about daily care of the personal self,
+and where the listening young warriors learned their
+lessons. If some aggressive war was contemplated,
+these chiefs agreed upon the plans. But when any
+battle actually began it was a case of every man for
+himself. There were then no ordered groupings,
+no systematic movements in concert, no compulsory
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>goings and comings. Warriors of all societies mingled
+indiscriminately, every individual went where
+and when he chose, every one looked out for himself
+only, or each helped a friend if such help were
+needed and if the able one’s personal inclination
+just then was toward friendly helpfulness. The warrior
+chiefs called out advice, perhaps a reminder of
+some rule of action theretofore discussed in the
+gatherings, or perhaps some special suggestion that
+exactly fitted the immediate situation, such as,
+“Yonder is one whose horse is down; go right in
+after him.” Ordinarily the advice of the chiefs was
+heeded. But the obedience was a voluntary one.
+In battle, the chiefs had not authority to issue commands
+that must be obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>Special war parties made up of members of some
+certain warrior society often went out seeking conflict
+with the enemy. The warrior societies competed
+with each other for effectiveness in this kind of
+activity, as well as in all other activities regarded as
+commendable. At times, the members of some certain
+warrior society would be selected by the tribal
+chiefs to do all of the tribal fighting in some case
+where the opposition was looked upon as being not
+great enough to make necessary the use of the entire
+tribal military forces. If this appointed segment of
+our fighters did well they were acclaimed. If they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>did not do well, especially if other warriors had to go
+to their assistance, the original combatants were
+discredited. Ordinarily, whatever warrior society
+was on duty as camp policemen had also the duty as
+special camp defenders. It was their business to be
+the first ones out to meet any attack upon the camp.
+Members of the other societies added their help if
+necessary, refrained from doing so if they were not
+needed. If the enemy onset was sufficient to render
+needful the resistance of all of the warriors in the
+camp, all of them were called by the heralds of the
+tribal chiefs. In cases of extreme danger, even the
+old men and some of the women might use whatever
+weapons they could seize and wield.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux tribes had ways closely resembling those
+of the Cheyennes. We traveled and visited much
+with them, particularly with the Ogallalas, sometimes
+with the Minneconjoux. The Sioux tribal governments
+were almost the same as ours. Each of
+them had numerous tribal chiefs, each had various
+warrior societies and chiefs of them. Their warriors
+dressed for death in battle, all of their people dressed
+for death in time of peace, according to the same customs
+among us. Their warrior training by precept
+and by discipline was similar to our system. They
+fought their battles as a band of individuals, the same
+as we fought ours, and the same as was the way of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>all Indians I ever knew. They had war dances and
+medicine dances differing only a little from our ceremonies
+of this kind. So when white people learn the
+ways of the Cheyennes they have learned also a great
+deal of the ways of the Sioux and of other Indians in
+this part of the world.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">[10]</a> Smoky Hill river (?).</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="IV">
+ <span class="p50l">IV</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Worshiping The Great Medicine.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I made medicine the first time when I was seventeen
+years old (1875). It was during the month of
+May, I believe, although we did not divide the years
+into months or weeks as the white people later taught
+us to divide them. Our family was in a camp of fourteen
+or fifteen lodges of Cheyennes in the hills at the
+head of Otter creek, a stream flowing into the eastern
+side of Tongue river. The main camp of the tribe was
+on Powder river, east of our location.</p>
+
+<p>To “make medicine” is to engage upon a special
+period of fasting, thanksgiving, prayer and self denial,
+even of self torture. The procedure is entirely
+a devotional exercise. The purpose is to subdue the
+passions of the flesh and to improve the spiritual self.
+The bodily abstinence and the mental concentration
+upon lofty thoughts cleanses both the body and the
+soul and puts them into or keeps them in health.
+Then the individual mind gets closer toward conformity
+with the mind of the Great Medicine above us.</p>
+
+<p>I said to my father: “All during my boyhood and
+youth the Great Medicine has been good to me. I
+have fond parents and kind brothers and sisters. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>have had plenty of food and have had no bad sickness.
+No bullet nor arrow has hit me. No serious
+injury of any kind has fallen upon me. I ought to do
+something to show my gratitude for all of these
+favors.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my son, you owe a debt for them,” my father
+agreed.</p>
+
+<p>Red Haired Bear, a good medicine man or spiritual
+adviser, was in our small camp. His wife was my
+mother’s sister. I went to him.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to make medicine,” I told him. “I think
+I have lived in a way good enough to render me
+worthy. I want to become still better. I want to
+thank the Great Medicine and ask His continued favor.
+I want to become able to kill all enemies I may
+meet and to be shielded from their assaults upon me.
+I do not want to die in any manner until I reach old
+age. I wish you would help me.”</p>
+
+<p>“How,” he responded encouragingly. “What
+number of days do you think you can endure?”</p>
+
+<p>“The whole four days,” I replied confidently.</p>
+
+<p>“How,” he glowed. “I will help you.”</p>
+
+<p>He warned me it was a difficult undertaking for
+any young man. He urged me to be brave. He said
+the bravest ones always got the greatest spiritual
+benefit. I asserted myself as feeling equal to any distress
+that might come to me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
+
+<p>“That is good,” he cheered me on. “You shall
+have the strongest of trials. You shall stay out one
+night without any shelter, the next night you may
+have a little cone tepee, the third night you may build
+for yourself a willow dome lodge.”</p>
+
+<p>This proposition put a check upon my eagerness.
+I had not thought of being unprotected from bad
+weather during any part of the time. It occurred to
+my mind that a rainstorm might interfere with the
+devotions. Even with a little cone tepee over me, a
+strong wind might upset the entire programme. My
+medicine might be broken by accidents like these. I
+asked if a willow dome lodge could be used during
+the entire procedure.</p>
+
+<p>“How. It shall be as you desire.”</p>
+
+<p>He started me out to cut willow wands for making
+the medicine lodge. He told me I must get seventeen
+of them, each a clean and strong and long piece
+of pliable green wood. I carefully gathered them,
+selecting and rejecting. I tied them into a pack bundle.
+Throwing the bundle upon my back and taking
+a crowbar in my hands, I carried the burden far up a
+gulch and into the timber at the hilltop. I chose a
+spot for the lodge and put down my load. With the
+crowbar I punched in the ground sixteen holes
+around a circle about eight feet in diameter. Into
+these holes I set upright sixteen of the wands. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>then bent their tops across, pairing them and tying
+together the pairs. The skeleton dome was completed
+by weaving through the coupled tops the
+seventeenth strand, this running from east to west. I
+returned then to Red Haired Bear for further instructions.</p>
+
+<p>“Get a buffalo head,” he ordered me.</p>
+
+<p>I searched the neighborhood until I found one.
+Under his directions I heaped up dirt into a low
+mound about eight feet due east from where was to
+be the eastern entrance opening of the lodge. Upon
+this mound was placed the buffalo head, it being set
+to face toward the lodge. I cleared off all grass and
+twigs to make a clean path between the buffalo head
+and the lodge opening. I gathered armfuls of sweet
+sagegrass and spread it as a carpet upon the floor of
+the enclosed circle. The two of us returned then to
+Red Haired Bear’s lodge.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine man painted my whole body. Red
+clay mixed into water, in a dish, was used for most of
+the painting. Four times he took portions of the
+powdered red earth, each separate time casting the
+portion upon the water’s surface and uttering low
+prayers as he stirred it into solution. After having
+put the red coloring upon the entire surface of my
+skin he got out from his medicine bag a package of
+pulverized black earth. Four different casts and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>four separate stirrings into water were made likewise
+with this coloring material. With the black paint he
+made first a circle about my face, including the forehead,
+the chin and the cheeks. Black wristlets and
+black anklets were next formed. On the middle of
+my breast he painted a black sun. On my left
+shoulderblade he put a black moon.</p>
+
+<p>My director then offered a prayer:</p>
+
+<p>“Great Medicine Above: You see Wooden Leg.
+He wants to be a good man. Look upon him and
+favor him. Make him brave and wise and kind.
+Make him generous to his people, to all Indians,
+even to his enemies if they come peaceably and in
+need. Help him to defeat all enemies who may
+beset him, and shield him from their efforts to take
+his life. Guide him so that he may be rich in food
+and skins and horses. Help him to find a good wife.
+Give to them many children. Keep them all in good
+health and make them live a long time.”</p>
+
+<p>He prayed also to the ground spirits. As he
+prayed to the Great Medicine he looked upward, and
+as he addressed the spirits below he looked down
+toward the ground. When the prayers were ended
+we walked together to the medicine lodge I had built
+in the hilltop forest. We sat down there beside the
+slender path I had made to connect the buffalo head
+and the entrance to the lodge. He talked to me:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span></p>
+
+<p>“This is going to be a hard trial for you, the hardest
+trial you ever have had. Throughout four days
+you will have neither food nor water. Your desires
+will distress you. Other distresses may be piled
+upon these. You may retreat now and postpone it
+to another time if you want to do so. What say
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I dread it,” I confessed, “but I know it will not
+kill me. I do not want to wait. I want to go on
+right now. I shall keep my courage from failing by
+fixing my thoughts upon being a good man.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is good,” he cheered me. Then he added:
+“Be brave.”</p>
+
+<p>The medicine man prayed again for me. He
+looked again upward and again downward, going
+through the same prayer for the below spirits as he
+had made to the Above Spirit. The praying was
+of the same kind as he had uttered just after the
+painting preparations, but he added some other solicitations
+for my welfare.</p>
+
+<p>After this prayer had ended I crept in upon the
+sagegrass floor of the skeleton willow dome. He
+covered the frame all over with many buffalo robes
+we had brought. Not even a faint ray of light could
+get inside. He then went away to our camp.</p>
+
+<p>I now was alone. For a little while I just sat
+there in the darkness—complete darkness, although
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>it was about the middle of the afternoon. I was
+naked, except for the breechcloth and a buffalo robe.
+I had a supply of kinnikinick, some matches, and my
+medicine pipe that had been given to me by my
+father. I loaded and lit the pipe for a thoughtful
+smoke. The flash of the match dazzled my eyes.
+Time dragged along. I could not smoke continuously,
+so I just sat there and meditated, or tried to
+do so. I did not know when the sun went down
+nor when darkness came. It began to seem rather
+lonely. I grew sleepy, so I stretched myself out
+with the robe about me and drifted into a doze. But
+every little sound startled me. I sat up and had
+another smoke. Soon I had another, and then another.
+I slept again, this time more soundly. I
+had not the least notion as to how long I remained
+asleep. It seemed I had been there more than a day
+and night, that the medicine man had forgotten me.
+I listened intently to every slight rustle in the surrounding
+forest. My prayers all had been in
+thoughts, not in spoken words. I almost wished for
+some disturbing intrusion to break up the entire proceeding.
+Noise of a horse’s footsteps fell into my
+ears. Closer, closer, very close.</p>
+
+<p>“Hey, Wooden Leg!” It was the voice of Red
+Haired Bear. “One day has passed. It now is
+noon.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span></p>
+
+<p>He dismounted and opened slightly the entrance
+covering. The light blinded me for a moment.
+Gradually he opened it wider, finally throwing it
+altogether aside. He allowed me to go outside for
+a few minutes, then I had to return to the interior.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us smoke together,” he invited.</p>
+
+<p>He sat just outside and I sat just inside. My smoking
+equipment was brought into use. He pointed the
+stem and sent a puff to each of the four principal
+directions, then to the above, to the below and to the
+buffalo head. We passed the pipe back and forth
+in many exchanges, until one loading of it was exhausted.
+He prayed again for me. Then he admonished
+me:</p>
+
+<p>“The next day will be more difficult. But, be not
+afraid. The Great Medicine sees you.”</p>
+
+<p>He shut up the lodge, mounted his horse and went
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Fitful slumbers, prayers, smoking, efforts at meditation,
+these alternated in my quiet activities. I
+was hungry and thirsty, especially thirsty. My body
+was hot. My heart was heavy. My ears constantly
+were listening, listening, to every faint whisper of
+Nature. All of the time appeared to be night, the
+blackest of night. Suddenly there came a stamp—stamp—stamp.
+Then:</p>
+
+<p>“Boo-o-o-o! Boo-o-o-o!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
+
+<p>A buffalo bull! The animal snorted, stamped and
+bellowed again. It surely would charge upon my
+lodge and tear it to pieces, I thought. I did not move,
+but I prayed earnestly: “Great Medicine, shield me.
+I have tried to be a good young man. You have
+been kind to me in past times. Be kind to me now.”
+I heard the threatening beast move away. It did not
+return.</p>
+
+<p>Hours, hours, hours. I did not know whether it
+was day or night. I heard a horse coming. That
+was a welcome sound. I was all attention.</p>
+
+<p>“Hey, Wooden Leg!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hey!”</p>
+
+<p>“Two days have passed,” Red Haired Bear informed
+me. “The sun now is far toward the west
+on your third day.”</p>
+
+<p>Again he opened my dark retreat, gradually letting
+in more and more light. Again we smoked together.
+I told him of the buffalo bull. He listened
+with evident great interest.</p>
+
+<p>“That is a good sign,” he comforted me. “No
+buffalo ever will harm you. You and all other Cheyennes
+will get plenty of meat and skins from them.
+The bull was your friend, telling you all this.”</p>
+
+<p>Another prayer went from the medicine man to
+the Above and to the below. After a short allowance
+of time for me outside, he put me again
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>into the enclosure and shut tightly the small hole.</p>
+
+<p>“Be brave,” were his parting words.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I replied. But I was not sure.</p>
+
+<p>Hot, thirsty, yet more hot and more thirsty. I
+prayed particularly for strength of body and firmness
+of heart to carry me through to the end of the
+trial. I loaded my pipe for a solacing smoke. But
+it was not a solace. The heat burned my already
+parching tongue. I tried to sleep. Maybe I did
+sleep. I do not know. I made attempts to meditate
+quietly. I do not know whether I actually was thinking
+or was following dreams racing through my mind.
+All I could be sure about was that I either was
+sitting down or lying down all the time. I heard
+something that cleared my mind at once. My mother
+brought wood and stones and placed them out by the
+buffalo head. She did not speak nor make any sign
+of recognition, but I knew it was my mother. It
+seemed I could look right through the robes and
+see her there. After she had deposited her burden
+she went away.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how lonely I was! I loaded and lit my pipe.
+No, it was not good. My mouth and throat were
+burning. Water! Water! But: “The Great Medicine
+sees me,” I kept thinking. My thoughts whirled
+and chased each other rapidly in circles. I dreamt
+that I heard the footsteps of a horse.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Hey, Wooden Leg!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hey!”</p>
+
+<p>“This is the day.”</p>
+
+<p>Happiness almost filled my heart. The only
+hindrance was in the thirst and the hot body. After
+I had been let out we smoked together. It was a
+torture to my tongue, but I did not complain. We
+went then to my father’s lodge in the camp. My
+father called out invitations to old men friends. They
+came and sat in a circle upon the robes spread over
+the lodge’s floor. I sat with them, by the side of
+my father. My mother brought a bucketful of water
+and set it off a little distance in front of me. I suppressed
+a strong desire to plunge my face into it,
+but I could not keep my eyes from staring at it. The
+medicine man sprinkled red powder upon the surface
+of the water, four small scatterings in four separate
+places. He passed his hands to and fro over it and
+prayed. It seemed I never in my life had heard so
+long a prayer. When it was ended he said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“Wooden Leg, you have been four days without
+water. Now you may drink four sups.”</p>
+
+<p>I seized the sides of the bucket. The four sups
+were four long-drawn mouthfuls. The water rumbled
+through my bowels. After a few minutes I was
+told, “Now you may have more, but do not take all
+you want.” I drank slowly, but I drew in big mouthfuls
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>and took many of them. Not long afterward I
+was allowed to apply myself a third time at the
+bucket.</p>
+
+<p>My mother brought a potful of buffalo meat she
+had been boiling. All of the guests were given portions
+of it. A piece was put upon a tin plate and
+set before me. It looked good enough to grab and
+swallow immediately. But I waited for advice. My
+adviser did not long detain me.</p>
+
+<p>“Wooden Leg, you have been four days without
+meat. Take four sliced-off bites, one for each day
+of the fast.”</p>
+
+<p>I selected a long chunk from the plate. I stuck
+the end of it far into my mouth, and with a sheathknife
+I cut it off. The chewing was vigorous, and
+I soon had it swallowed. The chunk was pushed a
+second time into my mouth and its end cut off there.
+A third and a fourth mouthful were taken in the
+same manner. After a few minutes, more meat was
+allowed to me. Then still more, all I cared to eat.
+It was the best meat I ever tasted.</p>
+
+<p>The old men joined in asking me:</p>
+
+<p>“Tell us of your experience.”</p>
+
+<p>I told them—told them particularly of the coming
+of the buffalo bull. They complimented me, said
+I was brave, said the Great Medicine was my friend,
+assured me that no buffalo ever would harm me.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>Their approval and their assurances made me glad.
+My heart was like the sun coming up on a summer
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>All of these old men, some of their wives, my
+father and mother and the medicine man went with
+me to my medicine lodge. We were to have a sweat
+bath worship together. My mother carried a bucketful
+of water for sprinkling upon the hot stones inside
+the lodge. The medicine man piled the stones into
+a cone heap. He leaned sticks of wood up the sides
+of this stone structure and set a fire to going among
+them. The other men stripped themselves to breechcloth
+and crept into the lodge. When the stones had
+become well heated by the wood fire over them the
+medicine man passed them to one of the men inside.
+They were handled with forked sticks and were piled
+into a pit some of the men had made in the center
+of the lodge’s earth floor. When the pit was filled
+with the hot stones the medicine man set inside the
+bucketful of water. He himself then crept in, on
+hands and knees as we all had done. One man remained
+outside to close the opening, to ventilate temporarily
+when we might require, to wait upon us in
+whatever way our needs might demand. Not any
+of the women went into the lodge. Twelve men
+were in there.</p>
+
+<p>At the left inside of the entrance sat the medicine
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>man. I was next at his left side. My father was
+third, at my left. The other men were seated on
+beyond, the row extending around the circle. All
+had backs to the wall. We had smoked together
+while the stones were being heated, but the pipe now
+had been placed outside. Its bowl rested on the
+ground beside the buffalo head and its stem projected
+upward past the nose and eyes of the hallowed object.
+A good spirit influence was coming from the
+nostrils of the head straight along the clean path and
+into the lodge. No knowing and worshipful Indian
+ever crossed that path. Such act would cut off the
+steady flow of healing virtue.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine man opened the interior proceedings
+with another prayer for my welfare. Once more
+he pleaded with the Great Medicine to make me
+good and generous, to give me success in hunting, to
+protect me from enemies and to enable me to kill
+them. Once more he asked that I might get a good
+wife, might have many children, and that myself and
+all of my family might keep good health and live to
+advanced years. He beseeched again that I might
+gather together many horses and not lose any of them.
+I believed his prayers would be heard. My hopes
+were high. My trust in the Being Above was strong.</p>
+
+<p>Water was squirted upon the hot stones in the
+central pit. The medicine man first gave each one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>in the lodge a drink of water. He took into his own
+mouth a chew of herb. After its mastication he
+supped and squirted four successive mouthfuls of
+water. Between the acts were short prayers. Thus
+he released from the stones the vitality put into them
+by the burning wood that had got it from the sun,
+the material representative of the Great Medicine.
+The stones hissed their protests as the water compelled
+them to release into the air the spiritual curative
+forces. Our bodies were enveloped by the steam
+wherein floated the vital energy. The vivifying and
+purifying influence soaked into our skins. Bad spirits
+were driven out of us and drowned in the water that
+dripped from us. The medicine man repeated from
+time to time the sprinkling of water upon the protesting
+stones.</p>
+
+<p>The soft whisperings of an eagle wing bone flute
+came into my ears. The sound seemed to come from
+the roof and from other points in the utterly dark
+interior of the lodge. After a few of the gentle blasts,
+I felt the instrument being placed in my hands. My
+father put it there. It now was mine, to keep. It
+was to be worn about my neck, suspended at the mid-breast
+by a buckskin thong, during all times of danger.
+If I were threatened with imminent harm I had
+but to put it to my lips and cause it to send out its
+soothing notes. That would ward off every evil design
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>upon me. It was my mystic protector. It was
+my medicine.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour or more together in the devotional
+dome, all of us went to our respective lodge homes.
+There my father presented me also with a shield of
+rawhide taken from the rump of a buffalo bull. The
+hair had been removed and the piece of skin had
+been dried rapidly before a fire, to make it extremely
+tough. It was covered with antelope buckskin sewed
+in place. The cover had medicine designs drawn in
+color upon its surface. This shield would turn off
+any bullet or arrow or other missile coming toward
+me. My father made it. He delivered it into my
+left hand.</p>
+
+<p>My second medicine experience took place a month
+or so after that first one. Black White Man, a medicine
+man, took me through it. This time the plan
+was for but two days of self denial and worship. I
+made the dome lodge according to the same rules
+as had governed in making the first one, which was
+the regular way of making them. Black White Man
+painted me in the same way and with the same ceremony
+used by Red Haired Bear. I had the same kind
+of harassing sensations while alone, but they covered
+only two days instead of four. The resumption of
+water and food was carried out in a manner exactly
+like had been done in the previous proceedings. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>sweat bath devotions had a like preparatory programme
+and followed a course like that of the other
+one and of all such affairs entered upon among the
+Cheyennes. But during this second time of spiritual
+upbuilding there was one intervening incident that
+marked it as different from all others.</p>
+
+<p>During the last part of my lonely vigil—I learned
+afterward it was during my second night—my
+quietude was broken by the tread of horses, many
+horses. I heard men talking. Gabble-gabble-gabble.
+It was not Cheyenne talk. It was not Sioux. This
+being the case, the horsemen necessarily must be
+enemies, either whites or Indians. It seemed now
+that the bellowing buffalo bull of my previous experience
+had been but a tame threat. It appeared
+I surely would be discovered or already had been
+discovered, by the gabbling strangers. It seemed
+that death threatened me. My hair raised itself and
+I could feel it standing upright. My heart thumped.
+It throbbed and pounded the inner wall of my breast.
+To my senses its noise was so boisterous as to notify
+the intruders and all the rest of the world that a
+human being frozen by fright awaited the fatal blow.
+I did not move—perhaps was not able to move. But
+I could think. I centered my thoughts upon whispering
+over and over, “The Great Medicine sees me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hi-ye-e-e-e!” The war-cry!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Bang! Bang! Bang-bang!” Rifle shots.</p>
+
+<p>The horses near me clattered away. One of them
+bawled as if wounded by a bullet. The strange
+voices went out of my hearing. Other voices shouted.
+These were Cheyennes. I heard Cheyenne women
+and children crying as they ran past my retreat. But
+I could do nothing but just sit there with my buffalo
+robe over my head. The commotion gradually died
+down. My pious meditations were much disturbed
+by the alarming turmoil. I could not keep myself
+from wondering what had happened. I wondered
+if the Cheyennes had been driven from their camp
+and had left me there alone. This thought chilled
+me. But I stayed, waiting, waiting. Many hours
+later Black White Man came.</p>
+
+<p>“They were Crows trying to steal our horses,” he
+explained. The raiders had been repulsed, but one
+of our Cheyennes had been killed. “It shows that
+the Crows never can hurt you,” the medicine man
+assured me.</p>
+
+<p>For a third season of warrior discipline I went
+one morning at dawn to the top of a hill. There I
+fasted, prayed, meditated and dreamed all day. During
+the day I saw the lodges taken down and the
+whole camp move away down the valley. But I had
+to stay. When the sun had set I started out afoot
+to follow the trail of my people. I drank water along
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>the way, but I got no food until my arrival at the
+home lodge at the end of my journey of ten or twelve
+miles.</p>
+
+<p>Another disciplinary means for subduing the flesh
+was to stand upright all day, from sunrise to sunset,
+on a hill. The devotee did not move during that
+time except to keep his face turned at all times toward
+the sun. He might keep his eyes closed or
+shaded, but his countenance had to be presented
+ever toward the venerated token of the Great Medicine’s
+existence. He prayed or otherwise kept his
+thoughts fixed on a high plane. This system of self
+denial was varied by the attitude taken. One might
+stand all day or sit in one position all day or lie
+down during all of the time. But the attitude assumed
+at the beginning must be kept to the end.
+My all-day supplications were made while sitting
+down.</p>
+
+<p>Standing upright in water from sunrise to sunset
+was one way of putting the body under the rule of
+the spirit. The water had to be up to the neck or
+the upper breast. Not any drink of it was taken.
+It was not permissible to move the body except for
+keeping the face toward the sun. The bodily torture
+incident to the full standard Great Medicine dance—what
+the white people call the sun dance—was
+the most severe test of hardihood, so it was looked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>upon as the highest form of self scourging. I never
+undertook this extreme step.</p>
+
+<p>Women did not make medicine by feats of endurance.
+Such was for men only. Sometimes two
+men would go together for the all-day hilltop fast
+or for some other similar performance. Ordinarily,
+though, only one man made up the vigil. I like best
+the solitary way. I think it is better to be alone at
+such times. At any of the occasions observable it
+was permissible for onlookers to view the act. Such
+scrutiny might aid greatly in spurring on to full
+compliance with the rules. Payment to any medicine
+man helper was due. This might be such as
+was agreed upon in advance—often paid in advance—or
+it might be in the form of subsequent free gifts
+to him. The standard fee was a horse.</p>
+
+<p>Our tribal Great Medicine dance was a ceremony
+of one, two or three days, the period depending upon
+immediate conditions. In times before mine the full
+period had been four days, but in my time three days
+was the maximum. It was not held at any regular
+time. Once every two or three years was the usual
+custom. It would be held, though, in successive
+years if the tribe was having misfortune or if enough
+special devotees wanted to undergo the trials. The
+summer season was the special time. The prime
+purpose was to ask the Great Medicine’s favorable
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>attention to the tribe as a whole, not to any particular
+persons. The prayers were for good grass, new
+colts in the horse herds, plenty of berries and roots,
+many children, success in hunting game and in repelling
+enemies.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes and the Arapahoes had their two
+Great Medicine ceremony dances together on one occasion
+when I was about twelve years old (1870).
+We were south of the mountains beyond the headwaters
+of Powder river. The two tribes camped as
+one, in one great camp circle, but all of the Cheyenne
+lodges were at one side of the camp and all of the
+Arapaho lodges at the opposite side. Each tribe had
+its Great Medicine lodge at its own side of the combined
+camp. I went back and forth looking on at
+both of them. The other people of both tribes did
+the same. I was not quite old enough during our
+free roaming days to take a part in the important
+tribal affairs. I merely looked, listened, kept quiet
+and thought about them. This double sacred dance
+of the Cheyennes and Arapahoes was for only one
+day. During that one day all of the participants and
+many other people took neither food nor water. After
+sunset they had a great feast. That was the regular
+way—the participants took neither food nor water
+while the ceremonies were being carried out, one,
+two, three or four days.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p>
+
+<p>Special invocation dances were held irregularly,
+often several times during one season. One or several
+or many persons would perform the rites. At
+a buffalo dance the intent was to obtain the aid of
+the Great Medicine in our efforts at getting the meat
+and skins of these animals. Deer dances, elk dances,
+antelope dances, were engaged upon by individuals,
+by parties or by the tribe. The object was to enlist
+spiritual forces to help us in gathering meat and
+skins. Berry dances, by few or by many people, had
+a like incentive. Always the dances were in summer,
+none of them in winter. Always there was self denial
+in various forms, sacrifices were made in various
+ways. At times the self denial was carried to the
+point of bodily torture. That was our way of paying
+in advance for the favors asked. That was all we
+could do by way of payment.</p>
+
+<p>The spirits of animals joined themselves often to
+assist or to hinder human beings. Sometimes one
+would give its medicine to a man, at other times some
+animal would break a man’s medicine, or would try
+to do so. At my father’s lodge an old man, Pockmarked
+Nose, told of a certain experience that came
+to him. My father afterward told me.</p>
+
+<p>Pockmarked Nose went one time with a young
+man to hunt buffalo. They were on horseback and
+were leading pack horses to bring back the meat and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>skins. They traveled up and down hills and over the
+level plains. Finally they found a band of buffalo.
+They got themselves ready and charged into the
+band. The young man had a bow and arrows, Pockmarked
+Nose had a flintlock gun. He killed a buffalo.
+Just afterward a shot came from somewhere
+aside and another buffalo went down. That shot
+from aside puzzled the two hunters, but they rode
+on. Each time the old man or the young man killed
+a buffalo the shot from aside brought down another
+to match it. But, who was doing this shooting?
+Was it a friend or an enemy? They could not see
+anybody. When six buffalo lay dead on the plain the
+old man applied himself at discovering the identity
+of the third hunter. Far off, on a slight elevation
+of the land, stood a dimly outlined human figure.
+Pockmarked Nose rode toward it.</p>
+
+<p>Was it the Above Spirit, the Great Medicine? Or
+was it a below spirit? Or was some powerful medicine
+man playing tricks? Pockmarked Nose did not
+know, and he never did find out to his satisfaction.
+The stranger had a wooden gun. He said: “Come,
+I give you this medicine gun. It never fails to kill.”
+Pockmarked Nose took and kept the offered gun.
+I do not know what use he may have made of it.</p>
+
+<p>My father himself saw a marvelous example of
+the spirit powers regularly belonging to the deer
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>tribe. When he was a young man he and a companion
+were hunting near the medicine water&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> not far from
+the present town of Sheridan, Wyoming. <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'They sa. bubbles'" id="tn-146">They saw
+bubbles</ins> coming up and bursting upon the water’s
+surface. They went up close, to learn what was
+causing this agitation. As they peered down into the
+deep but clear lake they saw there a deer moving
+about and quietly grazing along the bottom. While
+they were watching the animal it stopped grazing
+and floated slowly up to the water’s surface. My
+father killed it with an arrow. He skinned it, cut
+the meat from the bones, wrapped the skin about
+the meat and loaded the bundle upon his packhorse.
+At his home lodge he stood out and called the names
+of various friends. He invited them:</p>
+
+<p>“Come, feast with me. Good deer meat.”</p>
+
+<p>But when he shouted these words the flesh and
+the skin all jumped together and formed again the
+same live deer he had killed. The animal went running
+away. It ran back to the medicine water,
+plunged into it and disappeared. My father searched
+for it, but he could not see it. He told me he did not
+understand how a deer could do such things except
+it were by the help of the Great Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>Three of our medicine men invited some of us
+young men into a tepee on one certain occasion when
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>I was about fourteen or fifteen years old. They said,
+“We will show you how to make the winter go away
+so that the grass may grow, for the good of the young
+colts coming to our herds.” Just at that time there
+was a big snowstorm making the people and the
+horses shiver. But the three medicine men went
+confidently at their ceremonies.</p>
+
+<p>They sent a young woman out to gather some certain
+kind of sprigs of vegetation. It was not tobacco,
+but pretty soon the medicine men had it changed into
+tobacco. They formed a circle with us, loaded the
+pipe, and soon it was passing from one to another.
+To each of us in turn they said: “Draw in only a
+little of the smoke, but draw it in slowly and deeply.
+Hold it there a short time, then let it flow out from
+wide-open lips, not in puffs from firm lips.” We did
+as they directed. While the smoking was being done
+the three old men made prayers. After a while one
+of them said: “Look outside.” We looked. The
+storm had quit, the sky had cleared, the ground was
+wet but bare of snow, green grass was peeping up
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Every Indian had, or tried to have, some special
+medicine or spirit power of his own, to bring him
+good fortune or to shield him from harm. He had
+some object or objects that held this helpful influence,
+or he had certain ways of doing certain acts,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>or he had both of these aids. I had my special protective
+possessions and my particular methods of
+using them. It was considered not prudent to reveal
+these things, and I never have done so, except in
+some features that I could not keep secret.</p>
+
+<p>A powerful spirit man during my boyhood was
+one whose name originally was Walks Above the
+Earth. He was known as a man whose mind was
+at all times on spiritual things, who gave little or no
+thought to ordinary earthly matters. His name got
+changed, though, in his later life. This came about
+because of his choice of a mule for his riding animal.
+One time when he and Little Chief were approaching
+a Sioux camp somebody remarked, in derision,
+“Here comes that crazy Cheyenne on his mule.”
+That fixed upon him the name Crazy Cheyenne on
+a Mule. This afterward was shortened to Crazy
+Mule.</p>
+
+<p>He had a variety of medicine powers. He put himself
+through many trials, so the spirits helped him.
+One time, when we were in camp far up the Powder
+river, he had four Cheyennes go up close to him and
+shoot at him, each in successive turn. They sent
+four bullets directly at his body. He was standing
+with his back against a tree. After the four shots
+had been fired he stooped forward and pulled off his
+moccasins. From them he poured out the four bullets.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>I saw this. I was eight years old. I saw him
+do the same feat at a time when our tribal camp was
+pitched on the Rosebud valley, just below where the
+present Forsythe road forks to go to Lame Deer and
+to Ashland. At another time he showed his powers
+when the tribe were on upper Lame Deer creek.
+This was just before our warriors joined the Ogallala
+Sioux to fight the soldiers in the fort&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> at the south
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>Roman Nose was, I believe, the most admired of
+all warriors I ever saw. He was killed when I yet
+was a boy, but I remember him, and as I grew older
+I heard much talk of him as an example for the
+young men. The water spirits told him not to marry,
+so he lived a single and pure life. At various Great
+Medicine dances he went bravely through the bodily
+tortures as a sacrifice of self for the good of the tribe.
+White Bull, sometimes known also as Ice, was his
+usual medicine man adviser. In later years White
+Bull and others told me a great many stories illustrative
+of the admirable qualities of Roman Nose.</p>
+
+<p>He made medicine one time when we were camped
+on Goose creek, a stream flowing into the upper
+Tongue river. The medicine water lake was not far
+away. At dawn Roman Nose stripped himself, made
+a raft of logs and went out upon the lake. He took
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>with him his medicine pipe. He had a large buffalo
+robe for a bed and a small one for a pillow. No
+food, no water for drinking. He spent the day on
+his robe bed. He prayed, “Great Medicine, let me
+conquer all enemies,” and other prayers of this kind.
+He meditated upon the Above.</p>
+
+<p>That night a storm came. Lightning flashed and
+thunder shook the earth. Waves washed upon the
+raft and tossed it over the surface of the water. His
+friends were fearful he would be drowned. Early
+in the morning two men went to look for him. They
+saw him on the raft, floating safely. They told the
+people, “He was not harmed.”</p>
+
+<p>The second day he likewise prayed and meditated
+all day. His fast was continued. When that night
+arrived another storm came. The thunder and lightning
+were more active than they had been during
+the previous night. The waves lifted themselves
+higher. But when the calm morning dawned his
+watchers learned that nothing harmful had fallen
+upon him. The third day and night passed in the
+same manner, but the storm during the hours of
+darkness was yet more furious. “He surely will be
+killed by the water spirits tonight,” the people said.
+But he was not.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth night the storm was a terrible one, the
+worst any of the Cheyennes ever had seen. They
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>were fearful for themselves as well as for the young
+man on the raft. Hailstones pelted our lodges and
+scattered our pony herds. “He will be beaten to
+death,” everybody agreed. When the quiet twilight
+of morning came, two men went upon a hill to search
+over the waters. There was Roman Nose still floating
+on his raft. They helped him to land it and to
+put himself upon the shore. Not a hailstone had
+hit him. The water had been angry, crazy, reaching
+for his body, but not a drop of it had touched him.
+The water spirits failed to devour him. The Great
+Medicine prevented them. At the camp all of the
+old men sat themselves in a circle and listened to
+his rehearsal of the events of his great devotional
+adventure.</p>
+
+<p>At a battle with soldiers on Powder river (1865)
+Roman Nose showed the people that he had special
+protection against enemies. He rode his horse several
+times back and forth in front of the white men.
+He rode slowly, not fast. The soldiers shot at him,
+but not a bullet went into him. They either missed
+him or fell back harmless. He had a strong medicine
+warbonnet. I did not see him defy the soldiers, but
+I heard a great deal of talk about it. Our camp
+was above the forks of Powder river and Little Powder
+river. The battle was down below, on Powder
+river. Both the Northern and the Southern Cheyenne
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>tribes were in the upper valley, camping side
+by side. Both of the Great Medicine tribal lodges
+were in the camps, the one for our sacred Buffalo
+Head, and the other for the Medicine Arrows of the
+Southern Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>White Bull made many medicine fasts. He told
+me about them. He said that one time when he was
+fasting and praying on a hill, not in a lodge, on the
+third day a doe antelope came near to him. She
+lay down there on the ground and gave birth to twin
+fawns. White Bull reached out and seized the doe’s
+hind feet. She struggled, but he did not release
+her. She promised that if he would let her go free
+she would give to him the two fawns. But he told
+her he did not want the fawns, he wanted her medicine,
+her spirit powers. The doe groaned and protested,
+but finally she agreed:</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I give you my medicine.”</p>
+
+<p>He got the bear medicine also in a manner like
+that. When he was fasting and praying on a hill
+the bear came sniffing, sniffing, on his trail. It
+stopped suddenly as it came into his view. Both
+of them were startled and frightened. White Bull
+trusted the Great Medicine, but the bear was altogether
+afraid. It said, “If you will not harm me I
+will give you my medicine, and then you can speak
+fire from your mouth.” It gave him then its power
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>over spirits. He got also the medicine of a wild
+hog. Perhaps he had other medicines. I do not
+know. He had a good reputation for doctoring sick
+people. I have heard him “Blaa-a-a-a,” like a doe
+antelope, when he was making medicine for them.
+I have heard him, lots of times, grunting like a hog or
+whoofing like a bear. I never knew how much to believe
+of his stories. Lots of people said he told big
+lies.</p>
+
+<p>My father taught me some medicine practices for
+myself. He showed me where to gather the seed of
+certain grass that had power to shield me. A quantity
+of the seed was put into a buckskin pouch, and
+this I carried tied to my back hair. In the pouch was
+also a piece of loose buckskin. To prepare the medicine,
+a few seeds were pulverized between the fingers
+and the powder was allowed to fall upon the piece of
+buckskin spread out. A little saliva was mixed with
+it by the stirring of a finger. A slight spray of saliva
+then was put into the palms, after which the mixed
+seed and saliva medicine was taken into the palms and
+they were rubbed together. When they had been well
+rubbed they were passed all about my body or clothing,
+near the skin or clothing but not touching.
+Bullets then would be diverted and slip aside
+from me.</p>
+
+<p>My horse was protected by the same medicine. In
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>the same way the palms were passed all over the body
+of the horse, close but not touching. This would
+turn aside bullets from him. The hoofs were lifted
+and the bottom of the feet treated by the palm passing.
+He then would be not easily tired, would be
+surefooted, would not step into a hole and fall down.
+The palms were passed across the front of the horse’s
+nose. The medicine made him have a keen sense of
+smell and a clear eyesight. This helped him to find
+his way without difficulty during darkness or at any
+time when running.</p>
+
+<p>The face painting as it was done for me by Red
+Haired Bear at my first medicine making was adopted
+as my fixed mode of battle preparation in this regard.
+It was a black ring about my face, including lower
+forehead, chin and cheeks in its circle. All of the
+surface enclosed in the circle was painted yellow. I
+kept at all times right at hand a supply of charcoal
+and yellow clay paint. It did not take long for me
+to apply them when an occasion for their need might
+come. With this preparation, with my best clothing,
+my shield, my eagle wing bone whistle, myself and
+my horse protected by the grass seed medicine, I was
+almost fearless. I was not entirely so, but almost.
+In every time of danger I tried to keep myself
+thinking:</p>
+
+<p>“The Great Medicine sees me.”</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">[11]</a> Lake DeSmet.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">[12]</a> Fort Phil Kearny.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="V">
+ <span class="p50l">V</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Off the Reservation.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>After we had been driven from the Black Hills and
+that country was given to the white people my father
+would not stay on any reservation. He said it was
+no use trying to make farms as the white people did.
+In the first place, that was not the Indian way of
+living. All of our teachings and beliefs were that
+land was not made to be owned in separate pieces by
+persons and that the plowing up and destruction of
+vegetation placed by the Great Medicine and the
+planting of other vegetation according to the ideas
+of men was an interference with the plans of the
+Above. In the second place, it seemed that if the
+white people could take away from us the Black
+Hills after that country had been given to us and
+accepted by us as ours forever, they might take away
+from us any other lands we should occupy whenever
+they might want these other lands. In the third place,
+the last great treaty had allowed us to use all of the
+country between the Black Hills and the Bighorn
+river and mountains as hunting grounds so long as
+we did not resist the traveling of white people through
+it on their way to or from their lands beyond its
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>borders. My father decided to act upon this agreement
+to us. He decided we should spend all of our
+time in the hunting region. We could do this, gaining
+our own living in this way, or we could be supported
+by rations given to us at the agency. He chose
+to stay away from all white people. His family all
+agreed with him. So, for more than a year before
+the great battle at the Little Bighorn we were all the
+time in the hunting lands.</p>
+
+<p>Not all of the dissatisfied Indians stayed away from
+the reservations. Bands were moving to and from
+the hunting grounds at all times, even during the
+winter, but only a few remained here throughout the
+year. The Indians involved were both Sioux and
+Cheyennes, but there were many more Sioux than
+Cheyennes. A band of Uncpapas, led by Sitting Bull,
+remained entirely away from Dakota. There were at
+all times a big camp and some smaller camps of
+Ogallalas. Families or small bands of other Sioux
+came and went. The Cheyenne camps varied from
+thirty or forty lodges to two hundred or more. During
+the winter before the soldiers came after us the
+Cheyennes and Ogallalas kept near each other much
+of the time. We spent the earlier part of the cold
+weather season on Otter creek. Then we moved together
+over to Tongue river, setting our two camp
+circles near each other on the west side of the river
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>where now is the home place of John Bigheadman,
+known also as All See Him.</p>
+
+<p>Sugar, coffee, tobacco, ammunition, everything of
+that kind, were scarce with us. We were not greatly
+distressed because of this, but we had learned to use
+and to like these additions to our old ways, so we
+were pleased when such things came to us. We liked
+to get ammunition, as that helped us to kill more
+game. But, best of all, we liked to get tobacco. We
+used the plug tobacco that most white people use
+for chewing. We shaved it off in thin layers, using
+a board to lay it upon while cutting it. It was mixed
+with willow bark. This bark we called kinnikinick.
+It was the dried inside layer.</p>
+
+<p>Red Haired Bear had some tobacco, just a little
+piece, at one time when a certain very old man came
+to visit him. The old man was feeble and shaky.
+He was a good man, so Red Haired Bear determined
+to give him a treat. The host got out his pipe. “Give
+me a knife,” he said to his woman. Then, “Get me
+the tobacco board.” She did as he had asked. He
+cut off only a little of the tobacco and mixed it with
+plenty of kinnikinick. He loaded his pipe and lit
+it. When he had sent puffs to the four directions, to
+the Above and to the below spirits, he handed the
+pipe to the guest. The old man drew in and let out
+one draft. He stopped a moment as if thinking intently
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>about something. Then he drew in another
+draft. He let out a cloud through his nose.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, tobacco!” he exclaimed in delight.</p>
+
+<p>He took deep and slow inhalations. He let them
+out slowly, by the mouth and by the nose. As Red
+Haired Bear took his turn at the pipe the old man
+grasped handfuls of the smoke, rubbed together his
+palms, sniffed them over and over, rubbed his face
+and his clothing. “Good, good,” he kept saying.
+When the pipeful had been burned he had Red Haired
+Bear empty very carefully the ashes, mix some more
+kinnikinick willow bark with them and fill the pipe
+with this mixture. They had a third smoke of this
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>Four men went to the lodge of a certain medicine
+man. He told them he had some tobacco, and that
+made their hearts glad. He had a chunk of wood
+that looked like a plug of tobacco. He put this
+piece of wood upon the tobacco board and pretended
+to shave off slices from it to mix with kinnikinick.
+Even while he was shaving the stick the men were
+sniffing and saying, “Oh, good tobacco.” They
+smoked four pipefuls. The ashes were saved carefully.
+They were mixed then with other kinnikinick
+and four more pipefuls were smoked. The four men
+went away praising their host for having given them
+such fine entertainment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+<p>As Cheyennes came to us from the agency they
+brought coffee, sugar and tobacco. Other articles
+were brought, but these were the most desired. The
+luxuries were distributed among friends, small quantities
+here and there. Someone and another then
+would go to the front of his tepee, call out the names
+of special friends and invite: “I have tobacco. Come
+and smoke with me.” Or: “I have coffee and sugar.
+Come and feast with me.” Sioux might make such
+gifts to Cheyennes or Cheyennes might provide them
+to the Sioux. Or, members of the two sets of Indians
+might invite each other to smoke or to eat.
+Usually, though, the givings and the invitings were
+within tribal bounds. Yet every Indian who might
+prosper in any way was expected to hold himself always
+willing to share and desirous of sharing his
+prosperity with his fellows, with all friendly people,
+even with avowed enemies if such should come peaceably
+and should be in want. A first principle of
+Indian conduct was: Be generous to all Indians.</p>
+
+<p>Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox warriors, came
+to us with his family at the last end of the winter.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+He was the first one to disturb our peace of mind
+with the announcement:</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers are coming to fight you.”</p>
+
+<p>He said that the whites would fight all Cheyennes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>and Sioux who were off the reservations. He did
+not know from what forts the soldiers would come.
+He had not heard who would be their chiefs. But
+this did not matter. He and his family stayed with us.
+Other Cheyennes came.</p>
+
+<p>We did not believe Last Bull’s report. We
+thought somebody had told him what was not true.
+The treaty allowed us to hunt here as we might wish,
+so long as we did not make war upon the whites.
+We were not making war upon them. I had not seen
+any white man for many months. We were not looking
+for them. We were trying to stay away from all
+white people, and we wanted them to stay away from
+us. Our old men said that the reason the white
+people wanted us to leave off the roaming and hunting
+was that we should stay near them, so they could
+sell us more of their goods and their whisky. Our
+old men ever were urging the young men not to drink
+the whisky. The advice often was disregarded, but
+it appeared to be given serious consideration. Up
+to that time in my life I never had swallowed a
+drink of it.</p>
+
+<p>Lots of buffalo were feeding on the grass at the
+upper Tongue and Powder rivers, on all of their
+branches and on the other lands in this whole region.
+Lots of elk, deer and antelope could be found almost
+anywhere the hunter might go to seek them. Lots
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>of colts were being born in our horse herds this
+spring. We were rich, contented, at peace with the
+whites so far as we knew. Why should soldiers come
+out to seek for us and fight us? No, the report seemingly
+was a mistake.</p>
+
+<p>Spotted Wolf, Medicine Wolf and Twin, three
+Cheyenne chiefs, came to us as we camped on Powder
+river. They advised us to go to our agency.
+“Soldiers will come to fight you,” they assured us.
+We now believed this to be true. The chiefs in our
+band had a council. The next day they had another
+council.</p>
+
+<p>“No, we shall stay here,” they decided. “If soldiers
+come we shall steal their horses. Then they
+can not fight us.”</p>
+
+<p>Forty lodges of Cheyennes now were in camp on
+the west side of Powder river, forty or fifty miles
+above where Little Powder river flows into it. The
+report brought by the three chiefs aroused us into
+watchful activity. Every hunting party was on the
+lookout for white soldiers or for their trails. The
+women and old people in the camp kept themselves
+ever ready for immediate flight.</p>
+
+<p>My older brother Yellow Hair and I went scouting.
+We mounted our horses at night and went up the
+Powder river valley. As we were creeping and peeping
+over a hill our horses got away from us. But
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>we kept on afoot. We saw camp fires in a dry gulch
+on the east side of Powder river. Some other groups
+of Cheyennes were scouting in the same vicinity. A
+figure on horseback showed for a moment on a ridge.
+White Man? Cheyenne? Other Indian? Must be
+a white man, a soldier. Somebody off aside from us
+acted quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Bang!”</p>
+
+<p>The horse and rider went at once out of sight.
+My brother and I dropped down and lay quiet a long
+time. We talked of stealing soldier horses. Our
+own were gone, and we needed mounts. We crawled
+along further until we could see a soldier walking
+to and fro along the line of their horses, between us
+and the animals. He had a rifle. As we conferred
+together about what to do, other soldiers came to
+the horses. They were getting ready to move.
+Within a few minutes the entire body of them were
+gone. We went then close to the abandoned camp.
+We began to poke up the smoldering fires. Suddenly:</p>
+
+<p>“Bang!” The bullet whistled past us.</p>
+
+<p>We ran. Other shots were fired at us. We hurried
+into a narrow gulch or canyon. As we dodged
+from hiding place to hiding place up the gulch we
+could see soldiers on horseback following along the
+high sides. They were shooting down toward us.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>But they could not see us. There was a high wind
+blowing, the weather was of the blustering kind usual
+at that time of year. We hastened on to where the
+gulch led to the high bench land. Our pursuers had
+left us before we reached this broad area. We were
+tired, very tired. We wanted to stop and rest, but
+we feared our legs might grow stiff, so we trudged
+on. At dawn we heard barking of dogs at our camp.
+That was a welcome sound.</p>
+
+<p>“Waoo-oo-oo-oo,” we wolf-howled from a hilltop
+before we went into the camp. Our alarm brought
+out the people. They flocked to our lodge. A council
+of the old men was called. My brother and I were
+brought before it. Other young men who had been
+out also were at the council. “Young men, what do
+you know?” the chiefs asked us. We told them.
+We learned that the lone horseman shot during the
+night before was a Cheyenne. Another Cheyenne
+had sent the bullet. It had gone in at the wrist and
+out just below the elbow. The affair was entirely a
+case of mistaken identity.</p>
+
+<p>The council of old men decided we should keep
+away from the soldiers, not try to fight them. They
+sent out an old man herald to proclaim:</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers have been seen. We think they are
+looking for us. Today we move camp far down
+the river.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
+
+<p>Our hunters and scouts kept a lookout for the
+soldiers. Our camp was moved to a point just above
+where Little Powder river flows into Powder river
+and on the west side of the larger stream. The soldiers
+went over the hills to the headwaters of Hanging
+Woman creek. They followed this stream down to
+Tongue river. We felt safe then. Many of our
+people thought they were not seeking us at all.</p>
+
+<p>But one day some Cheyennes hunting antelope at
+the head of Otter creek, just over the hills west from
+our camp, saw the soldiers camped there. The hunters
+urged their horses back to warn us. Some of the
+horses became exhausted in the run, so their riders
+had to come on afoot. A herald notified the people.
+All was excitement. The council of old men appointed
+ten young men to go out that night and
+watch the movements of the soldiers. Others were
+out scouting or were awake and watching, but these
+ten had the special duty. Most of the people slept,
+feeling secure under the protection of the appointed
+outer sentinels. Early in the morning an old man
+arose and went to the top of a nearby knoll to observe
+or to pray, as old men were in the habit of doing.
+He had been there only a few moments when he
+began shouting toward the camp:</p>
+
+<p>“The soldiers are right here! The soldiers are
+right here!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span></p>
+
+<p>Already the attacking white men were between
+the horse herd and the camp. The ten scouts during
+the hours of darkness and storm had missed meeting
+the soldiers. They found a trail, this trail going up
+the creek valley. They turned their horses and
+whipped them in the effort to get ahead of the invaders.
+But the tired horses played out. They did
+not catch up with the soldiers until these had arrived
+at the camp, or afterward.</p>
+
+<p>Women screamed. Children cried for their mothers.
+Old people tottered and hobbled away to get
+out of reach of the bullets singing among the lodges.
+Braves seized whatever weapons they had and tried
+to meet the attack. I owned a muzzle-loading rifle,
+but I had no bullets for it. I owned also a cap-and-ball
+six shooter, but I had loaned it to Star, a cousin
+who was one of the ten special scouts of the night
+before. In turn, he had let me have bow and arrows
+he had borrowed from Puffed Cheek. My armament
+then consisted of this bow and arrows belonging to
+Puffed Cheek.</p>
+
+<p>I skirted around afoot to get at our horse herd.
+I looped my lariat rope over the neck of the first
+convenient one. It belonged to Old Bear, the old
+man chief of our band. But just now it became my
+war pony. I quickly made a lariat bridle and mounted
+the recovered animal. A few other Cheyennes did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>the same as I had done. But most of them remained
+afoot. I shot arrows at the soldiers. Our people
+had not much else to shoot. Only a few had guns
+and also ammunition for them.</p>
+
+<p>All of the soldiers who first appeared had white
+horses. Another band of them who charged soon
+afterward from another direction had only bay horses.
+I started back to try to get to my home lodge. I
+wanted my shield, my other medicine objects and
+whatever else I might be able to carry away. Women
+were struggling along burdened with packs of
+precious belongings. Some were dragging or carrying
+their children. All were shrieking in fright.
+I came upon one woman who had a pack on her back,
+one little girl under an arm and an older girl clinging
+to her free right hand. She was crying, both of the
+girls were crying, and all three of them were almost
+exhausted. They had just dived into a thicket for a
+rest when I rode up to them. It was Last Bull’s wife
+and their two daughters.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me take one of the children,” I proposed.</p>
+
+<p>The older girl, age about ten years, was lifted up
+behind me. A little further on I picked up also an
+eight-year-old boy who was trudging along behind a
+mother carrying on her back a baby and under her
+arms two other children. The girl behind me clasped
+her arms about my waist. I wrapped an arm about
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>the boy in front of me. With my free arm and hand
+I guided my horse as best I could. The animal too
+was excited by the tumult. It shied and plunged.
+But I got the two children out of danger. Then I
+went back to help in the fight.</p>
+
+<p>Two Moons, Bear Walks on a Ridge and myself
+were together. We centered an attack upon one certain
+soldier. Two Moons had a repeating rifle. As
+we stood in concealment he stood it upon end in
+front of him and passed his hands up and down the
+barrel, not touching it, while making medicine. Then
+he said: “My medicine is good; watch me kill that
+soldier.” He fired, but his bullet missed. Bear
+Walks on a Ridge then fired his muzzle-loading rifle.
+His bullet hit the soldier in the back of the head.
+We rushed upon the man and beat and stabbed him
+to death. Another Cheyenne joined us to help in
+the killing. He took the soldier’s rifle. I stripped
+off the blue coat and kept it. Two Moons and Bear
+Walks on a Ridge took whatever else he had and
+they wanted.</p>
+
+<p>One Cheyenne was killed by the soldiers. Another
+had his forearm badly shattered. Braided
+Locks, who is yet living, had the skin of one cheek
+furrowed by a bullet. The Cheyennes were beaten
+away from the camp. From a distance we saw the
+destruction of our village. Our tepees were burned,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>with everything in them except what the soldiers
+may have taken. Extra flares at times showed the
+explosion of powder, and there was the occasional
+pop of a cartridge from the fires. The Cheyennes
+were rendered very poor. I had nothing left but the
+clothing I had on, with the soldier coat added. My
+eagle wing bone flute, my medicine pipe, my rifle,
+everything else of mine, were gone.</p>
+
+<p>This was in the last part of the winter.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Melted
+snow water was running everywhere. We waded
+across the Powder river and set off to the eastward.
+All of the people except some of the warriors were
+afoot. The few young men on horseback stayed behind
+to guard the other people as they got away.
+One old woman, a blind person, was missing. All
+others were present except the Cheyenne who had
+been killed.</p>
+
+<p>The soldiers did not follow us. That night we
+who had horses went back to see what had become
+of them. At the destroyed camp we saw one lodge
+still standing. We went to it. There was the missing
+old blind woman. Her tepee and herself had
+been left entirely unharmed. We talked about this
+matter, all agreeing that the act showed the soldiers
+had good hearts.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
+
+<p>We found the soldier camp. We found also our
+horses they had taken. We crept toward the herd,
+out a little distance from the camp. One Cheyenne
+would whisper, “I see my horse.” Another would
+say, “There is mine.” Some could not see their own,
+but they took whichever ones they could get. I got
+my own favorite animal. We made some effort then
+to steal some of the horses of the white men. But
+they shot at us, so we went away with the part of our
+own herd that we could manage. When we returned
+with them and caught up with our people we let the
+women and some of the old people ride. I gave then
+to Chief Old Bear his horse I had captured when the
+soldiers first attacked us. He said, “Thank you, my
+friend,” and he gave the horse to his woman while
+he kept on afoot.</p>
+
+<p>We kept going eastward and northward. We
+forded the Little Powder river and went upon the
+benches beyond. Three nights we slept out. Only
+a few had robes. There was but little food, only a
+few women having little chunks of dry meat in their
+small packs. There was hard freezing at night and
+there was mud and water by day. But nobody appeared
+to become ill from the exposure. Early on
+the fourth day we arrived at where we had aimed, a
+camp of Ogallala Sioux far up a creek east of Powder
+river. Three or four Ogallala lodges had been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>beside our Cheyenne camp when the soldiers came.
+These people traveling with us led us to their main
+camp.</p>
+
+<p>The Ogallalas received us hospitably, as we knew
+they would do. Crazy Horse was their principal
+chief. Heads of lodges all about the camp were
+calling out to us:</p>
+
+<p>“Cheyennes, come and eat here.”</p>
+
+<p>They fed us to fullness and gave us temporary
+shelter and robes. At night a council was held by
+the chiefs of the two bands. At the council our
+people told about the soldier attack. It was decided
+that the Ogallalas and the Cheyennes should go together
+to the Uncpapa Sioux, located northeastward
+from us. The next forenoon all of us set out in
+that direction. Horses were loaned to the Cheyennes
+by the Ogallalas, so none of us had to walk.</p>
+
+<p>Buffalo Bull Sitting Down, known to the white
+people as Sitting Bull, was the principal chief of
+the Uncpapas in that camp. There were more of
+them than of Cheyennes and Ogallalas combined.
+When we arrived there they set up at once two big
+special lodges in the center of their camp circle. Our
+men were placed in one of these lodges, our women
+in the other. In each lodge sat a circle of Cheyennes
+about the inner wall. Uncpapa women had set their
+pots to boiling when first we had been seen. Now
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>they came with meat. They kept on coming, coming,
+with more and more meat. We were filled up,
+and we had plenty extra to keep for another day.
+An Uncpapa herald went riding about the camp and
+calling out:</p>
+
+<p>“The Cheyennes are very poor. All who have
+blankets or robes or tepees to spare should give to
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>Crowds of women and girls came with gifts. A
+ten-year-old Uncpapa girl put a buffalo robe in front
+of me and left it there. It was mine now. An
+Uncpapa man gave my father a medicine pipe to replace
+his lost one. I did not receive that kind of
+present, but I was provided with every important
+comfort. Whoever needed any kind of clothing got
+it immediately. They flooded us with gifts of everything
+needful. Crowds of their men and women
+were going among us to find out and to supply our
+wants.</p>
+
+<p>“Who needs a blanket?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take this one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who wants this tepee?”</p>
+
+<p>“Give it to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is yours.”</p>
+
+<p>They brought horses—lots of horses.</p>
+
+<p>“Who wants a horse?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I.”</p>
+
+<p>“You may have this one.”</p>
+
+<p>Oh, what good hearts they had! I never can
+forget the generosity of Sitting Bull’s Uncpapa Sioux
+on that day.</p>
+
+<p>Our women’s backs were burdened and our gift
+horses were loaded as we went to the nearby place
+assigned to us for the setting up of our own camp
+circle. Every household had a lodge, the same as
+had been the case at our lost camp. Some of the
+new tepees were small, but they served all necessary
+purposes until we could get buffalo skins for making
+larger ones.</p>
+
+<p>This triple camp was fifty or more miles east of
+Powder river, on east from a big and tall white stone
+which the white people call Chalk Butte. It was
+at the headwaters of a stream flowing westward into
+Powder river. The Cheyennes had been three sleeps
+on the way to the Ogallalas. One sleep there. Three
+sleeps of travel by Cheyennes and Ogallalas to the
+Uncpapa camp. Five or six sleeps the three tribes
+stayed together at this place.</p>
+
+<p>Various scouting parties went out to find out where
+were the soldiers. Eight or ten of us Cheyennes
+went to Tongue river and beyond. At Tongue river
+we stopped for a daytime rest. Our horses were
+picketed out to graze. After a while they began to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>show signs of alarm. A Cheyenne went out to look.
+He saw a lone white man afoot among the herd.
+Indian horses were afraid of white people, so they
+were snorting. The Cheyenne approached the white
+man and called out:</p>
+
+<p>“How!”</p>
+
+<p>“How,” the white man responded.</p>
+
+<p>They shook hands. The Cheyenne got his own
+horse, mounted it, and asked the white man to go
+with him to the other Indians. They set off, the
+Cheyenne on horseback, the white man afoot. The
+stranger had a six shooter in a scabbard at his belt,
+but he made no offer to use it. He appeared friendly.
+He was thin and hungry-looking. His clothing was
+very ragged. The other Cheyennes got their horses,
+and they all gathered about the newcomer. Some
+of them mounted their horses, others stood afoot
+holding them.</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you?” a Cheyenne signed.</p>
+
+<p>The white man could make signs, but not very
+well. He made us understand him, though. He said
+he had been a soldier, but he got lost from them. He
+told us he had not fought us, as he had been lost
+before that time. He said the ragged clothing he
+had on was taken from a dead Sioux, as he did not
+want to be seen with soldier clothing. One Cheyenne
+kept saying, in our language, “Let’s kill him.”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>But nobody agreed with him. Finally he jerked up
+his rifle and fired. The white man fell dead. Others
+then cut him and beat him, so that no one man could
+have the blame nor receive the honor.</p>
+
+<p>Robbing the body was the next step. About all
+he had was the six shooter, some cartridges for it,
+and a little package tied to his belt. It had meat
+in it. It was horse meat and had been cooked in
+an open blazing fire. We threw it away.</p>
+
+<p>This man was killed not many miles down the
+Tongue river from my present home place. The
+exact spot is on a ranch where now lives a white man
+named Wolf. The place is on Tongue river below
+the present town of Ashland, Montana.</p>
+
+
+<blockquote class="fs90">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="fs100">HISTORICAL NOTE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>A sketch of the military campaign of 1876 against the roaming
+Sioux and Cheyennes is interposed here for the enlightenment
+of such readers as may not be familiar with the frontier
+history of that period. There is nothing new in this sketch; it
+is simply a synopsis of what heretofore has been accepted and
+published.</p>
+
+<p>After the Indian troubles during and immediately following
+our civil war, in 1868 a treaty was made with the Sioux and
+Cheyenne tribes of the northern plains country. A few of the
+Sioux, mainly a band of Uncpapas led by Sitting Bull, refused
+to go into the treaty council. Various reservations in the Dakotas
+were agreed upon as belonging exclusively to the various
+tribes of Indians involved. All lands lying westward of these
+reservations, as far as the Bighorn river and Bighorn mountains,
+in Montana, were to be hunting grounds for the Indians as long
+as wild game in abundance remained there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
+
+<p>Bands of these Dakota red people were going out to the
+hunting grounds and returning again from time to time. Some
+of them elected to remain most of the time, or all of the time,
+in the Montana open country. Sitting Bull and a few others
+like him stayed entirely away from the agencies. They were
+actuated partly by resentment and partly by a sincere desire to
+avoid conflict that regularly resulted from prolonged contiguity
+of Indians and whites.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes and the Ogallala Sioux were assigned to the
+Black Hills country as their reservation—forever, according to
+the terms of the treaty. Soon afterward it became apparent
+that rich gold fields were hidden away somewhere in the lands
+conceded to them. In 1874, obedient to orders from Washington,
+General George A. Custer led his Seventh cavalry from Fort
+Lincoln, Dakota, on an exploratory expedition into the Cheyenne-Ogallala
+country. They found ample verification of the rumors
+as to the presence of gold there. The news spread rapidly, and
+there was a rush of white men fortune-seekers into the midst of
+these Indian possessions.</p>
+
+<p>The government made a weak effort to restrain the intruders.
+But the eager migrants flooded in and burst through the flimsy
+military barriers. The vexing problem was dodged by moving
+the Indians to other lands. But not all of them went to the
+designated new reservations. Many of them, angered at what
+they deemed a wrongful ousting, took their tepees and their
+families and went to live altogether in the open hunting regions.
+Indians from other reservations did likewise. That was the
+beginning of the “Indian uprising” of 1876.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1875, pursuant to our governmental policy,
+General Sherman, then commander-in-chief of the United States
+army, issued an important general order. He proclaimed that
+all Indians found off their reservations after the last day of
+January, 1876, would be regarded as hostiles to be fought by
+the military forces. It being evident that not many of the
+Dakota roamers in Montana would return to the reservations
+until they were forced to do so, bodies of soldiers were set in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>motion for seeking out and driving these wanderers back within
+their assigned territorial bounds.</p>
+
+<p>The active military field leaders in this campaign were Brigadier-General
+Terry, Brigadier-General Crook, Colonel Gibbon
+and Lieutenant-Colonel Custer. Each of these four officers had
+been brevetted Major-General of Volunteers during the civil
+war, but the contracting of the army after the war set each of
+them back to a lower ranking. Terry had infantry from Fort
+Rice and Custer’s Seventh cavalry, from Fort Lincoln, Dakota.
+Crook had a force of cavalry and infantry at Fort Fetterman,
+Wyoming. Gibbon had infantry from Fort Shaw and cavalry
+from Fort Ellis, Montana.</p>
+
+<p>From their three basic points—in Dakota, in Wyoming and in
+Montana—the three bodies of soldiers moved toward a common
+central area between the Powder and Bighorn rivers, in Montana,
+where the Indians being sought were roaming. Details of
+these military movements are too extensive for review here. The
+most thrilling phase of the campaign began when Custer and his
+Seventh cavalry set off up the Rosebud valley to follow a recent
+Indian trail. The result of this subsidiary proceeding was the
+supreme tragedy in the annals of our American frontier warfare.</p>
+
+<p>The first fight of that 1876 struggle was this attack upon the
+Cheyenne camp on Powder river, March 17th. There have been
+published many worthy books recounting the military operations
+of that year. Reliable edification on this subject may be found
+in General Godfrey’s magazine articles, in Colonel Graham’s
+“The Story of the Little Bighorn,” in Grinnell’s “The Fighting
+Cheyennes,” in Brininstool’s “A Trooper with Custer,” in the
+diaries of Lieutenants Bradley and McClernand, and in some
+other published writings.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> These tell the stirring story of where
+our soldiers went and what they did during that eventful summer.
+Wooden Leg tells the equally stirring story of where the
+Indians went and what they did during that same time.</p>
+
+<p class="right p2r smcap">Thomas B. Marquis.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">[13]</a> February, 1876.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">[14]</a> March 17th, 1876. Gen. J. J. Reynolds in command of soldiers.
+Historians mistakenly mention this incident as a victory over “Crazy
+Horse’s village.”—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">[15]</a> <span class="smcap">Editor’s Note</span>: The interested reader will find also much enlightenment
+in Dr. Marquis’ “Soldiering in the Old West,” to be published
+soon by The Midwest Company.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="VI">
+ <span class="p50l">VI</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Swarming of Angered Indians.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>A band of Minneconjoux Sioux arrived at the
+Uncpapa camp either just before or just after we
+got there. They had not been troubled by the soldiers,
+but they wanted to keep out of trouble. Lame
+Deer was their principal chief. The Cheyennes were
+well acquainted with the Minneconjoux. We had
+camped and hunted with them many times. There
+were some intermarriages with them, so there were
+a few Cheyennes among them and a few of their
+people belonging to our tribe. We had mingled with
+them almost as much as we had with the Ogallalas.
+We never had associated closely with the Uncpapas.
+They were almost strangers to us. We knew of
+them only by hearsay from the Ogallalas and the
+Minneconjoux.</p>
+
+<p>The movement to the Uncpapas was because they
+had a much larger band in the hunting grounds than
+had any of the other tribes. Some of them, with
+Sitting Bull as their leader, had been out all of the
+time for several years. At this first assembling, the
+Ogallala band was in number next to the Uncpapas.
+The Minneconjoux had not quite as many as had the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>Ogallalas. The Cheyenne band was the smallest.
+During past times, when the Cheyennes and the Ogallalas
+and the Burned Thighs (Brûlé Sioux) had
+fought the white soldiers many times in the country
+farther southward, not many of the Uncpapas had
+been with them. These people kept mostly at peace
+by staying away from all white settlements. Now
+it was becoming generally believed among Indians
+that this was the best plan.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting Bull had come into notice as the most consistent
+advocate of the idea of living out of all touch
+with white people. He would not go to the reservation
+nor would he accept any rations or other gifts
+coming from the white man government. He rarely
+went to the trading posts. Himself and his followers
+were wealthy in food and clothing and lodges, in
+everything needful to an Indian. They did not lose
+any horses nor other property in warfare, because
+they had not any warfare. He had come now into
+admiration by all Indians as a man whose medicine
+was good—that is, as a man having a kind heart and
+good judgment as to the best course of conduct. He
+was considered as being altogether brave, but peaceable.
+He was strong in religion—the Indian religion.
+He made medicine many times. He prayed and
+fasted and whipped his flesh into submission to the
+will of the Great Medicine. So, in attaching ourselves
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>to the Uncpapas we other tribes were not moved
+by a desire to fight. They had not invited us. They
+simply welcomed us. We supposed that the combined
+camps would frighten off the soldiers. We
+hoped thus to be freed from their annoyance. Then
+we could separate again into the tribal bands and
+resume our quiet wandering and hunting.</p>
+
+<p>The four camps could not remain long together in
+any one location. The food game would become
+scarce there and the feed for our horses would be
+eaten away. We had to move on. A council of all
+of the tribal chiefs decided we should go northward
+to the head of the next stream flowing into the east
+side of Powder river. The next morning after the
+decision had been made, the four different bands set
+off in procession toward the appointed place.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes were in the lead. The Ogallalas
+came next. Following them were the Minneconjoux.
+The Uncpapas were last. The order of movement
+was the result of an agreed plan. The Cheyennes
+and the Uncpapas had the specially dangerful positions.
+I do not know on just what grounds this was
+the arrangement, but I know that this was the intention.
+The Cheyennes kept scouts out in front looking
+forward from high points. The Uncpapas had always
+some of their young men staying back to observe
+if any enemies were following. The Ogallalas and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>the Minneconjoux sent guardians off to the hill points
+at the sides.</p>
+
+<p>Three sleeps, I believe, our four camp circles stood
+in this new location. The Cheyennes in advance had
+been allowed to choose first the spot for the encampment.
+The Ogallalas and the Minneconjoux then
+located themselves only a little distance from us and
+from each other. The Uncpapas placed their circle
+on whatever good ground was left and on ground
+most suitable for guarding that side of the combined
+body of Indians. In the camping as well as in the
+traveling, the Cheyennes and the Uncpapas occupied
+the specially exposed positions.</p>
+
+<p>The scarcity of feed for our horses led the council
+into a decision to move on yet farther northward.
+As I remember it, we spent one sleep in temporary
+camp during this movement as well as in the first
+combined shift of base. Our horses were weak for
+lack of food, so we had to travel slowly. We stopped
+at the upper regions of the next creek tributary to
+Powder river. I believe we stayed there three sleeps.</p>
+
+<p>The Arrows All Gone Sioux (the Sans Arcs) came
+to us at this camping place. Five camp circles now
+were in close communion. The number of people
+in this added band was about the same as <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'in the Ogallalla'" id="tn-180">in the Ogallala</ins>
+or the Minneconjoux organizations. In the
+case of each of the five tribes, only a part of their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>members were here. But in each case more were
+coming from time to time while few or none were
+going back to the reservations. I believe the number
+of Cheyenne lodges now must have been increased
+to fifty. The Ogallalas, Minneconjoux and Arrows
+All Gone each had more, perhaps sixty or seventy.
+The comparative size of the Uncpapa circle indicated
+they might have had as many as a hundred and fifty
+lodges.</p>
+
+<p>After three or four sleeps the five camps moved
+again. This time we swerved to the northwestward.
+Our stopping place now was lower down on the next
+creek flowing into Powder river. New grass was
+beginning to peep up here. Our hungry horses
+searched greedily for it. The herder boys were kept
+busy at keeping them from rambling too far. The
+tribal herds were kept separate, boys or youths from
+each tribe guarding their own bands.</p>
+
+<p>The Blackfeet Sioux joined us here, I believe. I
+am not sure of the exact place where they came, but
+I can not recollect any other point where they might
+have come. I recall clearly, though, that when we
+got to Powder river there were six camp circles, the
+Blackfeet Sioux making up the sixth one. Theirs
+was not a very large circle, but it was a separate one.
+They camped close to the Uncpapas.</p>
+
+<p>Many extra horses were brought in by some of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>newly arriving Indians. I think most of them were
+brought by the Blackfeet Sioux, or perhaps by the
+Arrows All Gone. But wherever they were needed
+by members of other tribes they were distributed
+out as gifts.</p>
+
+<p>A few Waist and Skirt Indians&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> attached themselves
+to us. They were known also as No Clothing
+people, because their men had no clothing. They
+were extremely poor, having but little property and
+no horses. They had plenty of dogs—big dogs—to
+drag or to carry their tepees and other scant property.
+Their tribal name, as known to us, arose from
+their women having dresses made up in two parts.
+Other Indian women made up their dresses in one
+piece. I heard Cheyennes talk about Sitting Bull’s
+father being with these people. He may have been
+there, but I do not remember having seen him.
+These Indians had small tepees, and their lodge poles
+were placed with the butt ends up. They camped
+all the time in a little group beside the Uncpapa circle.
+Some Assiniboines also were mingled with the
+Uncpapas, and others of them were with the Blackfeet
+Sioux. A few Burned Thigh tepees were with
+the Ogallalas and the Blackfeet Sioux. Many of the
+incoming Indians talked of having been north of Elk
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>river.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> Some of the talk I had heard was that they
+had been searching there for us. As I remember it,
+the extra horse bands were brought from the north
+side of that stream.</p>
+
+<p>Chief Lame White Man and a big band of other
+Cheyennes came to us at Powder river. They had
+made a long journey out from the White River
+agency. They had been looking for us all about the
+heads of the Powder, Tongue and Rosebud rivers.
+They doubled back and found our trail east of Powder
+river. They had not learned of the soldier attack
+upon our Cheyenne camp.</p>
+
+<p>Lame White Man did not belong to the Northern
+Cheyenne tribe, but he had been much of the time
+with us. He was a big chief or an old man chief of
+the Southern Cheyennes. He was not a chief with
+us, but he was a wise and good man. For this reason
+he had much influence among us, even as an adviser
+to our chiefs. His wife and family were with him, and
+their lodge became a part of our growing camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>From Powder river our course was directed westward.
+We went over the hill country. The grass
+was coming up everywhere, and our horses were
+growing stronger. I believe we camped in two or
+three places between there and the Tongue river, one
+sleep at each place. Individual hunters and small
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>hunting parties were gathering meat for their families.
+Even when we stopped for but one sleep at
+any place, all of the camp circles were formed and
+all of the lodges set up. It was the taking down,
+moving and setting up again every day of a little
+city.</p>
+
+<p>A big band of additional Cheyennes came to us
+on Tongue river. They were led by Dirty Moccasins,
+an old man chief. They had crossed Powder river,
+journeyed over the divide west of it to Otter creek and
+followed this stream down to Tongue river. Our
+camp was thirty or forty miles down from where
+Otter creek flows into the river. Straggling lodges
+had been reaching us, but this was the largest annexation
+in any one group. Our Cheyenne circle
+now was double what it had been when we first joined
+the Uncpapas. The other circles likewise were growing
+in the same way. These Cheyennes brought
+extra ammunition, sugar, coffee and tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Going on west from Tongue river, we stopped several
+days, perhaps four or five sleeps, at the upper
+part of a stream we knew as Wood creek. It is the
+first creek of importance west of Tongue river and
+flowing, I believe, into Elk river. Our horses now
+were getting much grass. As the main part of the
+herds grazed, the men were hunting. Big parties of
+Indians killed lots of buffalo in this neighborhood.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>There were many thousands of these animals here.
+The Cheyennes made a special effort to get a plentiful
+supply of robes for making larger lodges. The
+smaller ones given to our people by the Uncpapas
+had been comfortable, but larger ones were more
+comfortable. We also got skins for robes. Men
+and women all were busy, the men at hunting and
+the women at tanning the skins.</p>
+
+<p>Councils of the chiefs of the six tribes assembled
+together were held at each place of camping. They
+talked of whatever might be of general interest. Particularly,
+a council settled where we should go next,
+at each move. We had not set out to go into any
+special region. The moves depended upon reports
+of hunting parties or scouts. They learned and reported
+where was most of such game as we were
+seeking.</p>
+
+<p>Many young men were anxious to go for fighting
+the soldiers. But the chiefs and old men all urged
+us to keep away from the white men. They said
+that fighting wasted energy that ought to be applied
+in looking only for food and clothing, trying only
+to feed and make comfortable ourselves and our families.
+Our combination of camps was simply for
+defense. We were within our treaty rights as hunters.
+We must keep ourselves so.</p>
+
+<p>From Wood creek we went yet westward to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>upper part of what we called Sioux creek. Here we
+stayed but one sleep and followed the same direction
+the next day. All of the people were on horses or
+on lodgepole travois dragged by horses. All of the
+personal or family belongings were in travois baskets
+or on the backs of special pack horses. We had not
+any wagons. Such vehicles could not have been used
+in most of the country that Indians inhabited then.</p>
+
+<p>We arrived at the Rosebud river or large creek
+about the middle of May, I believe. I did not know
+then anything about a calendar, but judging from
+my recollection of the condition of the grass and the
+trees, about the weather and other natural conditions,
+that must have been about the time.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Many times
+during the later years of peace I have been up and
+down that valley, on my way to and fro between the
+reservation and the town of Forsythe, so I with other
+Cheyennes have kept exactly in mind all of the old
+camping places along this stream.</p>
+
+<p>The first Rosebud camping place of the six great
+circles of Indians was about seven or eight miles up
+from Elk river. The Uncpapa circle at that time
+was partly on the land where now is a ranch house
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>occupied by white people. The place now is known
+as the James Kennedy place, as a white man having
+that name lived there during many years. The
+Uncpapa circle extended from the present location
+of this house out across the present highway road
+and upon the bench eastward. The Cheyennes were
+camped about a mile and a half up the valley from
+Sitting Bull’s Uncpapas. Our location included a
+line of trees such as yet are there extending from
+the creek across the road east of it. An old white
+man named Eugene Noyes was living there a few
+years ago, in a house just off a short distance southwest
+from that old Cheyenne camp site. The other
+four circles were at four different places between the
+Uncpapas and the Cheyennes. All of them were on
+the east side of the creek.</p>
+
+<p>Charcoal Bear, chief medicine man of the Northern
+Cheyennes, came to us at this first Rosebud camp.
+Lots of our people were with him. He brought the
+tribal medicine lodge and our sacred Buffalo Head
+and all other of our tribal medicine objects. The
+lodge was set up in the midst of our camp circle. It
+put good thoughts and good feeling into the hearts
+of all Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>I have heard in later years that soldiers from north
+of Elk river came across and saw our camp here. But
+I never knew of any soldiers having been seen by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>any of the Indians in this region. We did lots of
+buffalo hunting all across from Tongue river and
+continued to kill many of them on the hills west
+of the Rosebud. I did not hear any talk of the buffalo
+or other game showing signs of having been
+alarmed by any other people. Six or seven sleeps,
+I believe, we stayed here. Then we moved up the
+valley about twelve miles.</p>
+
+<p>At this second Rosebud camp the Uncpapa circle
+was on land just across the present highway road
+westward from and almost in front of a school house
+now standing east of the road. A mile and a half
+or more on up the valley was the Cheyenne circle.
+Between them, all on the east side of the creek, were
+the other four tribal circles. On this Cheyenne camping
+ground I had been in a camp of our people ten
+years before this, when I was a boy. Here Crazy
+Mule had made medicine and had done some wonderful
+acts. Here also at that past time a Cheyenne
+woman had gone out eastward up a wooded gulch
+and had hanged herself.</p>
+
+<p>While we now were at this second Rosebud combined
+camp a report was brought in that Crows had
+been seen in our vicinity. A herald rode about our
+camp circle making the announcement. It was
+agreed our Crazy Dog warriors should go out to find
+them. The Crazy Dogs built a bonfire and had a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>preparatory dance. All of them stripped naked and
+painted their bodies. All of them danced barefooted.
+It was considered wonderful that they could do this
+without getting cactus thorns into their feet. As
+the dance was going on it began to become known
+that the report of Crows was a mistake, that nobody
+had seen them. The war dance was ended and the
+bonfire died down. It may have been that Crows
+actually had been seen, as I have learned in later
+times that some of them were scouting as helpers for
+soldiers north of Elk river.</p>
+
+<p>After one sleep at the second Rosebud camp we
+traveled on up the valley another twelve or fifteen
+miles. This time the Uncpapas occupied land now
+on both sides of the highway road and to the west
+and south of a painted peak the white people now
+call Teat butte. The other camps were scattered
+irregularly on up the valley, all yet on the east side
+of the creek. It was about a mile and a half from
+the lower or last Uncpapa site to the upper or advanced
+Cheyenne site. Only one sleep here. The
+next forenoon the Cheyennes headed again a procession
+up the Rosebud valley.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth Rosebud camp was at and above the
+place where now the main highway from Forsythe
+forks to go toward Lame Deer and toward Ashland.
+The lower or northern end of the group, the site of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>Sitting Bull’s people, was on the benchland by the
+present roadside east and northeast from the forks.
+Four camp circles were, as usual, somewhere between
+them and the Cheyennes in front and the Uncpapas
+at the rear. One of the Sioux camps was on the west
+side of the creek, the first time any of the circles
+had been set up on that side. The Cheyennes were
+about a mile east of where a roadside trading store
+in late years has been managed by a white man named
+Parkins. We were at the mouth of a stream flowing
+into the Rosebud and known now as Greenleaf creek.
+Our circle was only about a mile southward from the
+Uncpapas. The others were in an irregular curve between
+us. All of the Indians had been using the dirty
+yellow water of Rosebud creek, but now the Cheyennes
+had better water from Greenleaf creek. While
+we were here, some more Cheyennes arrived from
+the reservation. They told us:</p>
+
+<p>“Lots of soldiers are being sent to fight the Indians.”</p>
+
+<p>Three sleeps I remained with our people at this
+camp. Great bands of Sioux went buffalo hunting
+among the hills and small mountains west of the
+Rosebud. I went hunting also, but I did not go
+there. Eleven Cheyennes, including myself, got our
+pack horses and set out over the low pass to Tongue
+river. We were on the lookout for soldiers or signs
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>of them, but we did not want to fight them. We had
+our war bags, of course, but Indians did not take pack
+horses when going out to fight.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three days after we had left our people
+they moved on up the Rosebud. This time the camp
+circles extended from just above the present Toohey
+ranch to a point about a mile and a half up the valley
+from that place. As usual, the Uncpapas were at
+the last end while the Cheyennes were at the first
+or upper end. The Uncpapas were on the east side
+of the creek, just west of the present main highway.
+The Cheyennes at the upper end of the group were
+on the west side of the creek, on a bench, a mile or
+so across west from the road. I was not there at the
+time, but this place is only ten or twelve miles north
+of our present reservation, so I have learned all about
+it from other Cheyennes as we have traveled up and
+down the road now there.</p>
+
+<p>At this camp the Uncpapas had a Great Medicine
+dance. No other Indians took part in it, but great
+throngs of people from the other camp circles assembled
+to look on. This Great Medicine dance, or
+sun dance, as the white people call it, was held about
+a quarter of a mile west of the present highway that
+extends along the valley. The medicine lodge was
+pitched just north from the Uncpapa camp circle.
+Its exact site was on a flat bottom by the creek about
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>a quarter of a mile south by southwest from the present
+Toohey ranch house. By the present roadside,
+just below the Toohey ranch house, is a signboard
+that tells people, “Custer camped here June 23,
+1876.” The place where Sitting Bull’s people had
+their Great Medicine dance is only half a mile southwest
+from this roadside signboard.</p>
+
+<p>A few miles up the valley from this camp site are
+the deer medicine rocks. They are three or four
+miles below the present reservation northern gate.
+They may be seen about a mile west of the present
+road and off from the base of the hills. They are
+about half a mile or farther southwest from the big
+ranch house of a white man named Bailey. In the
+old times, both Cheyennes and Sioux had reverence
+for these separated cliff towers. As hunters were
+about to go for deer or antelope, they assembled on
+horseback and grouped around the deer medicine
+rocks. There they looked up to the tops and made
+prayers for success in the oncoming hunt. It is probable
+that the Indians at that camping time paid the
+usual respect to this old-time place of worship. But
+I do not know. I was not there. I then was traveling
+up the Tongue river valley, with ten other Cheyenne
+buffalo hunters.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">[16]</a> Santee Sioux, Wahpeton group, refugees from Minnesota, dwelling
+in Canada.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">[17]</a> The universal Indian name for the Yellowstone river.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">[18]</a> Thomas H. Leforge and his Crow scouts learned that the hostile
+Indians arrived on the Rosebud about May 19th, 1876. They observed
+a great camp there on May 26th. A few days later this camp was
+gone. Lieutenant Bradley’s diary records these facts. Bradley, Leforge
+and the Crow scouts were of the Gibbon forces, located then on
+the north side of the Yellowstone river.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="VII">
+ <span class="p50l">VII</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Soldiers from the Southward.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Our party of eleven buffalo hunters went over the
+same low pass that is traversed by the road now
+going from the Rosebud to Tongue river and Ashland.
+We did not find any big herd of buffalo. We had
+killed only four by the time we arrived at Hanging
+Woman creek. We decided then to go on over to
+Powder river. We followed Powder river almost up
+to the mouth of Lodgepole creek. On the way we
+came across a dead Indian on a burial scaffold. The
+body had been stripped of all wrappings and of clothing.
+We wondered if this had been a Sioux, a Crow
+or a Shoshone. We wondered also who had robbed
+the body.</p>
+
+<p>One of our men named Lame Sioux went out to
+a hill for a look over the country. Pretty soon he
+began to signal. He had seen a camp of soldiers.
+All of us got out to look. Yes, this was a soldier
+camp. We dropped back into hiding. Ourselves and
+our horses all were put into concealment until darkness
+came. Then we dressed ourselves, painted ourselves
+and went on a night scout for a closer view.
+We saw the camp fires burning. We worked our way
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>carefully toward them. It was after the middle of
+the night when we arrived at a point where we could
+see well the entire scene. But all of the soldiers then
+were gone.</p>
+
+<p>We slept then until morning came. When we went
+to the abandoned camp site the first thing to arouse
+our special interest was a beef carcass having yet on
+the bones many fragments of meat. The next interesting
+object was a box of hard crackers. It had
+been raining, and they were wet, but this made them
+all the better. We ate what we wanted of them.
+We cooked pieces of the beef on the fire coals. We
+enjoyed a fine breakfast. Then we set out on the
+trail of the soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>The trail led us northwestward over the divide and
+down Crow creek. Near where Crow creek empties
+into Tongue river we saw the soldier camp.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> The
+time was late in the afternoon. We retreated and
+skirted around up the river. At dusk we crossed it
+to the west side. The water was running high. We
+stripped and tied our clothing in bundles about our
+necks. We sat upon our riding horses and led our
+pack horses as they swam through the lively current.
+We hid ourselves among the trees on that side of the
+valley and slept until morning.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span></p>
+
+<p>From a cliff the next morning we saw first a band
+of about twenty Indians riding away from the soldier
+camp. Were they Crows? Were they Shoshones?
+We exchanged guesses, but we did not know. We
+talked among ourselves about making an attack upon
+them. There was some talk of trying to steal soldier
+horses. We were anxious to do something warlike,
+to get horses or to count coups. But the general
+agreement was that it was too risky. We considered
+it most important that we return and notify our
+people on the Rosebud. We did not want to tire out
+our horses in an effort to get others or to get fighting
+honors. But we lingered to do some more looking.
+We saw soldiers walking about their camp. It had
+been flooded by the high waters. They were splashing
+about here and there and appeared to be getting
+ready to travel. We decided it was time for us also
+to travel.</p>
+
+<p>Six of us, including myself, started out toward the
+hills between us and the uppermost Rosebud. The
+five other Cheyennes remained behind to see where
+the soldiers might go. During the day two of these
+came on and joined us. Before night the final three
+were with us. “They are coming in this direction,”
+the three reported. We then were on the upper small
+branches of Rosebud creek.</p>
+
+<p>We killed a buffalo there. We hurried in cutting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>from it some of the choice pieces. We quickly divided
+up the liver and ate the raw segments. Over a hastily
+built fire we scantily toasted little chunks of buffalo
+meat. As we devoured them we spoke but few words.
+Whatever speech was uttered was in jerky sputterings.
+Everybody was excited. Every minute or two
+somebody was jumping up to go somewhere and look
+for pursuing soldiers. After the food had been bolted
+we hastened to move on. When darkness had well
+advanced we stopped for the night. Our horses
+needed rest and food. We picketed them. We felt
+safe during the night, so we slept soundly.</p>
+
+<p>Before the sun was up we were several miles on
+down the Rosebud valley. We did not know just
+where our people were, but we knew they were somewhere
+on this stream. We found them strung along
+from the location of our present Indian dance hall
+there up almost to the present home of Porcupine.
+We wolf-howled and aroused the people. Cheyennes
+flocked to learn why we had given the alarm. We
+went on into camp and reported to an old man. Some
+Sioux were there, and they carried the news to their
+people. Soon all of the camp circles were in a fever
+of excitement. Heralds in all of them were riding
+about and shouting:</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers have been seen. They are coming in this
+direction. Indians are with them.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span></p>
+
+<p>Councils were called. Lots of young men wanted
+to go out and fight the soldiers, but the chiefs would
+not allow this. Our chiefs appointed Little Hawk,
+Crooked Nose and two or three others to go scouting
+and find out about the further movements of the
+white men. Maybe some Sioux scouts also were sent
+out. I do not know, but I think they depended upon
+the Cheyennes to do the work.</p>
+
+<p>The Indians all moved camp, going on up the
+valley about ten miles. Here the Cheyennes chose
+for their location a spot on the east side of the Rosebud,
+just across from the present Davis creek and on
+the land now occupied by Rising Sun. The Sioux
+following them set their circles on down the creek, the
+Uncpapas being below the present Busby school.
+My recollection is we stayed here more than one
+sleep, but I am not sure. When we left this place we
+went westward up Davis creek and across the hills beside
+it, going toward the dividing hills separating us
+from the Little Bighorn river. It was understood
+we were on our way to that valley.</p>
+
+<p>We camped that afternoon just east of the divide.
+The place is about a mile north of the present road
+there, the camps extending northward up a broad
+coulee full of plum thickets. Dry camp, no water, at
+this place. One sleep here. The next morning we
+went on over the divide and down the slopes to what
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>we called Great Medicine Dance creek, but known
+now to the white people as Reno creek. We stopped
+where the main forks of the creek come together.
+Our circles were formed along the valley and on the
+bench. The Cheyennes were at the advance or west
+end, the Uncpapas at the rear or east end. From our
+camp to theirs the distance was about two miles.
+The grouped camps centered about where the
+present road crosses a bridge at the fork of the creek.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>Little Hawk and the other scouts returned to us
+here. They reported the soldiers as being on the
+upper branches of the Rosebud. The Sioux were told
+of this report, or they may have had information from
+scouts of their own. Heralds in all six of the camps
+rode about and told the people. The news created
+an unusual stir. Women packed up all articles except
+such as were needed for immediate use. Some
+of them took down their tepees and got them ready
+for hurrying away if necessary. Additional watchers
+were put among the horse herds. Young men wanted
+to go out and meet the soldiers, to fight them. The
+chiefs of all camps met in one big council. After a
+while they sent heralds to call out:</p>
+
+<p>“Young men, leave the soldiers alone unless they
+attack us.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span></p>
+
+<p>But as darkness came on we slipped away. Many
+bands of Cheyenne and Sioux young men, with some
+older ones, rode out up the south fork toward the
+head of Rosebud creek. Warriors came from every
+camp circle. We had our weapons, war clothing,
+paints and medicines. I had my six-shooter. We
+traveled all night.</p>
+
+<p>We found the soldiers&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_21_21" href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> about seven or eight
+o’clock in the morning, I believe. We had slept
+only a little, our horses were very tired, so we did not
+hurry our attack. But always in such cases there
+are eager or foolish ones who begin too soon. Not
+long after we arrived there was fighting on the hillsides
+and on the little valley where was the soldier
+camp. In this early fighting, one young Cheyenne
+foolishly charged too far, and some Indians belonging
+to the soldiers got after him. They shot and
+crippled his horse. I and some other Cheyennes
+drove back the pursuers. I took the young man behind
+me on my horse, and we hurried away to our
+main body of warriors.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Red Cloud, son of the old Ogallala Chief Red
+Cloud, was wearing a warbonnet. His horse was
+killed. According to the Indian way, in such case the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>warrior was supposed to stop and take off the bridle
+from the killed horse, to show how cool he could conduct
+himself. But young Red Cloud forgot to do
+this. He went running as soon as his horse fell.
+Three Crows on horseback followed him, lashed him
+with their pony whips and jerked off and kept his
+warbonnet. They did not try to kill him. They
+only teased him, telling him he was a boy and ought
+not to be wearing a warbonnet. Some of his Sioux
+friends interfered, and the Crows went away. The
+Sioux told us that young Red Cloud was crying and
+asking mercy from the Crows. He was my same age,
+eighteen years old.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_22_22" href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+
+<p>White Wolf, a Cheyenne almost thirty years old,
+had a repeating rifle. In drawing this weapon from
+its scabbard at his left side it was accidentally discharged.
+The bullet broke his left thigh bone. He
+finally recovered and is yet living (1930). He still
+limps on account of that accidental wound.</p>
+
+<p>Until the sun went far toward the west there were
+charges back and forth. Our Indians fought and ran
+away, fought and ran away. The soldiers and their
+Indian scouts did the same. Sometimes we chased
+them, sometimes they chased us. One time, as I was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>getting away from a charge, I caught up with a Cheyenne
+afoot and driving his tired horse ahead of him.
+My horse also was very tired, so I dismounted and we
+two drove our mounts into a brush thicket. There we
+rested a while. It appeared that all of the Cheyennes
+were in hiding just then.</p>
+
+<p>Chief Lame White Man, the old Southern Cheyenne,
+rode out into the open on horseback. He
+called to us for brave actions. Our young men had
+high regard for him. The Cheyennes came out from
+hiding and went flocking to him. I and my companion
+joined them. It then became the turn of the
+soldiers and their Indians to get out of our way.</p>
+
+<p>The soldiers finally left the field and went back
+southward, on the trail where they had come to this
+place. Some Sioux and Cheyennes followed them a
+short distance, but not far. The soldiers lost or left
+behind some of the packs from their mules.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_23_23" href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> We got
+crackers and bacon and other food material. I found
+a good white hat and a good pair of gloves. I picked
+up a little package of something and stuffed it under
+my belt. As I went riding away, the package rubbed
+between the belt and my body. The day was hot, and
+I was sweating freely. My nostrils perceived a
+pleasant odor. I traced it to the package. I took it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>from my belt, sniffed at it, then fumbled at the heavy
+paper and tore off a corner.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, coffee!” My heart was glad. I had something
+good to take as a gift for my mother.</p>
+
+<p>The only naked Cheyenne in that battle was Black
+Sun. All of the rest of us had on whatever war
+clothing he owned. I do not recollect having seen
+there any Sioux who was not dressed in his best. But
+Black Sun had a special medicine painting for himself.
+He spent a long time at getting ready. All of
+his body was colored yellow. On his head he wore
+the stuffed skin of a weasel. He wrapped a blanket
+about his loins. The soldiers and enemy Indians fired
+many shots at him without harming him. Finally
+some one of them got behind him and shot him
+through the body. He fell, not dead, but unable to
+stand up. Some of his friends rescued him. I caught
+his horse. When we were ready to go back to our
+camps we put him upon a travois and had his horse
+drag this bed for him. He died that night, at his
+home lodge. He was the only Cheyenne killed that
+day. Limpy was shot in his left side and had his
+horse killed. Other Cheyennes had slight wounds.</p>
+
+<p>One Burned Thigh Sioux was killed during the
+battle, and one Minneconjoux died after arrival at the
+camps. I do not know how many other Sioux were
+killed, but some Cheyennes said there were twenty
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>or more. I think the Uncpapas lost the most warriors.
+I remember that one of the dead Sioux was a
+boy about fourteen years old. Black Sun was buried
+in a hillside cave. I believe that all of the Sioux dead
+were left in burial tepees on the camp site when we
+left there.</p>
+
+<p>All camps were moved again early the next morning
+after the Rosebud battle. We followed a short
+distance down Medicine Dance creek and then turned
+southward across the benches to the Little Bighorn.
+In present times, where the Busby road joins the
+graveled highway there is a bridge over the river.
+About half a mile south of this bridge, on the west
+side of the highway and on the east side of the river,
+stood the camp circle of the Uncpapas. The Cheyennes
+were a mile or more farther up the river. The
+other four tribal camps were scattered here and there
+between the Uncpapas and the Cheyennes. There
+was not here nor at any other camping location a
+placing of the camp circles in line with one another.
+The groupings between Uncpapas and Cheyennes
+were according to the form of the land or the curves
+of the stream. The only strict rule of camp circle location
+was that none should be set up ahead of the
+Cheyennes nor behind the Uncpapas.</p>
+
+<p>Six sleeps we remained at this first camping place
+on the Little Bighorn. We had beaten the white men
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>soldiers. Our scouts had followed them far enough
+to learn that they were going farther and farther
+away from us. We did not know of any other soldiers
+hunting for us. If there were any, they now would
+be afraid to come. There were feasts and dances in
+all of the camps. On the benchlands just east of
+us our horses found plenty of rich grass. Among the
+hills west of the river were great herds of buffalo.
+Every day, big hunting parties went among them.
+Men and women were at work providing for their
+families. That was why we killed these animals.
+Indians never did destroy any animal life as a mere
+pleasurable adventure.</p>
+
+<p>Six Arapaho men came to the Cheyenne camp
+while we were at this place. They said they were
+afraid of soldiers, as they had killed a white man on
+Powder river. Many Sioux and some Cheyennes suspected
+them as spies, but finally all of us were satisfied
+they wanted to stay with us as friends. They were
+invited into lodges of different ones of the Cheyennes.
+Some more of our own people from the reservation
+joined us here. It is likely some Sioux also arrived,
+but I am not sure about that.</p>
+
+<p>Our plans had been to go up the Little Bighorn
+valley. But our game scouts reported great herds of
+antelope west of the Bighorn river. Because of this,
+the chiefs decided we should turn and go down the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>Little Bighorn, to its mouth. From there our hunting
+parties would cross the Bighorn and get antelope
+skins and meat that we now wanted.</p>
+
+<p>These councils of chiefs of all of the tribal circles
+were held sometimes at one camp circle and sometimes
+at another. In each case, heralds announced
+the meeting and told where it would be held. Each
+tribe operated its own internal government, the same
+as if it were entirely separated from the others. The
+chiefs of the different tribes met together as equals.
+There was only one who was considered as being
+above all of the others. This was Sitting Bull. He
+was recognized as the one old man chief of all the
+camps combined.</p>
+
+<p>Almost all of our Northern Cheyenne tribe were
+with us on the Little Bighorn. Only a few of our
+forty big chiefs were absent. Two of our four old
+men chiefs, Old Bear and Dirty Moccasins, were here.
+Old Bear had been off the reservation throughout all
+of the past year, while Dirty Moccasins had come to
+us on the Rosebud. The absent two old men chiefs
+were Little Wolf and Rabbit, this last one known
+sometimes as Dull Knife, or Morning Star. Our
+tribal medicine tepee was at its place in our camp
+circle, and Charcoal Bear, its keeper, was with it. I
+believe all of the thirty chiefs of the three warrior
+societies were present, except Little Wolf, leading
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>chief of the Elk warriors. I do not know how many
+Cheyennes in all were in the camp.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_24_24" href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> In fact, I do
+not know how many of us there were in our tribe at
+that time. I never knew of any count having been
+made during those times.</p>
+
+<p>We crossed the Little Bighorn river to its west
+side and set off down the valley. Cheyennes ahead,
+Uncpapas behind, in the usual order of march. The
+journey that day was not a long one. After eight or
+nine miles of travel the Cheyennes stopped and began
+to form their camp circle. The tribes following us
+chose their ground, and their women began to set up
+the villages taken down that forenoon. The last
+tribe, the biggest one, the Uncpapas, placed themselves
+behind the others.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyenne location was about two miles north
+from the present railroad station at Garryowen, Montana.
+We were near the mouth of a small creek flowing
+from the southwestward into the river. Across
+the river east of us and a little upstream from us was
+a broad coulee, or little valley, having now the name
+Medicine Tail coulee.</p>
+
+<p>The Uncpapas, at the southern end of the group
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>and most distant from us, put their circle just northeast
+of the present Garryowen station. The other
+four circles were placed here and there between us
+and the Uncpapas.</p>
+
+<p>Our trail during all of our movements throughout
+that summer could have been followed by a blind
+person. It was from a quarter to half a mile wide
+at all places where the form of the land allowed that
+width. Indians regularly made a broad trail when
+traveling in bands using travois. People behind
+often kept in the tracks of people in front, but when
+the party of travelers was a large one there were many
+of such tracks side by side.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">[19]</a> Prairie Dog creek? Finerty writes that the soldiers were camped
+there June 8th.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">[20]</a> Wooden Leg, Big Beaver and Limpy, each on a separate occasion,
+went with me and pointed out the exact locations of the 1876 Indian
+campings on the Rosebud and the Little Bighorn.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_21_21" href="#FNanchor_21_21" class="label">[21]</a> General Crook’s soldiers, June 17th, 1876. Historians have copied
+each other in repetitions that the hostiles here were “Crazy Horse and
+his Ogallalas,” and that they were from the “Crazy Horse village” supposed
+to have been only a short distance down the Rosebud.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_22_22" href="#FNanchor_22_22" class="label">[22]</a> The Crow aspect of this same story was told to me by Along the
+Hillside, an old Crow man who was a scout with Crook. He was one
+of the pursuers who jerked the warbonnet from the amateur Sioux.—T.
+B. M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_23_23" href="#FNanchor_23_23" class="label">[23]</a> Finerty writes that Crook had 1,000 pack mules, and that the
+Crows and Shoshones joined him on June 14th, at the Goose Creek
+camp.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_24_24" href="#FNanchor_24_24" class="label">[24]</a> At the Northern Cheyenne fair at Lame Deer in 1927 I estimated
+the encampment at about 1,100. Wooden Leg and some other old men
+were asked to compare this camp with the one on the Little Bighorn.
+After a consultation, it was generally agreed that there must have
+been 1,600 or more Cheyennes in their camp when the Custer soldiers
+came.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="VIII">
+ <span class="p50l">VIII</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>On the Little Bighorn.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Every one of the six separate camp circles had its
+open and unoccupied side toward the east. Every
+lodge in each of these camps was set up so that the
+entrance opening was at its east side. This was the
+arrangement at all of our campings in this entire
+summer of combined movement. This was the regular
+Indian way of putting up a lodge or arranging a
+camp.</p>
+
+<p>Some old Cheyennes talk of seven camp circles,
+and a few of them mention eight. But there were
+only six important ones. The extra one or two were
+not of tribal bands governing themselves as such.
+These additional Indians in considerable number
+were the Burned Thighs, Assiniboines and Waist and
+Skirt people. These kept themselves mainly in their
+own separated groups, but the groups would be placed
+close to some main camp circle and considered as
+belonging to it. At this particular camping place
+the Waist and Skirt Sioux were right beside the great
+Uncpapa circle, the Burned Thighs were partly with
+the Blackfeet Sioux and partly with the Ogallalas.
+Beginning with the Cheyennes at the north side and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>following up the river, four camp circles succeeded
+each other: Cheyennes, Arrows All Gone, Minneconjoux,
+Uncpapas. Away from the river and southwest
+of the Cheyennes and Arrows All Gone was the
+Ogallala camp. Between the Ogallalas and the Uncpapas,
+but nearer to the Uncpapas, was the Blackfeet
+Sioux camp, this also back a short distance from
+the river. A small and irregular camp of Burned
+Thigh Sioux was located by the river between the
+Cheyennes and the Arrows All Gone, or just east of
+the Ogallalas. All of the camps were east of the
+present railroad and highway.</p>
+
+<p>One big lodge of Southern Cheyennes was in our
+circle. In it were eight men, six women and some
+children. Lame White Man, the Southern Cheyenne
+chief, had his own family lodge. He and his family
+had been with our northern branch of the tribe so
+long that they were looked upon as belonging to us.
+The six Arapaho men were attached to the lodge of
+Two Moons, one of the little chiefs of the Fox warrior
+society. One of his two wives was an Arapaho
+woman. There was not any white person nor any
+mixed-breed person with us. I never heard of there
+being any such person there with any of the Sioux
+tribes.</p>
+
+<p>Our tribal medicine tepee, containing our sacred
+Buffalo Head and other revered objects, was in its
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>place at the western part of the open space enclosed
+by our camp circle. The medicine arrows, which belong
+to the Southern Cheyennes, were not here. Ours
+was the only tribal medicine lodge in the whole camp.
+The Sioux tribes did not maintain this kind of institution.
+They had tribal medicine pipes, but no special
+lodges for them.</p>
+
+<p>Our family dwelling had in it seven people. These
+were my father and mother, my older brother Yellow
+Hair, my older sister Crooked Nose, myself Wooden
+Leg, a younger sister and a small boy brother. All
+of us together owned nine horses. I personally
+owned two of these. Other tepees had more people
+in them, some not as many. A few unmarried young
+men had little willow dome and robe shelters. Old
+couples likewise had this sort of temporary housing.
+These would be abandoned and built anew at each
+time of moving camp.</p>
+
+<p>Three hundred lodges seems to me now as being
+about the size of our Cheyenne camp. The Blackfeet
+Sioux had about the same number, or a few less.
+The Arrows All Gone had more. The Minneconjoux
+and the Ogallalas each had more than the Arrows
+All Gone. The Uncpapas had, I believe, twice as
+many as had the Cheyennes.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_25_25" href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span></p>
+
+<p>The principal chiefs of the various camp circles
+were:</p>
+
+<p>Uncpapas: Sitting Bull. He also was recognized
+as the one old man chief of the combined tribes. The
+Uncpapa medicine man chief was named Buffalo Calf
+Pipe.</p>
+
+<p>Ogallalas: Crazy Horse, old man chief.</p>
+
+<p>Minneconjoux: Lame Deer, old man chief.</p>
+
+<p>Arrows All Gone: Hump Nose, or Hump, important
+chief of some kind.</p>
+
+<p>Blackfeet: I do not know name of any chief there.
+Also, I do not know what chiefs may have been with
+the small irregular bands of other Indians.</p>
+
+<p>Cheyennes: Old Bear and Dirty Moccasins, old
+men chiefs. Next to them, Crazy Head was considered
+the most important tribal big chief. Lame
+White Man was regarded as the most capable warrior
+chief among us, although Last Bull and Old Man
+Coyote also were held in special high esteem.</p>
+
+<p>Our Cheyenne warrior society chiefs were these:&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_26_26" href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
+
+<p>Elk warriors: Leading chief—Lame White Man.
+Nine little chiefs—Left Handed Shooter, Pig, Goes
+After Other Buffalo, Plenty Bears, Wolf Medicine,
+Broken Jaw, A Crow Cut His Nose, White Hawk and
+Tall White Man.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span></p>
+
+<p>Crazy Dog warriors: Leading chief—Old Man
+Coyote. Nine little chiefs—Black Knife, Beaver
+Claws, Iron Shirt, Little Creek, Snow Bird, Crazy
+Mule, Strong Left Arm, Red Owl and Crow Necklace.</p>
+
+<p>Fox warriors: Leading chief—Last Bull. Nine
+little chiefs—Wrapped Braids, Plenty of Buffalo
+Bull Meat, Little Horse, Sits Beside His Medicine,
+Two Moons, Bears Walks on a Ridge, Mosquito,
+Rattlesnake Nose and Weasel Bear.</p>
+
+<p>The Fox warriors were on duty as camp policemen
+at this time. It was their business, while remaining
+on duty, to watch for the approach of enemies as well
+as to enforce the tribal laws. A few of the little chiefs
+of the warrior societies, and various members of the
+different ones, were not in the camp.</p>
+
+<p>Our three leading warrior chiefs were allowed to
+talk in the tribal councils, where the tribal big
+chiefs and old men adviser chiefs assembled for
+the consideration of tribal affairs. The little warrior
+chiefs were expected to attend these councils,
+but they were not permitted to talk there. They
+were required to keep still and listen. The place
+for them to talk was in the warrior society meetings,
+where they were the instructors while the young warriors
+had to remain quiet and listening. The Sioux
+and other tribes had this same kind of system.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span></p>
+
+<p>Guns were not plentiful among us. Most of our
+hunting had been with bows and arrows. Of the
+Cheyennes, Two Moons and White Wolf each had a
+repeating rifle. Some others had single-shot breech-loading
+rifles. But there was not much ammunition
+for the good guns. The muzzle-loaders usually were
+preferred, because for these we could mold the bullets
+and put in whatever powder was desired, or according
+to the quantity on hand. I believe the Sioux
+had, in proportion to their numbers, about the same
+supply of firearm material that we had. The Waist
+and Skirt people had few or no guns, were in every
+way very poor. My muzzle-loading rifle had been
+lost with my other personal effects when we had been
+driven out and had our lodges burned on Powder
+river.</p>
+
+<p>Six or eight guns, I suppose, had been taken from
+soldiers at the Rosebud fight. I recall seeing only
+two, a rifle and a revolver, among the Cheyennes.
+Both of them used cartridges. The ammunition belt
+I saw taken there had a special piece of belting swung
+in a curve from the main girdle. Around the main
+circle were loops for forty rifle cartridges. The revolver
+cartridges were carried in twelve or fifteen
+loops on the suspended curve. On the surface of a
+revolver scabbard I saw were six other loops for its
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>cartridges. I never heard of the Indians getting from
+the Rosebud soldiers any ammunition except what
+was in the belts captured.</p>
+
+<p>My cap-and-ball six shooter was my warring
+weapon. I had plenty of caps, powder and lead for it.
+I had a bullet mold to make its bullets from the lead.
+I kept the bullets and the caps in two small tin boxes.
+The powder I carried in a horn swung by a thong from
+my shoulder. For the gun I had a good scabbard.
+This was fastened to my leather belt.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyenne horses were put out to graze on the
+valley below our camp. Horses belonging to other
+tribes were placed at other feeding areas on the valley
+and on the bench hills just west of the combined Indian
+camps. The tribal herds were kept separate
+from each other. Boys from each tribe guarded their
+horse bands. An occasional riding horse was
+picketed near to or within each camp circle. It could
+get better feed with the herd, and probably it felt
+better satisfied there, but always there was somebody
+here or there, particularly among the policemen, who
+picketed a horse for ready use.</p>
+
+<p>I had no thought then of any fighting to be done
+in the near future. We had driven away the soldiers,
+on the upper Rosebud, seven days ago. It seemed
+likely it would be a long time before they would
+trouble us again. My mind was occupied mostly by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>such thoughts as regularly are uppermost in the minds
+of young men. I was eighteen years old, and I liked
+girls.</p>
+
+<p>That night we had a dance. It was entirely a
+social affair for young people, not a ceremonial or
+war dance. In the midst of the open area within our
+camp circle the women and girls cleared off and
+leveled a broad surface of ground. The young men
+brought a tall pole and set it up at the center of the
+dancing ground. Charcoal Bear, the medicine chief,
+brought the buffalo skin that regularly hung from
+the top of the sacred tepee. He tied it to the top end
+of our long pole before we raised it. We built a big
+bonfire. The drums and the Cheyenne dance songs
+enlivened the assemblage. It seemed that peace and
+happiness was prevailing all over the world, that nowhere
+was any man planning to lift his hand against
+his fellow man.</p>
+
+<p>The same kind of amusement was going on in the
+Sioux camps. An occasional group from them came
+to our party. An occasional group of Cheyennes
+went visiting among them. I was enjoying myself in
+our own gathering. Finally, though, a young man
+friend of mine proposed:</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s go and dance a while with the Sioux girls.”</p>
+
+<p>Four of us went to the neighboring camp, that of
+the Arrows All Gone Sioux. Pretty soon the girls
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>were asking us to dance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_27_27" href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> The Sioux women gave us
+plenty of food. We were treated well, so we did not
+go elsewhere nor back to our own people. We stayed
+there and danced throughout the remainder of that
+night.</p>
+
+<p>At the first sign of dawn the dance ended. I
+walked wearily across to the Cheyenne camp. I did
+not go into our family lodge. Instead, I dropped
+down upon the ground behind it. I do not remember
+anything that might have happened during the two
+or three hours that followed. When I awoke I went
+into the family lodge. My mother prepared me a
+breakfast. Then she said: “You must go for a bath
+in the river.”</p>
+
+<p>My brother Yellow Hair and I went together.
+Other Indians, of all ages and both sexes, were splashing
+in the waters of the river. The sun was high, the
+weather was hot. The cool water felt good to my
+skin. When my brother and I had dabbled there a
+few minutes we came out and sought the shelter of
+some shade trees. We sat there a little while, talking
+of the good times each of us had enjoyed during
+the previous night. We sprawled out to lie down and
+talk. Before we knew it, both of us were sound
+asleep.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_25_25" href="#FNanchor_25_25" class="label">[25]</a> Estimating the Cheyennes at 1,600, it appears the entire camp
+numbered about 12,000.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_26_26" href="#FNanchor_26_26" class="label">[26]</a> List made up in various conferences wherein Wooden Leg was
+assisted by Sun Bear, White Wolf, Big Crow, Two Feathers and Big
+Beaver, all warriors at the battle.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_27_27" href="#FNanchor_27_27" class="label">[27]</a> The customary Indian way is for the women to choose partners
+at the social dances.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="IX">
+ <span class="p50l">IX</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>The Coming of Custer.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In my sleep I dreamed that a great crowd of people
+were making lots of noise. Something in the noise
+startled me. I found myself wide awake, sitting up
+and listening. My brother too awakened, and we
+both jumped to our feet. A great commotion was going
+on among the camps. We heard shooting. We
+hurried out from the trees so we might see as well
+as hear. The shooting was somewhere at the upper
+part of the camp circles. It looked as if all of the
+Indians there were running away toward the hills to
+the westward or down toward our end of the village.
+Women were screaming and men were letting out
+war cries. Through it all we could hear old men
+calling:</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers are here! Young men, go out and fight
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>We ran to our camp and to our home lodge. Everybody
+there was excited. Women were hurriedly
+making up little packs for flight. Some were going
+off northward or across the river without any packs.
+Children were hunting for their mothers. Mothers
+were anxiously trying to find their children. I got
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>my lariat and my six shooter. I hastened on down toward
+where had been our horse herd. I came across
+three of our herder boys. One of them was catching
+grasshoppers. The other two were cooking fish in
+the blaze of a little fire. I told them what was going
+on and asked them where were the horses. They
+jumped on their picketed ponies and dashed for the
+camp, without answering me. Just then I heard Bald
+Eagle calling out to hurry with the horses. Two other
+boys were driving them toward the camp circle. I
+was utterly winded from the running. I never was
+much for running. I could walk all day, but I could
+not run fast nor far. I walked on back to the home
+lodge.</p>
+
+<p>My father had caught my favorite horse from the
+herd brought in by the boys and Bald Eagle. I
+quickly emptied out my war bag and set myself at
+getting ready to go into battle. I jerked off my
+ordinary clothing. I jerked on a pair of new
+breeches that had been given to me by an Uncpapa
+Sioux. I had a good cloth shirt, and I put it on.
+My old moccasins were kicked off and a pair of
+beaded moccasins substituted for them. My father
+strapped a blanket upon my horse and arranged the
+rawhide lariat into a bridle. He stood holding my
+mount.</p>
+
+<p>“Hurry,” he urged me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
+
+<p>I was hurrying, but I was not yet ready. I got my
+paints and my little mirror. The blue-black circle
+soon appeared around my face. The red and yellow
+colorings were applied on all of the skin inside the
+circle. I combed my hair. It properly should have
+been oiled and braided neatly, but my father again
+was saying, “Hurry,” so I just looped a buckskin
+thong about it and tied it close up against the back
+of my head, to float loose from there. My bullets,
+caps and powder horn put me into full readiness. In
+a moment afterward I was on my horse and was going
+as fast as it could run toward where all of the rest
+of the young men were going. My brother already
+had gone. He got his horse before I got mine, and
+his dressing was only a long buckskin shirt fringed
+with Crow Indian hair. The hair had been taken
+from a Crow at a past battle with them.</p>
+
+<p>The air was so full of dust I could not see where
+to go. But it was not needful that I see that far. I
+kept my horse headed in the direction of movement
+by the crowd of Indians on horseback. I was led out
+around and far beyond the Uncpapa camp circle.
+Many hundreds of Indians on horseback were dashing
+to and fro in front of a body of soldiers. The
+soldiers were on the level valley ground and were
+shooting with rifles. Not many bullets were being
+sent back at them, but thousands of arrows were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>falling among them. I went on with a throng of
+Sioux until we got beyond and behind the white men.
+By this time, though, they had mounted their horses
+and were hiding themselves in the timber. A band of
+Indians were with the soldiers. It appeared they were
+Crows or Shoshones. Most of these Indians had fled
+back up the valley. Some were across east of the
+river and were riding away over the hills beyond.</p>
+
+<p>Our Indians crowded down toward the timber
+where were the soldiers. More and more of our
+people kept coming. Almost all of them were Sioux.
+There were only a few Cheyennes. Arrows were
+showered into the timber. Bullets whistled out toward
+the Sioux and Cheyennes. But we stayed far
+back while we extended our curved line farther and
+farther around the big grove of trees. Some dead
+soldiers had been left among the grass and sagebrush
+where first they had fought us. It seemed to me the
+remainder of them would not live many hours longer.
+Sioux were creeping forward to set fire to the timber.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the hidden soldiers came tearing out on
+horseback, from the woods. I was around on that
+side where they came out. I whirled my horse and
+lashed it into a dash to escape from them. All others
+of my companions did the same. But soon we discovered
+they were not following us. They were running
+away from us. They were going as fast their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>tired horses could carry them across an open valley
+space and toward the river. We stopped, looked a
+moment, and then we whipped our ponies into swift
+pursuit. A great throng of Sioux also were coming
+after them. My distant position put me among the
+leaders in the chase. The soldier horses moved
+slowly, as if they were very tired. Ours were lively.
+We gained rapidly on them.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_220fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_220fp.jpg" alt="Wooden Leg drawing">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Wooden Leg making Custer battle drawings for the
+ author</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>I fired four shots with my six shooter. I do not
+know whether or not any of my bullets did harm.
+I saw a Sioux put an arrow into the back of a soldier’s
+head. Another arrow went into his shoulder. He
+tumbled from his horse to the ground. Others fell
+dead either from arrows or from stabbings or jabbings
+or from blows by the stone war clubs of the
+Sioux. Horses limped or staggered or sprawled out
+dead or dying. Our war cries and war songs were
+mingled with many jeering calls, such as:</p>
+
+<p>“You are only boys. You ought not to be fighting.
+We whipped you on the Rosebud. You should have
+brought more Crows or Shoshones with you to do your
+fighting.”</p>
+
+<p>Little Bird and I were after one certain soldier.
+Little Bird was wearing a trailing warbonnet. He
+was at the right and I was at the left of the fleeing
+man. We were lashing him and his horse with our
+pony whips. It seemed not brave to shoot him. Besides,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>I did not want to waste my bullets. He pointed
+back his revolver, though, and sent a bullet into
+Little Bird’s thigh. Immediately I whacked the white
+man fighter on his head with the heavy elkhorn
+handle of my pony whip. The blow dazed him. I
+seized the rifle strapped on his back. I wrenched it
+and dragged the looping strap over his head. As I
+was getting possession of this weapon he fell to the
+ground. I did not harm him further. I do not know
+what became of him. The jam of oncoming Indians
+swept me on. But I had now a good soldier rifle.
+Yet, I had not any cartridges for it.</p>
+
+<p>Three soldiers on horses got separated from the
+others and started away up the valley, in the direction
+from where they had come. Three Cheyennes, Sun
+Bear, Eagle Tail Feather and Little Sun,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_28_28" href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> joined
+some Sioux in pursuit of the three white men. The
+Cheyennes told afterward about the outcome of this
+pursuit. One of the soldiers turned his horse eastward
+toward the river and escaped in the timber.
+The other two kept on southward. Of these two, one
+went off to the right, up a small gulch to the top of
+the bench. There he was caught and killed. The remaining
+one rode on toward the mouth of Reno
+creek. As he neared that point he swerved to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>right. He made a circle out upon the valley and returned
+to the timber just across west from the mouth
+of Reno creek. Here he dismounted from his exhausted
+horse and got himself into the brush. The
+Sioux and Cheyennes surrounded him and killed him.
+They told that he fought bravely to the last, making
+use of his six shooter.</p>
+
+<p>A warbonnet Indian belonging with the soldiers
+was chased by Crooked Nose, a Cheyenne, and some
+Sioux. The chase was afoot, across a wet slough and
+into some timber northward from where the soldiers
+had been hidden for a few minutes. After many exchanges
+of shots, after much dodging and shifting of
+position, the enemy Indian was killed there.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_29_29" href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> I
+was told afterward about this killing. I did not see
+it. I was following the fleeing soldiers to and across
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>Indians mobbed the soldiers floundering afoot and
+on horseback in crossing the river. I do not know
+how many of our enemies might have been killed
+there. With my captured rifle as a club I knocked
+two of them from their horses into the flood waters.
+Most of the pursuing warriors stopped at the river,
+but many kept on after the men with the blue clothing.
+I remained in the pursuit and crossed the river.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
+
+<p>Whirlwind, a Cheyenne, charged after a warbonnet
+Indian belonging with the whites. The enemy Indian
+bravely charged also toward Whirlwind. The two
+men fired rifles at the same moment. Both of them
+fell dead. This was on the flat land just east of the
+river where the soldiers crossed.</p>
+
+<p>Another enemy Indian was behind a little sagebrush
+knoll and shooting at us. His shots were
+returned. I and some others went around and got
+behind him. We dismounted and crept toward him.
+As we came close up to him he fell. A bullet had
+hit him. He raised himself up, though, and swung
+his rifle around toward us. We rushed upon him.
+I crashed a blow of my rifle barrel upon his head.
+Others beat and stabbed him to death. I got also
+his gun. It was the same as the one I had taken
+from the soldier, but the Indian’s gun had a longer
+barrel. A Sioux said: “You have two guns. Let
+me have one of them.” I gave him the one I had
+taken from the Indian just killed. I liked better
+the shorter barreled one, so I kept it. The Sioux
+already had the Indian’s ammunition belt. He did
+not give me any of the cartridges. There were only
+a few of them. One of the Sioux scalped the dead
+man. Different ones took his clothing. I took nothing
+except the gun I had given away.</p>
+
+<p>I returned to the west side of the river. Lots of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>Indians were hunting around there for dead soldiers
+or for wounded ones to kill. I joined in this search.
+I got some tobacco from the pockets of one dead
+man. I got also a belt having in it a few cartridges.
+All of the weapons and clothing and all other possessions
+were being taken from the bodies. The
+warriors were doing this. No old people nor women
+were there. They all had run away to the hill
+benches to the westward. I went to a dead horse,
+to see what might be found there. Leather bags
+were on them, behind the saddles. I rummaged into
+one of these bags. I found there two pasteboard
+boxes. I broke open one of them.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, cartridges!”</p>
+
+<p>There were twenty of them in each box, forty in
+all. Thirty of them were used to fill up the vacant
+places in my belt. The remaining ten I wrapped into
+a piece of cloth and dropped them down into my own
+little kit bag. Now I need not be so careful in expending
+ammunition. Now I felt very brave. I
+jumped upon my horse and went again to fight whatever
+soldiers I might find on the east side of the river.</p>
+
+<p>The soldiers had gone up gulches and a backbone
+ridge to the top of a steep and high hill. Indians
+were all about them. Shots were going toward them
+and coming from them. A friend here told me that
+Hump Nose, a Cheyenne two years younger than I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>was, had been killed on the west side of the river.
+My heart was made sad by this news, but I went on
+up the hill. I joined with others in going around
+to the left or north side of the place where were
+the soldiers. From our hilltop position I fired a few
+shots from my newly-obtained rifle. I aimed not at
+any particular ones, but only in the direction of all
+of them. I think I was too far away to do much harm
+to them. I had been there only a short time when
+somebody said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“Look! Yonder are other soldiers!”</p>
+
+<p>I saw them on distant hills down the river and
+on our same side of it. The news of them spread
+quickly among us. Indians began to ride in that direction.
+Some went along the hills, others went down
+to cross the river and follow the valley. I took this
+course. I guided my horse down the steep hillside
+and forded the river. Back again among the camps
+I rode on through them to our Cheyenne circle at
+the lower end of them. As I rode I could see lots
+of Indians out on the hills across on the east side
+of the river and fighting the other soldiers there. I
+do not know whether all of our warriors left the first
+soldiers or some of them stayed up there. I suppose,
+though, that all of them came away from there,
+as they would be afraid to stay if only a few remained.</p>
+
+<p>Not many people were in the lodges of our camp.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>Most of the women and children and old Cheyennes
+were gone to the west side of the valley or to the
+hills at that side. A few were hurrying back and
+forth to take away packs. My father was the only
+person at our lodge. I told him of the fight up the
+valley. I told him of my having helped in the killing
+of the enemy Indian and some soldiers in the river.
+I gave to him the tobacco I had taken. I showed
+him my gun and all of the cartridges.</p>
+
+<p>“You have been brave,” he cheered me. “You
+have done enough for one day. Now you should
+rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I want to go and fight the other soldiers,” I
+said. “I can fight better now, with this gun.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your horse is too tired,” he argued.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but I want to ride the other one.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned loose my tired horse and roped my
+other one from the little herd being held inside the
+camp circle. He blanketed the new mount and arranged
+the lariat bridle. He applied the medicine
+treatment for protecting my mount. As he was doing
+this I was making some improvements in my appearance,
+making the medicine for myself. I added my
+sheathknife to my stock of weapons. Then I looked
+a few moments at the battling Indians and soldiers
+across the river on the hills to the northeastward.
+More and more Indians were flocking from the camps
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>to that direction. Some were yet coming along the
+hills from where the first soldiers had stopped. The
+soldiers now in view were spreading themselves into
+lines along a ridge. The Indians were on lower ridges
+in front of them, between them and the river, and
+were moving on around up a long coulee to get behind
+the white men.</p>
+
+<p>“Remember, your older brother already is out
+there in the fight,” my father said to me. “I think
+there will be plenty of warriors to beat the soldiers,
+so it is not needful that I send both of my sons.
+You have not your shield nor your eagle wing bone
+flute. Stay back as far as you can and shoot from
+a long distance. Let your brother go ahead of you.”</p>
+
+<p>Two other young men were near us. They had
+their horses and were otherwise ready, but they told
+me they had decided not to go. I showed them my
+captured gun and the cartridges. I told them of
+the tobacco and the clothing and other things we
+had taken from the soldiers up the valley. This
+changed their minds. They mounted their horses
+and accompanied me.</p>
+
+<p>We forded the river where all of the Indians were
+crossing it, at the broad shallows immediately in
+front of the little valley or wide coulee on the east
+side. We fell in with others, many Sioux and a few
+Cheyennes, going in our same direction. We urged
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>our horses on up the small valley. As we approached
+the place of battle each one chose his own personal
+course. All of the Indians had come out on horseback.
+Almost all of them dismounted and crept
+along the gullies afoot after the arrival near the soldiers.
+Still, there were hundreds of them riding here
+and there all the time, most of them merely changing
+position, but a few of them racing along back and
+forth in front of the soldiers, in daring movements
+to exhibit bravery.</p>
+
+<p>I swerved up a gulch to my left, where I saw some
+Cheyennes going ahead of me. Other Cheyennes
+were coming here from the east side of the soldiers.
+Although it was natural that tribal members should
+keep together, there was everywhere a mingling of
+the fighters from all of the tribes. The soldiers
+had come along a high ridge about two miles east
+from the Cheyenne camp. They had gone on past
+us and then swerved off the high ridge to the lower
+ridge where most of them afterward were killed.
+While they were yet on the far-out ridge a few Sioux
+and Cheyennes had exchanged shots with them at
+long distance, without anybody being hurt. Bobtail
+Horse, Roan Bear and Buffalo Calf, three Cheyennes,
+and four Sioux warriors with them, were said to have
+been the first of our Indians to cross the river and
+go to meet the soldiers. Bobtail Horse was an Elk
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>warrior, Roan Bear a Fox warrior, and Buffalo Calf
+a Crazy Dog warrior. They had been joined soon
+afterward by other Indians from the valley camps
+and from the southward hills where the first soldiers
+had taken refuge.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the Indians were working around the ridge
+now occupied by the soldiers. We were lying down
+in gullies and behind sagebrush hillocks. The shooting
+at first was at a distance, but we kept creeping
+in closer all around the ridge. Bows and arrows were
+in use much more than guns. From the hiding-places
+of the Indians, the arrows could be shot in a high
+and long curve, to fall upon the soldiers or their
+horses. An Indian using a gun had to jump up and
+expose himself long enough to shoot. The arrows
+falling upon the horses stuck in their backs and
+caused them to go plunging here and there, knocking
+down the soldiers. The ponies of our warriors who
+were creeping along the gulches had been left in
+gulches farther back. Some of them were let loose,
+dragging their ropes, but most of them were tied to
+sagebrush. Only the old men and the boys stayed
+all the time on their ponies, and they stayed back on
+the surrounding ridges, out of reach of the bullets.</p>
+
+<p>The slow long-distance fighting was kept up for
+about an hour and a half, I believe. The Indians
+all the time could see where were the soldiers, because
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>the white men were mostly on a ridge and their
+horses were with them. But the soldiers could not
+see our warriors, as they had left their ponies and
+were crawling in the gullies through the sagebrush.
+A warrior would jump up, shoot, jerk himself down
+quickly, and then crawl forward a little further. All
+around the soldier ridge our men were doing this.
+So not many of them got hit by the soldier bullets
+during this time of fighting.</p>
+
+<p>After the long time of the slow fighting, about
+forty of the soldiers&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_30_30" href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> came galloping from the east
+part of the ridge down toward the river, toward where
+most of the Cheyennes and many Ogallalas were hidden.
+The Indians ran back to a deep gulch. The
+soldiers stopped and got off their horses when they
+arrived at a low ridge where the Indians had been.
+Lame White Man, the Southern Cheyenne chief, came
+on his horse and called us to come back and fight.
+In a few minutes the warriors were all around these
+soldiers. Then Lame White Man called out:</p>
+
+<p>“Come. We can kill all of them.”</p>
+
+<p>All around, the Indians began jumping up, running
+forward, dodging down, jumping up again, down
+again, all the time going toward the soldiers. Right
+away, all of the white men went crazy. Instead of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>shooting us, they turned their guns upon themselves.
+Almost before we could get to them, every one of
+them was dead. They killed themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The Indians took the guns of these soldiers and
+used them for shooting at the soldiers on the high
+ridge. I went back and got my horse and rode around
+beyond the east end of the ridge. By the time I got
+there, all of the soldiers there were dead. The Indians
+told me that they had killed only a few of those
+men, that the men had shot each other and shot
+themselves. A Cheyenne told me that four soldiers
+from that part of the ridge had turned their horses
+and tried to escape by going back over the trail
+where they had come. Three of these men were
+killed quickly. The fourth one got across a gulch
+and over a ridge eastward before the pursuing group
+of Sioux got close to him. His horse was very tired,
+and the Sioux were gaining on him. He was moving
+his right arm as though whipping his horse to make
+it go faster. Suddenly his right hand went up to his
+head. With his revolver he shot himself and fell
+dead from his horse.</p>
+
+<p>I raced my horse to hurry around to the hillside
+north of the soldier ridge. The Indians there were
+all around a band of soldiers on the north slope.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_31_31" href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+I got off my horse and fired two shots, at long distance,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>with my soldier gun. I did not shoot any
+more, because the sagebrush was full of Indians
+jumping up and down and crawling close to the soldiers,
+and I was afraid I might hit one of our own
+men. About that time, all of this band of soldiers
+went crazy and fired their guns at each other’s heads
+and breasts or at their own heads and breasts. All
+of them were dead before the Indians got to them.</p>
+
+<p>Many hundreds of boys on horseback were watching
+the battle. They were on the hills all around,
+far enough away to be out of reach of the soldier
+bullets. The ridge north of the soldier ridge was
+crowded with these boys and some old men. When
+the warriors were crowding in close to the soldiers
+on the north slope, one soldier there broke away and
+ran afoot across a gulch toward the northward hill.
+I suppose he thought there were no warriors in that
+direction, as all of them were hidden and creeping
+through the sagebrush and gullies. But several of
+them jumped up and ran after him. Just after he
+got across the gulch he stopped, stood still, and killed
+himself with his own revolver. A Cheyenne boy
+named Big Beaver lashed his pony into a dash down
+to the dead white man. The boy got the soldier’s
+revolver and his belt of cartridges, jumped back upon
+his pony, and hurried away again to the hilltop. A
+Cheyenne warrior scalped the soldier and hung the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>scalp on a bunch of sagebrush, leaving it there.
+While I was at this part of the field, a Waist and
+Skirt Indian said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“I think I see the big chief of the soldiers. I have
+been watching one certain man who appears to be
+telling all of the others what to do.”</p>
+
+<p>He tried to point out this man. But just then
+another bunch of soldier horses went running wildly
+among them, kicking up a great dust and knocking
+down or jostling the men. So I did not get to see
+the special man the Indian was trying to show me.</p>
+
+<p>I saw one Sioux walking slowly toward the gulch,
+going away from where were the soldiers. He wabbled
+dizzily as he moved along. He fell down, got
+up, fell down again, got up again. As he passed
+near to where I was I saw that his whole lower jaw
+was shot away. The sight of him made me sick. I
+had to vomit. I did not know him, and I did not
+learn whether he died or not.</p>
+
+<p>I had remained on my horse during most of the
+long time of the fighting at a distance. I rode from
+place to place around the soldiers, keeping myself
+back, as my father had urged me to do, while my
+older brother crept close with the other warriors.
+I got off and crept with them, though, for a little
+while at the place where the band of soldiers rode
+down toward the river. After they were dead I got
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>my horse and mounted again. I stayed mounted
+until I got around into the gulch north from the west
+end of the soldier ridge. By this time all of the
+soldiers were gone except a band of them at the
+west end of the ridge. They were hidden behind
+dead horses. Hundreds or thousands of warriors
+were all around them, creeping closer all the time.
+From the gulch where I was I could see the north
+slope of the ridge covered by the hidden Indians.
+But the soldiers, from where they were, could not
+see the warriors, except as some Indian might jump
+up to shoot quickly and then duck down again. We
+could get only glimpses of the soldiers, but we knew
+all the time right where they were, because we could
+see their dead horses.</p>
+
+<p>I got down afoot in the gulch. I let out my long
+lariat rope for leading my horse while I joined the
+warriors creeping up the slope toward the soldiers.
+During all of the earlier fighting, when I had been
+most of the time going from place to place on horseback,
+I had fired several shots with my rifle captured
+from the soldier when we chased them across the
+river. I also had used my six-shooter. I had replaced
+the four bullets expended during the chase of
+the first soldiers in the valley. In this second battle
+I used up the six, reloaded the six-shooter, and fired
+all of these additional six shots at the soldiers. But
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>it is hard to shoot straight when on horseback, especially
+when there is much noise and much shooting
+and excitement, as the horse will not stand still.
+When I went crawling up the slope I could lie down
+and shoot. I could not see any particular soldier to
+shoot at, but I could see their dead horses, where the
+men were hiding. So I just sent my bullets in that
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>A Sioux wearing a warbonnet was lying down behind
+a clump of sagebrush on the hillside only a
+short distance north of where now is the big stone
+having the iron fence around it. He was about half
+the length of my lariat rope up ahead of me. Many
+other Indians were near him. Some boys were mingled
+among them, to get in quickly for making coup
+blows on any dead soldiers they might find. A Cheyenne
+boy was lying down right behind the warbonnet
+Sioux. The Sioux was peeping up and firing a rifle
+from time to time. At one of these times a soldier
+bullet hit him exactly in the middle of the forehead.
+His arms and legs jumped in spasms for a few moments,
+then he died. The boy quickly slid back down
+into a gully, jumped to his feet and ran away.</p>
+
+<p>A soldier on a horse suddenly appeared in view
+back behind the warriors who were coming from the
+eastward along the ridge. He was riding away to
+the eastward, as fast as he could make his horse go.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>It seemed he must have been hidden somewhere
+back there until the Indians had passed him. A band
+of the Indians, all of them Sioux, I believe, got after
+him. I lost sight of them when they went beyond
+a curve of the hilltop. I suppose, though, they caught
+him and killed him.</p>
+
+<p>The shots quit coming from the soldiers. Warriors
+who had crept close to them began to call out
+that all of the white men were dead. All of the Indians
+then jumped up and rushed forward. All of the
+boys and old men on their horses came tearing into
+the crowd. The air was full of dust and smoke.
+Everybody was greatly excited. It looked like thousands
+of dogs might look if all of them were mixed
+together in a fight. All of the Indians were saying
+these soldiers also went crazy and killed themselves.
+I do not know. I could not see them. But I believe
+they did so.</p>
+
+<p>Seven of these last soldiers broke away and went
+running down the coulee sloping toward the river
+from the west end of the ridge. I was on the side
+opposite from them, and there was much smoke and
+dust, and many Indians were in front of me, so I did
+not see these men running, but I learned of them
+from the talk afterward. They did not get far, because
+many Indians were all around them. It was
+said that these seven men, or some of them, killed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>themselves. I do not know, as I did not see them.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_32_32" href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+
+<p>After the great throng of Indians had crowded upon
+the little space where had been the last band of fighting
+soldiers, a strange incident happened: It appeared
+that all of the white men were dead. But
+there was one of them who raised himself to a support
+on his left elbow. He turned and looked over
+his left shoulder, and then I got a good view of him.
+His expression was wild, as if his mind was all tangled
+up and he was wondering what was going on here.
+In his right hand he held his six-shooter. Many of
+the Indians near him were scared by what seemed to
+have been a return from death to life. But a Sioux
+warrior jumped forward, grabbed the six-shooter and
+wrenched it from the soldier’s grasp. The gun was
+turned upon the white man, and he was shot through
+the head. Other Indians struck him or stabbed him.
+I think he must have been the last man killed in this
+great battle where not one of the enemy got away.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
+
+<p>This last man had a big and strong body. His
+cheeks were plump. All over his face was a stubby
+black beard. His mustache was much longer than
+his other beard, and it was curled up at the ends.
+The spot where he was killed is just above the middle
+of the big group of white stone slabs now standing
+on the slope southwest from the big stone. I do
+not know whether he was a soldier chief or an ordinary
+soldier. I did not notice any metal piece nor
+any special marks on the shoulders of his clothing,
+but it may be they were there. Some of the Cheyennes
+say now that he wore two white metal bars.
+But at that time we knew nothing about such things.</p>
+
+<p>One of the dead soldier bodies attracted special
+attention. This was one who was said to have been
+wearing a buckskin suit. I had not seen any such
+soldier during the fighting. When I saw the body it
+had been stripped and the head was cut off and gone.
+Across the breast was some writing made by blue and
+red coloring into the skin. On each arm was a picture
+drawn with the same kind of blue and red paint.
+One of the pictures was of an eagle having its wings
+spread out. Indians told me that on the left arm
+had been strapped a leather packet having in it some
+white paper and a lot of the same kind of green picture-paper
+found on all of the soldier bodies. Some
+of the Indians guessed that he must have been the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>big chief of the soldiers, because of the buckskin
+clothing and because of the paint markings on his
+breast and arms.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_33_33" href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> But none of the Indians knew
+then who had been the big chief. They were only
+guessing at it.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was just past the middle of the sky.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_34_34" href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
+The first soldiers, up the valley, had come about the
+middle of the forenoon. The earlier part of the fighting
+against these second soldiers had been slow, all
+of the Indians staying back and approaching gradually.
+At each time of charging, though, the mixup
+lasted only a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>I took one scalp. As I went walking and leading
+my horse among the dead I observed one face that
+interested me. The dead man had a long beard
+growing from both sides of his face and extending
+several inches below the chin. He had also a full
+mustache. All of the beard hair was of a light yellow
+color, as I new recall it. Most of the soldiers had
+beard growing, in different lengths, but this was the
+longest one I saw among them. I think the dead man
+may have been thirty or more years old. “Here is a
+new kind of scalp,” I said to a companion. I skinned
+one side of the face and half of the chin, so as to
+keep the long beard yet on the part removed.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_35_35" href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>got an arrow shaft and tied the strange scalp to the
+end of it. This I carried in a hand as I went looking
+further.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_240fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_240fp.jpg" alt="A man standing by a river">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Limpy, a Cheyenne veteran of Custer’s last battle, standing at the Little Bighorn
+ ford where the Indians crossed to meet the Custer soldiers</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Somebody told me Noisy Walking was badly
+wounded. I went to where he was said to be, down
+in the gulch where the band of soldiers nearest the
+river had been killed in the earlier part of the battle.
+He was my same age, and we often had been companions
+since our small boyhood. White Bull, an important
+medicine man, was his father. I asked the
+young man: “How are you?” He replied: “Good.”
+But he did not look well. He had been hit by three
+different bullets, one of them having passed through
+his body. He had also some stab wounds in his side.
+Word had been sent to his relatives in the camp west
+of the river, and it was said his women relatives were
+coming after him with a travois. I moved on eastward
+up the gulch coulee.</p>
+
+<p>I discovered almost hidden the dead body of an
+Indian. I did not go up close to it, but I could see
+the scalp was gone. That puzzled me. Could this
+be a Crow or a Shoshone? I had not known of there
+being any Indians belonging to these soldiers killed
+here. As I stood there looking, it seemed there was
+something familiar about the appearance of that
+body. I backed away and went to find my brother
+Yellow Hair. We two returned to the place. We
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>got off our horses and walked to the dead Indian. We
+rolled the body over and looked closely.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it is Lame White Man,” my brother agreed.</p>
+
+<p>We called other Cheyennes. Several of them came.
+All of them promptly confirmed our identification.
+All of us were satisfied some Sioux had scalped him,
+or maybe had killed him, finding him in among the
+soldiers and supposing him to be a Crow or a Shoshone
+belonging to them. We knew he had gone
+with the young men in their charge upon the soldiers
+there. Perhaps he had gone farther than the
+others and was killed on his way back to us, the
+killer mistaking him for an attacking enemy Indian.
+A bullet had gone in at his right breast and out at
+his back. He also had many stab wounds. He was
+still dressed in his best clothing, none of it having
+been taken. The Cheyennes never made any inquiries
+among the Sioux concerning the case. We
+just kept quiet about it.</p>
+
+<p>My brother took the blanket from his horse and
+covered the body of the favorite Cheyenne warrior
+chief. A young man hurried away to go across the
+river and tell his people. When I came back to the
+place an hour or so afterward the dead man’s wife
+and three or four women helpers had come with a
+horse dragging a travois. Four of us young men
+rolled the body into the blanket and put it upon
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>the buffalo hide stretched across the lodgepoles. The
+women set off with it toward the river.</p>
+
+<p>I helped likewise in putting my friend Noisy Walking
+upon the swinging bed when his father and
+mother and other women came after him. Judging
+by his appearance then, this was the last good act
+I ever should do for him. Various groups of women,
+many more of the Sioux than of the Cheyennes, were
+on the field searching for and taking away their dead
+and wounded men. Two Sioux had been killed in
+this same first charge upon the soldiers. I did not
+like to hear the weeping of the women. My heart
+that had been glad because of the victory was made
+sad by thoughts of our own dead and dying men and
+their mourning relatives left behind.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed decorations on the shoulders and stripes
+on the arms of some of the soldier coats. I did not
+think of their meanings. I did not hear any of the
+Indians there talk about any meanings for these special
+marks. If I thought about it at all, I may have
+thought these were particular medicine ways the soldiers
+had for preparing themselves. It was a long
+time after that day before I learned that the wearers
+of these were the soldier chiefs.</p>
+
+<p>Each Indian horse used for going into the battle
+had only a blanket strapped upon its back and a
+lariat rope about the neck. In riding, the lariat was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>looped into the horse’s mouth, or was looped over
+the head and then into the mouth, for a bridle. The
+surplus of the long rope was coiled and tucked into
+the rider’s belt. If a man fell from his horse the coil
+would be jerked from his belt, so he would not be
+dragged. Also, the uncoiling as the horse might
+move away would leave a long rope trailing after it,
+so it was easy to recapture the animal. That was
+the regular Indian way of riding.</p>
+
+<p>Warbonnets were worn by twelve Cheyennes
+among the three hundred or more of our warriors
+in the battle. It may be I have forgotten a few of
+them, but as I recollect it our warbonnet men on
+that day were these:&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_36_36" href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> Crazy Head, Crow Necklace,
+Little Horse, Wolf Medicine, White Elk, Howling
+Wolf, Braided Locks, Chief Coming Up, Mad Wolf,
+Little Shield, Sun Bear and White Body. Three of
+these were little warrior chiefs. Ten of the warbonnets
+had trails. Sun Bear had a single buffalo
+horn projecting out from the front of his forehead
+band. Crazy Head was a big chief of the tribe, had
+been a great fighter in past times, but was not now
+a warrior chief. While he had on his warbonnet here,
+I suppose he stayed in the background and let the
+young men do the fighting. Chief Lame White Man
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>was not wearing a warbonnet on this occasion. It
+was not usual for a man of his high standing to go
+into the battle as he did. I suppose he did so because
+he had not there any son to serve as a warrior.</p>
+
+<p>Not any Cheyenne fought naked in this battle. All
+of them who were in the fight were dressed in their
+best, according to the custom of both the Cheyennes
+and the Sioux. Of our warriors, Sun Bear was nearest
+to nakedness. He had on a special buffalo-horn
+head dress. I saw several naked Sioux, perhaps a
+dozen or more. Of course, these had special medicine
+painting on the body. Two different Sioux I
+saw wearing buffalo head skins and horns, and one
+of them had a bear’s skin over his head and body.
+These three were not dressed in the usual war clothing.
+It is likely there were others I did not see. Perhaps
+some of the naked ones were No Clothing
+Indians.</p>
+
+<p>A dead Uncpapa Sioux received something of the
+same kind of mistaken attention given to our Lame
+White Man. The dead Sioux was mixed in with
+dead bodies of the soldiers. An Arapaho and a No
+Clothing Indian supposed him to be a Crow or a
+Shoshone belonging to the white men fighters. They
+jabbed spears many times into the body. They were
+much embarrassed when they learned of their
+mistake.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span></p>
+
+<p>I found a metal bottle, as I was walking among
+the dead men. It was about half full of some kind
+of liquid. I opened it and found that the liquid was
+not water. Soon afterward I got hold of another
+bottle of the same kind that had in it the same kind
+of liquid. I showed these to some other Indians.
+Different ones of them smelled and sniffed. Finally
+a Sioux said:</p>
+
+<p>“Whisky.”</p>
+
+<p>Bottles of this kind were found by several other
+Indians. Some of them drank the contents. Others
+tried to drink, but had to spit out their mouthfuls.
+Bobtail Horse got sick and vomited soon after he
+had taken a big swallow of it. It became the talk
+that this whisky explained why the soldiers became
+crazy and shot each other and themselves instead of
+shooting us. One old Indian said, though, that there
+was not enough whisky gone from any of the bottles
+to make a white man soldier go crazy. We all agreed
+then that the foolish actions of the soldiers must
+have been caused by the prayers of our medicine men.
+I believed this was the true explanation. My belief
+became changed, though, in later years. I think now
+it was the whisky.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_37_37" href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+
+<p>I took a folded leather package from a soldier having
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>three stripes on the left arm of his coat. It had
+in it lots of flat pieces of paper having pictures or
+writing I did not then understand. The paper was
+of green color. I tore it all up and gave the leather
+holder to a Cheyenne friend. Others got packages of
+the same kind from other dead white men. Some
+of it was kept by the finders. But most of it was
+thrown away or was given to boys, for them to look
+at the pictures.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_38_38" href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+
+<p>I rode away from the battle hill in the middle of
+the afternoon. Many warriors had gone back across
+the hills to the southward, there to fight again the
+first soldiers. But I went to the camps across on
+the west side of the river. I had on a soldier coat
+and breeches I had taken. I took with me the two
+metal bottles of whisky. At the end of the arrow
+shaft I carried the beard scalp.</p>
+
+<p>I waved my scalp as I rode among our people.
+The first person I met who took special interest in
+me was my mother’s mother. She was living in a
+little willow dome lodge of her own. “What is that?”
+she asked me when I flourished the scalp stick toward
+her. I told her. “I give it to you,” I said, and I
+held it out to her. She screamed and shrank away.
+“Take it,” I urged. “It will be good medicine for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>you.” Then I went on to tell her about my having
+killed the Crow or Shoshone at the first fight up the
+river, about my getting the two guns, about my
+knocking in the head two soldiers in the river, about
+what I had done in the next fight on the hill where
+all of the soldiers had been killed. We talked about
+my soldier clothing. She said I looked good dressed
+that way. I had thought so too, but neither the coat
+nor the breeches fit me well. The arms and legs
+were too short for me. Finally she decided she would
+take the scalp. She went then into her own little
+lodge.</p>
+
+<p>I passed one bottle of the whisky among friends.
+Each took a small drink of it until all of it was gone.
+The other bottle I gave to Little Hawk. He himself
+drank all of the whisky in it. Pretty soon, though,
+he became sick and he vomited up everything in his
+stomach.</p>
+
+<p>Some special excitement was going on over beyond
+the Arrows All Gone camp. A big crowd of
+Sioux were gathered there. I went to see what they
+were doing. They had surrounded some Indians just
+then arrived in the camp. “Kill them, every one of
+them,” some Sioux were shouting. Others were saying:
+“Wait. Let us be sure.” Above the confusion
+of threats and general noise of the excited throng I
+heard an angry thundering:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No. I had nothing to do with the soldiers. I
+am all Indian, all Cheyenne.”</p>
+
+<p>It was the voice of Little Wolf, most respected of
+the four old men chiefs of the Cheyennes. He was
+speaking in our language. He could not talk Sioux.
+He never had mingled much with them, so not many
+of them knew him.</p>
+
+<p>Yellow Horse, an old Southern Cheyenne man,
+was with me. He said to me: “Let us go to Little
+Wolf. You are his relative, you know the Sioux language,
+and you should talk for him.” We crowded
+our way through to the old chief. Both of us shook
+hands with him. The Sioux began talking to us
+about him. Some Cheyennes also were accusing him.
+One of these was White Bull. He knew Little Wolf,
+but he said the chief ought to have been with the
+Cheyennes long ago, that he ought not to have waited
+until after the fighting before joining us, that he
+stayed too long on the reservation. I knew that
+White Bull’s heart was troubled, though, about his
+own son, Noisy Walking. Finally, Yellow Horse
+called out: “Wait until this young man talks to
+Little Wolf. He will find out and tell everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you been with the soldiers?” I asked the
+chief.</p>
+
+<p>“No, you foolish boy,” he flared back at me. “Do
+these people think I am a crazy man? I have with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>me seven lodges of our people. There are families
+of women and children. They have their tepees,
+their packhorses, all of their property. Does anybody
+suppose that is the way to join the soldiers and
+help them? Not any part of me ever was white man.
+I am all Indian. I am willing to fight any man who
+says I am not.”</p>
+
+<p>He went on to tell all about the experiences of his
+little band of Cheyennes. On their way out from the
+reservation they saw soldiers camped on the upper
+Rosebud, just the afternoon before. They kept hidden
+back in the hills and watched the soldiers go on
+toward the divide leading to the Little Bighorn. His
+people did not set up their lodges that night. Instead,
+they traveled a while and rested a while, their
+scouts all the time watching the soldiers. Early in
+the morning, some of Little Wolf’s young men out
+in front found a box of something the soldiers had
+lost. Just then, some soldiers came back, shot at
+these young men, and they returned to Little Wolf.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_39_39" href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
+The band continued to follow the soldiers, but kept
+themselves hidden. From the hilltops they heard the
+guns and saw some of the fighting. It appeared that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>all of the Indians in the camps were running away.
+Finally, the shooting mostly died down. The
+frightened little band peeped over the hilltops and
+saw that the camps and the Indians still were on the
+valley. Then they cautiously came on to join us.</p>
+
+<p>I repeated all of this story to a Sioux chief. He
+told the assembled Sioux warriors and I told the
+Cheyennes. Some grumbling continued, many saying
+that Little Wolf ought to have been with us long
+ago, but all of them became satisfied that neither he
+nor his companions deserved killing. The crowd
+scattered, and the newcomers moved on to join the
+Cheyenne camp. There were some additional scoldings
+of them on account of their having stayed so
+long at the reservation. But their women had plenty
+of sugar and coffee in their packs, and with gifts
+of these desirable extra foods they soon quieted all
+complaints. Little Wolf at that time was fifty-five
+years old.</p>
+
+<p>Burial parties of Cheyennes were going to the hill
+gulches west of our camps, to put our dead into rock
+crevices. Each warrior lost was disposed of by his
+women relatives and his young men friends. A big
+band of people went out to help bury Lame White
+Man. I accompanied the relatives of Limber Bones,
+one of our young men who had been killed. We
+took him far back up a long coulee. We found there
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>a small hillside cliff. Four of us young men helped
+the women to clear out a sheltered cove. In there
+we placed the dead body, wrapped in blankets and
+a buffalo robe. We piled a wall of flat stones across
+the front of the grave. His mother and another
+woman sat down on the ground beside it to mourn
+for him. The rest of us returned to the valley.</p>
+
+<p>The Sioux likewise were disposing of their dead.
+Their customary way was to set up burial tepees.
+It appeared that in all of the Sioux camps these were
+being set up. They were placed where had been the
+dwelling lodges, or near them. In some cases the
+original dwelling lodges of the dead ones were left
+standing, in each case the body being all dressed for
+burial and left on a scaffold in the lodge or on the
+dirt floor, the dwelling being then abandoned by the
+inhabitants. This was a common mode of Sioux
+burial, and sometimes the Cheyennes did it in this
+way.</p>
+
+<p>All of the camps were being moved. This was
+in accordance with a regular custom among the Indian
+tribes. When any death occurred in a camp,
+either from battle or from other cause, right at once
+the people began to get ready to move camp to some
+other place. The Cheyennes selected a camping spot
+down the river about a mile northwestward. The
+Sioux all began moving northwestward and back
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>from the Little Bighorn toward the base of the bench
+hills west from the river. In the new locations, all
+of the camps except the Cheyennes were west of the
+present railroad and highway.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the women and children and older people
+in the camps had fled toward the hills to the northward
+and westward when the first band of soldiers
+made the attack upon the Uncpapas at the upper
+part of the group of camps. I suppose there were
+very few people left in the camps at that end until
+after those soldiers had been chased away and across
+the river. When I rode up there and around the
+west and south sides of the Uncpapa and Blackfeet
+circles it was hard to keep from running over the
+Indians who were hurrying afoot toward the bench
+lands to the westward.</p>
+
+<p>Our Cheyenne people who were not active warriors
+started to go toward the north, down the valley,
+and some of them crossed the river. But when the
+second band of soldiers were seen on the high ridge
+far out eastward these Cheyennes who had crossed
+the river returned to the camping side. Of course,
+nobody knew how many soldiers were coming. Nobody
+knew what would be the outcome of their attack.
+They had surprised us by their sudden appearance.
+We were not prepared for battle.</p>
+
+<p>At the first time of the flight from the camps, many
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>women and some of the men seized small packs of
+food or other precious possessions and carried them
+away. The fleeing ones stopped on the benchlands
+west of where had been their camp circles. They
+stayed there and watched the fighting. After a little
+while, since no more of the soldiers had come to that
+side of the river, people began hurrying to the camps,
+quickly gathering up other things, then hurrying
+back to the hilltops. Later, as none of our warriors
+were returning, it became evident that we were winning
+the contest. Our people then became more confident.
+The old men who were making medicine
+prayers for our success added words of encouragement
+to the waiting families.</p>
+
+<p>Throngs of women now were busy going back and
+forth between the old and the new camp positions.
+They were carrying water from the river and wood
+from the timber. All of the lodges not abandoned
+were taken down. Most of them were packed, not
+set up in the new spots of location. The poles were
+wrapped, the buffalo skin coverings were put into
+bundles, packs were made up, all put into readiness
+for quick movement elsewhere if need be. Only the
+cooking pots and other essential articles were left
+in use. The women went by hundreds to cut willows
+for making little skeleton dome shelters, in substitution
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>for the regular tepee lodges kept packed. It
+had not rained here during all of that day, but rain
+might come at any time. Not all of the Indians,
+though, prepared shelters. Many depended only
+upon robes for shielding them if shielding should
+become needful. The lodges of mourning Cheyennes
+were torn or cut to pieces or burned, and their furnishings
+were cast away. These bereft people, according
+to our customs, now had to live during their
+time of mourning without any lodge or any property
+of their own. They dwelt outside or with hospitable
+friends. The poles and skins of any travois used to
+carry dead bodies were also thrown away. Sometimes
+the horses used to drag the travois of a dead
+person were killed or were turned loose to be captured
+by whoever might want them.</p>
+
+<p>After sundown I visited Noisy Walking. He was
+lying on a ground bed of buffalo robes under a willow
+dome shelter. His father White Bull was with
+him. His mother sat just outside the entrance. I
+asked my friend: “How are you?” He replied:
+“Good, only I want water.” I did not know what
+else to say, but I wanted him to know that I was
+his friend and willing to do whatever I could for him.
+I sat down upon the ground beside him. After a
+little while I said: “You were very brave.” Nothing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>else was said for several minutes. He was weak.
+His hands trembled at every move he made. Finally
+he said to his father:</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I could have some water—just a little
+of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. Water will kill you.”</p>
+
+<p>White Bull almost choked as he said this to his
+son. But he was a good medicine man, and he knew
+what was best. As I sat there looking at Noisy
+Walking I knew he was going to die. My heart was
+heavy. But I could not do him any good, so I excused
+myself and went away.</p>
+
+<p>There was no dancing nor celebrating of any kind
+in any of the camps that night. Too many people
+were in mourning, among all of the Sioux as well as
+among the Cheyennes. Too many Cheyenne and
+Sioux women had gashed their arms and legs, in
+token of their grief. The people generally were
+praying, not cheering. There was much noise and
+confusion, but this was from other causes. Young
+men were going out to fight the first soldiers now
+hiding themselves on the hill across the river from
+where had been the first fighting during the morning.
+Other young men were coming back to camp after
+having been over there shooting at these soldiers.
+Movements of this kind had been going on all the
+time since the final blows fell upon all of the soldiers
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>in the second and greatest battle. Old men heralds
+were riding about all of the camps, singing the braveheart
+songs and calling out: “Young men, be brave.”
+The only fires anywhere among us were little camp
+fires for cooking. Or, there may have been at times
+a larger blaze coming from some mourning family’s
+lodge being burned.</p>
+
+<p>I did not go back that afternoon nor that night to
+help in fighting the first soldiers. Late in the night,
+though, I went as a scout. Five young men of the
+Cheyennes were appointed to guard our camp while
+other people slept. These were Big Nose, Yellow
+Horse, Little Shield, Horse Road and Wooden Leg.
+One or other of us was out somewhere looking over
+the country all the time. Two of us went once over
+to the place where the soldiers were hidden. We
+got upon hill points higher than they were. We could
+look down among them. We could have shot among
+them, but we did not do this. We just saw that
+they yet were there.</p>
+
+<p>Five other young men took our duties in the last
+part of the night. I was glad to be relieved. I did
+not go to my family group for rest. I let loose my
+horse and dropped myself down upon a thick pad of
+grassy sod.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_28_28" href="#FNanchor_28_28" class="label">[28]</a> Little Sun, in the presence of Wooden Leg and other veteran
+Cheyennes, told me of this incident.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_29_29" href="#FNanchor_29_29" class="label">[29]</a> This apparently was Bloody Knife, Custer’s favorite Arikara
+scout.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_30_30" href="#FNanchor_30_30" class="label">[30]</a> The Indians differ as to the color of the horses ridden by these
+soldiers, but military students of the case believe this to have been
+Lieutenant Smith’s troop.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_31_31" href="#FNanchor_31_31" class="label">[31]</a> Captain Keogh or Captain Tom Custer, or both troops.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_32_32" href="#FNanchor_32_32" class="label">[32]</a> The story of wholesale suiciding is such a reversal of our accepted
+conceptions that some reader may exclaim: “That is a villifying falsehood!”
+<i>But it is the truth.</i> Most of the Seventh cavalry enlisted men
+on that occasion were recent recruits. Only a few of them ever had
+been in an Indian battle, or in any kind of battle. It is evident,
+though, that they fought well through an hour and a half or two hours.
+Then, finding themselves vastly outnumbered, they “went crazy,” as the
+Indians tell. They put into panicky practice the old frontiersman rule,
+“When fighting Indians keep the last bullet for yourself.” A great
+mass of circumstantial evidence supports this explanation of the military
+disaster. The author hopes to attain publication, at some future
+time, of his own full analysis of the entire case.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_33_33" href="#FNanchor_33_33" class="label">[33]</a> Evidently this was Captain Tom Custer.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_34_34" href="#FNanchor_34_34" class="label">[34]</a> All old Cheyennes insist the battle ended about noon.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_35_35" href="#FNanchor_35_35" class="label">[35]</a> This unfortunate soldier probably was Lieutenant Cook.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_36_36" href="#FNanchor_36_36" class="label">[36]</a> Various old Cheyennes helped Wooden Leg in making this list.—T.
+B. M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_37_37" href="#FNanchor_37_37" class="label">[37]</a> The whisky explanation is regularly advanced by the warrior
+veterans nowadays. It appears none of them have any conception of
+suicide to avoid capture.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_38_38" href="#FNanchor_38_38" class="label">[38]</a> Paper money. The soldiers received two months’ pay after they
+had left Fort Lincoln. There had been no opportunity for them to
+spend a cent, except among themselves, since that time.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_39_39" href="#FNanchor_39_39" class="label">[39]</a> Here appears to have been the key incident that misled Custer into
+supposing his presence revealed to the camps and that caused him to
+attack at once, lest they escape. Big Crow, Black Horse and Medicine
+Bull, all of them with the Little Wolf band, told me the details of
+this experience.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="X">
+ <span class="p50l">X</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>The Spoils of Battle.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I slept late that next morning after the great
+battle. The sun had been up an hour before I awoke.
+I went to the willow lodge of my father and mother.
+When I had eaten the breakfast given to me by my
+mother I got myself ready again to risk death in an
+effort to kill other white men who had come to kill
+us. I combed and braided my hair. My braids in
+those days were full and long, reaching down my
+breast beyond the waist belt. I painted anew the
+black circle around my face and the red and yellow
+space enclosed within the circle. I was in doubt
+about which clothing to wear, but my father said the
+soldier clothing looked the best, even though the
+coat sleeves ended far above my wrists and the legs
+of the breeches left long bare spots between them
+and the tops of my moccasins. I put on my big white
+hat captured at the Rosebud fight. My sister Crooked
+Nose got my horse for me. Soon afterward I was
+on my way up and across the valley and on through
+the river to the hill where the first soldiers were
+staying.</p>
+
+<p>I had both my rifle and my six shooter. I still
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>was without my medicine shield and my other medicine
+protectors that had been lost on Powder river.
+Most of the other Cheyennes and Sioux had theirs.
+The shields all were of specially shrunken and toughened
+buffalo skin covered with buckskin fringed and
+painted, each with his own choice of designs, for
+the medicine influence. I went with other young men
+to the higher hills around the soldiers. I stayed at
+a distance from them and shot bullets from my new
+rifle. I did not shoot many times, as it appeared I
+was too far away, and I did not want to waste any
+of my cartridges. So I went down and hid in a gulch
+near the river.</p>
+
+<p>Some soldiers came to get water from the river,
+just as our old men had said they likely would do.
+The white men crept down a deep gulch and then
+ran across an open space to the water. Each one had
+a bucket, and each would dip his bucket for water
+and run back into the gulch. I put myself, with
+others, where we could watch for these men. I
+shot at one of them just as he straightened up after
+having dipped his bucket into the water. He pitched
+forward into the edge of the river. He went wallowing
+along the stream, trying to swim, but having
+a hard time at it. I jumped out from my hiding
+place and ran toward him. Two Sioux warriors got
+ahead of me. One of them waded after the man
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>and struck him with a rifle barrel. Finally he grabbed
+the man, hit him again, and then dragged him dead
+to the shore, quite a distance down the river. I kept
+after them, following down the east bank. Some
+other Sioux warriors came. I was the only Cheyenne
+there. The Sioux agreed that my bullet had been
+the first blow upon the white soldier, so they allowed
+me to choose whatever I might want of his
+belongings.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_40_40" href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+
+<p>I searched into the man’s pockets. In one I found
+a folding knife and a plug of chewing tobacco that
+was soaked and spoiled. In another pocket was a
+wad of the same kind of green paper taken from
+the soldiers the day before. It too was wet through.
+I threw it aside. In this same pocket were four white
+metal pieces of money. I knew they were of value
+in trading, but I did not know how much was their
+value. In later times I have learned they were four
+silver dollars. A young Cheyenne there said: “Give
+the money to me.” I did not care for it, so I gave
+it to him. He thanked me and said: “I shall use
+it to buy for myself a gun.” I do not remember now
+his name, but he was a son of One Horn. A Sioux
+picked up the wad of green paper I had thrown upon
+the ground. It was almost falling to pieces, but he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>began to spread out some of the wet sheets that still
+held together. Pretty soon he said:</p>
+
+<p>“This is money. This is what white men use to
+buy things from the traders.”</p>
+
+<p>I had seen much other paper like it during the
+afternoon before. Wolf Medicine had offered to
+give me a handful of it. But I did not take it. I
+already had thrown away some of it I had found.
+But even after I was told it could be used for buying
+things from the traders, I did not want it. I was
+thinking then it would be a long time before I should
+see or care to see any white man trader.</p>
+
+<p>I went riding over the ground where we had
+fought the first soldiers during the morning of the
+day before. I saw by the river, on the west side, a
+dead black man. He was a big man. All of his
+clothing was gone when I saw him, but he had not
+been scalped nor cut up like the white men had been.
+Some Sioux told me he belonged to their people but
+was with the soldiers.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_41_41" href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
+
+<p>As some of us were looking at the body of an Indian
+who had been with the soldiers, an old Sioux
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“This is a Corn&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_42_42" href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> Indian, not a Crow nor Shoshone.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span></p>
+
+<p>He showed us the differences in appearance, especially
+the earrings and the hair dressing. The
+Crow men wore their hair cut off above the forehead
+and roached up. The Shoshones had almost the
+same way of placing this foretop. The Corn Indians
+kept their hair in braids, parted like that of the
+Sioux and Cheyennes, but the Corn Indian parting
+was not in the middle of the top, as ours was. I examined
+again the one I had helped in beating to
+death. I learned he also was a Corn Indian. I found
+yet a third one. We who had killed them were young
+men, and there was great excitement at the time, so
+we had not observed their tribal connection. We had
+supposed them to be the same Crows and Shoshones
+we had fought on the upper Rosebud creek a few
+days before. Now there began to be talk that maybe
+these soldiers were not the same ones we had fought
+there. Or, perhaps they had added the Corn Indians
+to their forces since that time. There were different
+opinions on the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Some Sioux caught a mule that wandered out
+from the place where the soldiers were together on
+the hilltop. The animal was going down toward
+the river when the Indians got it. They tried to lead
+it toward their sheltered place behind a knoll, but
+it would not go. It appeared to be wanting a drink
+of water. One Sioux got behind it and whipped it,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>while a companion pulled at the leading strap. But
+the mule just stood there, would not move. On its
+back were packs of cartridges. The Sioux took these
+and let the mule go.</p>
+
+<p>I went with other Cheyennes along the hills northward
+to the ground where we had killed all of the
+soldiers. Lots of women and boys were there. The
+boys were going about making coups by stabbing
+or shooting arrows into the dead men. Some of the
+bodies had many arrows sticking in them. Many
+hands and feet had been cut off, and the limbs and
+bodies and heads had many stabs and slashes. Some
+of this had been done by the warriors, during and
+immediately after the battle. More was added,
+though, by enraged and weeping women relatives of
+the Sioux and Cheyennes who had been killed. The
+women used sheathknives and hatchets.</p>
+
+<p>A dog was following one of the Sioux women
+among the dead soldiers. I did not see any other
+dog there, neither on that day nor on the day before,
+when the fight was on. There were some Indian
+dogs tangling among the feet of the horses at the
+time of the fighting of the first soldiers, on the valley
+above the camps. But even here most of them were
+called away by the women and old people going to
+the western hilltops.</p>
+
+<p>Three different soldiers, among all of the dead in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>both places of battle, attracted special notice from
+the Indians. The first was the man wearing the
+buckskin suit and who had the colored writing and
+pictures on his breast and arms. Another was the
+black man killed among the first soldiers on the
+valley. The third was one having gold among his
+teeth. We did not understand how this metal got
+there, nor why it was there.</p>
+
+<p>Paper boxes of ammunition were in the leather
+bags carried on the saddles of the soldiers. Besides,
+in all of the belts taken from the dead men there
+were cartridges. Some belts had only a few left in
+them. In others the loops still contained many, an
+occasional one almost full. I did not see nor hear
+of any belt entirely emptied of its cartridges.</p>
+
+<p>All during that forenoon, as well as during the
+afternoon and night before, both in the camps and
+on the battle grounds, Indians were saying to each
+other: “I got some tobacco.” “I got coffee.” “I
+got two horses.” “I got a soldier saddle.” “I got a
+good gun.” Some got things they did not understand.</p>
+
+<p>One young Cheyenne took something from a dead
+soldier just after all of them had been killed. He
+was puzzled by it. Some others looked at it. I was
+with them. It was made of white metal and had glass
+on one side. On this side were marks of some kind.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>While the Cheyenne was looking at it he got it up
+toward his ear. Then he put it up close.</p>
+
+<p>“It is alive!” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Others put it to their ears and listened. I put it
+up to mine.</p>
+
+<p>“Tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick,” it was saying.</p>
+
+<p>We talked about its use. We agreed generally it
+was that soldier’s special medicine. Many Indians
+came and wondered about it. The young man decided
+to keep it for his own medicine.</p>
+
+<p>When I was getting ready the next morning to go
+and fight again the soldiers staying on the hilltop,
+the Cheyenne young man had a crowd around him
+again examining his strange white man medicine.
+They were listening, but it made no sound. After
+different ones had studied it, he finally threw it away
+as far as he could throw it.</p>
+
+<p>“It is not good medicine for me,” he said. “It
+is dead.”</p>
+
+<p>I saw another soldier medicine thing something
+like this one, but the other one was larger and it did
+not make the ticking noise. It acted, though, like
+it was alive. When it was held with the glass side
+up a little arrow fluttered around. When it was held
+quiet for a while the arrow gradually stopped fluttering.
+Every time it stopped the point of the arrow
+was toward the north, down the valley. There was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>talk then of other soldiers coming from that direction,
+so it was decided this medicine object was useful
+for finding out at any time where might be soldiers.
+Little Shield had it when I saw it. He gave it to High
+Walking. Another Cheyenne got a pair of field
+glasses. We understood them. This was a big pair.</p>
+
+<p>Cleaners for the rifles puzzled us a while. They
+were in joints and were carried in a long hole in the
+end of the wooden stock. Pretty soon we learned
+what was their use. I saw one rifle that had a shell
+of cartridge in its barrel. A Sioux had it. He could
+not put into the gun any other cartridge, so he threw
+it into the river.</p>
+
+<p>Yellow Weasel, a Cheyenne, got a bugle. He tried
+to make a noise with it, but he could not. Others
+tried. Different ones puffed and blowed at it. But
+nobody could make it sound out. After a while we
+heard a bugle making a big noise somewhere among
+the Sioux. The Cheyennes said: “The Sioux got
+a good one. This one Yellow Weasel has is no good.
+He might as well throw it away.” But he kept it, and
+it was not long until he was making it sound.</p>
+
+<p>One Cheyenne got a flag. There were several
+others among the Sioux. I do not know just how
+many they got, but I believe I saw nine of them.</p>
+
+<p>Bridle bits were thrown away, but the leather parts
+were kept. I got two sets of bridle reins, but no other
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>parts of the bridles. A Cheyenne gave them to me.
+All of the soldier boots were taken from them. But
+they were not worn by the Indians. The bottoms
+were cut off and discarded. Only the tops used.
+These made good leather pouches, or the leather was
+cut up to make something else. Old men were allowed
+to have all of the saddles. But only a few of
+the Cheyenne old men got them. I saw lots of Sioux
+old men riding around on soldier saddles, either
+on the soldier horses or the Indian horses.</p>
+
+<p>All of the soldier horses taken by the Indians were
+good. They were fat and sleek and strong and lively.
+They were better than any of the Indian horses. Some
+were killed or were so badly wounded we did not want
+them. But when we could scare them away from
+the soldiers as the fighting was going on, we did
+this. Any time that horses got among us we turned
+them toward the river, for the old men or the boys
+to capture. It was easy to do this, as they were
+very thirsty. One big band of them went down from
+the west end of the ridge.</p>
+
+<p>Noisy Walking died during the night after the
+great battle. Six Cheyennes now had been killed.
+Another man, Open Belly, was badly wounded and
+was expected to die. He was about thirty years old,
+but he had neither wife nor children. The six dead
+were:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lame White Man, age about thirty-eight, wife and
+two children.</p>
+
+<p>Limber Bones, age twenty, not married.</p>
+
+<p>Black Bear, age twenty, not married.</p>
+
+<p>Noisy Walking, age eighteen, not married.</p>
+
+<p>Hump Nose, age sixteen, not married.</p>
+
+<p>Whirlwind, age sixteen, not married.</p>
+
+<p>Others had wounds that crippled them but did not
+threaten to kill them. Little Bird got a bullet through
+a thigh. Many had scratch wounds. Sun Bear almost
+got killed. He went into the first great Cheyenne
+charge. A bullet glanced off his forehead. He
+was dazed and he fell down. But he got up right
+away and went on fighting.</p>
+
+<p>Hump Nose and Whirlwind were killed during the
+first battle, above the camps. Hump Nose fell on
+the west side of the river, in the valley fighting.
+Whirlwind’s death took place on the east side, when
+he had the fight with the Corn Indian, who also was
+killed. Lame White Man and Noisy Walking received
+their bullets at the time of the first charge
+among the Custer soldiers who rode down toward
+the river. Open Belly, our man who died after we
+arrived east of Powder river, was hit by a soldier bullet
+when he was riding across the bench where the
+stone house of the Custer Battlefield National Cemetery
+now is standing. Limber Bones and Black Bear
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>were killed on the steep slope just north of the present
+Custer stone monument. Both Limber Bones and
+Black Bear were a little taller than I was. After
+they were gone I was the tallest young man in the
+tribe, I believe. I heard of a few women riding out
+to watch the fighting, but I did not see any women
+there during that time. None of them was doing
+any fighting. All of them kept far back.</p>
+
+<p>The Indians supposed all the time that these were
+the same soldiers we had fought on the upper Rosebud
+valley. Little Wolf and his people, arriving just
+after the fight ended, explained to us that these men
+just killed came from another direction. Then, when
+we learned that the Indians with these soldiers at
+the Little Bighorn were Corn Indians, not Crows
+or Shoshones, it began to appear that the Little Wolf
+band had it right, that these really were not the Rosebud
+battle soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>During the afternoon it was learned that yet another
+band of white men were coming up the Little
+Bighorn valley.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_43_43" href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> All of the young men wanted to
+fight them. A council of chiefs was held. They
+decided we should continue in our same course—not
+fight any soldiers if we could get away without doing
+so. All of the Indians then got ready to move.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span></p>
+
+<p>Mourning families abandoned and left behind their
+meat, robes, cooking pots and everything else they
+owned, as well as their vacated or destroyed lodges.
+That was a custom among all of the Sioux tribes the
+same as with the Cheyennes. I saw several Sioux
+tepees left standing. I supposed there were dead
+warriors in some of them, or perhaps in all of them.
+Some Cheyenne tepees were left standing. These had
+belonged to families wherein a member had been
+killed. But, except the lodges and property abandoned
+by mourning people, all of the possessions of
+the Indians were taken with us.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the afternoon the procession of tribes was
+in movement. Again, as at all other times, the Cheyennes
+went ahead and the Uncpapas came last. Several
+parties of young men went aside to go across the
+river and shoot again among the soldiers camped on
+the high hill. A few stayed there until darkness
+came. Uncpapa scouts watched behind, observing
+particularly the new band of soldiers coming up the
+Little Bighorn valley.</p>
+
+<p>We set out southwestward up the small valley of
+a creek just south of the present Garryowen railroad
+station. Soon we mounted to the benchland and
+traveled southward. Late in the night, the whole
+caravan stopped and rested a few hours, all sleeping
+in the open, with no lodges. At daylight we traveled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>on, now following up the Little Bighorn valley. During
+the afternoon we stopped for camping. The
+Cheyenne circle, at the leading or southern end, was
+about two miles below the mouth of Greasy Grass
+creek, below the place where now is located the town
+of Lodge Grass, Montana.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_40_40" href="#FNanchor_40_40" class="label">[40]</a> In a letter published in Brady’s book, Private Wm. E. Morris
+tells of the death of Tanner, of Troop M, while he was after water
+for the Reno wounded men.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_41_41" href="#FNanchor_41_41" class="label">[41]</a> Isaiah, a negro, Sioux interpreter for the Seventh cavalry.—T.
+B. M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_42_42" href="#FNanchor_42_42" class="label">[42]</a> The Arikaras were known as Corn people.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_43_43" href="#FNanchor_43_43" class="label">[43]</a> The Terry-Gibbon forces. They camped that night on the site of
+the present Crow Agency.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XI">
+ <span class="p50l">XI</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Rovings after the Victory.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>All of the lodges were set up here below the mouth
+of Greasy Grass creek. All of the six tribal camp
+circles were arranged as they had been before the
+soldiers came and troubled us. The Cheyennes again
+were on one of their favorite old camping spots.
+They still were at the advance side of the group of
+circles. The Uncpapas still were at the opposite
+side.</p>
+
+<p>I was stationed as a wolf to keep lookout from a
+hill near our camp. As I sat there, an Indian young
+man rode up to me. He asked me, in Sioux language,
+“Who are you?” I said, “I am a Cheyenne.” He
+got down from his horse. He had tobacco and a pipe,
+and we had a smoke together. He told me he belonged
+to the Waist and Skirt people, but I already
+could see that, by his earrings. All of the Waist and
+Skirt men wore elk teeth hanging from their ears.
+After we had smoked and visited a while, he said:</p>
+
+<p>“I think the big chief of the soldiers we killed
+was named Long Hair. One of my people killed him.
+He has known Long Hair many years, and he is sure
+this was him. He could tell him by the long and
+wavy yellow hair.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
+
+<p>This was the first time I ever had heard of any
+such person as Long Hair. The news was interesting
+to me at first, but after I had thought a few moments
+about it the story seemed not very important. I
+recalled myself having seen at least three soldiers
+having long and light-colored hair. One of these I
+had shot after he was dead. Just after the end of
+the fighting I saw this long-haired soldier lying there
+without any appearance of wounds on him. So I
+put the muzzle of my rifle against the side of his head
+and sent a bullet through it. This man’s clothing
+was gone when I first saw him. I had not any thought
+about whether or not he was a chief.</p>
+
+<p>A great council was held at the Greasy Grass camp
+that night. Chiefs of all of the tribes were there. It
+was out of doors, in the midst of the camp circles.
+I believe it was at the Ogallala camp, but I am not
+sure. At this council I heard an Uncpapa Sioux war
+chief say:</p>
+
+<p>“Long Hair was big chief of the soldiers. I saw
+him there, and I killed him. I know it was him. I
+could not mistake the long and wavy yellow hair.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_44_44" href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
+
+<p>I did not hear anyone else during that time make
+claims of knowing who was the soldier big chief.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>There was some talk, though, that all of those soldiers
+had been chosen specially for their bravery and
+had been sent out direct from Washington. It was
+generally agreed that whoever was the big chief of
+them, he must have been the big chief of all of the
+white man soldiers in the world.</p>
+
+<p>At this council I heard chiefs of the different tribes
+announce the number of their killed. The Cheyennes
+had lost 6. Uncpapas, 7. Arrows All Gone, 4. Minneconjoux,
+3. Ogallalas, 2. I have forgotten the
+numbers from the Waist and Skirt, Burned Thigh
+and Blackfeet Sioux. I think, though, that all of
+these three tribes together might have lost 7 or 8.
+Total deaths, about 30.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_45_45" href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Cheyenne warriors had a dance at this Greasy
+Grass camp. Charcoal Bear, our medicine chief,
+brought the buffalo skin from the sacred tepee and
+put it upon the top of a pole in the center of our
+camp circle. We danced around this pole. No
+women took part in the dancing. Many of them had
+sore legs from the mourning cuts. Our dance was
+not carried very far into the night. It was mostly
+a short telling of experiences, a counting of coups.
+My father told, in a few words, what his two sons
+had done. When he had ended the telling of my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>warrior acts, he said: “The name of this son of
+mine is Wooden Leg.” Up to this time some people
+still used my boyhood name, Eats From His Hand.
+But now this old name was entirely gone.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Sioux people had little dances here,
+the same as the Cheyennes were having. But not all
+of them did this. The Uncpapas did not dance.
+They said it was not time, that we ought to mourn
+yet a while. Some of them came to look on quietly
+at our gathering.</p>
+
+<p>Only one sleep we stayed at the Greasy Grass location.
+The great band of Indians trailed from there
+on up the Little Bighorn valley. Our next stop was
+near where is the present town of Wyola.</p>
+
+<p>An accidental killing took place during the time
+we were at this next camp. That afternoon, as we
+were traveling, a Cheyenne named Coffee was among
+the men who hunted buffalo along the way. He got
+a load of meat on his pack horse and joined us just
+after the camp had been set up. He belonged to our
+tribal medicine lodge, as a helper for the chief medicine
+man. He rode to the medicine lodge and made
+a movement to dismount from his horse. He had
+a rifle strapped in front of his body. As he swung
+himself from the horse, his rifle accidentally was discharged.
+Coffee originally had been a Southern
+Cheyenne, but for many years he had been a member
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>of our tribe. He was an old man, but he never
+was married. He said that one having his position
+as helper to the medicine chief ought not to have a
+wife. But Charcoal Bear, the medicine chief, had a
+wife and two children.</p>
+
+<p>After one sleep at this place we turned eastward
+and went over the hills to the extreme upper Rosebud.
+One sleep at this place. We moved on down,
+going past the ground where we had fought the soldiers
+on this creek. We camped a few miles below
+where this fight had taken place. One sleep here.
+The movement was kept up down this valley. The
+next camp was pitched near the present Busby.
+After one sleep here we traveled on northward. This
+time we stopped at our favorite old camping place
+on the Rosebud above the mouth of Muddy creek.</p>
+
+<p>I was not with the camps at all of these stopping
+places. Like many others, I was out a part of the
+time looking for meat. I took it to my people when
+I could get any. Buffalo were scarce along the line
+of travel, so most of the game killed was elk, deer or
+antelope. Many people among the Indians were
+hungry for more food. Partly because of the fast
+traveling and partly because the hunters were not
+going far on account of soldiers in the country, the
+food demands of the people could not be supplied to
+their full satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span></p>
+
+<p>I went out with one party, though, as far as the
+present town of Sheridan, Wyoming. We found there
+plenty of buffalo. We loaded our pack horses and
+started to return to the moving Indians. But somebody
+saw soldiers, or it was said they had been seen.
+I did not see them. But I quickly threw off the meat
+from my pack horse, the same as the others did, and
+we rode away southward as fast as our horses could
+go. Not far off we got into a wooded canyon and hid
+there until darkness came. At night we went back
+and picked up all of our meat. We then traveled on,
+and the next day we got to our people.</p>
+
+<p>We Cheyennes had a dance at our camp near the
+mouth of Muddy creek, on the Rosebud. I do not
+recollect any dance in any other tribal circle at this
+place. Our warriors again talked in public of acts
+at the great battle. One would dance, flourish a
+gun, and say, “I killed a white man soldier.” Another
+would do the same. Each one who did this
+had to have witnesses to verify his claims. A few
+women took part in the dance. My grandmother
+was one of them. She had the bearded face scalp I
+gave to her, and she told of my doings in the fight
+with the first soldiers. After this dance, she threw
+away the scalp.</p>
+
+<p>One sleep we stayed here. Then we continued
+down the Rosebud. The next stop was below the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>mouth of Lame Deer creek, as it now is known. We
+moved from there on down to the mouth of the stream
+now called Greenleaf creek. All along the Rosebud
+we had seen the trail of the soldiers we had killed
+at the Little Bighorn. We now had full proof that
+they had come up this valley from the Yellowstone.
+After one sleep at the Greenleaf camping place we
+left the Rosebud valley.</p>
+
+<p>The direction of movement was turned eastward.
+We followed the little branch stream to its head and
+went on over the divide to Tongue river. Stopped
+there, one sleep. Next day, traveled up this valley
+to Otter creek and on up this little valley several
+miles. One sleep in the camp on Otter creek. The
+next camp was set up at the head of Otter creek. The
+day after that our great band of tribes went over another
+divide and camped on what the white people
+call Pumpkin creek. One sleep, then eastward to a
+branch of Powder river. Next, to Powder river.
+Following, one day of travel down Powder river and
+one more camping beside this stream. Crossed the
+river and went up a creek flowing into its east side.
+This creek is the next one south of that one where
+the combined Indians had traveled in starting from
+east of Powder river toward the valleys westward from
+there.</p>
+
+<p>We now were in the same region where all of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>tribes had come together three months before this
+time. In coming back to the gathering place all
+of the Indians traveled together, as we had done in
+going westward from it. The Cheyennes still were
+moving in the advance and camping in the advance.
+The Uncpapas still were following last and camping
+last. On the return we hurried from place to place.
+There was no stopping for special hunting. I believe
+we remained only one sleep at each of the camps.
+I may have forgotten one or two places of our camping.
+I think, though, that it was sixteen or more
+sleeps from the battle camp on the Little Bighorn
+back to this place on the creek east of Powder river.</p>
+
+<p>Open Belly, our badly wounded man, died here
+east of Powder river. One wounded Sioux had died
+along the way. This brought the Cheyenne loss from
+the battle up to seven. Some Sioux count also was
+increased by one. All of the Indians then had lost
+about thirty-two warriors as a result of the great
+battle. The wounded men had been carried during
+all of the journey on travois beds. That makes easier
+riding than any other way I know. But it may have
+been they could have become well if during all the
+time they had been quiet in a lodge.</p>
+
+<p>The Indians were hungry. Our meat was all gone.
+The horses had been traveling hard every day and
+were tired. The fat and sleek soldier horses we had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>were more tired than the Indian ponies. It was said
+this was because they were not used to living on
+grass alone, as the Indian ponies were.</p>
+
+<p>We stayed four or five sleeps at this camping place.
+Every day the chiefs met in council. Finally, they
+decided on a separation of the tribes. It seemed there
+was no danger just now from soldiers. By traveling
+separately, or in small bands, more meat and skins
+could be taken by each tribe or band. The horses
+all could get more grass when scattered. Everybody
+agreed it was best to separate. I think this was the
+intention of the chiefs all the time, but we were staying
+together for yet a few days of final visiting in a
+quiet camp before the separation.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes went first down the Powder river.
+We followed it to where it flows into Elk river. We
+found a big pile of corn in sacks by Elk river. We
+fed some of it to our soldier horses. Some people
+cooked a little and ate it. We emptied out most of
+the remainder and took the sacks.</p>
+
+<p>By Powder river we saw lying dead an old man
+and an old woman. They were Sioux. Both of the
+bodies were humped down close together among some
+brush as if they had been in hiding there when they
+had been shot. Many bullet wounds were in both of
+them, all of the holes in the back of the head and
+back of the body. There were lots of tracks of soldier
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>horses there. The old man was scalped, but
+the woman was not.</p>
+
+<p>We saw a steamboat on Elk river. Soldiers were
+on the boat. As they passed along, some of the
+Cheyennes shot at them. I do not know whether or
+not any soldier was hit by the shots. They did not
+shoot back at us. The boat did not stop.</p>
+
+<p>We moved back up Powder river. We camped
+and hunted all along far above the forks of the Powder
+and the Little Powder. We went over to Tongue
+river, to the upper Rosebud, to the upper Little Bighorn
+branches. We moved back and forth among
+the valleys of these higher regions. We got plenty
+of game and our horses had plenty of grass.</p>
+
+<p>Four Cheyennes, Bear Man, Bullets Not Harm
+Him, Big Nose and myself Wooden Leg, went out
+from a camp on the upper Rosebud to get buffalo
+meat. We went far out southward. We got our pack
+horses loaded and started back. We heard many
+shots following close after each other.</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers are after somebody,” we agreed.</p>
+
+<p>We hurried away from that neighborhood. None
+of us went to look. The next day at camp we learned
+what had happened. Some soldiers had been after
+a mixed hunting party of Sioux and Cheyennes. Tall
+Bear, a Cheyenne, had been killed.</p>
+
+<p>All during the remainder of the summer the Cheyennes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>traveled and hunted. We kept mostly in the
+upper parts of the valleys. Not many of our people
+went to the reservation. But some more came out
+and joined us. Dull Knife, the old man chief, was
+with us soon after the separation of the tribes. All
+of the four old men chiefs now were here. Charcoal
+Bear kept our tribal medicine lodge set up at every
+place of camping. When the leaves began to fall we
+were on Powder river. We camped and hunted along
+up its valley. As the snows of winter began to fall
+we moved farther up.</p>
+
+<p>Ten of us young men decided to go on a war party
+against the Crows. Black Hawk and Yellow Weasel
+were the big men or leaders of this party. We left
+the tribal camp on a small creek flowing into the west
+side of Powder river. It was located then almost in
+the Big Horn mountains, far up beyond where now is
+Buffalo, Wyoming.</p>
+
+<p>Six sleeps we ten Cheyenne warriors traveled westward
+and northward, looking all the time for Crows.
+We would kill any Crow found, if we could, or whatever
+horses of theirs we might find would be made
+ours if we could get them. Our sixth sleep was on
+the west side of the Bighorn river, just below the
+place where in past times had been the soldier fort.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_46_46" href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>We now were in Crow land. But we had not yet seen
+any Crow Indian.</p>
+
+<p>We followed on down the west side of the Bighorn
+to its mouth. We crossed there to its east side and
+went a little distance down the Elk river. There we
+saw a Crow man, woman and some children traveling
+up the valley with only their one lodge. We hid
+back. They did not see us. We decided not to harm
+them. We turned back and set off up the east side
+of the Bighorn. When we got to the mouth of the
+Little Bighorn we followed up this valley. Our tenth
+sleep of the war journey found us camping where now
+is Crow Agency, only a short distance down the river
+from where had been the great combined camp when
+we had fought the soldiers during the early summer.</p>
+
+<p>We rode next morning all about the camping
+places of the Indians when the soldiers had come.
+We looked where had been the little shelter camps
+after the battle with them. We went then across the
+river and over to the ridge where we had killed all of
+the soldiers. The weather was clear and chilly, but
+not cold. There was no snow on the ground. We
+led our horses as we walked all over the battle field.
+Each man told the others of his own experiences during
+the fight. I showed them where Noisy Walking
+had been found and where my brother and I came
+upon the body of Lame White Man. The places
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>where all of the killed Cheyennes and many of the
+Sioux had fallen were known by some one or other
+of us. We visited all of these places and talked of
+the dead Indian friends.</p>
+
+<p>Dirt and sagebrush mounds now were at the places
+where had been the dead soldiers. In a few places
+we could see some parts of their bodies exposed. But
+mostly the graves were good, except they had no
+stones piled over them. At one end of many different
+ones of the graves was a straight board stuck into the
+ground, to stand up there. They were straight
+boards, not crosses. Dead horses were lying in decay
+here and there among the graves. Wolves had been
+eating at the horses. I did not notice any place where
+it appeared wolves had been at the graves.</p>
+
+<p>I found a folding knife that had belonged to some
+soldier. Another of our party found a Sioux sheathknife.
+Soldier boot bottoms and other pieces of soldier
+belongings were scattered here and there. I
+saw some broken Cheyenne spears. There were many
+hundreds of arrows lying all along the ridge and on
+its sides. Some were Cheyenne arrows, but mostly
+they were from the bows of the Sioux.</p>
+
+<p>I hunted specially for cartridges. The others also
+picked them up, but they were getting them to give to
+friends. I was the only one of this party having a
+soldier rifle. There were lots of empty shells, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>from place to place we picked up loaded ones. Near
+a dead horse I found a whole pasteboard boxful of
+good cartridges. There were forty of them in the
+box. The box had been rotted by rain and had fallen
+apart, but the cartridges were good. They only
+needed to be wiped dry. I filled my belt and put the
+remainder into my pockets. Others found other boxfuls.</p>
+
+<p>We went on southward over the hills to the place
+where the first soldiers had hidden themselves on the
+hilltop. We found other cartridges here. After having
+looked a while at this place we forded the river to
+the west side and walked about over the valley where
+the first fight had taken place. One other man and
+myself were the only two in this party who had been
+in this battle. We told our companions about how
+we chased the soldiers and killed them. I showed
+them right where I had taken my rifle from the soldier
+and where I had helped in killing the Corn Indian.
+I pointed out to them the place where I was
+hidden and where was the soldier when I shot him as
+he was dipping up water. I told of my getting the
+wet tobacco from a hip pocket and the metal money
+from another pocket. They laughed when I told
+of having thrown aside the wet paper money the soldier
+had folded and laid into a little paper box.</p>
+
+<p>We slept this night only a little distance up the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>valley from this first battle ground. Here we made
+for ourselves the same kind of little brush shelters
+we had been making each night. We slept by twos
+or in groups, to keep warm.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning we set out over the divide eastward
+toward the Rosebud. We followed the same
+trail regularly used by the Indians traveling this region,
+the same that had been used by the soldiers in
+coming to us. Four more sleep camps we made in
+going on eastward to Tongue river and up this valley.
+Somewhere below the mouth of Hanging Woman
+creek our scouts caught sight of Indians coming down
+the valley. All of us got to where we might see.
+Most of the Indians were afoot. Only a few had
+horses. We watched and wondered. Who were
+these people?</p>
+
+<p>The band of walking Indians were our Cheyennes,
+the whole tribe. They had but little food. Many of
+them had no blankets nor robes. They had no
+lodges. Only here and there was one wearing moccasins.
+The others had their feet wrapped in loose
+pieces of skin or of cloth. Women, children and old
+people were straggling along over the snow-covered
+trail down the valley. The Cheyennes were very
+poor.</p>
+
+<p>Our people told us of soldiers and Pawnee Indians
+having come to the camp far up Powder river where
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>we had left them. The Cheyennes had to run away
+with only a few small packs, as our small band had
+done on lower Powder river during the late winter
+before this time. The same as we had done, they had
+to see all of their lodges burned and most of their
+horses taken. Many of our men, women and children
+had been killed. Others had died of wounds or had
+starved and frozen to death on the journey through
+the mountain snow to Tongue river. Three Cheyenne
+women and a boy had been captured by the
+Pawnees.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_47_47" href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>The tribe were hunting now for the Ogallala Sioux,
+where Crazy Horse was the principal chief. These
+Sioux were somewhere in this region. We crossed to
+the east side of Tongue river just above the present
+white man town of Ashland, Montana, and went over
+the benches to Otter creek. After a night of sleep
+here we moved on eastward over the little mountains.
+Travel and sleep, travel and sleep, we kept going.
+Eleven sleeps the tribe had journeyed when we arrived
+at the place on Beaver creek where now is a
+white man trading store and a postoffice called Stacey.
+Here we found the Ogallalas.</p>
+
+<p>The Ogallala Sioux received us hospitably. They
+had not been disturbed by soldiers, so they had good
+lodges and plenty of meat and robes. They first assembled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>us in a great body and fed us all we wanted
+to eat. To all of the women who needed other food
+they gave a supply. They gave us robes and blankets.
+They shared with us their tobacco. Gift horses
+came to us. Every married woman got skins enough
+to make some kind of lodge for her household. Oh,
+how generous were the Ogallalas! Not any Cheyenne
+was allowed to go to sleep hungry or cold that
+night.</p>
+
+<p>We had traveled and hunted much during past
+times with these Sioux people. At all times there
+was some one or more families of them with us or
+some of our Cheyennes with them. Of our friendly
+intermarrying, there was more connection with the
+Ogallalas than with any other tribe. Their people
+during the summer and fall had been going to and
+from the agency more than ours had been. Our few
+incoming Cheyennes had brought us some news about
+the soldiers we had fought on the Little Bighorn.
+But the Ogallalas informed us more fully. From
+them we learned that the big chief of the soldiers was
+Long Hair, the same man who several years before
+this time had fought the Southern Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>After we had rested with the Ogallalas a few days
+the chiefs counciled together and decided that the
+tribes should join in movement up the Tongue river.
+All of us then followed our back trail over to Otter
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>creek and on to Tongue river. We moved slowly and
+hunted along the way. The Cheyennes got a new
+supply of buffalo meat and many more skins for enlarging
+their lodges. We crossed Tongue river on the
+ice, to the east side. Not far up the valley we went
+back over the ice, to the west side. We traveled then
+on up the benchland trails, to Hanging Woman
+creek. The Ogallalas had some cattle they had taken
+from white people or from soldiers. These were
+butchered along the way. They had yet also a few of
+the horses taken at the battle on the Little Bighorn.
+But these horses that had been so fat and strong were
+now poor and weak. Most of them already had died.
+They did not know how to find winter food like the
+Indian ponies could find it.</p>
+
+<p>At Hanging Woman creek it was decided the two
+tribes would separate. The Ogallalas would go eastward
+up this stream. The Cheyennes would continue
+on up the Tongue river valley. As usual, a few Cheyennes
+joined the Sioux and a few of their people decided
+to come with us. My sister Crooked Nose
+started with the other people. Chiefs Crazy Horse
+and Water All Gone and a few other Ogallalas came
+to us. Just as the tribes were about to separate, some
+scouts brought in the report:</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers are coming!”</p>
+
+<p>The two bands of Indians began to come again together.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>The warriors mingled themselves as being of
+one tribe. The women and children and older men
+of both sets of people moved together up the Tongue
+river. The young men put themselves behind their
+fleeing people. Somebody said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“They have captured some women. Your sister
+is one of them.”</p>
+
+<p>My heart jumped when this news came to me. I
+lashed my horse into a run toward where it was said
+they had been captured. There I saw tracks of soldier
+horses. The trail led to the river ice. On the
+opposite side of the river, the west side, were soldiers.
+They began shooting at me. I had to get away. I did
+not see any of the women, so I supposed they had
+been killed. My heart then became bitter toward
+these white men.</p>
+
+<p>I hid my horse in the brush at the foot of a ridge
+where some warriors were on its top. I walked up
+there. Many Indians were hidden behind rocks and
+were shooting toward the soldiers. I chose for myself
+a hiding place and did the same. I had my soldier
+rifle and plenty of cartridges. Many soldiers
+were coming across on the ice, to fight us. But we
+had the advantage of them because of our position on
+the high and rocky ridge.</p>
+
+<p>Big Crow, a Cheyenne, kept walking back and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>forth along the ridge on the side toward the soldiers.
+He was wearing a warbonnet. He had a gun taken
+from the soldiers at the Little Bighorn battle. He
+used up his cartridges and came back to us hidden behind
+the rocks, to ask for more. Cheyennes and
+Sioux here and there each gave him one or two or
+three. He soon got enough to fill his belt. He went
+out again to walk along the ridge, to shoot at the
+soldiers and to defy them in their efforts to hit him
+with a bullet. All of us others kept behind the rocks,
+only peeping around at times to shoot. Crazy Horse,
+the Ogallala chief, was near me. Bullets glanced
+off the shielding rocks, but none hit us. One came
+close to me. It whizzed through the folds of my
+blanket at my side.</p>
+
+<p>Big Crow finally dropped down. He lay there
+alive, but apparently in great distress. A Sioux went
+with me to crawl down to where he was and bring
+him into shelter. Another Sioux came after us.
+When we got to the wounded man I took hold of his
+feet and the two Sioux grasped his hands. The
+three of us crawled and dragged him along on the
+snow. Bullets began to shower around us. We let
+loose our holds and dodged behind rocks. When the
+firing quieted, we crept out and again got him. My
+brother just then called out to me: “Wooden Leg,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>come, we are going away from here.” I let loose
+again and went to my brother. The two Sioux continued
+to drag Big Crow.</p>
+
+<p>The Indians moved back and forth, down and up,
+fighting the soldiers at different times all day. After
+darkness came, the fighting stopped. The group
+where I was built a little fire, so we might warm ourselves.
+As soon as the light of it showed, the bullets
+began to sing over our heads. We quickly threw
+snow upon the fire. Then we moved to another place.
+I got down where I had left my horse. It was still
+there. I mounted and joined my friends. All of the
+Indians left there during the night. Some of the
+Ogallalas already had gone on up Hanging Woman
+creek. Chiefs Crazy Horse and Water All Gone, with
+many lodges of their people, attached themselves to
+the Cheyennes. We went up Tongue river. We
+traveled all night and all the next day before we
+stopped to camp.</p>
+
+<p>We did not know where these soldiers had come
+from.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_48_48" href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> We did not know either how far they might
+follow us. But our scouts remaining behind saw
+them go back down Tongue river. At the camp, Big
+Crow’s relatives went about inquiring for him. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>told where I last had seen him. Finally, they found
+the two Sioux who had been with him when I left
+him. These men said he was dead. That was our
+one man lost in the battle. Two Sioux were killed.</p>
+
+<p>The missing Cheyennes were: Sweet Woman, an
+old woman, age fifty or older. Lame White Man’s
+widow and her two girls. Little Chief’s wife, their
+girl and their boy. My sister Crooked Nose, past
+twenty-one years old. A boy belonging to some other
+family. There were four women and five children.
+These were said to be in one group together, and all
+were captured by the soldiers. We were not sure,
+though, but some of them or all of them might have
+been wounded or killed.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes and the few Ogallalas now with us
+traveled far up Tongue river. We found plenty of
+buffalo there. We went on west to the upper Little
+Bighorn. After camping and hunting there, we went
+farther west to the Bighorn at the mouth of Rotten
+Grass creek. We did not stay here long. We returned
+to the Little Bighorn. Most of the last part
+of the winter was spent in camp on this valley. All
+of the time during the next few months we had good
+hunting. Soldiers did not trouble us nor we did not
+trouble them.</p>
+
+<p>Almost the entire Northern Cheyenne tribe was in
+this winter camp on the upper Little Bighorn. Little
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>Wolf, Dull Knife, Dirty Moccasins and Old Bear, our
+four old men chiefs, were here. Charcoal Bear, the
+medicine chief, had kept possession of the sacred
+buffalo head through all of our distress. We had
+now as good a medicine lodge for it as we ordinarily
+had. This lodge was at its usual place at the back part
+of the space within our horseshoe camp circle. All
+of the people had good lodges. In every way we were
+living yet according to our customary habits. We
+were not bothering any white people. We did not
+want to see any of them. We felt we were on our
+own land. We had killed only such people as had
+come for driving us away from it. So, our hearts
+were clean from any feeling of guilt.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_44_44" href="#FNanchor_44_44" class="label">[44]</a> In fact, his wife and others to whom he was well known assert that
+General Custer was not wearing his hair long at the time he was killed.
+For some time before that occasion he had kept his hair cut short.—T.
+B. M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_45_45" href="#FNanchor_45_45" class="label">[45]</a> The small loss is explainable by the extensive suiciding among
+the soldiers.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_46_46" href="#FNanchor_46_46" class="label">[46]</a> Fort C.&nbsp;F. Smith.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_47_47" href="#FNanchor_47_47" class="label">[47]</a> This Powder river fight was on November 26th, 1876.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_48_48" href="#FNanchor_48_48" class="label">[48]</a> These soldiers were commanded by Colonel Nelson A. Miles. They
+had come from Fort Keogh, which he had established on the Yellowstone
+just above the mouth of Tongue river. This fight was on
+January 1, 1877.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XII">
+ <span class="p50l">XII</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Surrender of the Cheyennes.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Just before the grass began to show itself in the
+early part of the spring, two visitors arrived at our
+camp on the Little Bighorn. One of these was our
+captured old woman, Sweet Woman. The other was
+a half-breed Sioux we called White.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_49_49" href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> Each had a
+horse to ride and each was leading a pack horse. In
+their packs were tobacco and other things, for gifts
+to the principal chiefs. The visitors said they had
+been sent out from the soldier fort at the mouth of
+Tongue river, to invite us to come there and surrender
+peaceably. They brought a promise from Bear
+Coat,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_50_50" href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> the soldier chief there, that we should not
+be harmed and should be given plenty of food.</p>
+
+<p>Sweet Woman told us all of the captives were well.
+She said they had been treated well, that they had a
+lodge for themselves and that Bear Coat had a soldier
+guard near their lodge at all times to keep other soldiers
+from bothering them. This Sweet Woman was
+a sister of White Bull’s wife. She was a widow. Her
+husband had been dead many years. He had been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span>a black man, and the name for him was Black Man.
+As a boy he had been captured by the Cheyennes.
+She was a tall and thin woman, but she was healthy.</p>
+
+<p>Our chiefs counciled about this proposal. It was
+decided quickly that we might as well go in that direction.
+The final decision could be made at some
+other place. We moved then eastward by camps and
+sleeps of one night each. We stopped one night at
+the mouth of Hanging Woman creek, where we had
+fought the soldiers in the middle of the winter before.
+Some other young men and I climbed up among the
+rocks where we had fought. We searched for Big
+Crow’s body. We found it. It was lying with the
+back partly propped up against a bush in a thin group
+of small pines. The right hand was up and behind
+the head. The left hand was over the breast. We
+could not decide whether he had been dead when left
+there or had put himself into this position and had
+frozen to death. We stretched out the dead man and
+covered him with stones. His people felt better when
+we told them what we had done.</p>
+
+<p>The half-breed Sioux traveled with us to Tongue
+river. Some of the chiefs decided to go with him to
+the soldier fort and find out what might happen to
+the Cheyennes if all should go there. They left us
+and went down the valley. The Cheyennes going on
+this journey of peacemaking were: Old Wolf and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>Crazy Head, tribal big chiefs. Little Creek and Two
+Moons, little chiefs of the Crazy Dog and Fox warrior
+societies. White Bull, a medicine man but not a
+chief. The Elk warriors did not send any chief.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_296fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_296fp.jpg" alt="Big Beaver standing in a cemetery">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Big Beaver, a veteran Cheyenne warrior, standing at the spot where he saw the
+ last Custer soldier killed June 25, 1876</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The tribe and the Ogallalas with us kept on moving
+eastward. At Powder river it was decided to
+wait for the return of the chiefs who had gone to the
+fort. The Ogallalas with us separated from us and
+traveled on. Most of them said they were going to
+the agency. A little band of them went down Powder
+river. All of the Cheyennes remained in tribal circle
+camp on the west side of Powder river, above the
+mouth of Little Powder river, only a short distance
+above the place where we had been burned out a year
+before this time.</p>
+
+<p>The four chiefs came back to us at this Powder
+river camp. White Bull was not with them. They
+told us he had stayed with the soldiers, to scout for
+them in hunting for Indians. This news did not
+please us. As we looked at it, the surrendering to
+the soldiers was good if one felt like doing this. But
+an offer to help them to kill friends showed a bad
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>I was affected more, though, by other news the
+chiefs brought. It was concerning my sister Crooked
+Nose, one of the captives. When the chiefs were
+only a part of the first day out in coming back from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>the fort, somebody followed them to tell them about
+her. She had been very sad in heart because of a
+belief she never again would see her people. She
+had felt better when the chiefs came, but when they
+went away again she fell into deep grief. Her sorrow
+was so great that she got out her hidden six-shooter
+I had given to her and shot herself dead. My heart
+almost stopped beating when I heard about her death
+in this way. She had been a good sister, kind to
+everybody.</p>
+
+<p>Seven Cheyennes from the agency came to the
+camp on Powder river. They had one tepee lodge
+but no women were with them. They came only to
+tell us we ought to surrender at the agency. They
+said all of the Indians there were being fed well, were
+being treated well in every way. Nobody was being
+punished in any manner for past conduct in warfare
+against the soldiers. To my father and to most of
+the Cheyennes this sounded more attractive than the
+invitation to go to the Elk river fort.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_51_51" href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> Our people
+were better acquainted with conditions at the agency.
+Besides, the Ogallalas had the same agency with us,
+so these people also would be there. Our old men
+counciled about whether the tribe should surrender.
+And, if so, where they should go. It was decided to
+let every Cheyenne choose for himself.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span></p>
+
+<p>Little Wolf and the other principal chiefs chose to
+go to the agency. Charcoal Bear, the medicine chief,
+said the sacred buffalo head and the medicine lodge
+should follow them. Their choice influenced the
+course of most of the tribe. My father said we ought
+to go with them. For two or three days, I believe,
+the chiefs and the people talked about the matter.
+Finally, the main body of the tribe set off toward the
+agency. A smaller part of it determined to go to the
+Elk river soldier fort. These were convinced by Two
+Moons and White Bull’s relatives that they would
+receive better treatment there.</p>
+
+<p>But not all of the Cheyennes were ready yet to
+surrender at any place. Fourteen or fifteen men, six
+or seven of them having wives and children, separated
+off to go westward. White Hawk, a little chief of the
+Elk warriors, was with them. They said they were
+going to join the Minneconjoux Sioux, who then were
+in camp on Rosebud creek or on a branch of it that
+afterward was called Lame Deer creek. The principal
+chief of these Minneconjoux Sioux was Lame
+Deer.</p>
+
+<p>I joined another band still desiring most the freedom
+we considered to be ours by right. Thirty-four
+Cheyennes made up this band. Last Bull, leading
+chief of the Fox warrior society, was the big man of
+our party. His warrior followers at this time were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>from all three of the societies. The people making
+up this group of further hunters were these:</p>
+
+<p>Last Bull, his wife and two daughters.</p>
+
+<p>Many-Colored Braids, his wife, two daughters and
+a son.</p>
+
+<p>Little Horse, his wife, two daughters and a son.</p>
+
+<p>Black Coyote, his wife and small daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Dog Growing Up, his wife and one small boy.</p>
+
+<p>Fire Wolf, Yellow Eagle, Spotted Wolf, Chief
+Going Up a Hill, White Bird, Buffalo Paunch, Big
+Nose, Meat, Medicine Wolf, Horse Road, Little
+Shield, Yellow Horse, my brother Yellow Hair and
+myself Wooden Leg. All of these were unmarried
+young men.</p>
+
+<p>Five tepee lodges were taken along and set up at
+each camping place, by the wives of the five married
+men. The unmarried young men slept mostly unsheltered,
+or at each camping they made for themselves
+little willow or tree branch lodges. They did
+their own cooking, most of the time, but often some
+young man would give a part of his meat to some
+woman as payment to her for cooking his meat for
+him. I dwelt all the time in the lodge of Last Bull,
+as a member of his family. He felt very friendly to
+me because of my having helped his wife and children
+at the time the soldiers came to the Cheyenne camp
+the year before, on Powder river.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span></p>
+
+<p>Every man in this band had a good gun of some
+kind. I had my rifle taken from the soldier. I had
+not used up much of the ammunition I had found on
+the battle grounds at that time and afterward. I did
+not do any more shooting than was necessary in getting
+plenty of meat. I was saving my cartridges for
+fighting whatever soldiers might come.</p>
+
+<p>We traveled and hunted all about the country on
+the upper Powder river and the upper Tongue river.
+We had to be moving often, because game was not
+plentiful. Every day scouts were out trying to locate
+buffalo. All of the time they were on the lookout too
+for soldiers or for Crows or Shoshones. We were not
+loafing idly. We were working and earning our
+living.</p>
+
+<p>A baby boy was born to the wife of Black Coyote at
+one of the camps. The wife of Many-Colored Braids
+took care of her, as medicine woman. As we moved
+from place to place, the young woman and her baby
+were put into a travois bed. The other women helped
+in taking down and setting up her lodge. Her personal
+name was Calf Road. She was specially famous
+because she had fought as a warrior with her husband
+Black Coyote at the battle with the soldiers on the
+upper Rosebud. Now there were thirty-five people
+in our band.</p>
+
+<p>I was sent alone from this band one time to scout
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>for buffalo. I took with me a pack horse to bring
+back whatever meat I might get. I had on the led
+horse a soldier pack saddle belonging to Last Bull.
+I stayed out three sleeps. I saw a few deer and antelope
+but no buffalo.</p>
+
+<p>We were having a good many days of hunger. Our
+horses had plenty of grass, but our own ribs were becoming
+thin. Our clothing was wearing out, and we
+could not get enough of skins to renew them and to
+keep our beds and our lodges in good order. My soldier
+coat and breeches were gone, and my last shirt
+and cloth breeches were almost in tatters. The only
+good article of wear I had now was my big white hat
+I had captured at the Rosebud battle.</p>
+
+<p>A Cheyenne named Yellow Eagle added himself to
+us. He had been at the agency not long before. We
+decided to have him and White Bird go there together
+and spy out the conditions. They went. In
+a week or so they were back among us.</p>
+
+<p>“Good treatment, plenty of food, blankets, everything,
+nobody punished,” they reported.</p>
+
+<p>We started right away for the agency. But not all
+of us yet were ready to go there. Medicine Wolf,
+Growing Dog, Meat and my brother Yellow Hair said
+they were going to stay out hunting. They said
+it would not be long before lots of Indians would be
+back out here, the same as had been here during the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>year before. I was almost persuaded to remain with
+them, but Last Bull said he now was convinced the
+Indians would not come back to this country. So I
+kept with the main part of our band. We traveled
+southeastward toward the White River agency of the
+Cheyennes and the Ogallalas.</p>
+
+<p>At a white man house far along our way we stopped
+to see if the people there might give us some food.
+The only people there were two white men. They
+acted as if they were badly frightened, but we made
+peace signs to them, and only two of us went to their
+door. We made signs that our Indians all were very
+hungry, and we asked them for something to eat.
+They gave us a little beef meat and some sugar and
+coffee. We were glad to get this, and we told them
+our hearts were good toward them.</p>
+
+<p>Three strange Indians on horseback approached us
+from our front as we arrived about a day’s journey
+from the agency. We could see they were Indians,
+but they had on soldier clothing. This alarmed us.
+All of our men cocked their guns and went out in
+front of the women and children. We watched and
+waited. The three Indians stopped. At a distance
+they made signs to us. They told us they were soldier
+scouts come out to help us find our way to the
+agency. We allowed them to join us and remain with
+us the remainder of the way. One of them was a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>Cheyenne, another was a Sioux, the third was a Cheyenne-Sioux
+named Fire Crow.</p>
+
+<p>It made all of us feel good to see the hundreds of
+Indian lodges as we came near to the agency.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_52_52" href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> We
+galloped our horses forward. We cheered and fired
+gunshots into the air. Some soldiers came running
+out from their tents, but they soon saw we were
+friendly and were only celebrating and notifying our
+people we had come. We saw great camps of Arapahoes
+and Ogallalas as well as the tribal camp circle
+of our own Cheyennes. Many soldiers also were
+there, in their own separate camp. Several of the
+soldier chiefs came and shook hands with our men
+and said, “How.” One of these soldier chiefs we
+specially liked. We learned from a Cheyenne his
+name among the Indians was White Hat.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_53_53" href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> He could
+make good sign-talk. It appeared he understood Indians
+better than any white man soldier I ever had
+seen. I suppose that was why we liked him.</p>
+
+<p>A white man married to a Cheyenne woman was
+acting as interpreter for the soldiers. His name was
+Rowland. But White Hat did not need any interpreter
+in talking to us, he could make the sign-talk so
+well. After the general handshaking, White Hat
+said:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Now, you men must give to me your guns and
+your horses.”</p>
+
+<p>We were not expecting this, but we trusted him, so
+we began to do as he had asked. But Black Coyote
+jumped back and said he would not give up his gun.
+He cocked it and stood there. He was much excited.
+Just then three Sioux dressed in soldier clothing
+came riding toward us. Black Coyote aimed his gun
+at them. Last Bull pushed the gun aside and said:</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t shoot. You are crazy.”</p>
+
+<p>He talked to Black Coyote, telling him that a shot
+just now might cause all of us to get killed. White
+Hat motioned the three Sioux to go away, and they
+did so. Black Coyote then quieted down. He gave
+his gun to Last Bull, and this leader gave it to a soldier
+with White Hat. I was the only one among us
+having a gun captured from the soldiers at the battle
+on the Little Bighorn. When I handed it to a soldier
+he gave it to White Hat. White Hat examined it with
+apparent great interest. He then called other soldier
+chiefs to look. Finally he asked me:</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you get this gun?”</p>
+
+<p>I did not answer him at once. He asked me again,
+making signs so clear that I could not help but make
+some kind of answer. I told him the truth. I showed
+him just how I had seized it and wrenched it away
+from a soldier riding toward the river during the first
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>part of the great battle a year before this time. The
+way they talked about it, it appeared the Indians had
+not been giving them these guns taken from the soldiers.
+After a little while, White Hat shook hands
+again with me and made signs to me: “You are a
+brave man. Do not be afraid any soldier will want to
+kill you.”</p>
+
+<p>The next morning all of us went to the agency
+buildings for gifts we had been told would be there
+for us. Wagons came with the presents. They were
+unloaded in piles. Blankets, clothing and different
+kinds of food were in the piles. Two of our people
+were appointed to divide up and distribute the articles
+among all of us. Our hearts now were glad. It
+seemed good to be here with plenty and not be in
+fear of soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>I received other gifts. An Ogallala Sioux presented
+me with a medicine pipe, the first one I had
+owned since the loss of mine when the soldiers burned
+out our forty lodges on lower Powder river. A Cheyenne
+young man gave me a wad of paper money like
+I had seen at the time of the great battle. He said:
+“You can buy things at the trader’s store with this
+paper.” I put it into my pocket. After a while I
+got a Sioux young man friend to go with me to the
+agency trader’s store. I took out my money and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>gave it all to the trader. He counted it over and over.
+Then he asked me, in Sioux speech:</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you get all of this money?”</p>
+
+<p>My Sioux friend quickly answered:</p>
+
+<p>“He got it from Custer.”</p>
+
+<p>The trader said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“The soldiers are going to hang you.” This
+startled me at first, but both he and my Sioux friend
+laughed, so I knew he was only joking.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, what all do you want?” the trader asked,
+after they had joked me a little while.</p>
+
+<p>I got first a red and yellow shirt. Then I got some
+breeches that fitted me much better than the pair
+that had been given to me by the agency people. I
+picked out a fine red blanket, a hat and a big silk
+scarf. I got plenty of tobacco. I bought coffee,
+sugar, meat and other things. I did not want all of
+the goods I bought, but the trader kept telling me of
+what I ought to have. After each time he brought me
+what I asked for, he took from the money some part
+of it. Then he would ask:</p>
+
+<p>“And what else?”</p>
+
+<p>I did not know how much the different articles were
+worth. I kept on choosing some other until finally
+the trader said:</p>
+
+<p>“Your money is all gone.”</p>
+
+<p>My friend helped me to carry all of my property to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>my home lodge. I wore the new hat just bought.
+But I took along the old white hat I had captured
+from the soldiers. I gave this old one to my father.
+He was much pleased to get it. It was the first white
+man hat he ever owned. He threw away then the
+old Indian buffalo hat he had been wearing.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Cheyennes who had gone to the Elk
+river soldier fort were here now. They had been
+sent here by the soldiers. Other Cheyennes had
+stayed at that fort, the men joining the soldiers as
+scouts for them. All of these Cheyennes brought
+here were dwelling in soldier tents. Many other Indians,
+Cheyennes, Ogallalas and Arapahoes, also had
+the soldier tents. These were larger than most of
+the Indian tepees then in use. The tepees were
+smaller than usual because only a few buffalo skins
+had been taken during this summer.</p>
+
+<p>There was some dissatisfaction among the Cheyennes
+on account of talk of them being taken to the
+South. The agent and the soldier chiefs had said we
+ought to go there and be joined as one tribe with the
+Southern Cheyennes. Our people did not like this
+talk. All of us wanted to stay in this country near
+the Black Hills. But we had one big chief, Standing
+Elk, who kept saying it would be better if we should
+go there. I think there were not as many as ten
+Cheyennes in our whole tribe who agreed with him.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>There was a feeling that he was talking this way only
+to make himself a big Indian among the white people.
+The white men chiefs would not talk much to any
+Cheyenne chief but him. They gave him extra presents
+and treated him as if he were the only chief in
+the tribe, when he was but one of our forty tribal big
+chiefs. One day he went about telling everybody:</p>
+
+<p>“All get ready to move. The soldiers are going
+to take us from here tomorrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Lots of Cheyennes were angry. We had understood
+that when we surrendered we were to live on
+our same White River reservation. We had given
+up our guns and our horses and had quit fighting because
+of this promise. Now, after we had put ourselves
+at this great disadvantage, the promise was to
+be broken. But we could not do anything except
+obey him. So, three sleeps after my small band had
+come to what we thought was to be our home, the
+whole tribe was on its way to what we now call
+Oklahoma.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_49_49" href="#FNanchor_49_49" class="label">[49]</a> Bruyère, a Frenchman-Sioux scout for Miles.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_50_50" href="#FNanchor_50_50" class="label">[50]</a> The Cheyenne name for General Miles.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_51_51" href="#FNanchor_51_51" class="label">[51]</a> Fort Keogh, at the mouth of Tongue river.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_52_52" href="#FNanchor_52_52" class="label">[52]</a> White River agency, Fort Robinson, Nebraska.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_53_53" href="#FNanchor_53_53" class="label">[53]</a> Lieutenant W. P. Clark, who wrote a book on sign language.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XIII">
+ <span class="p50l">XIII</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Taken to the South.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The soldier leader of our movement to the South
+was known to us as Tall White Man. He was a good
+man, always kind to the Indians. We had to do whatever
+he said we must do, but he talked good to our
+chiefs, so all of us were pleased to have him guiding
+us. He had with him a band of soldiers. I do not
+know how many, but I think there may have been almost
+a hundred of them.</p>
+
+<p>Our horses that had been taken away from us at
+the agency were now returned to us. Still, many
+Cheyennes did not own any. Old people who had no
+animal to ride were provided with them from the
+soldier herd. Or, very old or sick people were
+allowed to ride in the soldier wagons. Young men
+who owned no horses had to walk or borrow from
+friends. I owned four. I had three of them loaned
+out most of the time.</p>
+
+<p>Soldier tents were used by the Indians as well as
+by the soldiers. I think the Indians had a few canvas
+cone tepees, but I do not remember seeing among us
+any buffalo skin lodges. We had not killed for a
+long time enough buffaloes to renew the old dwelling
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>shelters we liked so well. Wagons were used to haul
+the tents. Other wagons were loaded with bread,
+crackers, coffee, sugar and other food. Every day,
+rations were issued to all of the soldiers and all of the
+Indians.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_54_54" href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
+
+<p>A drove of cattle was kept moving along behind us.
+Some of them were butchered every day for meat.
+This was good, but the Indians liked better the wild
+meat when it could be found. Our chiefs talked to
+Tall White Man about this. He listened to their
+talk. He said it was good. He told them how it
+would be arranged for some of the Indians to hunt
+along the way.</p>
+
+<p>Thirty men, ten from each of the three warrior
+societies, were chosen by our warrior chiefs to do
+the hunting. Each of these thirty was given a rifle.
+At every time of hunting, each of them was allowed
+to have five cartridges for his gun. Other Indians
+were allowed also to hunt, but they had to use the
+bows and arrows or whatever else they might have
+for use. A few took out guns they had kept hidden
+when we had surrendered at the agency, but they had
+to be sly about this so the soldiers would not find out
+about them.</p>
+
+<p>We traveled slowly and camped often, so there
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>was plenty of time for hunting at distances from the
+moving people. The soldiers went always ahead.
+The Indians followed them. The wagons came behind
+the Indians. The drove of cattle were last. We
+kept mostly along the old trails of the Cheyennes as
+they had gone back and forth between the Black Hills
+and the South. These were across the high lands at
+the headwaters of the rivers. Not yet were many
+white people living here.</p>
+
+<p>Buffalo and antelope were plentiful. There were
+a few deer, but no elk. I rode out at times with the
+hunters, but I had neither gun nor bow and arrows.
+I could do nothing but look on and wish I could do
+some killing. I knew of one certain Cheyenne who
+had a rifle hidden. One night in camp I said to him:</p>
+
+<p>“I see every day lots of antelope. Let me take
+your gun tomorrow.”</p>
+
+<p>I killed a buffalo the next day with his gun. I
+killed also two antelope. I gave him half of the
+meat. Both of us had plenty to distribute among our
+friends. The soldiers never knew anything about it.
+Or, none of them said anything to me.</p>
+
+<p>Soldiers hunted with the Indians. All of the soldiers
+were friendly and good to us. They were good
+shooters and they killed lots of game. They gave us
+most of the meat. I became specially friendly with
+two or three of them. I liked to be with them, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>they appeared to like me. I went at times to their
+camp in the evening and visited with them. When
+we were about half along our journey I asked one of
+them:</p>
+
+<p>“Let me take your gun tomorrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you may take it,” he told me.</p>
+
+<p>He let me have five cartridges when I got the gun
+the next morning. Oh, how good I felt—on horseback,
+having a good rifle, and after buffalo! I killed
+one and brought in the best parts of its meat. I gave
+the soldier his choice of it and all he wanted, when I
+returned his gun that night in camp.</p>
+
+<p>Either a rifle or a six shooter was loaned to me for
+a day at other later times. Each time, with the rifle
+came five cartridges. Each time, with the six shooter
+came six loads for it. Each time, I returned the
+borrowed gun at the night camp and gave the friendly
+soldier whatever meat he might want. Most of them
+did not want much of it, so I had at all times plenty
+of the food we liked most, for our family group and
+for our friends who might need it.</p>
+
+<p>We camped near one certain big town far along on
+our journey. None of us were allowed to go into the
+town, but I went walking all about the outside of
+it to look at it. As I walked I found a big piece of
+wood that I wanted. I had seen at past times this
+same kind of wood, and I knew its usefulness to us.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>It was the heavy piece that lays across the necks of
+cattle when they draw a wagon. The Indians liked
+to get these, because they made the best kind of bows
+and arrows. I picked it up and lifted it over a
+shoulder. I went right away to my home tent lodge.</p>
+
+<p>I made a good bow. My mother had in her packs
+some dried sinew from buffalo back tendons. This
+I used to string my bow. I made then ten arrows.
+I got here and there some pieces of metal for the
+points. My mother made a pouch for the bow and
+arrows. She made it of a calfskin she had tanned as
+we were moving. I was glad now, with the full
+pouch slung from my shoulder and dangling at my
+left side. Two days I spent most of our camping
+time at this work.</p>
+
+<p>On the first day out with my new bow and arrows
+I killed a buffalo. I could have killed more, but I
+did not want any more. There were not so many of
+them here as we had found farther north, but we still
+were finding a few. There were yet plenty of antelope
+feeding out on the rolling hills and level lands.
+An antelope, though, is hard to hit with arrows. It
+can run fast and can dodge quickly. Still, if one be
+chased a long time it becomes tired. Any ordinary
+horse then can catch up with it. It is easy enough
+then to shoot arrows into its body. One arrow often
+is enough to kill it. I killed several of them, as many
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span>as I wanted to kill, while we were going on our way.
+I killed also a few more buffalo.</p>
+
+<p>One sleep before we got to the Southern Cheyenne
+agency we had some special doings. The agent
+there came out to see us. He had with him a half-breed
+Cheyenne as interpreter. They went to every
+tent of the Indians. At each place the interpreter
+asked the names and he wrote them on paper. We
+were in camp beside a soldier fort. That evening I
+saw some of the soldiers there trying to rope loose
+horses. I went to them and asked them to let me try
+it. They did. I could loop the lariat noose over a
+running horse almost every time I tried. The soldiers
+cheered. They were very friendly to me.</p>
+
+<p>The thirty Cheyennes who had been allowed to
+have soldier guns for hunting were told now they
+must give back these guns. But Little Wolf and
+Standing Elk talked to Tall White Man about this.
+They said: “Let us keep these guns for hunting, or
+we might need them for protecting ourselves.” But
+the good soldier chief replied: “No, I cannot do that.
+They must be returned to us.” Others of our chiefs
+joined Little Wolf and Standing Elk. Tall White
+Man sat in a long council with them. Finally, he
+agreed:</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the Cheyennes may keep the few guns they
+have.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span></p>
+
+<p>I learned in the South the white man name of
+Long Hair, the soldier big chief we had killed on
+the Little Bighorn. I was told he was called General
+Custer. I had heard this name spoken at the
+White River agency, but I did not understand clearly
+who was meant by it. The Southern Cheyennes
+knew of him because of his having fought against
+them before he had come into our northern country.
+They had surrendered to him.</p>
+
+<p>A few of our Northern Cheyennes had not yet
+joined us before we left the White River agency,
+at the North. Or, some of these fled from us as
+soon as it was decided we must go to the South. My
+brother Yellow Hair had not yet come in to surrender.
+He stayed hunting or he went to the Ogallalas.
+Not long after we became settled in the new
+home the news came to us that he had been killed.
+He was hunting on Crow creek, a stream flowing
+into the east side of upper Tongue river, when some
+white men not soldiers shot him. Our family now
+was made up of my father and mother, myself, my
+younger sister and the small boy brother.</p>
+
+<p>My first shoes were given to me at the southern
+agency. They were too big, but I wore them a part
+of the time. All of my life before this, I had worn
+only the moccasins made by Indians. I yet liked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>best the moccasins, but we did not have skins enough
+to make all of them we needed.</p>
+
+<p>I did some hunting in the southern country. But
+the hunting was not for the large food game animals.
+Very few of these got on the reservation, and we
+were not allowed to go off the reservation for hunting.
+So, my searching for something to shoot at with
+bow and arrows or with gun was for whatever small
+game could be found there.</p>
+
+<p>On one certain bow and arrow hunt I was afoot
+and alone. The weather was hot. I was tired and
+sweating. I went to the shade of two big trees. As
+I rested there, a fluttering noise attracted my attention
+to the tops of two trees. I looked. There
+sat an eagle perched high up. I aimed an arrow
+and shot. No harm done. I drew out another arrow
+and fitted it to my bowstring. I aimed more
+carefully this time. In a moment after the second
+shot, the eagle fluttered and tumbled to the ground
+out a little distance from the trees. I ran out there.
+The big bird flopped and hobbled along away from
+me. Before I could get hold of it the eagle had
+lifted itself into the air. It flew on and up, farther
+and higher. I watched it until it was gone entirely
+from my view.</p>
+
+<p>I learned how to hunt specially for eagles. Their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>regular sleeping places were at the tops of big trees.
+I would go out on horseback and locate myself under
+a big tree just as darkness was about to come.
+One night I sat under a tree waiting. I had both
+a rifle and a six shooter. Two eagles came. I shot
+and killed one with the rifle. I jerked out the six
+shooter and fired at the other one. It too tumbled
+down dead. That was good shooting, considering
+that the light was dim. But always in shooting eagles
+at night the dark body against the sky made a good
+enough target.</p>
+
+<p>On another eagle hunt at night, when I shot up
+into the tree the eagle fell to the ground wounded
+but not dead. It lay there moving about a little but
+not much. I ran to it and seized it, to hold it while
+I might beat it with the handle of my pony whip.
+It grasped in its two taloned feet my left forearm
+and my right thigh just above the knee. I struck it
+with the whip handle, but this only made it sink
+the talons in more deeply. I had to pry them loose.
+Then I beat it to death. I still own and make regular
+use of a fan made from a wing of that eagle.</p>
+
+<p>I shot one certain eagle in a tree above my head
+one night. Right after I fired the shot it tumbled.
+But it did not fall to the ground. I looked up among
+the branches, but I could not see it. I began to look
+about me on the ground. Just then a heavy thump
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>on top of my head almost knocked me down. The
+eagle had lodged somewhere and then had fallen.
+It seized my hat in its talons and bounced off my
+head to the ground. There I killed it with my six
+shooter.</p>
+
+<p>One night, as I stood watching under a tree I saw
+something moving along on a branch high up. It
+did not appear to be an eagle, but when it stopped on
+the branch I aimed my rifle and fired. It dropped
+straight down and plumped hard upon the ground.
+It was dead. It was to me a strange animal. It
+looked somewhat like the badgers of the northern
+country, except this animal I had killed was smaller.
+I remembered, too, that badgers do not live in trees.
+When I took it to the home lodge I found out what
+it was. The white people call this kind of animal a
+coon. I afterward saw others. I saw also what the
+white people call possums. We ate these little animals
+when we could get them.</p>
+
+<p>The tallest Indian I ever saw was a Southern Cheyenne
+young woman. I first saw her at one of our
+Omaha dances. I stood beside her, for measurement.
+The top of my head came just above the level of her
+shoulders. She was extremely slender and she stood
+up straight, not stooping. Her name was Slit Eyes.
+I did not see her father, but I saw her mother. The
+mother was a short woman. This very tall young
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>woman died when she was about twenty years old.</p>
+
+<p>After we had been a year on this reservation, many
+of our people began to ask to be taken back to the
+North. There was no game here, we were not allowed
+to go off the reservation for hunting, and we
+were not given food as it had been promised we
+should be given. At times, some of our young men
+would violate the orders and would slip away from
+the reservation to get a buffalo or some other animal
+good to eat. Some white people said the Indians were
+killing their cattle. I do not know. I did not do
+this. I stayed all the time on the reservation. But
+if any Indians did kill the white men cattle they
+did so because they were very hungry and could not
+find any wild game. We ate the beef because it was
+the best we could get. We always liked better the
+wild game.</p>
+
+<p>There was much sickness among the Northern
+Cheyennes. To us it was a new kind of sickness.
+Chills and fever and aching of the bones dragged
+down most of us to thin and weak bodies. Our people
+died, died, died, kept following one another out
+of this world. Finally, Chief Little Wolf declared
+that he for one was going to move back North,
+whether the white people consented or not. Others
+said they would follow him. The agent told them
+that soldiers would go on their trail and would kill
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>them. They were promised more food. They waited
+for it, but it did not come. More people flocked to
+Little Wolf’s side. Dull Knife said he too would
+go. Late in the summer, more than half of the tribe
+started out. Little Wolf’s last message to the
+agent was:</p>
+
+<p>“The soldiers may kill all of us, but they cannot
+make us stay in this country.”</p>
+
+<p>Soldiers went after them. Other soldiers from
+other places were sent out to head them off. The
+Cheyennes were hunted from all directions. They
+were found many times, but each time the Cheyennes
+fought off their pursuers and kept on going northward.
+Many of our people were killed, but the most
+of them got back to their old home country and
+were allowed to stay there.</p>
+
+<p>My father and I considered joining Little Wolf.
+But we had managed in one way and another to keep
+our family from starving, and we believed that after
+a while the food would be more plentiful. Some
+of us had been sick at times, but none of us yet had
+come near to death. We sympathized fully with our
+deceived and suffering people, and both of us had
+a high admiration for Little Wolf. But we settled
+our minds to stay here and keep out of trouble.</p>
+
+<p>From the Southern Cheyennes I learned a great
+deal about General Custer’s dealing with them in that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>country. All of them said he had smoked the peace
+pipe with them at the time they had surrendered to
+him, seven years before he was killed. According
+to the custom among us, this was understood as a
+promise by him that never again would he fight
+against the Cheyennes. When they learned that he
+had been killed by our people and the Sioux, they
+considered him as having deserved that kind of death,
+on account of his failure to keep his peace pipe oath.</p>
+
+<p>They told us also about the band of Southern
+Cheyennes who started out for the North, to join us,
+during the summer when we fought the great battle.
+Their medicine man chief was with the band, and
+he had the tribal medicine arrows and its tepee with
+him. Soldiers got after them. The medicine man
+chief and his wife separated themselves in the scattering
+flight from the soldiers, each of the two taking
+two of the four sacred arrows. After a few days the
+band all got together again, on upper Powder river.
+But there were so many soldiers in the country that
+they decided to go back to the South.</p>
+
+<p>An assemblage of army officers asked me to tell
+them about the Custer battle. When they sent for
+me my heart said thump—thump—thump. I was
+afraid they might hang me. I went, but I told only a
+little. They asked for more talk. They assured me
+their hearts were good toward me. They gave me
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>lots of money, about five dollars, I believe. Good!
+My heart quit thumping. I told them all they asked,
+answering many questions. Some things I kept to
+myself, but all that I told them was true.</p>
+
+<p>I got a wife from the Southern Cheyennes. She
+was my same age, twenty years old. All of my people
+and all of her people appeared to be pleased at
+our marriage. They gave us presents and we set
+up our own lodge. She had been a girl in the Cheyenne
+camp at the Washita river when Custer and his
+soldiers came there and killed many Cheyennes and
+burned their lodges (November, 1868). Chief
+Black Pot was one of the killed.</p>
+
+<p>The women and children fled, the same as ours
+had done at the Powder river. It was winter, and
+there was at that time a deep snow for that country.
+Soldiers chased the women and children and killed
+many of them as well as the men. My wife, at that
+time a girl, was barefooted, as others also were. They
+had been surprised early in the morning. She
+stopped and cut off pieces of buffalo robe to tie about
+her feet, to keep them warm as she ran. They went
+to a camp of Snake Indians (Comanches), farther
+down the river.</p>
+
+<p>My wife told me she also was with the Cheyennes
+when they surrendered to General Custer (1869)
+after he had smoked the pipe with their chiefs. When
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>they surrendered, some of the chiefs were put into
+prison and had chains put upon their ankles. When
+I heard all of this from my wife, as well from many
+others of the Southern Cheyennes, it seemed the
+Great Medicine may have directed Custer to his death,
+as a punishment for having broken his promise to
+the Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>When I had been six years in the South, the Northern
+Cheyennes were told they might go back now
+to their old country. The Little Wolf people had
+been given lands on the Rosebud and Tongue rivers.
+We could go to them or back to the White river,
+where the agency had become known as Pine Ridge.</p>
+
+<p>My father had died while we were in the land of
+the southern Indians. My wife and myself, my
+mother and her two remaining children all agreed
+we would move. A few of our tribal people decided
+to remain as members of the Southern Cheyenne
+tribe. We who left them went first to Pine Ridge.
+After not a very long stay there we were located in
+a region I always liked, the Tongue river country
+in Montana.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_54_54" href="#FNanchor_54_54" class="label">[54]</a> The movement to the South began in early May, 1877. Seventy
+days were spent in the journey.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XIV">
+ <span class="p50l">XIV</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Home Again on Tongue River.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Many changes had taken place in the affairs of
+our tribe when I got back among the principal body
+of them in Montana. Most of the men who had
+surrendered at Fort Keogh went into service there
+as scouts for the soldiers of General Miles, whose
+Indian name was Bear Coat. They had many stories
+to tell of these experiences. They helped in finding
+and in fighting some bands of our old friends the
+Sioux, who remained hunting through the country
+after we had gone from it. I did not like to hear
+these stories. I could not help but think these tribesmen
+of mine had done wrong in this kind of warfare.
+That was the way the Pawnees, Crows and
+Shoshones had done in past times, and we had been
+enemies to them because of their having done so.
+There came into my heart thoughts that possibly the
+death of my own brother Yellow Hair had been
+brought about by reason of some Cheyenne having
+guided the white men who killed him.</p>
+
+<p>The Nez Perces had come through the country
+soon after the part of our tribe had surrendered at
+the Elk river fort. The Cheyennes went with the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>soldiers to fight these other Indians. They had a
+battle far to the northward. Most of the Cheyennes
+were not in special danger during this battle, but
+two of them were said to have been very brave. These
+two were White Wolf and All See Him. White Wolf
+received a bullet wound across his scalp. He was
+stunned and he fell, but he was not killed. A Sioux
+scout dragged him into safety. The white soldiers
+gave money to the Sioux for his action. This was
+the same White Wolf who shot himself through the
+left thigh at our battle with the soldiers on the Rosebud
+and had to lie in his bed while his companion
+warriors fought the soldiers of Custer. All See Him
+had been a brave man in the Custer battle. He has
+another name, John Bighead Man. White Wolf also
+got another name after the Nez Perces bullet had hit
+him. His new name was Shot in the Head.</p>
+
+<p>Two Moons and White Moon were two Cheyenne
+scouts of that time who were not in the Nez Perces
+fight. They were out with some Cheyennes chasing
+buffalo as the soldier and Indian army traveled in
+their hunt for the Nez Perces. In the course of the
+chase Two Moons accidentally shot White Moon
+through the body. White Moon was entirely disabled,
+and Two Moons did not feel then like fighting
+anybody. He helped in taking care of White
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span>Moon, and he paid the Indian doctor a horse for
+curing him.</p>
+
+<p>People told me all about the journey of Little
+Wolf’s band from the South, with the soldiers after
+them all along the way. They had come to Fort
+Keogh and had surrendered to General Miles. Many
+of their men also enlisted as scouts. The Cheyennes
+at this place stayed a part of the time about the fort
+and a part of the time were allowed to live on the
+Rosebud and the Tongue rivers, near the fort. These
+combined Fort Keogh Cheyennes had been the beginning
+of our Tongue River reservation.</p>
+
+<p>The Little Wolf people had some trouble among
+themselves on their way from the southern country.
+One case was where a man who had become angered
+to craziness about something went at beating his
+whole family. He clubbed every one of them he
+could reach. All of them were put into an insane
+fright. An adult daughter, screaming and struggling
+to get away from him, stabbed him with her sheathknife.
+He let loose of her, walked away staggering,
+and soon fell dead. The young woman was in great
+grief because of her having killed her own father.
+The chiefs and all of the people sympathized with
+her. She was not punished. That was the only case
+I ever knew of a Cheyenne woman having killed
+anyone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span></p>
+
+<p>Black Coyote was the cause of one big trouble.
+He was the same man of our little band who was
+about to shoot when we were giving up our guns
+at the time of our surrender at the White River
+agency. At a camp east of Powder river, during the
+last part of this flight with the Little Wolf people,
+an old chief said to him:</p>
+
+<p>“Black Coyote, you have been riding during all
+of the journey. Many women are walking. You
+should let some one of them have your horse.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, it is my horse, and I want to ride,” Black
+Coyote answered.</p>
+
+<p>“But some of the women are old, and they are
+very tired,” the chief persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“It is my horse, and I intend to ride it,” the young
+man stubbornly responded.</p>
+
+<p>“Black Coyote, you are crazy.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. You are the crazy one.”</p>
+
+<p>The chief flourished his pony whip and lashed
+Black Coyote. He laid on stroke after stroke, many
+of them. The humiliated man humped his body and
+stubbornly hugged his rifle. He was sitting in front
+of his lodge. Suddenly he jumped up and ran away.
+A short distance off he turned and fired at the chief.
+The old man fell dead.</p>
+
+<p>Black Coyote ran on out of the camp. Some Cheyennes
+shot at him, but he was not injured. He kept
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span>on going, and he never returned. His wife at once
+gathered a few of their belongings and followed out
+to join him. Her two children and an old woman
+went with her. Whetstone, another Cheyenne man,
+also left the camp and stayed away with the outcast
+people.</p>
+
+<p>The two men went, just after dark one night, to
+a camp on Powder river, where were a few soldiers
+having a Sergeant with them. The Indians said,
+“How,” and approached the campfire in a friendly
+way. The soldiers were fearful and were on the lookout,
+but they replied, “How.” After the Indians had
+warmed themselves a little, Black Coyote said:</p>
+
+<p>“Give us some bread.”</p>
+
+<p>“How,” the Sergeant answered, and he gave them
+bread.</p>
+
+<p>As the two walked away, for some reason Black
+Coyote jerked up his rifle and killed the Sergeant.
+Then they rushed off into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The soldiers took the body of their Sergeant and
+went to Fort Keogh. Soldiers and Cheyennes from
+there went out to search for the bad Indians. They
+captured them and brought them to the fort. The
+two men were put into jail with chains upon their
+ankles. A soldier chief known to the Cheyennes as
+Little Chief talked to them:</p>
+
+<p>“Did you kill the Sergeant?” he asked them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No,” they answered him.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Little Chief again asked them: “Did
+you kill the Sergeant?” Still they said: “No.”
+After a few days, Black Coyote said: “Yes, I killed
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>Both of the men were hanged. I was told their
+bodies were not taken by the Cheyennes, but were
+buried by the white people. The hanging was at
+Miles City, I believe.</p>
+
+<p>Black Coyote’s wife, the woman warrior at the
+Rosebud battle, died while he was in jail. Cheyennes
+made signs to him from a distance, through the
+jail windows, and told him she was sick. Every
+day he asked: “How is my wife today?” She was
+dying, but to cheer him they told him, “She is better
+now.” When finally somebody told him she was
+dead, he went entirely crazy. He would take no food,
+and he fought every white man who came to him.
+He had to be beaten and tied first when they went to
+hang him. His relatives said it was her death that
+caused him to say he had killed the Sergeant. They
+say the Sergeant and the soldiers were trying to kill
+him at the time. But I know that Black Coyote was
+a very excitable man. Bad Indians like him made
+lots of trouble for the whole tribe.</p>
+
+<p>The most sorrowful new condition we found in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span>coming back to our Cheyenne country was in the
+case of Little Wolf himself. Some white men about
+the fort were selling or giving whisky to the Indians.
+One night, Little Wolf got a bottle of whisky and
+right away he drank all of it. He went into the fort
+trader’s store and leaned forward upon the counter.
+He was quiet, but he was dizzy and stumbling here
+and there. The trader said: “Little Wolf, you had
+better go to your lodge.” But he said: “No, I want
+to stay here.”</p>
+
+<p>Some Cheyenne men and women were playing
+cards at a table in the store. Famished Elk, a young
+man Sergeant of the scouts, was with them. He
+talked to Little Wolf. But the old chief paid no
+attention to his talk. Famished Elk took hold of
+Little Wolf’s arm and said: “Come, I will help you
+to get to your lodge.” He spoke and acted respectfully,
+but Little Wolf was angered because of the
+taking hold of him. He pulled himself away. His
+eyes blazed like fire. He stood a moment looking at
+the young man. Then he said:</p>
+
+<p>“I will kill you.”</p>
+
+<p>He staggered on alone out from the store. Famished
+Elk returned to sit in the card game. Nobody
+was expecting any further trouble. But not long
+afterward the door was opened and Little Wolf stumbled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>into the room. He straightened himself, leveled
+a rifle and fired. Famished Elk sank down dead upon
+the floor.</p>
+
+<p>The old chief went back to his lodge and told his
+two wives what he had done. “We must go,” he
+added. The three of them went out into the darkness
+of the night. Soldiers and Cheyennes searched
+for them. They searched during the next day and
+the next. The missing man and his two wives appeared
+in Miles City and sat themselves down at a
+place in plain view of the people there. A Captain
+and some soldiers went to him. This Captain we
+knew as Little Chief. He told Little Wolf what it
+was said he had done. He further told him:</p>
+
+<p>“You are no more chief of the Cheyennes.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is true and just,” Little Wolf agreed.</p>
+
+<p>All of the Cheyennes said: “How. It is right.
+Little Wolf shall be not any more a chief among
+us.” But their hearts were sad, not angry, when they
+said this. He was not punished in any other way.
+But he further punished himself. Before he and
+his wives had left their lodge he smashed into pieces
+his medicine pipe. Our old tribal laws required this.
+It was allowable for him afterward to smoke alone
+any small and short-stemmed pipe, such as might be
+made from a deer leg bone. But he did not do this.
+He denied himself all smoking. He never made any
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>offer even to sit in the company of other Cheyennes
+smoking together. White men sometimes offered
+him cigarettes, but he always refused them. After a
+time he learned to chew tobacco, a habit never followed
+by the old-time Cheyennes. It seemed he did
+this deliberately, for self-humiliation. He never tried
+to intrude himself into any tribal public affairs. The
+people remembered his great services in past times.
+But nobody consulted him on tribal matters in present
+times. Truly, in every way he never more was
+chief among the Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>Some Cheyennes who had run away or who could
+not be found, when we had been told we must go
+to the South, joined other tribes. Of these, some
+stayed away, others finally came back to us. Two of
+them came back to us on Tongue river. One was
+Joseph Tall White Man. He had dodged from the
+southern movement by escaping and joining the
+Blackfeet Sioux. The other was Little Crow. He
+had joined some tribe of the Sioux.</p>
+
+<p>When I was thirty-one years old (1889) I enlisted
+with other Cheyennes to form a new band of
+scouts for the soldiers at Fort Keogh. For a long
+time we did not do much except to drill and work
+at getting out logs from the timber and building
+houses for ourselves. The soldier officers bought
+horses for us to ride. All of the new horses were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>wild. We had to break them. I got bucked off at
+times. But finally, all of us had horses that would
+not buck.</p>
+
+<p>I learned to drink whisky at Fort Keogh. The
+trader at the fort sold whisky and beer to the soldiers,
+but he was not allowed to sell anything of this kind
+to the Indians. That made only a little difference.
+White men not soldiers would get whisky for us <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'wheneven we had'" id="tn-334">whenever
+we had</ins> money to give to them. They may have
+bought it at the fort trader’s store or it may have come
+from Miles City. I spent most of my scout pay for
+whisky. I never got into any trouble for being drunk,
+but sometimes an Indian did get into trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Tall Bull and some other scouts got drunk and
+went at night to where some soldiers were sleeping.
+The Cheyennes pointed their six-shooters at the soldiers
+and said: “Give us blankets.” The soldiers
+were scared, so blankets were given the Indians. A
+Sergeant went to tell the officers. A Lieutenant officer
+came back with him. But the Lieutenant was
+as drunk as were the Indians. He went away without
+doing anything about the matter.</p>
+
+<p>We had plenty to eat at the fort. A soldier named
+Jules Chaudel was the cook for our thirty Cheyennes.
+A part of my work was to haul water in barrels for
+him. I never got so drunk that I forgot to keep the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>barrels filled. He often gave me meat when it was
+not time for the Indians to eat.</p>
+
+<p>All of the scouts went for making war the next
+year after I enlisted. We were taken to Pine Ridge
+reservation. We were told the Sioux were going to
+fight against the Cheyennes in that country, so we
+were willing to help our own people. Our scouts
+were led by an officer we knew as Big Red Nose.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_55_55" href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>
+Willis Rowland, the half-Cheyenne, was our Sergeant.
+Soldiers from some other fort came to Fort Keogh
+and went with us to Pine Ridge.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to Pine Ridge we learned that it
+was mostly the other Sioux tribes, not the Ogallalas,
+who were wanting to fight against the white people.
+The Cheyennes living there did not want any trouble,
+so the bad Sioux were angered also at the Cheyennes.
+Some Ogallalas joined the bad Indians. Our Cheyenne
+relatives had their lodges torn down and burned.
+Big Foot was the principal chief of the Sioux making
+the trouble. We knew him, and we were sorry at
+having to fight against him, but we were willing to
+be on the side of the whites and our own Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>We Cheyenne scouts did not get into any battle.
+At one time we were all dressed and ready, but the
+officers made us stop behind a hill while the soldiers
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>went on and killed many Sioux at a camp on a little
+valley just over the hill. A Sioux started that fight
+by killing an officer who was taking all guns from
+them. The soldiers then began to shoot, and many
+women and children as well as men were killed. This
+trouble was on Wounded Knee creek. At the time
+of our advance up the hill I was wearing a warbonnet
+for the first time at any battle.</p>
+
+<p>Big Red Nose, our officer, was killed by a Sioux
+before this fight. White Moon and Rock Roads, two
+of our scouts, were out riding somewhere with him.
+They saw four or five Sioux coming on horseback.
+The Sioux were riding slowly, and it appeared they
+did not intend any harm. But while Big Red Nose
+had his head turned in another direction one of the
+Sioux fired his rifle. The bullet went through the
+head of the officer, from back to front, and he fell
+dead from his horse. The two Cheyennes whipped
+their horses and got away. The Sioux scalped Big
+Red Nose and took all of his clothing.</p>
+
+<p>As the Wounded Knee fight was going on, the
+Sioux fled in all directions. The soldier officer now
+leading us was White Hat. He sent me out to a little
+hilltop to watch where the people running away
+might go. I saw one Sioux man ride to a big house.
+He limped when he got off and walked into the house.
+I told White Hat about him. After a while he got
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>some soldiers, and all of us went to the place. From
+a distance, I called out in Sioux language for all
+people in the house to come out and surrender. Nobody
+came out. We went close to the door. I called
+to ask how many people were in there. A man’s
+voice answered me that there were three of them.
+I told him they must come out, but he did not answer
+me. White Hat knocked on the door. He knocked
+a second time and a third time. Then he and the
+soldiers smashed the door and went into the house.
+I followed them.</p>
+
+<p>A Sioux man was lying on a floor bed. A boy was
+lying on another floor bed. A woman was sitting
+beside the boy. The man had a sheet covering all
+of him but his head and neck. I did not know what
+else might be under the sheet, but I said:</p>
+
+<p>“You must give up your gun. You will be treated
+kindly.”</p>
+
+<p>He at once drew a rifle out from under the sheet
+and handed it to me. We learned that he had bullet
+holes through both legs, but no bones were broken.
+The boy had been shot through the left arm. The
+woman was not injured. The soldiers got a wagon
+and took them to the agency. A soldier doctor there
+took care of them.</p>
+
+<p>The troublesome Sioux were gathered out in what
+the Indians knew as the Bad Lands. It was a very
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span>rough country having no trees and not much grass.
+The Cheyennes went out with soldiers and camped
+between the agency and that country. We kept
+watching to try to find out how many were there and
+how many were going there or coming back to the
+reservation. It was winter, and the wind blows hard
+there much of the time. We had some cold rides.</p>
+
+<p>One night our officer gave me a writing on paper
+and told me to take it to the agency. He had the
+interpreter explain to me which officer there was to
+receive it. The air was full of whirling snow. The
+gusts of wind appeared to come from everywhere
+except behind me. I wrapped my blanket tightly
+about me and kept my body humped up as my horse
+moved along the trail. At first I was not afraid, as
+it seemed the night was too stormy for any Sioux to
+be traveling. Then I began thinking that perhaps
+the Sioux might suppose the same thing about the
+Cheyennes and the soldiers, and so there might be
+many of them along the way. I was startled and my
+heart was jumping at every little doubtful sight or
+noise. But I could not do anything but keep on
+going. I tried to make myself feel better by thinking
+of what a good sleep I should have after so hard a
+ride.</p>
+
+<p>At the agency I found the officer and gave to him
+the paper. Then I lay down on the floor behind his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>stove and went to sleep. Pretty soon the interpreter
+awakened me. The officer wanted me. He said:
+“You are a good scout. I want you now to take a
+message for me back to your officer.” I was yet half
+asleep. But right away I became all awake again
+and got myself ready to go. I was as much afraid on
+the way back as I had been in coming. The snow
+and the wind whirling it were the same. I did not
+freeze, though, and I got to our camp and gave this
+paper to my officer. He said: “Good. Now you
+may go and sleep.” It was almost morning. I slept
+far into the day. Nobody awakened me this time.</p>
+
+<p>All of the scouts and Long Yellow Neck, the officer
+now with us, were out one night after some
+Sioux who had been seen. The Cheyennes were
+afraid. We thought there might be many more Sioux
+not seen. I went off a little distance aside from the
+others, to look and listen where there was more
+quietude. I saw the flash of a match. I went cautiously
+in that direction. I got down into a deep
+gulch. I could hear Sioux voices talking above me.
+My heart seemed to be jumping all around in my
+breast. I kept still until the sound of the voices went
+beyond my hearing. I could not see anybody, but the
+sounds told me the direction the Sioux were traveling.
+I went back to the band and told of what had occurred.
+All of us then followed a trail along the rim
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>of the gulch. It led us to two lodges. We surrounded
+them and then let them know we were there. They
+did not fight us. We captured ten Sioux. We made
+them give us their guns. I was one of ten scouts
+appointed to take them to the agency.</p>
+
+<p>Some Ogallalas were with the Cheyennes as scouts.
+All together our band must have numbered sixty or
+more. I do not know exactly how many there were
+of either Cheyennes or Ogallalas, but I know there
+were more of the Cheyennes. Three Cheyennes and
+three Ogallalas were sent out one night to watch the
+trails. I was one of the three Cheyennes. Long Yellow
+Neck said: “I want you to find out how many
+bad Indians are going out from the reservation.”</p>
+
+<p>The six of us got upon our horses and rode away
+together into the night storm. One Ogallala and I
+separated off and dismounted, to look and listen. We
+watched particularly for match lighting, as any Indian
+who had tobacco was likely to stop long enough to
+light a match for smoking. After a little while, we
+saw what we were looking for. We moved quickly,
+but carefully, toward where we had seen the flash.
+We heard voices.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they are Sioux,” we whispered in agreement.</p>
+
+<p>We rejoined our companions and told them.
+Everybody said we ought to go back and tell the
+officer. All of us went then to our camp. An Ogallala
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span>knocked on the post at our officer’s tent. “Come
+in,” he said. All of us went into the warm shelter.
+Long Yellow Neck was writing. He put aside his
+paper and called the interpreter. We told what we
+had seen.</p>
+
+<p>“How many of them were there?” the officer asked
+one of the Ogallalas.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” the Indian replied.</p>
+
+<p>“You are foolish,” the officer told him.</p>
+
+<p>He asked others. Each one said: “I don’t
+know.” I said the same. But we explained that it
+was too dark to see anybody, that only the flash of
+the match had been seen and the voices had been
+heard. The officer said:</p>
+
+<p>“Good. Now, all of you go out again. If you
+see any Sioux, count them.”</p>
+
+<p>We found a fresh trail of horses going toward the
+Bad Lands. By a creek we saw that different campings
+had been made. Many carcasses of cattle were
+there. They were white men cattle that had been
+stolen and butchered by the Sioux.</p>
+
+<p>We three Cheyennes separated off from the three
+Ogallalas. The two parties scouted at a little distance
+from each other. After our three had traveled
+only a short while, I left my horse to be held by one
+of the others while I crept to the top of a bluff for
+looking and listening. A commonly traveled trail
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span>followed along past this bluff. Pretty soon I heard
+horses coming. I hugged close to the ground behind
+a rock. Four Sioux men rode past me toward the
+Bad Lands. They were almost close enough to reach
+out and strike me. I kept as still as the rock, except
+for my shivering from fright. When they were gone
+far enough I slid back a little distance and then
+jumped up and ran to my two companions. We
+found the three Ogallalas. They also had seen the
+four men. All six of us hurried back to our camp.
+The others appointed me to do the talking for our
+report. I told of how I had hidden behind the rock
+and counted them as they had passed by me. “There
+were four of them,” I said. Long Yellow Neck wrote
+my name on a piece of paper. Then he said:</p>
+
+<p>“Good. All of you may go now and sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>I believe I slept, but I am not sure whether I was
+sleeping and dreaming or was only lying there and
+thinking. I kept my cartridge belt buckled on me
+and I hugged my rifle to my body. It seemed that
+angry Sioux Indians were all about me. They were
+searching for me, to kill me. Some of them were
+striking at me with war clubs and slashing at me with
+knives. I heard calling of my name: “Wooden Leg.”
+I jumped up and stood there wide awake.</p>
+
+<p>Long Yellow Neck and a soldier with him were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span>in our tent. The soldier was reading off our names
+from a paper he had in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>“The same six are to go and scout again,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Another Cheyenne was added to us. The seven
+of us got our horses. We were about to go when an
+Ogallala rode into camp. He had come from the
+agency. We wondered what was his errand. We
+waited to find out. He went to Long Yellow Neck’s
+tent. Pretty soon everybody was saying:</p>
+
+<p>“All of the scouts and soldiers go back to Pine
+Ridge.”</p>
+
+<p>I do not know how the others felt, but my own
+heart fluttered in pleasure. I did not want then to
+fight any Sioux. We were only a short time in getting
+all of the camp ready to move. When we were
+about to start on our way, Long Yellow Neck said:
+“Now, I want someone to stay behind and watch, to
+see if any of the Sioux are following us.” He asked
+if I would stay. I said, “No, I do not want to stay
+behind.” He asked Bad Horses, Foolish Man, White
+Bird, Sweet Grass and others. Some Ogallalas were
+asked. Everybody asked said, “No.” While this
+was going on, three of the Ogallalas slipped away
+afoot, leaving their three horses. Long Yellow Neck
+told us he had thought all of us were brave men, but
+he had learned now that we were not brave. Finally
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span>I said: “I will stay behind and watch.” Little Thunder,
+an Ogallala, then said he would stay with me.</p>
+
+<p>We two caught the three horses left by the Ogallalas
+who had run away afoot. Little Thunder said:
+“I am hungry.” I too was hungry, but we had no
+food. We drove the three horses ahead of us and
+hurried forward. Soon we caught up with the scouts
+and soldiers. “Give us something to eat,” we asked.
+A soldier took a big box of crackers from a pack mule
+and gave it to us. He gave us also plenty of bread.
+We ate until we were full up, and then we put what
+was left upon one of the three horses we had been
+driving. We led the three now and followed on far
+behind the other people.</p>
+
+<p>The three Ogallalas afoot came to us. They asked
+us for bread and crackers. “If you will stay with
+us we will give you some,” we told them. They
+agreed. We gave them all they wanted. We let
+them have their horses. They rode with us all of
+the remainder of the way to the agency, helping us
+in watching back to see if any Sioux were following.
+We kept ourselves far behind. None of us saw any
+of the bad Indians anywhere along the way. When
+we rode into the agency camp, all of the soldiers and
+scouts were already there. We told Long Yellow
+Neck that we had not seen any Sioux following us.
+He said:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Good. Now you may sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>During the time we were scouting for the soldiers
+at Pine Ridge I got a Sioux head dress. It was a
+cap of some kind of skin having at its front a buffalo
+horn. I got it while the soldiers and scouts were
+camped on lower Wounded Knee creek. I was wearing
+it as I rode into camp. A soldier Sergeant said
+to me: “I wish you would give that to me.” “What
+would you give to me?” I asked him. “Five dollars,”
+he said. He gave me the five dollars and I gave him
+the buffalo horn head dress.</p>
+
+<p>About four hundred Cheyennes came with us when
+we left Pine Ridge to return to Fort Keogh. These
+were people of ours who had fled from the South with
+Little Wolf and Dull Knife, and who had been staying
+since then among the Ogallalas on the Pine Ridge
+reservation. But now they were allowed to come and
+join the main body of Cheyennes in Montana. A
+few Cheyennes still remained with the Ogallalas, but
+this movement of the big band brought together what
+was considered to be the entire Northern Cheyenne
+tribe. An officer known to us as Small Chief&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_56_56" href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>
+brought us back.</p>
+
+<p>Cheyenne visitors from the Rosebud and Tongue
+river lands were camped at all times near Fort Keogh.
+We scouts who had families kept lodges for them
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span>among the visiting campers. Relatives and friends
+were shifting constantly to or from the fort, Miles
+City and our Cheyenne country seventy miles south
+of us. I had my food with the other scouts, from the
+soldier supplies and at our eating room at the fort.
+But I spent much of my time at the home lodge. One
+day I saw the old man Little Wolf at the camp. I
+said to my wife:</p>
+
+<p>“I see Little Wolf. He is my relative. One of his
+wives is a sister of my father. I think I ought to invite
+him to eat at our lodge.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad to hear you say that,” she answered
+me. “Tell him to come now.” Right away she began
+to prepare bread and meat and coffee.</p>
+
+<p>When I brought Little Wolf I found he was partly
+drunk. He fumbled the food as he sat and ate. He
+ate freely, as though he were very hungry. He kept
+quiet and kept looking downward during all of the
+time. When he was done eating, I told him of my
+sympathy with him in his great trouble. He then
+told me all about the affair. “I loved the young
+man and all of his people,” he said. “I was crazy
+when I shot him.” At this time of conversation,
+Little Wolf was about seventy years old.</p>
+
+<p>This man gave away all of his horses after he had
+been put out of his position as our greatest chief.
+After that, all of his traveling was done afoot. Sometimes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>he went alone, sometimes one or both of his
+wives accompanied him. They took along whatever
+packs they could carry, and they slept in temporary
+shelters or with no shelter. He went at times to visit
+the Crows. He visited also the Arapahoes, in Wyoming,
+walking two hundred miles or more and back
+again. He died in 1904, at the age of eighty-three
+years. His wives and close friends stood his dead
+body upright on a high hill overlooking the Rosebud
+valley, where many Cheyennes had their reservation
+homes. A great heap of stones was built up to enclose
+him thus standing upright. Twenty-four years
+later, his bones were brought to the agency cemetery
+and put into a grave there. Bird,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_57_57" href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> the old-time Indian
+story white man who lives in New York, had a
+stone put at the head of this agency grave.</p>
+
+<p>Even the nearest relatives of Famished Elk never
+kept bad hearts against Little Wolf. At different
+times I have heard talk of him from Bald Eagle, a
+brother of the young man killed. Bald Eagle said:</p>
+
+<p>“Little Wolf did not kill my brother. It was the
+white man whisky that did it.”</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_55_55" href="#FNanchor_55_55" class="label">[55]</a> Lieutenant Casey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_56_56" href="#FNanchor_56_56" class="label">[56]</a> Lieutenant McEniney.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_57_57" href="#FNanchor_57_57" class="label">[57]</a> Dr. George Bird Grinnell, the author.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XV">
+ <span class="p50l">XV</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>A Tamed Old Man.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Thirty years after the great battle against Custer,
+there was a gathering of Indians and white people
+at the Little Bighorn. Besides a few of our people,
+there were Crows, Sioux, Arapahoes, Shoshones, Nez
+Perces, Kiowas, Piegans, Gros Ventres and Paiutes,
+these last known to us as Fish-Eaters.</p>
+
+<p>All Cheyennes who had fought in the battle were
+asked to come and join the other Indians and the
+white people in a peace feast. The place is only two
+short days of wagon traveling from our Lame Deer
+agency. But only a few Cheyennes would go there
+for the gathering. Among us there was much of such
+talk as: “Soldiers will be there. Seeing us might
+anger them so much as to make them want to kill
+us.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_58_58" href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> Seven of us decided to go. These were the
+younger Chief Little Wolf, White Elk, Bobtail Horse,
+Two Moons, Buffalo Calf, myself Wooden Leg, and
+Brave Bear, a Southern Cheyenne. Four of the seven
+men took along their wives and their lodges.</p>
+
+<p>In a big council lodge of the Crows a white man
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span>medicine doctor&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_59_59" href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> asked different ones to tell something
+of the great battle. He said he had heard the
+white people say that Two Moons was a great warrior
+there, and he asked Two Moons to make a speech.
+This Cheyenne stood up and talked a long time. He
+said he had been the big chief of all the Cheyennes
+during the fight. He filled the ears of his hearers
+with lots of other lies, while the rest of us laughed
+among ourselves about what he was saying. Other
+Cheyennes and Sioux were asked to get up and talk,
+but none of them would do so.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine doctor looked at my cousin, the
+younger Chief Little Wolf, and asked him:</p>
+
+<p>“Were you at the Custer battle?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were you in the first fight above the camps?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who took the soldier horses?”</p>
+
+<p>“The Sioux took most of them. The Cheyennes
+got a few. There were many Sioux and only a few
+Cheyennes in the fight.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who took the soldier guns?”</p>
+
+<p>“The same—the Sioux got many, the Cheyennes
+got a few.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Did you see Custer, either before or after he
+was killed?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know. Nobody knew anything about
+Custer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Our soldiers afterward could not find the bodies
+of all the white men killed. What became of them?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were any of them taken away and hidden?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think not, but I do not know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were any of them, either dead or alive, taken to
+the camps?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think not. I never heard of any taken there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me all about what you saw and what you
+did at the battle.”</p>
+
+<p>But Little Wolf would not tell. I said to him:
+“Go on, tell the truth, but do not talk like Two
+Moons did.” He was afraid, though. There were
+many white people and soldiers all around us, and he
+feared they might become angry.</p>
+
+<p>White Elk, Bobtail Horse, Two Moons, Brave Bear,
+Buffalo Calf and the Sioux men all answered the same
+kind of questions in the same way. But none of them
+except Two Moons would say anything further about
+the fight. Bobtail Horse was either nervous or
+scared, so he got tangled a little. The doctor asked
+him the same kind of questions. Then he asked:</p>
+
+<p>“How old are you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span></p>
+
+<p>Bobtail Horse sat there as though he did not understand
+what was being asked. Pretty soon he began
+to count on his fingers. He counted them over and
+over. Finally he said: “I do not know.” All of us
+knew exactly one another’s age, but none of us interfered
+to help him in answering the question. The
+doctor did not ask him any further questions.</p>
+
+<p>In my turn at the talking I was asked the same
+kind of questions:</p>
+
+<p>“Wooden Leg, were you in the Custer battle?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I was there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were you in the first fight up above the camps?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good. How old were you at that time?”</p>
+
+<p>“Eighteen winters.”</p>
+
+<p>“How old are you now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Forty-eight.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good. Tell me where you were during all of the
+time. Tell me what you saw and what you did.”</p>
+
+<p>I told him. It happened I was the only Indian at
+this gathering who had been in the first fight with
+what the white people call the Reno soldiers. It began
+with my brother and I being awakened by the
+shooting and our running to get our horses. I followed
+my own doings up the valley and into the
+chase after the soldiers through the river and up the
+hill. I showed how I had taken a rifle from a soldier.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>I described the killing of the Corn Indian and my
+taking his gun. The doctor wrote on a piece of paper
+as I talked. My cousin Little Wolf interrupted me:
+“You tell too much. Stop talking.”</p>
+
+<p>But I did not stop. It appeared none of the soldiers
+nor other white people listening to me were
+angry. This medicine doctor looked to me like a
+good man, one who understood that we had killed
+soldiers who had come to kill us. I described to him
+the way I had helped to kill the soldier getting water
+at the river. I told about the Indians surrounding
+the Custer soldiers on the long ridge and about many
+things that happened there. The doctor still was
+writing on the paper. He broke in with some questions
+and I answered each one as straight as I knew
+how to answer it. Little Wolf said to me: “Tell
+him Custer killed himself, and see if he becomes
+angry.” But I did not say anything about that.
+Other Indians, at other times, had tried to tell of the
+soldiers killing themselves, but the white people listening
+always became angry and said the Indians
+were liars, so I thought it best to keep quiet. Other
+questions came:</p>
+
+<p>“Did you see Custer?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I did, but I do not know. I think that
+no Indians there knew anything about him being with
+the soldiers.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Did you see soldiers having special marks on the
+shoulders of their coats?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I noticed some of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you know they were chiefs among the soldiers?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did not know then, but I know now.”</p>
+
+<p>“How many soldiers did you see having the markings
+on the shoulders?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know. When we were fighting them they
+all looked alike to us, the same as a herd of buffalo.”</p>
+
+<p>“How many Indians were killed?”</p>
+
+<p>I told him the number of dead Cheyennes, Uncpapas
+and others.</p>
+
+<p>“Good,” he said, and he wrote the numbers on his
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>The Cheyennes and some other Indians went with
+a few soldiers to Fort Custer, not far from the place
+where had been the great battle. The soldier officers
+at the fort shook hands with all of us. We gathered
+together, and some friendly speeches were made by
+officers and by Indians. All I said there was: “A
+long time ago we were enemies. Today we are
+friends.” The medicine doctor rode beside me as we
+were going to and from the fort. We made sign-talk
+together along the way. I showed him the only place
+where the Cheyenne tribe ever camped west of the
+Bighorn river. From the top of the Fort Custer hill
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span>we could see the place, just across from the mouth
+of the Little Bighorn.</p>
+
+<p>Many pictures were made of Cheyennes, Sioux,
+Nez Perces and Crows. Some were made on the
+valley and by the river where had been the first fight,
+others were made on the battle ridge and at its northern
+side. Pictures were made at night when the Indians
+were dancing. The bright flashes scared some
+of the Indians, but soon it was learned what was
+being done.</p>
+
+<p>Wagons came loaded with rations. We were given
+plenty of beef, bacon, bread, crackers, coffee, sugar,
+meat in cans, and other food. We were on the valley
+by the river, where had been the fight with the Reno
+soldiers. A soldier officer rode about, saying:</p>
+
+<p>“All Indians who were in the Custer battle get
+rations. No others are to be given any food.”</p>
+
+<p>But when the distribution began, lots of Crows
+came running. They crowded forward saying:</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, meat! Give some to us.”</p>
+
+<p>Their actions made me angry. I let loose my
+tongue:</p>
+
+<p>“You—Crows—you are like children. All Crows
+are babies. You are not brave. You never helped
+us to fight against the white people. You helped
+them in fighting against us. You were afraid, so you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>joined yourselves to the soldiers. You are not
+Indians.”</p>
+
+<p>Bobtail Horse said to me: “Ssh, keep your temper.”
+My cousin Little Wolf said: “You are doing
+right. Tell them what we think of them.” The
+Crows stopped asking for the rations. All of them
+went back and kept quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the rations given to us every day, each of
+us was paid three dollars at the end of each day, for
+four days. When the gathering ended and we were
+getting ready to go back to our reservation, we were
+given plenty of extra food to eat along the way. Some
+of it was eaten by ourselves and our friends after we
+arrived home.</p>
+
+<p>Another great gathering of whites and Indians assembled
+there fifty years after the battle. All of the
+Cheyennes, particularly the men who had been in the
+battle, were invited to go. Many lodges of our people
+traveled over the divide to that place and camped
+there, but I stayed at my home. Two times I was
+called to our Ashland district telephone for a talk
+from the agency. “We want you to go to the great
+peace celebration,” I was told. At each time of this
+talking I made reply: “I will think about it.” The
+more I thought about it, the more I felt like staying
+away. The battlefield is on the present Crow Indian
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span>reservation. I do not want to go upon their lands. I
+have made up my mind never again to go to any place
+where I might be called upon to shake hands with
+a Crow.</p>
+
+<p>The younger Chief Little Wolf, my cousin, had
+the boyhood name Thorny Tree. His mother was
+a sister of my father and of the older Little Wolf’s
+first wife. The young nephew Thorny Tree showed
+special bravery at a battle with the Shoshones. The
+old chief was so pleased at this manly conduct of
+his wife’s relative that he told the young warrior:</p>
+
+<p>“I give you my name. From this day on you shall
+be Little Wolf.”</p>
+
+<p>This younger man stayed with the Cheyennes at
+the Pine Ridge reservation, after the peaceful times
+came. Among them he was made a tribal chief.
+When the band of them were moved to our Tongue
+River reservation he was made a chief of the entire
+tribe. A few years later he was accepted as the principal
+old man chief. He told me that during the
+years he was living at Pine Ridge he often was mistaken
+for the same Little Wolf who led the Cheyennes
+in their flight from the South. In fact, he
+was with that band of fleeing Cheyennes, but he
+joined that group of them who went to Pine Ridge.
+The older Little Wolf and his last followers came
+to Powder river and on to Fort Keogh. The old
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>chief never was at Pine Ridge after that time.</p>
+
+<p>My cousin told me that white people often embarrassed
+him also in supposing him to have been
+famed as Chief Little Wolf at the Custer battle. In
+this case, the older man was not in the fight, he and
+a small band of Cheyennes having followed on the
+trail of the soldiers and having arrived at the camps
+after the white men all had been killed. The younger
+Little Wolf was already there with the great tribal
+assemblage. The family lodge of his father, Big
+Left Hand, was near to my own father’s family lodge.
+This last Chief Little Wolf, my cousin, died in 1927,
+at the age of 76 years.</p>
+
+<p>I visited the Arapahoes and the Shoshones, in
+Wyoming, several years ago. Eight Cheyenne men,
+some of us with our wives and our tepees went on
+this trip. I had a Custer gun, borrowed from a
+Cheyenne who kept it in hiding. We saw a big
+band of elk in a valley of the Bighorn mountains.
+I was chosen to lead the hunters in getting ourselves
+close to them. I said: “Yes, I will lead, but you
+others must stay back until I tell you it is time for all
+to show themselves and begin to shoot.” As we got
+well toward the elk band they suddenly ran away
+into a forest. I soon learned that one of our men
+had pushed on ahead and frightened them. “You
+are foolish,” was all I could say to him. We saw
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span>trails of other elk, plenty of them, but we did not see
+any others of the elk themselves.</p>
+
+<p>High up on the top of a rocky bluff we saw a bighorn,
+what the white people call a mountain sheep.
+Different ones of us shot at it and missed it. Another
+man and I then shot, at the same moment. The
+animal tumbled down the mountain. When we got
+to it we found that both of our bullets had struck
+the front part of its body. We enjoyed that meat.
+It was the first bighorn meat I had eaten for several
+years.</p>
+
+<p>Nine sleeps we made on our way to the reservation
+where we were going. We stopped with the Arapahoes,
+good friends of the Cheyennes all during the
+old times. There had been friendly intermarriages
+between our people and theirs. There was much of
+inquiring about Arapahoes living among us on our
+reservation. These people made gifts to us. They
+could not give much, because they were as poor as
+the Cheyennes.</p>
+
+<p>We moved camp for a visit with the Shoshones.
+In the old times they and the Cheyennes were constantly
+on terms of enmity. But now they received
+us cordially. From all sides came, “How,” “How,”
+“How.” An old chief of theirs went riding among
+them and calling out: “Everybody come and shake
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span>hands with our guests, the Cheyennes. Let them
+know we are glad they came to visit us.”</p>
+
+<p>Men, women, old people, boys, girls, all moved
+along past our group and greeted us with handshakes.
+They brought food. There were big piles
+of all kinds of things the Indians like to eat. After
+a while, they began to bring horses. One after another
+they kept giving these to us. Every Cheyenne
+among us had more horses than he could lead, when
+we parted from the Shoshones. I had nine of them
+presented to me. When we got back among our own
+people at home we were the richest Indians in our
+tribe. We had horses to give away to our friends.
+All of the Cheyennes agreed that the Shoshones have
+good hearts, that they are a good people.</p>
+
+<p>An Arickaree Indian visited me at my place on
+Tongue river a few years ago. We talked of the
+Custer battle. He told me one of their chiefs had
+been killed there. He described him. The special
+features of his war clothing were a fine buckskin
+shirt and a necklace made of bear claws. I described
+to him the Arickaree I had helped to kill. This one
+had on a buckskin shirt. An eagle feather stood up
+from his back hair. A red string tied his hair together
+behind. If he had a bear-claw necklace I did
+not see it. I did not see this kind of necklace on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span>any of the three Arickarees I saw dead. It may be
+one of the other two had one and it had been taken
+from him before I saw the dead body.</p>
+
+<p>I went to Washington when I was fifty-five years
+old. Little Wolf, Two Moons and Black Wolf were
+old men with me as delegates to speak for our tribe.
+Three younger men who could talk the white man
+language went with us. They were Willis Rowland,
+Ben Shoulderblade and Milton Little White Man.
+At a meeting with white men, there were some
+speeches made. Two Moons did most of the talking
+for us. The rest of us did not care to make any
+long talks. Two Moons told these people he was a
+big chief leading all of the Cheyennes at the Custer
+battle. None of us said anything in dispute of him
+at the meeting, but when we got away to ourselves
+Black Wolf said to him: “You are the biggest liar
+in the whole Cheyenne tribe.” Two Moons laughed
+and replied: “I think it is not wrong to tell lies to
+white people.”</p>
+
+<p>The same white man medicine doctor who had
+been at the gathering by the Little Bighorn was in
+Washington. He was good to us, helping us to see
+the strange sights in the big city. He could make
+good signs, so he and I talked much together. We
+went up to the top of a very tall stone he said was
+Washington’s monument. We rode up to the top
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span>and walked a long and winding stairway to the
+bottom.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp60" id="i_360fp" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_360fp.jpg" alt="Wooden Leg with his wife and daughter">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="left p1l fs60">
+ Photo by Hogan
+ </p>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Wooden Leg, his wife and their daughter, in 1914</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>A big ship took us Cheyennes out upon the great
+water. All of us became sick and vomited. “It is
+the same as whisky,” we said to each other. The
+ship took us to New York. There we visited our
+friend Bird, the old-time Indian story white man.
+The white man medicine doctor was traveling with
+us. He went with us on to Philadelphia, where we
+visited the biggest trader store I ever saw. In a theater
+in this city we sat upon a platform before a
+great crowd of white people. I was asked to make
+a speech. I talked, but only for a short time. One
+of our interpreters repeated to them what I said.
+This visit to the great cities was at some time during
+the spring (1913), in March or April, I believe.</p>
+
+<p>I lied to one man in New York. He asked me
+many questions. For a while I answered them as
+best I could. But it began to appear he was trying
+to show the old-time Indians as being low and mean
+people. I had told him a great deal about the fighting,
+about the taking of horses and saddles and guns,
+about other matters of this kind. I found I did not
+like him, so I decided to end our talk.</p>
+
+<p>“What time of day was it when all of the Custer
+soldiers had been killed?” he asked me.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” I answered him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Did the Indians keep the money they took from
+the soldiers?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you get any of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>After these answers he quit talking to me and went
+away.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine doctor friend came several years
+afterward from Washington to our Lame Deer
+agency. I saw and talked with him here. I still
+keep a big flag he gave to me. I liked him. He was
+a good man, one having a heart good toward Indians.</p>
+
+<p>The guns taken by Cheyennes from the Custer
+soldiers were given up or had been thrown away by
+those of our people who surrendered at the White
+River agency. I think that all of the Sioux also had
+to give their guns of all kinds to the soldiers chiefs
+at their reservations. But at Fort Keogh General
+Miles was good to the Cheyennes. He allowed them
+to keep their guns. I suppose that many Indians
+threw away their Custer guns, for fear of being found
+out and punished for having killed those soldiers.
+But the Fort Keogh Cheyennes kept theirs hidden. A
+few of these have been buried with the owners who
+died. But even to this day, I know of several of the
+Custer rifle guns hidden among the people on our
+reservation. White Elk and Spotted Wolf used to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span>have Custer soldier six-shooters. These two men
+are dead. I do not know what became of their six-shooters.
+The Cheyennes also have yet some of the
+Custer soldier ammunition belts and saddle-bags.
+They do not like to tell of having these captured war
+things, because there are some white people who
+become angry when they talk of the old times of warfare
+between the whites and the Indians.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_60_60" href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
+
+<p>I have yet four of the ten arrows I made from
+the cattle neckyoke picked up at the town when we
+were on our way to the South. For keeping my
+comb and paints I have a flat pouch made from a
+bootleg. The boots I got at the White River agency
+the next day after my hunting party went there to
+surrender. Another young man and I were walking
+in the neighborhood of the soldier tents there. I
+found a pair of soldier boots among some other articles
+also cast aside by the white men. The soles
+were worn, but the tops were good. I knew how to
+make use of them. I cut off the worn bottom parts
+and kept the tops. My mother sewed one of them
+into the pouch. I know of some Cheyennes who
+still have such carriers made from bootlegs of Custer
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span></p>
+
+<p>I lost the medicine pipe given to me by the Ogallala
+Sioux man at the White River agency. That
+was my second medicine pipe. The third one came
+to me when I was somewhere past forty years old.
+An Uncpapa Sioux visiting me at my place gave it
+to me. I still have it. It is made of the red stone
+found in their part of the country. After he had
+given to me this pipe I went on a journey into the
+Bighorn mountains. There I got some blue stone
+of the kind used for making Indian pipes. I made
+two of them. I now have three pipes, one red one
+and two blue ones. I have kept all three of them
+for several years, and I do not expect to sell any
+of them.</p>
+
+<p>I was baptized by the priest at the Tongue river
+mission when I was almost fifty years old. My wife
+and our two daughters were baptized too. I think
+the white people pray to the same Great Medicine
+we do in our old Cheyenne way. I do not go often
+to the church, but I go sometimes. I think the white
+church people are good, but I do not believe all of
+the stories they tell about what happened a long time
+ago. The way they tell us, all of the good people
+in the old times were white people. I am glad to
+have the white man churches among us, but I feel
+more satisfied when I make my prayers in the way
+I was taught to make them. My heart is much more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span>contented when I sit alone with my medicine pipe
+and talk with the Great Medicine about whatever
+may be troubling me.</p>
+
+<p>Our old ways of worship were kept up through
+several years after we came to this reservation. Our
+Great Medicine dances and other old ceremonies were
+carried out as we had them in the days when we
+traveled over the whole hunting region. Then the
+government compelled us to quit them. I think this
+was not right. Lately, though, the conditions have
+changed. We were allowed to have our Great Medicine
+dance in 1927, again in 1928 and in 1929.</p>
+
+<p>We had good medicine men in the old times. It
+may be they did not know as much about sickness
+as the white men doctors know, but our doctors knew
+more about Indians and how to talk to them. Our
+people then did not die young so much as they do
+now. In present times our Indian doctors are put
+into jail if they make medicine for our sick people.
+Whoever of us may become sick or injured must have
+the agency white man doctor or none at all. But he
+can not always come, and there are some who do not
+like him. I think it is best and right if each sick
+one be allowed to choose which doctor he wants.
+When Eddy was agent he let us keep our own old
+ways in all these matters. Our people liked him the
+best of all the agents we have had.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span></p>
+
+<p>A policeman came to my place, one time, and told
+me that Eddy wanted to see me at the agency office.
+He did not say what was wanted. I thought: “What
+have I done?” I went right away. I never had been
+much about the agency, and I did not know Eddy
+very well. But the people all the time were saying
+he was a good man, so I was not afraid. When I
+got there, a strange white man was at the office. The
+interpreter told me this man was from Washington.
+Eddy and the other man talked to me a little while,
+about nothing of importance. Then Eddy said:</p>
+
+<p>“We want you to be judge.”</p>
+
+<p>The Indian court was held at the agency. My
+home place was where it now is, over a divide from
+the agency and on the Tongue river side of the reservation.
+I accepted the appointment. I was paid ten
+dollars each month for going to the agency and attending
+to the court business one or two times each
+month. Not long after I had been serving as judge,
+Eddy called me into his office. He said:</p>
+
+<p>“A letter from Washington tells me that Indians
+having two or more wives must send away all but
+one. You, as judge, must do your part toward seeing
+that the Cheyennes do this.”</p>
+
+<p>My heart jumped around in my breast when he
+told me this. He went on talking further about the
+matter, but I could not pay close attention to him.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span>My thoughts were racing and whirling. When I
+could get them steady enough for speech, I said to
+him:</p>
+
+<p>“I have two wives. You must get some other man
+to serve as judge.”</p>
+
+<p>He sat there and looked straight at me, saying
+nothing for a little while. Then he began talking
+again:</p>
+
+<p>“Somebody else as judge would make you send
+away one of your wives. It would be better if you
+yourself managed it. All of the Indians in the United
+States are going to be compelled to put aside their
+extra wives. Washington has sent the order.”</p>
+
+<p>I decided to keep the office of judge. It appeared
+there was no getting around the order, so I made up
+my mind to be the first one to send away my extra
+wife, then I should talk to the other Cheyennes about
+the matter. I took plenty of time to think about
+how I should let my wives know about what was
+coming. Then I allowed the released one some
+further time to make arrangements as to where she
+should go. The first wife, the older one, had two
+daughters. The younger wife had no children. It
+seemed this younger one ought to leave me. I was
+in very low spirits. When a wagon came to get her
+and her personal packs I went out and sat on a knoll
+about a hundred yards away. I could not speak to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span>her. It seemed I could not move. All I could do
+was just sit there and look down at the ground. She
+went back to her own people, on another reservation.
+A few years later I heard that she was married to a
+good husband. Oh, how glad it made my heart to
+hear that!</p>
+
+<p>I sent a policeman to tell all Cheyennes having
+more than one wife to come and see me. One of
+them came that same afternoon. After we had
+smoked together, I said:</p>
+
+<p>“The agent tells me that I as the judge must order
+all Cheyennes to have only one wife. You must
+send away one of yours.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall not obey that order,” he answered me.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it will have to be that way,” I insisted.</p>
+
+<p>“But who will be the father to the children?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know, but I suppose that will be
+arranged.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wooden Leg, you are crazy. Eddy is crazy.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. If anybody is crazy, it is somebody in
+Washington. All of the Indians in the United States
+have this order. If we resist it, our policemen will
+put us into jail. If much trouble is made about it,
+soldiers may come to fight us. Whatever man does
+not put aside his extra wife may be the cause of the
+whole tribe being killed.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</span></p>
+
+<p>Many of our men were angered by the order. My
+heart sympathized with them, so I never became offended
+at the strong words they sometimes used.
+Finally, though, all of them sent away their extra
+wives. Afterward, from time to time, somebody
+would tell me about some man living a part of the
+time at one place with one wife and a part of the
+time at another place with another wife. I just listened,
+said nothing, and did nothing. These were
+old men, and I considered it enough of change for
+them that they be prevented from having two wives
+at the same place. At this present time I know of
+only one old Cheyenne man who has two wives. They
+are extremely old, are sisters, and they have been
+his two wives for sixty or more years. He stays a
+part of the time with one of them and a part of the
+time with the other. The sister-wives visit each
+other, but they have different homes, several miles
+apart.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout ten years I kept the position of judge.
+I rode my horse or went in my wagon to the agency
+once or twice each month. It became tiresome to
+me. Eddy went away, and we had another agent.
+I decided to resign, and I did so. After I had been
+out of the office a few years there was another change
+in agents. The man we now have, the one we have
+named Sioux Agent, was put in charge of our reservation.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</span>One day, Sioux Agent sent a message calling
+me to his office.</p>
+
+<p>“I want you to be judge again,” he said. “You
+will be paid twenty-five dollars each month.”</p>
+
+<p>That was better than the ten dollars each month I
+had been paid during the ten years of my first service.
+I took his offer. So now, in my old age, I am helping
+my people to learn the ways of the white man government.
+For the old people, it is a great change, so I
+try to apply my thoughts at teaching the young Cheyennes
+whatever I am expected to teach.</p>
+
+<p>I was chosen two times as a little chief of the
+Elk warriors, in the old times. But in each instance
+I got somebody else to take my place. Also, at two
+different times of election of tribal chiefs, since we
+have been on the reservation, a band of warriors
+came to me and said: “We want you to be a big chief
+of the tribe.” But I did not want to have that position,
+so in each instance I told my friends to choose
+some other man, some one who would like to have
+it. Some white people, at different times, have called
+me, “Chief Wooden Leg.” But I never was a chief,
+neither of my warrior society nor of the tribe.</p>
+
+<p>My younger brother’s name was Twin. When he
+grew up to manhood he went from here to the Minneconjoux
+Sioux. There he was appointed a policeman.
+He continued in that duty until his death, a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</span><ins class="corr" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'few years age'" id="tn-371">few years ago</ins>. My mother died here at my home, on
+the Tongue river reservation. My younger sister and
+myself are the only members of my father’s family
+yet living. This sister is the wife of Little Eagle.
+Their farm place is only a few miles down the valley
+from mine.</p>
+
+<p>Both of my daughters went to school at the Tongue
+river mission. They lived there during the school
+months. Each Sunday we were allowed to take them
+to our home. At other times we might go to the
+mission and see them for a few minutes. Later, I
+built a house only a quarter of a mile from the Mission,
+and on a sloping hillside above it. We could
+look from our front door and see the children at any
+time when they might be outside of the school buildings.
+My wife and I were pleased at their situation
+in life. “They will have more of comfort and happiness
+than we have had,” we said to each other.</p>
+
+<p>But the younger daughter fell into an illness when
+she was about fourteen years old. We expected she
+soon would be herself again, but she grew worse
+instead of better. She became so weak she could not
+stay any longer at the school. She continued to go
+on downward after we brought her to our home.
+Finally, her spirit went back to the Great Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>All of our love now was fixed upon the other
+daughter. She advanced to full young womanhood.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</span>She could read the white man books, and she could
+write letters to our friends far away. But she too
+became ill, the same as her younger sister. During
+all of one winter she gradually wasted away. Every
+afternoon her body burned with fever. Every night
+her bed was soaked with the sweating. Every morning
+she coughed almost to strangling. Neither the
+medicines of the agency physician nor the prayers of
+our own medicine men could help her. Just when
+the spring grass was coming up, she was buried in our
+mission cemetery.</p>
+
+<p>My heart fell down to the ground. I decided then
+that the white man school is not good for Indian
+children. I think they do not get enough of meat at
+the boarding schools. I think too that they are kept
+in school too much during each year. They ought
+to be out and free to go as they please during all of
+the good weather of the autumn and the spring. It
+may be that white children can stand it to be in
+school most of the year. I do not believe, though,
+that Indian children can stand it. It is not good
+sense to have the whites and the Indians living by
+the same rules.</p>
+
+<p>My sister’s daughter and her husband had pity
+for me and my wife. They gave to us their oldest
+son. He makes his home with us. On the agency
+roll his name is Joseph White Wolf. But according
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</span>to the Indian way he is our boy, our grandson. He is
+a good boy, comforting and helpful to us. I pray
+often that he may become a good man, may get a good
+wife, may have many children and may live far into
+old age.</p>
+
+<p>My farming land is back from the valley, on a
+creek flowing into Tongue river. Each year I have
+some alfalfa hay and some oats or wheat, or both. I
+have a garden of vegetables, including an acre or
+more of corn for our own food. All together, twenty-one
+acres was the most land I had in cultivation in
+one season. That was a few years ago. I do not have
+that much now. I become tired more quickly than
+I did in past times. It appears my legs are not now
+made of wood, as they used to be.</p>
+
+<p>I get pension money each month because of my
+service as a scout at Fort Keogh. For a while it was
+twenty dollars monthly. Then it was increased to
+thirty dollars. Now it is forty dollars. As I grow
+older it will be further increased. My pay as judge
+added to this pension money makes enough for me
+to buy food and clothing for my wife and boy, without
+need for farming. But I like to have more than I
+need, so I can help my friends. I can not do this
+many more years.</p>
+
+<p>A few other old Cheyennes get the pension money.
+We few are the rich men of our tribe of very poor
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</span>people. Many of our old men and women have a
+hard time getting enough food. Some white people
+say to them: “You have good land, so you ought
+to be prosperous.” They appear not to understand
+that Indians are not born farmers. Besides, many
+among us are older than I am. Even if these did
+know how to farm, they have not the strength to
+do it.</p>
+
+<p>Another thing the white people appear not to
+understand: The old Indian teaching was that it is
+wrong to tear loose from its place on the earth anything
+that may be growing there. It may be cut off,
+but it should not be uprooted. The trees and the
+grass have spirits. Whatever one of such growths
+may be destroyed by some good Indian, his act is
+done in sadness and with a prayer for forgiveness
+because of his necessities, the same as we were taught
+to do in killing animals for food or skins. We revere
+especially the places where our old camp circles used
+to be set up and where we had our old places of
+worship. There are many of such spots on our reservation.
+White people look at them and say: “These
+Indians are foolish. There is good land not plowed.”
+But we like to see these places as they were in the
+old times. They help to keep in our hearts a remembrance
+of the virtues of the good Cheyennes dead and
+gone from us.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_58_58" href="#FNanchor_58_58" class="label">[58]</a> A few old Cheyennes still talked this way in 1926. Fear kept
+them from attending the fiftieth anniversary of the battle.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_59_59" href="#FNanchor_59_59" class="label">[59]</a> The Cheyenne interpreter for them on that occasion informed me
+this man was Doctor Dixon.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_60_60" href="#FNanchor_60_60" class="label">[60]</a> During 1926 and 1927 I came into possession of six carbines, three
+ammunition belts, one full pair of saddle-bags and one half-pair of
+same, that these Fort Keogh Cheyennes had kept hidden ever since
+their having been taken from the Custer soldiers in 1876.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak fnormal fs110 linesp" id="XVI">
+ <span class="p50l">XVI</span>
+ <br>
+ <i>Clearing the Docket.</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Cheyennes still disagree among themselves about
+the number of sleeps the combined tribes stayed at
+different camps along the way from east of Powder
+river to the Little Bighorn and back again to the
+Powder river country. For a long time there was
+disagreement as to the length of time we had been at
+the battle camp before the Custer soldiers came.
+Some said we had been there only one sleep, others
+said two sleeps. This dispute was settled, though,
+several years ago, when a band of Ogallalas visited us
+on this reservation. In a great gathering with them
+at our Lame Deer agency there was a general rehearsing
+of the battle at the Little Bighorn. Little Hawk,
+a Cheyenne, spoke of us having slept there two nights
+before the soldiers came. Somebody corrected him:</p>
+
+<p>“We had slept there only one night.”</p>
+
+<p>“I bet you we had been there two sleeps,” Little
+Hawk replied. He spread out a blanket and laid
+upon it some money.</p>
+
+<p>His money was matched. Other bets were made,
+by other Indians differing in their beliefs on the subject.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</span>Old men then were called upon, one after
+another, to tell what was in their memories concerning
+the question. White Elk, young Chief Little
+Wolf, Wooden Leg, various other old Cheyennes and
+several of the old Sioux, all were asked for expressions
+of their beliefs. Each one of them said:</p>
+
+<p>“One sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>Little Hawk and his supporters finally had to admit
+themselves mistaken. In the general exchange of
+talk, many corroborating incidents were mentioned.
+There came then a full agreement that we had been
+in this camp only one night, that the soldiers attacked
+us the next morning, that after the fighting had ended
+we moved our camps a short distance northwestward
+and stayed there all of this night, and that in the late
+afternoon of the day after the great battle we left
+the place and traveled all night and all the next day
+up the Little Bighorn valley. Of the two nights at
+the battle place, one had been at the first camping
+spot where the soldiers attacked us and the other had
+been at the second camping spot, a short distance
+away, where we moved on account of our death
+losses.</p>
+
+<p>For fifty years we old Cheyennes talked of Bear
+Coat, or General Miles, as having been big chief of
+the soldiers who came up the Little Bighorn valley
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</span>the next day after the Custer battle.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_61_61" href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> We have been
+corrected by our present white man doctor friend.
+He informs us that General Miles did not come into
+this country until more than a month after that time.
+He says that a General Terry and a General Gibbon
+were the chiefs of these soldiers. I never before had
+heard of either of these two men.</p>
+
+<p>I never had heard of any of General Custer’s relatives
+having been killed with him, until our present
+white man doctor friend told us about the two
+brothers and the brother-in-law and the nephew. He
+tells us also that General Custer’s body was not cut
+up. I do not know why he was spared, if such was
+the case. I never heard of any favorings of any dead
+man there. I do not know of any reason for intentional
+difference in treatment of them.</p>
+
+<p>It was not then known to us who was the chief of
+these white men soldiers. It was not known to us
+where they had come from. We supposed them to
+be the same men we had fought on the Rosebud, eight
+days before. We had not known who was the chief
+of those soldiers on the Rosebud. I never heard any
+Indians at that time guessing as to who he may have
+been. It made no difference to us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</span></p>
+
+<p>I have been told that certain different ones of
+Indians have claimed special honor for having killed
+Custer himself. All such men are only boasting to
+get attention. There was no talk of this kind during
+the hours and days right after the battle. If there
+had been, all of us would have known of it. I tell
+you again: None of us knew anything about Custer
+being there. The few Southern Cheyennes and the
+few Sioux warriors who had seen him in earlier times
+did not learn until many weeks later that he had been
+killed in this battle. It was weeks or months later
+when the most of us first learned that there ever was
+such a man. The white people, not the Indians, told
+us.</p>
+
+<p>Even if some white man soldier in the battle had
+been well known to all of the Indians it would have
+been hard to recognize him there. During the first
+hour or two of the fighting we were too far away to
+single out and recognize any particular one. As we
+got close, the air became more and more full of smoke
+and dust. The Indians were greatly excited. All of
+the white men went crazy. It must have been that
+not any one of them looked like his natural self. I
+believe that not any warrior then was thinking of
+trying to find out which one was the chief of the
+soldiers nor which soldier might be a past acquaintance.
+Every fighter, on both sides, was sweating and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</span>dust-covered. The dead soldiers were dirty and
+bloody. Very soon, they were much worse than that.
+Their best friends would not have known them.</p>
+
+<p>Of the thirty Indians killed in both fights, I believe
+about half fell from the bullets of the Custer
+men. Of these fifteen or so killed by the Custer men,
+there were more of them fell during the first close
+fighting, when Lame White Man led us and himself
+was killed, down toward the river, than fell at any
+other one section of the field. The soldiers in the entire
+battle with the Custer men could have killed a
+great many more of us, or we should have gone away
+and left them after some further fighting, if their
+whisky had not made them go crazy and shoot themselves.
+I do not know just how many of them we
+killed, but I believe the number was not more than
+twenty or thirty, all together. Some of these were
+during the slow distant shooting time and some were
+after we had gone among them and found badly
+wounded men to kill at once. There was no capturing
+alive. I did not hear any Indian talk of wanting
+to make such capture.</p>
+
+<p>All of our dead Cheyennes were found, were taken
+away and were buried. I am not sure about all of the
+Sioux dead, but it seems they all must have been
+found, as there was the remainder of that afternoon
+and much of the next day to make search. The three
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</span>dead Corn Indians I saw were left where they had
+been killed.</p>
+
+<p>None of the Custer soldiers came any closer to the
+river than they were at the time they died. When the
+first Indians went out and met them, and exchanged
+shots with them, these soldiers were riding along
+the ridge far out northeastward.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_62_62" href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> They kept moving
+westward along its crest until they spread out on the
+ridge lower down, the ridge where the most of the
+battle took place. After about an hour and a half
+of the slow fighting at long distances, the group of
+forty soldiers who rode down from the ridge along
+a broad coulee and toward the river were charged
+upon by Lame White Man, followed at once by many
+Cheyennes and Sioux. This place of the first Indian
+charge and the first sudden great victory is inside of
+the present fence around the battlefield and at its
+lower side.</p>
+
+<p>The most important warrior among the Cheyennes
+was Lame White Man. I believe all of our old men
+consider him so. Next in importance and usefulness
+were Old Man Coyote, leading chief of the Crazy
+Dog warriors, Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox
+warriors, and Crazy Head, one of our tribal chiefs
+who had been a warrior society chief when he was a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</span>younger man. The first Indians to go across the
+river and fire upon the Custer soldiers far out on the
+ridge were two Sioux and three Cheyennes. These
+three Cheyennes were Roan Bear, Buffalo Calf and
+Bobtail Horse. This last named man is still living,
+his home being on the Rosebud side of our reservation.</p>
+
+<p>Two Moons used to tell white people of his own
+great importance in the battle. I believe he was
+brave, like many others there, but he was not thought
+of as being very important. He was one of the nine
+little chiefs of the Fox warriors. The only special
+way I heard him talked about was concerning his having
+a repeating rifle, the only one of such guns among
+the Cheyennes in this battle. When the smaller part
+of our Cheyenne tribe surrendered to General Miles,
+at Fort Keogh, Two Moons was chosen by him as
+their one big chief. For several years those Indians
+were governed by General Miles. From time to time,
+in the years following, others of our people were
+added to these. The coming of Little Wolf made a
+difference, but he lost his place when he killed the
+Cheyenne. When all of the tribe finally were assembled
+on the present reservation, the Fort Keogh
+officers and the government agents still kept Two
+Moons as the one big chief over all of us. I do not
+know of there being among us any great dissatisfaction
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</span>because of this, but I do know that it was General
+Miles, not the Cheyennes, who selected him as our
+leader.</p>
+
+<p>There are yet living (1930) among the Cheyennes
+more than twenty men and about the same number
+of women who were full-grown people with us in the
+camp beside the Little Bighorn. I suppose that each
+tribe of the Sioux have, in proportion, the same numbers.
+We have many more who were children in the
+camp and who remember much of what was done at
+that time. Last Bull, leading chief of the Fox warriors,
+took his family and joined the Crows after the
+days of peace came. His two daughters married
+Crow men. The scared and screaming girl I took
+upon my horse when the soldiers burned our forty
+lodges on Powder river has become an old woman,
+a Cheyenne-Crow woman. She is known to the white
+people as Mrs. Passes.</p>
+
+<p>Every time I have been where white people have
+been asking questions about the Custer battle, somebody
+has wanted to know:</p>
+
+<p>“Where was Sitting Bull during the fight?”</p>
+
+<p>For a long time I did not understand why this question
+was pressed so strongly. Then I learned that
+white people had been saying: “Sitting Bull was a
+coward. He was not with the warriors in the
+fighting.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</span></p>
+
+<p>I do not know where he was. I had not thought
+about trying to find out. I suppose he was helping
+the women and children and old people, where he
+belonged. He had a son in the fight. Any man having
+a son serving as a warrior was expected to stay
+out of battles and give the son his chance to get warrior
+honors. Lame White Man, the Southern Cheyenne
+tribal chief who was killed, went into the fight
+because of his having no son there. I suppose it was
+the same with Chief Crazy Horse, of the Ogallalas,
+and Chief Hump Nose, of the Arrows All Gone. I
+do not know of any other tribal chiefs or old men
+having mixed into the battle. My father stayed in
+the camps, but his staying there was not on account
+of personal fear.</p>
+
+<p>I am not ashamed to tell that I was a follower of
+Sitting Bull. I have no ears for hearing anybody
+say he was not a brave man. He had a big brain and
+a good one, a strong heart and a generous one. In
+the old times I never heard of any Indian having
+spoken otherwise of him. If any of them changed
+their talk in later days, the change must have been
+brought about by lies of agents and soldier chiefs
+who schemed to make themselves appear as good men
+by making him appear as a bad man.</p>
+
+<p>It is comfortable to live in peace on the reservation.
+It is pleasant to be situated where I can sleep
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</span>soundly every night, without fear that my horses may
+be stolen or that myself or my friends may be crept
+upon and killed. But I like to think about the old
+times, when every man had to be brave. I wish I
+could live again through some of the past days when
+it was the first thought of every prospering Indian to
+send out the call:</p>
+
+<p>“Hoh-oh-oh-oh, friends: Come. Come. Come.
+I have plenty of buffalo meat. I have coffee. I have
+sugar. I have tobacco. Come, friends, feast and
+smoke with me.”</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_61_61" href="#FNanchor_61_61" class="label">[61]</a> This mistake of the old Cheyennes arose from their having found
+Miles in command of the soldiers at Fort Keogh when they surrendered
+there in 1877. They supposed, and kept right on supposing, that
+he had been the leader of the Yellowstone river soldiers who came up
+the Bighorn and the Little Bighorn in June, 1876.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_62_62" href="#FNanchor_62_62" class="label">[62]</a> Many Custer rifle shells have been found scattered along this high
+far-out ridge, by J.&nbsp;A. Blummer and other residents.—T.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;M.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="noindent center fs110 p2t">THE END</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"> <div class="chapter"></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a><a id="Page_386"></a>[Pg 386]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="hanging">Legend for opposite map: A.—Near the present-day Crow
+Agency, Montana.</p>
+
+<p class="phalfl">1. Uncpapa camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>2. Blackfeet Sioux camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>3. Minneconjoux camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>4. Arrows All Gone camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>5. Ogallala camp circle.</p>
+
+<p>6. Cheyenne camp circle.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Arrows <img alt="arrow images" height="23" src="images/arrows.jpg" width="80"> show Reno troops’ advance and
+retreat.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>7. Reno battle line, for a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>8. Present Garryowen railroad station.</p>
+
+<p class="phalfl">9. Reno entrenchment hill, after retreat across the river.</p>
+
+<p>10. Present Custer monument, in field enclosed by fence.</p>
+
+<p>11. Broad coulee of Medicine Tail creek just across east from
+Cheyenne camp circle.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="hanging">The long links, <img alt="links images" height="23" src="images/links.jpg" width="80"> show approach of
+Custer troops, moving northwestward, along a high ridge.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Scattered crossmarks, x x x, show where irregular second
+camps of Indians were placed.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Little Bighorn river flowing northwestward.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Indians forded river at Medicine Tail coulee and also
+went along hills from Reno hill, 9, to intercept Custer
+soldiers.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_387" style="max-width: 50.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_387.jpg" alt="Map of the area around the Custer Battlefield">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Camp Sites and Other Salient Points in Vicinity of
+ Custer Battlefield, Montana.</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</span></p>
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="hanging">Legend for opposite map: A.—Present-day Miles City, Montana.
+B.—Present-day Hardin, Montana. C.—Near the present-day
+Sheridan, Wyoming.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">1. Cheyenne camp whipped out and burned, on Powder river,
+just above mouth of Little Powder river, March 17, 1876.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">2. Where Cheyennes joined the Ogallala band.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">3. Where Ogallalas and Cheyennes together joined Sitting Bull’s
+Uncpapas. Minneconjoux Sioux also came here, making
+four separate camp circles.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">4. Arrows All Gone Sioux joined here, making five camp circles.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">5. Powder river. Blackfeet Sioux made here the sixth camp
+circle. Other small bands had come, but not enough for
+tribal camp circles.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">6. Camp at Tongue river.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">7. Upper Wood creek, where they stayed five or six days, for a
+great buffalo hunt.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">8. The six camp circles on the Rosebud river, about May 19th.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">9. Where the Uncpapas had their sun dance, in early June.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">10. Reno creek camp, from which the Indians went out at night
+to fight Crook’s soldiers, on the upper Rosebud.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">11. Site of the Crook fight, on the upper Rosebud, June 17th.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">12. Custer battle, June 25th.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="noindent">All moved away together, in the same six tribal camp circles,
+until they arrived back at 3, east of Powder river.
+Here the great combined camp was broken up, and the
+tribes separated, about July 15th.</p>
+</blockquote>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_389" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_389.jpg" alt="Map of Indian travel near the Yellowstone river in 1876">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Sketch Map of Hostile Indians’ Course of Travel in Montana, 1876.</span></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+<div class="transnote">
+ <h2 class="nobreak center fnormal fs100" id="Transcribers_Notes">
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+ </h2>
+
+<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been silently
+corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within the
+text and consultation of external sources. Some hyphens in words have
+been silently removed and some silently added when a predominant
+preference was found in the original book. Except for those changes
+noted below, all misspellings in the text and inconsistent usage have
+been retained.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+ <a href="#tn-toc">Table of Contents</a>: “Roving after the Victory” replaced by “Rovings after the Victory”.<br>
+ Page <a href="#tn-146">146</a>: “They sa. bubbles” replaced by “They saw bubbles”.<br>
+ Page <a href="#tn-180">180</a>: “in the Ogallalla” replaced by “in the Ogallala”.<br>
+ Page <a href="#tn-334">334</a>: “wheneven we had” replaced by “whenever we had”.<br>
+ Page <a href="#tn-371">371</a>: “few years age” replaced by “few years ago”.
+</p>
+
+<p>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+public domain.</p>
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78411 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/78411-h/images/arrows.jpg b/78411-h/images/arrows.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c37b5fc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/arrows.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/colophon.jpg b/78411-h/images/colophon.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7fa21eb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/colophon.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/cover.jpg b/78411-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..31e3e12
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_028fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_028fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e1ef64c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_028fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_076fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_076fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1a365a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_076fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_112fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_112fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..603fb8a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_112fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_112fpb.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_112fpb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..13ce0a9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_112fpb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_220fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_220fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f80b009
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_220fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_240fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_240fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..96b1a63
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_240fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_296fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_296fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2be2d25
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_296fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_360fp.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_360fp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b28d826
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_360fp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_387.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_387.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..34e2aa7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_387.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_389.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_389.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a9aad8d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_389.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg b/78411-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5ffd886
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/78411-h/images/links.jpg b/78411-h/images/links.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a391189
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78411-h/images/links.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6c72794
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1e69796
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78411
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78411)