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Sitting Bull was the political and spiritual leader of the Sioux warriors who destroyed General Custer's force in the famous battle of Little Big Horn.
South Dakota author Ernie LaPointe and his three sisters are now the only known living descendants of the legendary Lakota warrior Sitting Bull.
The great-grandson of the legendary Lakota Sioux Chief Sitting Bull has been confirmed as his closest living relative using an innovative new DNA technique applied to hair taken from the Native ...
A lock of hair and wool leggings belonging to Sitting Bull will soon be repatriated by the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., to his closest living relatives. The Hunkpapa ...
Pit Bull Sitting Like a 'Proper Gentleman' Has Everyone Obsessed originally appeared on PetHelpful. An adorable pooch named ...
Sitting Bull's Winchester Model 1876 was taken from his home after a botched attempted to arrest the Sioux chief ended in his death.
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‘Sitting Bull’ Review: History Channel’s Lessons on a LeaderOne of the refreshing things about “Sitting Bull,” the History Channel’s two-night, four-hour documentary on the Sioux leader, is its attempt at some kind of balance amid the hosannas. The ...
Sitting Bull, Buffalo Bill and the circus of lies A new book describes how Native American culture was consumed and repackaged by show business. Its author, Eric Vuillard, explores into the ...
On his first trip east of Dakota in March 1884, Sitting Bull rode an elevator in a St. Paul wholesale grocery store — selling autographs on the street for $1.50 a pop to onlookers who came to ...
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