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Crazy Horse (Tashunca-uitco) was born on the Republican
River about 1845. He was killed at Fort Robinson, Nebraska, in 1877, so
that he lived barely thirty-three years.
Celebrated for his ferocity in battle, Crazy Horse was
recognized among his own people as a visionary leader committed to
preserving the traditions and values of the Lakota way of life.
Even as a young man, Crazy Horse was a legendary warrior.
He stole horses from the Crow Indians before he was thirteen, and led his
first war party before turning twenty. Crazy Horse fought in the 1865-68
war led by the Oglala chief Red Cloud against American settlers in
Wyoming, and played a key role in destroying William J. Fetterman's
brigade at Fort Phil Kearny in 1867.
Crazy Horse earned his reputation among the Lakota not
only by his skill and daring in battle but also by his fierce
determination to preserve his people's traditional way of life. He
refused, for example, to allow any photographs to be taken of him. And he
fought to prevent American encroachment on Lakota lands following the Fort
Laramie Treaty of 1868, helping to attack a surveying party sent into the
Black Hills by General George Armstrong Custer in 1873.
When the War Department ordered all Lakota bands onto
their reservations in 1876, Crazy Horse became a leader of the resistance.
Closely allied to the Cheyenne through his first marriage to a Cheyenne
woman, he gathered a force of 1,200 Oglala and Cheyenne at his village and
turned back General George Crook on June 17, 1876, as Crook tried to
advance up Rosebud Creek toward Sitting Bull's encampment on the Little
Bighorn. After this victory, Crazy Horse joined forces with Sitting Bull
and on June 25 led his band in the counterattack that destroyed Custer's
Seventh Cavalry, flanking the Americans from the north and west as
Hunkpapa warriors led by chief Gall charged from the south and east.
Following the Lakota victory at the Little Bighorn,
Sitting Bull and Gall retreated to Canada, but Crazy Horse remained to
battle General Nelson Miles as he pursued the Lakota and their allies
relentlessly throughout the winter of 1876-77. This constant military
harassment and the decline of the buffalo population eventually forced
Crazy Horse to surrender on May 6, 1877; except for Gall and Sitting Bull,
he was the last important chief to yield.
Even in defeat, Crazy Horse remained an independent
spirit, and in September 1877, when he left the reservation without
authorization, to take his sick wife to her parents, General George Crook
ordered him arrested, fearing that he was plotting a return to battle.
Crazy Horse did not resist arrest at first, but when he realized that he
was being led to a guardhouse, he began to struggle, and while his arms
were held by one of the arresting officers, a soldier ran him through with
a bayonet.
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