
Contents
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“A Sioux Squaw is as Bad an Enemy as a Buck” “A Sioux Squaw is as Bad an Enemy as a Buck”
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The Inquiry The Inquiry
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The Indian View of Wounded Knee The Indian View of Wounded Knee
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Settling the Wounded Knee Controversy Settling the Wounded Knee Controversy
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2 Exonerating the Seventh Cavalry
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Published:January 2016
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Abstract
This chapter explores the US government’s attempts to exonerate the Seventh Cavalry from the controversies surrounding the conflict against the Lakota People at Wounded Knee. On February 12, 1891, Secretary of War Redfield Proctor issued an official statement on the engagement. Proctor argued that the Native American “band of savage fanatics” led by Chief Big Foot attacked Colonel James W. Forsyth’s troops, thereby instigating the battle. He insisted that the Cavalry was not responsible for the deaths of nearly two hundred people for various reasons. The Secretary of War’s statement was intended as an authoritative intervention in the intense controversy over what exactly had happened at Wounded Knee. Proctor concluded by commending Forsyth for his leadership and praising the cavalrymen for their gallantry in action. The statement elevated a particular interpretation of Wounded Knee to official status while marginalizing competing memories of the killings carried out by the Cavalry.
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