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Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota
The Wounded Knee Massacre took place at Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota on December 29, 1890
After the death of Sitting Bull, General Custer's old regiment rounded up about 350 Sioux and took them to a camp at Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. The soldiers forced the Native Americans to give up their weapons, and, when a deaf native was confused as to why he was being asked to give up his gun, it went off in the ensuing struggle for the gun. The soldiers shot back. Over 300 unarmed Native Americans were slaughtered and the soldiers left the corpses to freeze on the ground. The Battle of Wounded Knee brought the Indian wars to an end.
The battle takes its name from the nearby creek, called chankpé opi wakpála in the Lakota language ("wounded knee creek"). The creek was known by that name long before the battle of 1890.
It was never a battle. It was a massacre. It was over by Wounded Knee Creek.
Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota
The Wounded Knee Massacre took place at Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota on December 29, 1890
In Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota.
In Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota.
After the death of Sitting Bull, General Custer's old regiment rounded up about 350 Sioux and took them to a camp at Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. The soldiers forced the Native Americans to give up their weapons, and, when a deaf native was confused as to why he was being asked to give up his gun, it went off in the ensuing struggle for the gun. The soldiers shot back. Over 300 unarmed Native Americans were slaughtered and the soldiers left the corpses to freeze on the ground. The Battle of Wounded Knee brought the Indian wars to an end.
The battle takes its name from the nearby creek, called chankpé opi wakpála in the Lakota language ("wounded knee creek"). The creek was known by that name long before the battle of 1890.
The Myall Creek massacre involved the killing of up to 30 unarmed Indigenous Australians.
It was never a battle. It was a massacre. It was over by Wounded Knee Creek.
Sand creek massacare
It is known in history as the Battle of Wounded Knee or the Wouded Knee Massacre or the Chief Bigfoot Massacre and it happened at Wounded Knee Creek, 11 miles west of present day Batesland, South Dakota.
Your mom goes to college
Wounded Knee, located on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in southwestern South Dakota, was the site of 1890 conflicts between the Lakota Native American Indians and the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment. The conflicts resulted in the death of at least 150 Indians and 25 soldiers.