Killing Crazy Horse

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Killing Crazy Horse Page 27

by Bill O'Reilly

Chivington, John M.

  Chokonen tribe

  Cholocco Litabixbee. See Horseshoe Bend, Battle of

  Christmas

  A Christmas Carol (Dickens)

  Civil War

  Clark, Ben

  Clark, William P.

  Clarke, Matthew St. Clair

  Clear Lake, California

  Cleveland, Grover

  Clinton, William

  Cloud, Samuel

  Cochise (Chiricahua Apache chief). See also Cheis

  Apache Pass and

  Bascom affair and

  Civil War and

  death of

  meeting of with Ulysses S. Grant

  Mexico and

  negotiating with Ulysses S. Grant

  Cochise’s Head rock formation

  Cody, William (Buffalo Bill)

  Coffee, John

  Coloradas. See Mangas Coloradas

  Comanche (horse)

  Comanche Indians

  Adobe Walls, Texas, and

  Civil War and

  Eeshatai

  Fort Parker attack and

  horses and

  Kwihnai

  Mexican War and

  Pease River, Texas, and

  Peta Nocona

  Quanah Parker

  reservation of

  Texas and

  Topsannah

  Comanche Moon

  Comancheria

  Commission Appointed to Treat with the Sioux Indians for the Relinquishment of the Black Hills

  Cooke, Jay

  Cooke, William W.

  Coolidge, Calvin

  Cornells, Jim

  Corpus Christi, Texas

  costs of fighting Native Americans

  cow tails

  Coyuntura

  Crazy Horse (Lakota Sioux chief)

  after Fort Phil Kearny

  Battle of the Rosebud and

  Black Hills and

  death of

  Fort Keogh and

  Fort Phil Kearny and

  grave site of

  hunting of by George Crook

  Little Bighorn and

  Slim Buttes and

  surrender of

  Crazy Horse Memorial (South Dakota)

  Creek Nation

  Andrew Jackson and

  Civil War and

  civil war within

  Fort Mims attack and

  Horseshoe Bend and

  problems of

  Crockett, Davy

  Crook, George

  Battle of the Rosebud and

  cavalry and

  Cochise and

  hunting Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull

  Curley (Indian scout)

  Custer, Boston

  Custer, Elizabeth “Libbie”

  describing husband

  later life of

  relationship of with husband

  Custer, George Armstrong “Autie”

  Battle of Gettysburg and

  biographies of

  Black Hills and

  Cheyenne at the Washita River and

  Crazy Horse and

  death of

  Little Bighorn and

  Sitting Bull and

  Custer, Tom

  Civil War and

  Little Bighorn and

  Dakota Sioux

  Dakota Territory

  battle for

  Black Hills and

  Slim Buttes

  Wild Bill Hickock and

  Dapple Dave (horse)

  Dash-den-zhoos (Cochise)

  Davis, Jefferson

  Davis, William

  Deadwood, Dakota Territory

  Democratic Party

  Dent, Julia Boggs. See Grant, Julia

  de Soto, Hernando

  Dickinson, Charles

  Dixon, Billy

  dogs

  buffalo hunters and

  Cochise and

  Comanche and

  Fort Phil Kearny attack and

  George Custer and

  Dos-teh-seh (wife of Cochise)

  dragoons

  Dragoon Springs, Battle of

  duels

  Dull Knife (Cheyenne chief)

  Durley, William

  Eccleston, Robert

  Edmonson, Samuel

  Eeshatai (Comanche spiritual leader)

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo

  Emory, William H.

  Emuckfaw Creek

  Fetterman, William J.

  Fifteenth Amendment to U.S. Constitution

  Fifth Law

  Finerty, John

  Fletcher, Josiah

  Ford, John

  Fort Abraham Lincoln

  Fort Breckinridge

  Fort Buchanan

  Fort Keogh

  Fort Laramie

  Treaty of. See Treaty of Fort Laramie

  Fort Mims

  Andrew Jackson and

  attack on

  construction of

  Fort Parker

  Fort Phil Kearny

  Fort Robinson

  Free, Mickey. See also Telles, Felix

  Frontreras, Mexico

  Gadsden Purchase

  Gall (Sioux chief)

  Gamesett (Sauk)

  “Garry Owen” (song)

  Gatewood, Charles Bare

  Gentles, William

  Georgia, removal of Cherokee from

  Geronimo (Chiricahua Apache leader)

  Gettysburg, Battle of

  Ghost Dance movement

  Gibbon, John

  gold

  Arizona Territory and

  Black Hills and

  California and

  Deadwood and

  Gold Rush

  Goodnight, Charles

  Gordon, David S.

  Granger, George

  Grant, Frederick

  Grant, Julia

  Grant, Orvil

  Grant, Ulysses S. “Sam”

  Adobe Walls, Texas, and

  Battle of Monterey and

  Black Hills and

  Civil War and

  on duplicity

  election of

  final years of

  George Custer and

  Little Bighorn and

  meeting of with Cochise

  Mexican border and

  negotiating with Cochise

  Nez Percé tribe and

  Red Cloud and

  Gray Wolf. See Crook, George

  greenbacks

  Greene, William C.

  Grouard, Frank

  Grummond, Frances

  Grummond, George W.

  Hall, Rachel and Sylvia

  Hamlin, Hannibal

  Harrison, William Henry

  Hatterway, Susan

  Hawkins, Benjamin

  Hayes, Rutherford B.

  He Dog (Sioux)

  Henry, Patrick

  Hickok, James Butler (Wild Bill)

  High Backbone (Sioux chief)

  Hollow Horn Bear (Brulé Sioux leader)

  Homestead Act of 1862

  horses. See also Pony Express

  Apache and

  cavalry and

  Cherokee forced relocation and

  Cheyenne and

  Chokonen warriors stealing

  Civil War and

  Cochise and

  Comanche and

  Creek Nation and

  Fort Phil Kearny and

  George Custer and

  mail routes and

  Nez Percé and

  Sioux and

  Texas Rangers and

  Washita River attack and

  Horseshoe Bend, Battle of

  Houston, Sam

  Howard, Oliver Otis

  Hunkpapa Sioux. See also Sitting Bull

  Hutchings, Andrew Jackson

  Illinois, Blackhawk’s War and

  Indian Appropriations Act of 1871

  Indian Appropriations Act of 1889

  Indian Removal policy

  infantry

  Jackson, And
rew

  Act to Preserve Peace on the Frontiers and

  Blackhawk’s War and

  Florida and

  injuries to during duels

  letter to after attack on Fort Mims

  Manifest Destiny and

  Martin Van Buren and

  Seminole Indians and

  Jackson, Andrew Jr.

  Jackson, Rachel

  Jeffords, Tom

  Johnson, Andrew

  Jordan, James

  Joseph (Nez Percé chief)

  Kellogg, Elizabeth

  Kellogg, Mark

  Keogh, Myles

  kidnapping

  Kirkpatrick, William

  Komantcia Indians. See also Comanche

  Kwihnai (Comanche chief)

  Lafayette, Marquis de

  Lakota Sioux. See also Crazy Horse

  Lamar, Mirabeau

  Lame White Man (Cheyenne chief)

  Lee, Henry

  Lee, Robert E.

  Legal Tender Act of 1862

  Lewis and Clark Expedition

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Andrew Johnson and

  assassination of

  Blackhawk’s War and

  Civil War and

  money after Civil War and

  Sioux nation and

  Little Bighorn, Battle of (Montana)

  Little Crow (Santee Sioux)

  Little Plume (Piegan leader)

  Lone Bear (Sioux warrior)

  Long, Richard

  Long Hair. See Custer, George Armstrong

  Lowell, James Russell

  Lower Creek people

  Lucas, Robert

  Lyncoya (Cree child)

  mail routes. See also Butterfield Overland Mail Route; Pony Express

  Mangas Coloradas (Apache chief)

  Manifest Destiny

  Marcy, Randolph B.

  Marion, Frances

  Martinez, Bernardo

  Martinez, Jesusa

  Massie, William

  Masterson, Bat

  McCall, Jack

  McLaughlin, Frederic

  McLaughlin, James

  Medicine Lodge Treaty of 1867

  mercury

  Metzger, Adolph

  Mexican War

  Mexico

  Apache and

  border with Texas

  Chokonen tribe and

  Cochise and

  Gadsden Purchase and

  Miles, Nelson

  militias

  Milky Way (Penateka Comanche chief, aka Asa Havi, Bird Chief)

  Mims, Samuel

  Minnesota

  money

  Monroe, James

  Monroe Doctrine

  Monterey, Battle of

  Montoya, Narivo

  Moving Behind Woman (Cheyenne)

  My Life on the Plains (Custer)

  Naduah. See Parker, Cynthia Ann

  Naiche (Cochise)

  Narrative of Twenty-one Months Servitude as a Prisoner Among the Comanche Indians (Plummer)

  Nashashuk (Sauk)

  Nashville, Tennessee

  Nashville Whig

  New Mexico. See also Apache Pass

  New-Yorker

  New York Herald

  New York Times

  New-York Tribune

  Nez Percé tribe

  Nez Perce War of 1877

  Nocona, Peta (Comanche chief)

  Northern Pacific railroad

  No Water (Sioux)

  Oakley, Annie

  oases

  Offutt, Denton

  Oklahoma Land Rush

  Oregon Trail

  Overland to California on the Southwestern Trail (Eccleston)

  Paha Sapa. See Black Hills

  Palmer, Innis N.

  Panic of 1873

  Parke, John G.

  Parker, Benjamin

  Parker, Cynthia Ann

  Parker, Daniel

  Parker, James

  Parker, John

  Parker, Lucy

  Parker, Quanah (Comanche leader)

  Parker, Sallie “Granny”

  Parker, Sarah “Sallie”

  Parker, Silas

  Parker, Waneda

  Parsons, Enoch

  Patterson, John B.

  Pawnee tribe

  Pease River, Texas

  Pequot tribe

  Perry, Frank W.

  Pettigrew, William

  Phillips, John

  Pisago (Chokonen warrior)

  Plains Indians

  Platte Bridge, Battle of

  Plummer, James

  Plummer, Rachel Parker

  Polk, James K.

  Pomeroy, Samuel

  Pomo tribe

  ponies

  Pony Express. See also mail routes

  Pope, Nathaniel

  Porter, Robert Percival

  Potawatomi tribe

  Powhatan tribe

  Pratt, James

  Prescott, Arizona

  Presidio of Santa Rosa de Corodéguachi

  Proctor, Henry

  Quanah (Comanche leader). See Parker, Quanah

  Radical Reconstruction

  raiding

  railroads

  Apache Pass and

  impacts of

  Northern Pacific

  protection of

  Rain-in-the-Face (warrior)

  Rankin, Cornet

  Red Buttes, Battle of

  Red Cloud (Sioux chief)

  Battle of the Rosebud and

  Black Hills land purchase and

  Fort Phil Kearny and

  surrender of Black Hills and Unceded Territories and

  Treaty of Fort Laramie and

  Red Cloud, Jack (Sioux)

  Red Eagle (Creek chief). See Weatherford, William

  Red Feather (Lakota Sioux)

  Red Horse (Sioux warrior)

  Red Napoleon. See Joseph (Nez Percé chief)

  Red Sticks. See also Creek nation

  Andrew Jackson and

  Battle of Tallushatchee and

  Fort Mims attack and

  Reed, Harry Armstrong “Autie”

  Reid, John

  Relles (Chokonen warrior)

  Reno, Marcus

  Republican Party

  reservations

  Apache

  Comanche

  on North Platte River

  Sioux

  Reynolds, John

  Rigdon, Martin

  Robards, Richard

  Rommel, John

  Roosevelt, Theodore

  Rosebud, Battle of the

  Ross, Sullivan

  Rushmore, Mount

  Ryan, John

  Sand Creek massacre

  Sanders, William

  Santa Fe Trail

  Santee Sioux

  Sauk Indians, Blackhawk’s War and

  scalping

  attack on Mexican barracks and

  attack on William Davis household and

  Battle of Horseshoe Bend and

  Blackhawk and

  bounties and

  of buffalo hunters

  Cochise and

  Comanche and

  Custer’s Last Stand and

  Fort Parker attack and

  Little Bighorn and

  of Mangas Coloradas

  Sand Creek massacre and

  of Sioux

  Sioux and

  Stillman’s Run and

  Texas Rangers and

  Washita River and

  Scott, Winfield

  The Searchers (movie)

  secession

  Second Cavalry

  Seminole Indians

  Seymour, Horatio

  Sheridan, Phil

  Sherman, William Tecumseh

  Sioux nation. See also Crazy Horse; Red Cloud; Sitting Bull

  Black Hills and

  Fort Phil Kearny and

  Little Bighorn and

  Minnesota and

  reservation of

  reservat
ions and

  Treaty of Fort Laramie and

  Wounded Knee and

  Sitting Bull (Hunkpapa Lakota Sioux)

  Black Hills and

  as entertainer

  hunting of by George Crook

  later life of

  Little Bighorn and

  overview of

  Slim Buttes and

  surrender of

  slavery

  Andrew Jackson and

  Andrew Johnson and

  Apache and

  California and

  Cherokee and

  Civil War and

  Cochise and

  Comanche and

  Creek and

  Fort Mims and

  Frederick Grant and

  Hernando de Soto and

  Ulysses S. Grant and

  Slim Buttes, Dakota Territory

  Smith, Algernon

  Smith, George

  Smith, James Webster

  Sooners

  Soule, Silas

  Spangler, John

  Spanish, Chokonen tribe and

  Spotted Tail (Sioux leader)

  stagecoach

  Stephenson, James

  Stillman’s Run

  St. Louis Democrat

  stockades

  Stone, John Finkle

  Stuart, J. E. B.

  Sturgis, Samuel

  Suicide Boys (Cheyenne and Sioux warriors)

  Sullivan, John L.

  Sutherland, Bill

  Tallushatchee, Battle of

  Tatanka Iyotake. See Sitting Bull

  Taylor, Zachary

  Taysha

  Taza (Chiricahua Apache chief)

  Tecumseh (Shawnee chief)

  telegraphs

  Telles, Felix. See also Mickey Free

  Terry, Alfred

  Texas

  Adobe Walls

  Apache and

  Comanche and

  Corpus Christi

  Fort Parker attack and

  Pease River

  Republic of

  Sam Grant and

  Texas Rangers

  Thames, Battle of the

  Thieves Road

  Thoreau, Henry David

  Tohopeka. See Horseshoe Bend, Battle of

  Tom (slave)

  Topsannah (Comanche)

  Trail of Tears

  transcontinental railroad

  Apache Pass and

  impacts of

  Northern Pacific

  protection of

  Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868)

  Black Hills and

  overview of

  Red Cloud and

  Sioux reservation and

  Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

  Treaty of Moultrie Creek

  Treaty of New Echota

  Truman, Harry

  Turley, James

  Turrill, Henry Stuart

  Twain, Mark

  Unceded Territories

  Union Pacific Railroad

  U.S. House of Representatives

  U.S. Senate

  U.S. Supreme Court

  Upper Creek people. See Red Sticks

  Valencia, Leopoldo

  Valverde, Battle of

  Van Buren, Martin

  Waglula (Sioux chief)

  Wakan Tanka

  Wallace, James

  Wallowa Valley

  war bonds

  Ward, John

  War of 1812

  Washington, George

  Washita River, Oklahoma

 

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