"I am looking to the North for my life"--Sitting Bull, 1876-1881 /
What happened to the Sioux after the Little Bighorn. Illustrates how two countries, the United States and Canada, struggled to control their potentially explosive common border.
Основен автор: | Manzione, Joseph, 1957- |
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Формат: | Електронна книга |
Език: | English |
Публикувано: |
Salt Lake City :
University of Utah Press,
℗♭1991.
|
Серия: |
University of Utah publications in the American West ;
v. 25. |
Предмети: | |
Онлайн достъп: |
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=12516 |
Подобни документи: |
Print version::
"I am looking to the North for my life"--Sitting Bull, 1876-1881. |
Съдържание:
- Peace is much more fatal to Indians than war : initial military operations in eastern Montana, 1876-1877
- In another world, white men, but different from any I ever saw before : the Sioux seek asylum in the northwest Territories, winter 1877
- A dangerous precedent : the Canadian Minister of the Interior visits Washington, D.C., summer 1877
- You belong on the other side, this side belongs to us : the Terry Commission meets with the exiled Sioux, autumn 1877
- These reports are wholly unfounded : rumors of invasion and war, winter and spring 1878
- When there are no more buffalo or game, I will send my children to hunt and live on prairie mice : the politics of hunger, 1878-1880
- The return of the Gall-Hearted Warriors : the Sioux surrender, 1880-1881.