Sitting Bull needed a place to sleep. Charles Wilkins gave him the use of a jailhouse bunk. Sitting Bull gave him drawings that later led to sleuthing to find the artist.
On his first trip east of Dakota in March 1884, Sitting Bull rode an elevator in a St. Paul wholesale grocery store — selling autographs on the street for $1.50 a pop to onlookers who came to gawk at ...
The Lakota leader Sitting Bull defeated George Custer’s cavalry, but a sustained conflict with American forces proved ruinous ...
Sitting Bull has 2 graves. Will DNA from a lock of hair tell which holds his bones? DNA from a lock of hair taken from Sitting Bull's body before burial in 1890 has confirmed Ernie LaPointe is the ...
The brand new history documentary Sitting Bull premieres on the History Channel Tuesday, May 27 at 9/8c. The first part of the documentary premieres May 27 and the second part will follow Wednesday, ...
A lock of hair from legendary Lakota chief Sitting Bull's head had been stored for over a century in Washington's Smithsonian Institution at room temperature in a glass box. Now, Sitting Bull's lock ...
The great-grandson of famed Lakota Sioux Chief Sitting Bull has been confirmed as his closest living descendant by scientists, who used a new technique in which ancient DNA fragments were extracted ...
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