Letters from an American - December 28, 2024
Episode Date: December 29, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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December 28th, 2024. On the clear cold morning of December 29th, 1890, on the Pine Ridge
reservation in South Dakota, three US soldiers tried to wrench a valuable Winchester away
from a young Lakota man. He refused to give up his hunting weapon.
It was the only thing standing
between his family and starvation.
And he had no faith it would be returned to him
as the officer promised.
He had watched as soldiers had marked
other confiscated valuable weapons for themselves.
As the men struggled, the gun fired into the sky.
Before the echoes died, troops fired a volley
that brought down half of the Lakota men and boys
the soldiers had captured the night before,
as well as a number of soldiers surrounding the Lakotas.
The uninjured Lakota men attacked the soldiers
with knives, guns they snatched from wounded soldiers,
and their fists.
As the men fought hand to hand,
the Lakota women who had been hitching their horses
to wagons for the day's travel,
tried to flee along the nearby road
or up a dry ravine behind the camp.
Stationed on a slight rise above the camp,
soldiers turned rapid fire mountain guns on them.
Then over the next two hours, troops on horseback
hunted down and slaughtered all the Lakotas they could find,
about 250 men, women, and children.
15 years ago, I wrote a book about the Wounded Knee Massacre,
and what I learned still keeps me up at night.
But it is not December 29th that haunts me.
What haunts me is the night of December 28th.
On December 28th, there was still time to avert the massacre.
In the early afternoon, the Lakota leader, Satanka,
had urged his people to surrender to the soldiers looking for them.
Satanka was desperately ill with pneumonia, and the people in his band were hungry, underdressed,
and exhausted.
They were making their way south, across South Dakota, from their own reservation in the
northern part of the state to the Pine Ridge Reservation.
There they planned to take shelter with another famous Lakota chief, Red Cloud.
His people had done as Sitanka asked, and the soldiers escorted the Lakotas to a camp
on South Dakota's Wounded Knee Creek, inside the boundaries of the Pine Ridge Reservation.
For the soldiers, the surrender of Sitanka's band marked the end of what they called the
Ghost Dance Uprising.
It had been a tense month. Troops had pushed into the South Dakota reservations in November,
prompting a band of terrified men who had embraced the Ghost Dance religion to gather
their wives and children and ride out to the Badlands. But at long last,
army officers and negotiators had convinced
those ghost dancers to go back to Pine Ridge and turn themselves in to
authorities before winter hit in earnest. Sitanka's people were not part of the
Badlands group and for the most part were not ghost dancers. They had fled
from their own northern reservation two weeks before when they learned that officers
had murdered the great leader Sitting Bull in his own home.
Army officers were anxious to find
and corral Sitanka's missing Lakotas
before they carried the news that Sitting Bull
had been killed to those who had taken refuge
in the Badlands.
Army leaders were certain the information
would spook the ghost dancers and send them flying back to the Badlands. Army leaders were certain the information would spook the Ghost
Dancers and send them flying back to the Badlands. They were determined to make
sure the two bands did not meet. But South Dakota is a big state and it was
not until late in the afternoon of December 28th that the soldiers finally
made contact with Sitanka's band. The encounter didn't go quite as the officers planned.
A group of soldiers were watering their horses in a stream
when some of the traveling Lakotas surprised them.
The Lakotas let the soldiers go
and the men promptly reported to their officers
who marched on the Lakotas as if they were going to war.
Sotanka, who had always gotten along well
with army officers,
assured the commander that the band was on its way to Pine Ridge and asked his
men to surrender unconditionally. They did. By this time Sotanka was so ill he
couldn't sit up and his nose was dripping blood. Soldiers lifted him into
an army ambulance, an old wagon, for the trip to the wounded knee camp.
His rag-tag band followed behind.
Once there, the soldiers gave the Lakotas an evening ration and lent army tents to those who wanted them.
Then the soldiers settled into guarding the camp.
And the soldiers celebrated, for they saw themselves as heroes of a great war, and it had been bloodless.
And now, with the Lakota's surrender, they would be demobilized back to their home bases before the South Dakota winter closed in.
As they celebrated, more and more troops poured in.
It had been a long hunt across South Dakota for Satanka and his band, and officers were determined the group would not escape them again.
In came the 7th Cavalry, whose men had not forgotten that their former leader George
Armstrong Custer had been killed by a band of Lakota in 1876.
In came three mountain guns, which the soldiers trained on the Indian encampment from a slight
rise above the camp. For their part the Lakotas were frightened. If their surrender was
welcome and they were going to go with the soldiers to Red Cloud at Pine Ridge
as they had planned all along, why were there so many soldiers with so many
guns? On this day and hour in 1890, in the cold and dark of a South Dakota December night,
there were soldiers drinking, singing, and visiting with each other,
and anxious Lakotas either talking to each other in low voices or trying to sleep.
No one knew what the next day would bring, but no one expected what was going to happen.
One of the curses of history is that we cannot go back and change the course leading to disasters,
no matter how much we might wish to.
The past has its own terrible inevitability.
But it is never too late to change the future.
You know, every year on this date, I post the story of the Wounded Knee Massacre.
My book about that event was so hard to write, I had to take a long break in the middle of
it.
When you write a book, you get to know your characters as if they were family.
Sometimes you love them and sometimes you don't, but they become a part of you.
As the massacre drew inexorably closer, I wrote about the scenery, plant life, and animals
of the plains as a distraction from what I knew was coming.
But it came anyway.
Even after all these years, I still have a hard time on the date of the massacre.
In an interview this year, someone asked me why I write as if I am running out of time,
and it hit me that I write these letters because no matter how hard I tried, I could not stop the Wounded Knee Massacre.
But maybe I can help to stop the next one.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.