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- CUSTER, CRAZY HORSE, SITTING BULL, and the LITTLE BIGHORN Ron Mccoy Oklahoma State University
- Deadwood, South Dakota CLE Excursion, July 17-20, 2020
- Sitting Bull's 1884 Visit to St. Paul
- CHAPTER 9 the Opening of the Missouri Plateau
- Native American Attitudes
- American Indian Education Reform Summit”: PABTCU Vision • Discussions on Moving to “Higher Education System” • PABTCU Begin Work on First Report/Recommendations
- The Sioux Land Commission of 1889: Prelude to Wounded Knee
- Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown Reading and Study
- The Black Hills Historian 2011 Newsletter of the Friends of Case Library
- SITTING BULL (1831–1890) Was the Greatest Chief of the Lakota Nation
- Self Study Workshop
- The Sitting Bull
- Chapter 4: the Military Seeks Control
- Review: Sitting Bull: Lakota Warrior and Defender of His People
- Sitting Bull
- A Trail of Tears
- Annotated Bibliography. Second Edition. National Council Of
- The War Club of Sitting Bull the Oglala
- Heroes of Native Resistance
- Pre-Tribal Colleges Pre-1950S 1950S 1776: 1950S: ◊ U.S
- Our Heroes Are Not Cowboys, Nor Did They Wear Cowboy Hats. Sitting Bull
- Misguided by Experience: a Defense of Custer's Actions at the Little Bighorn
- Native American Leaders Biographies
- Report of the Sitting Bull Indian Commission
- Native Americans
- Annie Oakley, Calamity Jane and the Myth of the West Amy Reece
- Native American Heritage Month Honor The
- Crazy Horse Crazy Horse (Ta-Sunko-Witko), a Chief of the Oglala Sioux, Was One of the Strongest Leaders of the Native American Resistance on the Great Plains
- The Sioux Agreement of 1889 and Its Aftermath
- Representation of the Battle of Little Bighorn in Four Major Films: “Little Big Man”, “They Died with Their Boots On”, “Sitting Bull” and “Chief Crazy Horse”
- Indian Patriots: a Study Through Portraiture
- Dakota Images: Valentine T. Mcgillycuddy
- Wunder Collection- Great Plains and Indian Bibliographies
- Sitting Bull and Geronimo: a Comparison of Their Im Litary and Religious Leadership Gary Joseph Younger Fort Hays State University
- Review of Mother Earth Spirituality: Native American Paths to Healing Ourselves and Our World
- Sitting Bull Collection
- 'Buffalo Bill' Cody, 1846-1917: He Represented the Spirit and Tradition of the American West
- “For My Women I See Nothing”: Native American Women and the Dawes Act of 1887
- Timeline Provides Federal Jurisdiction for Wounded Knee in Last Battle Crimes Committed by Or Against Between U.S
- Fort Robinson, Custer, and the Legacy of the Great Sioux War
- A Contested Future: Buffalo Bill's Wild West, Native American Performers, and the Military's Struggle for Control Over Indian Affairs 1868-1898
- Answers to Scout Sheet
- Bibliography
- Cochise ( Hardwood ) (Tribe : Chiricahua Apache ) 1815-1874
- Custer's Smile
- General George Armstrong Custer Sitting Bull
- Famous Native Americans
- South Dakota State Historical Society Markers
- Article Title: Chasing Sitting Bull & Crazy Horse: Two Fourteenth U S Infantry Diaries of the Great Sioux
- Custer and Sitting Bull a Theater Piece for Voice, Soundfile, and Electronic Keyboard
- By: Lindsey Johnston Sitting Bull Was One of the Best Indian Leaders in All of History
- Sitting Bull's Performance of Self in Buffalo Bill's Wild West
- Red Cloud and the Sioux Nation
- Speech Excerpts
- The Cowboy Legend : Owen Wister's Virginian and the Canadian
- Buffalo Bill's Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World
- United States Postage Stamps with Native American Subjects
- Wounded Knee 3/11/10 11:51 AM Page Iii
- Annie Oakley