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Sand Creek Massacre (1864)

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  • Wild Cat Woman (b. - 1864)
    Tangle Hair was the father of both Spotted Tail and a daughter (don't know her name) who married Spotted Crow (Cheyenne) and produced Whirlwind Soldier. I have some notes which I am stil...
  • Spotted Crow (1814 - 1864)
    According to Father Powell, Spotted Crow was born in 1814. In 1854, when he was only 40 years old, he was chosen as one of the younger Southern Cheyennes to sit in the Council of the 44. His offic...
  • Black Kettle, Chief of the Southern Cheyenne (c.1803 - 1868)
    Black Kettle (Cheyenne, Moke-tav-a-to) (born ca. 1803, killed November 27, 1868) was a leader of the Southern Cheyenne after 1854, who led efforts to resist American settlement from Kansas and Colorado...
  • Brig. General John Chivington (USA) (1821 - 1894)
    Milton Chivington (January 27, 1821 – October 4, 1894) was a 19th century United States Army officer noted for his role in the New Mexico Campaign of the American Civil War and in the Colorado War. He ...

The Sand Creek massacre (also known as the Chivington massacre, the Battle of Sand Creek or the massacre of Cheyenne Indians) was an atrocity in the American Indian Wars that occurred on November 29, 1864, when a 700-man force of Colorado Territory militia attacked and destroyed a peaceful village of Cheyenne and Arapaho in southeastern Colorado Territory,[3] killing and mutilating an estimated 70–163 Indians, about two-thirds of whom were women and children. The location has been designated the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site and is administered by the National Park Service.

Source: Sand Creek massacre at Wikpedia.