On September 5, 1877, Crazy Horse, an Oglala Sioux Indian chief who resisted removal efforts, was killed at Fort Robinson by a U.S. soldier. This Date in Native History: On September 5, 1877, Crazy ...
History Detectives goes in search of a Native American legend. More than a hundred and twenty five years after his death, the name Crazy Horse still echoes in the black hills of South Dakota.
This Date in Native History: On January 8, 1877, Crazy Horse fought his final battle against the United States Army before agreeing to come into Fort Robinson, Nebraska in May that same year. The ...
In South Dakota’s Black Hills, there is a humongous mountain carving in progress called the ‘Crazy Horse Memorial’. Envisioned by Polish American sculptor Korczak Ziółkowski back in the 1940s, when ...
In South Dakota, 70 years have passed since one man - and later his family - began to sculpt Crazy Horse, a famous Native American figure, into a granite mountain. In September, the New Yorker ...
Oglala Lakota warrior Crazy Horse and his men—outnumbered, low on ammunition and forced to use outdated weapons to defend ...
but one local woman took home a piece of Adelaide's history. The original sign for an iconic Adelaide city strip club has been bought by a local woman for an eye-watering amount. The original sign for ...
The history of Wounded Knee would spur American ... The statue, envisioned as a freestanding sculpture of the great Sioux chief Crazy Horse, will be much larger than any of the Rushmore figures.