The Betrayal of Crazy Horse

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2022
  • The Army might have killed Crazy Horse, but it was his former friends and jealous rivals, such as Little Big Man, Red Cloud, and Spotted Tail, that offered him up.
    The betrayal of Crazy Horse is a story with twists and turns that should bring us to recall that, "truth is stranger than fiction."
    For the hacker copyright claim, here are my proofs of purchase.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 128

  • @manofpeace2953
    @manofpeace2953 Рік тому +61

    It’s a shame that so many of the bravest figures in history, have died at the hands of cowards.

    • @mikerelva6915
      @mikerelva6915 3 місяці тому

      History is what is written by the friends of winners. As Norm McDonald would say "isn't it weird the good guys have won every single war?". Take everything with a grain of salt, we will really never know what happened and who was the hero or coward. Hundreds of true heroes have been painted as cowards and countless evil men painted as the good guys.

    • @user-me8qj6zk8n
      @user-me8qj6zk8n 2 місяці тому +2

      You stand CORRECTED!!.. far from cowardice.. accurately speaking.. "IGNORANCE "..is a plague.. since the beginning...

  • @brianwhite8593
    @brianwhite8593 Рік тому +18

    That must of been something to know since he was a teenager that eventually his own people would betray him but still did his best for them until the end 😢

  • @wamblinunpa2eagles250
    @wamblinunpa2eagles250 Рік тому +8

    The Journey continues, Crazy Horse's people lives on...Hoka Hey... Lakota 23..

    • @wiseguysoutdoors2954
      @wiseguysoutdoors2954 Рік тому

      My great grandmother was a child survivor of wounded knee. She was found in the barn of the German immigrant family Gosser, in Northern Nebraska, just across the South Dakota line. She was fair haired and light skinned like many Oglala Lakota, including Crazy Horse. They informally adopted her, rather than turning her over to the Calvary, whom they thought would kill her.

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 Рік тому +18

    The death of Crazy Horse was a truly tragic end to the life of a brave warrior and shrewd leader. I visited the site of Crazy Horse's killing at Camp Robinson, now Fort Robinson State Park, in the northwestern corner of Nebraska on four occasions as a child and a young adult and have many fond memories of the park as it is in modern times.

  • @thebookofearl3303
    @thebookofearl3303 Рік тому +12

    Great! thank you! Tashunka Witco - Crazy Horse, is a real American hero and deserved much better than he got

    • @vasil12361
      @vasil12361 4 місяці тому

      Tashunke Witko. His Horse is Crazy.

  • @serenoart
    @serenoart Рік тому +14

    You are also a really good storyteller. The way that you introduced the story sitting by the fire with that music playing really draws a person into the tale.

  • @dnwlogisticsllc8609
    @dnwlogisticsllc8609 8 місяців тому +6

    I served twice in Iraq and observed a number of key leader engagements and you are absolutely right.

  • @travishendrix7026
    @travishendrix7026 Рік тому +8

    There always seems to be those remarkable men who loose their lives unjustly when humanity moves from one season to another.
    Crazy Horse paid this price in his time.
    Betrayal is as evil as it gets.

  • @jonathanhandsmusic
    @jonathanhandsmusic Рік тому +6

    Your military experience gives you a good sense of the difficulty people have when in conflict with different cultures. The Indian Wars are a textbook example of this. Excellent video!

  • @scinanisern9845
    @scinanisern9845 Рік тому +13

    When Crazy Horse was young he had a dream. He spoke to his father about the dream and was pronounced a Thunder Dreamer. He dreamed he was a warrior. He rode with other warriors and killed many but was never harmed. He grew famous for his bravery and his success in winning battle after battle and always being immune from harm. Then one day as he rode into battle indians rose from the ground, dragged him from his horse and dragged him into the ground.

    • @tashunkawitco8484
      @tashunkawitco8484 6 місяців тому

      Wasn't that called the red Reed Vision I believe his family was spiritual class why car version of priest or I prefer the term holy man but he became a shirt wearer which was a great honor amongst Warriors I believe there were only five at one time and his family were traditionally not from the warrior class but I think you're referring to the red Reed Vision. He has been my hero since childhood a great warrior very very spiritual man I do not know if it's true but I have heard that he was very much in love with red Cloud's daughter butt red cloud has given her to another man to marry set alarm for talk that he loved her since childhood my son lives in South Dakota now and we went up there last year during the winter you can almost see the Dakota on horses on those Rolling Hills and it was so cold with that wind blowing it really gives you a great respect for how tough they were and their amazing ability to survive and that kind of an environment and those kinds of elements because it was definitely much colder back then they were truly a great race of people and they still are I wish that they would release Leonard Peltier from prison he has been in there very long time and I think the federal government just use them to make an example out of him the man should be released he has been in prison far too long

    • @jwdundon
      @jwdundon 2 місяці тому

      That was some "good shit" he was smoking.

    • @marthadgreen8216
      @marthadgreen8216 Місяць тому

      Peltier is not Sioux he just came up to stir trouble. Hes guilty. x​@@tashunkawitco8484

  • @JackDiamond21
    @JackDiamond21 Рік тому +9

    I'm a Dakota-Sioux and the oral history is that, Red Cloud didn't want Crazy Horse to have any influence. So he Crazy Horse taken care of, they also have personal beef between them. A relative of Red Cloud, called No Water shot Crazy Horse over a woman back in the day. And Red Cloud has harboured a dislike of Crazy Horse ever since.

    • @wiseguysoutdoors2954
      @wiseguysoutdoors2954 Рік тому +2

      Red Cloud was a once great man, who, later in life, disgraced himself to all Lakota people!!

    • @tashunkawitco8484
      @tashunkawitco8484 6 місяців тому

      Crazy horse has been a hero of mine since childhood I have also heard that he loved red Cloud's daughter very much since childhood I've always wondered if that was true and I've heard that he stayed out kind of by himself a lot that he was a very spiritual man he came in when his people needed him almost like spiritually he could sense when they needed him. I'm glad there's a memorial for him at first I thought they were carving up the Black Hills to do it and that would be a great disrespect to the Dakota people since the Black Hills are so sacred to them I am told that is they came up from out of the Earth. You come from a very proud noble people

    • @JackDiamond21
      @JackDiamond21 6 місяців тому

      @@tashunkawitco8484 read the books, The journey of Crazy Horse: A Lakota History by Joseph Marshall III.
      And, Crazy Horse: The Strange Man of the Oglalas by Mari Sandoz.
      The book by Joseph Marshall III he talks to people who saw Crazy Horse when he was alive. So it's interviews by people who lived and fought with him. I'd recommend that book above all others cause it's stories from the Lakota who lived with and saw Crazy Horse when he was alive.

  • @jesterLxxix
    @jesterLxxix 3 місяці тому +2

    As a oglala lakota growing up on the pine ridge rez, we were told stories of sitting bull, red cloud, and others. But to me, Crazy Horse always stood out from the others. He's highly respected and cherished among our people. All lakota boys wanted to be a warrior like crazy horse growing up.

  • @serenoart
    @serenoart Рік тому +6

    Your remarks around the Mark Twain quote resonated with other stories I have heard from Cultural Officers and interpreters stationed overseas in the “war on terror”. Thank you for your perspective, because it has the ring of truth.

    • @user-xy9ib7iy7k
      @user-xy9ib7iy7k 11 місяців тому

      Unfortunately that "ring of truth" often becomes the "ring of fire" for the one speaking. But, hell with it. Never did like the cold.🤣
      👽👻🦂😇

  • @alwaysfourfun1671
    @alwaysfourfun1671 Рік тому +9

    I forgot to thank you for your nice documentation. I had once read the account of dr. McGillyguddy on the death of Crazy Horse. You have added more detail, especially about the confusion with the people early 1877 and the many sentiments that ran rampant. The connection to the next 1877 military campaign against the Ni Mii Puu, Nez Perce, who were expelled from their lands, as they were hunted by the USA army, with the aid of native scouts of other tribes. Many conquered natives were looking for a job in the army as an adventurous alternative to boring reservation life. I have great respect for the present-day people in their success to maintain their cultural identity in spite of all the hardships imposed by their oppressors.

  • @wes326
    @wes326 10 місяців тому +4

    Hello from Omaha. Great presentation. It's hard to believe that Crazy Horse and others became army scouts after participating at the LBH battle. Thanks for sharing.

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  6 місяців тому +1

      Indeed. It is one of those things that make history so damn interesting and truly stranger than fiction.

  • @Jay_Hall
    @Jay_Hall Рік тому +17

    It is all so very sad, my heart bleeds for them. I have walked the Dull knife battle site on the Red Fork many times, mostly all alone,,the Spirits are heavy there, but it is a beautiful place, but much death and suffering. :(

    • @nialloneill5097
      @nialloneill5097 Рік тому

      You are probably sad, for you was probably there. A sad time, not least as it followed a string of diverse, evil attacks amidst the great invasion by the white man on the native red populus. This sadness is deepened by the need to worship the Almighty, something many plains tribes had managed to do, whilst the white men came out of greed, incited by Satan, Thus, there were many mature spirits who incarnated within the tribes, as they had been living under the guise and protection of the Great Spirit, the Will of God. These mature human spirits were being polished in their development, ready for the last acts of the Great Judgement, which constitute the terrifying events of the Apocalypse, when the light souls will be separated from the majority of the dark souls. This deepens the grief and sadness of the events of this time, which akin to the times of Tecumseh, were full of bitter experiences for the red man, but this suffering proffers great rewards from a spiritual perspective within the Wheel of Life, which includes reincarnation in new lives. Thus, people are led along through a series of lives, and events, to prepare them in their development, and oft we find ourselves fighting alongside friends of old, and against enemies of old too. This story and these times fill me with great sadness, for I was there, as Crazy Horse and before that as Tecumseh, fighting for the retention of the 'old ways', which served the Great Mystery and Great Spirit. After dying, I was fortunate to reincarnate shortly afterwards into a life of service for the Great, or Holy, Spirit, Who had traversed many spiritual planes to come to the earth at the request of Jesus, for He is at the same time, the Son of Man! He was born unto the German lands in the year of the Little Big Horn battle, and shortly after I joined Him, but His beneficent work for mankind was destroyed by the Nazis, again tools of the darkness, which wishes to destroy as many of mankind as is inhumanely possible. This is all part of the greater war between light and darkness. Men are meant to mature and return to their one true home, a place called Paradise, in the blessed fields of the eternal planes, not so high up compared to other luminous planes, but nevertheless unusually beautiful when compared to the earth, which pales in comparison in relation to its beauty Thus, eternal life is on offer, but Satan and his vassels which to destroy men, so now only around 20% can make it through the separation of mankind, which will be done from 2028 as we enter the Apocalypse, a time of intense karmic reaapings, for so as a man sows, so must he reap.

    • @nialloneill5097
      @nialloneill5097 Рік тому

      And most men have sown much evil, hence the forthcoming tragedies, which I have seen in visions for a long time, including both this life, and that of Crazy Horse! Most men will die, although some may return later, when the earth has been cleansed by the nature spirits after the end of the Apocalypse. These nature spirits rebelled against the white men of the time during the early 1800's, and the New Madrid earthquake describes some of these strange happenings, including the appearance of a Comet. A comet is driving the Judgement, as it contains power from high up, and follows the course prescribed by the Great Spirit, and its effects are being seen now, but they will increase from 2028, when the US will be nuked. Then within 5 years, WW3 commences. I predicted the Ukraine war well beforehand, through guidance, so these dates will likely be correct. N Korea are itching to destroy the US, and I sense that they will initiate these dark times, which have been prophesied amongst various culture, repeatedly, for over 2000 years. Men must make good what they lack spiritually, and atone for their past mistakes, by living a simple life, which is guided by the Great Spirit. The earth will one day be covered in verdant, enchanting forests again, full of nature spirits, who will help men, as they did long ago, to show them how to live aright.. The Star (Comet) will materialise eventually, and after some time encircling the earth, it will stop over a Holy Mountain, which is where I worked alongside the Great Spirit, in the 1900's. I return there in a few years, to complete something that should and could have ended, if men had supported the Great Spirit, when He was here. Now the Judgement will be fat worse, and more terrifying, sadly. Hell on earth!!!

  • @hesavedawretchlikeme6902
    @hesavedawretchlikeme6902 Рік тому +6

    Thank you for doing this video about the natives of these tribes. Crazy Horse and the other tribes would have been better had they continued on to Canada. Our government "never" kept their word to the Indian people. And the betrayals increased among them, as the pressures to control placed upon the military, the intrigue of enemies, the movements west of the pioneers, gold in South Dakota, and eventual murder of Crazy Horse.

  • @walterbrown9651
    @walterbrown9651 Рік тому +5

    I really enjoy and appreciate your work DataMeister! Thanks again!

  • @creightonleerose582
    @creightonleerose582 4 місяці тому +2

    ~Thanks for the Great presentation of Tasunke Witko & his ultimate end....
    I went to that very site in front of the guardhouse @ Ft. Robinson when I was 9 or 10 years old in 1984. Spooky experience for me. (My fam originally from St. Paul Nebraska, but eventually settled up here in western WA state) I swear, we'd done ALL the late 1800's U.S Cavalry forts in the Neb/S.Dakota/Wyoming areas that summer! of '84. Got to be a bit repetitive, as they all tend to look the same as to layout....;)
    -Then The Battle Of The Greasy Grass/Bighorn site in MT on the trip home which for me was QUITE the experience @ that young age!

  • @sharonharper5833
    @sharonharper5833 Рік тому +3

    so many lives, both humans and animals were lost...feel really bad for the wars that happened

  • @gator83261
    @gator83261 Рік тому +5

    Good video. Cool to see the Old Ironsides patch. I was in 1st AD back in 1984-87, as a lieutenant in 2-59 Air Defense Artillery. Very good memories and friends.

    • @francisebbecke2727
      @francisebbecke2727 Рік тому

      To a fellow Air Defender, my sympathies. "Air Defense eats its young."

  • @serenoart
    @serenoart Рік тому +3

    Your videos are awesome and well researched. Thank you!

  • @jerryjones188
    @jerryjones188 Рік тому +6

    Enjoyed the history. Presentation and details were very thorough. I look forward to watching and learning more. Thank you for your service to the USA. My two oldest sons were over there too, with USMC.

  • @MJ-we9vu
    @MJ-we9vu Рік тому +7

    I visited Camp Robinson and it seems so desolate. It's hard to imagine it as it was in the 1870s with hundreds of Indians and troops going about their business. And the replica buildings seem so small when compared to newer structures. If you're more than 6 feet tall you'd have to duck to enter any door.

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 Рік тому +3

      I didn't notice the low doorways the first three times I visited the state park that now occupies the site of Camp Robinson (now called Fort Robinson). Granted, I was still a child on those occasions. On my most recent visit, I had reached my adult height of 6'5, so I had to be careful going through doors! The strangest thing is that there is another fort from the same era that is located at the opposite end of the state of Nebraska (Fort Omaha) that has also been preserved, though as a community college campus rather than as a state park. If it hadn't been much greener than Fort Robinson, I'd have sworn it was the same place based on the construction and layout of the buildings.

  • @Leman.Russ.6thLegion
    @Leman.Russ.6thLegion Рік тому +3

    He was also one of the few natives that never mutilated the men he killed in battle.

    • @vasil12361
      @vasil12361 4 місяці тому

      That was the job of the women.

  • @tylermease8465
    @tylermease8465 Рік тому +1

    ABSOLUTELY AMAZING 🙌💙⚡

  • @michaelthomson8065
    @michaelthomson8065 Рік тому +3

    A great presentation. Thoroughly enjoyed it.

    • @michaelthomson8065
      @michaelthomson8065 Рік тому +1

      Crazy Horse was a thorn in the side of both the US govt.,and cheifs like Red Cloud and Spotted Tail

  • @SiobhanFallon7
    @SiobhanFallon7 Рік тому +3

    This is another great video! Thank you, Corey! (But I do miss your voice through out).

  • @silvermarlin3774
    @silvermarlin3774 Рік тому +4

    Great video! Greetings from Germany.

  • @wallacedarbous5493
    @wallacedarbous5493 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for a great video and for your service, I'm going to recommend a book .neither wolf nor dog.

  • @fastsetinthewest
    @fastsetinthewest Рік тому +1

    NEW SUBSCRIBER. From near Fort Worth, Texas. Eaglegards...

  • @dansharp8042
    @dansharp8042 3 місяці тому

    A story well done!!

  • @skyeparry5252
    @skyeparry5252 Рік тому +1

    now i understand how the concept of suspenseful movies started

  • @DavidIreland-um8pg
    @DavidIreland-um8pg 8 місяців тому +1

    I was in the U.S. Navy. And I also lived in the Black hills as a child and there is a beautiful place Ive been alot of places almost like dancing in those dimensional my dog Stoneman. Many things go inside with this. It Resonates

  • @donbrown2391
    @donbrown2391 Рік тому +2

    Daniele Bolelli's History On Fire podcast has a great 4 part series on the life of Crazy Horse and another on the Battle for the Black Hills. This vid was a nice synapses...

  • @angelopecora1
    @angelopecora1 Рік тому +4

    Well done , disturbing as it is

  • @justinpetitt588
    @justinpetitt588 Рік тому

    this one is really fascinating

  • @barbaraanneneale3674
    @barbaraanneneale3674 7 місяців тому

    This is an extremely tragic story well told.

  • @nigeldeforrest-pearce8084
    @nigeldeforrest-pearce8084 Рік тому +2

    As Always, Brilliant. Save some money and do the narration Yourself, as You Are Just Fine!!!

  • @davidwarren719
    @davidwarren719 Рік тому +1

    I’ve been meaning to give High West a try

  • @FaithiinJesus
    @FaithiinJesus Рік тому +2

    I grew up in this area, Western Nebraska Eastern Wyoming my parents were farmers and we used to find old Indian camps sites with many arrow heads and other remnants of past Indian camps. I also went to school and employed many modern day Indians on the farm. I also remember playing Oelrichs, South Dakota in JR High football and getting our ass kicked.

    • @Jay_Hall
      @Jay_Hall 8 місяців тому +1

      Cry,,so true! :)

  • @rodgerhart5094
    @rodgerhart5094 Рік тому +1

    cant believe they didnt hesitate for even a second before taking anyones life

  • @jamiescherer4018
    @jamiescherer4018 Рік тому +1

    because of all this even the common man had to suffer so much

  • @joan8178
    @joan8178 14 днів тому

    As an avid student of Native American history it is appalling to keep reading about the treachery & lies of the govt & military in dealing with the tribal peoples.

  • @nancymartinez2435
    @nancymartinez2435 Рік тому

    the informationare actually very critical

  • @keithfaulk1354
    @keithfaulk1354 11 місяців тому +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @sonjastaes772
    @sonjastaes772 Рік тому

    thank you

  • @GaryNelson-ct5fe
    @GaryNelson-ct5fe 8 місяців тому +1

    No, it was on the morning of February 26, 1776 during the Revolutionary War, before the USA was formed.

  • @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257
    @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257 Рік тому +1

    FOR ADULT It was GREAT that CH tried to defuse his murder or whatever by blaming none. Yes DM I just wonder how many were in Guardhouse and why there and if they allowed autopsy of C. Horse or other Warrior died.

  • @Rauly84
    @Rauly84 7 місяців тому

    The only ones that never surrender : SEMINOLE

  • @bdinaz
    @bdinaz 6 місяців тому +1

    UND Poloshirt? Fantastic.

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  6 місяців тому

      Damn Right!

    • @bdinaz
      @bdinaz 6 місяців тому +1

      @@MilitaryHistory317 Hey, UND Class of '85. Minor in History.
      Got both home and away Hockey Jerseys with the Bennet Brienne logo.

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  6 місяців тому

      Class of '88, Aviation. @@bdinaz

  • @leoburns7197
    @leoburns7197 Рік тому

    they came up up really powerful terms

  • @frankromero4048
    @frankromero4048 2 місяці тому

    Correct me if I'm wrong... CrayHorse was not a Chief... And never wore those big head dresses...
    Only wore one feather pointing down... So that it would'nt interfear with his Bow &
    Arrows...He was more like a Sargent at Arms...

  • @daviddowning2152
    @daviddowning2152 6 місяців тому

    Crazy horse... we hear what you say...

  • @tompelham7035
    @tompelham7035 8 місяців тому

    Tragedy upon Tragedy:(

  • @clintperry799
    @clintperry799 Рік тому

    I'm disabled all my life , but I would have joined ! 🇺🇲

  • @dragonsguardianofcrystalhearts

    Mistranslation starting wars.. sounds familiar.

  • @sonjastaes772
    @sonjastaes772 Рік тому

    so sad story

  • @tabletsam5624
    @tabletsam5624 Місяць тому

    Crazy horse was the greatest of the great. Murderded from men they never been able to defeat him on the battlefield.

  • @wait4dl
    @wait4dl 10 місяців тому +1

    what hy mnt is on the table .?

  • @LtBRS
    @LtBRS Рік тому

    So many manipulative bad-actors.

  • @Skynet_01
    @Skynet_01 Рік тому +2

    Whoa whoa whoa... a Blackhawks jacket? You local to Chicago?

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  Рік тому +2

      Justin, that is actually an old-time North Dakota Fighting Sioux logo. I have spent many days at Fort Sheridan! I am a fan of the Blackhawks!!!!

    • @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257
      @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257 Рік тому +1

      Go Bobby Hull eh in God we pray Bl Trinity Jesus on Ss Isaac and John SJ Martyrs day in NY where Iroquois rules E. 🇺🇸 USA

  • @donaldmurphy3148
    @donaldmurphy3148 16 днів тому

    Actually NOTHING has changed in all this time.
    Men of Honor betrayed. Everyone seeking their own personal gain.
    Behind the scenes.

  • @GaryAshleycrashsmashley
    @GaryAshleycrashsmashley Рік тому +2

    I'm not sure how being with Nellie would make him more agreeable to whites Crazy Horse was just as white as he was. Keep in mind they are all related to each other Red Clouds mother and my fourth great grandmother Winona, Crazy Horse grandmother Iron Cane and Smoke were full siblings and of mix ancestry. White Swan is a Half sibling but I'm not sure how yet. Crazy Horse side with his mother's side that was watȟógla. Smoke who raised Red Cloud after his mother was killed at Fort Wilkie in North Dakota was a Wazaza.

  • @kristincline2019
    @kristincline2019 Рік тому

    the routes look easy in the map but actually are the worst

  • @elizabethglover1441
    @elizabethglover1441 Рік тому

    this sometimes seems like a fiction story

  • @andrzejkomorowski6588
    @andrzejkomorowski6588 Рік тому

    To bylo wspaniale zwyciestwo Siedzacego Byka i Szalonego Konia i wszystkich indian nad ta biala cholota

  • @russellbrewer6862
    @russellbrewer6862 Рік тому +3

    Does anyone know where he was taken after death?

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  Рік тому +5

      That is still a mystery. His father buried him where no one would be able to find him.

    • @russellbrewer6862
      @russellbrewer6862 Рік тому

      @@MilitaryHistory317 Do you suppose any relatives today are aware, but aren't talking?

    • @JackDiamond21
      @JackDiamond21 Рік тому +1

      ​@@russellbrewer6862 his father put his body on a scaffold near Camp Sheridan, then moved it when they moved the spotted tail agency. The Black Hills, Rosebud Rez, Porcupine Butte and Wounded Knee Creek are the possible locations for his final resting place. Porcupine Butte on Pine Ridge is the most concrete evidence there is. If his body isn't in Pine Ridge somewhere then he is lost to time. He could be buried anywhere from Camp Sheridan all the way back to Pine Ridge. Wounded Knee Creek and Porcupine Butte are both in Pine Ridge, so again if he isn't in Pine Ridge somewhere then he is lost to time. I say he is buried around the Porcupine Butte area. Even we don't really know, so the reality is that it's anyone's guess where Crazy Horse is. Just as mysterious as finding the great khan, Chinngis Khaan.

    • @JackDiamond21
      @JackDiamond21 Рік тому

      ​@@MilitaryHistory317 exactly only his dad truly knows

    • @floydsadler3559
      @floydsadler3559 7 місяців тому

      I know Crazy Horse’s descendants, and they claim to know his gravesite to this day.

  • @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257
    @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257 Рік тому +1

    Yes but I thought no pics of Crazy Horse as he like PNG Nationals say it affects one's Spirit. So is Crazy Horse identifiable. God Bl Trinity bless US and all eh in Jesus we trust Mary's SsJos pax et ius plus

  • @robcharlesbrownspeechleyan257

    Is he ingroup pics maybe DataM in JesuMaryJos Ss pray like St Paul asked Ephesians who passes it in Heaven to Jesus

  • @donaldmurphy3148
    @donaldmurphy3148 Рік тому +1

    I would rather have,"Crazy Horse"as President than the current JOKE.

  • @eileenweeks1815
    @eileenweeks1815 Рік тому

    OMG! Are you kidding me? What's with the cigar and liquor? You John Wayne?

    • @DanaNordberg
      @DanaNordberg Рік тому

      I agree with you!

    • @serenoart
      @serenoart Рік тому +2

      That’s what you chose to focus on in this video? Good grief.

    • @Rameus
      @Rameus Рік тому

      Who gives a shit.

  • @Horsecatcher
    @Horsecatcher Місяць тому

    This reanimated pictures of our grandfather's remains and memories is not right. We respect our dead we do not bring back to life our memories of them. It is against our beliefs to molest our ancestors. Whoever did this either wasn't thinking or they weren't ndn.

  • @dominicconnor3437
    @dominicconnor3437 Рік тому +2

    The native people's betrayal of each other is the only way that the Europeans could actually defeat the natives. If the Native Americans had joined together the continent would still be in their hands. Edit its better he died while he still had memories of freedom. He never gave up his freedom.

  • @mitchwood6609
    @mitchwood6609 Рік тому

    who does your voice overs?

  • @mitchwood6609
    @mitchwood6609 Рік тому

    is crazy horse pictured at 6:43??????

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317  Рік тому

      Sadly, there are no confirmed photos of Crazy Horse. There is one floating out there that some claim was him, but serious scholarship dismisses that.

    • @DanaNordberg
      @DanaNordberg Рік тому

      There was never any picture of crazy horse ever .

    • @JackDiamond21
      @JackDiamond21 Рік тому

      ​@@MilitaryHistory317 that's his cousin who is said to look like him, I think the name was little hawk. Only real thing we got is a sketch of him, of which one of his relatives says is accurate. Someone did a video on that sketch and brought it to life. It looked creepy, knowing that I could be looking at what he physically looked like.

  • @leilalowe8011
    @leilalowe8011 Рік тому

    those time were so bad tbh