1862 Minnesota Massacre

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  • Опубліковано 3 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @doorusthewalrus6903
    @doorusthewalrus6903  3 роки тому +116

    Now with twice the music at twice the volume!
    Hopefully, the volume is settled at a suitable cacophony. The editing is still a work in progress. Let me know your valid criticisms for improvement in the comments. Enjoy!

    • @truettjohnson7230
      @truettjohnson7230 2 роки тому +6

      It sounds like a Jackson,Andrew or Thomas J.,should have went through that Area,like they did down here,and they would have been sent on Vacation to (Indian territory)Oklahoma!!!

    • @SurferJoe1
      @SurferJoe1 2 роки тому +5

      Your use of sound is really effective and adds a lot of drama to an already thrilling story. Excellent work. Thanks for sharing this.

    • @NathanTarantlawriter
      @NathanTarantlawriter 2 роки тому +5

      I thought it fit well. Volume and choice of fx.

    • @bobbynoname2538
      @bobbynoname2538 2 роки тому +7

      Very glad that someone cares enough about their channel to correct un- satisfactory issues. Thumbs up!!!

    • @washingtondale
      @washingtondale 2 роки тому +5

      not a Feel good story but Your presentation is excellent.

  • @kathleenperry9877
    @kathleenperry9877 2 роки тому +481

    My great great grandmother Sarah Fadden was just a child when she was one of the 62 people led to safety by the Indian John Other Day. Her Father told Mr. Other Day that if they survived they would name their unborn son after him, which they did after safely arriving in North Dakota. My great great uncle was John Other Day Fadden. I could listen to these stories forever. Thank you.

    • @chasingdreamsov9190
      @chasingdreamsov9190 Рік тому +16

      My real name is John b brown Jr.. named after other day and same as earl persons

    • @kufarimahdi9636
      @kufarimahdi9636 Рік тому +5

      Mi name es John john after tallhorse

    • @PallideMeam
      @PallideMeam Рік тому +1

      🙏🏻❤️☝🏻

    • @trenthoward6800
      @trenthoward6800 Рік тому

      Yeah that's nice and all but it does nothing to offset how violent these redskinned savages are lmao.

    • @-AyeYallThereGoLaFlare-
      @-AyeYallThereGoLaFlare- Рік тому +6

      @@kufarimahdi9636 your name ain’t Kufari ?

  • @RK-xv9rp
    @RK-xv9rp 2 роки тому +282

    One of my great, great grandfathers was in Company B of the Fifth Minnesota. He was at Fort Ridgely for the whole duration of the battle. He survived some terrible battles in the south after leaving Minnesota. The siege at Vicksburg, the Battle of Nashville, etc. He returned to Minnesota after the war and passed away in 1913. His name, William H. H. Chase is on the monument erected at Ft. Ridgely. Thank you for this video.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +14

      What a life! That so cool to hear. Thank you for telling me.

    • @RK-xv9rp
      @RK-xv9rp 2 роки тому +6

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 You're Welcome!

    • @jamesbutler8959
      @jamesbutler8959 2 роки тому +10

      That's amazing. Those poor guys, talk about trauma and ptsd. So sad but damn if they weren't some badassses.🇺🇸

    • @bikeman1x11
      @bikeman1x11 2 роки тому +11

      @@jamesbutler8959 men werent snowflakes then

    • @timbeatty11
      @timbeatty11 2 роки тому +12

      My Great X3 Grandpa was in the minnesota 1st I think. Fort Snelling. His bunk still had his name on it in the fort on display. His name was John Reed.

  • @Deandak-nx5mu
    @Deandak-nx5mu 2 місяці тому +22

    A fabulous recall of 1862. Thank you For this time of Minnesota history.

  • @bettymiller1929
    @bettymiller1929 2 роки тому +336

    My great grandfather”s family was wiped out in one of these battles… somehow the baby survived and was adopted by a family…
    So that is why I’m alive today

    • @wilshirewarrior2783
      @wilshirewarrior2783 2 роки тому +9

      Little Big Man!!

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +26

      Good to know your roots. What an origin story!

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому +14

      Betty Miller · . Thank God ..it's great to have you in the world.

    • @odin-fr9et
      @odin-fr9et 2 роки тому +6

      That's amazing

    • @Tboy439
      @Tboy439 2 роки тому

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 ...Maybe you should do a little more research before you make a bogus video that is not even close to the truth. The Massacres that happened in Minnesota in 1862, including the one in New Ulm, were instigated by Confederate War General Albert Pike in order to kill as many protestants as possible why many of their men were off to war. It had nothing to do with broken treaties or what some of the towns people may have said. I'm a ditz on the computer, but if you care to learn a little truth on the mater there is a video on UA-cam called....The Hidden Hands Behind Albert Pikes Klu Klux Klan and Scottish Rite Freemasonry...By Adam 1984. It's only 13;15, but it will give you the truth and change a lot of what you now believe.

  • @10Doomhawk
    @10Doomhawk 9 місяців тому +19

    I imagine this how my grandparents felt watching all those westerns in the 60s and 50s. You're voice is perfect for these stories

    • @tomthx5804
      @tomthx5804 2 місяці тому +2

      Always honor the 800 innocent women children and babies that were killed by the Indigenous people who started all of this.

    • @gregobern6084
      @gregobern6084 2 місяці тому +1

      Few wanted the Indians to win. Once or twice they did

    • @Leslie-es5ij
      @Leslie-es5ij Місяць тому

      ​@@tomthx5804 it was white people that caused it !

  • @michaeloutsidethebox3391
    @michaeloutsidethebox3391 Місяць тому +13

    I have no idea why this came up on my feed but I just completed watching the entire program. I very much enjoyed it and thank you sincerely for producing it.
    so for the many who don't take the time to thank you, I thank you again! Wow, what a story. I'm creeping up on 70 and knew nothing of this history. I now live in Minnesota and therefore it held special significance.
    I also subscribed. 😁🙏🙏

  • @bravobravoh1344
    @bravobravoh1344 2 роки тому +232

    I've never heard of this story and I'm nearly 52 years old. Damn public school education left a lot to be desired. I found this quite interesting.

    • @fordwk
      @fordwk 2 роки тому +7

      It was covered in the mini-series Centennial, the character Col Skimerhorn was motivated to kill Tribes because his family was murdered by the Sioux in MN.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 2 роки тому +11

      @@fordwk Skimerhorn was based on a real person, Colonel John M. Chivington, who commanded US Volunteers at the Sand Creek Massacre in Colorado, which resulted in the murder of an estimated 150 Cheyenne and Arapaho men, women, and children. It should be noted that Volunteers were not regular US Army soldiers, but militia troops called to active service during the War Between the States. Also, not every soldier under his command obeyed Chivington's senseless order to attack defenseless women and children. Captain Silas Soule not only defied him, but even testified against him later at a court of inquiry, despite murder threats. In the end Chivington was forced to resign his commission and Colorado's territorial governor was dismissed. Two months after his testimony Soule was ambushed and killed by two assassins. He wounded the man who shot him, Charles Squier, but Squier later escaped federal custody when his own captor was presumed murdered in a staged drug overdose. Squier eventually fled to Central America where he met a most ignoble end, having both of his legs crushed in a railroad accident, which led to gangrene and his death in 1869.

    • @shawnmichaelduncan5951
      @shawnmichaelduncan5951 2 роки тому +3

      Yes it's very disappointing. 38 Dakota Indians were hanged

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 2 роки тому +6

      @@shawnmichaelduncan5951 Indeed. Colonel Sibley ordered over 300 to be hanged. It was the direct intervention by President Abraham Lincoln that kept the number so low. Despite this, at least one of the Sioux pardoned by Lincoln was hung anyway.

    • @ALRIGHTYTHEN.
      @ALRIGHTYTHEN. 2 роки тому +2

      Even if they tried to teach the things they should, they couldn't cover everything.

  • @painmt651
    @painmt651 Рік тому +37

    Thank you for helping to preserve the history of this nation. It all needs to be remembered.

    • @zazasnruntz7505
      @zazasnruntz7505 9 місяців тому

      Yup your fellow white men are still doing massacres in america nothing has changed

  • @racketyjack7621
    @racketyjack7621 2 роки тому +34

    This is one of the finest narratives I have heard. It covered an event I have never heard of before. Thank you. Subscribed.

    • @robbiebriody6670
      @robbiebriody6670 Рік тому

      This narrative is White washed history. I suggest reaching out to the native account to provide balance and perspective. Little Crow argued against this war until the very end.

  • @Paladin1873
    @Paladin1873 2 роки тому +178

    Hollywood has repeatedly retold the story of Custer's Last Stand, but this is a far greater tragedy for all involved, yet largely ignored and forgotten. This is a brutally honest and riveting presentation. Well done, sir. The music and sound effects were spot-on. What were those melodies?

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +10

      I read somewhere that the Battle of the Little Bighorn has more books written about it than any other battle in history. It's also the battle we know the least about. Not sure if it's true, but I believe it. It's done to death. Plenty of interesting conflicts nobody talks about.
      The music (in order):
      -Channel theme is tune from Ry Cooder. I think Paris, TX is the name.
      -1:08 Billy the Kid by Aaron Copland
      -3:59 Lakota National Anthem
      -5:39 Sioux War Chant
      -12:39 Johnny Comes Marching Home Again
      -12:49 Hell on the Wabash
      The rest is a repeat of these motifs.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 2 роки тому

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 Thanks. I have several Copland albums, including Billy the Kid. I'll have to look for the others.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 2 роки тому +1

      Oh this stuff has been covered in film and TV too. It was very fashionable to show soldier raids after 1970 on TV. Films did it more after 1960, Winchester 76, etc..

    • @zsedcftglkjh
      @zsedcftglkjh 2 роки тому

      Indeed

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 2 роки тому +10

      Lots of massacres from the other side that don't get a lot of notice as well.

  • @CoIoneIPanic
    @CoIoneIPanic Рік тому +39

    This is one of the best historical retellings of Indian battles that I have ever heard the narration is great the writing is crisp and it is pretty well balanced All Things Considered. well done!

  • @richardsanjose3692
    @richardsanjose3692 Місяць тому +3

    This randomly appeared on my feed although im a big history buff and especially first person narratives but hadnt watched any in quite a while however as i immediatly subscribed even before hearing it and i appreciate this great piece of history and hope for more.

  • @jeanhansen3488
    @jeanhansen3488 2 місяці тому +4

    I grew up 6 miles north of Fort Ridgely. My ancestors settled that area and were involved protecting the farms and settlers in and around Fort Ridgely. Their names are on a monument there to this day. Thank you so much for covering these battles. Your narrative sounds accurate to what I have been told all my life.

  • @LearningSpanishwithDrL
    @LearningSpanishwithDrL Місяць тому +38

    I grew up in Minnesota. We never learned any of this in school.

    • @donthompson4537
      @donthompson4537 Місяць тому +10

      Same reason you don't hear of numerous white people that were shielded and saved by Sioux missionary indians. In appreciation, US Govt deeded land to the Sioux missionaries but lost their land to another band not entitled to the deeded land. Casino money and high.paid lawyers is keeping this lawsuit in limbo. Case is called WolfChild VS US Govt. Case 12-5035

    • @tyrlant2189
      @tyrlant2189 Місяць тому

      Because it's goes against the narrative they want to teach you (your ancestors were evil, so its your Job to babysit brown ppl and let them replace you).

    • @mikeklinger1712
      @mikeklinger1712 Місяць тому

      That's because Minnesota teaches narrative not education

    • @manicmamc291
      @manicmamc291 Місяць тому +2

      Because it would be a stark reminder showing what happens when people steal land that doesn’t belong to them. I see a lot of similarities between this event, Nat Turner’s uprising, and even Oct 7, 2023. This is what happens when you take and take for centuries from a people who were there long before you were, when you push a people beyond their means and their sanity

    • @mikeklinger1712
      @mikeklinger1712 Місяць тому

      @@manicmamc291 I agree the Bible shows the Jews being there a long time!

  • @pegrathwol
    @pegrathwol Рік тому +45

    What a story! I'd heard of the Sioux uprising in Minnesota in 1862, but only in passing. This is an absolutely fascinating part of frontier history. It's a shame it's not more well known. I'm speculating, but think it was probably overshadowed because the Civil War was raging in the East at the time. This happened at almost the exact time as the battle of Antietam (17 Sep 1862), the deadliest one day battle in American history. Thanks so much for sharing this essential part of Minnesota and American history.

  • @moistmike4150
    @moistmike4150 2 роки тому +79

    As a teenager I was quite interested in tales of the American frontier. At one point I remember reading a book of short histories of the Indian Wars. One story in particular I wish I'd never read was about an American Army officer who was captured sometime in the early 1800's by an Iroquois war party. His own small band of soldiers had been killed during an ambush and he was the only survivor. The story was related by a French trapper who was friendly to the Iroquois in that area, but had no love for the Americans or British. Long story short, the Iroquois braves decided to burn the American alive. When the trapper told the officer that his fate was to be burned, he stated that he "would attempt to bear it bravely", but the trapper told him that it would be nowhere near a quick death, as the Iroquois truly enjoyed the spectacle of burning their captives slowly on a bed of coals where they would tie a man's hands behind his back and then rope him by his neck to a pole, but leave his feet and legs free. Then they'd watch him dance as he'd slowly roast to death over coals with just enough rope to allow him to put part of his body out of the intense heat, but not all of it. This led to a man "favoring" various parts of his body as the rest of him roasted in various places until the thousands of twists and turns to obtain some relief had finally caused every part of the man's surface to become charred, with the exception of his face and head; at which point the Iroquois would shove him to the ground and heap hot coals on his head to finish the deed. The "fun" was to see how long they could keep a man alive during this ordeal. The trapper related that it took this particular officer a day and a half to finally expire. I still have trouble grasping this level of evil and the knowledge that the native peoples of the Americas had been dealing out this sort of treatment to their rivals long before Europeans appeared on the scene has since destroyed any naive ideas of the "Noble Indigenous Peoples" B.S. you might hear from supremely ignorant people in our modern era.

    • @dylonmc4323
      @dylonmc4323 2 роки тому

      Definitely!!!! They sure as hell don't teach us this in school or the fact that Indians often sacrificed people to ther gods and some of them even practiced cannabilsm.
      The Indian world was freaking vicious and for the most part needed replaced.

    • @patrickmulroney9452
      @patrickmulroney9452 2 роки тому +6

      talk to the hand bigot

    • @dylonmc4323
      @dylonmc4323 2 роки тому

      @@patrickmulroney9452 STFU you brainwashed,snow flake liberal! No one gives a fck what you think as your being bred out, ran over and rapped by your own masters you vote in to office and they take from you! Your obsolete and in the way of the left but they use fools like you to step on you people who are to ignorant to look at the facts and the truth.
      I'm HALF INDIAN AND 1/4 JEWISH. I'm associated with the Muskogee creek tribe of Oklahoma BUT I CAN STILL SEE ,READ ABOUT AND SPEAK FACTS YOU FREAKING ZOMBIE.

    • @dylonmc4323
      @dylonmc4323 2 роки тому

      @@patrickmulroney9452 THE INDIAN WORLD WHILE STILL IN THE STONE AGE WAS ABSOLUTELY VIOLENT AND VICIOUS! INDIANS, NATIVE AMERICANS SLAUGHTERED THEMSELVES RIGHT UP TO THE END!
      NOT ONLY WAS HUMAN SACRIFICE COMMON EVEN CANNABILSM WAS MORE WIDE SPREAD THAN IT WAS THOUGHT.
      GO DOWN INTO THE AMAZON SOY BOY AND VISIT WITH THE TRIBES DEEP IT IN IT.AND SEE IF YOU DONT GET SOMETHING STUCK IN YOUR (A..).
      NORTH AMERICA WAS NOT MUCH DIFFERENT IN THE 1600s !!!!! GET OVER IT.

    • @dylonmc4323
      @dylonmc4323 2 роки тому

      @@patrickmulroney9452 Then LOOK at what the Spanish found in south America!!! While I do not like the gold digging Spanish and am glad they where crushed by england I do understand the horrors they found in south America.
      CAN YOU IMAGINE WALKING INTO A STONE WORLD WHERE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE ARE BEING TORTURED ,HAVING HEARTS RIPPED OUT , BEHEADED AND SACRIFICED FOR EVIL GODS AS THIER BODIES ROLE DOWN THE STEPS. PILES OF DEAD BODYS. A WORLD OF SLAVERY AND MURDER!
      CHILDREN BEING KILLED WITH THEIR DEAD MASTERS. BURIED ALIVE OR LEFT TO FREEZE TO.DEATH IN THE MOUNTAINS!
      I'm glad the Spanish destroyed this world.
      GOD used the Spanish to clean them ,out so a new Christian world could bring lightness around the world and the modern world could come in to existence.

  • @secretamericayoutubechanne2961

    This documentary Channel Is the Best in the West! He has incredible paintings like the Sand Creek one, and great narration and music audio!

  • @theherbman2101
    @theherbman2101 Місяць тому +1

    I’m thankful the algorithm decided to recommend me this video, this is quite a vivid and horrifying retelling of this grim piece of history, thank you for covering these stories.

  • @SSHitMan
    @SSHitMan Місяць тому +6

    Indian attacks were rampant in both the Union and Confederacy during the Civil War as both sides were preoccupied fighting each other and couldn't spare troops to guard the frontier.

  • @Balrog-tf3bg
    @Balrog-tf3bg Місяць тому +1

    We heard about this in school, but this is the first true documentary I’ve seen on it. Good job, and thank you for making this

  • @NathanTarantlawriter
    @NathanTarantlawriter 2 роки тому +37

    I really appreciated this. I recently have discovered a published diary of one of my ancestors, a Nathan Addison Baker, and I plan to narrate it soon. You've done a great job here! I really liked it.

    • @craigramage5022
      @craigramage5022 Рік тому

      When you narrate that diary I hope you tell the other side. The Native American side of the story. It is sad that it happened but it would have all been avoided if they would have left their land alone try not to push them off their land and rape their women and taken all their food . In memory of all the tribes that were involved in my ancestry and DNA, Powhatan, Cherokee, lenape and and my husband's great-grandfather Fox tribe. Thank you, Maureen Ramage

  • @tominva4121
    @tominva4121 2 роки тому +133

    My ancestor, Alexander Faribault, was friends and hunting partners with both Little Crow and Sibley. He joined the 5th Minnesota as a volunteer guide, and was one of those that fought at Birch Coolee. He was a very wealthy man before the war, but lost everything afterwards for being of "mixed blood" and protecting Sioux indians that had been relocated to his land. It was a tragedy for EVERYONE involved! Truly horrible!

    • @alwaystheirtocomment
      @alwaystheirtocomment 2 роки тому +1

      "meetoo" is here now

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 роки тому +16

      "The treaties of 1851 had promised the Dakota lump sum payments in exchange for land, but eleven years later the Dakota had still not received the funds....Most of the money was given directly to creditors contrary to treaty terms and to federal law.” Carol Chomsky, “U.S.-Dakota War Trials”, Stanford Law Review, November 1990

    • @brittanyhayes1043
      @brittanyhayes1043 2 роки тому +6

      My ancestor was Gideon Hollister Pond, brother of Samuel W Pond. He knew Little Crow during a mission and taught him English.

    • @apostlekelley3618
      @apostlekelley3618 Рік тому +3

      Thank you for sharing. Was his property and finance taken from him?

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 Рік тому +4

      @@apostlekelley3618 Faribault's wealth was hit hard by the "economic panic of 1857." He also had several businesses that failed, resulting in further loss of income. With a negative cash flow, he ended up asking the government to remove the Indians from his land, as he could no longer afford their care. He ended up selling his property and living with family.

  • @yayoib49
    @yayoib49 2 роки тому +27

    Not enough is said here about The part the Chippawa played in Fighting their Ancient Enemy the Sioux and driving them out of Minnesota , The Chippawa are still in Minn and Wisconsin , The Sioux are gone to Canada and the Dakotas

    • @corvusduluth
      @corvusduluth 2 роки тому +3

      Prairie Island, Shakopee

    • @siorcmor8480
      @siorcmor8480 Рік тому +2

      Ojibwe

    • @jaysonhochsprung21
      @jaysonhochsprung21 Рік тому +4

      Upper and lower Sioux agency Natives in Minnesota on their reservations would disagree.

    • @siorcmor8480
      @siorcmor8480 Рік тому +2

      To clarify - Chippewa is the white's mangling of the name 'Ojibwe". and they considered joining in the fight against US Govt, and wisely declined. I'm pretty sure had they joined in thet would have gone aftefr Govt. agencies and propert, and WOULD NOT have slaughterd 400 + unarmed settlers. It would still have gone badly for them, however.

    • @velikgray1564
      @velikgray1564 Місяць тому +1

      I'm Lakota/Ojibwe 😂 we all around intermingled after the peace treaty from the battle in Red Lake

  • @namcat53
    @namcat53 2 роки тому +39

    Thanks for this story. It was never taught to us in school in the 60's.

    • @shawnmichaelduncan5951
      @shawnmichaelduncan5951 2 роки тому +5

      Same in the ,80s.

    • @threeoneoh6406
      @threeoneoh6406 2 роки тому +6

      It’s still not taught in schools

    • @STho205
      @STho205 2 роки тому +1

      Is that Minnesota State History or general history living elsewhere? I grew up in south Alabama, pretty far from MN, and I knew about the Minnesota Indian war in 62, the Chivington persecution raid and the great Mankato hanging during Lincoln's 1st term.
      We learned of the Fort Mims massacre by the redstick Creeks on river settlers forted up in 1813 and the following defeat a year later at Horseshoe Bend.
      They followed that in 11th grade US history with listing the major battles and raids in all of the US territories from 1780 to 1890. Kids back then 70s, were more interested I guess.
      These raids and the two big wars after 1861 were mentioned in the Little House series of books.

    • @sayhey7482
      @sayhey7482 2 роки тому

      HELLS BELLS , i could write a book then teach an entire course of what we wernt taught back then ,esp CAT-LIC schooling

    • @jamalanderson3891
      @jamalanderson3891 Рік тому +3

      Graduated from a Minnesota high school in 2003, and this was not talked about. Minnesota history wasn’t discussed after 5th grade, and the history up to that point was just very local stuff like fort snelling, and how St. Paul, the state capital, was nearly named pigs eye. Pigs eye lived under the bridge and beat the shit out of everyone, like bill the butcher.
      Why was anything Indian wars or anything Indian not discussed? I don’t know, can only speculate

  • @hockeytown8995
    @hockeytown8995 2 роки тому +13

    Ironically, Little Crow was killed the same day as Pickett's Charge happened at Gettysburg, with Vicksburg falling the next day.

  • @stevewhite7426
    @stevewhite7426 2 роки тому +10

    My great grandfather’s school house in Hutchinson was burned down by Little Crow. My grandmother was home, hiding under the bed.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +1

      A timeless strategy for kids throughout the years! The boogyman can't harm you under the covers.
      Jocularity aside, that must have been terrifying for him. Thank God it was a Sunday!

    • @alwaystheirtocomment
      @alwaystheirtocomment 2 роки тому

      "meetoo" lies

    • @gratefulguy4130
      @gratefulguy4130 Місяць тому

      ​​@@alwaystheirtocomment cope harder

  • @Music-lx1tf
    @Music-lx1tf 2 роки тому +15

    There has to have been many stories untold. Thanks for a wonderful presentation.

  • @davidmclean1403
    @davidmclean1403 Рік тому +11

    Outstanding presentation keep up the good work. As a history scholar I commend you on your research and giving both sides of the Indian wars. Graphics n pictures are great ,a lot of research has gone into all of your work. Keep it up!

  • @odin-fr9et
    @odin-fr9et 2 роки тому +14

    I first learned about little crow from the movie bury my heart at wounded knee. This is first extensive documentary I seen abot him. I wish to know more about him. Thanks for the video.

  • @johnbackman4475
    @johnbackman4475 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you. First complete version I have heard. My great-great-great grandmother was a prisoner

  • @judithcampbell1705
    @judithcampbell1705 Місяць тому +1

    I'm nearly 70 years old and this is the first time I've heard of this battle! I wonder why they didn't teach it in school. Thank you 💛 for covering it so well. I subbed. 🐺

    • @mike73383
      @mike73383 Місяць тому

      Long ago the school system was taken over by the anti-American left. They don't teach accurate American history unless it meets their anti-American agenda.

  • @decimated550
    @decimated550 2 роки тому +11

    30:51 a touching detail " the rescued slept in the tens of the soldiers, while the men took the hard ground outside"

  • @michealtull9033
    @michealtull9033 Рік тому +2

    Excellent job of telling this story , a part of history that I had never heard . THANKYOU ! 👍👍👍👍

  • @InvertsandOi
    @InvertsandOi 2 роки тому +27

    I think it's important to acknowledge the tactical sophistication of the indigenous forces, which are highlighted in this video. Even recent history books and podcasts (how most of us consume history these days) seem to harbor the long held opinion that indigenous Americans weren't capable of sophisticated battlefield tactics. I think it's great that this channel highlights the truth.

    • @Codeman22
      @Codeman22 2 роки тому +6

      I think you are over estimating them.

    • @muddyhotdog4103
      @muddyhotdog4103 2 роки тому +6

      @@Codeman22 he is.. it's not hard to wait and hide behind tress and riverbeds and conduct a surprise attack/ambush on an unsuspecting regime stuck on "civilized" warfare. This is always the nature of a fighting force when another group is coming into their territory -ie wait and spring a trap

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому +3

      @@muddyhotdog4103 . yeah..only there are tactics the U.S. began to teach at west point..or any other military branch..in the case with Little Crow and the Santee..decoy operations were especially studied.

    • @pettyfogger2305
      @pettyfogger2305 Рік тому +8

      The life native Americans, like nearly all peoples whos' lives were marked by almost continuous warfare between themselves and with other tribes who all either got really good at it or disappeared from history.
      It stands to reason that those tribes that thrived were able to defend their camps and successfully defeat other tribes for land, slaves and prosperity; there were no prize for second place.
      Children endlessly listened to warriors recount battles (and tactics) and played war until they could join their elders at the real thing.
      Anyone who does not understand and appreciate the war expertice of surviving tribes like the Souix while Europeans were still slapping each other with satin gloves and following Marquis of Queensbury rules in combat is missing the point here. Thousands of British and their professional Hessian fighters were stunned and beaten bloody by settlers who simply adopted the tactics of the Eastern tribes. Washington did NOT cross an ice-choked river at midnight to attack early on Christmas morning using tactics learned in the British war college he and some of his commanders attended before the Revolution. The surrendering Brits were mortified at the savage termidity and lack of social graces of the attack under those unfair and ghastly tactics the Americans learned from the indians.

    • @masterofreality1552
      @masterofreality1552 Рік тому +1

      Natives were brilliant tacticians.The commanche are well known for superior horsemanship and their tactical prowess.

  • @mikequinlivan8842
    @mikequinlivan8842 2 роки тому +37

    I lived on Lake Shetek, well, actually a smaller lake named Bloody Lake, from 1995 -1999. Where the rebellion started was no more than 1 mile from my house.
    It is a lovely area, but the video offers confusing pictures and paintings in regards to what the terrain looked like. Honestly, Minnesota starts to get a bit more hilly and tree covered around Mankato. A large part of the rebellion was on the Minnesota Prairie. Regardless, as a student one of the best history teachers I ever had took my class out numerous times to learn the history of the rebellion. Truly fascinating.

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 2 роки тому +1

      I believe the conflict started on the Lower Sioux Agency, quite a spell to your east.

    • @mikequinlivan8842
      @mikequinlivan8842 2 роки тому

      Mmmm…not a ton. But if that’s what they say. I was told different.

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 Рік тому

      @@mikequinlivan8842 Yes, it actually started on the Lower Sioux Reservation near Morton. However, there was an Indian attack several days later at Lake Shetek.

    • @Alexander-Craig0530
      @Alexander-Craig0530 Рік тому +1

      What rebellion?,these people were fighting for what they saw as their land same as the Union was fighting the confederacy,I’m sorry but Sherman said it himself “War is hell”

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 Рік тому

      @@Alexander-Craig0530 There's a difference between war and total genocide.

  • @sartainja
    @sartainja 2 роки тому +19

    Superb presentation.

  • @ArmenianBishop
    @ArmenianBishop Рік тому +16

    My paternal grandmother's parents were at the Battle of New Ulm, where they helped with the defense of the town. This I learned from my dad, a very long time ago. My dad died in 2003, and I'm 67 years old.

    • @Dragonshmm265
      @Dragonshmm265 Рік тому +4

      So cool; do you still live in MN? I have connections to New Ulm as well, love the history

    • @daphnewilson7966
      @daphnewilson7966 Рік тому +4

      as the last survivor (now turned 70) of one side of my family, I am dredging thru bales of photographs of dead people that I am the last one who even knows who they were. In particular, an uncle-in-law was on the Enterprise in the Pacific in WW2. His DD214 records 2 Silver Stars and a few others. Ask them before they die, my friends!

    • @ArmenianBishop
      @ArmenianBishop Рік тому +2

      @@Dragonshmm265 I'm in California, and I live on the San Francisco Peninsula. My dad was a WWII Veteran; my mom was an Armenian-American raised on a Fresno farm; they were CAL students, and married in Berkeley.

  • @stephanhirons3454
    @stephanhirons3454 2 роки тому +23

    Being a Brit don't know an awful lot about American history but this is great stuff!Keep it up man.Most definitely subscribed

    • @gammon1183
      @gammon1183 2 роки тому +1

      I was lucky enough to be taught by my dad and he taught global history with no bias and iam forever grateful for his instruction as I believe it gives me a better grasp of the world today and yesterday.
      Im sitting by a river in rural North Devon enjoying this awesome video 🇬🇧😎

  • @lisetteeliseparis7070
    @lisetteeliseparis7070 Рік тому +1

    Ma and Pa made me write an essay on every chapter of 'Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee' the summer I turned ten. Subscribing! Thank you for your channel.

  • @IAmJaguarPaw.ThisIsMyForest.
    @IAmJaguarPaw.ThisIsMyForest. 2 роки тому +6

    Excellent presentation. Thank you.

  • @miller87able
    @miller87able 24 дні тому +1

    I grew and live in the new ulm area. I remember reading about it school and went on school trips to learn more history. And as an adult now and still find artifacts in the spring and we recently found and grinding Boulder and stones on our farm

  • @tonyarceneaux286
    @tonyarceneaux286 2 роки тому +14

    Maybe one of the biggest events around the same time as the American civil war.

  • @Sandbarfight
    @Sandbarfight Рік тому +1

    I found your channel a few days ago I've subscribed and I'm binge watching your videos everyday for a couple hours. Thanks for the amazing hard work.

  • @lilyrose161
    @lilyrose161 10 місяців тому +3

    My 4th Great-Grandfather Francois LaBatte (LaBathe) was Native American and killed at the Lower Sioux Agency 0n 8/18/1862. He was a trader and his son-in-law Vanoss Robinette (also Native American) was taken hostage along with his family.

  • @timbeatty11
    @timbeatty11 2 роки тому +73

    My family survived that. They were friends with the Indians. The day before my family was told to stay home and was not hurt. My family was hated until we left the farm in the 1930s. We still owned the farm till 2014.

    • @SirManfly
      @SirManfly 2 роки тому +6

      Wow, whatta story !! That's a long time to own a chunk of land !!

    • @timbeatty11
      @timbeatty11 2 роки тому +7

      @@SirManfly we were only on it for the 1850s to the 1930s. Then we rented it

    • @anthonymctigue9038
      @anthonymctigue9038 2 роки тому +6

      Yes id well believe that sclandous what happened to the indians the real people
      BUT THE DEVIL HAD ARRIVED IN AMERICA .

    • @aethelwyrnblack4918
      @aethelwyrnblack4918 2 роки тому +16

      @@anthonymctigue9038 Did he go down to Georgia looking to make a deal?

    • @Leo_Pard_A4
      @Leo_Pard_A4 2 роки тому +11

      @@anthonymctigue9038 nice grammar, dumdum.

  • @johnratican3824
    @johnratican3824 2 роки тому +26

    Great story telling. Not "PC" at all either. You told it like it was.

    • @captainsensiblejr.
      @captainsensiblejr. 2 роки тому

      Telling it like it was is good history. Not enough was told in this story about why the Sioux rose up. What a shame that Black American history, again, events that happened, is being censored by states that don't want to acknowledge massacres of black citizens. I'm sure this uprising and massacre would be readily taught in these states because they were white. If all these victims were black , and were killed by white men, this historical event would never see the light of day in states run by Republicans,

  • @fenrirrising131
    @fenrirrising131 Місяць тому +1

    Yer a damn good story teller. And i love true frontier stuff. Its hard to find creators that will touch on it in a cogent manner.

  • @lndrover100
    @lndrover100 Рік тому +5

    Great video about the massacre. On a side note, Frederick Russell Burnham, who would later be a tracker in the Apache Wars, then head to Africa, meet up with and serve as an army scout with Robert Baden-Powell, heavily influencing what would become Boy Scouts (it was from Burnham that Baden-Powell incorporated the campaign hat and neckerchief, as well as a bunch of field craft), was a baby when his mother hid him in his basket in a pile of corn husks before running into the woods to avoid Little Crows warriors, who did burn down the farm. They moved to California, where his exploits as a boy really took off. For a good read, check “A Splendid Savage”, the Burnham biography from 2014.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  Рік тому +1

      As an Eagle Scout, I will most definitely read that book! Thank you.

  • @truthspkr1
    @truthspkr1 Рік тому +2

    Excellent video! Thanks for your work on this balanced true history of the West. This is going to my grandchildren.

  • @davidokeefe1898
    @davidokeefe1898 2 роки тому +6

    Sad. Fascinating. Mistreatments of the Lakota was totally unnecessary. They understood that the 'Americans' were awash with food. Thanks for your excellent presentation.

  • @kaycox19
    @kaycox19 Рік тому +1

    Woncerful retelling of his (to me) unknown story. Thank you!

  • @xray86delta
    @xray86delta 2 роки тому +30

    As an old artilleryman, I know why artillery is called "the King of Battle".

    • @ryanhighberg4662
      @ryanhighberg4662 2 роки тому

      Was the king of battle. Drones of all sizes will be the future king.

    • @tadghostal8769
      @tadghostal8769 Рік тому +1

      @@ryanhighberg4662 Add anti-sniper drift, and a small 3 gram shaped charge. Times this drone by a billion, and you sir rule the world.

    • @frozenokie4034
      @frozenokie4034 Рік тому +1

      75% of battle casualties are due to artillery. Or at least that is what my Sgt. Major told me when I was in college in the 80s

  • @1391john
    @1391john 2 роки тому +3

    What a story! Thank you so much and God bless!

  • @fredflinstone5431
    @fredflinstone5431 2 роки тому +7

    Great documentary..... I became interested when a girlfriend and I visited Ft. Ridgeway a few years ago... Got the connection with the Mankato hangings, and touched up on the topic... Interesting time in Minnesota history with the Civil war and the problems with treaty provisions....

  • @larrypriser6413
    @larrypriser6413 2 роки тому +9

    Excellent video, proves the point I've always made, this land wasn't stolen, it was fought over through war, which was how all land was fought over at that time in history, one side was overmatched and lost.

    • @mito88
      @mito88 2 роки тому

      hawaii, american samoa, puerto rico, yeah....

    • @georgepoitras3502
      @georgepoitras3502 2 роки тому +2

      @@mito88 No one on land today is the rightful owner anywhere on earth.

    • @mito88
      @mito88 2 роки тому

      @@georgepoitras3502 is israel aware of this?

    • @georgepoitras3502
      @georgepoitras3502 2 роки тому +2

      @@mito88 Everyone knows it everywhere but we kid ourselves into believing our rights are more virtuous. No matter where you or I are typing this from it is true.

    • @brittanyhayes1043
      @brittanyhayes1043 2 роки тому

      Exactly!

  • @bernacus5949
    @bernacus5949 Рік тому +5

    You got my sub. This content is phenomenal. Thank you for replying to my inquiry about the music. And doing so promptly. I've been loading up your videos in my que. The sound track to this video has a very 1960's or 70's cowboys and indians movie, feel to it. Idk if that's what you were going for. But I love it man! Great stuff. Looking forward to binging more as I mow and while I'm at work.

  • @jeffandsherriefranzwa8970
    @jeffandsherriefranzwa8970 Рік тому +6

    I'd like to see a video about the war between the Sioux and the Chippewa, which climaxed in 1776 near present-day St. Croix Falls, WI.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  Рік тому +3

      That'd be fascinating. Sadly, I know precious little about Indian inter-tribal wars. A good channel for this is 'History at The OK Corral.' He's absolutely fantastic for inter-tribal history!

    • @daveneumann8106
      @daveneumann8106 8 місяців тому

      I lived in St. Croix Falls. There is a small monument to the battle in the park on the north side of St. Croix Falls. The park is on the St. Croix River, along Hwy 87.

    • @jeffandsherriefranzwa8970
      @jeffandsherriefranzwa8970 8 місяців тому

      @@daveneumann8106 Hi Dave. I lived in St. Croix Falls from 1960-65. I was in school grades K-3 there. Did we maybe cross paths?

  • @tonyobadinage6647
    @tonyobadinage6647 2 роки тому +25

    @Doorus the Walrus - A fascinating glimpse into the unknown (for us Europeans) story of the Indian Wars and uprisings at a critical time in US history. This is an excellent production, clearly presented, in a balanced manner, with good pictorial and audio support. I thoroughly enjoyed this and heartily recommend watching it.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 роки тому +3

      The rest of the remaining 6,000 plus Dakota were driven out of Minnesota by Sibley's troops and the incentive of a general 1863 state legislative scalp bounty for their death - the starting price
      was $25 per Dakota scalp, then $75. By the fall of 1863 the state bounty was $200 per scalp, “but by then most Dakotas had vanished from Minnesota.” Professor Mary Lethert Wingerd, North Country: The Making of Minnesota (University of Minnesota Press, 2010), p. 330.

  • @kevinyoung9557
    @kevinyoung9557 2 роки тому +8

    Awesome history lesson. I lived in Minnetonka for eight years and had no clue until now.Thank you for the teaching.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 роки тому +5

      “The Sioux were still a hunting society in the early nineteenth century. All evidence considered, it seems likely that 50 percent of those living in 1650 were children. This would boost the total Sioux population in the Mississippi watershed to about 38,000 at white contact....Theoretically, at least, epidemics do much to explain
      the general decline in Sioux populations from 38,000 at white contact to 25,000 in 1805,....” Gary Clayton Anderson, Kinsmen of Another Kind: Dakota-White Relations in the Upper Mississippi Valley, 1650-1862 (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1997), p. 19 and p. 22.

    • @dylonmc4323
      @dylonmc4323 2 роки тому

      @@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 tribes like the Mandan where completely wiped out like island Indians of Jamaica and the Caribbean islands. All that's left of them is 3 words. Canoe , hammock and another words I've forgotten.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 роки тому

      @@dylonmc4323 yes and if you read the blog "arctic - news" blogspot it's well-documented that the near term future of all humans is now directly threatened. It's amazing what people don't know about if they don't look into it - rather people are very passive about their education. hahaha.

    • @burtonwarrior3102
      @burtonwarrior3102 Рік тому +1

      Mandan are still alive today. The colonizers tried to exterminate us indigenous. They are called now The Three Affiliated Tribes in North Dakota. Mandan, hidatsa and arikara tribes make up the three affiliated tribes. I’m Lakota by the way. And we don’t call ourselves Sioux. For ex he said santee Sioux. It’s called the santee Dakota Sioux is what the Europeans called us.

  • @stevenhall8964
    @stevenhall8964 Рік тому +6

    You didn't relate the true start of this war. 2 young warriors, teenagers, were out hunting for anything they could when they came up to a farm house and decided they would ask for some food, coming closer they saw a chickens nest with eggs, one of the boys said "let's just take those eggs!" The other boy said they shouldn't because they would get in trouble. The 1st boy said " trouble! from who? I'm not afraid of these wasicun! (takers of the fat) I will go over and kill that farmer and take the eggs and his cow!" So they went to the house and the farmer who was known to be a good man by some of the Dakota (Sioux) greeted them and was killed right there the boys looted the house and killed his livestock and stole the eggs and whatever they could carry and beat it back to their village, the leaders admonished the boys and everyone started to panic, Little Crow said he understood the frustration that led to the killing but the soldiers were the enemy but now it doesn't matter the boys actions have forced us to flee or fight, and suggested that they move west immediately to their wilder cousins the Lakota (also Sioux) but then he was shouted down with many saying he was a coward and threatened him unless the fight, so reluctantly he led the warriors out to fight the following day, they came up with a plan but so many warriors crept out in the night and started killing civilians all over so they barely had enough warriors to carry out their plan, and you told the rest here!

  • @everettbass8659
    @everettbass8659 2 роки тому +16

    Great story enjoyed it very much.Story telling is an art,keep it up.

  • @pettyfogger2305
    @pettyfogger2305 2 роки тому +19

    Greetings,
    My G x 4 grandmother lost her husband, brother and sister-in-law when Inkapuda led an attack (aka Inkpatha in our family history). She hid with 4 children, all under age 8 in the root cellar. They watched the attack and massacre through the floor board cracks. A family bible still exists with an indian's bloody footprint inside it's cover.
    Grandma hid for hours and then shoved her way past furniture and a rug to find her adult loved one butchered but her infant nephew blood-covered but uninjured. With 4 small children of her own plus the tiny orphan, she hid in the corn field for 3 days, existing on raw corn and the dew that formed on the leaves of the corn stalks-to frightened to return to her cabin or the river due to passing bands of raiding indians who traveled along the river banks.
    They were rescued by troops of Sibley's cavalry along with a 10 year old orphan she discovered and collected while in the cornfield.
    Grandma Bryttva Mestad, her 4 children and the two orphan boys returned to Winnishiek County, Iowa (Highlandville).

    • @dannycurtis4835
      @dannycurtis4835 Рік тому +2

      Fascinating!

    • @kendelldecoteau8438
      @kendelldecoteau8438 Рік тому +1

      Inkpaduta was my grandfather. Did you know why the Wahpekute' were pushed to do those things? I'm not saying it was right what they did but they were on someone's home already. They shouldn't have been there. Settlers were killing his family and his people with no regard. He went to Fort Dodge to try to reconcile but nothing happened. His family was again killed.

    • @pettyfogger2305
      @pettyfogger2305 Рік тому +1

      @@kendelldecoteau8438 First of all, how wonderful to me you, even via FB and certainly over the circumstances. Yes, in fact, I have been aware of most of the reason that drove the Conflict as I chose NOT to accept the easy assumption that the indians just decided to go to war with those settlers.
      Could we exchange email addresses, etc., as I would love to settle and exchange info, oral family recollections and more? I would be honored to be part of a greater understanding of the events leading up to the war, both for my family members and possibly yours.
      My understanding was that rations and a payment were due to the tribe that were not accomplished and that the brother of the man who settled my city, La Crosse, WI refused to furnish food and other necessities, breaking the treaty and causing people to face starvation and disease in the coming winter. This latest act was merely the latest slight/insult/ breaking of treaty guarantees by the BIA and government representitives after your nation ceded wnership and occupancy of a great swath of ancestral land, agreed to live in a limited area and under government control PLUS turn in all firearms making hunting for subsistance almost impossible.
      All that plus unknown daily slights and insults inescapeably drove your ancestors to violently retaliate against villages and settlers who were understandably viewed as antagonists too. My grandmother was told that our ancestors traded with, had almost daily contact with families and tribal members and had developed relationships and had the ability to discuss trades and other interactions with tribal members. When my grandma first told me the story her great grandmother, a 10 year old girl at the time of the attack at their cabin we were in the barn hand milking the half dozen cows grandma still owned about 60 years ago. After I had posed every question my teen-aged mind could think of I returned to talk with her about the family legacy but also what I learned about the indians' plight up to the attacks.
      My grandma was shocked to hear about the bands' treatment and were facing starvation and recall that she finally able to better understand the attacks. As a mother who suffered gringing poverty even before the Depression that just got worse for her family as the Government enforced programs most often hurt as many families as it tried to helped, I am sure she instantly understood and identified with at least some of the your ancestors' anger, fear and desperation and most certainly the fear of watching your children sufferand die on the whim of a politician.
      I hope you will consider email contact with me. We share a common set of events but few if any of the direct and indirect results; I hope we might enlighten and inform family and others of the fuller picture of those times. Would you agree that as people who gather our families' own history and insure our descendants hear the best version we are able to give, that we owe both ancestors and descendants a chance for a fuller, truer account? I look forward to your response!

  • @jeremygoggleye5022
    @jeremygoggleye5022 Місяць тому +2

    Ojibwe is what the English heard when they met us, Chippewa is what it sounded like to the French when we called ourselves Anishinaabe. Translation, "The People". I posted this earlier, not sure if it uploaded my comment.

  • @wakekobilake3607
    @wakekobilake3607 2 роки тому +23

    My mother's family was spared when a Lakota they had fed warned them of the pending attack. They were able to escape but their farm was burned to the ground.

  • @ArmyVet82ndAbn
    @ArmyVet82ndAbn Рік тому +4

    Great history lesson, thanks for the video.

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 2 роки тому +13

    Family lore says my great [great?] grandfather was a Federal Soldier and was killed in a Souix massacre before the Civil War. Whether it was at Ft Snelling, or if he was a sergeant, and Cavalryman, are murky details. His widow and sons resettled in Rock Island, Illimois. The eldest sons worked at the Arsenal there during the Civil War. As a young man, my paternal grandfather moved to Chicago and became a telegrapher, before studying medicine. He was drafted into the US Army Medical Corps during the Great War and was with the AEF and subsequent occupation of Germany -- 1918-19. He went deaf from the shelling.

  • @conniecharley1927
    @conniecharley1927 2 роки тому +5

    Only know stories like this after graduation HS etc ..while living at home only what television stories and movies told us.. The comments made as family members being saved or killed was very interesting.. like this video.

  • @williamfairfaxmasonprescot9334
    @williamfairfaxmasonprescot9334 2 роки тому +6

    Thank you #DoorustheWalrus for the detailed historical documentary!

  • @lukejohn322
    @lukejohn322 Рік тому +7

    What I love about this story is MN and USA history. What I hate is the lack of humanity people have for one another. It is happening now and will happen again. To my Sioux, Chippewa and Mahnomen Friends.

  • @jadefurman2840
    @jadefurman2840 Рік тому +3

    I live just south of this area. I so love this story. The Gardener family was massacred a block from where I grew up.

  • @duanewilmes-zo8dm
    @duanewilmes-zo8dm 2 місяці тому +1

    I was in sixth grade ... Lynd Public Schools, Lyon County, Minnesota (1965-1966).
    Had a a class about Minnesota history.

  • @billysmith6284
    @billysmith6284 2 роки тому +16

    I’m surprised how many times this happened over the centuries and how they start. It was total war with horrendous civilian casualties for centuries.

    • @washingtondale
      @washingtondale 2 роки тому +1

      Billy is right. “warpath” (plundering civilians) & also joining foreign enemies in war - have harsh consequences. A thrilling & ugly period of history (Corruption, violence, superstition) Can’t be judged out of context.

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 2 роки тому +2

      Little Crow did not depart from the ways of the white man. Like the Japanese, he was an apt pupil, learning all that he could, and then making full of use of this knowledge to advantage. If he had done his deeds in India or South Africa in the service of Queen Victoria, there would be statues of him in Trafalgar Square.

    • @washingtondale
      @washingtondale 2 роки тому +4

      @@DrCruel fighting for survival, nothing to do with white, red skin. Natives killed or enslaved weaker tribes + some early euros also kept slaves (see, Indian Slavery in Pacific Northwest). Scouts & natives killed each other nearly on sight (see Drannan 31 yrs on the plains)

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 2 роки тому +1

      @@washingtondale No doubt. Except that Little Crow happened to be born to a losing team. Cetshwayo would have sympathized.

  • @MrW781
    @MrW781 Рік тому +1

    Just riveting! Did you write the narration? If so, have you published. I was hooked the whole way through.

  • @estelleroebuck5842
    @estelleroebuck5842 Рік тому +3

    When I hear stories about Lavina Eastlick, she is seen as a hero. When I read her account, that she wrote, I read about how she ignored her son's cry for help while he was getting hit in the head. She played dead even when her son, who walked 50 miles with his baby brother, called out her name. She left her son, who was dying, and another boy to die alone. She found a six year old girl and two infants unharmed, and she left them to die. Her version of survival is horrific. She had no remorse and bragged about all the money donated to her after the fact.

  • @DtownDisciple74
    @DtownDisciple74 2 місяці тому

    Great video, I was born n raised in MN n I've never heard of any of this. Will def be looking 4 more videos 2 learn about things they don't teach us in schools

  • @moritztabor7804
    @moritztabor7804 3 роки тому +4

    Thank you very much!

  • @arnonabuurs7297
    @arnonabuurs7297 Рік тому +1

    nice one thanks for this, listened to it for one minute and couldnt stop lol

  • @spambedam
    @spambedam 2 роки тому +23

    I recommend watching this. An even handed recount of a terrible conflict. Though I had heard of the mass execution, I never knew what led up to it. Having lived my life where Indians once lived, it all seemed as distant as the moon but this account makes it all relevant.

    • @daverowe7305
      @daverowe7305 Рік тому +4

      I live in Lakota country and all you ever hear about is how Lincoln executed all these Dakota in MN. They want to "Cancel" him because of it. They never mention the uprising.

    • @AnchoredSoulSband
      @AnchoredSoulSband Рік тому +2

      Would not have happened if we native Americans were left alone

  • @samuelprice2461
    @samuelprice2461 Рік тому +7

    Totally insane to think that this all was happening at the same time as the climax of the Civil War.
    Makes me think about what Shelby Foote said about how the Union was fighting the whole war with “one arm tied behind its back.”
    I’ll bet the Minnesotans wished most of their fighting men hadn’t left home.

    • @DonAbrams-hq7ln
      @DonAbrams-hq7ln 3 місяці тому

      That was b4 Gettysburg, the 1st Minnesota should have stayed at HOME!!!

  • @jonesperkins1382
    @jonesperkins1382 Рік тому +4

    I thought I knew my history, I have never heard of this. Probably because during this time all I was studying was the Civil War

    • @LukeLovesRose
      @LukeLovesRose Місяць тому

      Schools won't teach you the truth about these raids

  • @seerstone8982
    @seerstone8982 2 роки тому +7

    Excellent documentary! Fair, and balanced, great narration!

    • @Quincy_Morris
      @Quincy_Morris 7 місяців тому

      It’s more important to be true than to be ‘balanced’

  • @kayakdan48
    @kayakdan48 Рік тому +7

    I have visited the Schell's Brewery in New Ulm,MN. Part of their tour describes how the warring Indians, although coming to the brewery during the uprising and finding employees and owners...left them all alive.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  Рік тому +2

      I absolutely love how commenters on this video help fill-out the story! Fascinating!

    • @kayakdan48
      @kayakdan48 Рік тому

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 Your presentation was amazing...glad I could add a bit of a side story. There is still lots of animosity among those related to the settlers killed and the Native Americans to this day. Everyone seems to remember/know what happened quite vivdly from word of mouth. Especially in the New Ulm to Mankato area of the state.

    • @Dragonshmm265
      @Dragonshmm265 Рік тому +1

      They gave the Indians pie, eggs, etc. They were very nice to the Indians in the area. Great brewery, love the history. I grew up near there

  • @msmorgan45
    @msmorgan45 3 роки тому +17

    I found this to be very informative, I have read Over the Earth I Come so already know the story, some of the historical videos out there are pretty dry, yours was well narrated and very watchable. I live in Kansas and our history has much of the same conflict between people, starting with the Civil War, or before the Civil War as in the burning of Lawrence Kansas, it wasn't Indians that burned Lawrence and killed over a hundred citizens. The history of this nation is fascinating, gritty, and evolving.
    Thanks for the video.

    • @fattyhaggs356
      @fattyhaggs356 2 роки тому

      Who was it?

    • @whosawesome3829
      @whosawesome3829 2 роки тому +5

      Lawrence had it coming!

    • @JamesWilliams-st4bp
      @JamesWilliams-st4bp 2 роки тому +2

      @@fattyhaggs356 Quantrill's Raid 1863

    • @fattyhaggs356
      @fattyhaggs356 2 роки тому +2

      @@JamesWilliams-st4bp I will reaearch.thank you.
      Blessings.

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 2 роки тому

      @@whosawesome3829 No women or children were killed at Lawrence, only Redlegs (see "The Outlaw Josie wales"). However, Jim Lane, their leader, escaped. The Redlegs had killed many citizens of Missouri, including women and children.

  • @billweir8824
    @billweir8824 Місяць тому +1

    Very sad to listen to but made me realize just how much suffering spreads across those plains in early times.

  • @rosaoddin4338
    @rosaoddin4338 2 роки тому +8

    Good storyteller - well done

  • @AZ-kr6ff
    @AZ-kr6ff 10 місяців тому

    Narrative and text at the same time. Brilliant.

  • @TRHARTAmericanArtist
    @TRHARTAmericanArtist 2 роки тому +26

    Thanks for bringing this to light. Early on John Smith warned of the duplicity of the indigenous people. His warning was ignored and resulted in the deaths of approximately 200 colonists who had breakfasted with them that very morning. Some folks never learn.

    • @simondalton3726
      @simondalton3726 2 роки тому +12

      Really? ‘… the duplicity of the indigenous people…’. You have to be kidding.

    • @toasteddingus6925
      @toasteddingus6925 2 роки тому +6

      Bahahajajahajjahaha yeah, it was those darned duplicitous indigenous people alright

    • @simondalton3726
      @simondalton3726 2 роки тому +6

      @@toasteddingus6925 right? How dare they try and take back the land that had been fairly stolen from them.

    • @TRHARTAmericanArtist
      @TRHARTAmericanArtist 2 роки тому +9

      As I said...some people never learn.

    • @simondalton3726
      @simondalton3726 2 роки тому

      @@TRHARTAmericanArtist Yep. Never trust the white man

  • @paultanker5606
    @paultanker5606 2 роки тому +1

    G'Day, well done Sir most Interesting and Informative, good to see you looked at both sides, Going to Binge Watch the rest of your work, thank you for what you have done !👍

  • @alec2726
    @alec2726 2 роки тому +7

    The Massacre of women and children never made the Lakota-Sioux either a great people or great warriors?

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah..they did what was done to them as far as women and children.. I don't think it's right but I understand it. Murdering women and children then driving them into imprisonment behind fences while not allowing them to hunt because they would give them food..then as food didn't show..mocked them like the fat head telling them to eat grass..that would be reason to make sure grass was the last thing in it's mouth.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +4

      @@UncutSavage9858 Let's be clear: the Sioux were not "starving." There was a bad crop in 1862, but rationing does not equal starvation. A massacre should not be hung around the head of one man's insult.

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому +1

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 . That ain't what I know..whatever you have going must be misinformation. From my understanding they were pit into an area and not allowed to go outside of it..even for hunting ..then food promised was piss poor even before the point of not showing up..you do the math

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому

      @@doorusthewalrus6903 . Watch " How The West Was Lost " " Let Them Eat Grass "

    • @UncutSavage9858
      @UncutSavage9858 2 роки тому

      Same situation with my relatives the Miccosukee and Seminole..stay in this little area and shut up. We had little to eat so we hunted outside the reservation lines and raided farms for food..and now we have people such as yourself saying they weren't starving..they weren't being shot dead on site..but then again..there will always be squatter types pop up here and there with alternative facts that if swallowed leads one to think the tribes were just evil devil worshiping people so they deserve to be abused and murdered. I don't really care anymore for what you boat people come up with

  • @davidkiser6083
    @davidkiser6083 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing, I never heard of this Battle before. Thank Y👏👏

  • @riancreamer6904
    @riancreamer6904 Рік тому +4

    History is a funny thing: we laud conquerors like the Romans and make films that glorify Viking raiders yet we seem to have concluded that the European conquest of the Americas was all bad and that their enemies were somehow more noble and pure.

  • @clinthowe7629
    @clinthowe7629 Рік тому +2

    a very well made and interesting series of events. thats an astounding casualty figure, 600 to 1250 dead settlers.

  • @paulguzman1634
    @paulguzman1634 2 роки тому +13

    This story would make a great historical movie or even a miniseries - if they could keep the original story intact. You know Hollywood! :)

    • @jimbrew4529
      @jimbrew4529 Рік тому

      I'd like to see Ken Burns make a documentary concerning this conflict.

    • @johnwalters1055
      @johnwalters1055 2 місяці тому

      It would end up like Tom horn good movie sad end

  • @andrewmaccallum2367
    @andrewmaccallum2367 Рік тому

    Excellent as always👏👏👏 Thanks for this 👍

  • @danpress7745
    @danpress7745 2 роки тому +17

    Let them eat grass; Sad that the few dishonest in this world cause so much misery for the many.

    • @catman8670
      @catman8670 2 роки тому +1

      Sorry, far more than few

  • @dougpeterson7819
    @dougpeterson7819 2 місяці тому +1

    I was raised in a little town called Slayton by lake shetek was taught this in school

  • @UrzuaTroskenia0369
    @UrzuaTroskenia0369 2 роки тому +5

    I went to public school in MN from 2nd to12th, they never mention these conflicts. Perhaps what now resides has inherited karmas from the past's bloody history while stacking new negative karma, MN is going downhill spiritually.

    • @michaelknuteson3666
      @michaelknuteson3666 Рік тому

      MY gf is Sicangu from Rosebud sd. She asked if there was a wiping of the tears ceremony done here. they do this so both sides can heal from the bad blood btwn them.

    • @UrzuaTroskenia0369
      @UrzuaTroskenia0369 Рік тому

      @@michaelknuteson3666 thats fine regarding the past, I was referring to state history being overlaped by Marxism or events like Knee Cop and Fentynal Mercy.

    • @jamalanderson3891
      @jamalanderson3891 Рік тому +1

      @@UrzuaTroskenia0369 it seems as though other regions of the country know more about the history than us. This stuff is actually interesting, knowing all the little nuances, where exactly things happened. Now it’s, like you said, a marxist global narrative, which isn’t really how things went down. Do people see the truth as it happens, or an event in relation to a given narrative?

    • @UrzuaTroskenia0369
      @UrzuaTroskenia0369 Рік тому

      @@jamalanderson3891 I agree kind of, public education is flawed, and I'm not to sure regarding private, regardless even the Indegenous may embelish as well considering the bad blood of the past still playing out today plus everything else of the present. I think people can see truth both ways, but even more so whats convinient or they are born into, I don't think it's bad thing to speculate on past ancestry or of past cultures and civilization if curiosity or passion is persent.

  • @leomarkaable1
    @leomarkaable1 2 місяці тому

    My great grandfather John fought in the 10th Minnesota regiment. He was present at the battles in that war, and also at the Mankato hangings. Later he fought with US Grant. He was seriously wounded in the battle of Mobile Bay.

  • @marksolarz3756
    @marksolarz3756 3 роки тому +15

    Schells breweries. August Schell had always been very kind to the Indians. They went around......August Schell and his small Buisness. Mercy...not entirely blood thirsty. Have a beer. It’s still there!

    • @marksolarz3756
      @marksolarz3756 3 роки тому +3

      I live here in Peace! Township Minnesota. Not far from the old Hinckley fire museum.

    • @doorusthewalrus6903
      @doorusthewalrus6903  2 роки тому +3

      That sounds like a story in and of itself. Prosit!

    • @peterhamlinhamlin8908
      @peterhamlinhamlin8908 2 роки тому +1

      Schell beer firewater made many millions from Crow people. Or did he just give it
      away being nice.....sooo kind.....

    • @copperypuddle3858
      @copperypuddle3858 2 роки тому +5

      @@peterhamlinhamlin8908 Cope and seethe

    • @davegreene1198
      @davegreene1198 2 роки тому

      @@peterhamlinhamlin8908
      They made German beer... not firewater.
      Stop with the stupidity already.