Description

Book Synopsis
Popular culture largely perceives the tragedy at Wounded Knee in 1890 as the end of Native American resistance in the West, and for many years historians viewed this event as the end of Indian history altogether. As Akim D. Reinhardt demonstrates in this volume, however, the twentieth century continued to be politically dynamic.

Trade Review
"Reinhardt has produced an accessible collection of resources that both novices and scholars will find useful."—David Christensen, Kansas History
"A welcome contribution to American Indian history."—Jace Decory, South Dakota History
"Reinhardt covers more Lakota history and culture in one book than any other collective publication I have seen or read. It is a very thorough, accurate, and powerful collection of primary source documents. . . . The publication is a very useful teaching tool and a valuable source of information for interested readers."—Tribal College Journal
"A fresh tapestry of Lakota and Dakota history."—Roundup Magazine
"Welcome to the Oglala Nation: A Documentary Reader in Oglala Lakota Political History is more than a documentary reader. Through a combination of primary documents, historical narrative, and historiography, Akim Reinhardt provides a comprehensive overview of more than 500 years of Oglala Lakota political history."—Margaret Huettl, Great Plains Quarterly
“Akim Reinhardt’s Welcome to the Oglala Nation is a powerful combination of narrative description and primary documents that provides the reader with a deeper understanding of Oglala political history. Both the novice and the expert should find it useful.”—David R. M. Beck, professor of Native American studies at the University of Montana and coauthor of City Indian: Native American Activism in Chicago, 1893–1934
“Gathered in these pages is the story of one of the Great Plains’ ultimate survivors: the Oglala Lakotas. Covering the days when they first left the eastern woodlands for the prairie up to contemporary tribal politics, Akim Reinhardt has compiled vital information for scholars and armchair historians alike.”—Stew Magnuson, author of The Death of Raymond Yellow Thunder and Wounded Knee 1973: Still Bleeding

Table of Contents
PrefaceAcknowledgmentsA Note on TerminologyIntroductionOglala Political History: An OverviewDocuments in Oglala Lakota Political History1. Origins of the Oceti Sakowi?2. Oglala Winter Counts3. Jean-Baptiste Truteau Describes Lakota Politics and Expansion (1795)4. Treaty with the Sioune and Oglala Tribes (1825)5. Francis Parkman Observes an Oglala Political Meeting (1846)6. Oglalas Meet with U.S. Officials (1867–1868)7. Second Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868)8. Breaking Up the Great Sioux Reservation (1889)9. Breaking Up Pine Ridge Reservation and Organizing Bennett County (1910)10. Preamble to the Constitution and Bylaws of the Oglala Tribal Council (1921)11. John Collier’s Plains Congress, Rapid City, South Dakota (1934)12. The Indian Reorganization Act (1934)13. Preamble to the Constitution and Bylaws of the Oglala Sioux Tribe of the Pine Ridge Reservation of South Dakota (1936)14. Final Meeting of the Oglala Tribal Council (1936)15. Oglala Sioux Tribal Council Resolution No. 1 (1936)16. Meetings of the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1936)17. Christianity and Politics on Pine Ridge Reservation (1936–1937)18. Initial Ordinances and Resolutions of Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1937)19. Early Ordinances and Resolutions of Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1938)20. Oglala Sioux Tribe Bans Display of “Uncivilized Practices” (1938)21. Office of Indian Affairs Monitors the Cutting of Timber (1940)22. Office of Indian Affairs Curtails Oglala Sioux Tribal Authority (1942)23. Letters of Frank Ecoffey (1942)24. Office of Indian Affairs Officials Suggest Forcing Pine Ridge Oglalas to Contribute to War Effort (1943)25. Interior Secretary Harold Ickes Restricts Tribal Government Membership (1943)26. Tribal Council Terminates the Tribal Buffalo Herd (1944)27. Letter Granting Mr. and Mrs. Fast Horse Permission to Leave Pine Ridge Reservation (1945)28. Resolution to Remove Pine Ridge Superintendent W. O. Roberts (1945)29. Tribal Council Authorizes a Delegation to Washington DC (1946)30. Porcupine District Council Demands a “White Man” as Farm Agent (1946)31. Congress Authorizes Compensation for Gunnery Range Land Seizures (1956)32. Commissioner of Indian Affairs Demands Greater Bureaucratic Efficiency (1960)33. Edison Ward Interviews South Dakota State Attorney Robert Maule (1964)34. Tribal President Johnson Holy Rock Interviewed (1967)35. Former Tribal Council Member Thomas Conroy Interviewed (1967)36. Future Tribal President Gerald One Feather Interviewed (1967)37. Oglala Sioux Tribe Bill of Rights (1968)38. Interior Department Certifies Pine Ridge Elections (1968)39. Presidential Hopeful Robert Kennedy Visits Pine Ridge Reservation (1968)40. Political Tensions on Pine Ridge Reservation (1970)41. Tribal Council Attempts to Suspend the Tribal President and Vice President (1971)42. Conflict on Pine Ridge Reservation (1972)43. Tribal President Richard Wilson’s Inauguration (1972)44. Tribal Council Seats Representative Kills Straight (1972)45. Pine Ridge Superintendent Stanley Lyman Interviewed (1972)46. Tribal President Richard Wilson’s Impeachment Hearing (1973)47. Anti-Wilson Tribal Member Interviewed (1973)48. A Tribal Policeman’s Observations of Pine Ridge Reservation (1973)49. Tribal President Richard Wilson Discusses Pine Ridge Politics (1973)50. Chuck Trimble Discusses the Current Political Situation (1974)51. U.S. Civil Rights Commission Report on Pine Ridge Election (1974)52. United States vs. Sioux Nation of Indians (1980)53. President Bill Clinton Addresses Pine Ridge Reservation (1999)54. Camp Justice Protests Alcohol Sales and Unsolved Murders at Whiteclay, Nebraska (2000)55. Protests at Red Cloud Administration Building End (2001)56. Tribal President Cecilia Fire Thunder Is Impeached (2006)57. Federal Approval of Casino Gambling on Pine Ridge Reservation (1993)58. Prairie Wind Casino Opens on Pine Ridge Reservation (2007)59. Amendment to the Oglala Sioux Tribal Constitution (2008)60. Oglala Sioux Tribe Debates Legalizing Alcohol on Pine Ridge Reservation (2014)AppendixesNotesGlossary and Pronunciation GuideBibliographic EssayIndex

Welcome to the Oglala Nation A Documentary

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A Hardback by Akim D. Reinhardt

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    View other formats and editions of Welcome to the Oglala Nation A Documentary by Akim D. Reinhardt

    Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
    Publication Date: 01/09/2015
    ISBN13: 9780803268463, 978-0803268463
    ISBN10: 0803268467
    Also in:
    Local history

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Popular culture largely perceives the tragedy at Wounded Knee in 1890 as the end of Native American resistance in the West, and for many years historians viewed this event as the end of Indian history altogether. As Akim D. Reinhardt demonstrates in this volume, however, the twentieth century continued to be politically dynamic.

    Trade Review
    "Reinhardt has produced an accessible collection of resources that both novices and scholars will find useful."—David Christensen, Kansas History
    "A welcome contribution to American Indian history."—Jace Decory, South Dakota History
    "Reinhardt covers more Lakota history and culture in one book than any other collective publication I have seen or read. It is a very thorough, accurate, and powerful collection of primary source documents. . . . The publication is a very useful teaching tool and a valuable source of information for interested readers."—Tribal College Journal
    "A fresh tapestry of Lakota and Dakota history."—Roundup Magazine
    "Welcome to the Oglala Nation: A Documentary Reader in Oglala Lakota Political History is more than a documentary reader. Through a combination of primary documents, historical narrative, and historiography, Akim Reinhardt provides a comprehensive overview of more than 500 years of Oglala Lakota political history."—Margaret Huettl, Great Plains Quarterly
    “Akim Reinhardt’s Welcome to the Oglala Nation is a powerful combination of narrative description and primary documents that provides the reader with a deeper understanding of Oglala political history. Both the novice and the expert should find it useful.”—David R. M. Beck, professor of Native American studies at the University of Montana and coauthor of City Indian: Native American Activism in Chicago, 1893–1934
    “Gathered in these pages is the story of one of the Great Plains’ ultimate survivors: the Oglala Lakotas. Covering the days when they first left the eastern woodlands for the prairie up to contemporary tribal politics, Akim Reinhardt has compiled vital information for scholars and armchair historians alike.”—Stew Magnuson, author of The Death of Raymond Yellow Thunder and Wounded Knee 1973: Still Bleeding

    Table of Contents
    PrefaceAcknowledgmentsA Note on TerminologyIntroductionOglala Political History: An OverviewDocuments in Oglala Lakota Political History1. Origins of the Oceti Sakowi?2. Oglala Winter Counts3. Jean-Baptiste Truteau Describes Lakota Politics and Expansion (1795)4. Treaty with the Sioune and Oglala Tribes (1825)5. Francis Parkman Observes an Oglala Political Meeting (1846)6. Oglalas Meet with U.S. Officials (1867–1868)7. Second Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868)8. Breaking Up the Great Sioux Reservation (1889)9. Breaking Up Pine Ridge Reservation and Organizing Bennett County (1910)10. Preamble to the Constitution and Bylaws of the Oglala Tribal Council (1921)11. John Collier’s Plains Congress, Rapid City, South Dakota (1934)12. The Indian Reorganization Act (1934)13. Preamble to the Constitution and Bylaws of the Oglala Sioux Tribe of the Pine Ridge Reservation of South Dakota (1936)14. Final Meeting of the Oglala Tribal Council (1936)15. Oglala Sioux Tribal Council Resolution No. 1 (1936)16. Meetings of the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1936)17. Christianity and Politics on Pine Ridge Reservation (1936–1937)18. Initial Ordinances and Resolutions of Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1937)19. Early Ordinances and Resolutions of Oglala Sioux Tribal Council (1938)20. Oglala Sioux Tribe Bans Display of “Uncivilized Practices” (1938)21. Office of Indian Affairs Monitors the Cutting of Timber (1940)22. Office of Indian Affairs Curtails Oglala Sioux Tribal Authority (1942)23. Letters of Frank Ecoffey (1942)24. Office of Indian Affairs Officials Suggest Forcing Pine Ridge Oglalas to Contribute to War Effort (1943)25. Interior Secretary Harold Ickes Restricts Tribal Government Membership (1943)26. Tribal Council Terminates the Tribal Buffalo Herd (1944)27. Letter Granting Mr. and Mrs. Fast Horse Permission to Leave Pine Ridge Reservation (1945)28. Resolution to Remove Pine Ridge Superintendent W. O. Roberts (1945)29. Tribal Council Authorizes a Delegation to Washington DC (1946)30. Porcupine District Council Demands a “White Man” as Farm Agent (1946)31. Congress Authorizes Compensation for Gunnery Range Land Seizures (1956)32. Commissioner of Indian Affairs Demands Greater Bureaucratic Efficiency (1960)33. Edison Ward Interviews South Dakota State Attorney Robert Maule (1964)34. Tribal President Johnson Holy Rock Interviewed (1967)35. Former Tribal Council Member Thomas Conroy Interviewed (1967)36. Future Tribal President Gerald One Feather Interviewed (1967)37. Oglala Sioux Tribe Bill of Rights (1968)38. Interior Department Certifies Pine Ridge Elections (1968)39. Presidential Hopeful Robert Kennedy Visits Pine Ridge Reservation (1968)40. Political Tensions on Pine Ridge Reservation (1970)41. Tribal Council Attempts to Suspend the Tribal President and Vice President (1971)42. Conflict on Pine Ridge Reservation (1972)43. Tribal President Richard Wilson’s Inauguration (1972)44. Tribal Council Seats Representative Kills Straight (1972)45. Pine Ridge Superintendent Stanley Lyman Interviewed (1972)46. Tribal President Richard Wilson’s Impeachment Hearing (1973)47. Anti-Wilson Tribal Member Interviewed (1973)48. A Tribal Policeman’s Observations of Pine Ridge Reservation (1973)49. Tribal President Richard Wilson Discusses Pine Ridge Politics (1973)50. Chuck Trimble Discusses the Current Political Situation (1974)51. U.S. Civil Rights Commission Report on Pine Ridge Election (1974)52. United States vs. Sioux Nation of Indians (1980)53. President Bill Clinton Addresses Pine Ridge Reservation (1999)54. Camp Justice Protests Alcohol Sales and Unsolved Murders at Whiteclay, Nebraska (2000)55. Protests at Red Cloud Administration Building End (2001)56. Tribal President Cecilia Fire Thunder Is Impeached (2006)57. Federal Approval of Casino Gambling on Pine Ridge Reservation (1993)58. Prairie Wind Casino Opens on Pine Ridge Reservation (2007)59. Amendment to the Oglala Sioux Tribal Constitution (2008)60. Oglala Sioux Tribe Debates Legalizing Alcohol on Pine Ridge Reservation (2014)AppendixesNotesGlossary and Pronunciation GuideBibliographic EssayIndex

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