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Ear-Rings Bracelets Pendants Cross-Pendants |
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Southern cheyenne flag |
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Northern cheyenne flag |
Nothing in the Cheyenne legends recalls
migration to the North American Continent. It was believed that the first
Cheyenne lived under-ground and were led to the surface by one of their
more adventuresome people, who, following a small source of light, discovered
the world above them.
It is commonly accepted that the Cheyenne were originally
from North of the Missouri River on a large lake. They occupied a region
populated by the Algonquon speaking people. It is suspected they began
their tribal migrations from the shores of the Great Lakes or the upper
Mississippi River area. They originally appear in historical records on
a map attributed to Joliet and drawn about 1673.
By the end of the 1700's the Cheyenne had migrated to
the Sheyenne River in eastern North Dakota. When or why the Cheyenne moved
farther up the Minnesota River and ultimately to the Sheyenne River is
unknown, probably due to pressures from the Sioux or Assiniboin. They
lived more than a half century on the Sheyenne.
Their principle village, containing about 70 lodges
was located on the south bank of an old channel of the river, about 12
miles south of Lisbon, Ransom County, North Dakota. While there they acquired
horses and metal knives, but still did not have guns. Armed with the bow
and arrow and lance, the Cheyenne soon came to depend on the vast buffalo
herds to supplement their diet of beans, corn and squash.
It is estimated they acquired horses about 1750. By
the early 1800's, the Cheyenne ranged widely to the southwest of the Missouri
River. A french trader, Persine duLuc, noted that, although the Cheyenne
wandered the greatest part of the year, they sowed maize (corn) and tobacco
near their "cottages" which they came to reap at the beginning
of autumn (the Cheyenne built earth lodges to live in, some more than
40' in diameter).
When the Lewis and Clark Expedition came upon the Cheyenne
along the Missouri River about 1804, their numbers were estimated at about
300-400 fighting men, but Clark did not come in contact with the whole
tribe, which meant the tribe numbered between 1400 and 1600 persons. He
described the Cheyenne as "rich in horses and dogs, the dogs carry
a great deal of their light baggage.
Military Societies of the Cheyenne not only had ceremonial
functions such as their participation in the Sun Dance, but also were
largely responsible for protecting the tribes and maintaining tribal discipline.
These societies were organized on either age-grade basis or continuous
membership in a specific society.
These Cheyenne Societies were Wolf Soldiers, Fox soldiers,
Dog Soldiers and Red Shields or Bull Soldiers, and later, the Thunder
Bows also known as the Bowstrings.
Cheyenne life on the plains early in the 19th century
was well adapted to tribal existence. Their institutions were both meaningful
and intergrated. They had worked out a practical government system and
a religion or super-naturalism related directly to the environment in
which they lived, established a satisfying economy, maintained an orderly
family and kinship system, and made alliances with powerful and friendly
tribes which assured that they would not be exterminated by their native
foes.
The Cheyenne removal to the Arkansas River did not bring
peace to the tribe. The early and mid 1830's were a time of widespread
inter-tribal wars on the southern and central plains, in which the Cheyenne
frequently participated. About this time frame the Cheyenne and Arapaho
formed an alliance. The Cheyenne had large horse herds and animosity grew
between the Cheyenne and Pawnee over the years.
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Cheyenne. Man's portrait |
There was no cessation of hostilities
between the 2 tribes during the 1850's. In 1851-52, Alights on the Cloud,
a prominent Cheyenne chief was killed by the Pawnee. The Cheyenne gathered
their allies, the Arapaho, Brule' Sioux and smaller numbers of Kiowa,
Kiowa-Apache, and Crow and followed their sacred Medicine Arrows and Buffalo
Hat into battle against the Pawnee. The 1853 war against the Pawnee ended
in disaster for the Cheyenne. The warriors of the combined tribes could
not drive the enemy from a strong defensive position and the battle raged
indecisivly for hours. Then a body of horsemen appeared, Pottowatomi,
armed with new rifles, who alternately advanced by platoons, firing and
retreating. The Plains Indians were no match for the well organized Pottawatomi
warriors, so the former fled the battlefield. In 1854, however, the Cheyenne
revenged their defeat when they and the Kiowa cut off 113 Pawnee and killed
them almost to the man.
Restlessness continued with the tribes and by the winter
of 1863-64, Gov. Evans of Colorado Territory was convinced Indian hostilities
would begin in the spring. If all went well, the Indians could be defeated
and Colorado Territory could be cleared of hostilities. In March of 1864,
Major General Samuel R. Curtiss withdrew every man who could be spared
from the Indian frontier to meet a Confederate force poised on the Arkansas
River. Governor Evans began to worry about the defenseless position of
the settlements in Colorado Territory.
In 1875, an Expedition led by Col. Miles from Camp Supply
led to the surrender of a majority of the hostile Cheyenne. The days of
freedom ended, the buffalo hunt, the thrill of horse raids, were all in
the past. The Southern Cheyenne were powerless to contest the superior
force of the white man, who gave them rations, schools, Christianity,
and its substitutes.
Stripped of their reservation several decades later by land hungry American
farmers and speculators, the Cheyenne declined as disease, despair and
lethargy took their toll.
The Southern Cheyenne clung stubbornly to their institutions
until, finally in the 1930's, some recognition of their culture was granted
by the United States of America. The Cheyenne is one tribe with two reservations,
one in Oklahoma, the Southern Cheyenne and one in Montana, the Northern
Cheyenne.
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