
Mad Bear - American-Tribes.com
Chief Mad Bear is Lower Yanktonais and recorded on all the census as Lower Yanktonais. His wife was Santee. His family is as follows:
Wallace "Mad Bear" Anderson - Wikipedia
Wallace "Mad Bear" Anderson (November 9, 1927 – December 10, 1985) was a Tuscarora activist predominantly active in the 1950s who became a spokesman for tribal sovereignty. [1] …
Crazy Bear - Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site (U.S ...
Known also as Mad Bear, Fool Bear, or Crazy Bear, Ours Fou roomed with Kurz in the latter's quarters during frequent visits to the post in the fall and winter of 1851-1852. The courtesy was …
Wallace “Mad Bear” Anderson (1927-1985) - Find a Grave
Wallace P ''Mad Bear'' Anderson, a longtime champion of American Indian civil rights, died in the Veteran's Administration Hospital after a long illness, at age 58. He was born on and lived on …
APOLOGIES TO THE IROQUOIS - The New Yorker
Mad Bear, who is 31, is not a chief. He has seen a good deal of the world. He went into the Navy when he was 16 and remained there till he was 21. He drove a landing craft in the...
Chief Mad Bear Lineal Descendants v. Henderson - Casetext
May 11, 2016 · The Previous 16 years, the Chief Mad Bear lineal descendants have tried to resolve the environmental injustice of the first man-made disaster from the 1944 Pick Sloan …
He Who Has No Ears - HistoryNet
May 27, 2016 · The Sioux gave Colonel William S. Harney the nickname “Mad Bear” after his relentless 1855 punitive expedition. (Library of Congress) Secretary of War Jefferson Davis …
Honored Leaders - The Historical Marker Database
Apr 30, 2017 · In this image, Sitting Bull is roping and capturing a horse, as he did in Montana in 1866. A thin line connects his mouth to a "sitting bull buffalo," his namesake. Chief Gall. Chief …
Chief Mad Bear portrait | DPLA
Chief Mad Bear sits posed for a portrait. He wears a dark striped suit, and a dark tie.
Akta Lakota Museum | Chief Mad Bear Name: Mathó Ocinsica …
As a young man, Mad Bear was a member of the Sioux “Fool Soldier Band.” Later he became chief of his people, the Yanktonais, living in the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. Like many …