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Wounded Knee, 1890 – 1973 in photos (Graphic) (Original Post) OmahaBlueDog Feb 2014 OP
Having been a photo collector for 30 years pipoman Feb 2014 #1
Bobby Onco, captured in iconic Wounded Knee photo, dies at 63 Wilms Feb 2014 #4
I remember the 1973 standoff liberal N proud Feb 2014 #2
Thank you for posting. SamKnause Feb 2014 #3
It seems he was also illegally brought back from Canada when he was supposed to have IrishAyes Feb 2014 #7
I was extremely disappointed okasha Mar 2014 #10
Scrolling through the pictures..... AnneD Feb 2014 #5
I too remember the '73 "standoff"... mahannah Feb 2014 #6
Thanks to everyone for everything. Great OP and replies. IrishAyes Feb 2014 #8
Disturbing, to say the least. Aldo Leopold Feb 2014 #9
I loved Russell Means. I even joined AIM RebelOne Apr 2014 #11
 

pipoman

(16,038 posts)
1. Having been a photo collector for 30 years
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 10:05 AM
Feb 2014

I purchased several Wounded Knee photos taken by Northwestern Photographic Company of Chadron, Nebraska about 20 years ago. At that time they cost me $40 to $100 each, now they sell for $150 to nearly $1000. Incredibly sad depictions and some of the only visual reminders of the actual injustices in the effort to "tame the west".

 

Wilms

(26,795 posts)
4. Bobby Onco, captured in iconic Wounded Knee photo, dies at 63
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 10:38 AM
Feb 2014
Robert Charles Onco, a Kiowa Indian from Oklahoma who was active in the American Indian Movement and its role in the 1973 siege at Wounded Knee, S.D., died last week of lung cancer. The Vietnam-era veteran and resident of the Shinnecock Indian Nation reservation in Southampton was 63.




http://www.newsday.com/long-island/obituaries/bobby-onco-captured-in-iconic-wounded-knee-photo-dies-at-63-1.6964610

liberal N proud

(60,334 posts)
2. I remember the 1973 standoff
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 10:09 AM
Feb 2014

I was a kid in Northwest Iowa and South Dakota was a mere 70 miles away and the local news came from Sioux City, they covered it.

SamKnause

(13,101 posts)
3. Thank you for posting.
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 10:15 AM
Feb 2014

What a savage history the U.S. has.

Unfortunately, that savagery continues to this very day.


FREE Leonard Peltier !!!!!!!!!!!

IrishAyes

(6,151 posts)
7. It seems he was also illegally brought back from Canada when he was supposed to have
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 08:28 PM
Feb 2014

safe haven there.

AnneD

(15,774 posts)
5. Scrolling through the pictures.....
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 11:22 AM
Feb 2014

I was struck by the fact that the shack that folks called home looked exactly like the shack my Cherokee grandparents live in. I remember 1968 well because that is the year my Grandparents, Aunts and Uncles first received electricity in the outreaches of the Nation. They still kept lanterns in the house just in case the power went out.

And chinking the cracks between the boards to keep the wind out. At night we would place quilts on the doorways and sleep in the living room under the potbellied stove. The men would take turns tending the fire overnight.

Russell Means was one of the last great Sioux Chiefs and a free thinking man. I recommend reading his writings. He had many followers in other Nations.

mahannah

(893 posts)
6. I too remember the '73 "standoff"...
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 03:33 PM
Feb 2014

I was on the early shift at a Minneapolis TV station, on my way home, and heard the news on the car radio. I turned around and asked the news director to give me a camera and let me get in before the roadblocks. He said it was just an AIM stunt and would be over before I got there. I had finished reading Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" just two weeks before.

RebelOne

(30,947 posts)
11. I loved Russell Means. I even joined AIM
Fri Apr 25, 2014, 04:44 PM
Apr 2014

even though I have no Native American heritage. But I have always been an advocate of the rights of our Native Americans, and I deplore the atrocities my ancestors did to them in the past.

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