Chief Sitting Bull
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Chief Sitting Bull

Did Chief Sitting Bull have BLUE EYES?
I went to Madame Tussauds Wax Museum-the figure they present has blue eyes.
Does anyone have any historical information on this subject?
Possible, but not likely. Extremely unlikely, in fact.
Blue eyes are found exclusively amongst Caucasians. To my knowledge, no other people has blue eyes. Even amongst Caucasians the blue eyes gen is not dominant. A child from parents with blue and brown eyes is more likely to have brown eyes.
Only if Sitting Bull had Europeans in his ancestry, it might be possible. But even then it is not very likely.
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| | Chief Sitting Bull $49.99 Chief Sitting Bull - Giclee Print |
| | Sitting Bull, Sioux Chief $39.99 Sitting Bull, Sioux Chief - Giclee Print |
| | Chief Sitting Bull, Sioux Indian $39.99 Chief Sitting Bull, Sioux Indian - Giclee Print |
| | Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake) 1831-1890 Teton Sioux Indian Chief $49.99 Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake) 1831-1890 Teton Sioux Indian Chief - Giclee Print |
| | Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake) 1831-90 Teton Sioux Indian Chief $49.99 Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake) 1831-90 Teton Sioux Indian Chief - Giclee Print |
| | The Last Days of Sitting Bull: Sioux Medicine Chief $24.64 Sitting Bull was a fascinating, but controversial figure in the political history of relationships between the First Nations and the U.S. Government. Author Usher L. Burdick illuminates the human factor in the tragic events leading up to the death of Sitting Bull and the aftermath at Wounded Knee, building from the correspondence and papers of Indian Agent James McLaughlin. The late Congressman Usher L. Burdick (18791960) first published The Last Days of Sitting Bull in 1941. Author: Burdick, Usher L. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 188 Publication Date: 2011/08/29 Language: English Dimensions: 9.02 x 5.98 x 0.43 inches |
| | Sitting Bull $39.99 Sitting Bull - Giclee Print |
| | Biography: Sitting Bull - Chief of the Lakota Nation - $19.99 For history scholars, the name Sitting Bull brings to mind the powerful Native American Resistance and the bloody Battle at Little Bighorn. There was much more to the Sioux medicine man's rich and varied life though, and as the filmmakers behind A&E's acclaimed Biography series of documentaries look even deeper into Sitting Bull's past, the noble efforts of one warrior to preserve his rich heritage offers a moving portrait of the man who masterminded the victory at Custer's Last Stand, and held a curious position in Buffo Bill's "Wild West Show" before meeting a grim end in captivity. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi |
| | With Sitting Bull at the Spirit Lake Massacre - $14.99 As helmed by Robert North Bradbury, the silent feature With Sitting Bull at the Spirit Lake Massacre was produced in 1925 but went unreleased until 1927, and was then considered lost for another 80 years. It stars a Native American thespian, Chief Yowlachie, as the famous 19th Century Sioux Indian Sitting Bull. The tale unfolds in the 1860s or 1870s, just outside of Spirit Lake, Iowa, where the burgeoning Caucasian populace continues to claim one Native American settlement after another, indiscriminately. They err (and in a big way) by laying hands on a settlement long promised to the Sioux, located at Spirit Lake proper; this, in turn, rouses the ire of Sitting Bull and prompts him to forcibly reclaim the territory. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi |
| | Sitting Bull : Sioux War Chief $9.75 No Synopsis Available |
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Chief Tatanka Yotaka or Sitting Bull (1834- 1890)
Why does this country build statues to lawbreakers?
When Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man, She broke the law and due process took place. Martin Luther King Jr. also broke the law and was rewarded with a statue also. I am Indian and my people are still captive and no statue or holiday honors my ancestors. Why don't we have a Chief Joseph Day or a Sitting Bull Day or even a Crazy Horse Day. We are the forgotten people but we are far more nobel then Rosa Parks.
you want a statue? build one and they will come to see it. all us american invaders feel guilty about the indians (native americans) and we love them and their stories and people.
The government does not care about you or us either. they are just a government. They are busy now destroying other races and societies. You must get a process started on internet or whatever to get funds to build a museum or whatever. i am sure millions will support the idea. use people power and you shall have all the statues you want. but do not expect the government that destroyed you to now honor you. they are too prideful. they are no diffferent now than they were back when they invaded your lands.
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No…it should NOT be!
I'm stopping by to say that I've found a copy of The Blue Plateau. Verdict? It's a smooth-moving non-fictional fiction — “its logic is poetic” — though Tredinnick has an anxious habit of being not just poetic but also Poetick, and speaking in fridge magnet grandeurs. “Who we are in the end is what love leaves behind,” for example, or calling a list of Aboriginal words, “this small poem of the sound of water falling in a valley.” Then a woman jots down a list of events she remembers and he writes, “This is a memoir in free verse.” (“Oh God,” he seems to be fretting, “what if they don't understand that I'm a poet?”) Things are better when he relaxes and lets his research speak for itself. One short sentence about cooked parrot tasting like apples is worth more than all the sentences that insist on being Poetry. Good research, good organisation of material, and the “variety of literary forms” is well appreciated. Comparing it to Heat-Moon's work, I think some of H-M's nuts-and-guts approach wouldn't have gone astray, but at least Tredinnick doesn't (like H-M) spend the last chapter mistaking himself for the reincarnated love child of Walt Whitman and Chief Sitting Bull.