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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 14:52:06 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 14:53:43 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 14:55:09 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 14:56:53 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 14:58:25 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 15:00:01 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 15:01:35 GMT -5
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Post by Mitchell BigHunter on May 27, 2020 15:12:02 GMT -5
There is a another narrative, from a Dakota woman in the book "Through Dakota Eyes", by Gary Clayton Anderson.
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Post by chicheman on May 28, 2020 5:57:13 GMT -5
Thank you Mitchel BigHunter, Pidamaya for this interesting share. That was tragic events of the Dakota war of 1862 that sure could have been avoided if the Dakota would have been treated fairly and with justice. I was reading the Dakota Prisoner of War Letters - Dakota Kaskapi Okicize Wowapi by Clifford Canku and Michael Simon, a very good book in my opinion and it is often kind of heartbreaking to read of the treatments the Dakota had to endure. Best from Germany, Tanyan un wo, Toksta ake chicheman
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Post by travellingwoman60 on Sept 26, 2020 10:31:46 GMT -5
On page 830 of The Red Road and Other Narratives of the Dakota Sioux, Beveridge writes that Wanduta was also called Tawasuwota (Mnyio, 1985). I wondered if they were the same man until I read the end of your thread and that Tawasuwota died before he made it to Manitoba Canada. Wanduta was at Oak River (Sioux Valley) until at least 1913.
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