Photo Gallery
- Lt. William Philo Clark, General Crook’s chief of scouts, was confident he could “work” Indians to do the Army’s bidding. He was photographed by D. S. Mitchell standing beside Little Hawk, uncle of Crazy Horse, at the Red Cloud Agency in 1877. [National Anthropological Archives 0209700.]
- American Horse joined Crazy Horse as a shirtwearer of the Oglala in 1868, but sided with Red Cloud thereafter. He was standing near Crazy Horse when the chief was fatally stabbed and helped to carry him into the adjutant’s office. [Photo by D. S. Mitchell, National Anthropological Archives 0210300.]
- When the Army came to arrest him, Crazy Horse fled with his ailing wife from the Red Cloud Agency to Camp Sheridan. There, promised by Lieutenant Jesse Lee that no harm would come to him, Crazy Horse agreed to return the next day. [Photo by Charles Howard, October 1877, National Anthropological Archives 0236900.]
- General George Crook began an autobiography in the 1880s but abandoned the manuscript after a brief, guarded account of the battle of the Rosebud, where most of his officers thought he had been whipped by Crazy Horse. He is pictured here near the end of his career, about the time he was appointed commander of the Military Division of the Missouri. [National Anthropological Archives 1604805.]
- Spotted Tail with wife and daughter, photographed by S.J. Morrow in October 1876, when General Crook proclaimed him chief of the White River Sioux. Spotted Tail was a dogged defender of his people, but he stopped fighting the whites for good about 1865. [National Anthropological Archives 9851000.]
- Red Cloud dominated the Oglala for more than sixty years after killing chief Bull Bear in 1841. This portrait was probably taken in October 1876, when photographer S. J. Morrow visited the Red Cloud Agency at the time General Crook, angered by Red Cloud’s defiance, tried to depose him. [National Anthropological Archives 9851600.]
- William Garnett, son of a Confederate general, spent his life among the Sioux. Standing behind him in this photograph taken about 1905, are his third wife, Fillie, half-Oglala daughter of the trader Nick Janis, and four of Garnett’s children. [Denver Public Library, Western History Collection, No. x-31493.]
![00209700-web Lt. William Philo Clark, General Crook’s chief of scouts, was confident he could “work” Indians to do the Army’s bidding. He was photographed by D. S. Mitchell standing beside Little Hawk, uncle of Crazy Horse, at the Red Cloud Agency in 1877. [National Anthropological Archives 0209700.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/00209700-web-150x150.jpg)

![00210300-web American Horse joined Crazy Horse as a shirtwearer of the Oglala in 1868, but sided with Red Cloud thereafter. He was standing near Crazy Horse when the chief was fatally stabbed and helped to carry him into the adjutant’s office. [Photo by D. S. Mitchell, National Anthropological Archives 0210300.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/00210300-web-150x150.jpg)
![00236900 DPI 600-web When the Army came to arrest him, Crazy Horse fled with his ailing wife from the Red Cloud Agency to Camp Sheridan. There, promised by Lieutenant Jesse Lee that no harm would come to him, Crazy Horse agreed to return the next day. [Photo by Charles Howard, October 1877, National Anthropological Archives 0236900.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/00236900-DPI-600-web-150x150.jpg)

![01604805-web General George Crook began an autobiography in the 1880s but abandoned the manuscript after a brief, guarded account of the battle of the Rosebud, where most of his officers thought he had been whipped by Crazy Horse. He is pictured here near the end of his career, about the time he was appointed commander of the Military Division of the Missouri. [National Anthropological Archives 1604805.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/01604805-web-150x150.jpg)



![09851000 Edit Iso-web Spotted Tail with wife and daughter, photographed by S.J. Morrow in October 1876, when General Crook proclaimed him chief of the White River Sioux. Spotted Tail was a dogged defender of his people, but he stopped fighting the whites for good about 1865. [National Anthropological Archives 9851000.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/09851000-Edit-Iso-web-150x150.jpg)
![09851600-web Red Cloud dominated the Oglala for more than sixty years after killing chief Bull Bear in 1841. This portrait was probably taken in October 1876, when photographer S. J. Morrow visited the Red Cloud Agency at the time General Crook, angered by Red Cloud’s defiance, tried to depose him. [National Anthropological Archives 9851600.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/09851600-web-150x150.jpg)
![10031493-web William Garnett, son of a Confederate general, spent his life among the Sioux. Standing behind him in this photograph taken about 1905, are his third wife, Fillie, half-Oglala daughter of the trader Nick Janis, and four of Garnett’s children. [Denver Public Library, Western History Collection, No. x-31493.]](http://www.thekillingofcrazyhorse.com/wp-content/uploads/10031493-web-150x150.jpg)



