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Post by Diane Merkel on Sept 21, 2006 6:30:49 GMT -6
"Yellow Eyes was an informant for Sitting Bull. She joined Sitting Bull at the Battle of Little Bighorn, escaped with him to Canada in 1877 and later returned and surrendered with him in 1881." Source: www.californiademocrat.com/articles/2006/09/20/news/102news60.txtI have a lot of Indians listed named Yellow [something], but I haven't heard of this woman. Is the above true? Diane
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Post by Diane Merkel on Mar 5, 2007 20:22:07 GMT -6
"In the Spirit of Yellow Eyes, A Cultural Legacy," will be presented 10 a.m., Saturday, March 10, at Missouri's American Indian Cultural Center at Van Meter State Park. Dorothy Eiken, an enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, will present the program. Her great-great grandmother, Yellow Eyes, was with Sitting Bull at the Battle of Little Bighorn. Yellow Eyes fled with Sitting Bull to Canada in 1877 and accompanied him upon his return to the United States and subsequent surrender in 1881. More Info: www.marshallnews.com/story/1192339.html
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Post by dorothyeiken on Mar 11, 2007 18:43:04 GMT -6
Hi Diane,
In regard to my great-great-grandmother, Yellow Eyes, a Hunkpapa Lakota Sioux with Sitting Bull's band. That I have evidence that she and her husband and children were at the Battle of the Little Big Horn and stayed with him into exile in Canada is true. I have Frank Bennett Fiske photos of her in 1903 at Fort Yates and lots of oral history from my grandfather and his siblings. She is on the twelth census of the United States in 1900 and states she was approx. 72. She was living on the Standing Rock Sioux Resevation from 1886 until her death in 1905 or 1906. She left Canada when Sitting Bull surrendered in 1881 but went to Fort Peck with some of the warriors, possibly her sons and husband. Please feel free to contact me.
Dorothy
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Post by Diane Merkel on Mar 11, 2007 20:29:56 GMT -6
Welcome, Dorothy! I hope your talk went well yesterday.
I am trying to make the list of people present at the Little Big Horn as complete as possible. I would like to include Yellow Eyes if she was, in fact, in the village. I know it's difficult, but is there any way to prove her presence there? Does any Indian account mention her?
Best wishes, Diane
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Post by ephriam on Mar 11, 2007 22:31:06 GMT -6
Dorothy:
Welcome to the LBHA board! May I ask the names of Yellow Eyes husband? Thank you.
ephriam
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Post by dorothyeiken on Mar 12, 2007 8:55:57 GMT -6
Ephriam, The 2 husbands I have researched of Yellow Eyes were Ihanyake and Holy Bear. I have three different spellings of Yellow Eyes. The one on the 1900 census is very difficult to make out. Our family has know her as Ishtazi or Istha Zha Zha in Lakota. Dorothy
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Post by dorothyeiken on Mar 12, 2007 9:00:56 GMT -6
Diane, Hi Diane,
A difficult job to list the Indian women and children at the LBH as the connection would be through the men. It never seemed to matter who the old women were, widowed or plural wives etc. I can't imagine the number of Indian children who were never named. Our's is an oral history and I'm going on what my Indian relatives were told from generation to generation.
Thanks for asking.
Dorothy
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Post by Diane Merkel on Mar 12, 2007 12:42:45 GMT -6
I understand. Thank you!
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Post by ephriam on Mar 13, 2007 6:25:25 GMT -6
Dorothy:
I was trying to find Yellow Eyes in the Sitting Bull Surrender Census, taken at Standing Rock in Aug.-Sept. 1881. There are several women named Yellow Eyes. Perhaps you might recognize one of these:
#48. age 30. Wife of Fine Voice Eagle, Crow King's band, Hunkpapa.
#309. age 70. Grandmother of High Hill and Brings Plenty. Circle Bear's Band, Sans Arc.
#318. age 25. Wife of Afraid of Enemy. Circle Bear's band, Sans Arc.
#352. age 21. sister-in-law of Mato Yahapi. Hump's band, Minnecoujou.
#714. age 10. daugher of Boy Horse, Grass' band, Blackfeet Lakota.
#494. Brown Eyes, age 40, wife of Good Thunder. Big Road's band, Oglala.
Any of these look like possibilities?
ephriam
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Post by dorothyeiken on Mar 13, 2007 11:41:04 GMT -6
Ephriam,
Yellow Eyes would not be on the surrender census at Standing Rock in Sept. of 1881. She did not accompany Sitting Bull and his people to Fort Buford or Standing Rock, or Fort Robinson in 1881.
She went with the warriors who were afraid to surrender to Fort Peck in Montana Territory. She didn't get to Standing Rock until 1886.
So none of the people on the list would be her. In 1881 she would be approx. 53 years old.
Dorothy
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Post by grandma on Mar 15, 2007 21:17:25 GMT -6
Hi Diane, In regard to my great-great-grandmother, Yellow Eyes, a Hunkpapa Lakota Sioux with Sitting Bull's band. That I have evidence that she and her husband and children were at the Battle of the Little Big Horn and stayed with him into exile in Canada is true. I have Frank Bennett Fiske photos of her in 1903 at Fort Yates and lots of oral history from my grandfather and his siblings. She is on the twelth census of the United States in 1900 and states she was approx. 72. She was living on the Standing Rock Sioux Resevation from 1886 until her death in 1905 or 1906. She left Canada when Sitting Bull surrendered in 1881 but went to Fort Peck with some of the warriors, possibly her sons and husband. Please feel free to contact me. Dorothy
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Post by grandma on Mar 15, 2007 21:27:12 GMT -6
Hi Dorothy, I am brand new to the boards. I found your posting most interesting because I have a link to Amy Wizi (Yellow Eyes) I show that she is the daugher of Walks Among the Pines and Wizi. She is the granddaughter of Rebecca Red Woman and Brown Cloud. She also attended the Hampton Institute April 1884-1885. I would appreciate any photo or other information about her. Peace begins with a smile Grandma
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Post by dorothyeiken on Mar 18, 2007 19:37:13 GMT -6
Hi Grandma,
I haven't been able to trace Yellow Eyes mother or father. She stated her birthday as May, 1828 on the 1900 census. She would have been about 72 then. I believe that may have been a guess. My grandfather had to go to the elders to try and find his birthday. His mother, Obosawin (daughter of Yellow Eyes) died November 1895 at Fort Yates when he was about 9. Obosawin was 38 when she died and had 9 or 10 children.
I know the Yellow Eyes I'm related to didn't attend Hampton Institute. She never lived in anything other than a tipi. There is no record of her being educated nor is there record of Obosawi being educated though she may have spoken some English. My grandfather, Yellow Eyes' grandson attended Hampton from 1900 to 1907. He spoke Lakota as well as English and did some translating at Fort Yates. My older sister remembers going along when he was translating from English to Sioux.
Does any of this help?
Dorothy
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Frank
Full Member
Posts: 226
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Post by Frank on Apr 2, 2007 12:16:33 GMT -6
Is the the Mrs. Yellow Eyes you were talking about?
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Post by dorothyeiken on Apr 4, 2007 10:17:55 GMT -6
Frank,
I can't open the image you sent. I'm not able to tell you then if it's her photo. The photo I have is a Frank B. Fiske silver gelatin print he signed with her name on the back in 1903.
Dorothy
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