Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Washington Red Clouds: A team name to honor a great warrior and leader


 The Washington Red Clouds: A team name to honor a great warrior and leader      
Courtesy American Heritage Center, Universityof Wyoming - One of several delegations that Red Cloud (center) led to Washington between 1870 and the 1890s to advocate on behalf of the Sioux
By Bob Drury and Thomas Clavin, Published: November 1 
Bob Drury and Thomas Clavin are the authors of The Heart of Everything That Is: The Untold Story of Red Cloud, an American Legend.”
In June 1870, the most powerful American Indian leader in the country, Red Cloud, arrived in Washington with a contingent of Oglala and Brule Sioux. He was treated as a head of state, given tours of the Capitol and the Washington Navy Yard — where he witnessed a gunnery demonstration — and was feted at a White House reception hosted by President Ulysses S. Grant. The former commander of the Union armies may have recognized the significance of Red Cloud accomplishing in two years what Robert E. Lee could not in four: defeating the United States in a war.
What is called Red Cloud’s War officially began in 1866 when the Sioux leader could no longer abide the relentless incursions, including the building of U.S. Army forts, into his people’s territory. The high  point of the war occurred when he and his field commander Crazy Horse wiped out an Army troop of 81 men. President Andrew Johnson’s stunned administration sued for peace. In November 1868, Red Cloud signed a treaty to end the fighting — only after burning the Army forts to the ground.Less than two years later, Red Cloud was in the nation’s capital. “He became stunningly famous,” historian R. Eli Paul wrote. “Newspapers recounted his every word and deed, and large crowds of onlookers gathered at every public sighting .”
 It is time for Red Cloud to return to Washington — on the professional football team’s jerseys and in its fighting spirit.

STORY

No comments: