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Extended Work
Pretty Shield - the squaw's point of view - Red Devils Chapter 15
By jean.day
01 March 2008
I cut this down pretty much from the interview, as it was given.  But here is part of what I left out:

Pretty Shield talks about the man-woman Indian who was at the battle. He was a male, who had the heart of a woman, but the strength or a man. She/he changed into his male clothes before the battle, fearing that people would discover his maleness when he was killed - and taunt him for wearing a skirt. His'her main job was stripping the bodies and scalping, and finishing off those who weren't quite dead.

It never occurred to me that homosexual or cross-dressing Indians would exist as theirs was such a macho society. But this Indian was accepted pretty well, from the story.


After coffee, I went on to the next file, and Cora Sue said she would try to do another one too.

This time she chose a file of an interview with a squaw, Pretty Shield, wife of Go Ahead, and it was a very long article.

The interviewer starts out by asking, "Goes Ahead was with General Custer on the day he was killed on the Little Bighorn, was he not?"

"Ahh," she smiled, with great pride in her eyes, "and for that the Great Chief in Washington sends me, every moon, a paper that I trade away for ten dollars. And I need it for my children. I wish it were more," she added, a quick change in her expressive face.

"Tell me about this," I urged. "Tell me all that you remember about the fight on the Little Bighorn."

She got up and went to the door, stood there looking out at the hill that is thickly covered with gleaming white monuments marking the supposed spots where, on the twenty-fifth of June, 1876, General Custer, and Troops C, E, I, F, and L, of the famous Seventh United States Cavalry, died to the last man.

"Were they ever buried?" I asked, standing behind her.

"I do not know, Sign-talker," she answered, with uncertainty in her voice. "I do know that this country smelled of dead men for a whole summer after the fight, and that we moved away from here, because we could not stand it. Ahh, war is bad," she sighed, turning back into our room. "There was always somebody missing, because of war.

"I remember when Son-of-the-morning star [General Custer] fought our old enemies, the Lacota and Cheyenne, on the Little Bighorn," she went on, speaking slowly, as though collecting her thoughts. "Many of our young men went with The-other-one [General Terry]. More than one hundred, maybe fifty more, went with Three-stars [General Crook], who got whipped on the Rosebud by Crazy Horse and his warriors. Besides these many Crows went with Son-of-the-morning-star. These are the ones that you have asked me to tell you about. I will begin at the beginning.


“I am coming to what you wished to know, the fight on the Little Bighorn. When Son-of-the-morning-star left the camp of the blue soldiers at the mouth of Tongue River he went up the Rosebud. My man, Goes-ahead, White-swan, Half-yellow-face. Hairy-moccasin White-man-runs-him and Curly were his wolves.

"The country was filled with Lacota and Cheyenne. They were like ants on a freshly killed buffalo robe that is pegged to the ground. Of course the Crow wolves knew this by the sign that the enemy left, tracks, old fires, and dead buffalo whose meat had been but half taken, many such things that told the truth. Such things tell a good deal, show that men are traveling, and that they are in a great hurry to reach some place.

"My man, Goes-ahead, White-man-runs-him, and Hairy-moccasin, were ahead of Son-of-the-morning-star and his blue horse-soldiers. Half-yellow-face, who was my uncle, and carried the pipe [commanded], and Curly were with Son-of-the-morning-star. Curly said that he was sick, and I guess he was. Maybe what he knew was ahead of him made him sick. It was enough to make anybody feel a little like lying down for a while.

"But at that point the three Crows, wolves, who were ahead of Son-of-the-morning-star saw sign that told them many, many Lacota lodges had been there, and that they had not been long gone. Some of their fires were yet smoking a little; and the three Crow wolves found a few Lacota horses there, too. These they caught. This camp was the very one that had whipped Three-stars, but nobody then knew that he had been whipped by Crazy Horse and his warriors on the Rosebud.

"My man, Goes-ahead, Hairy-moccasin, and White-man-runs-him, knew that there were more Lacota and Cheyenne somewhere ahead than there were bullets in the belts of the blue soldiers who were with Son-of-the-morning-star. They believed that they ought to tell him this, so they went back, and told him. But he only said, 'Go on again,' and then drank from a straw-covered bottle that was on his saddle.

"My man, Goes-ahead, and the other two Crow wolves, went on again, as they had been told. But when they came, once more, to the place where the big Lacota village had been, they waited there for Son-of-the-morning-star to come to them with his horse-soldiers. They knew that there were too many Lacota and Cheyenne ahead, and were afraid to go on alone.

"When he got there, and had looked around a little, Son-of-the-morning-star asked my man, Goes-ahead, if there was a better place to camp near there. Goes-ahead said that there was, that at a creek white men call Thompson there was a better place. The water that is in this creek comes from the high mountain springs, and is cool and good.

"The blue horse-soldiers went to this creek and made their camp. Before the next morning came the Crow wolves were again out, looking for the Lacota and Cheyenne. The sun was not yet near the middle of the sky when they saw the biggest village they had ever looked upon in their lives. It was on the Little Bighorn River. The flat was white with lodges, and the hills black with Lacota and Cheyenne horses, as far as they could see.

"My man, Goes-ahead, told me that he felt afraid when he saw so many lodges. He, with the two others, Hairy-moccasin, and White-man-runs-him, turned here, going up the creek that white men call Reno. They met Son-of-the-morning-star coming down this creek, and told him what they had seen. They said that there were more Lacota, more enemies, than there were bullets in the soldiers' belts, that there were too many to fight.

"But Son-of-the-morning-star was going to his death, and did not know it. He was like a feather blown by the wind, and had to go."

She pressed her fist against her forehead, and bent her head. "Tst, tst, tst! He would not listen," she murmured. "And he was brave; yes, he was a brave man.

"Two-bodies, a half-breed interpreter, listened," she went on. He spoke to Son-of-the-morning-star, saying, 'You can yet get safely away.'

"But the soldier chief wanted to fight. He had to fight, because he had to die. And this made others die with him," she added, speaking slowly and with deep feeling.

"My man, Goes-ahead, told me that Son-of-the-morning-star drank too often from the straw-covered bottle, and that as soon as Two-bodies told him that he might yet get away he made a big mistake by dividing his blue horse-soldiers into three parties, sending two of them away from him."

Pretty-shield was deeply affected here. She stood up, leaning over the table. "It was now that my man, Goes-ahead, stripped himself for battle, tying some breath-feathers in his hair," she said, speaking rapidly. "And it was now that the little chief, Reno, went away as he had been ordered, with all of the Arickara wolves. White-swan and Half-yellow-face went with them, by mistake. And it was now that Curly, who said he was sick, ran away. Ahh, I know these things are true, because my man, Goes-ahead, was there and saw them happen.

"Reno, the little soldier chief, crossed the river and began shooting. Then he ran away, because he saw how the fight would end. Anybody would have known its end, anybody.

"My man, Goes-ahead, was with Son-of-the-morning-star when he rode down to the water of the Little Bighorn. He heard a Lacota call out to Two-bodies, who rode beside Son-of-the-morning-star, and say, 'Go back, or you will die.'

"But Son-of-the-morning-star did not go back. He went ahead, rode into the water of the Little Bighorn, with Two-bodies on one side of him, and his flag on the other -- and he died there, died in the water of the Little Bighorn, with Two-bodies, and the blue soldier carrying his flag.

"When he [Custer] fell in the water, the other blue soldiers ran back up the hill. It was now that my man, Goes-ahead, ran fast. He told me that the fighters were so many, and so crazy, that in the thick dust and powder-smoke, anybody might easily have run away. So he, White-man-runs-him, and Hairy-moccasin, ran when they saw Son-of-the-morning-star fall into the water, with Two-bodies and the blue horse-soldier that carried his flag. My man, Goes-ahead, showed me where Son-of-the-morning-star fell into the water.

"They ran up the little creek that comes into the Little Bighorn just above the spot where Son-of-the-morning-star fell down from his horse. I will take you there, and show you. They kept running fast until they came to the packers, who had all the blue soldiers' bullets and grub.

My man, Goes-ahead, said that when he got there with Hairy-moccasin and White-man-runs-him the packers had formed a circle with their pack-train, and that the mules were falling dead, that bullets were coming like rain, and that he, with the two other Crow wolves, stopped there to help the packers fight. They dug pits there, and beside these holes, the dead mules stopped many, many bullets. My man, Goes-ahead, said that, with the packers, they killed more Lacota and Cheyenne than the blue soldiers did."

Gradually, as she talked, her voice had grown louder, her position more tense. "Ahh," she sighed, suddenly relaxing, "my man, Goes-ahead, told me that he was afraid; and yet he did not run away until he saw Son-of-the-morning-star fall down from his horse into the water of the Little Bighorn. He told me that Son-of-the-morning-star was ahead of his men, and that when he fell the blue horse-soldiers ran back up the hill. He took me to the place, and showed me exactly where Son-of-the-morning-star fell into the water, with Two-bodies and the flag, where he himself started to run away, and where he stopped to fight with the packers. Yes," she said, her voice trailing off to a murmur, "my man, Goes-ahead, was afraid that day; but he did not lie to me. The monument that white men have set up to mark the spot where Son-of-the-morning-star fell down, is a lie. He fell in the water," she whispered, as though to the shade of her man, Goes-ahead.

Her attitude affected me deeply. Goes-together, our interpreter, who had been sewing buckskin with an awl and sinew, laid her work aside, as though she too had been stirred by Pretty-shield's expressed feeling. When the old woman again spoke her words startled me.

"The sun was more than half way between the middle of the sky and the world when the yelling and shooting stopped," she said, evenly. "It was now that White-man-runs-him spoke in Crow to my man, Goes-ahead, and Hairy-moccasin. 'We had better get away from here before the enemy charges this place,' he said.

"The three Crow wolves got up to go. They had good soldiers' guns now, and thought that they could make out to reach their people.

"'Where are you going?' the chief packer asked.

"'We are going to get a drink of water,' signed White-man-runs-him, cunningly.

"The packer chief gave each of the three Crow wolves a canvas-covered, flat bottle to fill and bring back. But every man who had tried to fill one of those bottles had been killed, every one. The three Crows did not go after the water, did not even keep the flat bottles.

"They cut across to Reno Creek, following it upstream until they reached pine trees. Here they saw four Lacota wolves who had been sitting on the high hills to watch for more blue soldiers. They had not been in the fighting. One of these Lacota wolves was quite a way behind the others. He was riding a gray horse, and leading a sorrel mule that must have got away from the blue soldiers. My man, Goes-ahead, killed this Lacota, and scalped him.

The sorrel mule got away from Goes-ahead, but not the gray horse. The rope that the dead Lacota had dropped when my man's bullet struck him, got tangled in the gray's legs, so that Goes-ahead caught him. He gave this horse to White-man-runs-him. They took turns riding him, because they had no other horse. They had lost them in the fight.

I well remember that old gray Lacota horse. His back was sore, and he was so old that he was no good.

"This all happened in the moon when the leaves are fully grown [June].When my man, Goes-ahead, reached the Bighorn River with the two others, he found it high, bad to cross. The water had spread out very wide. Rain was falling, and it was dark besides. They could not see the other side of the wide river when they began to swim, so that when they reached land they thought that they were across the stream. But it was only an island they reached; and here they rested before going the rest of the way.

"They had no clothes, because they had stripped themselves to fight, and did not go back to look for any clothes. But now they felt pretty cold, and they were hungry, having had nothing to eat since the morning before the fighting on the Little Bighorn.

"While they were resting the day came, gray and rainy. Goes-ahead saw two wolves on the hills across the Bighorn. He believed they were Crows, but the others thought them Lacota. Anyhow Goes-ahead called loudly, and then made signs. The two wolves across the Bighorn were Crows, as Goes-ahead had believed. They came down to the water's edge on their side, and said, in signs, that all the blue horse-soldiers were dead.

"One of these Crow wolves, who had been with The-limping-one [General Gibbon] was named No-milk. The other's name was Plenty-butterflies. No-milk crossed the river and gave my man and the others some bacon and soldiers' bread, and part of his clothing. He said that more blue soldiers, walking-soldiers, were coming, and that they had six wagons with them that made their traveling very slow.

"He said that the soldiers had told him that White-swan, and my uncle, Half-yellow-face, the two Crow wolves who had, by mistake, gone with the little soldier-chief [Reno] when Son-of-the-morning-star divided his men, were dead. While he was talking some other Crows who had been with The-limping-one [Gibbon] and The-other-one [Terry] crossed the river, and did not go back to the walking-soldiers.

"Our village was on Arrow creek when these Crows came to us. When our wolves saw them they signaled that the Lacota were coming. A war party rode out to meet them, and even attacked them, by mistake. My man, Goes-ahead, had to kill two of their horses before the Crow war-party saw its mistake and stopped its foolishness. By this you can see how nervous my people were during these days of trouble. Everybody looked exactly like a Lacota to us.

"This time the home-coming of our warriors was not a happy one. I saw my man, Goes-ahead, and felt glad; but when the men who had been to war told us that Half-yellow-face and White-swan were dead, my heart fell down to the ground. They were both good, brave men, and besides, Half-yellow-face was my uncle, my father's brother. The mourning was terrible to hear. The relatives of the two missing men gave away all their horses, and clothing, cutting themselves on their arms and legs and heads until they were bloody all over. But when my father began to mourn for his brother, Half-yellow-face, my man, Goes-ahead, stopped him. 'Wait four days,' he said, 'and then if your brother does not return I will mourn with you.'

"All that night the people mourned, crying for their dead, and for Son-of-the-morning-star, and his blue soldiers, who had so foolishly died."

She ended, abruptly, staring at the wall over my head. "Sign-talker," she said, severely, "too much drinking may have made that great soldier-chief foolish on that day when he died. I have seen whisky do such things. Our own chiefs have signed too many papers with their thumbs when whisky was doing their thinking for them.

"Our old men were not whisky drinkers. The first time that I ever saw a Crow warrior drink whisky was when a fire-boat blew up on the Big River. There were many barrels of whisky along the river there, after that fire-boat sank in the water; and some of our men drank a little and grew foolish, so foolish that we all laughed at them. But lately our men drink, and do not care who laughs."

"Tell me about Half-yellow-face and White-swan and Curly," I suggested, to get her back to her story. "Ahh, Curly did not come back for a long time," she said. "He found the blue soldiers who were with The-other-one and The-limping-one, and went with them to the place where the big fighting had been. It was not until after some white men took him to Washington that Curly talked, and then his tongue was not very straight.

"When Half-yellow-face and White-swan got back we heard their story, and it was like hearing the dead speak, because we thought they had been killed. They said that they had not understood, and had gone with the little chief [Reno] by mistake. They were with him until his men came to the big Lacota village, until the little chief's men got off their horses to shoot, and until one of the littler chiefs tried to get back onto his horse, and got dragged. He let his foot go clear through the stirrup, and his frightened horse ran away, dragging him. When Half-yellow-face and White-swan saw this they knew it was bad medicine. They saw how things were going to end, as anybody could; and then they ran to a hole in the hill. My man, Goes-ahead, showed me this hole, and so did my uncle, Half-yellow-face; and I will show it to you.

"The Lacota set the country afire to drive them out of the hole. It was here that White-swan got shot in the hand. His hand was never any good after that day. He was also shot in the foot and in the shoulder. But the bullet only burned his shoulder, making a bloody mark there that was not bad. They stayed in that hole, even when the smoke of the Lacota fire nearly smothered them, for two days and two nights; and some of the Arickara wolves were in there with them.

"Finally the Lacota and Cheyenne left the Little Bighorn, and then the walking-soldiers came. Half-yellow-face said that they were very glad to see the walking-soldiers, because White-swan's wounds were swelling, and looked very bad, and because they all wanted to get something to eat."

She hesitated a little now, and then as though to wipe away any possibly detracting statement that she had made about General Custer, she said: "Even if Son-of-the-morning-star had not divided his men he would have been whipped and killed, because he was being blown by the winds. If The-other-one, Three-stars, The-limping-one, and Son-of-the-morning star had kept together they would have whipped the Lacota and Cheyenne; but no one of them could have done this. There were too many Lacota, too many Cheyenne.

"Two years after this bad day Half -yellow-face took my man, Goes-ahead, and me, over the ground where all these things happened. I can take you over it, and tell you exactly what he told us. Yes," she added, "and for more than a year my people found dead blue soldiers and dead Lacota far from the Little Bighorn. I remember that in the summer following the big fight my people found four blue soldiers together, one of them a chief, beyond Big-shoulder, on Bear-in-the-middle creek. This is six miles from the fighting-place on the Little Bighorn. Our men said that, by the clothes he wore, they knew that one of these dead horse-soldiers was a chief."

Here, suddenly reminded of her duty, Pretty-shield stood up, her blanket falling to the floor. "Ahh!" she exclaimed, glancing at the window, "the sun is low down. I have talked about war until I forgot my children. I will come again. Ho!"

Essentially, Pretty Shield said the half breed scout, Bouyer, was shot out of the saddle in the middle of the Little Bighorn during Custer's failed charge at Medicine Tail Coulee. Sage and LaForge said Bouyer was badly wounded but did not die, and that he subsequently crawled to the edge of the river, was found by the Sioux, begged to be killed, and was finally accommodated by the Sioux before they threw his body back in the river.

Reviews
Hi Jean
Written by fellpony (1715 comments posted) 2nd March 2008
I haven't been following the whole of your Red Devils sequence but I found this very convincing. I must go and read more - you've got me intrigued.
Thanks fellpony
Written by jean.day (2366 comments posted) 2nd March 2008
This is the sort of book where you can start and stop at anytime. Hopefully, those really interested in American history will read it all through, but I have tried to include items that would be of interest just for a one-off read. In a few chapters I get to the writing of Mrs. Custer - and it is very readable.

Written by bluecity (432 comments posted) 2nd March 2008
A lot of research here! You have covered a lot of detail. A very grisly ending too. 
 
Rosemary

Written by Fledermaus (3487 comments posted) 3rd March 2008
So the Americans knew how to exploit the tensions too. I wonder if the Crow had some advantages in the long term? Usually tribes all over the world that chose the side that won in the end were greatly rewarded, yet somehow I can hardly imagine any native tribe in the USA being rewarded by the US government...
Thanks Rosemary and Fledermaus
Written by jean.day (2366 comments posted) 5th March 2008
I doubt if any of the Indians had long term benefits after the war was over. Except for being asked to take part in Wild West Shows, which no doubt paid them well.  
 
The Indians didn't win in the end - and by August of this same year, most of the Indians were back on their reservations. Some like the followers of Crazy Horse had another battle the next year, and Sitting Bull and most of his people went to Canada.

Written by Phil (6959 comments posted) 22nd March 2008
More fascinating history. See you at the next chapter! 
 
Phil
Thanks Phil
Written by jean.day (2366 comments posted) 23rd March 2008
I think maybe I overdid the Indian interviews, as there was a lot of repetition in them - but in fact, originally I was going to put in several more. I think they are so fascinating - and give the whole thing from a different perspective.

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