Born in South Dakota in 1831, Sitting Bull was given his father's name
after killing his first buffalo as a teenager. Sitting Bull witnessed
the downfall of his people's way of life after the California gold rush
of 1849 and the opening up of the West by the railroad. After he was
wounded in battle, his views hardened about the presence of whites in
Sioux land. He began to assume an uncompromising militancy that would
characterize the rest of his life. Developing into one of the most
important chiefs, Sitting Bull was able to unite a multitude of Sioux
bands and other tribes at his camp, which continually expanded as the
tribes sought safety in numbers. It was this camp that General George
Armstrong Custer found on June 25, 1876, when he led the 7th Cavalry
advance party to the Little Big Horn River. Sitting Bull, who had seen a
vision of this attack during a tribal dance, and his people were able to
defeat Custer and his men, but their victory was short-lived as
thousands more outraged soldiers pursued the Sioux, forcing their
surrender. This brave warrior was finally brought down in 1890 by tribal
police who had been sent to arrest him. In Sitting Bull, read about a
man who refused to back down from his convictions, even when they
brought him face to face with the United States Calvary.