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" ... imagine. Bereft of lodges and the most ^ordinary of cooking apparatus ; with no ponies or other means of transportation for wood or water ; half-starved, and very little to eat, and scarcely anything that could be called clothing, they were truly... "
Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of the ... - Page 277
by United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs - 1875
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Report of the Department of the Interior ... [with Accompanying ..., Part 1

United States. Dept. of the Interior - 1875
...that could be called clothing, they were truly o'jects of pity, and for the first time the Cheyeunes seemed to realize the power of the Government and...their own inability to cope successfully therewith. By way of punishment and example, it was decided that thirty-three of the ring-leaders and desperadoes,...
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Annual Reports, Volume 17, Part 1

1898 - 968 pages
...that could be called clothing, they were truly objects of pity; and for the first time the Cheyenne seemed to realize the power of the government and their own inability to cope successfully therewith (Keport, 48). On the 27th of April they were formally transferred from the charge of the military to...
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Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the ..., Volume 17

Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology - America - 1898 - 962 pages
...that could be called clothing, they were truly objects of pity; and for the first time the Cheyoune seemed to realize the power of the government and their own inability to cope successfully therewith (Report, 48). On the 27th of April they were formally transferred from the charge of the military to...
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The Cheyenne Indians

James Mooney - Cheyenne Indians - 1905 - 146 pages
...that could be called clothing, they were truly objects of pity ; and for the first time the Cheyennes seemed to realize the power of the government, and...their own inability to cope successfully therewith." l By the opening of June, 1875, most of the hostile Comanche and Kiowa had come into Fort Sill and...
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Memoirs of the American Anthropological and Ethnological Societies, Issues 1-6

American Ethnological Society - Anthropology - 1907 - 560 pages
...that could be called clothing, they were truly objects of pity ; and for the first time the Cheyennes seemed to realize the power of the government, and...their own inability to cope successfully therewith." ' By the opening of June, 1875, most of the hostile Comanche and Kiowa had come into Fort Sill and...
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Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association, Volume 1

American Anthropological Association - Anthropology - 1907 - 566 pages
...that could be called clothing, they were truly objects of pity ; and for the first time the Cheyennes seemed to realize the power of the government, and...their own inability to cope successfully therewith." l By the opening of June, 1875, most of the hostile Comanche and Kiowa had come into Fort Sill and...
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War Dance at Fort Marion: Plains Indian War Prisoners

Brad D. Lookingbill - History - 2006 - 296 pages
...catastrophe. With no ponies or other means of transportation, they became docile. For the first time, they "seemed to realize the power of the government and...their own inability to cope successfully therewith." They expressed gratitude for the "white man's medicine," indicating to the agent that the "superstitious...
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