The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973 began when Native Americans occupying the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota sought to remove the corrupt tribal leader Dick Wilson from power. This sparked a siege by FBI and military forces that lasted for weeks with extensive gunfire exchanged. Though the occupiers did not achieve their goals, the incident drew national attention to the mistreatment of Native Americans and helped spur the Native American Revitalization Movement by bringing various tribes together in the fight for equality. Wounded Knee became a symbol of both the injustices faced by Native peoples and their continued resistance.
The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973 began when Native Americans occupying the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota sought to remove the corrupt tribal leader Dick Wilson from power. This sparked a siege by FBI and military forces that lasted for weeks with extensive gunfire exchanged. Though the occupiers did not achieve their goals, the incident drew national attention to the mistreatment of Native Americans and helped spur the Native American Revitalization Movement by bringing various tribes together in the fight for equality. Wounded Knee became a symbol of both the injustices faced by Native peoples and their continued resistance.
The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973 began when Native Americans occupying the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota sought to remove the corrupt tribal leader Dick Wilson from power. This sparked a siege by FBI and military forces that lasted for weeks with extensive gunfire exchanged. Though the occupiers did not achieve their goals, the incident drew national attention to the mistreatment of Native Americans and helped spur the Native American Revitalization Movement by bringing various tribes together in the fight for equality. Wounded Knee became a symbol of both the injustices faced by Native peoples and their continued resistance.
The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973 began when Native Americans occupying the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota sought to remove the corrupt tribal leader Dick Wilson from power. This sparked a siege by FBI and military forces that lasted for weeks with extensive gunfire exchanged. Though the occupiers did not achieve their goals, the incident drew national attention to the mistreatment of Native Americans and helped spur the Native American Revitalization Movement by bringing various tribes together in the fight for equality. Wounded Knee became a symbol of both the injustices faced by Native peoples and their continued resistance.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 11
The Wounded
Knee Incident of 1973 By: Reuben B. Lewin
Wounded Knee, South Dakota
Wounded Knee was the sight of the final massacre of the Indian Wars.
In the winter of 1890 a group of Lakota
were moving to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation when they were attacked by the US Army.
Over 300 men, women, and children
were murdered.
Their bodies were left in the ice for 3
days and then thrown in a mass grave.
Wounded Knee is hallowed ground to
many Native American tribes.
Modern Problems at the Pine Ridge
Reservation
During the early 1970s many Lakota and
Oglala living on the Pine Ridge Reservation were being abused by the tribal leader of the Reservation.
Dick Wilson was the head of the tribal
Government and had power to distribute funds and resources on the reservation. He was known for using his power to help his friends and abuse Indians who held to their traditional culture. Wilson was proassimilation.
One of the largest goals of the occupation of
Wounded Knee was to remove Dick Wilson from the power on Pine Ridge.
Problems within the United
States
For hundreds of years the United States
Government fought wars against the Native American peoples across the country.
Native tribes had been displaced and forced
onto smaller and smaller reservations. Treaties guaranteeing the protection of tribal land were not held up by the United States.
Racism against Native Americans was
endemic.
When Indians could no longer be out rightly
killed, the Government instituted the boarding school program.
The Indian Schools
For many decades the Government sanctioned
the forceful taking of Native American children from their families, against their will, so they could be taken to Indian Schools across the country.
The point of the boarding schools was to erase
the children's native identity, and assimilate them to American culture.
They were forced to learn English, and
abandon their original languages and practices.
Physical and mental abuse at the hands of
those controlling the schools was widespread and well documented.
Time to Take a Stand
By 1973 many groups of Native Americans
including the Lakota and the Oglala were fed up with the broken treaties, abuse and systemic racism.
After members of the Pine Ridge
Reservation contacted members of the American Indian Movement (AIM) for support they decided to occupy the town of Wounded Knee.
They took control of the small town and
waited for the Government to show up.
When the FBI first arrived the occupiers
opened fire on the FBI and the siege was on.
The United States Response
The Government responded by sending the FBI,
the US Marshalls, and military forces into Wounded Knee to try and end the siege. They did not however make a full scale attempt to retake the town fearing a repeat of the massacre of 1890.
For weeks Government negotiators attempted to
reach a resolution with the occupiers, while at night gunfire was exchanged between Government forces and the people within the town.
The Government forces at Wounded Knee fired
over 500,000 rounds of ammunition into the town before the siege ended. Several of the occupiers were killed.
People Took Notice
After the siege had gone on for a while the
Native Americans within Pine Ridge declared it to be an independent country.
Chief Fools Crow was the most senior tribal
elder at Pine Ridge. He was chosen to lead a delegation to the United Nations to explain the Natives cause.
The United Nations failed to recognized the
newly independent nation, but the incident got tons of coverage by the national press.
Soon people from all over the country were
going out to Wounded Knee to support the occupation.
The Occupation Ends
After many weeks the occupation of Wounded
Knee came to an end.
Although the incident forced the unfair
treatment of Native Americans on the eyes of the American people, the occupiers did not achieve their goals.
Their independent nation was never realized.
Dick Wilson remained the head of the Pine
Ridge Reservation.
In the years that followed Dick Wilson had the
supporters of the occupation in Pine Ridge killed off. Pine Ridge had he highest per capita murder rate in the United States in the years following the occupation.
The Impacts of Wounded Knee
Although many called the occupation
unsuccessful, the siege of Wounded Knee in 1973 had profound consequences.
The incident forced the American people to
examine the mistreatment of Native Americans and the systemic racism they faced.
The Occupation of Wounded Knee helped
spur the Native American Revitalization Movement.
Members of the occupation continued to
support the movement for Native American equality in the years to come.
The Legacy
The incident at Wounded Knee helped to
bring together many different Native communities that had been fragmented and destroyed by years of abuse and neglect.
Wounded Knee is no longer seen as only a
dark place in the minds of Native Americans.
Wounded Knee is now not only the sight of
the last massacre of the Indian Wars, it was the sight at which Native Americans took a stand together in the push for equality.