Moving Robe Woman - Hunkpapa heroineMoving Robe Woman (1854-1935) was a Hunkpapa Lakota wo
Moving Robe Woman - Hunkpapa heroineMoving Robe Woman (1854-1935) was a Hunkpapa Lakota woman who fought during the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876 to avenge her brother. Moving Robe Woman was harvesting turnips when she heard that her brother had been killed by the U.S. cavalry. According to an interview conducted in 1931 she did the following thing:“I sang a death song for my young brother who had been killed. My heart was bad. Revenge! Revenge! For my brother’s death. (…) I ran to a nearby thicket and got my black horse. I painted my face with crimson and braided my black hair. I was mourning. I was a woman, but I was not afraid.(…)By this time the soldiers were forming a battle line in the bottom about a half mile away. In another moment I heard a volley of carbines. The bullets shattered tipi poles. Women and children were running away from the gunfire. In the tumult I heard old men and women singing death songs for their warriors who were now ready to attack the soldiers. The enchanting death songs made me brave, although as was a woman. Father led my horse to me and…we galloped toward the soldiers.”Warrior Rain in the Face recalled that Moving Robe Woman was “pretty as a bird” as she was galloped on her charger, brandishing her brother’s war staff over her head. He said: “always when there’s a woman in charge it causes the warrior to vie with each other to display their valor”.Moving Robe Woman fought as fiercely as any of the warriors. She killed two of Custer’s troopers: shooting one with her revolver and stabbing the other to death with her knife. She also reportedly shot the badly wounded interpreter Isaiah Dorman. A possible account tells the scene as follow, with him saying:““Do not kill me, because I will be dead in a short while, anyway.”The woman said, “If you did not want to be killed, why did you not stay home where you belong and not come to attack us?” The first time she pointed the gun it did not go off, but the second time it killed him.”The battle ended in Custer’s death and a temporary victory. Moving Robe Woman died in 1935. She concluded her interview by saying:“In this narrative, I have not boasted of my conquests. I am a woman, but I fought for my people. The white man will never understand the Indian. Eyas Hen La! I have said everything!”Warrior women of the Little Bighorn:-Buffalo Calf Road Woman -Susie Shot-In-the-Eye -Minnie Hollow WoodBibliography:“Eagle Elk’s story of the battle of the Little Bighorn”Hall Alan R., A Man Called Plenty Horses, The Last Warrior of the Great Plains WarHardoff Richard G., Lakota Recollections of the Custer Fight, New Sources of Indian-military HistoryLawson Michael L., Little Bighorn, Winning the Battle, Losing the WarPhilbrick Nathaniel, The Last Stand, Custer, Sitting Bull and the Battle of the Little Bighorn -- source link
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