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Iron Tail (Wasu Maza) was a Minneconjou Lakota who lived from 1857 to1955. His uncle was Black Elk and he fought under Crazy Horse in 1876 at the Battle of Little Bighorn when he was only eighteen years old. Little Bighorn was a victory for the Sioux but shortly after the battle, Iron Tail followed Chief Sitting Bull into exile in Canada. They surrendered to the US forces at Fort Buford in July of 1881, were pardoned, and allowed to settle on the Great Sioux Reservation of South Dakota with promises of peace and non-interference. In February of 1890, the United States government dissolved the Great Sioux Reservation. In an effort to break tribal identity, individuals were forced to farm on 320 acre family plots and children were sent away to government schools that forbid any inclusion of traditional culture and language. This same period was marked by a severe drought which decimated crops and livestock. In response, many of the desperate Sioux embraced a religious movement known as the Ghost Dance. The unity of the Ghost Dancers frightened the Bureau of Indian Affairs and military troops were dispatched to quell what US officials saw as a brewing Indian revolution.Tensions came to a head in December 1890 when Sitting Bull was killed during an arrest attempt on the Standing Rock reservation. A group of Ghost Dancers fled to join Chief Big Foot (Sitting Bull’s half-brother) on the Cheyenne River Reservation where Iron Tail and his family were also living at that time. Big Foot tried to move to the Pine Ridge Agency where Chief Red Cloud could broker a negotiated surrender but the Army surrounded the group at Wounded Knee Creek and the rest of the story is history. Approximately 150 Lakota died in the fighting, another 150 died of exposure and 25 US troops also perished. Iron Tail was severely wounded and lost his mother, father, two brothers, sister, and wife in the massacre and his infant son who died a short time later.

































