FORT ROBINSON -- Descendants of Northern Cheyenne tribal members who fled Fort Robinson in 1879 returned on Thursday and Friday to dedicate a memorial that’s been 15 years in the making. More than 200 ...
Vincent White Crane, left, of Ashland, Montana, and Gilbert White Dirt of Lame Deer, Montana, bless the Cheyenne Breakout monument near Fort Robinson State Park. Northern Cheyenne Indians, holding a ...
1879 - A group of 130 Cheyenne held in the cavalry barracks at Fort Robinson made their escape on January 9, 1879. They fled to the White River after disabling the guards and climbed the buttes west ...
Remember that as you watch courageous cavalry steed Joey gallop into a hail of bullets and bursting artillery shells in Steven Spielberg’s Oscar-nominated film “War Horse.” And then file that trivia ...
March 11, 1874 - The U.S. Government authorized the establishment of a military camp known as Camp Robinson in March 1874. The camp was later designated Fort Robinson and became the site for many ...
The annual Christmas dinner at Fort Robinson State Park on Dec. 1 will take people back to a period that marked the end of what became known as the Sioux Wars.
"Second reprinting, with minor changes and new illustrations" - [p.2] of cover. "Reprinted from Nebraska history, Volume 39, no. 3, September 1958." - [p.2] of cover ...
March 11, 1874 - The U.S. Government authorized the establishment of a military camp known as Camp Robinson in March 1874. The camp was later designated Fort Robinson and became the site for many ...
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