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Dakota Datebook
October 20, 2003
"Red Tomahawk and Hoover"
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Today marks the anniversary of President Hoovers
death in 1964. Thirty-five years earlier, Red Tomahawk, the man who killed
one of the most famous Native Americans in history, left Standing Rock
Reservation to visit the Hoover in Washington, D.C.
It was 1929, and Red Tomahawk, who lived at Cannonball, had become quite
famous. His trip to Washington and other East Coast cities was a good-will
visit on behalf of his people, and was found notable enough to be picked
up by the national press.
Washington had seen many war heroes, but few had the
record of Red Tomahawk, who engaged in many of the Indian wars in the
latter half of the 1800s. The event that made him most famous, though,
took place in 1890, when he was serving as Sergeant of Indian Police.
Red Tomahawk took forty men and raided Chief Sitting Bull's camp, where
it was believed that Sitting Bull was preparing to lead his people into
a serious uprising.
Red Tomahawk and his men faced 150 armed braves to arrest
Sitting Bull, who resisted and called on his men to fight. Red Tomahawk
shot the chief, and when the fighting was over, Sitting Bull, his son
and six others were dead.
Red Tomahawks East Coast visit was at Summeralls
invitation. General Summerall, who was Hoovers Army Chief of Staff,
had visited Red Tomahawk in North Dakota the previous year, where he had
been made an honorary member of the Sioux tribe and given the Indian title
of High Star.
Red Tomahawk was by now 80 years old. He spoke no English,
but curious politicians and socialites responded to his dignity and straight
bearing. He was warmly welcomed in Washington, but newspaper accounts
show that the attitudes toward Native Americans at the time were far from
enlightened.
One Washington paper reported, Chief Red Tomahawk
of the Sioux tribe of Indians in North Dakota was in the capital today
to make big whoopee with Chief General Charles Summerall... He will also
pay his respects to Big Chief President Hoover at the White House and
to that other noted Indian chief, Vice President Charles Curtis... He
will be put up as General Summerall's guest at one of the capital's big
teepee, the Carlton Hotel, and will be escorted about on his travels in
the city by Lieutenant George G. Forster, aid to General Summerall.
At the White House, Red Tomahawk was presented to President
Hoover by North Dakota Senators Lynn Frazier and Gerald Nye. Dressed in
his full regalia, the old man presented Hoover with a handsome, beaded-leather,
tobacco pouch.
Of the Washington visit, one regional paper wrote, Red
Tomahawk's trip is adding glory to Fort Yates and Sioux County. ...the
news (shows the) splendid impression the distinguished Indian is making;
our historic home is gaining very favorable advertising. In fact, Sioux
County as a whole is to be congratulated that it has Fort Yates within
its borders. But above all, Red Tomahawk is making friends for the Indians.
That such a fine upstanding character comes from their county is complimentary
to the entire Sioux nation. The favorable publicity gained through him
is of inestimable benefit to his people, and should be taken advantage
of to their future welfare.
Red Tomahawk died two years later, on August 7th, 1931.
Yet, North Dakotans see images of him on a daily basis... the profile
with Indian headdress that appears on our state highway signs, is that
of Red Tomahawk.

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