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Wounded Knee
Historically, Wounded Knee is generally considered to be the
end of the Indian Wars, the collective multi-century series of
conflicts between colonial and U.S. forces and the native Indian
tribes. It was also responsible for the subsequent severe
decline in the Ghost Dance movement. However, it was not the
last armed conflict between Native Americans and the United
States.
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A related skirmish took place at
Drexel Mission the day after the Battle of
Wounded Knee that resulted in the death of
one trooper and the wounding of six others
from K Troop, 7th Cavalry, with an unknown
number of Lakota casualties. Lakota Ghost
Dancers from the bands which had been
persuaded to surrender had fled after news
of Wounded Knee reached them, and they
burned several buildings at the mission.
They ambushed a squadron of the 7th Cavalry
responding to the incident and pinned it
down until a relief force from the 9th
Cavalry arrived. It had been trailing the
Lakota from the White River. Lieutenant
James D. Mann, who had been a key
participant in the outbreak of firing at
Wounded Knee, died of his wounds 17 days
later at Ft. Riley, Kansas on January 15,
1891. This engagement is often overlooked,
being overshadowed by the previous day's
tragedy.
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