Review: Washington politics and the 'Wounded Knee' massacre
"Leaders on the Sioux reservations in South Dakota heard reports in early 1890 of an Indian prophet who foretold of the potential for renewal of their world — a land of plenty without whites — through a mystical Ghost Dance ceremony.

They set forth to seek the seer, Wovoka, who lived in Nevada. From him, they learned the dance and brought it back to their people. The movement engendered by that ceremony would put the Indians on a collision course with Washington politics, political patronage, and business interests that would culminate later that year in tragedy.

In “Wounded Knee: Party Politics and the Road to an American Massacre,’’ Heather Cox Richardson, a historian at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, combines a solid account of the political context with a vivid and moving narrative of events that led to the slaughter of about 300 Sioux in South Dakota.

The root cause of the Indians’ discord involved the breaking-up of the Great Sioux Reservation that had encompassed rolling Dakota grasslands and the sacred Black Hills. That action was initiated to open up the land for settlement and mining by whites and enabled the creation of two safe Republican states in the Dakotas to bolster the sagging fortunes of President Benjamin Harrison’s administration heading into the 1892 election.

As Richardson puts it, “[T]he road to the massacre had begun in Washington.’’

For the unhappy Indians, news of the prophet’s vision promised not only justice but salvation from their material circumstances. “The burning summer’’ of 1890 had parched the remaining Indian lands. “Crops were withering and dying . . . while prices for consumer goods remained high.’’ In that context, the Ghost Dance movement, Richardson writes, was embraced “as a religious response on the part of the Indians to dire conditions.’’

The inexperienced, politically appointed agents on the reservations, however, viewed the fervor as a precursor to an uprising. They frantically lobbied Washington for military intervention. Eventually solders were sent to the region, ratcheting up the tension."

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Review: The politics of Wounded Knee (The Boston Globe 6/25)