-
Recent Posts
Comments
- Carrie Zeman on Whatever 3
- Jerry R. Weldy Great, Great Grandson of Joseph La Framboise--Little Rock Trader on Whatever 3
- SHIELAH M ANDERSEN on Whitewashing History, Part 2
- Elizabeth johnson on Lamson’s Daughter Tells the Story of Little Crow’s Death
- Terry Shepard on John Moredock, Indian Hater
Archives
Categories
- 1862 Dakota War trials
- A Thrilling Narrative
- abolition of slavery
- accessible publishing
- Alan Woolworth
- Andrew Myrick
- Belle Martin Renville
- Blue Earth County Beam
- Books
- Captivity
- Commemorating Controversy
- Curt Brown
- Dakota Commemorative March
- Dakota Exile
- Dakota Language
- Dakota Peace Party
- Dime Books
- Doing Historical Research
- Dred Scott
- Edward Sylvester Ellis
- Eli Lundy Huggins
- Ella Renville
- Exhibits
- Fiction
- Fort Ridgely
- German Turners
- Gwen Westerman
- Henry Milord
- history of printing
- Indian Hating
- J. Fletcher Williams
- James Gorman
- James W. Lynd
- John P. Williamson
- John S. Marsh
- Joseph Godfrey
- Josephine Huggins
- Literacy in the Dakota language
- Little Crow
- Lorenzo Lawrence
- Mankato Prison
- Minnesota Historical Society
- NAGPRA
- National Archives
- New Ulm
- newspapers
- Northern Lights
- O. W. Smith
- Oceti Sakowin
- Opinion
- Patronage System
- Pond Dakota Press
- pop culture
- Primary Sources
- Religion
- Return Ira Holcombe
- Samuel J. Brown
- scalping
- Scott W. Berg
- Simon Anawangmani
- Sinte
- Slavery in Free states
- Solon J. Buck
- Stephen R. Riggs
- Theo. G. Carter
- Thomas J. Galbraith
- Thomas S. Williamson
- Through Dakota Eyes
- Timothy J. Sheehan
- Truth and Reconcilliation
- truth-telling
- Uncategorized
- Underground Railroad
- Wabasha
- Walt Bachman
- Wambdi Okiya
- Warren Upham
- William P. Gere
- William Watts Folwell
- Women's History
- Zabelle Stodola
Blogroll
What I’m Reading
Mni Sota Makoce by Gwen Westerman & Bruce White
A Traffic of Dead Bodies by Michael Sappol
38 Nooses by Scott W. Berg
The Story of America by Jill Lepore
-
Tag Archives: Dakota War of 1862
Read Many Stories
150 years after an event as thoroughly-studied as the U.S. Dakota War of 1862, it is hard to find a fresh angle, a new point of view that makes even scholars question what they think they know. Mary Butler Renville’s A … Continue reading