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John Vance Lauderdale - After Wounded Knee

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The Wounded Knee Massacre of December 29, 1890, known to U.S. military historians as the last battle in the Indian Wars, was in reality another tragic event in a larger pattern of conquest, destruction, killing, and broken promises that continue to this day. On a cold winters morning more than a century ago, the U.S. Seventh Cavalry attacked and killed more than 260 Lakota men, women, and children at Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. In the aftermath, the broken, twisted bodies of the Lakota people were soon covered by a blanket of snow, as a blizzard swept through the countryside. A few days later, veteran army surgeon John Vance Lauderdale arrived for duty at the nearby Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Shocked by what he encountered, he wrote numerous letters to his closest family members detailing the events, aftermath, and daily life on the Reservation under military occupation. He also treated the wounded, both Cavalry soldiers and Lakota civilians. What distinguishes After Wounded Knee from the large body of literature already available on the massacre is Lauderdales frank appraisals of military life and a personal observation of the tragedy, untainted by self-serving reminiscence or embellished newspaper and political reports. His sense of frustration and outrage toward the military command, especially concerning the tactics used against the Lakota, is vividly apparent in this intimate view of Lauderdales life. His correspondence provides new insight into a familiar subject and was written at the height of the cultural struggle between the U.S. and Lakota people. Jerry Greens careful editing of this substantial collection, part of the John Vance Lauderdale Papers in the Western Americana Collection in Yale Universitys Beinecke Library, clarifies Lauderdales experiences at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

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title After Wounded Knee author Lauderdale John Vance Green - photo 1

title:After Wounded Knee
author:Lauderdale, John Vance.; Green, Jerry
publisher:Michigan State University Press
isbn10 | asin:0870134051
print isbn13:9780870134050
ebook isbn13:9780585187945
language:English
subjectWounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890--Personal narratives, Lauderdale, John Vance--Correspondence, Lauderdale, John Vance--Diaries, Physicians--United States--Correspondence, United States.--Army Medical Dept.--History, Teton Indians--Medical care, Pine Ridg
publication date:1996
lcc:E83.89.L38 1996eb
ddc:973.8/6
subject:Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890--Personal narratives, Lauderdale, John Vance--Correspondence, Lauderdale, John Vance--Diaries, Physicians--United States--Correspondence, United States.--Army Medical Dept.--History, Teton Indians--Medical care, Pine Ridg
Page i
After Wounded Knee
Page ii
John Vance Lauderdale ca 1888 Photograph courtesy of the Beinecke Rare Book - photo 2
John Vance Lauderdale, ca. 1888. Photograph courtesy of the
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
Page iii
After Wounded Knee
Correspondence of Major and Surgeon John Vance Lauderdale while Serving with the Army Occupying the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, 18901891
Edited and with an introduction by
Jerry Green
Michigan State University Press
East Lansing
Page iv
Copyright 1996 Jerry Green
All Michigan State University Press books are produced on paper which meets the requirements of American National Standard of Information SciencesPermanence of paper for printed materials ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Michigan State University Press
East Lansing, Michigan 48823-5202
03 02 01 00 99 98 97 96 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lauderdale, John Vance.
After Wounded Knee/Jerry Green
p. cm.
"Correspondence of major and surgeon John Vance Lauderdale while serving with
the army occupying the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. 18901891."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-87013-405-1 (alk. paper)
1. Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890Personal narratives. 2. Lauderdale, John
VanceCorrespondence. 3. Lauderdale, John VanceDiaries. 4. PhysiciansUnited
StatesCorrespondence. 5. United States. Army Medical Department History. 6. Teton
IndiansMedical care. 7. Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.)History. I. Green,
Jerry, 1946 . II. Title.
E83.89.L38 1995
($#." ?dc20
95-35471
CIP
Page v
To
My Sunshine,
My Love,
My Life,
My Gail.
Page vii
Contents
Foreword
ix
Acknowledgments
xiii
Editor's Notes
xv
Chapter One: Background
1
Chapter Two: The Letters
43
Chapter Three: After Pine Ridge
151
Notes
157
Bibliography
171
Index
177

Page ix
Foreword
In March 1994 James M. McPherson came to town. The Pulitzer-Prizewinning historian and author of the grand Civil War narrative, Battle Cry of Freedom spoke one evening to a rapt Lincoln, Nebraska, audience of academics, history buffs, and students. The subject of Dr. McPherson's lecture was the motivations of the nineteenth-century warriors for the Blue and Gray, what they fought for and why (see his What They Fought For, 18611865, [Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1994]). Describing his research in progress, he detailed his methods and offered some initial conclusions while effortlessly illuminating the master historian's art and craft.
What struck this listener was the (seemingly) severe restriction that McPherson had placed on his data, the raw material from which he had constructed his argument. From the vast Civil War documentationa body of work that America's Indian war studies can never challengehe used only contemporary first-person accounts, the diaries of participants and their letters to intimates, accounts that largely were never meant for outside eyes. This historian, therefore, had factored out the self-serving reminiscence, the grossly embellished newspaper story, and the politic official report. What remained for his examination was the work of a host of authors exposing their innermost thoughts, beliefs, prejudices, and motivations, a literature that possessed a remarkable potential for creating new insights on a familiar subject.
Move, if you will, from the Civil War army to its scaled-down descendant of the 1890s, to a cultural struggle between the United States and the Lakota people, and to a letter writer who initially states, "I shall not be able to give
Page x
you any information of the Sioux War till I get farther West." This line serves as a cautious prelude to a particular set of correspondence authored by Dr. John V. Lauderdale, a veteran army surgeon sent west in January 1891, preserved by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Yale University and prepared herewith for publication by Jerry Green.
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