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Standing Bear 1829-34?-1908
The trial of Standing Bear, a Ponca Indian chief,
in a United States District court in Omaha in l879, led to a decision
by Judge Elmer Dundy that native Americans are "persons within the
meaning of the law" and have the rights of citizenship.
Standing Bear was born on the Ponca reservation in what is now Nebraska
around 1834, although some sources say he was born in 1829. His Indian
name was "Ma-chu-nah-zah." Because he showed unusual abilities,
he became a chief at an early age.
In early times the Ponca were driven southward by the Sioux. By the time
Standing Bear was born they had settled in an area around the mouth of
the Niobrara River. In 1858 the Ponca relinquished all land they had claimed
except for a small reserve along the Niobrara. They tried to change from
nomadic buffalo hunters to farmers. In the Treaty of 1868, the government
mistakenly included the Ponca's land in the territory assigned to the
Sioux. Following this the Sioux raided the area claimed by the Ponca and
many lives were lost. The government's proposal to end the raids was to
move the Ponca to Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma).
In 1876 when the Ponca were told they were to be moved to Indian Territory,
they sent ten chiefs with a United States agent to look over the land
and its prospects. They were to make a decision for the Ponca tribe. However,
based on what they learned, the chiefs could not make a favorable report,
and the tribe voted not to go to Indian Territory. The government then
decided to send the Ponca to Indian Territory with or without their consent.
So the Ponca left on foot for Indian territory, escorted by the U.S. Army.
Inhospitable surroundings there caused many deaths. Standing Bear and
thirty others tried to return to their home on the Niobrara. They were
stopped on the Omaha Reservation and arrested on orders from the Secretary
of Interior at Washington, D.C. General George Crook detained Standing
Bear and the others at Fort Omaha. Although they were ordered back to
Indian Territory at once, a delay was obtained so they could rest and
regain their health. During this time their story was told to the public
by Thomas Tibbles of the Omaha World-Herald.
With the help of Thomas Tibbles and two lawyers, John L. Webster and A.J.
Poppleton, (and probably General Crook), Standing Bear petitioned the
court by a writ of Habeas Corpus. He appeared before Judge Elmer Dundy.
The government's lawyer was G.M. Lambertson.
Judge Dundy had to rule on whether an Indian had the rights of freedom
guaranteed by the Constitution. The government tried to prove that an
Indian was neither a person nor a citizen so couldn't bring suit against
the government. On April 30, 1879 Judge Dundy stated that an Indian is
a person within the law and that the Ponca were being held illegally.
He set free Standing Bear and the Ponca. A government commission, appointed
by President Rutherford B. Hayes, investigated and found the Ponca situation
to be unjust. They arranged for the return of the Ponca from Indian Territory
and allotted land to them along the Niobrara River.
Between 1879 and 1883 Standing Bear traveled in eastern United States
and spoke about Indian rights. He was accompanied by Tibbles, Susette
(Bright Eyes) LaFlesche, and her brother Francis LaFlesche. Standing Bear
won the support of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and other prominent people.
After he returned from the East, Standing Bear resided on his old home
on the Niobrara and farmed his land. He died in 1908.
Source: http://net.unl.edu/swi/guide/stbear.html |