872 THE GHOST- DANCE RELIGION [eth.ann.h 



Indian police killed in arresting Sitting Bull, this makes a total of 49 

 deaths on the government side, including 7 Indians and a negro: 



Adams, William. Kelley, James E. 



Bone, Albert S. (corporal, died of Kellner, August. 



wounds). Koru, Gustav (blacksmith). 



Casey, Edward W. (first lieutenant Logan, James. 



Twenty-second infantry, January 7). McClintock, William F. 



Coffey, Dora 8. (first sergeant). McCue, John M. 



Cook, Ralph L. Mann, James D. (first lieutenant, died <<f 

 Corwine, Richard W. (sergeant major). wounds, January 15). 



Costello, John. Meil, John W. (killed in railroad aoci- 

 Cummings, Pierce. dent. January 26). 



De Vreede, Jan. Mezo, William S. 



Dyer, Arthur C. (sergeant). Murphy, Joseph. 



Elliott, George (died of wounds, Janu- Nettles, Robert H. (sergeant). 



ary 13). Newell, Charles H. (corporal, died of 

 Francischetti, Dominic (December 30). wounds). 



Forrest, Harry R. (corporal i. Pollock, < >scar (hospital steward). 



Frey, Henry. Regan, Michael. 



Grauberg, Herman (died of wounds, De- Reinecky, Frank T. 



cember 30). Schartel, Thomas (First artillery, killed 

 Haywood, Charles (Ninth cavalry, col- in railroad accident, January I'll i. 



ored, December 30). Schwenkey, Philip. 



High Backbone (Indian scout). Stone, Harry B. (died of wounds, Janu- 

 Hodges, William T. (sergeant). ary 12). 



Howard, Henry (sergeant, died of wounds, Twohig, Daniel. 



January 23). Wallace, George B. (captain). 



Johnson, George P. Zehnder, Beruhard (died of wounds). 



The heroic missionary priest, Father Craft, who had given a large 

 part of his life to work among the Sioux, by whom he was loved and 

 respected, had endeavored at the beginning of the trouble to persuade 

 the stampeded Indians to come into the agency, but without success, 

 the Indians claiming that no single treaty ever made with them had 

 been fulfilled in all its stipulations. Many of the soldiers being of his 

 own faith, he accompanied the detachment which received the surren- 

 der of Big Foot, to render such good offices as might be possible to 

 either party. In the desperate encounter he was stabbed through the 

 lungs, but yet, with bullets flying about him and hatchets and warclubs 

 circling through the air, he went about his work, administering the 

 hist religious consolation to the dying until he fell unconscious from 

 loss of blood. He was brought back to the agency along with the 

 other wounded, and although his life was despaired of for some time, 

 he finally recovered. In talking about Wounded Knee with one of the 

 friendly warriors who had gone into the Bad Lands to urge .the hostiles 

 ti> come in, he spoke with warm admiration of Father Craft, and I 

 asked why it was, then, that the Indians had tried to kill him. He 

 replied, "They did not know him. Father Jutz [the priest at the 

 Drexel Catholic, mission, previously mentioned] always wears his black 

 robe, but Father Craft on that day wore a soldier's cap and overcoat. 

 11' lie had worn his black robe, no Indian would have hurt him." On 



