Chief Red Cloud
on Indian Rights
Red Cloud, chief
of the largest tribe of the Teton Sioux Nation, achieved early fame as a
warrior and yet was one of the most influential Indian leaders to urge peace
with the U.S. government. In 1870 Red Cloud visited the East, at which time be
gave the following speech at a reception in his honor at Cooper Union in New
York on July 16. Though a persistent critic of the government and of its Indian
agents, whom be charged with graft and corruption, Red
Cloud only opposed agitation for further wars that, he knew, would only result
in losses for his people.
MY BRETHREN AND MY FRIENDS who
are here before me this day, God Almighty has made us all, and He is here to bless what I
have to say to you today. The Good Spirit made us both. He gave you lands and
He gave us lands; He gave us these lands; you came in here, and we respected
you as brothers. God Almighty made you but made you all white and clothed you;
when He made us He made us with red skins and poor; now you have come.
When
you first came we were very many, and you were few; now you are many, and we
are getting very few, and we are poor. You do not know who appears before you
today to speak. I am a representative of the original American race, the first
people of this continent. We are good and not bad. The reports that you hear
concerning us are all on one side. We are always well-disposed to them. You are
here told that we are traders and thieves, and it is not so. We have given you
nearly all our lands, and if we had any more land to give we would be very glad
to give it. We have nothing more. We are driven into a very little land, and we
want you now, as our dear friends, to help us with the government of the United
States.
The Great Father made us poor and ignorant—made you
rich and wise and more skillful in these things that we know nothing about. The
Great Father, the Good Father in Heaven, made you all to eat tame food—made us
to eat wild food—gives us the wild food. You ask anybody who has gone through
our country to California; ask those who have settled there and in Utah, and
you will find that we have treated them always well. You have children; we have
children. You want to raise your children and make them happy and prosperous;
we want to raise and make them happy and prosperous. We ask you to help us to
do it.
At the mouth of the Horse Creek, in 1852, the Great
Father made a treaty with us by which we agreed to let all that country open
for fifty-five years for the transit of those who were going through. We kept
this treaty; we never treated any man wrong; we never committed any murder or
depredation until afterward the troops were sent into that country, and the
troops killed our people and ill-treated them, and thus war and trouble arose;
but before the troops were sent there we were quiet and peaceable, and there
was no disturbance. Since that time there have been various goods sent from
time to time to us, the only ones that ever reached us, and then after they
reached us (very soon after) the government took them away. You, as good men,
ought to help us to these goods.
Colonel Fitzpatrick of the government said we must
all go to farm, and some of the people went to Fort Laramie and were badly
treated. I only want to do that which is peaceful, and the Great Fathers know
it, and also the Great Father who made us both. I came to Washington to see the
Great Father in order to have peace and in order to have peace continue. That
is all we want, and that is the reason why we are here now.
In 1868 men came out and brought papers. We are
ignorant and do not read papers, and they did not tell us right what was in
these papers. We wanted them to take away their forts, leave our country, would
not make war, and give our traders something. They said we had bound ourselves
to trade on the Missouri, and we said, no, we did not want that. The
interpreters deceived us. When I went to Washington I saw the Great Father. The
Great Father showed me what the treaties were; he showed me all these points
and showed me that the interpreters had deceived me and did not let me know
what the right side of the treaty was. All I want is right and justice. . . . I
represent the Sioux Nation; they will be governed by what I say and what I
represent. . . .
Look at me. I am poor and naked, but I am the Chief
of the Nation. We do not want riches, we do not ask for riches, but we want our
children properly trained and brought up. We look to you for your sympathy. Our
riches will . . . do us no good; we cannot take away into the other world
anything we have - we want to have love and peace. . . . We would like to know
why commissioners are sent out there to do nothing but rob [us] and get the
riches of this world away from us?
I was brought up among the traders and those who
came out there in those early times. I had a good time for they treated us
nicely and well. They taught me how to wear clothes and use tobacco, and to use
firearms and ammunition, and all went on very well until the Great Father sent
out another kind of men—men who drank whisky. He sent out whisky-men, men who
drank and quarreled, men who were so bad that he could not keep them at home,
and so he sent them out there. I have sent a great many words to the Great
Father, but I don't know that they ever reach the Great Father. They were
drowned on the way, therefore I was a little offended with it. The words I told
the Great Father lately would never come to him, so I thought I would come and
tell you myself
And I am going to leave you today, and I am going back
to my home. I want to tell the people that we cannot trust his agents and
superintendents. I don't want strange people that we know nothing about. I am
very glad that you belong to us. I am very glad that we have come here and
found you and that we can understand one another. I don't want any more such
men sent out there, who are so poor that when they come out there their first
thoughts are how they can fill their own pockets.
We want preserves in our reserves. We want honest
men, and we want you to help to keep us in the lands that belong to us so that
we may not be a prey to those who are viciously disposed. I am going back home.
I am very glad that you have listened to me, and I wish you good-bye and give
you an affectionate farewell.