Kicking Bear was an Og
lala by birth. Through marriage he joined the Minneconjou and became a band
chief. Both the Oglala and the M
inneconjou belong to the Lakota Nation. Kicking Bear distinguished himself in several
battles to protect Lakota land during the War for the Black Hills (1876-77),
including the battle at Little Big Horn Creek.
Kicking Bear was a leader in the Ghost Dance religious movement, practiced a century ago
by Indian men and women in the belief that it would restore them and their deceased
ancestors to a fast-disappearing way of life. The U.S. Army stopped the movement with the
Wounded Knee massacre.
Kicking Bear was arrested and imprisoned at Fort Sheridan, Illinois. In 1891 his sentence
was commuted provided he join the European tour of Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show,
an experience he found humiliating. After a year-long tour, Kicking Bear returned to the
Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota to care for what mattered most to him -- his family.
In 1898, more than twenty years after the event, Kicking Bear painted his account of the
Battle of Little Big Horn at the request of artist
Frederic Remington.
General George Armstrong Custer can be seen in yellow buckskins on the left side of
the painting.
Sitting Bull , Rain-in-the-Face,
Crazy Horse, and Kicking Bear stand in the open center area. The figures rendered in
line in the upper left corner represent departing spirits of dead soldiers.