Chapter One
The Divine Injunction
Again, we come to the great law of right. The white race stood upon
this undeveloped continent ready and willing to execute the Divine
injunction, to replenish the earth and subdue it.... The Indian
races were in the wrongful possession of a continent required by the
superior right of the white man.
Charles Bryant,
HISTORY OF THE GREAT MASSACRE BY THE SIOUX INDIANS
(1864)
Philip Henry Sheridan, tough, fearless, and tenacious, like the
bulldog he resembled, faced a thorny problem in the fall of
1875 several thousand of them, actually. A small contingent of
Plains Indians, roaming the same lands they had occupied for
generations, refused to bow to the manifest destiny of the nation he
had so devoutly served for more than twenty years.
Sheridan's dilemma was a multifaceted one. From his headquarters in
Chicago, he comman ...
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