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Gall
Lakota Sioux


Topics covered in this document:


Introduction

Gall photo There's a story about how Gall got his unusual name. The story goes that as a young and famished orphan, he ate the gall of an animal that had been killed by one of his neighbors.

Whether or not that story is true, we'll probably never know.


Hunkpapa Chief

Gall was a Hunkpapa chief who rose to prominence among the Lakota as one of the warriors in the Red Cloud campaigns.

Unhappy with the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, which brought an end to those campaigns, Gall joined Sitting Bull and other war chiefs who refused to stay within the boundaries set up for them on the reservation.

Later in life, however, Gall changed his tune. Some 15 years later, while confined to a reservation, he encouraged his people to accept assimilation into white society as their only option. This opinion is probably the reason Gall is not as well-known as his Lakota warrior peers.

Which is too bad. Looking back with 20-20 hindsight, he probably had the right idea. Like the old saying goes: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

Military War Chief

As one of Sitting Bull's military chiefs, Gall led attacks on army troops along the Yellowstone River in 1872 and 1873.

In 1876, at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, he and his Hunkpapa warriors successfully drove Major Marcus Reno from the Lakota encampment.

He then moved north to assist Crazy Horse in attacking General Custer. After the skirmish with Custer, Gall fled farther north into Canada with Sitting Bull and his warriors.

However, in late 1880 Gall and Sitting Bull had an argument, most likely about Gall's peace-seeking attitude toward Whites, and Gall brought his band back south across the border.

Gall Seeks Assimilation

On 3 January 1881 Gall surrendered to the Army.

Standing Rock Reservation

He and his followers were sent to the Standing Rock reservation in the Dakota Territory.

Indian Agent McLaughlin

It was while on this reservation that he became friends with the one man whom Sitting Bull considered perhaps his biggest enemy ... Indian Agent James McLaughlin.

The closeness of their friendship is witnessed by a statement by McLaughlin that he and Gall would often discuss "personal affairs of staggering intimacy."

Agent McLaughlin felt that Gall was, along with Red Cloud, one of the truly great leaders of the Lakota nation.

Domestication of Lakota

Once on the reservation, Gall rejected his militant attitude and instead became a champion of federal efforts to "domesticate" the Lakota.

He used his prestige among the Lakota to facilitate reservation farming programs, and became a staunch supporter of educating Lakota children in special schools.

Reservation Judge

In 1889 Gall became a reservation judge for the Court of Indian Offenses.

Attitude Alienated Sitting Bull

That same year, he further alienated himself from Sitting Bull by giving his consent to reduce the size of the reservation.

Among the Lakota of Standing Rock, Gall originally challenged Sitting Bull for a place of respect ... but he never matched his former friend and mentor's influence and authority.

Gall's Death

Gall died on 5 December 1894 at his Oak Creek home in South Dakota.


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