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No Ethnographic Notes For This Plate.
Black Horse (identified by glyph), imprisoned in a building, reaches through a window to two men--one with a fox name glyph (white-tipped tail is distinctive for the red fox; see a similar fox, a gray fox, in Petersen's PLAINS INDIAN ART FROM FT. MARION, page 277) .
We know that Black Horse was wounded in while inside of a cabin. The Cheyenne historian John Stands in Timber wrote of this event: "Black Horse and two others rode to a cabin and the settlers ran away. Black Horse went down some steps into a storeroom [or root cellar] and someone hiding under a pile of boards there shot him in the leg." On page 75, Panther and Swift Fox rescue of the wounded Black Horse from the cabin. This event took place in 1878 or 1879. Black Horse tried to heal his leg without non-Indian medical treatment for 2 months until the Army surgeon at Fort Keogh, MT attended to his wound. After surgery, the doctor sent fragments of bone that he had removed to the Army Medical Museum in Washington, D.C. These pieces of Black Horse's bone were repatriated to the Northern Cheyenne in 2000 through the efforts of Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-CO), a descendant (Night/Black Horse).
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Drawings principally by Black Horse, c. 1879-1885, depicting Northern Cheyenne events beginning around 1865. L...