It's been 160 years since the Sand Creek Massacre- when United States soldiers attacked Cheyenne and Arapaho people camped in ...
Friday, Nov. 29, marks 160 years since the Sand Creek bloodshed, and the pain of the tragedy still haunts descendants of ...
In the meantime, then-Governor John Hickenlooper created a Sand Creek Massacre Commission to determine how to mark the 150th ...
"They need to know our story," said Chester Whiteman, a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma and tribal ...
Descendants of the Sand Creek Massacre victims returned to southeast Colorado this fall to resume a tradition of healing.
It was the deadliest day in Colorado history: November 29, 1864 - the Sand Creek Massacre. More than 230 people -- mostly ...
In the early morning hours of November 29, 1864, Colonel John M. Chivington led soldiers of the 1 st and 3rd Regiments to ...
Friday marks 160 years since Colorado's Sand Creek Massacre, where U.S. soldiers attacked a camp of indigenous people, mostly ...
On Wednesday, September 24, members of the Sand Creek Massacre Commemoration Commission will head northeast from Eads along Chief White Antelope Way to the banks of Sand Creek, where 150 members ...
Around 200 Cheyenne and Arapaho people were killed, most of them women, children and elders. The Sand Creek Massacre remains one of the worst atrocities committed by US soldiers in history and remains ...