- Source: Minnie Hollow Wood
Minnie Hollow Wood (c. 1856 – 1930s) was a Lakota woman who earned the right to wear a war bonnet because of her valor in combat against the U.S. Cavalry at the Battle of Little Big Horn.: 4:37 At one time, she was the only woman in her tribe entitled to wear a war bonnet.
Biography
Her husband, Hollow Wood, was a Cheyenne who also fought at the Little Big Horn. Both Hollow Woods surrendered to Colonel Nelson A. Miles at Fort Keogh in Montana in 1877.
Minnie Hollow Wood lived on the Cheyenne reservation in Montana and became an informant of author and ethnologist Thomas Bailey Marquis. Marquis suggested that she was a "favorite" of Miles while she was a prisoner at Fort Keogh.
Representation in popular culture
Minnie Hollow Wood was the subject of an animated short by Yvonne Russo. Minnie's War Bonnet premiered at the Red Nation International Film Festival in 2019.
See also
Buffalo Calf Road Woman – Cheyenne warrior (c. 1844–1879)
Moving Robe Woman – Native American womenPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
One Who Walks With the Stars – Native American warriorPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
Pretty Nose – Arapaho woman
References
External links
Minnie's War Bonnet – animated short
Directory of Plains Indians at the Battle of the Little Big Horn
Two images of Minnie Hollow Wood in "Native American Women and the U.S. Military"
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Minnie Hollow Wood
- Buffalo Calf Road Woman
- Pretty Nose
- Moving Robe Woman
- General Wood
- List of Native American women of the United States
- Timeline of women in warfare in the United States before 1900
- One Who Walks with the Stars
- Timeline of women in war in the United States, pre-1945
- Quail Hollow State Park