Cheyenne has been trembling for centuries in the Midwest Plains to date. So far, people rarely narrow down their lands and explore them, and fewer places to ride at dusk. Since Americans do not like them, there have been thousands of land and people, now only hundreds of acres. Like other locals, Cheyenne came from Siberia and then crossed the narrow Bering Strait that originally joined Asia and Alaska. Shai-ela is the word of the Sioux of Cheyenne, "People who speak funny words". Before they found Buffalo, they caught deer, rabbits and fish, women planted crops and gathered fruits.
The Cheyenne tribe of the Native American Indians is the most famous and famous tribe among the Indian tribes who currently settled in North America. They originally lived in several villages in the eastern part of the country and occupied the majority of today's Minnesota state, but until 19th century they were forced to migrate to Great Plains (Gennell). From the movement to the plain, the Xi'an tribes are divided into North Cheyenne and South Cheyenne, and their land extends from the Missouri River to the Arkansas River.
By the 1950s Cheyenne was on the verge of crisis just like any other ordinary tribe. Some Caucasians are foreseeing the next disaster waiting for tribes like Cheyenne. Thomas "Breaking Hands" Fitzpatrick is an experienced ordinary man representing Xia An and Arapaho as proxies. He was deeply concerned about the welfare of these people when he noticed that the huge southern buffalo was thinning. In 1853, Fitzpatrick talked about the seriousness of the situation to the Indian Affairs Bureau. "Cheyenne and Arapaho, and many Sioux people are actually hungry," he insists. "Status"
When Cheyenne came out in May 1877, a group of Cheyenne Indians escaped the reservation and returned to their hometown. Cheyeng warned that they would have problems if they left. Cheyen answered that they did not want war and just returned to the promised land. "When we agree to enter this country, we are going to go peacefully as we promised we have to go north ..." (Brown 341) They, Cheyenne, Throwing Robinson Fort, I had no choice but to give up their guns and weapons. On January 9, 1877, some Cheyenne fighters tried to kill security guards at the entrance of Robinson Castle. After the battle of short term, "The soldiers brought 65 Cheyenne captives, 23 of them injured, returned to Fort Robinson, mostly women and children.