Private Henry Collins—Second Cavalry, Sibley Patrol
Private William Evans—E. Company, Seventh Infantry
Private Benjamin F. Stewart—E. Company, Seventh Infantry
Private James Bell—E Company, Seventh Infantry
Private Christian Madsen—A Troop, Fifth Cavalry
*Private John Wenzel—A Troop, Third Cavalry
Private Albert Glavinski—M Troop, Third Cavalry
†Private Orlando H. Duren—E. Troop, Third Cavalry
*Private Edward Kennedy—C Troop, Fifth Cavalry
†Private John M. Stevenson—I Troop, Second Cavalry
†Private August Dorn—D Troop, Fifth Cavalry
Private Cyrus B. Milner—A Troop, Fifth Cavalry
†Private Edward Kiernan—E Troop, Third Cavalry
†Private William B. DuBois—C Troop, Third Cavalry
†Private August Foran—D Troop, Third Cavalry
†Private Charles Foster—B Troop, Third Cavalry
Washakie
American Horse Little Eagle
Dog Necklace Antelope Tail
Charging Bear Red Horse
Iron Thunder
Yellow Hair Rain Maker
John “Trailer Jack” Becker—packer on Sibley Scout
Wilbur Storey—owner/publisher, Chicago Times
Clint Snowden—city editor, Chicago Times
Thomas Moore—Chief of Pack Train
Richard “Uncle Dick” Closter
Grant Marsh—captain,
Dave Campbell—pilot,
†James B. Glover—packer
E. B. Farnum—Mayor of Deadwood
Martha Luhn—officer’s wife at Fort Laramie
Elizabeth Burt—officer’s wife at Fort Laramie
Robert Strahorn—correspondent, Denver
John F. Finerty—correspondent, Chicago
Joe Wasson—correspondent, New York
Reuben B. Davenport—correspondent, New York
T. B. MacMillan—correspondent, Chicago
J. J. Talbot—correspondent, New York
Barbour Lathrop—correspondent, San Francisco
Cuthbert Mills—New York
Tom Cosgrove—civilian leader of the Shoshone battalion
Nelson Yarnell—Cosgrove’s lieutenant
Yancy Eckles—Cosgrove’s sergeant
*killed in the battle of Slim Buttes
†wounded at the Battle of Slim Buttes
At Laramie I told the commissioners that I had seen the Sioux commit a massacre; they killed many white men. But the Sioux are still here, and still kill white men.
—Blackfoot
Crow war chief
The people must be left with nothing but their eyes to weep with.
—Lieutenant General Philip H. Sheridan
The “Sibley Scout” is famous among Indian fighters as being one of the narrowest escapes from savages now on record.
—Editorial
The New York
Toward the end of the perilous march [of the Sibley patrol], we all became so weakened that we marched for ten minutes and then would lie down and rest. Several of the most robust men became insane, and one or two never regained their wits.
—Lieutenant Frederick W. Sibley
[The skirmish at Warbonnet Creek] is one of few cases where a large party of Indians was successfully ambushed by troops.
—Don Russell
For the Indians who had gloried in the victory of Little Big Horn, Slim Buttes heralded the retaliatory blows that ultimately broke their resistance and forced their submission … the actions of September 9 and 10, 1876, commenced the relentless punitive warfare that was to be waged over the next eight months, until the tribesmen either had died or had gone peaceably to the agencies.
—Jerome A. Green
… many a suffering stomach gladdened with a welcome change from horse meat, tough and stringy, to rib