26th December 1862
In
August 1862 War broke out between the United States and the Sioux of
Dakota. The war itself was reasonably short but massacres had taken
place.
The US Army had captured over 300
Sioux. Many of them were known to have participated in violent actions
against white settlers, who now demanded action against the native
americans.
The situation was complex.
President Lincoln needed to stamp US authority over the area whilst not
provoking further uprisings. Local trials had found many of the
imprisoned men guilty and sentencing prescribed the death sentence.
President
Lincoln ordered an examination of each case. It found two women and 38
men to have committed crimes of a nature that would carry the ultimate
punishment. Lincoln therefore sanctioned the execution. 1 womans
sentence was subsequently reduced to 10 years imprisonment. One mans
sentence was quashed between Lincoln authorising the sentence and the
date of execution: the Army provided new evidence that raised doubts
over his guilt.
The remaining 38 Sioux
prisoners were held at Mankato, Minnesota. On 26th December 1862 they
were taken out by the army, led to one large gallows constructed
especially for 38 executions, and simultaneously hanged.
The
bodies were buried nearby but, as was common at the time, exhumed in
the night and the cadavers sold to doctors for medical research.
2 further Sioux leaders had escaped. They were captured at a later date and executed in 1865.
The
execution of 38 people is the largest in US History. It proved to be a
hugely controversial act. It infuriated the Sioux. It also infuriated
elements of the settlers communities who saw the clemency for many Sioux
as being too lenient.
Image: contemporary
drawing of the execution. United States Library of Congress's Prints and
Photographs division, digital ID cph.3a04167

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