("This book is written almost entirely from the Indian sta...)
"This book is written almost entirely from the Indian standpoint; and yet, when the details as related are compared with the facts really known by the historians, this story does not conflict, in many points, with the generally accepted story of the battle. The real point of difference, and that which is believed to be a new contribution, is the plan of attack of the Indians and the events of Custer's last stand ... The details of this story were not obtained in one interview, but in many interviews, covering a period of many years" (Preface, Page 17)
The Last Days of Sitting Bull: Sioux Medicine Chief
(Sitting Bull was a fascinating, but controversial figure ...)
Sitting Bull was a fascinating, but controversial figure in the political history of relationships between the First Nations and the U.S. Government. Author Usher L. Burdick illuminates the human factor in the tragic events leading up to the death of Sitting Bull and the aftermath at Wounded Knee, building from the correspondence and papers of Indian Agent James McLaughlin. The late Congressman Usher L. Burdick (1879-1960) first published "The Last Days of Sitting Bull" in 1941.
Usher Lloyd Burdick was an American lawyer, congressman, author. He is noted for his dedicated service in Congress.
Background
Usher Lloyd Burdick was born on February 21, 1879 near Owatonna, Minnesota, the son of Ozias Warren Burdick, a farmer, and Lucy Farnum. In 1882 the family moved to a homestead northwest of Carrington, Dakota Territory, and in 1884 to Graham's Island, Benson County, Dakota Territory, where frontier farming experiences adjacent to the Fort Totten Sioux Indian reservation and a rural schoolteacher's influence provided important formative experiences.
He became an expert marksman, acquired the ability to lasso, learned to speak a Sioux dialect fluently, and gained some knowledge of other Indian languages.
Education
Burdick attended Mayville Normal School (now Mayville State College), intermittently teaching in rural and village schools until he graduated with a teaching certificate in 1900. His success in quieting unruly students in one school earned him appointment as deputy country superintendent of schools.
Burdick enrolled in the law department of the University of Minnesota, supporting his family by teaching classes in a business college.
Career
In 1904 Burdick received the LL. B. and was admitted to the North Dakota bar. He combined law practice with employment in a bank in the village of Munich, North Dakota, a construction crew base for a Great Northern Railroad feeder (branch) line. Munich was home to seventeen illegal liquor establishments, a row of sporting houses along the railroad tracks, and a local reform movement that engaged Burdick's legal talents and physical prowess; he gained a county-wide reputation and was elected state representative from Cavalier County in 1906.
In the ensuing legislative sessions, Burdick became a leader, supporting anti-pass legislation--which made it a criminal act to give or receive free transportation on railroads for political purposes--primary elections, and popular election of senators. Reelected in 1908, Burdick was chosen speaker of the lower house.
In 1910 he was elected lieutenant governor. The same year he transferred his law practice to Williston, North Dakota, near the Montana border, where he also dabbled in farming and ranching. In 1912 he declined the Progressive nomination for governor, sensing that a third-party ticket for state office and congressional seats in the 1912 general election could not result in his own election to office and would encourage Progressives who were Republican nominees to support Taft instead of Roosevelt.
In 1914 he accepted the Progressive endorsement but was defeated by the incumbent conservative, L. B. Hanna. Two years later Hanna did not run and Burdick was again backed by the Progressives. Election seemed certain, but the emergence of the Nonpartisan League (NPL) diverted the protest vote and elected Lynn J. Frazier.
From 1913 to 1915 Burdick was state attorney and from 1915 to 1920 special prosecutor of Williams County, and from 1929 to 1932 he was assistant United States district attorney for North Dakota. During these years he helped organize and briefly led the North Dakota Farm Bureau. Later he was associated with the Farmers Union.
Without endorsement he ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 1932, but in 1934 his work with the Farm Holiday Association won him NPL endorsement, Republican party nomination, and election. He was reelected four times.
In 1932 Burdick had supported Franklin D. Roosevelt for president, but in 1936 he supported the Union Party presidential candidacy of William Lemke; as a consequence he lost his seniority rights in Congress. Burdick's congressional career was that of an agrarian reformer and, until Pearl Harbor, an isolationist in foreign affairs. He consistently supported work relief, housing legislation, and assistance to debtor farmers. Although he customarily supported New Deal programs, he initially opposed social security, perhaps because of his adherence to the Townsend Plan.
He opposed investigation of the sit-down strikes and refused to join in the attacks on Frank Murphy (who, as governor of Michigan, had supported the strikes) when Murphy was appointed attorney general. Burdick supported both the Ludlow Resolution, asking for a plebiscite before declaration of war, and the neutrality legislation sponsored by Senator Gerald P. Nye; he opposed big armaments, the draft, and lend-lease.
After Pearl Harbor he vigorously supported the war effort and voted for the Fulbright Resolution, calling for a postwar international peacekeeping organization, a position he reversed during the postwar period.
He spent much time browsing in antique shops for rare books; he established a library of some 12, 000 volumes on his Maryland farm, where he specialized in raising milk goats. As a congressman, Burdick did not sponsor any significant legislation; nor had he made a major effort on the Post Office, Civil Service, or Judiciary committees. But on the Indian Affairs and Pensions committees he sought to protect Indian interests, as well as those of his constituents. Burdick served in Congress until 1959.
Characterized as a "direct actionist"--an agrarian spokesman who brought voter pressure in support of farm legislation to bear upon his colleagues--he never forgot his pioneer roots, and he cultivated the image of a prairie, cowboy westerner, informal in personal appearance, who welcomed battle with the monopolistic eastern bankers and capitalists and thwarted their efforts to place American farmers in permanent thralldom.
His position on domestic policy did not change notably during his final ten years in Congress. On foreign policy he quickly reverted to an isolationist position and voted against arms for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, opposed continued appropriations for the Marshall Plan, and advocated withdrawal from the United Nations. He pressed for legislation that would have prevented congressmen, judges, and other public officials from accepting fees for speeches, a position consistent with the anti-pass laws he sponsored when first elected to public office in 1906.
In 1932, Burdick was elected president of the Farmers' Holiday Association, an association which advocated strikes for farmers, and which took radical direct action against farm foreclosures. Burdick was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination to the 73rd Congress in 1932, in which he favored Franklin D. Roosevelt to be elected president and the repeal of Prohibition.
He died in Washington, D. C. , a few days after his son became United States Senator.
He joined the coalition of liberal Republicans and Democrats that ousted the railroad-dominated Alexander McKenzie machine and elected a liberal Democrat, John Burke, as governor in what became known as the "North Dakota Political Revolution of 1906. " In the ensuing legislative sessions, Burdick became a leader, supporting anti-pass legislation--which made it a criminal act to give or receive free transportation on railroads for political purposes--primary elections, and popular election of senators. Reelected in 1908, Burdick was chosen speaker of the lower house.
In 1944, with NPL backing, he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination against the incumbent Nye. The senatorial effort cost Burdick his seat in the House of Representatives, and he returned to Williston, where he again practiced law and engaged in farming and ranching, specializing in breeding cattle and palomino horses. Burdick defeated incumbent Charles Robertson for the Republican congressional nomination in 1948 and subsequently won in the general election. During his second congressional career, his interest in writing, the West, and Americana moved from avocation toward vocation.
The 1956 decision of the NPL to endorse candidates in the Democratic primary gave conservatives control of the North Dakota Republican party, and in 1958 they refused Burdick endorsement. He withdrew, influenced by the certainty that his NPL-endorsed son, Quentin, would be the Democratic general election candidate.
He backed Quentin in the election, and his son became the first Democrat to be elected to the House of Representatives from North Dakota. Burdick's final political action was to facilitate the development of North Dakota into a two-party state.
Views
Writing about western history, Indians, and the agrarian movement began to occupy much of his time. Roused by the hardships of his many farm clients, he denounced the Federal Reserve, the Agricultural Credit Corporation, the War Finance Corporation, and the Federal Intermediate Credit Banks as instruments of the "Twin City bank gang, " and he supported Robert La Follette's 1924 presidential candidacy. As a consequence of cases he prosecuted as United States district attorney, he became an outspoken opponent of the Eighteenth Amendment.
Membership
He was a member of the Farm Holiday Association.
Personality
A large-framed man, standing 6 feet 2 inches and weighing 220 pounds, he participated in track--he ran the 100-yard dash in 10. 5 seconds--and played right end on the Big Ten championship teams of 1903 and 1904.
A gregarious and convivial man, he was a powerful speaker and a colorful personality, known as a raconteur skilled in the use of dialects; he could entertain while persuading, whether in court or Congress, on the campaign trail, or in informal social groups. He tended to be the center of attention of any group.
Interests
Philosophers & Thinkers
Theodore Roosevelt's books on western history and his reform image won Burdick's admiration.
Connections
He married Emma Rassmussen Robertson on September 5, 1901; they had three children. He named his oldest son Quentin, after one of the president's sons. Marital difficulties developed, ending in separation in 1920 and subsequent divorce. He then married Helen White, a secretary; they were divorced in 1926 or 1927. (According to Quentin Burdick, his father managed his second marriage and both divorces so carefully that the family did not know the time or place of the divorce proceedings. )
On July 31, 1956, he married a government employee, Mrs. Edna Bryant Sierson, who on August 30, 1956, was accidentally killed while horseback riding on the Burdick ranch near Williston. On February 28, 1958, he married another congressional employee, Mrs. Jean Rogers.