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  1. Rain-in-the-Face (Lakota: Ité Omáǧažu in Standard Lakota Orthography) (c. 1835 – September 15, 1905) was a warchief of the Lakota tribe of Native Americans. His mother was a Dakota related to the band of famous Chief Inkpaduta .

    • c. 1835
  2. Mar 17, 2023 · Rain-in-the-Face. A Hunkpapa Lakota, Rain-in-the-Face was born about 1835 near the forks of the Cheyenne River. Rain-in-the-Face had a reputation for belligerence from early boyhood. At the age of ten, he got into a fight with a "friendly" Cheyenne, the result of which his face was bloodied and streaked with blood, thus giving him his name.

  3. Apr 26, 2024 · Rain-in-the-Face ( Ite Omagazu, l. c. 1835-1905) was a Lakota Sioux warrior and war chief during Red Cloud's War (1866-1868) and at the Battle of the Little Bighorn (1876), after which he became famous as the man who killed Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer, his brother Capt. Thomas Custer, or both of them.

    • Joshua J. Mark
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  5. The two primary accounts of the battle by Rain In The Face are very different, and frankly contradictory. The first (actually the second chronologically) by Santee Sioux Ohiyesa is sympathetic and respectful -- essentially a death bed conversation between two old friends -- while the second by American journalist W. Kent Thomas is glibly exploitive -- Thomas purportedly got Rain In The Face ...

  6. Rain-in-the-Face was a leader of the Lakota tribe. He was among those who defeated George Armstrong Custer and the US 7th Cavalry Regiment at the 1876 Battle of Little Big Horn. Born in the Dakota Territory near the forks of the Cheyenne River in about 1835, Rain-in-the-Face was from the Hunkpapa band of the Lakota nation.

  7. Mar 2, 2017 · His name was Rain-in-the-Face. Contemporaries took Rain-in-the-Face seriously. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a poem titled “The Revenge of Rain-in-the-Face” in which Rain cries, “Revenge upon all the race of the White Chief with yellow hair!” before carving out George Custer’s heart.

  8. Rain-in-the-Face died at his home on September 14, 1905, at the Bullhead Station on the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota after a lengthy illness. Charles Eastman About the Author: Excerpted from the book Indian Heroes and Great Chieftains by Charles A. Eastman, 1918.

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