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#62
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10-17-2017, 07:26 PM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:833 Join Date: Nov 2012 Posts: 922 Mentioned: 3 Post(s) Quoted: 336 Post(s)
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Either that arrow was manual put in his cock or they had good aim with A bow savage
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#63
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10-17-2017, 08:20 PM
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
LOL, primitive 'natives' were slaughtering each other for centuries before the superior tribe showed up. You don't give a shit about the tribes that fell victim to the vicious Apache and Cheyenne. Who gives a fuck if a bunch of murderous, torturing, raping, near cave-men were defeated and dragged into the modern world.
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#64
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10-17-2017, 09:17 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,466 Mentioned: 6 Post(s) Quoted: 4543 Post(s)
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Amazing photograph, and excellent writeup!! This is a great post. I'd like to find out where he is buried. I assume they took the arrow out of his weiner...... |
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#65
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10-17-2017, 09:22 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,466 Mentioned: 6 Post(s) Quoted: 4543 Post(s)
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Found more info on "FINDAGRAVE", but I know they don't like links here, and I don't know how to post the info. He was from English, from a wealthy family, and attended Eton college.
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#66
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10-17-2017, 11:34 PM
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Thats what you get for invading a land where no-one has called you or invited you. But im sure it was because of the violent invasion not justified for local real native tribes. |
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#67
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10-17-2017, 11:41 PM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2584 Join Date: May 2017 Posts: 165 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 11 Post(s)
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Info from FindAGrave. Sgt Frederick C. H. A. Wyllyams Birth: 1841, England Death: Jun. 26, 1867 Kansas, USA Sergeant, Company G, 7th US Cavalry, killed by Cheyenne Indians. Born Frederick Charles Henry Augustus Wyllyams to a prominent English family, he was a graduate of Eton and had been sent to America for some impropriety, which he had hoped to regain his family's favor by earning a commission in the US Army. In 1866, he enlisted in Company G, 7th US Cavalry, and was assigned to Fort Hays, Kansas, where his obvious leadership abilities earned him rapid promotion to Sergeant. While the company was escorting General Wright's railroad survey party to Fort Wallace, Wyllyams became a good friend of fellow Britisher, William A. Bell, the survey party's photographer. Wyllyams was killed in a fight between the soldiers and a Cheyenne Dog Soldier War Party. His body had been stripped of all clothing, scalped, and mutilated, in accordance with Indian customs. The Indians believed that a mutilated enemy would be unable to rest in heaven, being forever crippled even in the afterlife. His friend, William Bell, took the photo of his body. SGT Wyllyams was married on 19 November 1865 in England, to Eliza Matilda Turner (born Dec 1834 in Waddon, Tuffley, Gloucester; died 11 Feb 1881 in Barton Regis, Gloucestershire, England). Following Wyllyams' death, she filed for his Civil War pension, and became a dressmaker to support herself. Inscription: Sergeant, 7 U.S. Cavalry Burial: Fort Leavenworth National Cemetery Fort Leavenworth Leavenworth County Kansas, USA Plot: Section C, site 1890 |
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#68
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10-18-2017, 06:15 AM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2584 Join Date: May 2017 Posts: 165 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 11 Post(s)
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Description of incident that caused his death. On the morning of Wednesday June 26th 1867, a party of Cheyenne Dog Soldiers and Lakotas launched a raid on the horse herd at Pond Creek Stage Station near the newly established Fort Wallace, Kansas. Soldiers of the 7th Cavalry rushed to repulse the attack. The leader of the military force, Captain Albert Barnitz, claimed to have inflicted ‘severe’ losses upon the Indians. He also reported six soldiers killed and six wounded. One of the military losses was a young Englishman, Frederick Wyllyams, who had enlisted the previous year and who had attained the rank of Sergeant by the time that he was killed. |
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#70
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10-18-2017, 09:07 AM
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Re: Arrowed by Indians
Yes a land with no borders, no common law, rife with infighting and tribal warfare. Completely prosperous as a world power. Such excellence of a race is evident today on Rez’s where gasoline is huffed more than it’s put in a car, and the most popular cologne is Jack Daniels.
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