Talk:Kintpuash
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captain jack [The only previous edit (16:04, 2005 May 12 205.217.85.209) struck thru. --Jerzy·t 2005 July 7 17:23 (UTC)]
Untitled
editI left in place the contradiction i found there:
- Re the quasi-ambush of the commission, it says
- commission numbered two (hence Canby as chair and one more)
- Re the hangings, it says
- Canby and commissioners (in plural), hence at least three.
Any truth to the Captain Jack's brain rumor?
editI attended Cornell University, which is known for its collection of famous 19th-century brains. Was Captain Jack's brain, as has been alluded to in the Cornell Daily Sun and other such Cornell-related publications, taken to Cornell for study after his execution?
--Slightlyslack 23:43, 20 July 2005 (UTC)
http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096411456
August 25, 2005
by: Suzan Shown Harjo / Indian Country Today
The Smithsonian's 4,500 Indian heads came from the U.S. Army Surgeon General's Indian Crania Study of the late 1800s. Specimens for that study were sought jointly by the Army Medical Museum and the Smithsonian, which even advertised in newspapers for readers to harvest Indian skulls and paid bounties for the dead. Indians were decapitated at massacre and battle sites, at forts and prisons. Indian bodies were exhumed from burial grounds, scaffolds and caves. One of the collected heads was that of Kintpuash, the Modoc leader known as Captain Jack, whose head was severed after he was hanged by the Army in 1873. His descendants learned that his skull was on the desk of a Smithsonian scientist, being used variously as a paperweight or ashtray. The scientist obviously had concluded his study, and Kintpuash's relatives took him home in 1984.
[User: Doctorleelee] 18:25, 23 Feb. 2006
Move to "Captain Jack"?
editIf Kintpuash is better known as Captain Jack, then why is this article at Kintpuash, and not Captain Jack (Native American), from which it is redirected? Should it be moved? Äþelwulf Talk to me. 17:29, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
External links modified
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Wiki Education assignment: Early American History Graduate Seminar
editThis article is currently the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 29 August 2024 and 12 December 2024. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Haytham1165 (article contribs).
— Assignment last updated by Raevan2011 (talk) 19:31, 18 October 2024 (UTC)