Jump to content

User:Urve/Lynching of Alec Coudotte, Philip Ireland, and Paul Holy Track

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Refer to caption
Refer to caption
Refer to caption
Drawings of Paul Holy Track, Philip Ireland, and Alec Coudotte, in 1897

On November 14, 1897, three Native American men—Alec Coudotte, Philip Ireland, and Paul Holy Track—were lynched.

Lynching

[edit]

Because they were held in Bismarck, North Dakota, two men were spared from the mob: Frank Blackhawk and George Defender.[1]

The murder of Coudotte, Ireland, and Holy Track was the only multiple lynching in North Dakota history.[1] They were lynched in Williamsport, North Dakota, then the seat of Emmons County, just across the Missouri River from the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. [1]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Vyzralek 1990, p. 23.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Beidler, Peter G. (2014). Murdering Indians: A documentary history of the 1897 killings that inspired Louise Erdrich's The Plague of Doves. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. ISBN 9780786475643.
  • Vyzralek, Frank E. (1990). "Murder in masquerade: A commentary on lynching and mob violence in North Dakota's past, 1882-1931". North Dakota History. 57 (1, Winter).