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DENVER'S CHARACTERS Little
Raven
(b. Colorado 18??-d. Oklahoma 1889).
Little Raven, the name of a Denver street opened in 1994
between 15th and 20th Sts.(near the South Platte River in Lower Downtown), belatedly
commemorates the Southern Arapaho chief who welcomed palefaces to Denver. Little Raven was
stout and congenial, with the light skin and big nose that characterized his tribe. He
entertained palefaced newcomers in his own handsomely decorated Denver tipi and visited
with the whites in their strange, square houses. Friendly relations, however, deteriorated
when many Arapaho refused to sign the Fort Wise Treaty of 1861, which expelled them from
their homeland in the Cherry Creek and South Platte valleys. Three years later, the
Colorado Volunteers slaughtered many Arapaho at Sand Creek in southeastern Colorado. Chief
Little Raven complained in vain: "It will be a very hard thing to leave the country
that God gave us. Our friends are buried there, and we hate to leave these grounds. There
at Sand CreekWhite Antelope, and many other chiefs lie there; our women and children
lie there. Our lodges were destroyed there, and our horses were taken from us."
Little Raven and his peaceful band of Arapaho survived Sand
Creek because he was clever enough to camp away from the army-designated site. He traveled
to Washington, D. C. to receive a peace medal from President U. S. Grant, but said he had
no peace to make, as he had never been at war with the whites. He signed the Medicine
Lodge Treaty of 1867, consigning the Southern Arapaho to Oklahoma, where he helped his
people adjust to reservation life.
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