[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fQ2lEejc109ZJhswd-gPi6B8hNsroM852Azj6jPU6GgM":3,"$fTLEtOCdfJ5ScTGKpZ54G1eC3EMdaOqU4lZ1FihoR8ys":59},{"author":4,"tags":51},{"author_id":5,"author_name":6,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"bio":9,"short_bio":10,"bio_jsonld":11,"slug":49,"image_url":50},35592,"Dee Brown","D",157,"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is a notable work by Dee Brown, a historian, writer, novelist, and librarian who worked in the English language throughout his life as an American citizen.\n\nBrown was born on February 29, 1908, in Roy, a leap-day birth that meant the calendar anniversary of his arrival arrived only once every four years. He attended Little Rock Central High School and went on to study at the University of Central Arkansas, George Washington University, and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, including its College of Media. Those years of formal education preceded a career in which he worked as a librarian alongside his pursuits as a historian, novelist, and autobiographer — four distinct but related vocations that he sustained across his working life.\n\nBrown's roles as librarian, historian, and writer gave shape to the body of work he produced, of which Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee stands as the most noted title. He wrote in English and brought to his work the perspectives of someone trained across multiple institutions and active in multiple modes of expression, from history and autobiography to fiction.\n\nBrown received the Owen Wister Award, a recognition that came to him in the course of his career. He died on December 12, 2002, in Little Rock — the same city where he had attended high school as a young man, and where his life ultimately closed. He was ninety-four years old, a span that had begun on that rare leap day in Roy in 1908.","Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is a notable work by Dee Brown, a historian, writer, novelist, and librarian who worked in the English language throughout his life as an American citizen.",{"@graph":12,"@context":48},[13,25],{"@id":14,"name":6,"@type":15,"sameAs":16,"birthDate":22,"deathDate":23,"description":24},"https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q903331","Person",[14,17,18,19,20,21],"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dee_Brown_(writer)","https://viaf.org/viaf/108695035/","https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79063935","https://openlibrary.org/authors/OL22437A","https://d-nb.info/gnd/121538842","1908-02-29","2002-12-12","American writer (1908–2002)",{"@type":26,"author":27,"headline":30,"isBasedOn":31,"mainEntity":32,"reviewedBy":33,"articleBody":9,"dateCreated":34,"dateModified":35,"additionalProperty":36,"creativeWorkStatus":47},"Article",{"name":28,"@type":29},"Editorial Team","Organization","Dee Brown — biography",[14,17,19],{"@id":14},{"name":28,"@type":29},"2026-05-26T02:22:25.980180+00:00","2026-05-26T02:30:43.502953+00:00",[37,41,44],{"@type":38,"value":39,"propertyID":40},"PropertyValue","Q903331","wikidata",{"@type":38,"value":42,"propertyID":43},"1.000","factscore",{"@type":38,"value":45,"propertyID":46},"claude-sonnet-4-6-r1","draftModel","AI-drafted, auto-published","https://schema.org","dee-brown",null,[52,56],{"tag_id":53,"tag_name":54,"tag_count":55},1486,"against",5,{"tag_id":57,"tag_name":58,"tag_count":55},15501,"came",{"quotes":60,"pagination":123},[61,69,75,81,87,93,99,105,111,117],{"id":62,"quote_text":63,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":66,"source":67,"quote_tag":68,"commentary":50},2975087,"Women in the West who insisted on wearing the full-skirted modes of the nineteenth century – including the hoop-skirt, the bustle, and Mother Hubbards – fought a continual battle against a hostile environment. The fact that flowing yards of silk and satin eventually won out over buckskin and rawhide is only one more confirmation of the theory that woman’s vanity can conquer all, any place and any time.",6,false,{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":70,"quote_text":71,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":72,"source":73,"quote_tag":74,"commentary":50},2975083,"He was so certain it was the right thing to do. And we all know, don’t we, gentlemen, of the deadliness of righteous men?",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":76,"quote_text":77,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":78,"source":79,"quote_tag":80,"commentary":50},2975078,"A short time later, near Gallina Springs, Graydon’s scouting party came upon the Mescaleros again. What happened there is not clear, because no Mescalero survived the incident.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":82,"quote_text":83,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":84,"source":85,"quote_tag":86,"commentary":50},2975075,"Such a development endangered the entire Indian policy of the government, which aimed to eradicate everything Indian among the tribes and make them over into white men.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":88,"quote_text":89,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":90,"source":91,"quote_tag":92,"commentary":50},2975070,"If the buffalo herd was a large one, sometimes the train would stop for an hour or so, the conductor, engineer, and entire crew joining the passengers in the sport. An.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":94,"quote_text":95,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":96,"source":97,"quote_tag":98,"commentary":50},2975067,"I’ve tried word processors, but I think I’m too old a dog to use one.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":100,"quote_text":101,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":102,"source":103,"quote_tag":104,"commentary":50},2975058,"A bonnet costs twenty dollars, and implies a shawl and gown to match. A bonnet to one wife, with shawl and gown to match, implies the like to every other wife.” The man paused, shook his head ruefully and concluded: “This taste for female finery is breaking up our Mormon homes. Brigham Young may soon be the only man in Salt Lake City rich enough to clothe a dozen wives.”28.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":106,"quote_text":107,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":108,"source":109,"quote_tag":110,"commentary":50},2975053,"Another Chief remembered that since the Great Father promised them that they would never be moved they had been moved five times. “I think you had better put the Indians on wheels,” he said sardonically, “and you can run them about whenever you wish.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":112,"quote_text":113,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":114,"source":115,"quote_tag":116,"commentary":50},2975049,"I now think a little powder and lead is the best food for them,” he concluded. 7.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"id":118,"quote_text":119,"author_id":5,"source_id":64,"has_image":65,"author":120,"source":121,"quote_tag":122,"commentary":50},2975044,"Participants in the massacre were later tried in Tucson and acquitted. To murder an Indian was considered no crime.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":49,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":50},{},[],{"currentPage":124,"totalPages":125,"totalItems":8,"itemsPerPage":126},1,16,10]