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  1. Little Bear (born âyimisîs, ᐋᔨᒥᓰᐢ or Macquettoquet - Little Big Bear) was a Cree leader who lived in the District of Alberta, Idaho Territory, Montana Territory, and District of Saskatchewan regions of Canada and the United States, in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

  2. Sep 9, 2015 · The Northwest Rebellion began 1885, over prolonged disagreements between the Métis and the Canadian government, exacerbated an already difficult situation. During the rebellion, several members of Big Bear’s Band of Cree killed nine settlers at Frog Lake and took others hostage.

  3. In the years after Sand Creek, Little Bear had several wives – Gum Woman, Wild Cat Woman, Fish Woman and Blind Woman, who were sisters. Little Bear was 75 years old at the time of his death on January 20, 1917. Only one of his children lived to adulthood, a son named White Face Bull.

    • " (born Ayimâsis or Macquettoquet)."
    • Rocky Boy, Hill County, Montana, USA.
    • circa 1842
  4. During the winter of 1882-1883, an estimated one-sixth to one-quarter of the Piegan population in Montana died of starvation. Desperate to avoid a similar fate, the Cree sent raiders against other Indigenous groups in an attempt to secure much needed horses and supplies.

    • Benjamin Hoy
    • 2019
  5. Jan 28, 2019 · Little Bear and his small band of 100-200 Indigenous Crees had just fought against the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the failed and bloody Northwest Rebellion — a First Nations and Métis uprising against Canadian rule and policies that led to disease and starvation across the northern Plains.

  6. Little Bear goes to sleep. Indigenous Storybooks is designed specifically for children, families, community members, and educators, and makes Indigenous stories from Little Cree Books available in Cree, Haida, English, French, as well as community-contributed translations into languages spoken in Canada.

  7. Little Bear was a Cree leader and son of noted Cree Chief Big Bear. Little Bear fled south across the border to Montana following the "Frog Lake Incident" in 1885. He and his people joined Ojibwe Chief Rocky Boy when President Woodrow Wilson signed into law an act of Congress creating "a reservation for Rocky Boy's band of Chippewa's and such ...