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Her Locket Was Found Among the Skulls: The Osage Terror of the 1880s in Northeastern Oklahoma 

Unworthy History
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In this episode we read from the December 1962 issue of True West magazine, in an article written by Glenn Shirley and illustrated by Robert Blewitt. This story is about the Osage Terror, a killer Delaware Indian who would prey on many travelers passing through the Osage country in 1880s.
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4 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 97   
@speakupriseup4549
@speakupriseup4549 5 месяцев назад
Takes an incomprehensible level of evil to want to hurt an innocent defenceless child
@martijn3015
@martijn3015 5 месяцев назад
Not really... He probably just saw her as a white intruder. The rest becomes easy after that first thought switching when you start villifying another one's race, gender, nationality/tribe. How often doesn't it happen in our own history? Even when it is still very likely happening now up into our modern age.
@mmcss1155
@mmcss1155 3 месяца назад
@Pax.Alotin Wrong!!!!!!!!!!! It is evil to kill a child no matter your "culture." Without children our world dies.
@sheldonhatch8255
@sheldonhatch8255 Месяц назад
Then please explain the Commanchee
@Roosterdoodler
@Roosterdoodler 5 месяцев назад
My ancestors settled in Pennsylvania, during the Pennsylvania Indian wars in the 1750s. Their two young daughters were captured, scalped, raped, one was killed the other was recovered and died 6 months later! The cause of death on her death certificate was (Fits)! They were 12 and 14!
@australianwoman9696
@australianwoman9696 5 месяцев назад
Poor young girls. 😢
@teacup3133
@teacup3133 5 месяцев назад
Wow, that is truly awful.
@deecooper1567
@deecooper1567 5 месяцев назад
😢😢😡😡👵🏻👩‍🌾❣️
@deecooper1567
@deecooper1567 5 месяцев назад
Disturbing yet interesting 👵🏻👩‍🌾❣️
@DanSnipe-k8o
@DanSnipe-k8o 5 месяцев назад
They were savages
@chrisanderson5317
@chrisanderson5317 5 месяцев назад
There was a family of killers on the planes of kansas who waylaid travelers. They escaped before they could be brought to justce. The 1960s TV show The Big Valley had an episode based on this family's depredations.
@deadhorse1391
@deadhorse1391 5 месяцев назад
I believe that would be the Bender Family. They ran a place travelers could eat and spend the night. They had blanket hung up and one of it hid behind it and hit their guests on the head People became suspicious and they took off, never to be seen again Authorities found skeletons in the house
@troycleek7394
@troycleek7394 5 месяцев назад
​@deadhorse1391 Yes there is a movie about the Benders. Pretty brutal.
@MrOtis1956
@MrOtis1956 5 месяцев назад
I'm very amazed that they didn't have spelling books on the PLAINS of Kansas at that time. A lexicon may have been what the killer was really after....
@bonnieprincecharlie6248
@bonnieprincecharlie6248 5 месяцев назад
There’s multiple versions of the story, it’s hard to know what’s true and what’s not, in one of them one of the male benders was captured and killed by a lynch mob.
@VickieV1333
@VickieV1333 5 месяцев назад
Stephanie Harlowe did a two parter on the Benders. Check it out!
@vickiparrish3235
@vickiparrish3235 5 месяцев назад
Being born/raised in Oklahoma over 70 years ago, I can remember a LOT of true stories about the murders of non Natives. By NA, whites, big cats, & the hairy man. All of my mom's 7 siblings married full bloods & from several different tribes. All were born in the late 1800's/early 1900's. To this day there are many disappearances of whites around the Tahlequah Cherokee Nation area. But the locals will NOT talk about it.
@unworthyhistory
@unworthyhistory 5 месяцев назад
Interesting. I went to Burnt Cabin Church camp in Talequah several times growing up. Met some kids with partial Cherokee ancestry. Glad to have not gone missing!
@australianwoman9696
@australianwoman9696 5 месяцев назад
Poor little Katie! 💔 😢
@lambastepirate
@lambastepirate 5 месяцев назад
Thanks for the story! A good one.
@godschildyes
@godschildyes 5 месяцев назад
Poor little Katie! ❤😢
@storkythepunk
@storkythepunk 5 месяцев назад
Great story, but it was probably the most gruesome I've heard you tell to date.
@tonyholt90
@tonyholt90 5 месяцев назад
That was interesting makes you think to where the rumours of monsters of man like creatures have come from
@johnlea8519
@johnlea8519 5 месяцев назад
That story would make a good horror movie....
@christopherfoster3744
@christopherfoster3744 5 месяцев назад
Hi, thank you for all your hard work. Really do a great job !
@1Glitterado
@1Glitterado 3 месяца назад
FANTASTIC WORK HERE…, THANK YOU‼️
@charlesbullghost5491
@charlesbullghost5491 5 месяцев назад
The true story is about a huge tall killer native American indigenous tribal member, who has the brutal strength of a hideous malevolent wendigo creature! The Osage indian terror on their reservation during the 1880s. My great inspiring wisdom for today. Have a great fabulous wonderful day.😀
@joesmith-tg3co
@joesmith-tg3co 5 месяцев назад
I live 40 miles from where this took place, Osage county is the largest in Oklahoma, still lot's of old growth, we have bears not many and mountain lions than bears
@dogparty-tt8qw
@dogparty-tt8qw 5 месяцев назад
Serial killer, cool story! 👍
@trailerparkcryptoking5213
@trailerparkcryptoking5213 5 месяцев назад
Ever heard of the Willow Springs Massacre in west Texas? People from Ohio went to California during the gold rush of 1849 and acquired a large amount of gold and had it poured into 377 20lb bricks at the San Francisco Mint and headed back home. They were ambushed by Comanches in the Sandhills north of current day Monahans, Texas after setting up camp and burying their gold for the night. A necklace was found on one of the bodies and positively identified by the sister whose had a matching one. Some artifacts are supposedly in a museum at Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas. My dad found one of the wagon wheels as a boyscout exploring the area as a child. We went and looked for the gold when my dad was about 50 with metal detectors and other equipment, but never located it..... Do a story on this.....
@tillross4078
@tillross4078 5 месяцев назад
My Grandfather in the 1700s was Cherokee Chief John Ross in his Honor in Oklahoma ,, Ross , Osage reservation ,, Just Saying 🙏
@alexsetterington3142
@alexsetterington3142 4 месяца назад
Your family must have extremely long lives, my grandfather was born in 1920.
@glenndent6626
@glenndent6626 5 месяцев назад
The original territory belonging to the Osage was sort of egg shaped with the larger end of the "egg" in eastern Missouri including what is now St. Louis extending southward into northern Arkansas. The smaller end of the "egg" extended into the Flint Hills of Kansas. After stealing most of their land our Government forced them onto a narrow strip of their original homeland in southeastern Kansas. Some years later it was decided to relocate them again, only this time they would have none of their original homeland left. The Osage, already having most of their land stolen from them and about to have what was left stolen realized that the only way to insure that they wouldn't keep being moved around was to purchase this "new" land from the Government. Supposedly the Osage promised not to go to war over the move if they would be allowed to purchase this "new" land. The Government did not give the Osage the land they're on in what is now Oklahoma, The Osage bought It. The Osage are the only First Nations People I'm aware of that purchased their land from the Government. Making it sound like the Government gave the Osage their land dishonors them. Facts my friend, Facts.
@568843daw
@568843daw 5 месяцев назад
The Osage moved from the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys probably during the Beaver Wars with the Iroquois. They ended up moving onto the Great Plains to save themselves. They were a fierce warring people… brave, strong, swift, handsome and … murderous. Warfare was how they took possession of land… great swaths of territory. However, this was a common practice. One such tribe that fled from the Osage were the Caddo People. As the United States settled areas that were Osage, Treaties were made, but with so many moving parts to control from both sides, it was nearly impossible. Did the United States Government purchase land? Yes, most of the time, and also no… at times. The concept of sale and purchase was not well understood by Native Americans at the time. It was common, in the early years, for tribes of many types, to sell property but they did not understand that selling the land meant they lost total control of it. Sometimes they would murder families who bought land from them and attempt to resell it. The accounts of transactions of every type are held in the Archives of every State in our Union. The devil is in the details. 🤔😉. Be well.
@glenndent6626
@glenndent6626 5 месяцев назад
@@568843daw thanks for the input. My knowledge of the Osage goes back to the latter part of the move you're mentioning. The Osage used to be part of a huge group of people consisting of 5 smaller groups. When they got to the Mississippi River one group voted not to attempt to cross it. The others decided to try it. One of the groups were carried downstream by the current before making it to the other side into what is now eastern Arkansas and made their home there. The Osage settled where I previously mentioned. The others settled in what's now northern Kansas and Nebraska. I only remember for sure, the names of 3 of the original 5 tribes. There were other tribes that moved to escape the Iroquois Confederacy too. As you say, The Devil's in the details. Be well, Until next time my relative
@Indian.heart1997
@Indian.heart1997 5 месяцев назад
The more I listen to the native American stories, the more I realise that the land of the mighty USA doesn't belong to the whites. They acquired it through wars, violence, deceit, rampant murders. Rest in peace native Americans - the original inhabitants. Same story with Australia and newzealand
@Sukijopa
@Sukijopa 5 месяцев назад
One of my great-grandmothers came from the Penobscot tribe. She married an Englishman, and they had 4 sons, one being my grandfather. I have read that the Penobscot tribe was reIativeIy peaceful, as compared to other Indians. I wonder if you know if they ever enacted any mayhem.
@shawnwaller8687
@shawnwaller8687 4 месяца назад
Great story 🙂
@8646aaron
@8646aaron 5 месяцев назад
The father gave up searching for his daughter the morning after her disappearance? Somethings wrong with that
@klackon1
@klackon1 5 месяцев назад
It sounds as if the film "Bone Tomahawk" is based on this story - to a degree.
@jackiemack8653
@jackiemack8653 5 месяцев назад
People go missing today too. Who knows?
@Curtiz2008
@Curtiz2008 5 месяцев назад
Texas Rangers Magazine was a pulp fiction publication with thrilling stories. None of the issues I have seen contain nonfiction stories, but that does not mean they never published any. Good magazine for western stories, though.
@rafaelramos1486
@rafaelramos1486 5 месяцев назад
A great story
@CraigMcDonald1234
@CraigMcDonald1234 5 месяцев назад
Thank you.
@oledahammer8393
@oledahammer8393 5 месяцев назад
Wonder if they drew inspiration from this story for the movie "Bone Mohawk"? Somewhat similar story line.
@deadhorse1391
@deadhorse1391 5 месяцев назад
I was thinking the same thing
@hillbillychic8417
@hillbillychic8417 5 месяцев назад
Do you mean bone tomahawk?
@michaellyczak9337
@michaellyczak9337 5 месяцев назад
The part about the wild man who killed settlers and travelers sounds an awful lot like the plot of the movie 'Bone Tomahawk'.
@katiesioux7757
@katiesioux7757 4 месяца назад
Those books were written for hype and to make money, i don't find truth in many of them.
@568843daw
@568843daw 5 месяцев назад
The accounts of American and Indian interaction before 1920 is typically SHOCKING! Native Americans were constantly at war one with another before and after settlers arrived. They stole land from one another or would simply murdered entire villages for property, food, women, slaves and so forth. A practice done for thousands of years. The Sioux are a sterling example of pillage and death. They were feared by most tribes as they swept across the plains like a deadly fire. Then colonists came along and most, not all, exacted the same aggressive punishment on the neophyte colonists and frontiersman. BTW, Each State has an Archives online which houses these accounts. The 1622 Massacre in Virginia and 1712 Tuscarora War are very scary historical accounts.
@kathrynmolesa1641
@kathrynmolesa1641 5 месяцев назад
This was also a scene from How the West Was Won.
@geraldoarnoldo6440
@geraldoarnoldo6440 5 месяцев назад
Now they're in Government.
@Stephanie-dj4iy
@Stephanie-dj4iy 4 месяца назад
YES 😂
@francisebbecke2727
@francisebbecke2727 4 месяца назад
My grandmother was part Osage and was born in 1869 close to Damascus, Arkansas. My grandfather caught some crap about marrying a squah. He gave as good as he got and spent a night in jail for delivering a haymaker in return. He did easy time because the other guy was a trouble maker not much liked in the community. My grandparent moved to Oklahoma as "sooners" although they got their land honestly. My mother was born near Snyder in 1914. Someday I plan to stop by this Osage reservation near Tulsa to see if there are any records about my grandmother.
@greymann1384
@greymann1384 5 месяцев назад
Wildman.... half human half something else
@jesuschristismylord4043
@jesuschristismylord4043 5 месяцев назад
He was half white, half Native American
@diankreczmer6595
@diankreczmer6595 5 месяцев назад
No, do not say, people of today are not worthy to stand in the shoes of past people There are always people going through hell
@johnmeadows5645
@johnmeadows5645 5 месяцев назад
I thought you were going to say it was a sasquatch.
@uwiwithanuzi
@uwiwithanuzi 4 месяца назад
Ahh, the Osage. Along with the Comanches, they were officially excluded from the list of "Civilized Tribes" of OK. I can see why.
@youtubefilmvisionary67
@youtubefilmvisionary67 4 месяца назад
Theres a 2016 Movie about that crazy family called Bender .
@paradoxstudios6639
@paradoxstudios6639 5 месяцев назад
Is this a true story ?
@jldonnell1
@jldonnell1 5 месяцев назад
My sentiment exactly...
@unworthyhistory
@unworthyhistory 5 месяцев назад
Supppsedly it’s true, although I was not able to find any records of the victims outside of this story, and often I can.
@MojoMedicineMan
@MojoMedicineMan 5 месяцев назад
👍
@JustinHavens-t7z
@JustinHavens-t7z Месяц назад
The government didn’t purchase the Osage reservation… the Osage themselves purchased the land from the Cherokee.
@68cutty
@68cutty Месяц назад
@RJ-hv6fr
@RJ-hv6fr 5 месяцев назад
Sasquatch! Missing 411
@sandiehamilton6004
@sandiehamilton6004 4 месяца назад
the Bermuda triangle of Osage OK
@ZoSoPage1977
@ZoSoPage1977 3 месяца назад
This false story has nothing to do with this little girl's image.
@littlemoon9285
@littlemoon9285 4 месяца назад
she reincarnated as princes arora
@jessicabowers7367
@jessicabowers7367 5 месяцев назад
Not a fan of the use of AI images, so not going to finish watching this video. Kind of a shame. Sounded like it could be interesting.
@panterpanterpanter993
@panterpanterpanter993 4 месяца назад
SO WHAT DO YOU WANT ? , A BIG HOLLYWOOD PRODUCTION MOVIE FOR FREE ? THE VIDEO WAS EXELENT , GET A LIFE
@fonziebulldog5786
@fonziebulldog5786 4 месяца назад
It was.
@jessicabowers7367
@jessicabowers7367 4 месяца назад
@@panterpanterpanter993 Where did I say I wanted a Hollywood production, little one? Something not using stolen art would be great. It can be simple and just as effective. Go get your blankie and take a nap instead of having tantrums in YT comments.
@allanbeamer7110
@allanbeamer7110 4 месяца назад
Well, to be fair, it isn't stolen art as you put it, but AI art, which I'm not a big fan of either. Something else I'm finding I don't like even more is the use of AI narration. Thankfully this video doesn't seem to have that. I think because this is RU-vid, and visual, people think they need to create something visual that can be seen with their eyes. But there are other story channels on YT that tell stories using random visuals, usually of nature, as they narrate their story. Usually in a YT video like this one, I just find my own visuals and listen to the narrative just like we used to do listening to radio. Same thing for me anyway. Take care.
@Robert-fs1pb
@Robert-fs1pb 5 месяцев назад
Osage Indians.
@benmaugaotega
@benmaugaotega 5 месяцев назад
Hmmmmm! ‘SATAN’…🤔
@katiesioux7757
@katiesioux7757 4 месяца назад
Trespassers
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