Cheyenne War Chief. His name was Woqini, which translates to Arched Nose and he was one of the most esteemed warriors of his era. His bravery and fearlessness was in descriptions of the Battle of Platte Bridge and the Powder River Expedition, both taking place in 1865. In battle he wore a magnificent headdress made with one buffalo horn and a long tail of red and black eagle feathers. On September 17, 1868 he was with a party of Cheyenne and Sioux who attacked a troop of Major George A. Forsyth's Scouts led by Lt. Beecher on the Republican River near the Colorado-Kansas border. The scouts retreated to a small sandbar in the Arickaree Fork, which became known as Beecher's Island. They were greatly outnumbered, but they were able to hold off enemy charges. Roman Nose unhesitatingly agreed to lead a charge, and as he rode past the riverbank, he was shot and killed. After the battle his body was placed on a scaffold with the bodies of other dead . He was later placed on the ridge of the battlefield. Beecher Island Battlefield is now a historical monument and memorial to the dead buried there.
Cheyenne War Chief. His name was Woqini, which translates to Arched Nose and he was one of the most esteemed warriors of his era. His bravery and fearlessness was in descriptions of the Battle of Platte Bridge and the Powder River Expedition, both taking place in 1865. In battle he wore a magnificent headdress made with one buffalo horn and a long tail of red and black eagle feathers. On September 17, 1868 he was with a party of Cheyenne and Sioux who attacked a troop of Major George A. Forsyth's Scouts led by Lt. Beecher on the Republican River near the Colorado-Kansas border. The scouts retreated to a small sandbar in the Arickaree Fork, which became known as Beecher's Island. They were greatly outnumbered, but they were able to hold off enemy charges. Roman Nose unhesitatingly agreed to lead a charge, and as he rode past the riverbank, he was shot and killed. After the battle his body was placed on a scaffold with the bodies of other dead . He was later placed on the ridge of the battlefield. Beecher Island Battlefield is now a historical monument and memorial to the dead buried there.
Bio by: John "J-Cat" Griffith
Family Members
Advertisement
See more Roman Nose memorials in:
Explore more
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement