Mochi: The tale of a Cheyenne woman warrior
Her name was Mochi or Mo-chis or Moqui or Buffalo Calf or Buffalo Calf Woman. She was a Cheyenne woman that didn't pick to be a warrior until the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 in the Colorado Territory - it's said that she saw a soldier killing her mother. After this tragic event, all was about revenge and some peaceful travelers including children paid off the ultimate price - she was involved in the German family massacre and the Lone Tree massacre.
Mochi ended incarcerated in Fort Sill, Indian Territory, and was later transferred to Fort Marion, Florida - this was the American name for the Castillo de San Marcos of the Spaniards in the city of St. Augustine. This fort was where the Seminole Chief Osceola was imprisoned in 1837.
There is a picture of Mochi at the fort. A list from 1875 in the National Anthropological Archives of the Smithsonian Institution includes her among the Indian prisoners at Fort Marion. She was released in 1878.
It's said that Mochi was the only Native American on record to be incarcerated as prisoner of war by the US Army.
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