Mudeater

Mudeater

By John D. Pihach

Subjects: Biography, Wyandot Indians, Frontier and pioneer life, West (U.S.) -- Biography, Wyandot Indians -- Biography, Canada, Western -- Biography, West (u.s.), biography, Riel, louis, 1844-1885, Riel Rebellion, 1885 -- Scouts and scouting, Mudeater, Irvin, 1849-1940, Frontier and pioneer life, west (u.s.), Frontier and pioneer life -- West (U.S.), Indians of north america, biography, Canada, biography, Scouts and scouting, Riel Rebellion, 1885, Riel, Louis, 1844-1885

Description: "Born the son of a Wyandot Chief in Kansas in 1849, Irvin Mudeater was one of the last great frontiersmen of the American West. Hired to run wagon trains to Santa Fe, Mudeater fought off "Indian attacks", was caught up in the Civil War, drove a stagecoach, and lived as a plainsman on the lawless frontier. Most of all, he was a buffalo hunter--killing 126 head in just one day. In 1882, Mudeater moved to Canada, adopted the name Robert Armstrong, and portrayed himself as white. Shortly after the fall of Batoche, he played the lead role in bringing the fugitive Métis leader, Louis Riel, into custody. John D. Pihach attempts to resolve the opposing stories of Riel's surrender/capture, scrutinizes the sensational incidents in Armstrong/Mudeater's life, and, with the inclusion of Mudeater's unpublished memoir, allows this consummate storyteller to speak in his own voice."--

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