1914: "Red men who scalp, howl, gamble, thieve, murder, and burn have no place in the "movies." Such depictions are an insult.. to Indians."
April, 1914 - Lincoln, Neb - A petition from the [Ogallalas] to have the motion picture of Wounded Knee battle film suppressed will be brought to Washington by a delegation. "Joseph Horncloud and Iron Hail, two Indians who were in the affair at Wounded Knee, will be included in this delegation and will testify that the pictures which were made and which are not being shown over the country misrepresent the affair, that it was a "massacre," not a "battle," that women and children were killed, that the Indians were disarmed and in lesser numbers, than the soldiers by more than half, whereas in the picture whites and reds are in equal numbers and the Indians are shown armed and in war paint."
June 4, 1914 - "Red men who scalp, howl, gamble, thieve, murder, and burn have no place in the "movies." Such depictions are an insult to the civilized American Indian, who are now in the majority," says an Assistant Curator of the American Museum of Natural History. "... they largely ignore the hundreds of innocent religious and tribal ceremonies that in the old picturesque days beautified the lives of the red men."