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Cpl Vic Burk
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel Excellent post on this Sunday Morning Brother Chip.
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
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My besties son taught on a reservation for two years and this was often the subject of discussion.
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LTC Stephen F.
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Edited >1 y ago
Thank you my friend PO1 William "Chip" Nagel for reminding us that the American bison was an important part of the culture of the indigenous Lipan Apache people of Texas - allowing them to feed themselves and stay independent.
Thank you my friend CSM Charles Hayden for mentioning me.
In 1986, I was TDY at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas to attend Combined Arms and Services Staff School [CAS3] At that time there was a small herd of 6 or American Bison on the campus in a protected area. The Bison was the adopted name for our CAS3 class group.

Return of the American Bison
"North America's largest mammal, the American bison, is an enduring symbol of the Great Plains. Bison once ranged from Canada to New Mexico and from Nevada to the Appalachian Mountains. By 1889, their populations were reduced from 30 to 60 million animals to fewer than 1000. Bison were pushed to the brink of extinction by a number of factors, including over hunting by hide hunters, trains, competition with cattle and horses, and disease. Bison survived near extinction with the help of prescient Native Americans and early conservationists who worked to protect the species through effective federal wildlife management policy. Today bison are considered a conservation success story. More than 500,000 bison now live on the Great Plains in protected herds that range on national, state, local, and private lands, and in 2016 President Obama codified the bison’s place in America’s cultural imagination by signing a law making bison the country’s first national mammal."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ww3cMgFr2xQ
FYI Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. LTC Greg HenningLTC John Shaw LTC John Mohor GySgt Thomas Vick GySgt Jack Wallace CWO4 Terrence ClarkCPL Ronald Keyes JrLTC Joe AndersonSPC Carlton PhelpsCOL Thomas McGrathSPC William WilsonCSM Bob StanekPFC Andrew "Tommy" M.SSgt Joseph BaptistPO3 Edward RiddleA1C Mike Allen
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LTC Stephen F.
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PO3 Edward Riddle
PO3 Edward Riddle
>1 y
Being part Choctaw, I truly appreciate this recognition of the Buffalo. Every part of the Buffalo was used by the Native Americans for their existence. The hides, meat, the muscle sinew, the hooves, the horns and all the parts in between, and I do mean all the parts.
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GySgt Jack Wallace
GySgt Jack Wallace
>1 y
hope so, almost killed out.Good to see this story and the recovery of the buffalo.
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