, where Satanta was incarcerated After a long and hard dealing with the U.S. government officers, in 1872 Guipago was allowed to meet his friend Satanta and the young war chief Ado-ete in St. Louis, and only after this he accepted to go to Washington with some other Kiowa, Comanche, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Wichita, and Delaware chiefs and talk about peace with President
Ulysses S. Grant; after Satanta and Ado-ete were temporarily paroled, Guipago led the Kiowa delegation to Washington in September 1872, and got Indian Commissioner E. P. Smith's promise to release the two captives. Satanta and his companion were definitively released only in September 1873, Guipago having made clear to Indian agent James M. Haworth that his patience was now at its end. Soon after their release, Satanta and Ado-ete, along with Guipago and
Tsen-tainte (
White Horse) were involved in attacking buffalo hunters and were present at the raid on Adobe Walls. But the Kiowa People deny Satanta was involved in that battle, other than being present. He yielded up his war lance and other
symbols of leadership to younger, more aggressive men. He was also present at the
Battle of the Upper Washita. His presence at the battle violated his parole, and was likely the reason the government called for his arrest. He surrendered in October 1874, and was returned to the
state penitentiary at Huntsville, Texas. Guards reported that Satanta, forced to work on the road, would stare for hours at the traditional hunting grounds of his people, and seemed to wither away. In his book, the History of Texas, Clarance Wharton reports of Satanta in prisonAfter he was returned to the penitentiary in 1874, he saw no hope of escape. For a while he was worked on a
chain gang which helped to build the
Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad. He became sullen and broken in spirit, and would be seen for hours gazing through his prison bars toward the north, the hunting grounds of his people. in
Huntsville, until 1963 Satanta is reported to have killed himself while incarcerated by jumping from a window on 11th October, 1878. Satanta was originally buried in
the prison cemetery in Huntsville. In 1963 his grandson, an artist named James Auchiah, received permission to transfer Satanta's remains to
Fort Sill, Oklahoma. The character of
Blue Duck in
Larry McMurtry's
Pulitzer Prize winning novel
Lonesome Dove was partially based on the life and death of Satanta. The actor
Rodolfo Acosta played Satanta in 1959 in the third episode of the
ABC western television series,
The Rebel, starring
Nick Adams. ==See also==