El Dorado News-Times

Wyoming memorial honors Native American veterans

- NATE PEREZ

John St. Clair, the chairman of the Eastern Shoshone Business Council, pointed to the dedication and bravery of Native Americans who served as volunteers in the Spanish American War and in World War I, before Native Americans were granted U.S. citizenshi­p.

CASPER, Wyo. — Decades before he became an Eastern Shoshone leader, John St. Clair was a soldier fighting in Vietnam.

The draft found St. Clair in 1966, and while he survived the war, he returned with post-traumatic stress disorder, though he didn’t realize it until many years later.

When St. Clair and other soldiers returned to the Wind River Reservatio­n, many didn’t identify as veterans because of the stigma. They encountere­d protests and were shunned. Many people assumed that every soldier that fought in Vietnam agreed with the government.

“It wasn’t true at all. I was drafted, but we had a choice after we were drafted,” he said. “Do we go to Canada, or do we do what we were drafted for? Most of us, especially Native people, went ahead and went to the military.”

Like many Native soldiers, St. Clair’s service went largely unrecogniz­ed at the time. And for all that time, despite multiple generation­s of Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho veterans, Wyoming lacked a memorial to honor their service.

That’s finally changed, the Casper Star-Tribune reports.

The Path of Honor, a memorial dedicated to Native American veterans, opened recently at the Frank B. Wise Business Center in Fort Washakie, where stones along a winding red path symbolize courage and commitment to living a purposeful life.

Lyle Wadda of American Legion Post 81 spearheade­d the project that began in 2008 after the Wind River Developmen­t Fund and Post 81 partnered to create the business center. Still, even after the building and memorial’s completion, Wadda found himself in disbelief when it was finally dedicated to the public in a ceremony attended by Gov. Mark Gordon, Rep. Andi Clifford, D-Fremont County, and other dignitarie­s.

Wadda’s goal was to create a space where everyone is welcome.

“We accept anyone in this post,” Wadda said at the dedication ceremony. “You don’t have to be Native American or part of another tribe. Business is open to everyone.”

St. Clair, the chairman of the Eastern Shoshone Business Council, pointed to the dedication and bravery of Native Americans who served as volunteers in the Spanish American War and in World War I, before Native Americans were granted U.S. citizenshi­p.

“Major General Lee Gilstrap, who trained 2,000 Natives for WWI stated — and I’m quoting, these are not my own words — ‘The Indian is the best damn soldier in the Army,’” St. Clair said.

At the Wind River Reservatio­n alone, close to 900 tribal members have served in conflicts ranging from World War I to the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

While Wyoming’s first memorial dedicated to Native Americans is now open, there is still more work to be done, said Jordan Dresser, chairman of the Northern Arapaho Business Council. He’s commended the veterans bringing awareness to trauma and mental health within Native communitie­s.

“The fact that a lot of the veterans here today mentioned (mental health awareness), it’s been very welcoming and promising,” Dresser said. “It shows that it’s something to talk about publicly, and there’s no shame in it. There’s no shame in admitting that you need help.”

PTSD is a difficult subject to talk about for Felicia Antelope, commander of American Legion Post 96 and a Northern Arapaho Tribal member who spoke during the dedication.

After deploying to Iraq in 2004 — a mission she openly objected to with her sergeant — she was injured and left mentally and physically traumatize­d. Since then, she’s learned to live with PTSD and how to talk openly about her struggles.

However, serving in the military was always a dream for Antelope.

Her father served, along with most of her uncles. In a way, she almost felt destined for service.

“My parents talked me out of it at 18, so I ended up going to college first,” Antelope said. “After college I decided to volunteer. My parents really didn’t say anything then because I had my

own life and my own apartment, but they tried talking me out of it again … but they were really happy.”

She graduated at the top of her class, earned sergeant stripes and made it to the Commandant’s List by achieving perfect scores in all her training.

Antelope went into the military because of a sense of duty, but she also did it for future generation­s.

“I think that ties in a lot with the Arapaho,” she said “Because we’re always thinking ahead. How can we make this place better for the next generation?”

 ??  ?? The Path of Honor memorial includes detained carvings honoring Native American service members.
The Path of Honor memorial includes detained carvings honoring Native American service members.
 ?? (AP/The Casper Star-Tribune/Cayla Nimmo) ?? Elsa Cowboy of the Eastern Shoshone Tribe walks Aug. 12 through the Path of Honor memorial in Fort Washakie, Wyo. Cowboy’s father was a WWII army veteran. “We weren’t citizens when they went to war,” says Cowboy, talking about the long history of Indigenous people serving in the military. “This is a great honor for all of those living on the boundaries of the reservatio­n.”
(AP/The Casper Star-Tribune/Cayla Nimmo) Elsa Cowboy of the Eastern Shoshone Tribe walks Aug. 12 through the Path of Honor memorial in Fort Washakie, Wyo. Cowboy’s father was a WWII army veteran. “We weren’t citizens when they went to war,” says Cowboy, talking about the long history of Indigenous people serving in the military. “This is a great honor for all of those living on the boundaries of the reservatio­n.”
 ??  ?? Martin Blackburn Sr. leads the color guard comprised of the Billy Farris Arapaho Warrior Post 96 and the Richard Pogue Post 81 on Aug. 12 at the dedication ceremony of the Path of Honor memorial. The Billy Farris Arapaho Warrior Post 96 is named in honor of Farris, a Northern Arapaho veteran who was killed in action.
Martin Blackburn Sr. leads the color guard comprised of the Billy Farris Arapaho Warrior Post 96 and the Richard Pogue Post 81 on Aug. 12 at the dedication ceremony of the Path of Honor memorial. The Billy Farris Arapaho Warrior Post 96 is named in honor of Farris, a Northern Arapaho veteran who was killed in action.
 ??  ?? Members of the public walk Aug. 12 through the Path of Honor memorial.
Members of the public walk Aug. 12 through the Path of Honor memorial.

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