Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance: The Glorious Impostor
Donald B. Smith
Biography & Autobiography / Historical
400 pages 5 x 8 1/2"
60+ B&W photos
ISBN 0–88995–197–7 paper CDN 19.95 USA 14.95
To the glittering world of New York society in the 1920s, Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance
was a presidential appointee to West Point, war hero, movie star, aviator, socialite,
journalist, best-selling author, and Indian advocate and activist–a full-blooded
Blackfoot chief who captured the imagination of North America with the story of
his life and the plight of his people.
But Long Lance was really Sylvester Long,
born into slavery of mixed blood parents in the American south. His youth was spent
behind the color barrier, and he resented the restrictions that slavery imposed.
He discovered, however, that he could pass as an Indian, which opened the door to
education. From there he used his "Indian ancestry" to gain entry into a military
college and, in an audacious move, to request a Presidential appointment to West
Point–claiming to be a full–blooded Cherokee from Oklahoma.
Fearing that
extensive media coverage of his appointment would uncover his lies, he fled
the United States to serve with Canadians during World War I. He returned
to work as a reporter at the Calgary Herald, where he became genuinely
interested in the plight of reserve Indians. The tragedy of their
surrender to reservation life resonated deeply with his own experience
as a slave in the American south.
But discovery of his true past dogged
him repeatedly and eventually drove him to alcohol and despair. He died by
his own hand in 1932. The story of this glorious impostor rises above his
deceptions to become a true history of racial injustice, which played a
significant role in driving this brilliant young man toward his tragic end.
Reviews
"A good story is always worth re–telling, especially when the second version is told with much more colour, detail, wisdom and maturity."
–Forever Young Magazine |