Charging Thunder (George Edward Williams)
It is possible that Charging Thunder may have been one of the twenty-seven Lakota Sioux arrested by order of Lieutenant Governor Miles for performing the Ghost Dance at the Pine Ridge Agency in the fall of 1890. Though the Chicago Tribune claimed they were "not held as prisoners of war" (29 Jan 1891) General Miles forcibly removed them and did not allow them to leave Fort Sheridan, Illinois until Buffalo Bill Cody petitioned the Secretary of State James G. Blaine to allow their release into his custody (Maddra 103).
Using their imprisonment as leverage, Cody was hoping to recruit more performers for his upcoming tour of the United Kingdom. In his argument to Blaine, Cody claimed that touring with the show would further native assimilation into white culture. Blaine relented, and in agreeing to travel with the show to the England, the prisoners greatly reduced the terms of their prison sentence. Twenty-three of the twenty-seven prisoners agreed to travel with the show, joined by a further forty-two Lakota Sioux from the Pine Ridge reservation. Whether as an imprisoned man or as a resident of the Pine Ridge reservation, Charging Thunder traveled overseas with this group in the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show in the 1892 season.
On January 12th, 1892, in Glasgow, Scotland, Charging Thunder was arrested for assault and served 30 days in Barlinnie prison. Upon his release on February 11th, he returned to the Wild West Show and completed the 1892 tour. His arrest was blamed on liquor consumption, with newspaper articles referencing his usual quiet and peaceful nature. Not only did this media coverage support racist stereotypes in Europe and United States about the impact of alcohol on Native Americans, it bolstered publicity for Buffalo Bill's show. News stories about Charging Thunder's arrest likely incentivized viewers eager to witness the "savage" nature of Native performers, something Cody profited from even as he had promised Secretary Blaine his intent was to "civilize" the performers with his tour (Maddra 167).
In spite of his previous arrest in the United Kingdom, Charging Thunder returned to England with the Buffalo Bill Show in 1902. This time, however, he was never to return to South Dakota. Charging Thunder married an American horse trainer, Josephine, and adopted the English name George Edward Williams. He and Josephine had two daughters, Gladys and Bessie, and settled in the Gorton area of Manchester, England. Williams continued to work with circus, performing with and training elephants at the Belle Vue Circus. In a 2006 interview, his grandchildren tell stories of his particular love for an elephant named Nellie, his favorite of all the show's animals. Williams died on July 28th, 1919, and is buried in Manchester.
Williams' story is one of a happy family life, but also one of persecution and imprisonment. Buffalo Bill's Wild West show provided one of few outlets that allowed the Lakota Sioux to leave the Pine Ridge Agency reservation, and for the Ghost Dance prisoners, a literal escape from prison. Williams' decision to leave the show and begin a new life in England exemplifies both the exploitation and the avenues of possibility provided to Native performers in the Buffalo Bill Wild West show.
Citations
Find A Grave. "George Edward Williams." https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/136381290/george-edward-williams
Maddra, S. (2006). Hostiles?: the Lakota ghost dance and Buffalo Bill's Wild West. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
The Hampshire Advertiser (Southhampton, Hampshire, England) "One of 'Buffalo Bill's' Indians [...]" 02 Jan 1892, via Newspapers.com
Chicago Tribune (Chicago Illinois): "Will Accompany Buffalo Bill: Bad Indians at Fort Sheridan to Give A 'Wild West' Show," 14 March 1981, via Newspapers.com
Ian Herbert, "From the Wild West to the North-west: how Buffalo Bill's traveling show left a Sioux legacy in Salford," 20 February 2006.The Independent. Online.