Mary
Good Road - b. 1835- d. July 22 1940 (did she die at 105?)
membership: Bad Face Band of the Oglala Lakota. Mary Good
Road was also known as Pretty Woman and Pretty Owl. Mary
was born at Lakota Territory in 1835. She was the daughter
of Hollow Bear and Good Owl. As of circa 1850, her married
name was Red Cloud. She married Chief Red Cloud at near
Raw Hide Buttes, Lakota Territory, circa 1850. Mary, as
Chief Red Cloud's wife, resided with him, at North Platte
River Region, Lakota Territory, after 1865.
She was listed as Chief Red Cloud's wife in a census on
June 30, 1904, at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, Wakpamini
District, Shannon Co., South Dakota. Mary died on July 22,
1940 at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota, USA.
She
and Chief Red Cloud raised 4 or 5 daughters and one son.
More
details about the dramatic beginning of their marriage can
be found in Red Cloud's autobiography and are also reported
on this webpage:
https://web.archive.org/web/20140328160726/http://mhs.mt.gov/pub/press/redcloudex.asp
Here
are the pictures of Pretty Owl/Good Road I've managed to
find so far:






Most
direct sources report that Pretty Owl was Chief Red Cloud's
only wife; however, as reported by Mrs. James Cook in
J. Olson Red Cloud and the Sioux Problem, it would
seem that in his younger days the Oglala chief took other
5 (!) wives. In his biography of Red Cloud, R. Larson reports
the data of a probate document of the South Dakota State
Historic Society in which are mentioned the names of Red
Cloud and Pretty Owl's children: Jack Red Cloud (their only
son), War Bonnet, Leading Woman, Plenty Horses, Charges
at Him and Tells Him. In Red Cloud's autobiography instead
we find just Jack's and 4 daughters' names: Wears War Bonnet
aka Julia Long Soldier, Libbie Slow Bear, Fanny Chase Alone
and Suzie Kills Above. This would leave out 2 or 3 daughters:
the wife of One Stab (reported in Fought With Custer:
The Story of Sergeant Windolph, Last Survivor of the Little
Big Horn), the wife of Big Road (reported in Mike Stevens'
website), "Louisa", who was the wife of the half-blood
Pete Richard (a key witness in the Plenty Horses trial)
and maybe, if Judge Eli Ricker's report is correct, one
of the wives of Chief American Horse. I guess only the Red
Cloud family can shed some light on this.
Almost
all of our sources agree that Pretty Owl had quite a strong
personality: even if Mari Sandoz's description of her being
" not silent as a winter mole" and the hint that
"many a man planted his mocassin firm and long on the
warpath because there was no peace in his lodge" sound
quite unfair, she had indeed a strong personality and didn't
seem ready to share her famous husband with other women.
As she said to an old friend, Charles P. Jordan: "When
he [Red Cloud] was a young man, I was very jealous of him
and used to watch him very closely for fear some other woman
would win him from me". Julia McGillycuddy, daughter
of the V.T. McGillycuddy, who was agent at Pine Ridge for
7 years, reports in her father's biography that in the 1880s
Red Cloud did attempt to take a younger wife, but was prevented
by Pretty Owl's threat to kill the intruder - anyway, Julia
McGillycuddy is far from being a reliable source. What's
more, at one point both Red Cloud and his wife were baptized
Catholics and this would have been a serious obstacle to
a polygamous household.
Years later, painter Elbridge Burbank said that at the beginning
he had a very hard time in persuading Chief Red Cloud to
pose for him and then he "discovered that at Red Cloud's
home, his wife was the boss. Any time the Indian agent or
officials wanted something of Red Cloud, they went to his
wife." and remarked "Had I known this, I might
have secured his portrait much sooner." It was also
true that Pretty Owl had quite an influence on her husband
in political matters: Jeffrey Ostler reports that in 1888
Pine Ridge Gallagher, believing that Red Cloud was reluctant
to sign the Sioux bill because his wife opposed it, had
W.J. Godfrey paid more a visit to the couple in the attempt
of persuading them to accept that resolution, but failed.
When Red Cloud, in the Ghost Dance's final days (January
1891) was abducted by Two Strike's band, rumors said that
it was Pretty Owl who decided to join the hostiles "declaring
that she would take the warpath alone, even if her husband
wouldn't join her", but this seems to be a groundless
story.
Pretty
Owl is buried next to her husband in Pine Ridge's Holy Rosary
Cemetery.
Found
this picture of two of Chief Red Cloud's daughters in their
late years:
—
Jinlian