Within days of the decision, the Omaha Herald noted that
"Judge Dundy's decision in the Ponca case goes a thundering
through the press and awakening the people to a new sense of its
importance." The paper went on to quote from other newspapers
from across the country.
The paper noted the "Many comments of eastern papers on Judge
Dundy's decision indicating that its effects upon tribes living
under treaties on reservations ... were misunderstood." Apparently,
the eastern papers were afraid that all Indians would be free to
leave their reservations, and that was a cause for fear. The Cincinnati
Gazette denounced the decision, calling it "impertinence."
The Omaha paper went to great lengths to argue against those views.
But other papers, like the St. Louis Republican took up
the cause:
"Now let the courts grapple with the great problem whether
an Indian is a citizen or an alien. Since the abolition of slavery,
all human beings except the Indians have been classed as one thing
or the other. But as our Indian policy is executed, the Indians
are sometimes both and sometimes neither. We make treaties with
them as we do with foreign nations, and we rule them as if they
were citizens, yet it is ridiculous to say they are both citizens
and aliens."
For his part, Standing Bear reacted to the decision by going home.
But before he left Omaha, he and his party went to the home of his
attorney John Webster. The newspaper reported Standing Bear's farewell:
"You and I are here. Our skins are of different color but
God made us both. A little while ago when I was young I was wild.
I knew nothing of the ways of the white people. I see you have
a nice house here. I look at these beautiful rooms, I would like
to have a house too, and it may be after a while that I can get
one, but not so good a house as this. That is what I want to do.
Standing Bear and his family in later years.
"For a great many years, a hundred years or more, the white men
have been driving us about. They are shrewd, sharp and know how
to cheat. But since I have been here I have found them different.
They have all treated me different. They have all treated me very
kindly. I am very thankful for it. Hitherto when we have been
wronged we went to war. To assert our rights and avenge our wrongs
we took the tomahawk. We had no law to punish those who did wrong,
so we took our tomahawks and went to kill...
“But you have found
a better way. You have gone into court for us and I find our wrongs
can be righted there. Now I have no more use for the tomahawk.
I want to lay it down forever. (Here he stooped down, laid the
tomahawk on the floor, and then stood erect and folded his arms.) I lay it down, I have no more use for it. I have found
a better way."