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We camped with the Sioux, and had a good time, plenty grass, plenty game, good water. Crazy Horse was head chief of the camp. Sitting Bull was camped a little ways below, on the Little Missouri River.
I recently wrote about the stupidity of General Custer and the defeat of his Calvary at Little Bighorn as a lead in ... limited view of the battle. The Sioux made superb use of reconnaissance ...
Custer led little more than 200 men in an attack on the Sioux Chief Sitting Bull's camp on Montana's Little Bighorn River. In the fight that followed, a force of thousands of Sioux killed Custer ...
Ken Woody, Chief of Interpretation at the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument discussed the events following the Battle of Little Bighorn and the Great Sioux War. He explained how the ...
Blackfoot, chief of the Mountain Crow ... the troops’ presence had been discovered by Sioux traveling toward the Little Bighorn camp. Custer’s plan to lay low and attack the next day was ...
Blackfoot, chief of the Mountain Crow ... the troops’ presence had been discovered by Sioux traveling toward the Little Bighorn camp. Custer’s plan to lay low and attack the next day was ...
which gives an account from seven Sioux Indians of Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer's defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876. Headquarters USA Military Station Landing Rock ...
On one level, Little Bighorn was a triumph for the Sioux and Cheyenne warriors. Yet, the battle brought down the white wrath and hastened the eradication of the Plains Indians’ way of life.
After the Sioux had ridden off ... The first actual sightseers at Little Bighorn were Indians. In the winter of 1876, Wooden Leg, a Cheyenne warrior and a veteran of the battle, led a nine ...
The chief envisioned “soldiers ... his adversaries did at the Battle of Little Bighorn, but historian Thomas Powers painted an engaging picture from the Sioux and Cheyenne perspective in ...
Chief Ogallala Fire ... 50 when General George Armstrong Custer led an army against the Sioux in 1876. The expedition ended with Custer and his entire battalion slaughtered at Little Big Horn.
Custer led little more than 200 men in an attack on the Sioux Chief Sitting Bull's camp on Montana's Little Bighorn River. In the fight that followed, a force of thousands of Sioux killed Custer ...