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Edge

144 YEARS AGO

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Custer-10.jpg.22c305eb9f984622e704b1dc83d179e8.jpgLittle-Bighorn-Battlefield-National-Monument-Montana.jpg.2bfe490fd8d26b5c79ab227447d1cf3a.jpg38987387420_44af5fdac0_b-1.jpg.90e509225f9834ebb285235b4e9b14f5.jpg

If you haven't been here, it's well worth the travel.

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Flew into Cody, Wyo last year. Did the Buffalo Bill museum and Yellowstone on Sat, then drove up to the battlefield on Sunday, worth every minute. Caught the Rodeo on both nights in Cody, also.

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44 minutes ago, wildwoody said:

Old dumass Custard..

Custer....

 

Graduated dead last and under arrest at West Point. But was commissioned Brigadier General at age 23.

Made Major General when 25. But died a It Col. in 1876.

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white crosses scattered on the prairie with a tight cluster at the hilltop.

'they got to where their country needed them first, travelling in the magic realm between heaven and earth, and when they got there they almost made a game of it. None were surer they couldn't lose than the Seventh Cavalry and the smokejumpers.' 

passage from "Young Men and Fire"  by Norman McLean

lee

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As with anything, a Lot of what ifs with this. What if Custer listed to his scouts about how many Indians were there. What if the Indians paid attention to Sitting Bulls vision and not mutlitaded the soldiers bodies. One interesting guy that was there was Cpt. Miles Keough.

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7 minutes ago, 10Turkeys said:

 One interesting guy that was there was Cpt. Miles Keough.

Was always enamored by the story of his horse; Comanche that survived the battle with 7 bullet wounds. He survived until 1891, one of only four horses to ever receive a full military funeral

But he wasn't buried he was stuffed and resides at the U of Kansas.

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2 hours ago, 10Turkeys said:

Flew into Cody, Wyo last year. Did the Buffalo Bill museum and Yellowstone on Sat, then drove up to the battlefield on Sunday, worth every minute. Caught the Rodeo on both nights in Cody, also.

were you surprised at the size of buffalo bills clothes? unless they shrunk he wasnt a very big guy 

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9 minutes ago, trphyhntr said:

were you surprised at the size of buffalo bills clothes? unless they shrunk he wasnt a very big guy 

Yep they were pretty small.

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33 minutes ago, trphyhntr said:

were you surprised at the size of buffalo bills clothes? unless they shrunk he wasnt a very big guy 

Same can be said of Custer. His wife claimed he was 6' but his uniforms at the Little Big Horn Museum show he was a couple inches taller than average men of the era at 5'9".

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The Indians call this the battle of Greasy Grass. If you get on YouTube and Google Ernie Lapointe, who is Sitting Bulls grandson, he tells the Indian side of it. According to him the fight was over pretty quick, one Indian was trying to mount his pony to get in the fight, the horse spun around three times and the battle was over.

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The one time I was there I was amazed by how small it was. The entrenchments at the top of the hills definitely help tell the story 

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If you drive along the ridgethat the soldiers took from the river to Lanst Stand Hill, it's quite some distance.

There are US Army headstones the entire distance marking where troopers fell. Their horses were exhausted, the soldiers were mostly immigrant teenagers, many of which couldn't even communicate well in English.

The grass was on fire, the smoke along with the dust made for impossible signaling or reorganization.

If memory from the battlefield still serves me, Custers rear guard, supply and hospital wagons were a short distance from the last stand hill approximately where the Natl Cemetery lies today. But the soldiers there in reserve were unaware of the massacre happening less than a mile away.

 

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6 minutes ago, Coffeeman said:

The one time I was there I was amazed by how small it was. The entrenchments at the top of the hills definitely help tell the story 

Yes there were holding actions attempted to let Custer escape. Keogh was killed doing so. Just wasn't good terrain for fighting positions.

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