Facsimile reprint. Originally published: Cyclorama of Gen. Custer's last fight against Sioux Indians, or, The battle of the Little Big Horn : with Grand Musée of Indian curios. -- Boston : Boston ...
As a soldier, General Ulysses S. Grant had depended upon the able assistance of Ely S. Parker, a Seneca Indian. As president, Grant tried with little success to ensure peaceful relations with Native ...
On June 25, 1876, George Armstrong Custer rode into legend—and oblivion. During this military engagement, all 210 soldiers under Custer's immediate command were killed along Montana's Little Bighorn ...
Caption title: Custer's last battle, by Edward S. Godfrey. "Reprinted, 1921, from The Century Magazine [January, 1892], for the celebration of the Forty-Fifth Anniversary of the Battle." ...
“The Sioux say this officer was the bravest man they had ever fought.” — Sioux Chief Red Horse, 1881. “History is not history unless it is the truth.” — Abraham Lincoln, 1856. We’ve all heard the ...
"Custer's Last Fight," one of the most famous depictions of the Battle of the Little Bighorn, and one of the most famously inaccurate, has been seen by millions of people in the past 106 years. And ...
Crazy Horse, played by Wade Amyotte of Lodge Grass, throws Lt. Col. George A. Custer to the ground during the Battle of the Little Bighorn Re-enactment at the Real Bird Ranch in Garryowen Friday.
HARDIN -- Lt. Col. George Custer and the battle he lost to American Indians 125 years ago generate more than just excitement in this small town each summer. They generate business. Big business.