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Paulo Roberto de Almeida
The Battle of the Little Bighorn, 1876
In late 1875, Sioux and Cheyenne Indians
defiantly left their reservations, outraged over the continued intrusions of
whites into their sacred lands in the Black Hills. They gathered in Montana with
the great warrior Sitting Bull to fight for their lands. The following spring,
two victories over the US Cavalry emboldened them to fight on in the summer of
1876.
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George Armstrong Custer |
To force the large Indian army back to the reservations,
the Army dispatched three columns to attack in coordinated fashion, one
of which contained Lt. Colonel George Custer and the Seventh Cavalry.
Spotting the Sioux village about fifteen miles away along the Rosebud
River on June 25, Custer also found a nearby group of about forty
warriors. Ignoring orders to wait, he decided to attack before they
could alert the main party. He did not realize that the number of
warriors in the village numbered three times his strength. Dividing his
forces in three, Custer sent troops under Captain Frederick Benteen to
prevent their escape through the upper valley of the Little Bighorn
River. Major Marcus Reno was to pursue the group, cross the river, and
charge the Indian village in a coordinated effort with the remaining
troops under his command. He hoped to strike the Indian encampment at
the northern and southern ends simultaneously, but made this decision
without knowing what kind of terrain he would have to cross before
making his assault. He belatedly discovered that he would have to
negotiate a maze of bluffs and ravines to attack.
Reno's squadron of 175 soldiers attacked the southern end. Quickly finding themselves
in a desperate battle with little hope of any relief, Reno halted his charging
men before they could be trapped, fought for ten minutes in dismounted formation,
and then withdrew into the timber and brush along the river. When that position
proved indefensible, they retreated uphill to the bluffs east of the river,
pursued hotly by a mix of Cheyenne and Sioux.
Just as they finished driving the soldiers out, the Indians found
roughly 210 of Custer's men coming towards the other end of the village,
taking the pressure off of Reno's men. Cheyenne and Hunkpapa Sioux
together crossed the river and slammed into the advancing soldiers,
forcing them back to a long high ridge to the north. Meanwhile, another
force, largely Oglala Sioux under Crazy Horse's command, swiftly moved
downstream and then doubled back in a sweeping arc, enveloping Custer
and his men in a pincer move. They began pouring in gunfire and arrows.
As the Indians closed in, Custer ordered his
men to shoot their horses and stack the carcasses to form a wall, but
they provided little protection against bullets. In less than an hour,
Custer and his men were killed in the worst American military disaster
ever. After another day's fighting, Reno and Benteen's now united
forces escaped when the Indians broke off the fight. They had learned
that the other two columns of soldiers were coming towards them, so they
fled.
After the battle, the Indians came through and stripped the bodies and
mutilated all the uniformed soldiers, believing that the soul of a
mutilated body would be forced to walk the earth for all eternity and
could not ascend to heaven. Inexplicably, they stripped Custer's body
and cleaned it, but did not scalp or mutilate it. He had been wearing
buckskins instead of a blue uniform, and some believe that the Indians
thought he was not a soldier and so, thinking he was an innocent, left
him alone. Because his hair was cut short for battle, others think that
he did not have enough hair to allow for a very good scalping.
Immediately after the battle, the myth emerged that they left him alone
out of respect for his fighting ability, but few participating Indians
knew who he was to have been so respectful. To this day, no one knows
the real reason.
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Sitting Bull 1878 |
Little Bighorn was the pinnacle of the Indians' power.
They had achieved their greatest victory yet, but soon their tenuous
union fell apart in the face of the white onslaught. Outraged over the
death of a popular Civil War hero on the eve of the Centennial, the
nation demanded and received harsh retribution. The Black Hills dispute
was quickly settled by redrawing the boundary lines, placing the Black
Hills outside the reservation and open to white settlement. Within a
year, the Sioux nation was defeated and broken. "Custer's Last Stand"
was their last stand as well.
George Herendon served as a scout for the
Seventh Cavalry - a civilian under contract with the army and attached
to Major Reno's command. Herendon charged across the Little Bighorn
River with Reno as the soldiers met an overwhelming force of Sioux
streaming from their encampment. After the battle, Herendon told his
story to a reporter from the New York Herald:
"Reno took a steady gallop down the creek bottom three miles where it
emptied into the Little Horn, and found a natural ford across the Little
Horn River. He started to cross, when the scouts came back and called
out to him to hold on, that the Sioux were coming in large numbers to
meet him. He crossed over, however, formed his companies on the prairie
in line of battle, and moved forward at a trot but soon took a gallop.
"The
Valley was about three fourth of a mile wide, on the left a line of
low, round hills, and on the right the river bottom covered with a
growth of cottonwood trees and bushes. After scattering shots were
fired from the hills and a few from the river bottom and Reno's
skirmishers returned the shots.
"He advanced about a mile from the ford to a line of timber on the right
and dismounted his men to fight on foot. The horses were sent into the
timber, and the men forward on the prairie and advanced toward the
Indians. The Indians, mounted on ponies, came across the prairie and
opened a heavy fire on the soldiers. After skirmishing for a few
minutes Reno fell back to his horses in the timber. The Indians moved
to his left and rear, evidently with the intention of cutting him off
from the ford.
"Reno ordered his men to mount and move through the timber, but as his
men got into the saddle the Sioux, who had advanced in the timber, fired
at close range and killed one soldier. Colonel Reno then commanded the
men to dismount, and they did so, but he soon ordered them to mount
again, and moved out on to the open prairie."