The
Battle of Little Big Horn, also popularly called
Custer's Last Stand, took place on
June 25,
1876 and was a victory of a large force of
Lakota and their allies including the
Cheyenne over the 7th Cavalry of the
United States Army which attacked their village. The part of the detachment personally commanded by
General George Armstrong Custer was killed to the last man.
The widow of Custer helped popularize this defeat in memory of her husband and the event as recreated in numerous films as a heroic American general fighting valiently against savage forces. By the end of the 20th century, the general recognition of the mistreatment of the various Native American nations in the conquest of the American west[?], and Custer's role in it, has changed the image of the battle to one of a bloodthirsty conqueror meeting his match against courageous warriors defending their land and way of life.
Further reading
- Wind on the Buffalo Grass, The Indians' Own Account of the Battle at the Little Big Horn River, & the Death of their Life on the Plains, collected and edited by Leslie Tillett, Thomas Y. Crowell, New York, 1976, Illustrated hardback, 158 pages with many drawings by Native Americans, ISBN 0-690-01155-5.
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