The most significant figure as to why Custer was defeated at the battle of little Big Horn was that General Terry had divided his force. He sent Custer and the 7th cavalry to fight the battle, which was a smaller number than he could have sent. This meant that there were fewer men. To make things worse, Custer then divided the men again, into 4 groups, the mule train, Bentine’s group, Reno’s group, and Custer’s group. This caused them to be outnumbered by the Indians even more, resulting in the loss of the Battle. Another key reason why Custer was defeated in the battle was that Custer had ignored warning from Indians scouts, who had told him not to attack, as the Indian tribe was bigger and more powerful. Custer ignored this information,
Information. The Indians knew the 7thCavalry were coming allowing Sitting Bull to mass his forces. Custer had no idea of the size, location, or weapons prior to the actual conflict. Had he known these factors he wouldn’t have split his forces leaving him spread thin at Custer hill and he would have taken a different approach to attacking the Native Americans.
In the Summer of 1876 the Seventh Cavalry of the United States, led by Lt. Colonel George Custer was dispatched to Montana to put down the defiant Sioux and Cheyenne Indians. On June 25th Custer made the mistake of splitting his force into three, ignoring orders to wait, and attacking the main Indian camp. One group of cavalry forces were led by Captain Fredrick Benteen another by Major Marcus Reno. Benteen was to prevent native escape in the upper valley, and Reno was to follow the Indian forces in pursuit. Reno's forces, however, were attacked and soon overwhelmed. Around 200 of Custer's men arrived to distract the Indian forces, but they too were soon overwhelmed by a large Indian force. While arrows and gunfire rained down on the men, they
General Wayne’s troops won! The Native Americans and settlers were the ones fighting. The Native Americans thought Wayne would have trouble with all the fallen trees.
Cheyenne and Sioux crossed the river and fought the soldiers forcing them north. Meanwhile another indian force moved downstream then doubled back in a arch engulfing Custer and his men. As Custer began to get surrounded he commanded his forces to shoot the horses and pile them up to create a wall, but the wall did not work in less than one hour Custer and his forces were dead.
Custer divided the 7th Cavalry into three battalions under himself, Major Marcus Reno, and Captain Frederick Benteen. Unsure of the surrounding terrain, Custer sent Benteen south to “scour the country and pitch into anything he might find.” Two hours later and four miles from the valley, Custer’s own scouts spied “a good-sized party of Indians in flight between the troops and the river.” Custer ordered Reno’s battalion to charge the enemy, telling Reno he “will be supported by the entire outfit.” Instead of following, however, Custer advanced onto high ground east of the village.
In Why Was the Confederacy Defeated by Alan Farmer the thesis was why the North won the American Civil War. “General E. Lee surrendered on April 10th 1865,” (145). He recognized that the war was lost before he surrendered. It was said that, “it would have taken a miracle for the south to win,” (145). The north had many advantages over the south that helped them win the war.
The Indians that had fought General Custer had actually fought a battle against an even larger American Army Force only 10 days earlier. In mid June of 1876 General George Crook and approximately 1325 American soldiers, packers, miners and Indian allies moved north1. The intent was to get contingents of the Cheyenne, Sioux and Arapaho to move to reservations.
It marked its last resistance of its population devastated by disease and demoralized by the removal policy pursued by the government. Some tribes including the crow, Arikara, Pawnee and Shoshoni fought alongside US army against their own enemies, the Sioux. In 1877 the army issued an ultimatum come on to the reservation or be hunted down. |
What- The demand for gold became increasingly higher and higher during this time. Because of this Americans kept on moving farther and farther west into areas where Indians lived in search of gold. The government started setting up Indian reservations to avoid conflict. The Sioux and the Cheyenne missed their deadline to move to a reservation so Custer came to
The Battle of Little Bighorn was one battle that the United States of America will never forget. General Custer led an army to take out the Sioux, one of the battalions was completely destroyed including Custer’s. Although the Sioux were very strong, the U.S and lots of power and more advanced technology. The question is why did we get massacred?
Early in the film Custer states something to the ilk of why the warriors could not fight civilized and scattered like “cowards”. For me
The soldiers help on a strong fight for 12 days at the Alamo, travis and his troop didn't want to surrender to the war. That's when Santa Ana ordered more than 1,800 men to head their way to the fortress. Then the Texans got to met the attackers with gunshots and cannons on their way. Then something horrible had happened during their war the Texans had wasted all their ammunition. So they had no weapons to use. At the end all the five Texans were dead. So that meant that the battle of Alamo was over.
kill without a single twinge, but was able to shed tears at a play in
A small band made a diversionary attack on a party of woodcutters from the fort, and Commandant Colonel Henry Carrington quickly ordered Colonel Fetterman to go to their aid with a company of 80 troopers. Crazy Horse and 10 decoy warriors then rode into view of the fort. When Carrington fired an artillery round at them, the decoys ran away as if frightened. The party of woodcutters made it safely back to the fort, but Colonel Fetterman and his men chased after the fleeing Crazy Horse and his decoys, just as planned. The soldiers rode straight into the ambush and were wiped out in a massive attack during which some 40,000 arrows rained down on the misguided troopers.With 81 fatalities, the Fetterman Massacre was the army's worst defeat in the West until the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876. Further Indian attacks eventually forced the army to reconsider its commitment to protecting the Bozeman Trail, and in 1868 the military abandoned the forts and pulled out, and prompted the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868. It was one of only a handful of clear Indian victories in the Plains Indian Wars.
Native Americans have even found their way into the world of video games. But even video games portray them in negative ways too. There is a game for the Atari 2600 called Custer’s Revenge, released in 1982 by Mystique, a video game company known for producing pornographic games at the time. Considered to be one of the most offensive video games ever made, it received major criticism due to its dated, yet crude pixelated presentation of raping Native American women. In the game, the player takes control of Custer, depicted nude with the exception of a cavalry hat, boots and a bandana. The objective of the game is to have Custer reach the other side of the screen, where there is a naked Native American woman tied