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Custer's
Last Stand ... Aftermath
Custer didnt
deal with military victories and moral failures for long. In
1876, he and his 264 men died in an attack on Sioux and Cheyenne
warriors during the Battle of the Little Big Horn in Black Hills,
Montana.
The federal
government opened Black Hills to gold mining in 1875 but Native
Americans refused to leave the area because of its religious
significance. As the U.S. military gathered to forcibly relocate
the warriors, Custers troops disregarded orders and attacked
a village.
George Flanders
was a soldier in a group arriving in Black Hills on June 26,
1876, a day after Custers charge. Flanders buried his
comrades that day and, years later, he heard an account of Custers
battlefield actions. In the Federal Writers Project essay,
George
L. Flanders, he recounted the Cheyenne Indian tale that
Custer had received a wound in the hip and was unable
to get up, but continued shooting until he had used all except
one of his cartridges and with that last bullet shot himself.
Custers
death galvanized the military. In subsequent months, they tracked
down Sioux and Cheyenne warriors and forced them onto reservations.
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