you
General George Custer was defeated and killed in the Battle of Little Bighorn
Umm...yes. They were.
General George Armstrong Custer and much of his family and all his men were killed by Native Americans under the leadership of Sitting Bull at the battle of the Little Bighorn.
General George Armstrong Custer
No, Custer and his men were all killed.
Sitting Bull. Custer and all his men at Little Round Top were killed.
the battle of the little big hornAnswer:The battle on June 25 and June 26, 1876, near the Little Bighorn River in eastern Montana Territory goes by different names:European Americans call it The Battle of the Little Bighorn -also known as Custer's Last StandNative Americans call it the Battle of Greasy Grass Creek
Near the Little Bighorn River in what is now part of the Crow Reservation in southeastern Montana. Custer, more accurately a Lieutenant Colonel at the time, was killed along with more than 250 of his men, including those at Custer's Last Stand.
George Armstrong Custer was killed in the Battle of the Little Bighorn July 25-26, 1876 in Montana.The name of the battle is the Little Big Horn, and is also the name of the place it took place. Also Custer and his men were not massacred they went looking for a fight and got one. It was a military blunder on Custer's behalf he was too overly confident that he could defeat the Sioux.
at the battle of the little big horn
211 men and Lieutenant George Armstrong Custer were killed at Little Bighorn Battle in Custer's last stand.
The Battle of Little Bighorn, also known as Custer's Last Stand, was a conflict where the Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne tribes defeated the US Army. In contrast, the fighting at Wounded Knee was a massacre in which the US Army killed over 200 Lakota Sioux, mainly women and children. The Battle of Little Bighorn involved a more organized Native American resistance, while Wounded Knee was a tragic example of excessive force by the US military.