yes
That was the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
Lieutenant Colonel (Brevet Major General of Volunteers) George Armstrong Custer was the commanding officer of the Custer Battalion of the 7th Cavalry at the time of the Battle of Little Big Horn, and leader of the troops killed there with him on "last Stand Hill".
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.
It was the Battle of the Little Big Horn.
if you mean George Custer, his last battle was at Little BigHorn (custard is a pudding)
On June 25,1876 at the battle of Little Bighorn.
No, Custer and his men were all killed.
Colonel George Armstrong Custer
They lost becuase they did have a plan
211 men and Lieutenant George Armstrong Custer were killed at Little Bighorn Battle in Custer's last stand.
That was the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
General George Armstrong Custer of the 7th Cavalry.
George Armstrong Custer
General George Custer was defeated and killed in the Battle of Little Bighorn
George A. Custer
The Participants in this Battle were- US Government- The Sioux Clan- Cheyenne- Arapaho
Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer commanded the US 7th Cavalry Regiment