You have the story wrong. They didn’t attack to Sioux, but were attacked by several thousand Lakota and Cheyenne warriors. The 263 men with Custer died.
The 7th cavalry (a regiment of the US Army) was under the command of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer.The Indian war party ( a combination of the LakotaSioux,North Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes) was led by Sitting Bull.
The highest ranking officer at the Little Big Horn was Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer, who died at the battle. He had been brevetted to brigadier general during the Civil War, but returned to his regular rank of captain after the war. He was gradually promoted, and lieutenant colonel when he died.
The Sioux won the Battle of Little Bighorn, not leaving a single American of General George Armstrong Custer's 7th Cavalry alive, meaning that they did not surrender but won the battle.The battle however, made the US fight full force to avenge the death of one of there best generals, which in fact lead to the end of The Indian War and forced almost every Native Americans to move to reservations or to drop there customs and live with whites.(Sorry if I bored you)
About the only animal large enough to take down a desert bighorn is the cougar.
A bighorn sheep
Battle of the Little Bighorn.
General George Armstrong Custer
Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer commanded the US 7th Cavalry Regiment
the war was located in bighorm
211 men and Lieutenant George Armstrong Custer were killed at Little Bighorn Battle in Custer's last stand.
They defeated out George A. Custers army and the government sent out the army
yes
George Armstrong Custer
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.
On June 25,1876 at the battle of 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".
Colonel George Armstrong Custer