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First hand accounts of the only survivors at that battle state (loosely quoted from memory): The men wouldn't shoot him (Custer - most likely he had dropped his gun so it would be against the (indian) law) so the women picked up spoons (large wooden and metal ladles) and begin or started towards him, to beat him (called counting coo - showing that we could kill you, but chose not to). That is when he pulled his pistol and shot himself in the head. So the first to find him dead were those Indians on the battlefield, more so because Indian war traditions required them to ensure that the men who died were not able to pursue them in the afterlife (mutilation of the bodies after death).

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Q: Who was the first to find Custer dead after the Battle of the Little Bighorn?
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Who fought in Custer's last stand?

Custer's Last Stand refers to the Battle of the Little Bighorn, which took place from June 25 to 26, 1876. The result of the battle was a victory for the Native Americans.


How long did Custer serve in the military?

I am not sure of the year, but i do know that his first battle was during the civil war in the first battle of Bull Run (1861) and his last battle was Battle of Little Bighorn (1876) where he was KIA


Why did the battle of Little Bighorn happen?

The Battle of Little Bighorn was caused by the discovery of gold in the Black Hills by George A. Cluster himself. The Black Hills were on land that had been reserved for the Sioux. Stuck between upholding an Indian alliance and gold, it's obvious which Americans chose.


What state was the battle of the little bighorn fought in?

The general term for the wars with the Indians in the West is referred to as the Plains Indians Wars. The US Army did recognize this as a war by issuing the Indiand War Campaign Medal, but I'm not sure what period of serviceit included. In 1876, the last serious Sioux warerupted, when the Dakota gold rush penetrated the Black Hills. This lead to the battle of Little Big Horn.


What happened first the battle of little bighorn or the discovery of gold in the black hills?

Gold was discovered in the Black Hills first. If you are doing American School history, I found both answers on page 281


What famous Union General captured the first and last battle flag of the Civil War?

Custer


What best describes the outcome of the Battle of the Little Bighorn?

The Battle of the Little Bighorn marked the beginning of the end of the Indian Wars. Although the battle ended in an overwhelming native victory, the vast military technological superiority of the United States Army eventually turned the Native American insurgencies into their favor. There are multiple perspectives on the outcome of how the battle ended:1. Perspective of the US:Colonel George Custer led around 640 troops to battle that day against between 2,000 to 5,000 Native warriors. Custer was an extremely arrogant commander - one author described him as a "headstrong nincompoop" - who refused to take the advise of his fellow officers and was a glory seeker. He thought the best thing he could do was engage the Natives in one climactic battle. When Native spies reported sighting a large Sioux settlement Custer mobilized his force. Upon entering the battlefield he split his 640 men int o three companies. He led the first, obviously hoping to be accredited to appear to be leading his victorious glorious soldiers into battle. After dividing his small force into even smaller units spread out across the hills, the Natives overwhelmed Custer's position first and he and about 250 troops of his company were wiped out in one massive charge. The other two companies sustained heavy casualties but held out longer. Rather than calling a retreat, in the disarray the surviving soldiers fled the battle in mass panic. Public reaction to the situation was shocked, but the losses a Little Bighorn were only a minor setback for the US military who would eventually show to the Natives during the end of the war that sheer numbers weren't enough to turn the tide.Perspective 2: The Nativesthe Natives did not see this as a victory. Rather, they saw it as an enormous loss of life for no reason. They didn't see it as a battle but oddly a massacre. The very night after the battle, the Sioux and Cheyenne packed their belongings and moved their settlement away from Little Bighorn in fear of an American counterattack. By the time General Terry arrived to investigate the loss of the 7th Cavalry, all he found were dead soldiers. The Natives had fled. A fact suppressed for many years was that Custer evidently committed suicide when the situation became hopeless, as he died of a bullet wound to the temple, while an arrow had been pushed into his penis (almost certainly after death). By the time word from the battle reached other Native tribes it was too late to rally hope. The US soon pushed harder and more ruthlessly to achieve its Manifest Destiny.The Native American won a decisive victory.


What mistake by colonel george Custer led to his defeat by chiefs sitting bulll and Crazy Horse at the battle of big horn?

The Battle of the Little Bighorn, fought on June 25, 1876, near the Little Bighorn River in Montana Territory, pitted federal troops led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer (1839-76) against a band of Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne warriors.


Place where Custer and his men were killed?

First of all, Custer was not ambushed at the Little Big Horn. He saw the encampment and in his arrogance he had no doubt that he would conquer the "savages". So Custer disobeyed a direct command not to engage the Indians, and attacked. He was out thought, outmanned and outmaneuvered by not only the Sioux but the cheyenne, Arapaho and a few from other tribes.


What mistake by Colonel George Custer led to his defeat by chiefs Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse at Battle of the Little Bighorn?

Flamboyant in life, George Armstrong Custer has remained one of the best-known figures in American history and popular mythology long after his death at the hands of Lakota and Cheyenne warriors at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.And the word mythology really fits how he is remembered.He graduated last in his class and then failed at his first posting to stop a fight between two cadets. He was court-martialed and was saved only by the need for officers with the outbreak of the Civil War where he did very well.In July of 1866 Custer was appointed lieutenant-colonel of the Seventh Cavalry. The next year he led the cavalry in a messed up campaign against the Southern Cheyenne. In late 1867 Custer was court-martialed again and suspended from duty for a year for being absent from duty during the campaign. Again a friend saved him.In 1876, Custer was scheduled to lead part of the anti-Lakota expedition, along with Generals John Gibbon and George Crook. He almost didn't make it because President Ulysses S. Grant relieved Custer of his command and replaced him with General Alfred Terry. Public opinion made Grant reverse himself.He did have ambitions to be President one day. And he hoped that this would do it.The original plan called for the three forces under the command of Crook, Gibbon, and Custer to trap the bulk of the Lakota and Cheyenne population between them and deal them a crushing blow. The troops of Crook and Gibbon were not at the same place with Custer as Custer was far ahead of them. Instead of waiting, Custer was so sure that he could win any fight with the Indians. He split his forces into three parts to ensure that fewer Indians would escape.The attack was one the greatest fiascos of the United States Army, as thousands of Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors forced Custer's unit back onto a ridge parallel to the Little Bighorn, surrounded them, and killed all 210 of them. Imagine thousands to 210. He just might have won if he had waited for the other two commanders.


What famous union general captured first and last battle flag and given the table which General Lee and Grant signed the Peace Treaty?

Custer


When did the Sioux Indians win the battle of the little bighorn?

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