Guardsmen from 20 states and Guam marched a training route early Sunday ending at Black Hills National Cemetery with a tribute on the anniversary of the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Exactly 135 years ...
Two individual decisions sealed the fate of an army officer at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. Lt. George E. Lord, the chief surgeon, was the only member of the 6th Infantry assigned to accompany ...
BISMARCK — Mark Kellogg was an itinerant journalist and telegraph operator who followed the Northern Pacific Railway as it forged an iron path through the Dakota Territory frontier. After stints in ...
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Sitting Bull and the Battle That Shattered Custer's Army
On June 25, 1876, George Armstrong Custer rode into legend—and oblivion. During this military engagement, all 210 soldiers ...
A weathered stone obelisk that arrived last winter at Weaver Park in Old Hilliard says that 21-year-old Weston Harrington was killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876. But ...
They had more than numbers to feed their sense of strength and pride. Just eight days earlier, on Rosebud Creek, they had forced Gen. George Crook and his 1,300 soldiers and scouts into a demoralizing ...
A haunting bit of history was found by accident at the Little Bighorn battlefield where 263 U.S. soldiers — including Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer — died fighting Lakota Sioux and Northern ...
A Civil War General Service cuff button was found in the dirt by a visitor at Little Bighorn Battlefield Monument in Montana, the National Park Service says. National Park Service photo A haunting bit ...
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