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Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument marks the spot of one of the most iconic and deadliest clashes between indigenous American Indians and the United States government. It was here on a ...
A flag that accompanied Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer and his 7th Cavalry into their final battle 134 years ago will be put up for auction, the auction house that will handle the sale said Friday.
The remains of a 7th Cavalry trooper killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn 115 years ago were interred among his comrades in the national cemetery at Custer Battlefield National Monument.
For more than a century, a hilltop granite obelisk and white headstones on the battlefield have honored the estimated 260 members of the 7th Cavalry who died in the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
A Colt revolver carried into the Battle of Little Bighorn by legendary cavalry officer Myles Moylan headlines Rock Island Auction Co.'s "premiere" May 2024 auction.
Regarding Fergus M. Bordewich’s review of Louis S. Warren’s “God’s Red Son”: The road to Wounded Knee began 14 years earlier at Custer’s (foolhardy) last stand at the Little Bighorn.
Yet recently he was riding a horse across a portion of the Little Bighorn Battlefield dressed as an 1876-era soldier with 22 other students in the U.S. Cavalry School.
An account of the battle of Little Big Horn by Two Moon a Cheyenne chief who took part in it.
Lt. Col. George Custer and the men of his 7th Cavalry Regiment went into the Battle of the Little Bighorn with flags flying, but they were wiped out, and nearly all their military artifacts were ...
Photograph of Colonel Thomas Ward Custer, 7th US Cavalry. Custer, the younger brother of General George Armstrong Custer, was killed in the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876 in the Montana ...
Headlong into a retreat from the Little Bighorn River, a 7th Cavalry horse racing to join the main body of troops on the ridge above threw a shoe.
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