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"Fort
Riley, Kansas"
The conclusion of the Civil War in 1865 emphasized
the importance of Fort Riley, Kansas in providing protection to the
railroad lines being built across Kansas. Evidence of this occurred in
the summer and fall of 1866 when the Union Pacific Railroad reached Fort
Riley and the 7th Cavalry Regiment was organized at the fort, commanded
by Colonel Andrew J. Smith. The regiment's ranks were filled with a hard
bitten crew of trappers, veterans from the Civil War and frontiersmen.
Subsequently, Brevet Major General George Armstrong Custer arrived in
December and was appointed to the vacant Lt. Colonel position to take
charge of the new regiment.
"George Armstrong Custer"
In 1861, Custer had graduated from West Point just in time to
participate in the First Battle of Manassas. He later served on the
staffs of Generals McClellan and Pleasanton. He had a distinguished
military career in the Civil War. On 26 June 1863, he was appointed the
"Brevet" rank of Brigadier General of Volunteers and placed in
command of the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Cavalry Division at Gettysburg and
Yellow Tavern. He commanded the 3rd Cavalry Division in the Shenandoah
Valley campaign, Fisher's Hill and Five Forks. In April 1865, he was
promoted to Major General of Volunteers. At the end of the War, the need
for command officers was no longer there and many, to stay in service,
accepted demotions to a lower rank and paid the wages of rank now held,
but was always given the respect and the title of the higher rank
previously held. After the War, Custer was required to revert to his
previous permanent rank of Captain. He then entered the painstakingly
slow promotion process that was customary in the small regular army.
That's why Custer was always referred to as "General Custer".
In 1867, one of Custer's first official acts with the Seventh Cavalry
was to organize a regimental band. The reason that "GarryOwen"
was adopted as the regimental song, as the story goes - one of the Irish
"melting pot" troopers of the 7th Cavalry, under the influence
of "spirits", was singing the song. By chance Custer heard the
melody, liked the cadence, and soon began to hum the tune himself. The
tune has a lively beat, that accentuates the cadence of marching horses.
Soon the tune was played so often that the 7th Cavalry became known as
the GarryOwen Regiment. GarryOwen" eventually became the official
song of the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, Texas in 1981.
In March 1867, when Indian attacks became more and more violent in the
high plains of western Kansas and eastern Colorado, the 7th Cavalry was
given its first opportunity to see what fighting Indians was all about.
Under the command of General Hancock, they marched from Fort Riley to
Fort Larned where they were joined by 6 infantry companies and a battery
of artillery, creating a task force consisting of over 1,400 men.
In April 1867, a meeting was held between the Army and a few chiefs of
the Plains Indians. Due to a misunderstanding, when the Army moved their
troops closer to the Indian encampment, the Indians feared an attack and
they fled under the cover of night. Custer and the 7th Cavalry, given
the task of tracking the Indians down, spent the entire summer in the
attempt to find them. The only contact they made with the Indians were
with small war parties which constantly harassed the troops.
During this campaign, Custer later left his command in the field and
traveled back to Fort Riley to visit his wife. Upon arrival there,
Custer was placed under arrest for being Absent With Out Leave. On 15
September 1867, Custer was court-martialed and found guilty. He was
sentenced to one year suspension from rank and pay. He went home to
Monroe, Michigan where he waited out his suspension.
On 24 September 1868, Custer's court martial was remitted and he
rerejoined his troops on Bluff Creek (near present day Ashland,
Kansas.). Almost immediately upon his arrival, the Indians attacked the
camp. Custer and his troopers gave chase and followed the Indians' trail
back to Medicine Lodge Creek, but found no Indians. Custer returned to
his camp on Bluff Creek where, he and General Sheridan planned a Winter
Campaign. Then heavy snows of winter would slow down the warriors, and
their ponies would be weak and could not travel far. If the Indian
villages were hard hit and their supplies destroyed, the Indians would
have to return to the reservation or starve. They knew that during the
winter months, the Indians would stay at one location which had good
water and a source of firewood for heat; all they had to do was - to
find it!
Sheridan's plan involved three columns: Colonel Andrew W. Evans with six
troops of the 3rd Cavalry and two companies of the 37th Infantry were to
travel down the South Canadian River. The second column consisted of
seven troops of the 5th Cavalry under the command of Major Eugene A.
Carr. They marched southeast from Fort Lyon, Colorado, and connected
with Captain William H. Penrose and his column of five troops of cavalry.
Then they scouted at Antelope Hills, along the North Fork of the
Canadian River. The third column was to march from Fort Dodge under the
command of General Sully and George A. Custer.
"Washita River, Oklahoma"
General Sheridan selected the 7th Cavalry, commanded by George
Armstrong Custer, to take the lead. They were to move southward, and
engage the Indians. This column was made up of eleven troops of the 7th
Cavalry and five companies of the 3rd Infantry. Setting out in a
snowstorm, Custer followed the tracks of a small Indian raiding party to
a Cheyenne village on the Washita River. At dawn he ordered an attack.
It was Chief Black Kettle's village, well within the boundaries of the
Cheyenne reservation. Nevertheless, on 27 November 1868, nearly four
years after the battle of Sand Creek, Custer's troops charged, and this
time Black Kettle could not escape. In a subsequent battle of the Winter
Campaign, the 3rd Cavalry under the command of Colonel Andrew W. Evans,
struck another Comanche village at Soldiers Spring on Christmas Day. The
Winter Campaign had been waged successfully against the Cheyenne in the
Oklahoma Territory. The scattered remnants of the Cheyenne were
decisively defeated.
Afterwards, most of the Cheyenes, Comanches and other tribes still on
the plains returned to the agencies. In March 1869, the Comanche-Kiowa
agency was relocated to Fort Sill, a new fort constructed in the Indian
Plains Territory, and the Cheyenne-Arapaho agency was relocated to
Darlington. Only the Kwahada were still on the Staked Plains. The Kiowa
and other Comanches were on the reservation, but by the fall of 1869
small war parties were occasionally leaving to raid in Texas.
In September 1871, the 7th Cavalry was distributed by squadrons and
company over seven Southern States to enforce federal taxes on
distilleries and suppress the activities of the Ku Klux Klan. Custer was
assigned to Elizabethtown, Kentucky where his chief duty was to inspect
and purchase horses for the Army.
In February 1873, Custer got the good news that the 7th Cavalry was
being reunited and being sent north to Fort Rice in the Dakota Territory.
His mission was to protect settlers in the region and the engineers of
the Northern Pacific Railroad who were surveying a rail route across the
Yellowstone River from the Sioux Indians.
In the last week of March 1873, the 7th Cavalry assembled at Memphis,
Tennessee where they boarded steamboats for Cairo, Illinois. At Cairo,
the regiment changed to overland rail headed northwest into the winter
weather of Yankton, Dakota Territory. The journey to Fort Rice was
completed in a 300 mile march, arriving on 10 June 1873.
"Custer's Black Hills
Expedition"
The completion of the overland railroad link provided an easy
means of transportation for gold seekers and farmers to come to the
area. As the migration continued, trouble with the Sioux increased. On
20 June 1873 an expedition was ordered to move into the Black Hills of
Dakota to provide protection for railroad construction parties. The
expedition consisted of 1,451 troopers, 79 officers, and 275 wagons. As
a focal point of scouting activities, a permanent encampment was
established at Fort Abraham Lincoln in the Yellowstone Territories. From
1873 to 1876, Custer commanded the Seventh Cavalry at Fort Abraham
Lincoln south of Mandan. In 1874, he led his troops south into the Black
Hills, which six years earlier had been set aside as part of the Great
Sioux Reservation. When Custer reported finding gold, the government
offered to buy the land from the Sioux, but they refused to sell. The
Army then allowed gold prospectors to come into the Reservation's hills
by the thousands. The Army's action prompted many Sioux to leave their
North Dakota reservations and join with other Sioux in Montana led by
Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, who were resisting white government
control.
In 1875, the regiment escorted a railroad survey party into the
Yellowstone Valley. This expedition brought the regiment into regular
contact with the Indian raiding parties, however no serious battles or
encounters occurred until the fateful expedition of 17 May 1876. General
Alferd H. Terry was in overall command of an Army campaign to relocate
the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians from the open plains to reservations. The
7th Regiment rode out of Fort Lincoln on 17 May 1876, with Custer along
with the Arikara and Osage scouts leading the way, followed by 1,200 men
and 1,700 horses and mules. The 7th Cavalry Band played "The Girl I
Left Behind Me".
The intent of Genaral Terry was to trap the Indians between Custer and
Major General John Gibbon in the Little Big Horn Valley. Custer had been
ordered to move a band of Indians toward the large cavalry force. Custer
was to pass all the way down the Rosebud Creek and cross over to the
Little Big Horn Valley and move north, in a blocking maneuver to prevent
the Indians from escaping south. Custer marched with approximately 700
soldiers, moving south for several days, identifying Indian camp signs
all along the way. After making visual contact with the Indians on 23
June, Custer ordered the column to turn west toward the Little Big Horn
Valley. On 24 June, the Arikara and Osage scouts identified a party of
Sioux following them. The Sioux fled when approached and Custer did not
want any of the Sioux encampment to escape. On the night of 24 June,
Custer outlined the plan for the next day. When the his regiment reached
the Sioux encampment on 25 June 1876, Custer made a decision to attack
and fight the Indians.
One of the most chronicled events in the history of the American West
was the famous Battle of the Little Big Horn, otherwise known as
Custer's Last Stand. Traveling up Rosebud Creek, at 12:07 Custer split
his command into three battalions. Major Reno, in command of companies
"A", "G", and "M", was directed to attack
the southern most end of the village in the valley. Captain Benteen, in
command of companies "D", "H", and "K",
was directed to explore the area in a southwesterly direction and to
"pitch into anything that he might find." Captain McDougall
was assigned with "B" Company to guard the pack train. Custer
took the five companies of "C", "E", "F",
"I", and "L" to make a frontal attack on the
encampment.
"Comanche - Sole Survivor"
Within a short period of
time, Custer and his troops were annihilated by the full might of an
estimated 5,000 Sioux Indians who were led by Chief Sitting Bull and
Chief Crazy Horse. Four days later, the other two battalions of the
regiment were rescued by supporting cavalry troops under the command of
Generals Terry and Gibbon. In the search for survivors of Custer's
forces, not one of the 264 troopers under Custer's command was found
alive. Five members of the Custer family were killed at the Battle of
the Little Big Horn; the General, his brother Captain Tom Custer,
brother-in-law Captain James Calhoun, younger brother Boston, and nephew
Autie Reed. Both Boston and Autie were civilians.
Only one horse, with seven arrows in his body, was found in a thicket.
The horse, named Comanche, was a gelding ridden by Captain Keogh, one of
Custer's officers. In the subsequent campaigns of 1876, troopers of the
5th Regiment rode after the Sioux to avenge the death of their comrades.
While Sitting Bull was pursued into Canada, Crazy Horse and the
Cheyennes traveled about, comparatively undisturbed. In July 1877, he
was finally prevailed upon to come to Fort Robinson, Nebraska on the
distinct understanding that the government would hear and adjust their
grievances, many of which are still unresolved today.
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