Why We've Gotten 'Custer's Last Stand' Wrong for Nearly 150 Years

Sometimes to get remembered in history, you need a great publicist. This weekend marks the 147th anniversary of the Battle of Little Bighorn-also known as ‘Custer’s Last Stand’-a chapter in U.S. history that some historians are arguing needs a rewrite.
Read more about Custer's Last Stand: time.com/6288437/custer-last-...
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  • @patrickmcsherry6038
    @patrickmcsherry603810 ай бұрын

    I am 60 years old, and I was never taught that the Custer was the victim of a sneak attack by the Lakota. I was always taught that Custer was a flawed officer (even during the Civil War), and that his attack on the Native American camp was a glory-seeking action that was flawed, short-sighted, ill-conceived, badly executed, and led to his demise and that of his men.

  • @glenw3814

    @glenw3814

    10 ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @mordechai-

    @mordechai-

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly! Also, he was told that he was outnumbered, and he assumed he and his men could handle it. They WERE lying in wait for him, though, and outnumbered his men at least five to one, iirc. Custer, in his arrogance, refused to wait for the backup soldiers that were on the way. And he and his men were demolished. All this was in the kid's biography of George Armstrong Custer that I read as a kid. (I'm 61 years old, now in 2023.) But he was still shown as an American hero. Shrug.

  • @bebopkirby

    @bebopkirby

    10 ай бұрын

    This video seems to be fighting a battle about the history and legacy of Custer which has not been taught or in vogue since the 1960’s. That is over half a century ago. If this video was made in say 1965 it might be revelatory, today it comes across as being stuck in a time warp.

  • @MikeNube

    @MikeNube

    10 ай бұрын

    He was presented as a hero -- a flawed hero, because he defeated J.E.B. Stuart's attack at the Battle of Gettysburg. That was a critical part of winning that battle, a turning point in the Civil War. Anyone who read about him also learned he was last in his class at West Point, and that he could be ruthless and harsh sometimes to the point of villainy. Whether Indian or cavalry, was hard to be at war out in the blazing sun in the wilderness. Was the land all occupied by native Americans? Did each of them own a couple of square miles each? How nice for them. Did they conquer each other's tribes and take land. Yes. How nice. to have a double standard.

  • @ktcarl

    @ktcarl

    10 ай бұрын

    It definitely was a tactical error.

  • @rexmundi7811
    @rexmundi781111 ай бұрын

    Lindsay Stallones Marshall states that the battle took place in the Black Hills. That is not true. The battle took place in Montana on Crow land. In fact, Crow scouts led Custer to the Lakota camp because the Crow hated the Lakota and wanted them out of their land. Marshall also fails to bring up the fact that the Lakota were occupying the Black Hills because they stole the Black Hils from the Cheyenne and the Crow one hundred years before.

  • @marshalofod1413

    @marshalofod1413

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly. And, the Ojibwa drove the Sioux off the Souix's original lands. And so on, and so on, and son. Some people act like Americans invented that driving people from their lands thing.

  • @charleshayes2528

    @charleshayes2528

    10 ай бұрын

    @@marshalofod1413 The fact that there were conflicts and displacements doesn't absolve the "American" settlers from responsibility, does it? Two wrongs don't make a right. The settlers had technological and financial superiority from almost the beginning and soon had a much larger population as well. Thus, they were not really under threat from the natives, except when encroaching on the remaining unsettled territories. No one says the natives were perfect, but the "white" population saw itself as civilised and Christian and yet, did not live up to their own standards and it is by their own standards that they can be judged. ("Some people act like Americans* invented that driving people from their lands thing." *Since the natives are, by definition, Americans, your comment isn't as clear as it might be, by the way.)

  • @Sophos1964

    @Sophos1964

    10 ай бұрын

    Correct!

  • @wylldflower5628

    @wylldflower5628

    10 ай бұрын

    @@charleshayes2528 Especially the standard of coming here to escape oppression. By this time everyone immigrating knew there were existing people living here, and should’ve thought through “displacing” more thoroughly.

  • @brianmacadam4793

    @brianmacadam4793

    10 ай бұрын

    @@marshalofod1413 The different aboriginal nations DID come into conflict on occasion, but they ALSO regociated with each other and built agreements. The US government signed a treaty with the natives and promptly broke the agreements. Custer was an instrument ( by no means the only one ) of the treaty betrayal.

  • @jmfa57
    @jmfa5711 ай бұрын

    I'm in my mid 60s and the way I learned of the battle of the Little Big Horn was that Custer was a very flawed commander who led his troops into disaster. In later life I finally got to check off a bucket list item and visit this battlefield. I was very pleased to see how the park rangers gave a very clear, very unbiased account that shared the points of view from both sides of this battle. The narrators in this video are surely representing their own biases. Custer had found in the past that by capturing and holding hostage Native American women and children, he gained a bargaining (extortion!) advantage. In this case, he reckoned dead wrong, and the righteously outraged Native American warriors wiped the US troops out. I would have done the same were I in their shoes. What is seldom acknowledged these days is how brutal the native tribes were to one another, as well as to encroaching settlers. History isn't pretty, and it's not meant to be, but I prefer it to be told with as few biases as possible, including judging past deeds by today's standards.

  • @HeyMykee

    @HeyMykee

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Realism over activism.

  • @philip48230

    @philip48230

    11 ай бұрын

    Well put

  • @TA-dg6tf

    @TA-dg6tf

    11 ай бұрын

    This is a very well written response. I appreciate the thoughtfulness and objectivity.

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    I only disagree with the last statement. A wrong act in any time period is a wrong act in all others. The fact that the act is not seen as wrong in all time periods does not make it any different. We might try to justify something through the lens of what was happening at a certain time, but that is all we are doing. Being able to understand why events occurred or why a person or group of people did what they did is not the same as saying it was the right thing to do. I am not saying that circumstances might dictate we do something that is later judged as wrong, such as stealing when we are starving or women who prostitute themselves during war to feed their starving children.

  • @RoninTF2011

    @RoninTF2011

    11 ай бұрын

    Would you say the same thing about judging the holocaust?

  • @davidwoolbright3675
    @davidwoolbright367511 ай бұрын

    Yeah. I’ve never heard of a sneak attack. I’ve always heard he attacked the village foolishly and got surrounded and defeated.

  • @28pbtkh23

    @28pbtkh23

    11 ай бұрын

    Maybe the woman in the video was referring how this was taught in schools before you were born, say in the 1950s and 1960s. The film “They died with their boots on” reflects this idea of sneaky Indians. You were probably taught what really happened.

  • @belleq7432
    @belleq743210 ай бұрын

    Im 74 years old.When I was a little kid I heard about Custer as a hero. By the time I was in high school in the 60's that was gone. Custer was depicted as an incompetent leader who led his men into disaster. By the early seventies the move"Little Big Man" was released which portrayed the event from the Native American point of view. I have't heard anyone reference Custer in a positive light ever since then. The revisionism presented in this video is that nothing changed in the United States from 1960 to now. There seems to be group of people who think we are still in the 1940s and 1950s and nothing has changed.

  • @kateruch7196

    @kateruch7196

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm 57 and my impression of Custer has always also been the one from Little Big Man; although maybe lampooned a little bit in the movie. I haven't watched it recently, though. (Too bad he couldn't make himself invisible - hopefully someone will get that reference.) I never learned he was a hero in school, either, so if that is still being taught, it's in a different part of the country. I will state that I was not always good at actually reading my history books, so my impressions could also have been from my teachers rather than my textbook.

  • @wylldflower5628

    @wylldflower5628

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kateruch7196 😆 I’ve understood more about history since I hit my 40s than I learned in school-reading and all. I think life experience helps you see it more cohesively, and life felt more hectic in my 20s and 30s!

  • @TheSaltydog07

    @TheSaltydog07

    10 ай бұрын

    The worst I've read if him is he raided villages after the men were away.

  • @MikeNube

    @MikeNube

    10 ай бұрын

    One reason the Crow Indians served as Custer's scouts is that the Lakota had been ruthless against them.

  • @gator83261

    @gator83261

    10 ай бұрын

    Lol

  • @alanrobertson9790
    @alanrobertson979011 ай бұрын

    I'd recommend that someone watches one of the detailed histories of Custers Last Stand before watching this. This video is more concerned about public perceptions rather than the events.

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    I've never thought of Custer as anything more than a narcissist that led his troops into an ambush.

  • @alanrobertson9790

    @alanrobertson9790

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gaoxiaen1 narcissist bit might be right but more to it than that. In a previous encounter with the Indians, Custer had managed to capture the Indian's women and children and so compelled the larger number of warriors to surrender. Custer was probably trying to pull off the same trick at Little Bighorn but been unable to.

  • @ivannio8519

    @ivannio8519

    2 ай бұрын

    @@gaoxiaen1 A very simplistic view indeed. Have you ever tried to find out if you are wrong?

  • @jameshart1545
    @jameshart154511 ай бұрын

    54 yrs old and never heard of a "sneak attack"

  • @seanfaherty

    @seanfaherty

    11 ай бұрын

    it was the story in the News Papers. It was soon discredited by Major Reno

  • @gamingnoob3190

    @gamingnoob3190

    10 ай бұрын

    Where? What paper?

  • @BullittOutdoors
    @BullittOutdoors10 ай бұрын

    I’m 45 and Big Horn was always taught as the Native Americans were intelligent and victorious and highlighted Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull as fantastic leaders. Clusters was always shown in a negative light, to the point of being arrogantly clumsy

  • @marcusaurelias399

    @marcusaurelias399

    10 ай бұрын

    Well said. I mean the arrogance and just sheer stupidness of splitting your force in 2. Plus not scouting the camp and knowing many different Indian tribes had joined forces and were ready for a battle

  • @jamesfacer594

    @jamesfacer594

    2 ай бұрын

    actually he split his force into thirds and he left his gatling guns behind deeming them too cumbersome. If you look more closely Custer performed well in the civil war and at gettysburg no less. No one is perfect. @@marcusaurelias399

  • @tooter1able
    @tooter1able11 ай бұрын

    Custer attacked without accepting the accurate reconnaissance of his scouts who warned him about the SIZE of the village. "You and I will go home today by a route we do not know" (Bloody knife-killed before Reno's eyes in the valley). Mitch Bouyer told him "It will take days to kill them"."Their horses are like worms in the grass" was the warning of another scout. Custer was then told that several Indians had been spotted looting a supply box that had fallen off of a pack mule in the rear of the line of march. Custer's immediate reaction was that the 7th had been discovered and that the element of surprise was lost. Though rational, it was the wrong conclusion --at the exclusion of all others--- because the Indians spotted were actually on their way AWAY from the Indian encampment. Two aspects of Custer's personality showed themselves clearly. One, ignoring accurate reconaissance and jumping to conclusions---impetuosity at its finest.

  • @zen4men

    @zen4men

    10 ай бұрын

    By definition, the command of cavalry requires the ability to sum up situations instantly, and come to a decision, because cavalry have both strengths and weaknesses, and the aim of the exercise is to attack at the time of your greatest strength, and your enemy's greatest weakness. So impetuosity can be determined by either success or failure. War being an art not a science, failure is therefore always a possibility. / Piston engined Fighter pilots are the embodiment of the Spirit of Cavalry, and a degree of recklessness is a necrssity if you are to close with your enemy and kill him. During the Battle of Britain, the most successful pilots were Polish. They had seen the Luftwaffe up close before, been defeated, and seen their country crushed. They had escaped through eastern Europe to France, only to be defeated again. In spite of this, they were not demoralised, but determined to kill Germans. / A flawed human being is what we all are - it is just that some are more publically found out than others! / There is a saying "Time spent in reconnaisance is never wasted". My late uncle was a Second Lieutenant in 1944 in Holland, in the reconnaisance troop of the 15/19th Hussars, riding in a 2 man armoured car, though 'armoured' against almost nothing. By necessity, you MUST be impetuous to drive along an open road by yourself, out in front of your forces, seeking out the enemy. But war develops one's survival instincts, and sometimes you just 'know' that something is not right, and that prior warning might just save your life. / Luck plays a great part too. Their armoured car drove down a long straight road to a slight curve to the right. The road was on an embankment, with trees both sides. As they turned the corner, there in front of them was a German convoy, heading in the same direction. Right at the rear, with it's gun facing forward, was a Tiger tank. As you might imagine, the command was given to reverse. It was a narrow road, so turning was not an option. The Tiger reversed back around the corner, and tried to traverse it's gun, but the trees were too close together, so it kept trying to find a space wide enough to achieve pointing the barrel down the road. Time seemed to stand still as the armoured car moved towards a hamlet with a staggered crossroads with a shop in direct line with the straight road. Just as the armoured car turned out of the straight road, a shell from the Tiger went straight through the shop! / Many cavalry officers then rode to hounds, which develops the ability to make instant decisions. I remember my uncle saying, with a faraway looki in his eyes "War is like a jolly good hunt!" There was a pause. Then he continued "But you must remember we were on the winning side!" / Winning included a warehouse of champage in Hamburg, and liberating Goering's private yatcht, so they were able to let their hair down in style! .

  • @John33gfed

    @John33gfed

    10 ай бұрын

    Excellent!

  • @hilariousname6826
    @hilariousname682611 ай бұрын

    I've been reading about "Custer's Last Stand" since I was a kid - and that was a long, long, time ago - and I've never encountered the idea that Custer was "attacked" in some sneaky way. Only a minute into this - hope it's not just going to be a re-hash of all the very well known facts and their logical conclusions ....... Edit: Okay, I'm at 2:20 now, and I'm baling .....

  • @JohnV-gb7dq

    @JohnV-gb7dq

    11 ай бұрын

    I've also never read any opinion that Custer was "attacked." Quite the contrary, and with a military background, my input on Custer was that he was a vain idiot who stupidly got his command wiped out.

  • @28pbtkh23

    @28pbtkh23

    11 ай бұрын

    You baled too early. The woman who was talking about a “sneak attack” was describing how the story of Custer’s last stand was traditionally taught in this way. She then goes on to say what really happened, based upon the research of the past 20 years.

  • @markchapel

    @markchapel

    10 ай бұрын

    @@28pbtkh23 What really happened has been well known for far, far more than 20 years. I'm 62 and I was never taught the misconceptions about the battle that she describes.

  • @gator83261

    @gator83261

    10 ай бұрын

    Agree, once I heard that I knew it’s another revisionist history piece trying to fit an agenda.

  • @ktcarl

    @ktcarl

    10 ай бұрын

    @@28pbtkh23 I was never "traditionally taught" that Custer was a victim of a sneak attack. I was always taught that Custer led an attack on the 'Indians' encampment.

  • @DancingShiva788
    @DancingShiva78811 ай бұрын

    I'm almost ready to retire and I've never heard it told as a sneak attack on Custer. Custer was arrogant, Custer bit off more than he could chew, Custer got his butt kicked.

  • @neilreynolds3858

    @neilreynolds3858

    11 ай бұрын

    There were a lot of popular reports after the battle so it's possible that they told the story that way. I've never read any of those but it sounds like the penny dreadful approach to reporting at the time.

  • @DancingShiva788

    @DancingShiva788

    11 ай бұрын

    @@neilreynolds3858 Yes, the original reports immediately after the battle were rabble rousing news. They very well might have referred to it as a sneak attack. She did seem to imply that these were more recent tales. I think it's been known a long time that it wasn't one of the brighter moments in American history, and not just because soldiers died. I really can't think of any stories I've heard though which didn't show Custer willingly making a series of strategic and tactical errors based on overconfidence and complacency.

  • @DancingShiva788

    @DancingShiva788

    11 ай бұрын

    @neilreynolds3858 Actually, it took a few minutes, but you jogged my memory, and you're right. Given the prejudice of the time, the story that American soldiers had been beaten by "savages" really wasn't acceptable. Admitting that the soldiers had blundered would have been anathema to the public of the time. Explaining it as a cowardly ambush would have been much more palatable, even if it was a lie.

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    @@DancingShiva788 The 'good guys' are always the ones wearing 'my country's' uniform.

  • @DancingShiva788

    @DancingShiva788

    11 ай бұрын

    @@normanacree1635 And God is always on their side as well!

  • @jlrva3864
    @jlrva386410 ай бұрын

    Back in the 1970's, our middle school American History class had the book "Black Elk Speaks" as part of the required reading list. This book told the Lakota side of the story, often mentioning inter tribal warfare.

  • @stuartjarman4930

    @stuartjarman4930

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, the various Indian nations had been fighting and slaughtering each other for just as long as the European nations, long before Columbus ever smelled the ocean breeze

  • @hesavedawretchlikeme6902

    @hesavedawretchlikeme6902

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, and I have this book Black Rlk Speaks, along with others like Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.

  • @amybooth6583

    @amybooth6583

    5 ай бұрын

    Massacre is another term loosely thrown around these days , the way native Americans fought in all their history was to attack an adversary’s camp and take women and children - so what are you saying all Native American battles against each other were genocidal massacre’s ?????

  • @thomaskalbfus2005

    @thomaskalbfus2005

    5 ай бұрын

    @@amybooth6583 Now there were massacres on the Eastern Front of World War II, every hear of Baba Yar, where they forced civilians at gunpoint to dig their own graves and then shot them down with machine guns and then had bulldozers bury their bodies afterwards, I don't think that was what Custer did. People use terms like Massacre to describe a battle when they want to insert their own value judgements on what happened. Wars are messy.

  • @mikearehart1270

    @mikearehart1270

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes. Most of the time their battles left no survivors.@@amybooth6583

  • @jsmith3772
    @jsmith377211 ай бұрын

    I don't know of anyone who was taught that Custer an innocent victim of Native American Aggression. For me the biggest injustice with Custer's Last Stand is we focus too much on what Custer did or did not do and not enough on the brave Native American Warriors who defended their homes both against Custer and against Crook a few days earlier.

  • @roberthudson1959

    @roberthudson1959

    11 ай бұрын

    Man for man, the Native Americans were infinitely better fighters than the troopers of the 7th, many of whom were both inexperienced and ill-trained (because Congress was cheap). In fact, one of Custer's fellow officers referred to the Native Americans as "the best light cavalry in the world."

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    You could expand that comment to include what ALL Native Americans did in defending their homes throughout the 'whitening of the West'.

  • @scottmoyer8923

    @scottmoyer8923

    11 ай бұрын

    @@normanacree1635 The Lakota we’re trying to steal Crow land , Bloody Knife a crow scout was killed in the battle. A Month earlier the Crow and Shoshone were fighting side by side with U.S. Troopers General George Crook to remove Lakota From Crow Land on the Rosebud Creek Montana It was deemed a Lakota Cheyenne Victory but they withdrew, then Custer met them at the Big Horn

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    @@roberthudson1959 Many US Army soldiers that fought against the Native Americans were southern Confederate POWs that volunteered to fight in Federal Army in the west rather than stay in a filthy, disease-ridden northern prison. I don't think that unit cohesion and a feeling of comradeship was very prevalent.

  • @martinjenkins8270

    @martinjenkins8270

    10 ай бұрын

    And had to defend there woman and children,which the soldiers never had to do

  • @justinstephenson9360
    @justinstephenson936011 ай бұрын

    "History textbooks are not history books" Sadly, so true especially in the current culture war era.

  • @billweasley1382

    @billweasley1382

    10 ай бұрын

    So true. American leftists are desperate to indoctrinate children to hate the United States as much as they do. You can see it clearly in this video. Schools probably spend less than a day on teaching about the founding fathers, and these "historians" want the focus of that day to be on the fact that some of them owned slaves. If they want to erase Custer from the textbooks because he wasn't relevant, how could they possibly justify a total focus on a completely irrelevant fact like that?

  • @stevejorgensen5274

    @stevejorgensen5274

    6 ай бұрын

    The "history" is written by the winners and only their side is told. I have read many accounts from the Indian side and most are in disagreement with what is normally told. Many accounts state the leader was shot off his horse at the deep ravien crossing. They didn't know it was Custer until later. Custer had gotten a short hair cut before starting on the expedition. Custer was trying to win with the hope it would propel him into the White House. He lost more ways than one.

  • @eddieBoxer

    @eddieBoxer

    5 ай бұрын

    Custer is not a hero he was a fool attacking the Lakota Indians putting his men at risk which resulted in a massacre of his men.

  • @CrowInMojaveDesert
    @CrowInMojaveDesert11 ай бұрын

    This is almost exactly how It was taught in School. The original narrative you proposed was the narrative over 100 years ago

  • @saw6436

    @saw6436

    11 ай бұрын

    Ditto. I was taught most of this (not all the details) in elementary school in the early 1970's.

  • @frederickburke9944

    @frederickburke9944

    11 ай бұрын

    The Narrative is that everything white people do, did, and believe today is wrong. That is the only narrative that matters. The exposing of the truth about Custer will never be over.

  • @adamcecil3630

    @adamcecil3630

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Who benefits by acting like we’ve made no progress in how we teach this? Come on. (Eye roll)

  • @Honu-up3ou
    @Honu-up3ou11 ай бұрын

    Anybody who has read about the battle doesn't think that Custer was on the right side of this. Why are they trying to rehash this? Custer's tactics were well-known by both sides.

  • @Honu-up3ou

    @Honu-up3ou

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dannytimms9011 I disagree; the US Government, local political leaders, and private property owners routinely broke multiple treaties and agreements and may have precipitated incidents to draw the Army in. The agency created to support the individual Native American groups was rife with corruption. Custer could've waited for the rest of the Army to get there, but he forced the issue, and the rest is known history.

  • @RSKLove

    @RSKLove

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dannytimms9011tell that to the victors. Notice how this Battle will never Live Down the infamy and embarrassment. 😂

  • @ccrider3435

    @ccrider3435

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Honu-up3ou A treaty is an oath...the treaty breakers back then are the oath breakers of today.

  • @RSKLove

    @RSKLove

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dannytimms9011 that’s our reality and we’re doing everything we can to get this misunderstanding sorted out. It’s not my logic either, it’s European colonizer logic, duh!

  • @RSKLove

    @RSKLove

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dannytimms9011 so there are unresolved crimes. Why not address these issues first and speedy?

  • @ronboe6325
    @ronboe632510 ай бұрын

    I grew up very close to that area back in the '60's, the general attitude was "Custer got his". Now many years later two books by Paul L. Hedren; "Great Siouz War, Orders of Battle" and " Powder River, Disasters Opening of the Great Sioux War" sheds a very harsh light on the US and the US Army in particular. The Army seems fond of making the same mistakes over the years, just different people making them.

  • @bartleydalfonso2853
    @bartleydalfonso285310 ай бұрын

    In June 1976 I was 24 and hitchhiked in Montana to the 99th anniversary of the battle (I was a history major in college). Several years later a major wildfire swept thru the battleground, burning off the high shrubs, revealing newly discovered artifacts from the battle (spent cartridges, bullets, belt buckles, canteens) that had remained hidden for a century, which revealed additional spots of the battle.

  • @yankeefan0747
    @yankeefan07473 ай бұрын

    For the closest historically accurate film depiction of the battle,I would recommend “ Son of the Morning Star” starring Gary Cole as Armstrong Custer.

  • @tarakeegan9479
    @tarakeegan947911 ай бұрын

    I read a book when I was young (maybe 10?) about Crazy Horse. I don’t remember the author or the actual title (though I’m sure it’s somewhere at my parents house) but it detailed his life growing up, leading to Little Big Horn. It fascinated me and inspired me to look at “history” with a critical eye.

  • @tarakeegan9479

    @tarakeegan9479

    11 ай бұрын

    No, but good thinking. This was a children’s book and more focused on his life growing up.

  • @robertcastro8435

    @robertcastro8435

    11 ай бұрын

    How about Nebraskan author's Mari Sandoz "Crazy Horse." It is an old classic written around the 1940s or 1950s.

  • @victorwilliams1304

    @victorwilliams1304

    10 ай бұрын

    I read the same book and did a report on the book.

  • @JimAllen-Persona

    @JimAllen-Persona

    10 ай бұрын

    For age 10, that’s pretty good. Most of us don’t really start to see what we’ve been taught is one-sided and usually wrong until we’re in some undergrad class and pick up Zinn. Too many politicians want to bury anything that fails to show us in a positive light but by seeing things as they really were we learn our heroes are just men (or women) subject to the social norms of the time that had some quality to make them stand out. History is written by the victors.

  • @victorwilliams1304

    @victorwilliams1304

    10 ай бұрын

    @@JimAllen-Persona When I was 10, the Community was still going to Civil Rights Movement and many of the college students were sporting the Fros and leather jackets of the Panthers. So, we were always taught to look pass the Facade even at that Age.

  • @MrMojoRisin13
    @MrMojoRisin1310 ай бұрын

    I have NEVER ONCE heard that Custer was "attacked," let alone in a "sneak attack" by native peoples. What I was taught as a child was that Custer, out of hubris and an inability to appreciate his predicament, attacked a much larger force and paid the price for it. But that he and a group of his men made a final stand atop a small rise. I do believe that was a fairly accurate account, given the battlefield archaeology and historical research that I've seen presented. So where is this "Custer was attacked, by a sneak attack" coming from??

  • @marlonmoncrieffe0728

    @marlonmoncrieffe0728

    4 ай бұрын

    The Leftist Time just making a horrible event sound even horrible.

  • @jayhellyer5406
    @jayhellyer540611 ай бұрын

    I'm at 1:04 and have just heard for the first time that it was a sneak attack by the Indians on Custer hahaha. There's no point watching people debunk a story that no one outside of the narrators has ever heard of.

  • @thatguyinelnorte

    @thatguyinelnorte

    5 ай бұрын

    That's where I bailed, too.

  • @kodiakkeith
    @kodiakkeith11 ай бұрын

    Live in an alternate universe much? There are a thousand books and history courses on the Custer fight, and none of them say anything other than Custer attacked the Indians.

  • @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    11 ай бұрын

    Ya these punks want to change reality because they suck. They sucked then! They suck now. If I was an Indian I'd jump off a cliff. Why? They suck! Except for Sitting Bull and a few others the suckage is amazing.

  • @DavidJohnson-py6mp
    @DavidJohnson-py6mp10 ай бұрын

    It would appear that we still won't get the Little Big Horn story right. Why don't we talk about how this was a war between two opposed cultures that could not and would not understand and tolerate one another. Let's also talk about how Custer was a proven and able combat commander in his own right that made a fatal error in judgment that day. Or how that there were also a number of very capable leaders and tactitions among the native American tribes as well. We should also recognize that the tribes had been warring against, eliminating, and dispossesing rival tribes all across the continent for generations before being removed by the whites. Continuing to dwell on wrongs committed by ancestors on both sides several generations ago seems to me to hinder our ability to move past those cultural differences and truly appreciate one another for what we are and not be judged for wrongs we didn't have any part in committing.

  • @mglenn7092

    @mglenn7092

    10 ай бұрын

    Custer was a proven and able combat cavalry officer who performed very well *under the close supervision of competent superior officers.* Left on his own, he was an egotistical, arrogant, idiotic, reckless, over-confident glory-hound who was a military disaster (a walking talking clusterf*** in modern military slang) just waiting to happen - until it finally did. He was absolutely unsuited to independent command (such as he had at Little Big Horn) and his errors in judgment were a constant feature of his career, not just on that final day of it. What happened to Custer at Little Big Horn was the inevitable result of letting Custer loose without someone keeping a tight grip on his leash. He got his, and it’s just too bad he took 250 decent men down with him. It’s really amazing that Custer lived as long as he did before one of his many errors in judgment finally got him killed.

  • @gator83261

    @gator83261

    10 ай бұрын

    @@mglenn7092lol

  • @doncook2054

    @doncook2054

    10 ай бұрын

    lol

  • @John33gfed

    @John33gfed

    10 ай бұрын

    Agreed. And also that many atrocities committed on both sides, by the settlers/ soldiers and by the natives, were often misunderstandings, misinformation and confusion. In essence, victims of the circumstances of their time. Just as an example, if and when a hostile Indian group killed, tortured or mutilated a family of settlers or soldiers, it didn't matter if the next group of Indians to come along were peaceful and innocent, they might still be targeted as the perpetrators and then wrongly might have had vengeance applied to them--and vice versa.

  • @thomasfoss9963

    @thomasfoss9963

    9 ай бұрын

    @@mglenn7092 I agree with your synopsis, and conclusion--- Custer was a serviceable officer while under competent officers, but on his own, he was very reckless, jeopardizing his men, and an arrogant glory hound----

  • @scottmoyer8923
    @scottmoyer892311 ай бұрын

    The Lakota and Cheyenne were on the Crow Reservation, as they were a month earlier at the Battle of the Rosebud, where the U.S and Crow and Shoshone fought side by side to remove Lakota off of Crow Land

  • @alwaysfourfun1671

    @alwaysfourfun1671

    11 ай бұрын

    The white people had betrayed the 1868 treaty that set aside the great sioux reservation, that included the Black Hills, Paha Sapa. White people, by the way under Custer, opened up the Black Hills to colonists and miners. Is it the right thing to do, to abide to the treaty and reinstate the great Sioux reservation with a gentle removal of the present inhabitants, except for those that held title to the land according to the 1868 treaty? By the way, the treaty also gave the sioux hunting rights in what was then unceded territory in much of Wyoming and parts of Nebraska. It is clear what the American government has to do, if they believe in treaties.

  • @scottmoyer8923

    @scottmoyer8923

    11 ай бұрын

    @@alwaysfourfun1671 Sorry you are correct about the Black Hills, But Incorrect about the Little Big Horn, The Crow Nation summoned Washington to enforce The 1851 Laramie Treaty in which the Lakota we’re Stealing Crow and Shoshone land, Grant Used Custer his most gallant Calvary Officer to do the job. A Month earlier General George Crook fought side by side with the Crow and Shoshone nation to move the Lakota off of Crow land at the Rosebud. All that being said The Black Hills of South Dakota belong to the Sioux Nation, but til this day they have not accepted Payment.

  • @alwaysfourfun1671

    @alwaysfourfun1671

    11 ай бұрын

    @@scottmoyer8923 I don't think "Washington" can be summoned by native people to do, what they not already intended to do. Even Crook, in march 1876 on the powder river, was waiting for Crows and Shoshone, before he engaged the Lakotah-Cheyenne-Arapaho allies. The three columns of Terry-Custer, Gibbon and Crook, about 4000 men strong, no women, no children, all people of fighting age, were converging on native people labeled by them as "hostiles", but with women, children and elderly. Did the Americans offer them a fair deal after they had stolen their treaty lands and depleted the bison? Is the 1851 Crow reservation still the same as the 1868 Crow reservation or the present-day Crow reservation? It was the white people, who invaded the Crow territory of 1851. Washington did nothing to uphold the treaty against white people. Custer himself trespassed into the Black Hills and Washington broke the treaty, by not defending the Sioux treaty rights against white invaders. Of course the present day Sioux will not sell the Black Hills. Money is printed more rapidly in the USA then toilet paper. Means nothing. Land is something you can relate to. How can you sell your land? Let's honor the 1868 treaty first. Big consequences, clearly, but sounds fair to me. Of course that example will cause an avalanche of disputes over the hundreds of treaties broken by the Americans. The native people were right when they spoke of "steal treaties".

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    @@alwaysfourfun1671 The "White Government". Most Europeans were enslaved by the robber barons, until unions started to demand fair working conditions and pay. Then Reagan decided to accept bribery and Wall Street decided to screw the USA's workers so that they could export American jobs to America's enemies. .

  • @timkaldahl

    @timkaldahl

    10 ай бұрын

    The Crow (Apsolooka) had indeed asked for US government assistance to expell the Lakota from their land. The Lakota were encroaching on the reservation of the Crow, which at the time extended from the Black Hills to Yellowstone National Park. The land around the Park was actually shared among the Crow, Shoshone, Nez Perce, Kootenai, Cheyenne and other tribes.

  • @richarddelasota1812
    @richarddelasota181210 ай бұрын

    This is a curious piece. I’m 79 and I have never been taught that the Battle of the Little Big Horn started as a sneak attack by the gathered Native American tribes. The battle did not take place in the Black Hills. It has never been a secret that some of the framers of the Constitution were slaveholders and that the inconsistency between the “All men are created equal” language and slaveholding was allowed to fester as the result of a compromise that was necessary to the creation of the United States until the Civil War.

  • @elxaime
    @elxaime11 ай бұрын

    "Still trying to outsmart me, aren't you, muleskinner? You want me to think that you don't want me to go down there, but the subtle truth is you really don't want me to go down there!"

  • @robertcastro8435
    @robertcastro843511 ай бұрын

    The Cheyenne drove the Kiowas from the Black Hills. The Kiowas were living that far north around the Black Hills sand Montana before they migrated to the southern plains.

  • @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes but the Cheyenne had DIBS!!!! Lmao!!!!!

  • @madalfromuk4729
    @madalfromuk472911 ай бұрын

    Custer did not want to believe his native American scouts about the numbers

  • @arthurlessard3315
    @arthurlessard33157 ай бұрын

    Since at least the 1960s, a fairly accurate narrative of the battle and Custer has been the one taught. I'm 60, and it is the one I was taught as a boy.

  • @davidjohnson6611
    @davidjohnson661111 ай бұрын

    The Native Americans were at war with each other for thousands of years over resources and territory. Many of these tribes hated each other going back centuries such as the Blackfoot the Lakota The Crow and so on that being said the colonial powers

  • @xanderk84
    @xanderk8410 ай бұрын

    I'm almost 40 and have been hearing since childhood about how American history is much darker and more morally complex than the sanitized version that all of us were supposedly brainwashed with, which glosses over slavery and the mistreatment of Native Americans. But what confuses me is that I was never taught this sanitized version of history, nor it seems was anyone else I know my age. So, it's very strange to hear people talk about the unjust treatment of the Native Americans or how some of the Founding Fathers owned slaves as though these points are major revelations. What does seem subversive is any take on American history that highlights the positive aspects of it.

  • @kevinreilly1480
    @kevinreilly148011 ай бұрын

    Indians did not “sneak” attack. Custer was the one attacking.

  • @dusseau13
    @dusseau1311 ай бұрын

    Living in Monroe County MI all of my 60+ years I rode the school bus with 2 Custer girls. One is even still a FB friend. I used to hold my long hippi hair so they could not scalp me (in good fun). The Custer statue in Monroe is controversial but it is for his Civil War battles. I always wished some tribe would buy land across the street and build bronze statues with warriors firing arrows toward the Custer statue. One time I remember someone putting a gag arrow a top Custer so it went in one side and out the other.

  • @angelasieg5099
    @angelasieg509910 ай бұрын

    I was in middle and high school in the 1980s. My textbooks called it the Battle Horn and Massacre at Wonded Knee. I was a history buff even as a teen. I found out the truth in my own books. My history teacher didn't like it much when I contradicted him.

  • @jackreisewitz6632

    @jackreisewitz6632

    9 ай бұрын

    Good for you !!! Have the courage to not believe something just because you were told to.

  • @gaoxiaen1
    @gaoxiaen110 ай бұрын

    I read "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" when I was thirteen. That's part of the US history that I remember. Custer and the violations of treaties, reservations, etc... were never mentioned in history class. Neither was the internment of Japanese-Americans in WWII. I didn't find out about that until I was in college, and it wasn't part of the history class I was taking. I happened upon it in the library, and wrote a term paper about it.

  • @ComradeHellas

    @ComradeHellas

    10 ай бұрын

    interesting

  • @runrig97

    @runrig97

    10 ай бұрын

    I read that...and also watched Little Big Man, which may have been more entertaining than historical, but I think it portrayed the gist of "Custer's Last Stand" fairly.

  • @marksteiner3810

    @marksteiner3810

    10 ай бұрын

    Maybe in your research you read of Colorado governor Ralph Carr, a Republican, whose political career was destroyed doing something honorable: opposing FDR and speaking up for Japanese-Americans who were interned because they were unpopular, having Japanese surnames. Some were agrarian, growing cantaloupes near Rocky Ford, CO. There is a monument in downtown Denver honoring his efforts to assist these displaced Americans 1941-45. It is called Sakura Square, near 18th & Larimer.

  • @retriever19golden55

    @retriever19golden55

    10 ай бұрын

    Just remember that Custer didn't decide the US government's policy towards the Natives. Those responsible were the wealthy and powerful men back East, who urged an end to the "Indian problem" and used their influence in the government to achieve it. They wanted the West settled so they could make money off it without ever setting foot there. The policies which led to broken treaties, rampant land theft, indiscriminate killing of Natives whether friend or foe, etc., were all in the name of greed, while those who died were Natives, soldiers, and poor immigrants looking for a better life. Many soldiers were also recent immigrants, unable to find other work in the recession following the Panic of '73 (another financial disaster for the whole country caused by bankers and financiers in a climate of unregulated greed...sound familiar?).

  • @marksteiner3810

    @marksteiner3810

    10 ай бұрын

    @@retriever19golden55 Indeed, and well put. The greed factor did not stop with native Americans and ordinary citizens. There was hard wealth being mined from South Dakota, Colorado and elsewhere out West. The eastern bankers/financiers would not tolerate a wealth transfer from east to west, and seeing their political and power base from NYC, etc., relocated to someplace like Denver. The march to un-Constitutional funny money was underway by 1893, with a panic and the Silver Act, effectively reducing the value of this mint-able metal by 60% ( US Mint still functions in Denver). With this most silver mines in Colorado shut down or reduced production gradually. The narrow-gauge railroads serving the mines shut down when there was no ore rock to haul. And later, in 1913, the Federal Reserve Act, Congress tossing its Constitutional authority to regulate the value of money, 16th Amendment income tax in 1916, and Nixon replacing the dollar from a gold standard with empty promises in 1971. Once again, as you said, greed governed.

  • @MuckoMan
    @MuckoMan10 ай бұрын

    I am 55. I thought I was going to see that Custer was a hero with this video. Instead I learned nothing new. Maybe this video was made by someone who just found out who Custer was and thought they found something new. Go West Young Man!

  • @auchenshoogle7233
    @auchenshoogle723310 ай бұрын

    Benteen & Reno were Rorke's drift to Custer's Isandllwana.

  • @63DW89A
    @63DW89A9 ай бұрын

    Custer made the fatal mistake of not trusting his intelligence information and ASSUMING that he and his tactics would prevail. His Indian Scouts had already informed him of the massive Indian force in front of him, yet Custer arrogantly thought he knew better than the Scouts who had actually observed the force strength they reported to Custer. The standing plan by General's Terry and Crook were for all U.S. Army forces to converge on the Little Bighorn area around June 26 to tactically envelope the large Indian Forces. Custer was ordered forward on a reconnaissance probe, with standing orders to pursue if possible, but with the option to tactically withdraw in the face of superior numbers. It would have not only been been a sound military doctrine move for Custer to halt the scouting mission, it would have been the responsible command decision to halt and then deploy small scouting parties to observe and report back the deployment of the Indian Forces, while dispatching regular couriers to Gen Terry to keep an up to date view for Terry of the developing situation as the larger forces approached the Little Bighorn. We can never know what was in Custer's mind on June 25th as he deployed his forces. But we do know from his past history that he was a bit of a publicity hound. And those say he was seeking glory in advance of a future political career may not be too far off base.

  • @carlinglin7289
    @carlinglin72899 ай бұрын

    The book "Centennial Campaign: The Sioux War of 1876" by John S. Gray gives a very good account of the battle, what led up to it and the aftermath. Custer made the fatal mistakes of not understanding the Indians' intentions and capabilities. Bands of Indians had been leaving the reservations to join bands that had not gone to the reservations and the Army was sent out to force them all back onto the reservations. Custer assumed that the Indians were dispersing to avoid the Army. He didn't understand that they were actually gathering, even when his Crow scouts told him so. He apparently thought he came upon a relatively small village and in a hurry to attack before they could escape, so he failed to do a proper reconnaissance before charging in. Pretty much a textbook case of what not to do.

  • @gumboclaymation7885
    @gumboclaymation788511 ай бұрын

    Custer was foolhardy. That he was brave is not up to dispute. General tactical doctrine is to not divide your forces in the face of a numerically superior foe. Though R.E. Lee may have used this to some effect during the American Civil war, this doctrine probably still holds true today. Perhaps Custers arrogance likely led to his slaughter. Custers forces were tired and divided in the face of a numerical superior enemy. In light of the empirical exhaustive study of this battle, it is not a stretch to say that the battle should be renamed to the victors. Not Custers Last Stand. To the victors go the spoils (a poor statement as the victors eventually got nothing more but continual persecution and degradation). The First Nations people of the tribes involved should justly be proud and remember this for the victory that they achieved.

  • @ccrider3435

    @ccrider3435

    11 ай бұрын

    ''That he was brave is not up to dispute.'' lol In furtherance of his diabolical evils, he was going to kidnap and kill the defender's ambushed women & children, who's land he was stealing.

  • @charleshayes2528

    @charleshayes2528

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ccrider3435 Personal courage is not the same as moral goodness. A person can be kind and honest and still be cowardly, a cruel man can be courageous. Hermann Goering was an air ace in the First World War, for example. Plenty of soldiers have shown personal bravery when faced with danger and also have shown immense cruelty when dealing with defeated enemies. So, I have no liking for Custer, at all. However, he seems to have been personally fearless whilst being reckless with the lives of his men.

  • @stewartmillen7708

    @stewartmillen7708

    11 ай бұрын

    His luck finally ran out.

  • @gumboclaymation7885

    @gumboclaymation7885

    11 ай бұрын

    @@stewartmillen7708 Karma is a bitch that way.

  • @mordechai-

    @mordechai-

    10 ай бұрын

    George Washington at one point also divided his army against a more powerful force, and somehow made it work Shrug.

  • @williamfleckles
    @williamfleckles5 ай бұрын

    I'm in my seventies, grew up in Chicago area. I was (am) a big history buff. What I was taught in the public elementary school was that Custer and the horse soldiers were heroes. A couple of my teachers even referred me to various books which contained a much more accurate depiction of how badly we treated the Native Americans. By the time I was In junior high and high schools, I had researched the "wild West" myself and discovered how flawed and/or evasive my earlier lessons had been. Our cinema also has to shoulder a portion of the blame for our misconceptions. It is a shame that this country has not done more to redress the crimes we committed. I came to realize that what happened here in North America happened all over the world when Europeans began their invasions- Oh, excuse me, expansions into the rest of the world, although we were not the first or only race of mankind to do this evil. Thank you for posting this.

  • @davidbaer4388

    @davidbaer4388

    4 ай бұрын

    I, too, am in my 70’s. During my formative years - in grade school and middle school (aka junior high as it was known then), Custer was referred to as a hero. It was not until college, in the early 70’s that I was exposed to a more accurate account.

  • @wolfetom10
    @wolfetom1010 ай бұрын

    This video is predicated on a historical fiction which went out of fashion at least 50 years ago. Wow, what a news flash.

  • @brian78045
    @brian780459 ай бұрын

    The battle didn't take place in the Black Hills, nor anywhere on the Sioux reservation in South Dakota, it took place on the Crow Reservation in Montana, at the Little Bighorn River. And the Sioux didn't leave the reservation because of mining, they left because the mining was contaminating their water. However, that really doesn't explain why the Sioux left the reservation, since the reservation at the time was all of western South Dakota, with clean water sources elsewhere on the reservation.

  • @bobwelke3308
    @bobwelke330810 ай бұрын

    I'm 76 years old. I was never taught that Custer was a hero. I was taught that he was an idiot.

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    Movie-"Little Big Man" kzread.info/dash/bejne/Zpx-m8ugoZTgips.html

  • @MrStaybrown

    @MrStaybrown

    10 ай бұрын

    So was Kit Carson.

  • @twistedlimb4053

    @twistedlimb4053

    10 ай бұрын

    The inspiration for Green Day's "American Idiot"

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    @@twistedlimb4053 One of the worst bands ever.

  • @Flynn1059

    @Flynn1059

    6 ай бұрын

    Then you were taught wrong.

  • @dannyhernandez1212
    @dannyhernandez121210 ай бұрын

    The TV miniseries Son of the Morning Star still has the most accurate portrayal of the Battle of the Little Bighorn put on film.

  • @Ospery157
    @Ospery1576 ай бұрын

    If you visit Custer's Last Stand they tell you he ignored his Crow Scouts warnings that there was a large group of Lakota along the Big Horn Valley. And Custer's response was leaving his gatling guns and supply lines behind, split his forces up and ran straight into a hornet's nest. My father had no respect for him and told us many times including there "he deserved what he got". Custer was dead last in his West Point Class of 1861 and the only thing that saved him from not being expelled was the Civil War. And my father also graduated from West Point, in 1951, and told us how Custer led was taught of what not to do in combat.

  • @RANDALLBRIGGS
    @RANDALLBRIGGS5 ай бұрын

    I've never thought or heard that Custer was attacked by the Sioux. He tried to launch an attack on a village that contained far too many warriors for him to overcome. This video might have been right 100 years ago, but it does not correctly describe how the Battle of the Little Bighorn has been portrayed for the last 50+ years.

  • @brucekuehn4031
    @brucekuehn403110 ай бұрын

    There have been many books written about Custer and Little Big Horn, but I’ve read only a couple so I’m no expert. I will say though that if 268 members of the US Army were killed in one battle today, it would still have major impact. Another thing was that the battle on June 25 and 26, 1876 was only reported out on July 6th, communications being what they were from that remote territory. This was only days after the nation’s first centennial celebration. The news hit hard. I would also encourage anyone visiting the Black Hills to go see the Crazy Horse Memorial which is still being carved and dwarfs the faces of Mt Rushmore.

  • @davisworth5114

    @davisworth5114

    9 ай бұрын

    Natives spread the news of the battle by smoke signals, and Natives on the East Coast knew of it before the US government did.

  • @raymondblanton9749
    @raymondblanton974910 ай бұрын

    Time, like other commenters before me I'm in my late sixties and never, ever heard anything like what this lady says 'we are learned'. She's creating her own narrative and then 'debunking' it. The fact that you know she's doing this and provide a platform for it to happen speaks volumes about you.

  • @leonardomoore1868

    @leonardomoore1868

    6 ай бұрын

    @raymondblanton9749 and u probably think Custer was a Saint and hero.

  • @marlonmoncrieffe0728

    @marlonmoncrieffe0728

    4 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU! I am glad so many people aren't falling for this!

  • @glenlivett78
    @glenlivett785 ай бұрын

    I grew up in the 80's and Custer's Last Stand was always taught as a case study of hubris and arrogance. We even got to calling it "the battle of the greasy grass" because that is how the natives referred to it, and they were the ones that won. The "Custer was ambushed and overwhelmed and died a hero's death" narrative died out in the Gilded Age, many of Custer's contemporaries condemned him as a narcissistic butcher. The only people that think the way she is accusing us of are the idiots who are products of American universities that arrived at college probably never hearing the name "battle of the little big horn" and are introduced to him by big brain professor guy telling them "everything you heard is a lie" followed by the false equivalency tactic of claiming everyone is as dumb as them and thinks we are fools that think the Custer myth was ever true.

  • @raggedyman2257
    @raggedyman225711 ай бұрын

    Who on earth has taught it was a sneak attack?

  • @jrcorsey
    @jrcorsey10 ай бұрын

    This video argues vigorously against a complete straw man. No American born after 1950 heard a good word about Custer in school, or missed hearing condemnation of the US government's failure to uphold Indian treaties. Contemptuous misinformation like this is why nobody should take Time seriously anymore.

  • @Dan_Boston
    @Dan_Boston11 ай бұрын

    I knew some of this. The details of this battle, specifically the aftermath, are gruesome.

  • @shooter853
    @shooter85311 ай бұрын

    I don't remember covering "Custer Last Stand" in school history. Neither grade school nor high school.

  • @davidmdyer838
    @davidmdyer83810 ай бұрын

    I don't think any of us has been taught Custer was killed in a sneak attack.

  • @robertcastro8435
    @robertcastro843511 ай бұрын

    Remember when Custer graduated last at West Point that most of the southern cadets had already left to enlist in their states army. Had they not left, Custer may not have graduated last. This may be a skewed figure. One of the South's best general, Lee's right hand man, James Longstreet, graduated near the bottom of his class.

  • @charleshayes2528

    @charleshayes2528

    11 ай бұрын

    @robertcastro8435 That's a valid point, but it assumes that some of the Southern cadets were less bright than Custer. Of course, they may have been. But does anyone have access to their prior academic record to indicate whether they were or were not better students than Custer? I am not a Custer expert, but his whole demeanour at West Point and his later behaviour don't convince me that he was academically inclined or even particularly intelligent.

  • @mordechai-

    @mordechai-

    10 ай бұрын

    Longstreet was a fool, but Lee was a forgiving man.

  • @retriever19golden55

    @retriever19golden55

    10 ай бұрын

    West Point was even more demanding then than it is now; very difficult to gain admission, even more difficult to complete. Out of more than 130 applicants Custer's year, only 68 passed the entrance exam. For a working class boy from the Midwest to pass it while upper class boys with extensive education sometimes failed was quite a feat for Custer (especially since the Congressman who appointed him was a Whig and Custer's family was Democrat; the appointments generally are politically compatible). Of those, only 34 managed to graduate, though to be fair, some were Southern boys who left. Damn few of the people who point out the "last in his class" crap would last at a week even at the modern West Point. Stonewall Jackson flunked the exam the first time he took it. George Pickett was also last. Lewis Armistead struggled academically, and finally was tossed out after breaking a plate over Jubal Early's head. Ulysses Grant was in the bottom quarter of his class (although I believe he still holds the record for the highest jump on a horse there). Class standing was not an accurate predictor of military success; many who graduated low or last were very successful afterwards due to their demonstrated willingness to think independently.

  • @jimiverson3085
    @jimiverson308511 ай бұрын

    Not sure about the theme here. I've known for 50 years that Custer died because he made a gross tactical mistake of splitting his regiment in the face of an opponent of unknown power, who turned out be be a much larger force. Not to mention the Native American saying of the time, "Custer had it coming." And based on his past history, that was true.

  • @alphalunamare

    @alphalunamare

    11 ай бұрын

    Also he had so grossly failed to inculcate any sense of a resilient line of command amongst his officers.

  • @jimiverson3085

    @jimiverson3085

    11 ай бұрын

    @@alphalunamare With Custer, it was all about Custer. He was the star of his own movie and everyone else was just a walk-on.

  • @haroldthatcher2517

    @haroldthatcher2517

    2 ай бұрын

    The troops were poorly armed and trained. Custer had turned down a offer of Gatling guns. The battle would have had a far diffrent outcome if he had those guns. The indians were useing repeater rifles. not just bows and arrows.

  • @bruceulrich1231
    @bruceulrich12315 ай бұрын

    Nobody suggests Custer's army was tricked or ambushed. I've never even heard this narrative. For the 50 years I've been alive and able to hear this story it has always been described as an act of hubris of an overconfident leader. A battle lost.

  • @alfredleadbeaterjr.6053
    @alfredleadbeaterjr.605318 күн бұрын

    Long ago, while doing research in a library, I read the war records written by Civil War Union Army officers and found that some wanted to court martial Custer for his attacks which plunged his little cavalry unit headlong into skirmishes where he was outnumber. These attacks were small affairs against isolated Confederate positions but they built Custer's reputation in the news papers, and his popularity protected him. rHowever, it was easy to see where his tactics would someday lead.

  • @jerrykanipe732
    @jerrykanipe73211 ай бұрын

    sorry to burst your bubble but everything you said has been common knowledge decades, In fact I seem to know about it than you do.

  • @boydmccollum692
    @boydmccollum69211 ай бұрын

    I thought everyone knew the actual history.

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    I didn't.

  • @DavidFell
    @DavidFell10 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. When I was four years old in 1962, we moved into a nice but old apartment building. I remember being told at the time: “it was built four years after Custer’s last stand.” I never really gave it much thought.

  • @mrcpaddler
    @mrcpaddlerАй бұрын

    Two factors - actually people - cemented Custer's defeat. Reno and Benteen. Reno lost his nerve and retreated, thereby allowing Custer to be flanked. Benteen betrayed Custer by purposely holding back reinforcements, even after receiving orders to move up quickly. He hung him out to dry. Captain Weir wanted to help, but Benteen help him back.

  • @alvarhanso6310
    @alvarhanso631010 ай бұрын

    Growing up in the 80s, I never heard of Custer as a hero. I was surprised to learn in AP US History that he was the youngest general in the history of the US, but my teacher also told us that he was demoted due to his recklessness and egomania. When we got to Little Big Horn, he picked up on his search for glory after the Civil War and that recklessness persisted and led to his getting his entire company wiped out. So, I don't think that he's been controversially taught as a hero or anything. I get that Little Big Horn provided the impetus for an entire War on Native Peoples, but I think US History has largely been teaching Custer correctly. The rest of the myths surrounding the West are far more pervasive, and far more pernicious, as well as persistent.

  • @gregzeigler3850

    @gregzeigler3850

    10 ай бұрын

    He was demoted because the Civil War was over, The next step down was to Colonel. He wasn't the only officer to step back in rank. Major Reno was a brevet brigadier general during the Civil War. Captain Benteen was a Lt. Colonel during the Civil War.Your history teacher wasn't very good. It was a common military tactic to split your army into three smaller armies in the face of a much larger force. The idea behind such, was the army in the middle was to take the brunt of the force and hold, until a flanking motion could be used(in this case Custer capturing escaping women and children). This was repeatedly done by Robert E. Lee with success(splitting his army into 3). Where Custer failed was 1. The army in the middle did not hold. and 2. Custer failed to get his hostages(see 1). Furthermore, the Sioux stole that land from the Crow, thus they really weren't "defending their land". The myths taught in today's schools in the name of "inclusion" are horrifying with devastating results(just look at the "wokeism" of today and the destruction of our nation).

  • @thatguyinelnorte

    @thatguyinelnorte

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gregzeigler3850 @alvarhanso6310 lookup "Brevet"

  • @karenwaddell9396

    @karenwaddell9396

    5 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@gregzeigler3850 I was with til your last sentence. Blaming inclusion and wokeism, both modern trigger terms is so silly.

  • @JTL1776
    @JTL177611 ай бұрын

    Wrong for 150 years. You're very wrong. My great grandparents were told in school that the battle of little big horn was under complicated circumstances.

  • @JTL1776

    @JTL1776

    11 ай бұрын

    And yes, I will say complicated. Because Custer was not wrong to defend his fellow Americans the settlers from native attack. Now was he legally wrong, yes, but morally, he was obligated to defend the American settlers.

  • @JTL1776

    @JTL1776

    11 ай бұрын

    We must teach both sides equally. As a young man who is active in serving and protecting the people and a descendant of George Clymer Pennsylvanian, Founding Father, and Abolitionist. History is not black and white. History is shades of Grey on all sides. There is no good and bad only right and wrong based on the choices you must make for you, your family, your country, your God.

  • @JohnNewkirk1
    @JohnNewkirk110 ай бұрын

    After watching this, I have to say I'm glad I had the history teachers that I had. They went far beyond the text books and challenged the popular myths, giving our young minds the opportunity to question what was in the text.

  • @christopherbaucom2871
    @christopherbaucom287110 ай бұрын

    I don't know who has gotten it wrong for 150 years. I've known the basic facts of Custer's failure since I was in school during the 1960's & 70's.

  • @emeraldearth7
    @emeraldearth710 ай бұрын

    Thank you for providing a more accurate perspective on the actual circumstances & following mythology of this battle. I served in 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry 40 years ago in Germany- the unit that was born from Custer’s defeated C Troop. We were fully indoctrinated on the “heroics” of Col. Custer & we celebrated “Garryowen Day” each June 25th by eating beans, bacon & biscuits before marching to a full squadron formation where we heard a rousing motivational speech about the sacrifices & heroics of Custer & his men. A few years after leaving the Army I had the opportunity to visit the Little Big Horn battlefield & after walking it for several hours I concluded that there was no “last stand” as portrayed in our history books & paintings. Custer’s men quickly scattered instead of forming an organized skirmish line, which is apparent by the locations of the markers spread out all over the hill. Custer was an egotistical narcissist & should have been posthumously charged for his failure to follow sound tactical doctrine & lack of concern for the welfare of the men he commanded. The American Hero created by this battle should have been Sitting Bull as he rapidly executed & lead a completely successful defense of the men, women & children under his protection. Custer was simply a maniacal fool who got what he deserved & should have been branded as such for leading more than 250 men to their premature, worthless deaths.

  • @mordechai-

    @mordechai-

    10 ай бұрын

    It breaks my heart to do so, but I gotta agree with you.

  • @mglenn7092

    @mglenn7092

    10 ай бұрын

    If 7th Cav wants to remember “heroes”, maybe they should be celebrating Marcus Reno and Frederick Benteen, who led the surviving portions of the 7th Cavalry (more than half the total force) rather than Custer and the 5 companies he led to their deaths. At least those two did something right in the vicinity of the Little Big Horn. I never served in the Cav, but I did serve in the Army and was stationed at Fort Riley for several years. For another wrongful history shocker, at Fort Riley there is a monument to the “brave” soldiers of the 7th Cavalry who “died heroically in combat” at the “battle” of Wounded Knee (most of whom were actually killed by friendly fire while perpetrating the massacre). Not something I think the Army should be celebrating.

  • @MJ-we9vu

    @MJ-we9vu

    9 ай бұрын

    Actually, the 7th had established a defensive position at Calhoun Hill in the Keogh sector while Custer moved further north to try and capture hostages. The defensive position held for quite some time until Calhoun was flanked and Crazy Horse broke the position with a charge. The survivors of the Keogh sector fled towards Last Stand Hill where they met up with Custer who was apparently moving to reunite with Keogh and await the arrival of Benteen's battalion. The fight on Last Stand Hill would have been quick although Custer's troops did make some effort to organize a defense by using their horses as breastworks. You give entirely too much credit to Sitting Bull, however. He was little more than a cheerleader encouraging the young men to go fight. There was no great strategy on the Native American side. The Indians didn't fight that way. They fought as individuals or small groups, not in an organized structure like the cavalry.

  • @baurdt
    @baurdt11 ай бұрын

    Wow! In the 70s when I was taught this in more depth a History of the West HS class, it was taught that Custer was not the hero and in fact lead his unit into a defeat. Custer mostly knew what he was up against, but his ego still made him carry through honestly thinking he could pull it off. Funny how we slowly revise history, or were we in the minority and taught what did happen instead?

  • @Ahjile

    @Ahjile

    10 ай бұрын

    You were definitely in the majority. This video was made by idiots.

  • @gregzeigler3850

    @gregzeigler3850

    10 ай бұрын

    It was a common military tactic to split your army into three smaller armies in the face of a much larger force. The idea behind such, was the army in the middle was to take the brunt of the force and hold, until a flanking motion could be used(in this case Custer capturing escaping women and children). This was repeatedly done by Robert E. Lee with success(splitting his army into 3). Where Custer failed was 1. The army in the middle did not hold. and 2. Custer failed to get his hostages(see 1).

  • @davisworth5114

    @davisworth5114

    9 ай бұрын

    Custer DID NOT KNOW that there were 10,000 natives in their camp on the Little Big Horn.

  • @ScottGrow117
    @ScottGrow1175 ай бұрын

    My uncle studied Battle of Little Bighorn for his entire life. He and many other amateur historians knew better than the official story for a very long time. They talked to families of Lakota and Cheyenne warriors who were there.

  • @tembry6886
    @tembry68868 ай бұрын

    Sitting Bull "You came to us that day, we did not come to you"

  • @PikeBishop65
    @PikeBishop6510 ай бұрын

    Wow, I would never want to be taught by Lindsay Marshall! Almost turned the video off right there. I am 57 years old and no one was ever taught in schools that Custer was attacked in a "sneak attack." How does she get such basic historical facts wrong? We learned that Custer behaved recklessly, failed to listen to his scouts and divided his already outnumbered force in enemy territory without knowing the disposition of the Indian forces. We learned that he brought on his own defeat! I don't know where she ever got idea!

  • @herchelleonwood7463

    @herchelleonwood7463

    10 ай бұрын

    yep the history books never lie,, btw slavery was really just vocational training..

  • @caspermilquetoast411

    @caspermilquetoast411

    5 ай бұрын

    She's woke.

  • @charleshayes2528
    @charleshayes252811 ай бұрын

    As a person living in the UK, I have been aware of the historical facts about Custer for decades - despite being brought up on Errol Flynn movies as a child. I was also exposed to, at least, some critical thinking when looking at British history, so that I was made aware of some of the darker aspects of Britain's imperial and colonial past. I am not saying this to bash the USA nor to promote the UK, but in order to ask a question. Britain's past is contested, with some wanting to see only the bad side while others want to only focus on the good, even to the extent of denying some of the darker moments. Nevertheless, there is a contest, the past is discussed and various views are put forward. So, why is it so difficult for the USA to do the same, to have an open discussion about the past and what really happened, rather than promoting a mythical view of events? In my early adulthood, I was aware of the beginnings of a revision of the heroic view of Custer, so that films were beginning to show another side to the man and to events. (This is not to say that those films, necessarily, were any more nuanced or realistic than the earlier, mythic, versions.) However, in the decades since, there seems to be a regression, such that even relatively recent historical events, e.g.; surrounding the Second World War, are being represented in mythic terms, which no longer represent history as it happened. While I used to laugh at Errol Flynn (again) apparently winning the war for the USA without a single British or British Empire soldier in sight, I found it more disturbing to see a retelling of Pearl Harbour which try to turn that tragic event into almost a heroic victory. At the time of the making of "Pearl Harbor" (2001) I read a review that implied that American audiences would not accept a film that was more accurate, as they could not think of America as anything other than winning and successful. I do not deny that British films (and others) sometimes overly fictionalise the lives of famous individuals, for example "The Imitation Game" (2014) and its portrayal of Alan Turing. However, this is driven by a different agenda than simply creating a heroic past for the nation.

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    Having watched "Pearl Harbor", I didn't get the feeling the Americans won anything on December 7 except great respect later for the bravery shown by many of the defenders. It was a horrific defeat and scene after scene in the movie depicted that about as well as they could have. Watch the American pilots in those P-40s (I think) did not supplant the tremendous losses clearly shown in other parts of the movie.

  • @janetcohen9190

    @janetcohen9190

    11 ай бұрын

    The narrative about the Spanish Armada 1588 from English perspective is an example of how propaganda, 'official' / 'pop-culture' storylines can completely cloud and distort, and contradict historical facts. The 1776 British Colonists rebellion against UK 'official' and pop-culture narrative is very flawed and omits numerous facts. But is a fine myth story toward utopia for both UK and US. There are abundant stories to sell ideas and myths in all countries. Plenty propaganda and venues to monger with too in our time. Of late becoming worse with efforts to eradicate facts instead of being realistic and balanced so to avoid being condemned to repeat past.

  • @gaoxiaen1

    @gaoxiaen1

    10 ай бұрын

    I've never seen a movie portraying the Peal Harbor attack as a victory. Maybe you could suggest one.

  • @charleshayes2528

    @charleshayes2528

    10 ай бұрын

    @@normanacree1635 Yes, it was horrific, but my comments weren't merely my own. Some of the criticisms of the movie came from American critics and from veterans. Also, I intended those comments to be taken with the increasing tendency of American films to focus only on America and the apparent unwillingness of audiences to have historically accurate storytelling. The fictional account of America finding the Enigma machine is a case in point. I want to make it clear, I have nothing but respect for those who were at Pearl Harbor and my comments are about the film and modern attitudes to it and not the event itself.

  • @Smog104
    @Smog10410 ай бұрын

    Custer was a hero of mine when I was 5 years old! When I grew up I thought you bastard !!

  • @andrewsmith9174
    @andrewsmith917410 ай бұрын

    The simple explanation is: 1) people got their information from limited and not easily fact checked sources. 2) Custer did a thing of notoriety in the Civil War, but was struggling to keep himself in the limelight. 3) the US govt gave the Black Hills to the native Americans. Then they discovered gold and the impact created a reasonable cause of action to the movers and shakers that had influence. Remember kids, the extremely weathly had A LOT of influence if they could make the case for “it’s for the good of the country…” (think railroads, the Banana Wars, etc). 4) Custer was chomping at the bit to get involved in something to prop him up post war, so there he is. A shit commander looking for glory, and maybe a piece of that gold for his trouble. 5) after the disaster, his wife was huge in keeping his name out there and making sure the narrative is the “right” one. It’s kind of the same with all “heroes”. We don’t like knowing they were cheaters, liars, unfaithful, or otherwise flawed. Look at the cult of personality around Bruce Lee. Same idea.

  • @firechiefsampolitano1541
    @firechiefsampolitano154111 ай бұрын

    Clearly the story you say people "know" about this event must be known by a handful of people because that's not what I was taught in elementary school in the 1960s. Even movies from the 50s They Died With Their Boots On clearly shows that there was gold in the Black Hills and people violated the treaty's with the natives. Custer was vain and we knew that too.. your peddling a fake story about what people really think that happened. I guess American education has sunk so far since the 60s that people are fed lies and not true history.

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    What makes you think this stuff is taught in schools? Have you been talking to Desantis? come on, man.

  • @clydekimsey7503
    @clydekimsey750311 ай бұрын

    No, we didn't get it wrong. Custer has always been seen as a fool

  • @KokowaSarunoKuniDesu
    @KokowaSarunoKuniDesu10 ай бұрын

    The background soundtrack is intensely irritating. The arguments of the interlocutors are compelling enough without it. I fail to see what such distracting sound is intended to add.

  • @wyojohn
    @wyojohn10 ай бұрын

    I grew up in the 70's not far from the battlefield, and no one that I knew thought Custer was a hero. Plus, when you go visit there, you learn about Reno and Benteen. Nobody ever talks about them. And if you want to read about another flawed officer, look up the Fetterman Fight. Supposedly, he bragged he could take on the whole Sioux nation with 80 men. Oops!

  • @woodrowmagnus2535

    @woodrowmagnus2535

    5 ай бұрын

    And now we have another Fetterman in the American government, and he's just as stupid as this cavalry man Fetterman was.

  • @johnsmithSongbird
    @johnsmithSongbird11 ай бұрын

    I believe you are right I grew up in a school and we were told what a foolish thing Custer did In a report I read in 1962 it said Custer attacked the village shooting men women children Then rode into the massive warriors waiting for him As a boy I was told how foolish he picked on a tribe much larger than he figured

  • @thetruthseeker5549
    @thetruthseeker55495 ай бұрын

    I've been a soldier in combat- thinking of the Young men I saw, an Infantry or Cavalry soldier who faces the deprivation of soldiering in the field every day, and then serves and stands by his brothers in battle, does not need a last stand to be a hero. Another thought, regarding the attacking of indian camps and the taking prisoner of women and children, the Army understood this and we practice it today. When a SWAT team goes into a home, they use speed, surprise, and violence of action to quickly take complete control of all involved, innocent or guilty. The theory is that this will reduce the risk and everyone will be safer the sooner the location is dominated. Charging indian camps was not a Custer thing, it was an Army doctrine that developed and was used whenever possible to end operations as quickly and decisevely as possible. Same idea today, in civilian as well as military apllications

  • @extraterrestrialfascisti7625
    @extraterrestrialfascisti7625Ай бұрын

    To prevent the Lakota from scattering and making it nearly impossible to defeat is the reason Custer attempted to capture the camps at the Little Big Horn. Capturing the women and children was not an act of genocide but it was to end the fighting as in the past when the women and children were captured the warriors quit fighting. Traditionally, the Indians would flee rather than stand and fight a large US army force. At the battle of the Rosebud and Little Big Horn the Lakota surprised the army by standing and fighting. As far as Custer's military competence he had his critics within/without the 7th cavalry. Most of the US army officers of the west were old and lethargic. Custer was younger and energetic like many of his peers Ranald Mackenzie and Wesley Merritt and enjoyed success where others failed just by his aggressiveness and determination.

  • @mrkrinkle72
    @mrkrinkle7210 ай бұрын

    Little Big Man is a brilliant movie and a must see! One of Dustin Hoffman's greatest acting jobs and a great cast!

  • @retriever19golden55

    @retriever19golden55

    10 ай бұрын

    The movie has little relation to either historical fact or to the book by Berger it claims to be based on. It's just a movie, not history.

  • @mrkrinkle72

    @mrkrinkle72

    10 ай бұрын

    @@retriever19golden55 so?

  • @safriedrich1631
    @safriedrich163111 ай бұрын

    So many Americans don't realize that Hiltler got the idea of "relocating indigenous people" from their homelands, from what the US government did to Native "Americans".. he just had to give the new location a different name.. instead of "reservations", called them concentration camps

  • @oldhippiejon

    @oldhippiejon

    11 ай бұрын

    The British used the first 'concentration' camps to hold Boar farmers in Natal during the Boar War. The US called them what they were reservations even if they were such camps no fences were erected to my knowledge and a lot of the natives at the BH actually came from them carrying repeat rifles bought at the stores on said camps. If you are going to quot history at least try to get it right.

  • @safriedrich1631

    @safriedrich1631

    11 ай бұрын

    @@oldhippiejon well, the US Government was having Native Peoples "move" to "different locations" soon after the their revolution against the "crown".. which I thought was decades before your Boar War... but you already knew that... didn't you !!

  • @johnbooth3073

    @johnbooth3073

    10 ай бұрын

    @@oldhippiejon The Germans invented Concentration camps in what is now Namibia. They were set up after a policy of extermination of the local population. The survivors were put into these camps and systematically worked to death and purposely given food of only 200 calories per day ( a tenth of what a human needs to live)These pre-date the British ones for the Boers . The Boer camps were not designed to exterminate the local population although many people died within them.

  • @mordechai-

    @mordechai-

    10 ай бұрын

    That idea is as old as the Ancient Assyrian attacks. In -422 BCE, the Assyrian s conquered a lot of Mesopatamia, and moved nations from one country to another. This forced them to learn how to live in the new country, and they couldn't spend much time defending it. The Babylonians assumed that method with some tweaks. The Greeks came and adopted the gods of each country and taught them the Greek gods, making everyone one morass of a culture. It sort of worked. The Romans came and also brought their culture to the lands they conquered, plus a system of offering citizenship to those who earned it. Each civilization had a trick they attempted to us to gather in their captives.

  • @terrysellers6712
    @terrysellers671210 ай бұрын

    What the younger generations don't realize is when I was in elementary school, a teacher told us the facts about last stand! And a whole lot of true history has been deleted in the last 30 years.

  • @jean-marcevans1439
    @jean-marcevans14397 ай бұрын

    I’m in the UK and I’ve never heard this version. I’ve always thought that Custer was in the wrong since reading Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee about 40 years ago and watching the film Soldier Blue. This video is making a narrative that died decades ago.

  • @rubennasser6907
    @rubennasser690711 ай бұрын

    Excellent! History should be told as it is. A good article on the Alamo would be welcome.

  • @mac2phin
    @mac2phin11 ай бұрын

    Custer finished last in his West Point class of 35.

  • @LarryjB53

    @LarryjB53

    11 ай бұрын

    And was promoted to General at the age of 25

  • @travisneighbors3691

    @travisneighbors3691

    10 ай бұрын

    Dumbest of the smartest? Is that better than being smartest of the learning disabled kids?

  • @retriever19golden55
    @retriever19golden5510 ай бұрын

    Post Civil War, Custer's rank was Lt. Colonel. He was not in charge of the Dakota column on the expedition to Little Big Horn, General Alfred Terry was. Custer signed no treaties, broke no treaties, and certainly didn't set policy for the treatment of Native peoples. On all occasions, he was under orders from President Grant through General Sherman, head of the war department. In fact, he nearly derailed his career when he testified to the Clymer Committee concerning the corruption of Indian agents and suppliers, who were pocketing money earmarked for food and other supplies to be provided to Natives on reservations. These people were being starved to death with inadequate amounts of rotting meat and weevily corn...they were forced to leave and fight back. Regular Army officers such as Crook, Mackenzie, Gibbon, and Custer all knew starving the Natives would lead to conflict and bloodshed, and the deaths of settlers, soldiers, and Natives alike. On some occasions all those men fed vanquished tribes people out of their own troops' stores.

  • @howarddittrich157
    @howarddittrich15710 ай бұрын

    “I think that the story that emerges as Custer as a hero”. Hmm, what I learned in grade school was that Custer was an arrogant idiot that commented a terrible blunder and got his troops killed.

  • @philipcone357
    @philipcone35711 ай бұрын

    Actually the concentration camps come directly from the American war in the Philippines. As to Custer dividing his force, yes Lee did that against a superior sized Union army. The reason it worked is the Union commander thought Lee’s force was much larger than it was. Had the Union commander, Hooker I believe been more aggressive the gamble may have failed. This force was aggressive.

  • @guitarlessonswith4480
    @guitarlessonswith448011 ай бұрын

    In this video I hear one view point speaking as though they are 100% accurate about another view point who likewise believed they were 100% accurate. The reality is, the truth falls somewhere in between the two.

  • @HeyMykee

    @HeyMykee

    11 ай бұрын

    But she completely misrepresents the "other viewpoint." I never heard there was a sneak attack on Custer-did you? Where is she pulling this "information" from? She's an activist misrepresenting history and history books for political reasons.

  • @michaelvandamme2694
    @michaelvandamme269410 ай бұрын

    I don’t believe anyone was taught that Custer was the victim of a “sneak attack”. It’s well known that Custer attacked against better judgment and was outnumbered 2 or 3-1. He was also outgunned, soldiers had single shot rifles vs natives with Henry lever action rifles. Almost all us soldiers were killed. That’s the story taught in schools

  • @davemiller6055
    @davemiller605510 ай бұрын

    I'm 55 and I was taught that Custer was overconfident and acted a bit recklessly. That and being outnumbered led to his defeat. I've been to the battlefield and seen how the history is depicted there. They give an objective account. They don't tell you Custer was a great guy minding his own business and that he was the victim of a sneak attack.

  • @rickydaum3818
    @rickydaum381810 ай бұрын

    I’m in my 60s and these people saying they were taught Custer was a flawed commander , I agree with. However the over all narrative in our up bringing was that Colonel Custer was a American hero brave and true. If they say otherwise they are full of crap. Your message is spot on

  • @alanfox4055
    @alanfox405511 ай бұрын

    BS just as I would expect from time

  • @RideGasGas
    @RideGasGas2 ай бұрын

    Saw two recent videos that presented a reasonably compelling case that Custer committed suicide. Had two wounds, one in his shoulder and one in his temple. The bullet recovered from his head wound was a reasonable match for the 41 Colt revolver he was given to try out not long before the battle. That Custer and the US Army were in there violating a recent treaty with native Americans doesn't get enough press. The entire Army command who ordered and participated in the event should be posthumously charged with war crimes.

  • @williamsouden90
    @williamsouden9011 ай бұрын

    I disagree with the representation of how it was taught in school. He was portrayed as an arrogant gloryhound who was outsmarted and outmanouvered. That was taught 40 years ago. Custer was responsible for the gold rush, anyway.

  • @jamesgalloway7453
    @jamesgalloway745311 ай бұрын

    Custer was absolutely a great hero. No amount of spin you put on his character will change my view of this man. Remember at the beginning she briefly mentions his civil war endeavors. Are we to forget those accomplishments? She aldo mentions how Custer would capture women and children. Other officers in his same position would not have been so kind. We know this. Custer was an ally to the natives and they respected him because he was on their side. I think it much more likely that Custer was set up. What better way to get the people behind breaking the treaty with the Lakota. After all they slaughtered an american hero. They should answer for that. No Custer was under orders to go and had no choice. He was promised reinforcement that never came. After the battle the women and children of the Lakota mutilated all the bodies save one. George Custer. Why? Because they respected him and they knew he had been used against them to bring about their downfall. No. Custer was an absolute hero who was betrayed by his own government for the gold in those hills. You're gonna tell me that a man who risked his life to fight for the freedom of others was also some murderous native hater. He wanted nothing but peace with the Lakota so he was standing in the way.

  • @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    @Fire_in_the_Hole_Chiraq

    11 ай бұрын

    Yep! And don't forget ol' Deathwind. Good old Louis Whetzel.

  • @normanacree1635

    @normanacree1635

    11 ай бұрын

    I encourage you to read an accurate biography of Custer. You might change your opinion of him a little bit. Also, there is no proof of whether Custer's body was mutilated or not. Some Native squaws claimed later they had pierced his ears so he could hear better in the afterlife, indicating the Natives did not believe he was listening to their concerns.

  • @jamesgalloway7453

    @jamesgalloway7453

    11 ай бұрын

    I don't think it would change my mind at all. I grew up devouring stories and books on Custer, the civil war and similar topics. Doing this gave me a wider scope and multiple perspectives on these subjects. This also led me to start analyzing these stories to see the reason and truth behind the story being told. For example, why did Lee send his men up that hill in Gettysburg three times? No history book will tell you this. Because those battle hardened rebels under his command could not be allowed to return home. Pure and simple logic. They couldn't go home because they were far too dangerous.

  • @mcgragor1

    @mcgragor1

    4 ай бұрын

    @@jamesgalloway7453 A good book to read is "They Buried My Heart At Wounded Knee" from 1970 I think. I got it at my local library. If I recall there are parts of it that speak of Custer working with the Indians, but other parts where he clearly was wanting to war with them. What we often miss, is that treaty after treaty was broken, there were many revenge killings on both sides (even if the avenged were not involved), and this caused many battles between those who were trying to keep the peace. It's clear in the end though, the Indians were pushed out, taken over, and mistreated as it concerned treaties and such, even though both sides had their issues.

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