Using Cheyenne and Arapaho accounts, Charles J. Brill tells the
story of General George Armstrong Custer's winter campaign on the
southern plains in 1868-69, including his attack in Black Kettle's
village on the snowy backs of the Washita River. Brill's searing
account details the ruthlessness of the U.S. Army's efforts to
punish southern plains tribes for what they considered incessant
raiding and depredation. Brill provides the Indian point of view as
he follows Custer into a battle that remains controversial to the
present day.
In a new foreword to this edition, Mark L. Gardner discusses the
significance of Brill's history-placing it in context with other
Custer and Indian Wars studies-and its Value to scholars and
general readers today. Gardner also provides an overview of the
career of Oklahoma journalist Charles J. Brill, much of whose life
has remained a mystery until now.
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