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"I am an old man, and soon my spirit must leave this earth to join
the spirit of my fathers. Therefore, I shall speak only the truth
in telling what I know of the fight on the Little Bighorn River
where General Custer was killed. Curly, who was with us, will tell
you that I do not lie." So spoke White Man Runs Him, a Crow Indian
who with five other Crow warriors had served as a scout for
Custer's Seventh Cavalry on June 25, 1876, the day of the battle
known to generations of white Americans as "Custer's Last Stand."
They survived the battle, but Custer and more than 250 troopers did
not. Thus their accounts and those of the Lakotas and Cheyennes who
triumphed at Little Bighorn (or Greasy Grass, as it was known to
the Lakotas) offer the only firsthand picture of what happened that
fateful day. These stories-from leaders as renowned as Black Elk
and Sitting Bull, warriors such as Wooden Leg, a Cheyenne woman,
and Arikara and Crow scouts-at last bring one of the most
unforgettable showdowns in American history to vivid, complex,
multifaceted life. Herman J. Viola was director of the National
Anthropological Archives. His many books include Little Bighorn
Remembered: The Untold Indian Story of Custer's Last Stand.
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