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Indian
Side of Little Bighorn
presented
in new book By Richard Pyle
Associated Press, 09/20/99 02:03 NEW YORK (AP)
The faces staring out from the page are leathery, chiseled,
emotionally opaque. The names Goes Ahead, White Man Runs Him, Yellow
Robe, Iron Hawk resonate as war cries and gunfire once did across the
treeless hills of eastern Montana. These Indians were there when Lt.
Col. George Armstrong Custer and some 200 U.S. cavalry troopers met
death at Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876. They were the Crow and
Arikara scouts who rode with Custer and the Sioux and Cheyenne braves
who destroyed him that hot Sunday afternoon.
Just as the outcome permanently tarnished Custer's reputation,
it left the Indians a bitter legacy that for some has lasted 23 years,
says Herman J. Viola, author of a new book that looks at the famous
battle from the Indians' point of view.
"None of the four tribes involved find any comfort in
the events of
1876," says Viola, curator emeritus of the Smithsonian
Institution. "The Crow and Arikara not only feel betrayed by the
government they sought to help, but today they are more often seen as
traitors for helping the cavalry hunt down their traditional
enemies."
Viola continues: "The Cheyenne and
Sioux, on the other hand,
suffered terribly for their victory. In fact, elderly descendants of
the Cheyenne and Sioux who were present at Little Bighorn still fear
some sort of retribution awaits them if their family connection to
Custer's demise is revealed."
Viola's book, 'Little Bighorn Remembered, the Untold Indian Story of Custer's Last Stand,' will appear next month. It includes many obscure and previously unpublished details about the most famous event of the 19th-century Indian wars. Among these are the Cheyenne oral legend that Custer's death was retribution by the Everywhere Spirit or God for breaking a promise never to attack the tribe and that some of Custer's troops may have drunk whiskey just before the battle. The book also includes a new reconstruction of Custer's movements at Little Bighorn by National Park Service archaeologist Douglas Scott and the first publication of all 41 drawings of the battle by Sioux chief Red Horse, which Viola calls a "Native American Bayeux Tapestry." The overriding theme is the conflict among the Plains tribes that transcended war with the Army Crow and Arikara versus their traditional enemies, the Sioux and Cheyenne. "This is not the Indians against the cowboys this is Indians against Indians," Viola said in an interview.
"I am very excited about this book,''
says Joseph Medicine Crow of
Lodge Grass, Mont., a tribal historian who at 86 may be the last
living person to have known anyone present at the battle of Little
Bighorn. Medicine Crow's great-uncle, or 'grandfather in the Indian
way,' was White Man Runs Him, an imposing 6-foot-6 warrior who was
one of the six Crow scouts with Custer that day and survived only
because Custer released the scouts from duty. As a boy, Medicine Crow
listened as White Man Runs Him and four other former scouts told
stories of their relationship with the flamboyant soldier they called
Son of the Morning.
In the book, Medicine Crow says the Crows'
friendly ties with the whites were based on a 100-year-old tribal prophecy
that resistance
meant eventual disaster and an 1825 treaty that was consummated by
the ritual touching of a knife blade to tongues. "This was a sacred
oath that will be kept forever," Medicine Crow says. He adds that in
later years, when asked to help the army fight the Sioux and
Cheyennes, the Crows saw themselves as using rather than being used
by the whites. "Crow survival was at stake. The Crows believed then and
still believe that they honorably used the white man as allies in
their continuing intertribal struggle with their worthy traditional
enemies," Medicine Crow says.
While the Sioux led by the famous Sitting
Bull and Crazy Horse have always overshadowed their Cheyenne allies, the
Arikara are "the
real forgotten people" on the other side, says Viola, although they
lost three scouts killed and the Crows none. Even after 123 years, fear
and suspicion persist, Viola says. "Old, old Indians still are afraid
to talk about Little Bighorn," he says. "They still think the
government is going to punish them. They say, 'you don't know the
government.'"
This is especially true with Cheyennes, who according to rumors
may still have Custer memorabilia paper money, weapons and battlefield
artifacts hidden away, he said. Among the more talkative Cheyennes
was the Rev. Joseph Walks Along, a Mennonite preacher who recalled
his grandfather, Yellow Robe, 12 at the time, saying the Indians
didn't expect a fight until they saw the soldiers weren't carrying a
flag of truce.
"Grandpa told us that prior to the battle, at a different
place,
Custer had told the Cheyennes that as long as the cavalry carried a
white flag and the American flag, they would be coming in peace. On
that day, Custer did not come in peace," said Joseph Walks Along.In
1908, four surviving Custer scouts returned to Little Bighorn with Edward S.
Curtis, a famed scholar-photographer on Indian
culture. Curtis died in 1925, and his unpublished papers were
rediscovered in 1988 by a son, then 95, who sent them to the
Smithsonian. Based on those writings, the Smithsonian's curator
emeritus of military history, James Hutchins, contributes a chapter
to Viola's book. He adds new details to the familiar story of how
Custer divided his force into three parts and ordered his second-in-command,
Major Marcus Reno, to attack the Indian encampment. The Crow
scouts criticized Custer for ignoring their warnings that the Sioux-Cheyenne
enemy were too numerous and for failing to ride to Reno's
aid. When the scouts donned tribal regalia, to die as Indians, Custer
let them go.
As they joined Reno, according to White
Man Runs Him, "we
looked
back and saw Custer still fighting," on a distant slope to the north.
They did not know until later that the sun had set for 'Son Of The
Morning Star'. Three Arikara scouts with Reno were killed, but the
Crows survived. Most continued to serve with the military. While
Custer was acclaimed a fallen hero, Reno was publicly vilified for
his actions at Little Bighorn. Hutchins says Curtis believed the
Crows' account of Custer's action but took the advice of his friend
President Theodore Roosevelt not to publish a story that "makes
Custer out both a traitor and a fool."
"Thirty years after the event it is necessary to be exceedingly
cautious about relying on the memory of any man, Indian or white," Roosevelt
wrote. "Such a space of time is a great breeder of myths." In
a foreword, Gerard Baker, a former Park Service superintendent of the Little
Bighorn battlefield, says modern-day critics who deride
the Crows and Arikaras for siding with the government forget that the
Plains tribes were already at war with each other and some needed
help to survive.
"Indians today often look back at Little Bighorn and see only the harmful results of the Indian alliance with the U.S. Army," writes Baker, whose Indian descendants include Arikara. "Hindsight is always 20-20, but our ancestors did not have crystal balls."
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