The bumper stickers were born before the holiday.
They could be seen on cars coming and going from the Indian reservations in America. They read “Custer died for your sins,” or “Custer wore Arrow Shirts.” And then came the holiday.
The Indian holiday on June 25 marks the 134th anniversary of the thrashing of George Armstrong Custer’s Seventh Cavalry at the Little Big Horn, or Greasy Grass, as the Indians called it. On all of the Sioux Indian reservations in South Dakota it is a statewide holiday. The Cheyenne and the Arapaho, also participants in the great victory, have joined the celebration.
They celebrate the day their ancestors handed the United States Army one of its worst defeats in all of the so-called “Indian Wars.” The Indians called them the “White Man Wars.”
Ironically, Custer considered himself to be a religious man. And yet the fatal charge he made into the valley of the Greasy Grass happened on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. Two hundred and ten American cavalrymen rode to their deaths that day, led by a man who was told by Cheyenne medicine men -- after he slaughtered their kinsmen at the Washita -- that if he ever attempted that feat again, he would surely be killed.
Custer met his demise on June 25, 1876, two years after he discovered gold in the Black Hills, a discovery that precipitated the deadly battles to follow and led to the eventual theft of the He’ Sapa (Black Hills) by the United States government.
As part of the archeological excavations 14 years after the battle, marble markers were set in place to mark where each soldier had fallen. According to the National Park Service, the field was eventually dotted with 252 markers or 42 more than the number of soldiers reportedly killed that day.
The Midwest Archeological Center reported that the archeologists chose to view the battlefield as a crime scene. And by using a combination of forensic techniques, such as studies of firing pin marks on cartridge cases and rifling marks on bullets, they have been able to determine the variety of weapons used in the battle.
Further excavations revealed skull fragments that had been broken while the bone was green indicating what is called “perimortem blunt instrument trauma.” The famous Lakota warrior Black Elk, when describing the final moments of the battle to which he was a witness, said the Indians used hatchets and clubs to finish off the surviving soldiers. The report indicates that the evidence of trauma on the recovered human bone supports Black Elk’s memory of the battle.
In what resembled a segment of the CSI television programs so popular today, forensic science indicated that the troopers of the 7th Cavalry were heavy users of coffee and tobacco. The bones demonstrated that the men led a rugged and hard life indicated by broken bones and significant back problems.
The archeological digs have substantiated much of what we have seen in the movies over the years. Custer did divide his troops into three elements and then subdivided his command into wings, which happened to be an accepted and field tested military tactic that had proven to be quite successful until the Battle of the Greasy Grass.
Often, I have wondered how many places in America celebrate victories over the U.S. Army. Do descendants of the Confederate Army celebrate? But weren’t they also a part of an American army fighting another American army?
The victory by the combined forces of the Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho over Custer’s 7th Cavalry was short and swift. Some Lakota warriors have said it lasted less than 30 minutes. But that battle raised the hackles of white America. The warriors and their families would pay a heavy price for that victory. As punishment and retribution, the three tribes would lose millions of acres of land for having the audacity to stand up and fight for their people and for freedom. If the word “patriots” has meaning, these warriors define it.
Few good things happened to Native Americans in the late 1800s or early 1900s, so this one good memory is firmly planted in the minds of a warrior society and lives on. While the rest of America goes about its business, the people of the Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations will reflect upon their day of glory with cookouts, horse races, dancing and prayers to commemorate a time when they ruled the Great Plains and were praised by Gen. Tecumseh Sherman as “the greatest light cavalry he had ever seen.”
Oh yes! One of the more recent Indian bumper stickers: “Fighting terrorism since 1492.”
Tim Giago, an Oglala Lakota, is the publisher of Native Sun News. He was the
founder and first president of the Native American Journalists Association, the
1985 recipient of the H. L. Mencken Award, and a Nieman Fellow at Harvard with
the Class of 1991. Giago was inducted into the South Dakota Newspaper Hall of
Fame in 2008. He can be reached at editor@nsweekly.com.
More Tim Giago:
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proportions (5/31)
Tim Giago: Indian trust fund
settlement insults land holders (5/24)
Tim Giago: Innocence lost at boarding school on
reservation (5/17)
Tim Giago: Students
in Wisconsin win victory on mascot bill (5/10)
Tim Giago: Political and religious fanaticism
turning deadly (5/3)
Tim Giago: Democrat
reaches out to South Dakota tribes (4/26)
Tim Giago: Mount Rushmore loses a man of great
vision (4/19)
Tim Giago: Black Hills
land claim settlement fund tops $1B (4/12)
Tim Giago: His ancestor was Crazy Horse's sole
interpreter (4/5)
Tim Giago: Look into
Native veteran discrimination claims (3/29)
Tim Giago: Inadequate funds crippling Indian health
care (3/22)
Tim Giago: Urban relocation
another failed Indian policy (3/15)
Tim
Giago: Statistics and health care in Indian Country (3/8)
Tim Giago: Indigenous in America, Australia share
paths (3/1)
Tim Giago: Sunday night
movies at boarding school (2/22)
Tim
Giago: Support the Year of Unity in South Dakota (2/15)
Tim Giago: Cherokee Nation fights termination
effort (2/8)
Tim Giago: Natives finding
true voice as Independents (2/1)
Tim
Giago: Obama's vision might not please everyone (1/25)
Tim Giago: No honor in 1890 massacre at Wounded
Knee (1/18)
Tim Giago: Support for
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Tim Giago: Addressing misconceptions about Indians
(1/6)
Tim Giago: Poem still
inspirational after many years (12/21)
Tim Giago: Brown's classic 'Bury My Heart' turns 40
(12/17)
Tim Giago: A place for Indian
time in this busy world (12/7)
Tim
Giago: The final showdown with Chuck Trimble (11/25)
Tim Giago: Open dialogue on America's dirty secret
(11/23)
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Tim Giago: The
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Tim Giago: Tribe responds to corruption allegations
(11/4)
Tim Giago: Tribal governments and
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Tim Giago: Airing
allegations of tribal corruption (10/26)
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(10/21)
Tim Giago: Can ceremonies save
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Tim Giago:
'Wizard' author backed genocide (10/12)
Tim Giago: Indians left out of bison roundup
(10/9)
Tim Giago: Racism against Native
Americans (10/5)
Tim Giago: Another nail
in the coffin of smokers (9/28)
Native
Sun Editorial: Mascots are not an honor (9/22)
Tim Giago: Leaving the anger and the meanness
(9/21)
Tim Giago: Indian Reorganization
Act turns 75 (9/14)
Tim Giago: They
could not kill Lakota spirituality (9/7)
Tim Giago: Don't take IHS criticism at face value
(8/31)
Tim Giago: Coffee and bagels with
Tim Johnson (8/24)
Tim Giago: Real
problems of US health care (8/17)
Tim
Giago: Sotomayor puts dent in glass ceiling (8/10)
Tim Giago: Standing ground at Mount Rushmore
(8/3)
Tim Giago: Voting Native and
voting independent (7/27)
Tim Giago:
Rapid City is changing for the better (7/20)
Tim Giago: Frontier mentality still alive in 2009
(7/13)
Tim Giago: The execution of Chief
Two Sticks (7/6)
Tim Giago: McDonald's
mentality needs revamp (6/29)
Tim Giago:
National health care debate and IHS (6/22)
Tim Giago: South Dakota restricts tribal growth
(6/15)
Tim Giago: No more status quo for
BIA education (6/8)
Tim Giago: Being
Indian and being independent (6/1)
Tim
Giago: Let Oglala Sioux president do her job (5/27)
Tim Giago: Memorial Day speech at Black Hills
(5/25)
Tim Giago: Small victories in
battle against mascots (5/18)
Tim Giago:
A day of tribal victory at Little Bighorn (5/11)
Tim Giago: Negative Native images in the news
(5/4)
Tim Giago: Resolving ownership of
the Black Hills (4/27)
Tim Giago: Good
things and bad things come in April (4/20)
Tim Giago: An open letter to South Dakota governor
(4/13)
Tim Giago: Nostalgia and South
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Tim Giago: An
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Tim Giago: Sticks and stones and Charles Trimble
(3/17)
Tim Giago: Pine Ridge team
triumphs at tournament (3/16)
Tim Giago:
Announcing the Native Sun News (3/9)
Tim
Giago: No winners at Wounded Knee 1973 (3/5)
Tim Giago: The real victims of Wounded Knee 1973
(3/2)
Tim Giago: No outrage over abuse
of Natives (2/23)
Tim Giago: A
perspective on the fairness doctrine (2/16)
Tim Giago: Throwing Tom Daschle under the bus
(2/9)
Tim Giago: Native people out of
sight, out of mind (2/2)
Tim Giago:
Native veteran loses fight against VA (1/26)
Tim Giago: The Wellbriety Journey for Forgiveness
(1/19)
Tim Giago: The stolen generations
in the U.S. (1/12)
Tim Giago: Indian
Country looks to Tom Daschle for help (1/5)
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