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History What-If: Could Custer Have Survived the Battle of Little Big Horn? [June 25, 1876]
nationalinterest.org ^ | June 16, 2019 | Staff

Posted on 06/25/2019 7:36:18 AM PDT by Red Badger

A different fate?

e can never know what frantic thoughts raced through George Armstrong Custer’s mind in the last hour of his life. But surely, as ever-growing numbers of angry, well-armed Plains Indians closed in on his 210 troopers of the 7th Cavalry, he must have realized that he had fatally misjudged the size of the hostile force now surrounding him.

His plan to subdue a large Indian village had completely broken down. He had been warned repeatedly by his scouts that his target, an Indian encampment on Montana’s Little Bighorn River, was far larger than he had imagined. Now, on this very hot June day in 1876, he must have known that he was going to die.

Even to the very end of what is now known as Custer’s Last Stand, we can picture the desperate, dust-covered Custer looking hopefully to the southeast for expected help from the rest of his command. He died not knowing why Major Marcus Reno and Captain Frederick Benteen never came up in support.

But we know. It is not a story of great valor, although certain moments of extraordinary bravery shine through. Benteen and Reno spent the rest of their lives defending their leadership and action—or lack of action—that day. An examination of the known facts reveals that they had a lot to defend.

Opposing the Native Nomadic Lifestyle

The growing presence and power of the white man, backed by overwhelming military strength, had gradually forced many of the Plains tribes onto reservations. However, some militant Indians still defied the United States government and chose to continue their nomadic lifestyle in the Unceded Territory. That huge expanse stretched from the Bighorn and Rocky Mountains on the west to the Great Sioux Reservation along the Missouri River to the east. It was there that the final battles of the Indian wars were fought.

On November 3, 1875, President Ulysses S. Grant and a few carefully selected cabinet members and Army generals met in secret session. The decision was made to launch a decisive war against the Indians and cripple their ability to further disrupt western expansion. Although no one knew it at the time, Custer’s fate had been sealed.

On December 6, the government issued an ultimatum. All roaming Indians would have to return to the reservations by January 31, 1876, or risk being considered “hostile.” In early February, Lt. Gen. Philip Sheridan, commanding the Division of Missouri, ordered his forces to prepare for operations against the hostiles. The military plan was a three-pronged affair. One force under Brig. Gen. George Crook moved out from Fort Fetterman in Wyoming. Colonel John Gibbon marched from Fort Ellis in Montana. The third unit, led by Brig. Gen. Alfred Terry, advanced from the Dakota Territory. Terry released Custer and his 7th Cavalry as a mobile strike force to track and locate the Sioux and Cheyenne tribesmen thought to be in Montana Territory in the Little Bighorn Valley.

Unheeded Warnings

By late June, however, the plan to link up and trap the hostiles was falling apart. Crook was defeated by an Indian force on the Rosebud River. Terry and Gibbon got temporarily lost. Custer was essentially on his own. In fact, Terry had given Custer unusual freedom. One part of his orders read, “We place too much confidence in your zeal, energy and ability to impose precise orders upon you which might hamper your action when nearly in contact with the enemy.” That was all the ambitious, headstrong Custer needed to hear. It triggered the inevitable chain of events that led to his death.

Counting 35 Indian scouts and civilians, Custer led 12 companies, 680 men, seemingly a substantial strike force. But by the time he headed out from Fort Abraham Lincoln on June 22, the number of Indians camped along the Little Bighorn had swelled to 7,000. Between 1,000 and 1,500 of these were warriors. Custer’s scouts found numerous trails leading to the Little Bighorn, and soon discovered the massive encampment that now held seven different Indian bands in a straight line stretching almost three miles. Even then, Custer did not seem to understand how many armed warriors he was facing.

On June 25, as the main cavalry body drew closer, Custer feared that his force had been detected, and instead of waiting for a surprise assault at dawn, he decided to attack that afternoon. Although his scouts continued to offer strong warnings, Custer discounted their advice. Lieutenant Edward Godfrey recalled Ree scout Bloody Knife saying, “We’ll find enough Sioux to keep us fighting for two or three days.” But, Godfrey said, “Custer remarked laughingly that he thought we could get through in one day.” Lieutenant Charles Varnum overheard Custer’s chief scout, the mixed-blood Mitch Boyer, tell Custer, “General, if you don’t find more Indians in that valley than you ever saw before, you can hang me.” Custer testily replied, “Well, a lot of good that would do me.”

Not only did Custer reject the warnings, he divided his force into four groups. He ordered Benteen to take three companies of 120 men, scout a series of ridges to the southeast to spot any Indians trying to flee, and then rejoin him. Private Charles Windolph later reported that he heard Benteen protest, “Hadn’t we better keep the regiment together General? If this is as big a camp as they say, we’ll need every man we have.” Custer curtly replied, “You have your orders.” Custer then ordered Reno to take three companies of 140 troopers and 35 scouts and launch an attack from the south end of the village. The slow pack train, under Captain Thomas McDougall, was given another 175 men. Custer retained five companies with 210 mounted soldiers and civilians. He promised to support Reno in the attack. To say the least, the plan was impulsive and uncoordinated.

A Complete Rout

A few minutes after 3 pm, Reno forded the Little Bighorn River, which the Indians called “Greasy Grass,” and raced his mounted troopers into the southern end of the village. Custer mistakenly believed that the Indians were trying to escape. But the Indians were not fleeing. Instead, Reno quickly rode into a growing number of counterattacking warriors. The troopers halted, dismounted, and formed a skirmish line, then watched in dismay as hundreds of Indians, some mounted and others on foot, began to outflank them. In less than an hour of heavy fighting, the soldiers were in danger of being surrounded. Bloody Knife, standing next to Reno, was struck in the head, spraying the major with blood and brains. In shock, Reno panicked, issued wildly confusing orders, and ran for it. No retreat order was passed to the troopers, but as he desperately mounted his horse to flee, Reno shouted, “Any of you men who wish to live, make your escape—follow me!”

The uncoordinated rush back to the river was total chaos. The soldiers drove their horses into the water, crossed the river, and clawed their way up the steep 100-foot bluffs on the other side. The Indians, riding on their flanks, poured a withering fire into the wildly retreating soldiers. Some 80 troopers, including 13 wounded, managed to get to the top. Seventeen others were left in the woods. Thirty of Reno’s men were killed initially, and another 27 died in the fighting. Reno insisted later that his retreat was actually a charge.

“I’ve Lost Half My Men!”

Custer never crossed the river. Instead, he led his men north on the near or east side along high bluffs above the valley, apparently hoping to block any Indians from getting away in that direction. Although a clear view of the valley bottom was difficult, he briefly spotted Reno fighting and saw for the first time, with his own eyes, the immense size of the enemy encampment. He quickly sent Sergeant Daniel Kanipe to find Benteen. Fifteen minutes later he dispatched trumpeter John Martin to carry another urgent message to the captain. Custer’s famous written order read: “Benteen—Come on—Big village—Be quick—bring packs. PS—Bring [ammunition] packs.”

Historian Walter Camp, who interviewed many of the participants soon after the battle, cited Benteen’s reply upon receiving the message: “After he read the message handed to him by Martin, he was heard to remark, ‘Well, if he wants me to hurry how does he expect that I can bring the packs? If I’m going to be of service to him I think I had better not wait for the packs.’” As Benteen rode closer, he suddenly saw Reno’s men scrambling to the top of the hill as Indian warriors swarmed in front. It was now 4:10 pm. A few minutes later, Benteen’s force joined Reno’s position. Martin, who stayed with Benteen, told historian Colonel W.A. Graham that he heard Reno exclaim, “For God’s sake, Benteen, halt your command and help me. I’ve lost half my men!” Benteen immediately distributed his extra ammunition to Reno’s men.

Could Benteen Have Aided Custer?

At almost the same time, heavy firing was heard coming from a few miles downstream. This was the critical moment. The Indians had spotted Custer’s cavalrymen approaching from the other end. Almost all the Indians now rushed off to meet the new threat. Although many troopers urged them to ride to the sound of the guns, neither Reno nor Benteen made any effort to move in that direction. They later denied even hearing any firing. Benteen told an army court of inquiry in Chicago in 1879, “I have heard officers disputing about hearing volleys. I heard no volleys.” At the same hearing, Reno blandly testified, “I heard no firing from down river.”

It has long been maintained that the Reno-Benteen forces were trapped on the hilltop by hundreds of Indians. In fact, Benteen told the court of inquiry, “The 900 Indians I saw in the valley remained there perhaps a half an hour then most of them went down the river.” In truth, the Indians were gone within minutes of Benteen’s arrival. Letters, memoirs, and subsequent interviews with both Indians and army troopers refute his sworn testimony.

Godfrey, in an 1892 interview, said, “At this time [4:20] there were a large number of mounted Indians in the valley. Heavy firing was heard down river. Suddenly, they all started down the valley and in a few minutes scarcely a horseman was to be seen. During this time questions were being asked. ‘What are we staying here for?’” William Taylor, a private with Benteen at the time, in a first-person narrative published after his death, wrote, “We heard firing off in the direction Custer was supposed to have gone. ‘Why don’t we move?’ was a question asked by more than one. The troops that were engaged in the valley were somewhat demoralized but that was no excuse for the whole command to remain inactive.”

“None but Squaws and Children in Front of Them”

In an interview with Camp, Martin said, “We heard a lot of firing down the river. It kept up for half an hour. It sounded like a big fight was going on. We wanted to hurry and join them but they wouldn’t let us go.” The great Sioux medicine man Sitting Bull was asked in an 1887 interview, “Did your war chiefs not think it necessary to keep some of the young men there to fight the troops in the entrenchments?” He answered, “No, only a few soldiers were left on those bluffs. There were none but squaws and children in front of them.” Cheyenne warrior Wooden Leg, in an interview when he was 70, said, “In the hills to the north there was another force of soldiers. The Indians shooting at the first soldiers began to leave and ride toward those on the northward hills.”

Lieutenant Charles DeRudio, one of those who remained hiding below in the valley, said, “Soon after Major Reno left the timber, firing commenced at the other end of the village. I heard immense volleys and more than half the Indians left.” In a 1916 interview, Crow scout Hairy Moccasin said he saw Reno’s fight in the valley, which he described as “a big scramble with lots of Sioux.” Later, Custer asked him, “How is it going?” He replied, “Reno’s men are fighting hard.” Boyer then sent him back south, where he met Benteen on the hilltop. Hairy Moccasin said to him, “Do you hear that shooting back where we came from? They’re fighting Custer there now.” This was specific information on Custer’s location that Benteen later denied knowing.

Similar information was given to Reno. At the Chicago court of inquiry, McDougall testified, “The firing I heard was to the north on my right as I went toward the Little Big Horn. It was just two volleys. I told Major Reno about it.”

At 5:05 pm, Captain Thomas Weir, who had been seen arguing strongly with Reno and pointing excitedly downstream, took his company, on his own, in that direction. From what is now known as Weir’s Point, he saw the end of the Custer battle, then returned to the top of the hill. He reported that he had seen Indians firing at troopers’ bodies already inert on the ground.

A Calculated Decision to Not Engage

The critical 10 to 15 minutes after Benteen joined Reno was the time in which a more determined leader might have taken charge. Admittedly, trying to mount an immediate relief force would have been difficult; the slow pack train with more ammunition had not yet come up. Perhaps it wouldn’t have made a difference and would have only resulted in more dead soldiers, but to refuse to try violated Custer’s order to “Come on—Come quick.”

Perhaps the most revealing testimony came from Benteen himself. He told the Chicago court, “A movement could have been made down the river in the direction Custer had gone upon my arrival on the hill, but we would have all been there yet.” Apparently, Benteen didn’t like the odds and figured that any soldiers who went that way also would have been killed. His sworn testimony that he and Reno heard no shooting, that they were tied down by 900 Indians, and that they didn’t really know where Custer was is not convincing.

Through the years, both Reno and Benteen tried to improve their version of what happened. They wrote letters and gave interviews in which they maintained that shortly after linking up on the hilltop, the ammunition pack train arrived and a movement was made in Custer’s direction. However, John Gray, in his 1991 book, Custer’s Last Campaign, convincingly shows that it was at least an hour before any such movement was launched, and that was only after continued prodding by Weir and others. Even then, it was a half-hearted advance. Benteen and Reno took only three companies down toward Custer’s position. By then, the window of opportunity had closed. Custer’s 220 men had been annihilated in a little less than an hour, and the victorious Sioux and Cheyenne were now coming back upstream. Quickly, the companies were forced to retreat to their position on the hilltop with the rest of the survivors.

Over the next several hours the Indians made repeated charges against the soldiers’ line. By all accounts, Benteen rallied the men, took control of the defense, and was responsible for preventing a rout. In later years, even his critics—and there were many—admitted that Benteen had held the force together. By evening, the shooting diminished and the companies remained through the night, listening to the shouts and loud victory whoops coming from the Indian encampment below.

In fairness, some participants believed that an attempted linkup would have been doomed. Varnum, Custer’s chief of scouts, told Camp that he never thought Benteen and Reno had any real chance of rescuing Custer. The same opinion was expressed later in a 1923 letter from General W.S. Edgerly, who had been a lieutenant with Benteen on the hilltop. Edgerly wrote, “In my opinion there was no chance to have saved Custer’s command or any considerable part of it from destruction [even] if Reno had advanced at once upon Benteen’s junction with him and without waiting for the ammunition.” He told Camp the same thing, adding significantly, “With the information they had at the time there was no reason not to have tried it.”

Sitting Bull Decides to Spare Reno and Benteen’s Force

After a nervous night on the bluff, the troopers strengthened their position for an expected attack in the morning. Although the Indians resumed sniping and harassing, they made no serious attempt to drive the soldiers off the hill. Writer David Humphreys Miller, who in the 1930s interviewed aged Indian participants, said that Sitting Bull told him that he believed the issue was settled, that the white soldiers had taken a drubbing, and he was willing to let it go at that. Numerous Native American accounts contend that it was only after a direct order from Sitting Bull that they were not allowed to attack and overwhelm the Reno-Benteen force as they had done earlier with Custer.

To the relief of the surviving troopers, in the late afternoon of the 26th the huge Indian camp began to pack up and move out. They had been warned by their scouts of the approach of Terry’s force. Fewer than 100 of their warriors had been killed in the fighting on the bluff and in action against Custer’s force to the north.

Retribution for Custer’s Last Stand

The next day Terry’s column arrived. Fighting at the Little Bighorn was over. Terry found the bodies of Custer and his men scattered above the river in various separate places where different companies had tried to make a stand. The dead bodies had been stripped and mutilated. Custer’s body was one of the few that had not been scalped. Grisly newspaper accounts of the battle and its aftermath outraged Americans across the country. They demanded retribution. From that time on, the Indians’ freedom to migrate, hunt buffalo, and celebrate their spirited lifestyle was running out. The military stepped up efforts to bring any still-roaming Indians under control. Western migration increased, new train tracks were laid, fortune seekers poured in for gold, and the traditional world of the Plains Indians soon disappeared. Custer’s Last Stand was also theirs.

The question remains: Could at least part of Custer’s five companies have been saved? Whether Reno and Benteen might have pulled it off can never be known. That they didn’t even try, and then grossly misrepresented the reasons why they didn’t, is no longer open to dispute.

Originally Published November 18, 2018.

This article originally appeared on the Warfare History Network.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Education; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: 7thcav; custer; littlebighorn
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To: laplata
I’ve never heard an explanation as to why Custer wasn’t issued repeating rifles. But I haven’t researched it, either. I can imagine some Quartermaster took the heat. But Custer should have seen to it.

It's a very simple explanation. Custer wasn't issued repeating rifles because the U.S. Government never bought any repeating rifles.

It was the Army's opinion that the lever action rifles of the time, that used the .44 Henry rimfire cartridge, were inferior to the Trapdoor Springfield firing the .45-70 rifle cartridge.

21 posted on 06/25/2019 8:21:32 AM PDT by Yo-Yo ( is the /sarc tag really necessary?)
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To: Red Badger

In Harry Turtledove’s alternative history novels Custer is a war hero who is about as well loved as Jerry Nadler.


22 posted on 06/25/2019 8:21:53 AM PDT by bigbob (Trust Trump. Trust the Plan.)
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To: Williams

Custer made a reasonable decision based on his mission. The great challenge in Indian warfare was almost always getting close enough to any number to fight. Almost always.

Custer had his faults but he had plenty of guts. And his mission was to engage the enemy. Not observe from a safe distance. But unlike his experiences in the Civil War, many of his men were substandard recruits and many of his officers lacked...well, lacked!

Riding to the gunfire was one of the cardinal rules of fighting back then. There is a reason the surviving officers were held in contempt.


23 posted on 06/25/2019 8:22:44 AM PDT by Mr Rogers (Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools)
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To: Red Badger

Maybe if he had a tank...

-PJ

24 posted on 06/25/2019 8:32:03 AM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: Don Corleone

From what I have read about Custer even from the Civil War until the Little Big Horn he displayed very little tactical subtlety. I’ve read his men hated him and that his unit had the highest desertion rate in the Army. There was an Army leader of that period (Name escapes now!) who by far was the premier Indian fighter of the era. Primarily because he was capable of learning from his mistakes. Developed effective counter-guerilla tactics from encounters with Indian guerilla tactics. This guy brought the Quanah Parker and the Comanches to heel. Custer at least to me always seem to be applying the same tactics over & over again from Civil War to Little Big Horn. Eventually getting disastrous results.


25 posted on 06/25/2019 8:32:16 AM PDT by Reily
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To: PanzerKardinal

The Command and General Staff College have been conducting staff rides of the Custer Battlefield for years. I participated in the first one, consisting of senior officers and the late Congressman Ike Skelton who had pushed the Army to study the Indian Wars. Instead of starting at the Visitors Center, we followed Custer’s approach march, stopping along the way to study the terrain and consider the information that Custer had available to him at that time. Along the way, we discussed the historical record along with the evidence left on the battlefield and the post mortem dissections written by the surviviors and by the historians.

Before setting out that morning, most of us agreed with your assessment. Interestingly, when the staff ride had been completed, most had revised our conclusions. Custer made mistakes, no doubt, but his decisions were not tactically unsound, especially given the Army’s experience with the Northern Plains Indians. His biggest concern was that the Indians in the camp would escape as they had always done and his mission was to prevent this long enough to allow the other columns to come up. He did not know that the Indians had decided to stand and fight which meant that his plan and his actions became problematic.

That evening, over a few beers in Story, WY, we agreed that Custer, Reno, and Benteen were not the buffoons painted by history. Combat veterans, as all of us were, remember that the enemy gets a vote and they get a chance to make their own decisions. On this day, the Indians made good decisions.


26 posted on 06/25/2019 8:36:44 AM PDT by centurion316
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To: Red Badger

Sometimes it is best to have a little patience, Miles, Terry and Gibbons were in the tactical plan. (???) Custer minus his bravado, could have lived and attained his political ambitions if he was a team player. IMO.


27 posted on 06/25/2019 8:38:16 AM PDT by Bringbackthedraft
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To: Political Junkie Too

I saw that episode.............


28 posted on 06/25/2019 8:43:23 AM PDT by Red Badger (We are headed for a Civil War. It won't be nice like the last one....................)
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To: Bringbackthedraft

Agree!


29 posted on 06/25/2019 8:44:26 AM PDT by Reily
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To: Red Badger

The best study on this I’ve read is by Richard Fox, an archaeologist who after the big fires in that region in the 1980s took teams of students with metal detectors and mapped every remaining cartridg3e on the battlefield. He then assembled a story that looks nothing like the “Custer’s Last Stand” circle-of-men fighting Indians riding around them.

According to the story of the shell casings, Custer’s five troops came under steady, but not whithering, long range fire for about 20-30 minutes upon reaching the ridges. Keough with about half the men was some distance from Custer’s half (”Custer Hill” and “Keough Hill”). Meanwhile, the Indians were crawling through the grass, getting extremely close. When they rose up all at once, the cavalry was immediately overwhelmed and fell back down the opposite side of the hill.

Fox’s research shows there was never a circle, and that Custer’s men were in such disarray and retreat that they never even formed a single skirmish line. He found carbine casings all down the back side of the hill as troopers fired, then ran and reloaded.

Moreover, the Sioux had Winchester repeaters. Maybe not a lot, but “some” of the Sioux were better armed than the soldiers they fought. While Fox agrees that some carbines may have jammed, he discounts this as a major factor as the soldiers never fired enough rounds per weapon to come close to jamming.

It is possible, based on Fox’s description, to envision a scenario in which Custer kept all 700 men together, including his ammo. If he had consolidated them into lines, with adequate ammo, he might have done enough damage to the larger force that by the time they figured out how to outflank him, they would be significantly “attrited” to use Gen. Schwartzkopf’s words.


30 posted on 06/25/2019 8:44:56 AM PDT by LS ("Castles made of sand, fall in the sea . . . eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: Yo-Yo

I takes it that after the Little Big Horn, they changed their mind............


31 posted on 06/25/2019 8:45:36 AM PDT by Red Badger (We are headed for a Civil War. It won't be nice like the last one....................)
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To: Bringbackthedraft

Custer minus his bravado...Gettysburg probably a union defeat


32 posted on 06/25/2019 8:48:13 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: LS

I think it was basically a live game of Risk.

Custer was way outnumbered.
The Sioux just whittled them down like a final battle on a Risk board.................


33 posted on 06/25/2019 8:49:21 AM PDT by Red Badger (We are headed for a Civil War. It won't be nice like the last one....................)
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To: Yo-Yo

The idea that if Custer had just been issued repeating rifles his command would have survived or even won the battle is a non-starter.

What killed Custer’s men wasn’t inadequate equipment.

What killed Custer’s men was lack of leadership and the subsequent lose of cohesion.

When you read the reports of the battlefield, from two days later, of the location of the dead, archeological evidence and interrogations of Indians who participated in the battle, you find what occurred was

1. Custer ordered his men to charge in.
2. They were confronted a massive wall of Indians.
3. Custer’s men attempted to retreat.
4. And were overwhelmed, surrounded and cut down.

There where no attempts at forming a line or use cover. There was no last stand.

The whole engagement lasted, “Less time than a hungry man can eat a meal.” ie. minutes

You could have given the men M16’s and M240’s and once the unit broke. The outcome would have been the same.

....

History is replete with forces armed with better equipment who broke and ran.

In the Falkland, the Argentinians were armed with better weapons, in prepared positions and outnumbered the British 4 to 1. But because of abysmal Argentinian leadership, the troops broke and ran.


34 posted on 06/25/2019 8:54:08 AM PDT by PanzerKardinal (Some things are so idiotic only an intellectual would believe it.)
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To: Red Badger

What if Custer would have had close air support during the battle of the Little Big horn...???


35 posted on 06/25/2019 8:56:18 AM PDT by shotgun
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To: laplata

“I’ve never heard an explanation as to why Custer wasn’t issued repeating rifles.”

I’ve heard that some people in the Army command were resisting switching to more modern rifles, because they thought that soldiers would just waste ammunition firing willy nilly, instead of carefully aiming their shots. I believe it wasn’t until the Spanish-American War that that line of thinking was completely uprooted.


36 posted on 06/25/2019 8:59:37 AM PDT by Boogieman
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To: shotgun

WHAT IF Custer had SHARKS with FRIGGIN LASERS?..................


37 posted on 06/25/2019 9:00:02 AM PDT by Red Badger (We are headed for a Civil War. It won't be nice like the last one....................)
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To: Red Badger

What if Superman worked for Custer?


38 posted on 06/25/2019 9:00:38 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator
😆
39 posted on 06/25/2019 9:01:49 AM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
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To: Red Badger

bookmark


40 posted on 06/25/2019 9:04:06 AM PDT by DFG
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