Why Custer really lost Little Bighorn
pplpod10 Juni

Why Custer really lost Little Bighorn

On the afternoon of June 25, 1876, the acrid smoke of black powder lifted across a desolate ridge in the Montana Territory, revealing a staggering military disaster: the complete annihilation of 210 soldiers from the U.S. Seventh Cavalry, led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer. The Battle of the Little Bighorn—known to the Lakota as the Battle of the Greasy Grass—ignited an immediate frenzy of American myth-making, which over the decades prompted more than 120 men to falsely claim they were the "lone human survivor" of the battalion. In reality, the only verified survivor found standing among the bodies days later was a severely wounded cavalry horse named Comanche. This decisive tactical defeat stunned an American public celebrating its centennial, exposing how the U.S. military’s systemic hubris and reliance on flawed intelligence blind spots had guided them straight into the largest Native American encampment ever assembled on the Great Plains.

Driven by a broken treaty over the discovery of gold in the sacred Black Hills, the U.S. government sought to forcibly herd independent tribal bands onto reservations. Custer marched into the valley underestimating the threat, operating on seasonal agency headcounts that completely ignored thousands of reservation Indians who had slipped away to join Sitting Bull's summer buffalo hunt. Rather than attempting a traditional army-on-army pitched battle, Custer deployed a brutal hostage strategy intended to capture women, children, and the elderly to use as human shields. However, brilliant war leaders like Crazy Horse anticipated the maneuvers, rapidly outflanking and fragmenting the cavalry. Modern forensic archaeology and long-ignored Native American eyewitness accounts have completely shattered romanticized oil-painting legends of a prolonged, heroic final stand, proving instead that the chaotic, terrifying route of Custer's battalion was over in less than thirty minutes.

  • The Inter-Tribal Geopolitical Landscape: The complex reality of the Great Plains, where the expanding Lakota nation had displaced the Crow and Arikara tribes from their ancestral lands; as a result, Crow and Arikara warriors strategically allied with the U.S. Army as specialized scouts, hoping to leverage the military to expel their regional rivals.
  • The Logistical Liability of Gatling Guns: Why Custer outright refused General Terry’s offer of rapid-fire Gatling guns; the heavy, early-model hand-cranked weapons jammed constantly from black powder residue, required crews to stand completely exposed to snipers, and had to be dragged through deep ravines by exhausted, "condemned" horses that slowed cavalry mobility.
  • The Visceral Collapse of the Skirmish Line: The turning point at the southern edge of the village where Major Marcus Reno's battalion was swarmed by hundreds of warriors; Reno suffered severe psychological shock and lost total tactical command after his close Arikara guide, Bloody Knife, was shot in the head right next to him, splattering blood across the officer's face.
  • The Lever-Action Firepower Paradigm Shift: The technological reality that decided the battle; while the cavalry relied on accurate but slow single-shot, breech-loading Springfield carbines—and had boxed up their close-quarter sabers before the march—the Lakota and Cheyenne utilized traditional silent bows alongside a blistering barrage of rapid-fire, lever-action Winchester and Henry repeating rifles.

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(8423)

Dua Lipa's Radical Optimism: The Difficult Third Album

Dua Lipa's Radical Optimism: The Difficult Third Album

After Future Nostalgia revived disco and earned Grammys, Dua Lipa faced an impossible choice: bottle the same magic again or risk everything on a new direction. She chose the tightrope, wiping her Ins...

2 Juli 20min

Dua Lipa: From Rejected Choir Kid to Global Pop Mogul

Dua Lipa: From Rejected Choir Kid to Global Pop Mogul

Told at age 11 that she could not sing, Dua Lipa moved from London to Kosovo and back again, relocating to London alone at 15 to chase a music career. The daughter of Kosovo Albanian refugees, she hus...

2 Juli 17min

FKA Twigs: The Auteur Who Built a New Vocabulary

FKA Twigs: The Auteur Who Built a New Vocabulary

From dancing in the background of pop videos and learning to pole dance while working in a Soho gentlemen's club, Tahliah Barnett became FKA Twigs, one of the most vital and fiercely independent voice...

2 Juli 17min

Florence and the Machine: Chaos, Survival and Rebirth

Florence and the Machine: Chaos, Survival and Rebirth

Florence Welch nearly named her band with a teenage joke, cutting Florence Robot Is a Machine down to Florence and the Machine an hour before her first gig. From recording breakthrough hit Dog Days Ar...

2 Juli 19min

Faye Webster: The Uncategorizable Artist Who Refused a Lane

Faye Webster: The Uncategorizable Artist Who Refused a Lane

Alt-country singer, underground rap label signee, competitive yo-yo designer, Nike ad photographer, and writer of love songs about a baseball player. Faye Webster's resume defies all categorization, a...

2 Juli 17min

Avril Lavigne: The Country Kid Who Became a Punk Icon

Avril Lavigne: The Country Kid Who Became a Punk Icon

She grew up singing country covers in a bookstore, played right wing on a boys' ice hockey team, and came from an evangelical family in a town of 5,000. Yet Avril Lavigne became the global face of 200...

2 Juli 24min

Charli XCX: The Warehouse Rave Kid Who Rewrote Pop

Charli XCX: The Warehouse Rave Kid Who Rewrote Pop

At 14, Charli XCX was playing illegal East London warehouse raves, her parents cheering from the back with a camcorder. She grew up to architect hyperpop and, with the lime green Brat, spark a cultura...

2 Juli 21min

Fergie: From Spelling Bee Champion to Pop Royalty

Fergie: From Spelling Bee Champion to Pop Royalty

Stacey Ann Ferguson was a straight-A Catholic school spelling bee champion, a Girl Scout, and the voice of Sally Brown in the Peanuts cartoons. Reconciling that image of 1980s innocence with the barri...

2 Juli 17min

Populärt inom Nöje

mellan-himmel-och-jord-med-jlc
badfluence
filip-fredrik-svarar
mardromsgasten
dialogiskt
rss-p3-musikdokumentar
chilla-med-de-vet-du
fem-i-topp
skandal
schulman-show
gott-snack-med-fredrik-soderholm
mannen-utan-spar
podme-bio-4
karatefylla
sexet
trumpodden
hemma-hos-strage
vardagsmysterier
alex-room-service-en-podcast-om-kiss
let-me-know-kiss-army-sweden-podcast