|
Product Description
Dead men tell no tales, and the soldiers who rode and died with George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn have been silent statistics for more than a hundred years. By blending historical sources, archaeological evidence, and painstaking analysis of the skeletal remains, Douglas D. Scott, P. Willey, and Melissa A. Connor reconstruct biographies of many of the individual soldiers, identifying age, height, possible race, state of health, and the specific way each died. They also link reactions to the battle over the years to shifts in American views regarding the appropriate treatment of the dead.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Custer Battle Casualties: Burials Exhumations and Reinterments (Montana and the West V 7)
- Custer Battle Casualties, 2: The Dead, The Missing, and a few Survivors (Montana And The West Vol. Eleven)
- Little Big Horn Battlefield, Montana Territory, June 1876 (American Battlefields Watercolor Map Series)
- The Godfrey Diary of the Battle of the Little Bighorn: (Expanded, Annotated)
- The Montana Column: March to the Little Bighorn
- Archaeological Perspectives on the Battle of the Little Bighorn
- The Strategy of Defeat at the Little Big Horn: A Military and Timing Analysis of the Battle
- Where Custer Fell: Photographs of the Little Bighorn Battlefield Then and Now
- The Mystery of E Troop: Custer's Gray Horse Company at the Little Bighorn
- Archaeology, History, and Custer's Last Battle: The Little Big Horn Re-examined
*If this is not the "They Died with Custer (Soldiers' Bones from the Battle of the Little Bighorn)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 27, 2024 04:46 +08.