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Gen. George A Custer {pic heavy}

Started by HaMeR, March 21, 2010, 07:36:17 PM

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HaMeR

Brace yourself folks!! We went for another ride today.  :eyebrow:

A little American history for the interested.

Early Life:

The son of Emanuel Henry Custer and Marie Ward Kirkpatrick, George Armstrong Custer was born at New Rumley, OH on December 5, 1839. A large family, the Custers had five children of their own as well as several from Marie's earlier marriage. At a young age, George was sent to live with his half-sister and brother-in-law in Monroe, MI. While living there, he attended McNeely Normal School and did menial jobs around the campus to help pay for his room and board. After graduating in 1856, he returned to Ohio and taught school.
West Point :

Deciding that teaching did not suit him, Custer enrolled at the US Military Academy. A weak student, his time at West Point was plagued by near expulsion each term for excessive demerits. These were usually earned through his penchant for pulling pranks on fellow cadets. Graduating in June 1861, Custer finished last in his class. While such a performance normally would have landed him an obscure posting and a short career, Custer benefited from the outbreak of the Civil War and the US Army's desperate need for trained officers. Commissioned a second lieutenant, Custer was assigned to the 2nd US Cavalry.
Civil War:

Reporting for duty, he saw service at the First Battle of Bull Run (July 21, 1861) where he acted as a runner between General Winfield Scott and Major General Irvin McDowell. After the battle, Custer was reassigned to the 5th Cavalry and was sent south to participate in Major General George McClellan's Peninsula Campaign. On May 24, 1862, Custer convinced a colonel to allow him to attack a Confederate position across the Chickahominy River with four companies of Michigan infantry. The attack was a success and 50 Confederates were captured. Impressed, McClellan took Custer onto his staff as an aide-de-camp.

While serving on McClellan's staff, Custer developed his love of publicity and began working to attract attention to himself. Following McClellan's removal from command in the fall of 1862, Custer joined the staff Major General Alfred Pleasonton, who was then commanding a cavalry division. Quickly becoming his commander's protégé, Custer became enamored with flashy uniforms and was schooled in military politics. In May 1863, Pleasonton was promoted to command the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Potomac. Though many of his men were alienated by Custer's showy ways, they were impressed by his coolness under fire.

After distinguishing himself as bold and aggressive commander at Brandy Station and Aldie, Pleasonton promoted him to brevet brigadier general despite his lack of command experience. With this promotion, Custer was assigned to lead a brigade of Michigan cavalry in the division of Major General Judson Kilpatrick. After fighting the Confederate cavalry at Hanover and Hunterstown, Custer and his brigade, which he nicknamed the "Wolverines," played a key role in the cavalry battle east of Gettysburg on July 3.

As Union troops south of the town were repulsing Longstreet's Assault (Pickett's Charge), Custer was fighting with Brigadier General David Gregg's division against Major General J.E.B. Stuart's Confederate cavalry. Personally leading his regiments into the fray on several occasions, Custer had two horses shot out from under him. The climax of the fight came when Custer led a mounted charge of the 1st Michigan which stopped the Confederate attack. His triumph as Gettysburg marked the high point of his career. The following winter, Custer married Elizabeth Clift Bacon on February 9, 1864.

In the spring, Custer retained his command after the Cavalry Corps was reorganized by its new commander Major General Philip Sheridan. Participating in Lt. General Ulysses S. Grant's Overland Campaign, Custer saw action at the Wilderness, Yellow Tavern, and Trevilian Station. In August, he traveled west with Sheridan as part of the forces sent to deal with Lt. General Jubal Early in the Shenandoah Valley. After pursuing Early's forces after the victory at Opequon, he was promoted to divisional command. In this role he aided in destroying Early's army at Cedar Creek that October.

Returning to Petersburg after the campaign in the Valley, Custer's division saw action at Waynesboro, Dinwiddie Court House, and Five Forks. After this final battle, it pursued General Robert E. Lee's retreating Army of Northern Virginia after Petersburg fell on April 2/3, 1865. Blocking Lee's retreat from Appomattox, Custer's men were the first to receive a flag of truce from the Confederates. Custer was present at Lee's surrender on April 9, and was given the table on which it was signed in recognition of his gallantry.
Indian Wars:

After the war, Custer reverted back to the rank of captain and briefly considered leaving the military. He was offered the position of adjutant general in the Mexican army of Benito Juárez, who was then battling Emperor Maximilian, but was blocked from accepting it by the State Department. An advocate of President Andrew Johnson's reconstruction policy, he was criticized by hardliners who believed he was attempting to curry favor with the goal of receiving a promotion. In 1866, he turned down the colonelcy of the all-black 10th Cavalry (Buffalo Soldiers) in favor of the lieutenant colonelcy of the 7th Cavalry.

In addition, he was given the brevet rank of major general at the behest of Sheridan. After serving in Major General Winfield Scott Hancock's 1867 campaign against the Cheyenne, Custer was suspended for a year for leaving his post to see his wife. Returning to the regiment in 1868, Custer won the Battle of Washita River against Black Kettle and the Cheyenne that November.
Battle of the Little Bighorn

Six years later, in 1874, the Custer and the 7th Cavalry scouted the Black Hills of South Dakota and confirmed the discovery of gold at French Creek. This announcement touched off the Black Hills gold rush and further heightened tensions with the Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne. In an effort to secure the hills, Custer was dispatched as part of a larger force with orders to round up the remaining Indians in the area and relocate them to reservations. Departing Ft. Lincoln, ND with Brigadier Alfred Terry and a large force of infantry, the column moved west with the goal of linking up with forces coming from the west and south under Colonel John Gibbon and Brigadier General George Crook.

Encountering the Sioux and Cheyenne at the Battle of the Rosebud on June 17, 1876, Crook's column was delayed. Gibbon, Terry, and Custer met later that month and, based on a large Indian trail, decided to have Custer circle around the Indians while the other two approached with the main force. After refusing reinforcements, including Gatling guns, Custer and the approximately 650 men of the 7th Cavalry moved out. On June 25, Custer's scouts reported sighting the large camp (900-1,800 warriors) of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse along the Little Bighorn River.

Concerned that the Sioux and Cheyenne might escape, Custer recklessly decided to attack the camp with only the men on hand. Dividing his force, he ordered Major Marcus Reno to take one battalion and attack from the south, while he took another and circled around to the north end of the camp. Captain Frederick Benteen was sent southwest with a blocking force to prevent any escape. Charging up the valley, Reno's attack was stopped and he was forced to retreat, with Benteen's arrival saving his force. To the north, Custer too was stopped and superior numbers forced him to retreat. With his line broken, the retreat became disorganized and his entire 208-man force was killed while making their "last stand."











Glen

RIP Russ,Blaine,Darrell

http://brightwoodturnings.com

2014-15 TBC-- 11

HuntnCarve

I find that intriguing.  Thanks for the tour through history.  I really enjoyed reading it all.  I don't know if you ever saw these, and I don't mean to hijack your post.  But I did these two calls a long while back.  Your post tells the whole story of one of these fellows last stands.



Dave

HaMeR

You're Welcome Dave. Glad you liked it too. Your input is always Welcome. There's no hijacking here as it's about Gen Custer. Those are some really cool calls too. This monument is only a 1/2 hour from me. Maybe we'll do a couple of the 7 Ohio Presidents someday too.  :biggrin:
Glen

RIP Russ,Blaine,Darrell

http://brightwoodturnings.com

2014-15 TBC-- 11

KySongDog

Custer (or what could be found of him) was buried at West Point.  If you ever have a chance to visit the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, I highly advise anyone to do so. The place drips with history with many famous men having trained there including Custer, Patton, Eisenhower, MacArthur, Grant, Lee, and many more.  Would you believe Edgar Allan Poe was a cadet at West Point for a short time?  


Jimmie in Ky

A trip to the point would be cool. Buut Custer was the only idiot in history to have been idolized  :doh2: Jimmie

Bopeye

Custer was only an idiot in the Battle of the Little Bighorn. He was a brilliant commander and cavalry man during the Civil War. His Cavalry saved the day, unfortunately, in more than one engagement against my Rebel Brethren.

I would have enjoyed that trip Hamer. I've been where he died, but seeing where he was born and his museum would be a treat.  :yoyo:
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Hawks Feather

Glen,

Neat pictures.  I haven't been there, but I have driven through Custar, OH many times.  The community was named after Gen. George Custer; the name was misspelled by railroad workers who made the sign for the station.

Jerry

KySongDog

Quote from: Jimmie in Ky on March 21, 2010, 10:02:52 PM
Buut Custer was the only idiot in history to have been idolized  :doh2: Jimmie

The ONLY idiot??  That is so not true.   :nono:

JohnP

Thanks for the history lesson and with pictures.

After my second tour in Vietnam I was reassigned to West Point as one of the instructors in the survival course. 
When they come for mine they better bring theirs

KySongDog

My son graduated from West Point in '01.  I visited him a few times and was always impressed by the history of the place.   Of course, he had a different take on it, especially as a plebe.   :eyebrownod:   

Jimmie in Ky

I too can think of a few others, but he sticks out more than most to me Semp. During the Civil war he was brash and reckless and had to have had both saddle bags full of rabbits feet. It was his western campaigns that showed me just what a fool he was. He lost a patrol at Washita and never bothered to look for them. No records of them having been found at all.

As for some others, We definately cannot forget Fetterman who claimed he could ride through the whole soiux nation with 80 men. We know how long that lasted  :innocentwhistle: Jimmie

Bopeye

Gen. George S. Patton was brash and reckless as well. He wanted to go ahead and attack the Russians at the conclusion of WWII, which probably wasn't a bad idea, but after 4 years of war I don't think anyone had the stomach for it, especially an unprovoked attack. They called him "Blood and Guts" for a reason.
Gen. Douglas Macarther wasn't exactly what you would have called a consevative general. He was madder than a rattlesnake when we dropped the A-bomb which probably saved hundreds of thousands of American lives, because it robbed him of some glory. Plus he defied a President.
Let's not forget Jeb Stuart who was arguably one of the greates Cavalry men to ever live. He same as disobeyed orders from the great Jefferson Davis himself.
Then there was Gen. Robert E. Lee that ordered one of the worst orders ever issued by a commanding general when he ordered what is known as Picket's Charge at Gettysburg when every 2nd Lieutenant worth their salt knows you don't frontal assault an enemy that has the higher ground unless you vastly outnumber them, which they did not. All Lee would have needed to do was bypass the much smaller union force and march on Washington and the south would have been the victor.

I do agree that although Custer considered the Battle of the Washita to be a great victory, it was far from that. He basically attacked a sleeping village of somewhat already subdued native americans, killing women, children, and all. That was when the true rift between Custer and Benteen began to materialize. It was until the last fifteen years or so that the descendants of Benteen were finally able to have his name cleared for being a coward at the battle of Greasy Grass, Little Bighorn or whatever you want to call it.
It was believed for a century that Benteen purposely held his troops back rather than go to that aid of Custer because he either was a coward or he had no intention of helping Custer anymore than duty required. Who really knows.  :shrug:
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