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100 Voices: Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapahoe, Crow, Arikara and American Eye-witness accounts of the Battle of the Little Bighorn

  A Note on 100 Voices by Bruce Brown
100 Voices: Full List * Crow/Arikara * Sioux/Cheyenne * American * Rosebud
Guided Tours: Crazy Horse at the Little Bighorn * Crazy Horse at the Rosebud
Features:
Who Killed Custer? * Who Killed Custer? Audio Book
Crazy Horse Surrender Ledger * Winter Count of Crazy Horse's Life
Bogus Crazy Horse Photos * Unsung 7th Cavalry Scouts Saga
Indian Battlefield Tactics * Woman Warriors * Little Bighorn Maps
U.S. Medal of Honor Winners * U.S. Atrocities * Indian Atrocities
Little Bighorn Mysteries * Virtual Museum

Source materials for "Conversations With Crazy Horse" by Bruce Brown

Who Became the
7th Cavalry Commander
After Custer Fell?

A look at the Seventh Cavalry chain of command

From Archaeology, History and Custer's last Battle by Richard Allan Fox, Jr.

Note

Arikara warrior Bears BellyCAVALRY TACTICS instituted in 1874, as I have shown, prescribed wing composition on the basis of company commander seniority. The five companies that entered the Custer battle were C, E, F, I, and L. Their respective commanders, with dates of rank and seniority, were Capt. Thomas Custer (December 2, 1875, third in rank), 1 st Lt. Algernon Smith (December 5, 1868, fourth in rank), Capt. George Yates (August 19, 1867, second in rank), Capt. Myles Keogh (July 28, 1866, first in rank) and 1st Lt. James Calhoun (January 9, 1871, fifth or last in rank). According to the tactical manual, therefore, the battalion should have been apportioned with Companies 1, C, and L in the right wing, Captain Keogh (I Company) commanding, and Companies F and E in a left wing commanded by Captain Yates (F Company): F, E, C, L, 1, with wing division between E and C.

There are reasonable suggestions that Captain Custer temporarily served headquarters staff as aide-de-camp to brother George (George A. Custer), leaving 2d Lt. Henry Harrington as C Company commander (and the only officer with the company). Thus, possibly, the battalion consisted of a right wing with Companies I (Keogh, first in rank), E (Smith, third in rank), and C (Harrington, fifth in rank) and a left wing of F (Yates, second in rank) and L (Calhoun, fourth in rank). This apportionment is not likely, however, for tactics allowed a company to maintain its prescribed battalion position in the absence, usually brief, of its commander. Captain Custer, if with the command staff, was technically not absent. A headquarters staff (regiment), by the way, consisted of the regimental commander, his aide, an adjutant officer, the sergeant major, a trumpeter, and others. In the strictest sense, the battalion consisted of five companies and the staff.

The Seventh Cavalry chain of command when Custer fell was (left to tight) Myles Keogh, Thomas Yates, Thomas Custer, James Calhoun.


Archaeology, History and Custer's Last Battle by Richard Allan Fox, Jr., University of Oklahoma Press 2000 p 140

NOTE:

This note by Richard Allan Fox, Jr. delineates the Seventh Cavalry chain of command after Custer was killed: Keogh, Yates, Thomas Custer, Smith and Calhoun. Thomas Custer was George Custer's brother, and Calhoun was his brother-in-law.

Major Marcus Reno and Capt. Frederick Benteen, who commanded Custer's two wings after he split his command, ranked number two and number three in the overall chain of command, but they were not with Custer when he fell.

  A Note on 100 Voices by Bruce Brown
100 Voices: Full List * Crow/Arikara * Sioux/Cheyenne * American * Rosebud
Guided Tours: Crazy Horse at the Little Bighorn * Crazy Horse at the Rosebud
Features:
Who Killed Custer? * Who Killed Custer? Audio Book
Crazy Horse Surrender Ledger * Winter Count of Crazy Horse's Life
Bogus Crazy Horse Photos * Unsung 7th Cavalry Scouts Saga
Indian Battlefield Tactics * Woman Warriors * Little Bighorn Maps
U.S. Medal of Honor Winners * U.S. Atrocities * Indian Atrocities
Little Bighorn Mysteries * Virtual Museum

Click here for "Conversations With Crazy Horse" by Bruce Brown


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"Crazy Horse In Action" by Bruce Brown on Astonisher.com

"The Unsung Seventh Cavalry Scouts Saga" by Bruce Brown on Astonisher.com

"The Complete Crazy Horse Surrender Ledger" by Bruce Brown on Astonisher.com

3D satellite maps of the Little Bighorn from Astonisher.com's 100 Voices

"Conversation With Crazy Horse," new fiction by Bruce Brown on Astonisher.com