Death of Custer, scene by Pawnee Bill's Wild West Show performers c. 1905 of Sitting Bull's stabbing Custer, with dead Native Americans lying on ground
On June 25, 1876, at the Battle of the Greasy Grass (Battle of Little Big Horn) Lakota, Arikara, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho defended Sioux and Cheyenne families living in south central Montana in a battle with the Seventh Regiment of the United States Cavalry.
As explained in An Indigenous Peoplesβ History of the United States for Young People by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, adapted by Debbie Reese and Jean Mendoza:
In June 1876, a large encampment of nontreaty Sioux and Cheyenne families was gathered along the Little Bighorn River. Later that month, Custer and the Seventh Cavalry prepared to attack the encampment, but warriors led by Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull successfully intercepted them. Most textbooks call this the Battle of the Little Bighorn, but Lakota and Cheyenne people, especially those whose ancestors defended the encampment villages, know it as the Battle of the Greasy Grass.
Sioux chief Sitting Bull and Lakota leader Crazy Horse directed their warriors against Lieutenant George Armstrong Custerβs regiment of over 225 cavalry men near the Little Bighorn River. Custer and his men died in the battle, and the united tribes claimed victory over the U.S. military that week.
But the victory against the United States was short-lived. Crazy Horse died in 1877 in U.S. military custody, as that government worked steadily to disarm the nations of the western plains and force their people onto reservations. Sitting Bull lived another 14 years and was murdered at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation by an Indian Agent. He was targeted for his political power and his participation in the anti-imperialist spiritual movement, Ghost Dance.
Marble markers for the Seventh Cavalry were erected in 1890, but it was not until Memorial Day of 1999 that red granite markers were added to the historic site to honor the memory of the Lakota, Sioux, Arikara, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho who died the week of the Battle of Greasy Grass.
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Update on my chef being a braindead slob especially lately: I guess he's off next week. I didnt know that until after he left today. I gues Monday and Tuesday mornings are the new guy and a long time dishwasher whoncsn handle the stuff he doesn't refuse to do. Neither of them csn stretch s pizza dough. The sous chef and I hafe both of those days off still, the schedule is set up to make the place need to close until 4 or it'll crash ans burn. I gotta convince the sous chef, whomis my longtime work pal to work his schedule as well. Seems like its gonns be essy cause we are both at the end of our fuses with thst guy and sre happy to see it blow up in his face. It isnt our job to come in on our weekend cause he didn't train someone. He even stopped us from teaching him pizza stuff. I feel really bad for the new guy though, he's gonna have a couple reallt bad days. He's like 2 weeks in, making pizza to rhe stsndard we have now legit takes months. Our retention rate is super good for a kitchen and everyone else has like 4 years minimum doing this and the standards have raised with the genersl skill level. He heard about this situation while we were seeing if there was a way to swap anyone else in without fucking up people's days off and seemed game to just go for it. I love that. So if he's comfortable working a disaster he cant be held accountable for cause if work politics that hes new to, he gets a big trust gain and a bit of work debt. Im off Monday and Tuesday snd Wednesday is a Canada holiday so paid day off, im NOT coming in. Especially cause my boss is taking a week off.