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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Okay if you're like me and kept trying to propagate cuttings but nothing put out roots before rotting maybe ignore all advice about keeping it out of direct light because I put them under a grow lamp and wow my basil cuttings are finally doing it
You ever rub em around in rooting powder?
Is that's what Australians call coke?
No but I'll be suggesting it
no because the rooting powder is supposed to be for in-ground use only (also I think for some reason it's not supposed to be used for food/herbs?) and idk I figured basil would do better just sitting in water since it's already so prone to rotting i can't imagine threading the fine line between enough humidity to keep it alive without killing it in dirt would be easy
but maybe I'm also wrong and it's just as easy as putting a dome over them. I found a little pine tree thing growing out of the fuckin' siding of my house and its root got a little messed up so I rooting hormone'd that and put half a soda bottle over it as a dome and tbh it stays pretty moisssst without me having to worry about it
I need to try again with the ghost pepper I've got growing, it'd be cool if I could keep clones of everything going over the winter under grow lights and have shit ready to go next April