Little Bighorn Reborn
With a new Indian memorial, the site of Custer's last stand draws descendants of victors and vanquished alike
- By Tony Perrottet
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
A Crow Indian, Joe Medicine Crow, wrote the script for this reenactment. It is based, he says, on interviews with a Cheyenne veteran of the battle, with echoes of the 1940 Errol Flynn film They Died With Their Boots On, and emphasizes reconciliation. "In this Battle of the Little Bighorn, there were no victors.... We red men and white men live in a united fortress of democracy, the United States of America."
Afterward, I went to the rival reenactment—hosted by the Real Bird family of Crow Indians by the Little Bighorn River—where I ran into Jason Heitland, who portrayed a federal soldier. "I'm going to fight here every year until I'm too old to do it," he told me breathlessly as we wandered among replica military tents by a shady creek. "You're fighting on the actual battlefield! You sleep where the actual Indian camp was, where the Cheyenne dog soldiers slept. And the battle itself is totally unscripted. You've got whooping Indians coming from all directions. It's quite a thrill."
"And the horses don't know it's fake," added Nicola Sgro, a coffee salesman from Michigan in his late-30s. "That's why it's so dangerous!"
By dusk on Sunday, after the last shot had been fired and the last memorial wreath had been laid, the battlefield had returned to its eerie silence. Visiting the site one last time, I was left with a sense of sadness for those on both sides—cavalrymen who were paid $13 a month to risk their scalps in an alien land, and Indian warriors desperately trying to preserve their nomadic way of life. "This was Custer's last stand," said John Doerner, "but it was also the last stand of the Indians. Within a year after the Little Bighorn, there wasn't a truly free Indian left on the plains."
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Comments (4)
I'm interested in the contact info for the Cheryl who wrote in on May 2, 2008 if it is still available.
Posted by david on October 8,2010 | 04:21 PM
I wish you would have also included the sayings from the Indian Memorial. The words are very powerful!! Those words make you think about what happened then & now.
Thanks for the very nice pictures & the info about the Indian Memorial at the Battle of the Little Big Horn.
Posted by Cyndi on November 13,2009 | 09:47 PM
I have a tobacco pouch made by White Swan with the tag of where it was bought and a letter dated 1904 by the man who bought it from him. I would like to sell it, the tag and the letter. Please contact me. Cheryl
Posted by Cheryl on May 2,2008 | 07:54 PM
this is just what i was lookin for
Posted by Desiree on April 18,2008 | 11:52 AM