Sumter
Posts: 62
Joined: 10/19/2005 Status: offline
|
Custer's motives while complex, were relatively clear for the most part. He recently had fallen into disfavor with the Grant administration because of testimony he gave to a congressional committee investigating fraud within the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Custer had little concrete information to offer, but indicated a belief that the corruption reached into Grant's cabinet and family. Grant was so angered by Custer's testimony that he stripped him of overall command of the Bighorn expedition and initially refused even to allow Custer to command the 7th Cavalry as part of the operation -- now to be commanded by Brig. Gen. Alfred Terry. Under pressure from Generals Terry, Sherman, and Sheridan, Grant relented and allowed Custer to lead his regiment. Custer certainly hoped that a dramatic victory could get him out from under the shadow of Grant's ire. (I don't think too much should be made of this, but Custer also understood that 1876 was a presidential election year.) Another -- equally important consideration -- involved the underlying theory that drove the army's strategy and tactics during the campaign. Simply put, everyone assumed that when attacked the Indians would flee. Hence the overall three-pronged approach to the campaign with columns under Gibbon, Crook, and Custer. Terry's orders to Custer established a schedule to coordinate the arrival of the columns, but also left him discretion to exploit the situation as he found it. Custer arrived in the Little Bighorn valley a day early and realizing the proximity of the Indian village apparently planned to hide out and rest until the next day. Upon receiving information that troopers searching for a lost box of hardtack had found both the missing box and a small band of Indians investigating it, Custer concluded that his command had been discovered and initiated the events that culminated in his defeat. (He had not been discovered, however, as the Indians in question were going away from the village and continued to do so.) Custer's own deployment mirrored the three column approach of the larger expedition. He first detached Benteen to scout to his left and insure that the Indians did not escape in that direction. Sometime thereafter he detached Reno to the right and ordered him to charge the village. Custer pledged to support Reno with the balance of the command. What Reno thought this pledge meant and what Custer actually intended did not match. Custer did not intend to follow Reno's command, but rather to support him by attacking from a different direction. Finally, Custer suffered from bad intelligence. He did not know that the Indians already had defeated Crook's column -- largely because Crook had made no effort to communicate this critical information. Custer also failed to appreciate the size of the village he was attacking -- although his Indian scouts had tried to warn him. Moreover, the determination of the Indians to fight rather than run -- combined with Reno's pathetic performance -- left Custer isolated and vulnerable. Sorry for being so long-winded.
|