Bloody Knife was an enemy to his father's people, the Hunkpapa Sioux, and a friend to the U.S. Army and George Custer.
Why?
We pick up where we left off in Part I, just before the Black Hill's Expedition of 1874, and explore how that summer campaign paved the way to Custer's Last Stand...
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Suggested reading:
Bloody Knife: Custer’s Favorite Scout, Ben Innis, edited by Richard Collin
Exploring with Custer: The 1874 Black Hills expedition, Ernest Grafe & Paul Horsted
Kaleidoscopic Lives: A Companion Book to Frontier and Indian life, by Joseph Henry Taylor
Kaleidoscopic lives; a companion book to Frontier and Indian life : Taylor, Joseph Henry, 1845- : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Battles and Skirmishes of the Great Sioux War, Jerome Greene
Where the Rivers Ran Red, Michael Donahue
The Arikara Narrative of Custer’s Campaign, Orin Libby
Jay Cooke’s Gamble, M. John Lubetkin
Gall: Lakota Warrior Chief, Robert W. Larson
The Custer Reader, Paul Andrew Hutton
Boots and Saddles, Elizabeth Custer
The Strategy of Defeat at the Little Big Horn, Frederic C. Wagner III
The Custer Companion, Thom Hatch
...
If you too have a passion for the 7th Cavalry, please consider joining:
Little Bighorn Associates
www.thelbha.com
Custer Battlefield Historical & Museum Association
custerbattlefield.org
Custer Association of Great Britain
www.english-westerners-society.org.uk
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For more about my current work-in-progress or my published books (The Confusion of Languages and You Know When the Men Are Gone, both with Putnam/Penguin), please see my author website:
www.siobhanfallon.com
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