The Battle of
Little Bighorn [http://www.dlncoalition.org/dln_nation/chief_red_horse.htm]
An Eyewitness Account by the Lakota Chief Red Horse recorded in pictographs
and text at the Cheyenne River Reservation, 1881
Five springs ago I,
with many Sioux Indians, took down and packed up our tipis and moved from
Cheyenne river to the Rosebud river, where we camped a few days; then took down
and packed up our lodges and moved to the Little Bighorn river and pitched our
lodges with the large camp of Sioux.
The Sioux were camped on the Little Bighorn river as follows: The lodges of the
Uncpapas were pitched highest up the river under a bluff. The Santee lodges were
pitched next. The Oglala's lodges were pitched next. The Brule lodges were
pitched next. The Minneconjou lodges were pitched next. The Sans Arcs' lodges
were pitched next. The Blackfeet lodges were pitched next. The Cheyenne lodges
were pitched next. A few Arikara Indians were among the Sioux (being without
lodges of their own). Two-Kettles, among the other Sioux (without lodges).
I was a Sioux chief in the council lodge. My lodge was pitched in the center of
the camp. The day of the attack I and four women were a short distance from the
camp digging wild turnips. Suddenly one of the women attracted my attention to a
cloud of dust rising a short distance from camp. I soon saw that the soldiers
were charging the camp. To the camp I and the women ran. When I arrived a person
told me to hurry to the council lodge. The soldiers charged so quickly we could
not talk (council). We came out of the council lodge and talked in all
directions. The Sioux mount horses, take guns, and go fight the soldiers. Women
and children mount horses and go, meaning to get out of the way.
Among the soldiers was an officer who rode a horse with four white feet. [This
officer was evidently Capt. French, Seventh Cavalry.] The Sioux have for a long
time fought many brave men of different people, but the Sioux say this officer
was the bravest man they had ever fought. I don't know whether this was Gen.
Custer or not. Many of the Sioux men that I hear talking tell me it was. I saw
this officer in the fight many times, but did not see his body. It has been told
me that he was killed by a Santee Indian, who took his horse. This officer wore
a large-brimmed hat and a deerskin coat. This officer saved the lives of many
soldiers by turning his horse and covering the retreat. Sioux say this officer
was the bravest man they ever fought. I saw two officers looking alike, both
having long yellowish hair.
Before the attack the Sioux were camped on the Rosebud river. Sioux moved down a
river running into the Little Bighorn river, crossed the Little Bighorn river,
and camped on its west bank.
This day [day of attack] a Sioux man started to go to Red Cloud agency, but when
he had gone a short distance from camp he saw a cloud of dust rising and turned
back and said he thought a herd of buffalo was coming near the village.
The day was hot. In a short time the soldiers charged the camp. [This was Maj.
Reno's battalion of the Seventh Cavalry.] The soldiers came on the trail made by
the Sioux camp in moving, and crossed the Little Bighorn river above where the
Sioux crossed, and attacked the lodges of the Uncpapas, farthest up the river.
The women and children ran down the Little Bighorn river a short distance into a
ravine. The soldiers set fire to the lodges. All the Sioux now charged the
soldiers and drove them in confusion across the Little Bighorn river, which was
very rapid, and several soldiers were drowned in it. On a hill the soldiers
stopped and the Sioux surrounded them. A Sioux man came and said that a
different party of Soldiers had all the women and children prisoners. Like a
whirlwind the word went around, and the Sioux all heard it and left the soldiers
on the hill and went quickly to save the women and children.
From the hill that the soldiers were on to the place where the different
soldiers [by this term Red-Horse always means the battalion immediately
commanded by General Custer, his mode of distinction being that they were a
different body from that first encountered] were seen was level ground with the
exception of a creek. Sioux thought the soldiers on the hill [i.e., Reno's
battalion] would charge them in rear, but when they did not the Sioux thought
the soldiers on the hill were out of cartridges. As soon as we had killed all
the different soldiers the Sioux all went back to kill the soldiers on the hill.
All the Sioux watched around the hill on which were the soldiers until a Sioux
man came and said many walking soldiers were coming near. The coming of the
walking soldiers was the saving of the soldiers on the hill. Sioux can not fight
the walking soldiers [infantry], being afraid of them, so the Sioux hurriedly
left.
The soldiers charged the Sioux camp about noon. The soldiers were divided, one
party charging right into the camp. After driving these soldiers across the
river, the Sioux charged the different soldiers [i.e., Custer's] below, and
drive them in confusion; these soldiers became foolish, many throwing away their
guns and raising their hands, saying, "Sioux, pity us; take us
prisoners." The Sioux did not take a single soldier prisoner, but killed
all of them; none were left alive for even a few minutes. These different
soldiers discharged their guns but little. I took a gun and two belts off two
dead soldiers; out of one belt two cartridges were gone, out of the other five.
The Sioux took the guns and cartridges off the dead soldiers and went to the
hill on which the soldiers were, surrounded and fought them with the guns and
cartridges of the dead soldiers. Had the soldiers not divided I think they would
have killed many Sioux. The different soldiers [i.e., Custer's battalion] that
the Sioux killed made five brave stands. Once the Sioux charged right in the
midst of the different soldiers and scattered them all, fighting among the
soldiers hand to hand.
One band of soldiers was in rear of the Sioux. When this band of soldiers
charged, the Sioux fell back, and the Sioux and the soldiers stood facing each
other. Then all the Sioux became brave and charged the soldiers. The Sioux went
but a short distance before they separated and surrounded the soldiers. I could
see the officers riding in front of the soldiers and hear them shooting. Now the
Sioux had many killed. The soldiers killed 136 and wounded 160 Sioux. The Sioux
killed all these different soldiers in the ravine.
The soldiers charged the Sioux camp farthest up the river. A short time after
the different soldiers charged the village below. While the different soldiers
and Sioux were fighting together the Sioux chief said, "Sioux men, go watch
soldiers on the hill and prevent their joining the different soldiers." The
Sioux men took the clothing off the dead and dressed themselves in it. Among the
soldiers were white men who were not soldiers. The Sioux dressed in the
soldiers' and white men's clothing fought the soldiers on the hill.
The banks of the Little Bighorn river were high, and the Sioux killed many of
the soldiers while crossing. The soldiers on the hill dug up the ground [i.e.,
made earth-works], and the soldiers and Sioux fought at long range, sometimes
the Sioux charging close up. The fight continued at long range until a Sioux man
saw the walking soldiers coming. When the walking soldiers came near the Sioux
became afraid and ran away.
[TEXT: Garrick Mallery, Picture Writing of the American Indians, 10th Annual
Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1893).]
© 1996 THE WEST FILM PROJECT and WETA