an his
fire. From there I cannot tell you. About four or five o'clock the
packtrain came up and the hard fighting was down there. I went back to
the packtrain and helped fight a while and then I took to the pine hills
away over to the east. When I heard that Custer had been killed I said:
"He is a man to fight the enemy. He loved to fight, but if he fights and
is killed, he will have to be killed."
THE STORY OF CHIEF RED CLOUD----OGOLLALA SIOUX
I remember that our camp was located in the valley of the Little Big Horn.
As I remember there were about four thousand Indians in our camp, and
about a hundred Sioux warriors in my own band. There were four or five
different sections of the Sioux tribe in this fight. I remember that
Rain-in-the-Face and Sitting-Bull, Crazy Horse, and Big Man were with us
in the battle. We were in our camp; there was plenty of buffalo meat in
those days, and we killed a good many. The women were drying the meat,
and the warriors were resting. Suddenly we heard firing, and we found out
that the soldiers were on us. The women and children were all frightened,
and started to run across the hills, and we men mounted our horses and
started toward the enemy. I remember that we pushed Reno back until he
had to cross the river, and go up against the bluffs, and then some of our
Sioux rode around the hill to head him off, and we had him in a pocket.
After we had killed many of Reno's men, Custer came along the ridge, and
we were called off to fight Custer. We kept circling around Custer, and
as his men came down the ridge we shot them down. And then the rest
dismounted and gathered in a bunch, kneeling down and shooting from behind
their horses. We circled round and round, firing into Custer's men until
the last man was killed. I did not see Custer fall, for all the Indians
did not know which was Custer. One reason why we did not scalp Custer was
because the Indians and the white soldiers were so mixed up that it was
hard to distinguish one man from another; and another reason was because
Custer was the bravest man of all and we did not want to touch him as he
made the last stand. This is also the opinion of Rain-in-the-Face.
Regarding the cause of the Custer fight I must say, we were pursued by the
soldiers, we were on the warpath, and we were on the warpath with the
Crows and other tribes. We were trying to drive them back from the
hunting grounds, and the sol
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