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|  Little Big Horn Battlefield
 #8103545 03/19/24 04:30 PM
03/19/24 04:30 PM
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| Joined:  Nov 2011 Idaho Falls, ID 
Grandpa Trapper
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Nov 2011
 Idaho Falls, ID
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Anybody been there and is it worth 1/2 day to visit it?  After attending John Graham’s Coyote Days in August, my nephew and I are planning on going there for an afternoon. 
 An old man roaming the Rockies
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8103556 03/19/24 04:46 PM
03/19/24 04:46 PM
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| Joined:  Jan 2012 PA
panaxman
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 Joined:  Jan 2012
 PA
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After Little Big Horn, We stopped in Broadus MT at the cross road; old diner with a 2 lane bowling alley, and arcade. Craig O was not  hanging there so we bolted. Tell ya what, not much going on there!  The store staff of 2 were delighted to have someone stop, they were dang lonely.Cruised to Rapid City to fly home the next day
 
 
Last edited by panaxman; 03/19/24 04:46 PM.
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8103559 03/19/24 04:52 PM
03/19/24 04:52 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 Worthington, IN
Scott T
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 Joined:  Dec 2006
 Worthington, IN
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Yes. We enjoyed it and learned a lot. If you like that kind of history stop at the Fort Sill museum if you get a chance. 
 Looks like he needs another year;-)
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8103675 03/19/24 07:34 PM
03/19/24 07:34 PM
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| Joined:  Sep 2020 Missouri
Osagan
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 Joined:  Sep 2020
 Missouri
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Anybody been there and is it worth 1/2 day to visit it?  After attending John Graham’s Coyote Days in August, my nephew and I are planning on going there for an afternoon. You bet ya it's worth seeing.    Been there  twice on 2 different vacations.   I recommend  you read up on the battle and look at the maps before you go.    It will help you out.   There is a good old historical fiction book out there.  Bugles In The Afternoon by Ernest Haycox that is worth reading.   Many many other books about The Little Big Horn also.  Right after the battle, to get the wounded soldiers care, a steamboat captain (Grant Marsh) of the Far West steamboat  ran over 700 miles from the mouth of the Little Big Horn near Harding Montana to Bismarck North Dakota in 54 hours.   He ran the Big Horn, Yellowstone and stump filled Missouri river night and day.   Just amazing stuff.     Lot's of valor like that and lots of stupidity on Custers part.  Well worth the effort to go and see the battlefield.     Rosebud battlefield is close also. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8103925 03/19/24 11:14 PM
03/19/24 11:14 PM
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| Joined:  Nov 2011 Idaho Falls, ID 
Grandpa Trapper
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Nov 2011
 Idaho Falls, ID
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I just heard the song Comanche the Brave Horse, a survivor of the battle, by Johnny Hornton. One thing was incorrect in the song and it says Comanche was General Custer’s horse which is incorrect. It was Capt. Myles Keogh’s horse who also got killed in the battle. After Comanche was nursed back to health from about four wounds, it was ordered that he would never have another saddle strapped on him or be rode again. I believe he lived for another 16 years. Also, he is preserved and fully mounted and on display at the University of Kansas. 
 An old man roaming the Rockies
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: arcticotter]
 #8104004 03/20/24 01:38 AM
03/20/24 01:38 AM
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| Joined:  Sep 2020 Missouri
Osagan
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 Joined:  Sep 2020
 Missouri
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It’s definitely worth the stop.  One of things that really stuck with me is that the battle lasted only about 15 minutes.  Well sort of.  Yes, at the north end of the battlefield it didn't take long for the allied Indian forces to dispatch Custer and his band. BUT, at the south end of the battlefield (about 1 1/2 miles  to the south),   another group of soldiers under Major Reno and Captain Benteen forted up on top of a hill and held the Indians off till the main group of soldiers under General Terry relieved them the next day.    Lots of wounded.  These wounded troops are the ones that they carted down The Little Big Horn  about 20 miles north to the where the steamboat was anchored.   |  |  |  
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8104031 03/20/24 05:09 AM
03/20/24 05:09 AM
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| Joined:  Jun 2010 MT (Big Sky Country)
Allan Minear
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 Joined:  Jun 2010
 MT (Big Sky Country)
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Get ahold of Montana tourism for literature on the area and check out Fort Smith Mt and Yellowtail Dam , that's also where the Haystack battle was along the Bozeman Trail . Yellowtail Dam is well worth a stop to see a canyon filled with water and go to boat launch unless you don't do switch backs well or don't have good brakes , there's a Indian monument up there and you can see the buffalo in the pasture from there with field glasses or a spotting scope .
 
 The museum in Hardin is the busiest in the entire state and highlites some of the farming equipment from days gone by , as well as Campbell farming corporation who was once the largest farming corporation in the world .
 Mr Campbell was sent to Russia to teach them how to grow wheat even , oh and there small field is 25,000 acres !
 
 So do yourself a favor and spent a bit more than a day in Big Horn Co. to see the sights , then near Custer Mt is fort Manual Lisa a fishing access where the first Fur trade fort was after the Lewis and Clark expedition  .
 There's world class trout fishing in the Big Horn River also and remember the early mountain men trapped beaver in all the streams and rivers you'll drive by but then so did I when I lived down there .
 
 You're friend along the snare line .
 Allan
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|  Re: Little Big Horn Battlefield
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
 #8104103 03/20/24 07:56 AM
03/20/24 07:56 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2011 Northern KY
huntcook
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 Joined:  Dec 2011
 Northern KY
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Yes it worth the stop I have been there twice if I was in the area I would stop again. 
 Government making sin legal does not make it right.
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