03623nam 22005173 450 991015878430332120230807213138.097817862538801786253887(CKB)3710000001011362(MiAaPQ)EBC4807591(Au-PeEL)EBL4807591(CaPaEBR)ebr11355044(OCoLC)975222036(Perlego)3018295(MiAaPQ)EBC32247573(Au-PeEL)EBL32247573(OCoLC)1530382350(EXLCZ)99371000000101136220210901d2015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMore Than Numbers1st ed.San Francisco :Normanby Press,2015.©2015.1 online resource (49 pages)Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY -- THESIS -- DISCUSSION -- CONCLUSION -- "CUSTER AND THE LITTLE BIGHORN-THE POPULAR IMAGE" -- HISTORICAL BACKGROUND -- THE PLAINS INDIANS -- CONFLICT OVERVIEW -- LITTLE BIGHORN CAMPAIGN -- 7TH CAVALRY ACTIONS AT THE LITTLE BIGHORN -- COMMAND AND CONTROL -- STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP-SITTING BULL -- THE PEOPLE-INDIAN MORALE -- TACTICAL COMMAND AND CONTROL -- SITTING BULL'S INFLUENCE DURING THE BATTLE -- COMMAND AND CONTROL SUMMARY -- MOVEMENT AND MANEUVER (TACTICS) -- MASS MOVEMENT -- TACTICAL MANEUVER -- SUMMARY -- FIRES -- RIFLES -- BOW AND ARROWS -- FIRE (i.e., conflagration) -- INTELLIGENCE -- LOGISTICS -- FORCE PROTECTION -- SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION -- BIBLIOGRAPHY.There can be no argument that the numerical advantage the Indians held during the battle of the Little Bighorn was a decisive factor in their overwhelming victory. However, numbers alone did not solely guarantee that the Indians would be able to annihilate five companies of the 7th Cavalry, kill over one third of the soldiers in another three companies, and seriously threaten the destruction of the entire regiment. The mere fact that the Indians, who were supposedly wild savages, were able to kill over 260 well-armed soldiers while only losing between an estimated 30-40 of their own, with at least eight of these being non-combatants, indicates that the Indians did not defeat the 7th Cavalry by simply throwing bodies at them. Rather, the Indians earned their victory with good leadership and savvy tactical actions.In the actual fighting, the Indians consistently used the terrain in expert fashion and combined fires and maneuver that overwhelmed the troopers' ability to react to each new and developing threat. The Indians combined bases of fire (with many Indians using weapons far superior to that of the cavalry), infiltrated, and penetrated to isolate units on the battlefield and then pressed their attacks to a total tactical victory, literally annihilating Custer's detachment. Although the cavalry did achieve complete surprise in their attack on the village, the Indians were able to quickly meet each new threat posed by the soldiers during the course of the battle and then react faster than the troopers during every subsequent event. More Than NumbersGreat PlainsIndians of North AmericaGreat Plains.Indians of North America.973.82Vickers USMC Major B. C1376471MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910158784303321More Than Numbers3412305UNINA