Curley (or Curly) 1859-1923
Curley was born in Montana in 1859. As an member
of the Crow tribe he took part in several skirmishes with the Sioux before
agreeing to became a scout with Colonel John Gibbon in April 1876. Two
months later he was sent by Gibbon to join General George A. Custer in
his search to locate the villages of those Native Americans involved in
the battle at Rosebud Creek.
An encampment was discovered on the 25th June. It was estimated
that it contained about 10,000 men, women and children. Custer assumed
the numbers were much less than that and instead of waiting for the main
army under General Alfred Terry to arrive, he decided to attack the encampment
straight away.
Custer divided his men into three groups. Captain Frederick Benteen
was ordered to explore a range of hills five miles from the village. Major
Marcus Reno was to attack the encampment from the upper end whereas Custer
decided to strike further downstream. Custer then sent Curly and the other
three Indian scouts (Hairy Moccasin, Goes Ahead and White Man Runs Him)
away from Little Bighorn before the battle began.
At the battle of the Little Bighorn George A. Custer and all
his 264 men were killed. The soldiers under Reno and Benteen were also
attacked and 47 of them were killed before they were rescued by the arrival
of General Alfred Terry and Colonel John Gibbon and their troops.
After the battle false stories circulated that one of Custer's
party had survived. On 26th July 1876 the New York Herald Tribune published
an interview with an unnamed Indian scout who it claimed had survived
the battle. The newspaper quoted the scout as saying that "General
Custer was the last man to be killed." He also added that Custer
had not been scalped because the Sioux respected their brave enemy.
Curley was the person most often identified as the lone survivor.
He denied that he had witnessed the battle but on 29th July, the Chicago
Tribune published an article claiming that Curley had told them that "more
Indians were killed than Custer had men." John F. Finerty of the
Chicago Times also claimed that Curley had witnessed Custer's death. In
a book published several years later, Finerty claimed that "Curley
said that Custer remained alive throughout the greater part of the engagement,
animating his men to determined resistance, but about an hour before the
close of the fight lie received a mortal wound."
Curley died of pneumonia on 21st May 1923.
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