A Good Year to Die: The Story of the Great Sioux War
In 1876, two years after gold was discovered in the Black Hills, the region became the last important battleground of a tragic war against the Cheyenne and Sioux nations. For the sake of American economic expansion, the United States Army, led by General Crook, General Terry, and Colonel Custer, aimed to trap the Indians — led by Sitting Bull — in a three-pronged attack and destroy forever the Indians' power.When the campaign ended, Custer and his troops had been defeated at the Little Bighorn and General George Crook had met with near-disaster at the Rosebud. Nevertheless, the brilliant Oglala Sioux chief Crazy Horse was dead, Sitting Bull and his band had been driven to Canada, and the military power of the Sioux and the Northern Cheyennes was broken. The government achieved its aims, but the casualties both sides had suffered made these wars the most unnecessary ever fought between the federal government and the Indians.
"A provocative analysis... (and) sophisticated use of Native American accounts.... This sympathetic account will appeal especially to those interested in Native American culture and history". — Publishers Weekly.
"Narrative history does not get much better than this". — Booklist.
"A Good Year to Die has been solidly researched and is clearly presented, a book of permanent value to Western history fanatics". — Los Angeles Times.
"Robinson early on strikes the right theme: that the Great Sioux War marked the inevitable end of a way of life in North America and its replacement with a kind of sedentary dependence on the white man's bureaucracy". — New York Times.
- Author
- Charles M. Robinson III
- Format
- paperback
- Pages
- 464
- Publisher
- University of Oklahoma Press
- Language
- english
- ISBN
- 9780806128900
- Genres
- history, american
- Release date
- 1996
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