Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

The Non Shorpy Web All Stars.

buler

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,380
Location
Wisconsin
Yakima Canutt:


yakima-canutt.jpg
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Dutch hat styling circa 1635
2954.jpg


Michael


Gen. Custer.png

Perhaps a fan of Dutch style hats!
He wore a uniform of black velveteen, with gold lace that extended from his wrist to his elbow,
a wide-collared blue sailor shirt with silver stars sewn on and a red necktie around his throat.
It is said that Custer wanted a distinctive uniform so his men could see him during combat.

The “Boy General”.
635927133155556348-15.jpg
 
Messages
18,214
It is said that Custer wanted a distinctive uniform so his men could see him during combat.

The oral history of the Akta Lakota & the Oglala Sioux beginning with Crazy Horse's command that killed Custer & his men, is that Custer had cut his hair sometime before the battle & that he was wearing his buckskins instead of his blue uniform. In death Custer's body was accorded some small measure of respect that was not granted to the remains of the uniformed soldiers simply because the Lakota didn't know who he was & thought he might have been a civilian & not a soldier.

I went to the battlefield in 2014 for the 138th anniversary & the rededication of the monument to the Native American tribes.

http://aktalakota.stjo.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8998
 
Last edited:
Messages
15,276
Location
Somewhere south of crazy
The oral history of the Akta Lakota & the Oglala Sioux beginning with Crazy Horse's command that killed Custer & his men, is that Custer had cut his hair sometime before the battle & that he was wearing his buckskins instead of his blue uniform. In death Custer's body was accorded some small measure of respect that was not granted to the remains of the uniformed soldiers simply because the Lakota didn't know who he was & thought he might have been a civilian & not a soldier.

I went to the battlefield in 2014 for the 138th anniversary & the rededication of the monument to the Native American tribes.

http://aktalakota.stjo.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8998
Poor Custer. His courage and impetuosity overcame his judgement. He didn't realize just how p---ed off the Native people were. I thought I had read somewhere that one of the Sioux women stuck an awl in his ear so he could hear better in the afterlife.
The battlefield is haunting.
 
Messages
18,214
Poor Custer. His courage and impetuosity overcame his judgement. He didn't realize just how p---ed off the Native people were. I thought I had read somewhere that one of the Sioux women stuck an awl in his ear so he could hear better in the afterlife.
The battlefield is haunting.
The guy graduated dead last in his class at Westpoint. He was nothing but a flamboyant baffoon. One of my best friends GG Uncle, Charlie Reynolds was a civilian guide with Custer & killed that day. You can find his name on the rolls.

The battlefield is very somber. I've been there twice. The only other place I have been where the same feelings & emotions overcome me is Shiloh Hill.
 
Messages
15,276
Location
Somewhere south of crazy
The guy graduated dead last in his class at Westpoint. He was nothing but a flamboyant baffoon. One of my best friends GG Uncle, Charlie Reynolds was a civilian guide with Custer & killed that day. You can find his name on the rolls.

The battlefield is very somber. I've been there twice. The only other place I have been where the same feelings & emotions overcome me is Shiloh Hill.
I believe he may have had presidential aspirations.
I have had similar sensations at Gettysburg and Culloden.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,250
Messages
3,077,310
Members
54,183
Latest member
UrbanGraveDave
Top