Thieves' Road: The Black Hills Betrayal and Custer's Path to Little Bighorn
Terry Mort
(Author)
Description
In the summer of 1874, Brevet Major General George Armstrong Custer led an expedition of some 1000 troops and more than one hundred wagons into the Black Hills of South Dakota. This fascinating work of narrative history tells the little-known story of this exploratory mission and reveals how it set the stage for the climactic Battle of the Little Bighorn two years later. What is the significance of this obscure foray into the Black Hills? The short answer, as the author explains, is that Custer found gold. This discovery in the context of the worst economic depression the country had yet experienced spurred a gold rush that brought hordes of white prospectors to the Sioux's sacred grounds. The result was the trampling of an 1868 treaty that had granted the Black Hills to the Sioux and their inevitable retaliation against the white invasion. The author brings the era of the Grant administration to life, with its peace policy of settling the Indians on reservations, corrupt federal Indian Bureau, Gilded Age excesses, the building of the western railroads, the white settlements that followed the tracks, the Crash of 1873, mining ventures, and the clash of white and Indian cultures with diametrically opposed values. The discovery of gold in the Black Hills was the beginning of the end of Sioux territorial independence. By the end of the book it is clear why the Sioux leader Fast Bear called the trail cut by Custer to the Black Hills thieves' road.Product Details
Price
$25.00
$23.25
Publisher
Prometheus Books
Publish Date
February 10, 2015
Pages
336
Dimensions
6.3 X 1.3 X 9.0 inches | 1.23 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781616149604
BISAC Categories:
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About the Author
Terry Mort is the author of The Wrath of Cochise (Pegasus, 2013), The Hemingway Patrols (Scribner, 2009), a book on fly fishing, and edited anthologies of Mark Twain, Jack London, and Zane Grey (Lyons Press). The Wrath of Cochise was widely praised and received excellent reviews in the Wall Street Journal and Publishers Weekly. The Hemingway Patrols, also widely praised, was Amazon's best book of the month in August 2009.
Reviews
""An absorbing account of the expedition.... An exceptional study of both Custer's mission and the variety of forces that led to it. . . . An excellent history of both the Black Hills Expedition and the times in which it occurred." --On Point: The Journal of Army History "A comprehensive, discerning, carefully researched, and readable account . . . . Indispensable reading." --Michigan War Studies Review "Mort's delightful prose will entice readers of history, geography, Native American studies and sociology. All will revel in the feeling of being in the Dakotas at the end of the 19th century." --Kirkus Reviews, STARRED REVIEW