Item #27977 Custer and the 1873 Yellowstone Survey. A Documentary History. Edited by M. John Luberkin. Custeriana.

Custer and the 1873 Yellowstone Survey. A Documentary History. Edited by M. John Luberkin.

Norman: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 2013. First Printing of the First US Edition. A Fine tight copy in a Fine dust jacket. In 1873. The Northern Pacific’s proposed middle—the 250 miles between present Billings and Glendive, Montana—had yet to be surveyed, and Sioux and Cheyenne Indians opposed construction through the Yellowstone Valley, the heart of their hunting grounds. A previous surveying expedition along the Yellowstone River in 1872 had resulted in the death of a prominent member of the party, and the near-death of the railroad’s chief engineer. Such is the backdrop for Custer and the 1873 Yellowstone Survey, the story of the expedition told through documents selected and interpreted by historian M. John Lubetkin. The U.S. Army was determined to punish the Sioux, and the Northern Pacific desperately needed to complete its engineering work and resume construction. The expedition mounted in 1873—larger than all previous surveys combined—included “embedded” newspaper correspondents and 1,600 infantry and cavalry, the latter led by George Armstrong Custer. Lubetkin has gathered firsthand accounts from the correspondents, diarists, and reporters who accompanied this important expedition. Item #27977

Price: $125.00

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