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preface 1. Utley, Frontier Regulars, 4. 2. Hebard and Brininstool, The Bozeman Trail, 2:90. 3. Leckie, Elizabeth Bacon Custer and the Making of a Myth; Dippie, Custer’s Last Stand. introduction 1. Leckie, Elizabeth Bacon Custer and the Making of a Myth, xx. 2. Sibbald, “Camp Followers All: Army Women of the West,” 56–67. 3. For sources on the myriad roles of women in the frontier army see Stallard, Glittering Misery; Nacy, Members of the Regiment; Stewart, “Army Laundresses: Ladies of the ‘Soap Suds Row,’” 421–36; Miller, “Foragers, Army Women, and Prostitutes,” in Jensen and Miller, eds., New Mexico Women, 141–68; Holmes, “And I Was Always with Him,” 177–90. 4. Coffman, The Old Army, 25. 5. Coffman, The Old Army, 104. 6. Vivandière is a term from a mixture of French and Latin meaning “hospitality giver.” For information about vivandières see Gail R. Jessee, “The Confederate Cantinieres,” Florida Frontier Gazette, October 1998, www.floridafrontier.com, accessed 8 November 2006; Atkins, “Civil War Vivandieres and Daughters of the Regiment,” www.vivandiere.net, accessed 8 November 2006; Battle, Hearts of Fire. 7. Carrington, Absaraka, Home of the Crows, 1, 41; Carrington, My Army Life, 61–62. 8. Coffman, The Old Army, 288. 9. Welter, “The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820–186,” 151–74. 10. Fraser, America and the Patterns of Chivalry, 8. 11. Brooks, Chivalric Days, iii. 12. Mintz and Kellog, Domestic Revolutions, 56. 1. prelude to disaster 1. Harcey, Croone, Medicine Crow, White-Man-Runs-Him, 22. “Absaroka” has a varied synonymy, with “Absaraka,” “Absarokee,” “Apsáalooke,” “Absaroga,” and “Apsaroga” being a few of the more common versions. “Absaroka” is the most widely used spelling today. note s Notes to pages 1–19 202 2. Harcey, Croone, Medicine Crow, White-Man-Runs-Him, 19. 3. Carrington, Absaraka, 13. Margaret Carrington named her book “Absaraka, Home of the Crows” to emphasize her belief that Absaroka should be returned to the Crows after they had been dispossessed by the Lakota and the U.S. government. 4. White, “The Winning of the West,” 342. 5. White,“The Winning of the West,” 321; Hassrick, The Sioux, 7; Walker, DeMallie, Lakota Society, 14–17. 6. Harcey, Croone, Medicine Crow, White-Man-Runs-Him, 16–28; White, “The Winning of the West,” 319–43. 7. Andrist, The Long Death, 18–20; Lavender, Bent’s Fort, 319–23. 8. Hoxie, Parading Through History, 86–88; Linderman, American, 49. 9. For descriptions of the founding of the Bozeman Trail see Doyle, “Journeys to the Land of Gold,” 54–67; Doyle, “The Bozeman Trail, 1863–1868,” 5–11; Hebard and Brininstool, The Bozeman Trail, 1:201–35. 10. Olson, Red Cloud and the Sioux Problem, 23–24. 11. McGinnis, “Strike and Retreat,” 30–41. 12. Athearn, Sherman and the Settlement of the West, 16. 13. Matloff, American Military History, 301. 14. Manzione, “I Am Looking to the North for My Life,” 7–8. 15. Coffman, The Old Army, 218–19; Murray, Military Posts in the Powder River Country, 52; Utley, Frontier Regulars, 10–14. 16. Athearn, Sherman and the Settlement of the West, 6. 17. Athearn, Sherman and the Settlement of the West, 43. 18. Athearn, Sherman and the Settlement of the West, 39; Young, The West of Philip St. George Cooke, 326; Utley, Frontier Regulars, 12. 19. General Ulysses S. Grant, Department of the Army, Washington dc, to General William T. Sherman, Division of the Missouri, St. Louis, March 3, 1866, in Grant, The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, 16:93. 20. Young, The West of Philip St. George Cooke, 19. 21. Foote, The Civil War, 1:472. 22. Quaife, Introduction to Absaraka, xxvi–xxvii. 23. McKeen, “Henry Beebee Carrington,” 19–33. 24. McKeen, “Henry Beebee Carrington,” 33–69. 25. McPherson, The Battle Cry of Freedom, 320–21. 26. McKeen, “Henry Beebee Carrington,” 70–76. 27. McPherson, The Battle Cry of Freedom, 299–301. 28. Lord, They Fought for the Union, 1–8. 29. McKeen, “Henry Beebee Carrington,” 77–80. 30. McKeen, “Henry Beebee Carrington,” 80; Cabaniss, “The Eighteenth Regiment of the Infantry,” 643. Cited from online transcription at the U.S. Army Center of Military History website, www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/R&H/R&H-FM .htm, accessed April, 2001. 31. McDermott, “Price of Arrogance,” 42–53; Carrington, Absaraka, 244. [52.207.218.95] Project MUSE (2024-03-28 11:16 GMT) Notes to pages 19–33 203 32. McDermott, “The Life of William Judd Fetterman,” 43. 33. Carrington, Absaraka, 244. 34. McDermott...