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Author Previous Topic: Friends of the Little Bighorn 2005 Calendar Topic Next Topic: Weir Point -- Before & After
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whistlingboy
Lieutenant

USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 16 2005 :  11:11:01 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Given easteners' insatiable appetite for stories of the west and the popularity of General Custer,after the debacle in southeastern Montana were there not 'hungry' reporters who wanted to immediately go west and do their own investigations and send the 'true' story of the LBH (in their eyes) back home? Was the general public (reporters) banned from this area (it wasn't government land yet). Were there not foolish, gutsy reporters yet? No prospectors of 'golden' news to get rich in attention other than the few we read accounts of? Basically, it was 'Army' investigations that established the facts and put the 'pieces' together, right?

Thank you, Lorenzo; you are a learned man and sensitive to the finer points of marriage and love. And I don't doubt that many of us are all too aware of what it takes to maintain a marriage, who have walked this 'path' with its pitfalls, sacrifices and rewards. These days it is easier (and profitable maybe) to rectify marriage arguments and dissatisfactions by divorce where one of the two makes substantial monetary gains at times. But then doesn't one have to question how 'deep' true love really is when the 'split' becomes a business venture in the end.
No, Elizabeth Custer appears to me to have been not the selfish opportunist some portray her
to have been. Yes, she wrote the books but they weren't justifications for a bad marriage or a 'vehicle' to slander her husband and 'set the story straight' for those persons who go after the 'truth' and wreck lives in the process. The books were simply a manifestation of her love and a way for her to deal with her 'loss' and a chance to 're-live' her life with her husband one more time. And yes, they did provide her with some needed and helpful income.

Edited by - whistlingboy on January 16 2005 11:16:03 AM
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joseph wiggs
Brigadier General


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Posted - January 16 2005 :  11:15:18 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Lorenzo, I agree with you regarding whistlingboy's sensitive and perceptive post. I'm equally glad to hear, from you, that Custer's mine adventure did bear fruitation making his partners rich. Had the General survived he, and Libbie too, would have shared in the riches. I wonder, what do you call all the "idiots" of the west who struck it rich, smarter than those who did not?
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 16 2005 :  12:06:27 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
You call them more fortunate. Again, Lorenzo, a book, a quote. Something like evidence.

In any case, you have to deal with the fact that Custer left his wife poorer and legally broke at his death.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
Status: offline

Posted - January 16 2005 :  3:51:21 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
Very strange Dark that you now ask a quote when once you called yourself bored from quotes. However, you can find the mine affair in Barnett. It's the one I remember by memory as I have not my books here.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 17 2005 :  12:03:57 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
Again, Lorenzo, you worm out by now pretending an English-Italian failure. I never said I was bored from quotes, although I nailed Wiggs for providing pointless quotes.

If true, why would the "mine affair" exculpate Custer? Was it legal for an Army officer to be involved in it? Was it appropriate? Did that particular mine pan out and would it offset ALL the other fiascos Custer lost on and Libbie would not pay off?

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
Status: offline

Posted - January 17 2005 :  1:45:32 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
You told me too, about quotes, but, Dark, the only one that pretend something here is you, and you pretend to know everything about Custer's life when you know nothing instead or very few about him. What a hell there is of illegal to have a mine and to be a soldier? What right have you always to don't believe in what other people says? I tell you Barnett or no? Is'nt a source? take the book and read it, if you don't have it, buy it. (It's a good book, also if I don't agree with all what she writes.) Cause if I ask you quotes for everything you state, instead of a forum this become a reproduction of books and this, really I don't know if is legal!
Why the mine affair exculpate Custer? Well you assume that he don't care about his wife's future, this affair instead shows that He was looking for it.He was looking at it as a way to guarantee a safe future to his wife; the mine affair and the readings he had to do and others. However, I translate you the part that talk about mine affair. This is not a simple work for me but I'll do for your praise. Of course, don't look at mistakes.
among the others, August Belmont invested 15000 dollars and jacob Astor 10000. As usual, Custer was optimist. He wrote to Libbie(She knows about this affair: "It can be that my small Standby and me, that amble for a long time to the possession of a small fortune, are realizing our hopes and our desires? "A series of letters of Hall (a colonel of the Michigan Brigade) revealed that little by little would have had to abandon those excessive hopes. In these letters the colonel repeatedly tried to reassure him. "I have delayed to write you three or four days", wrote Hall, "in the hope to be able to report you something good, but the fact is that the things are tremendously complicated and I have to ask to wait you at least another week." Hall mentioned to the possibility "that some controversy rose with the Crescent Company", thing that doesn't have to surprise as the seam had been separated between this society and the group headed by Custer and Hall, but, this last, communicated, optimist as always, that his own rights would have been maintained and that he would have "protected the fiduciary action in possession of our friends of New York." He remembered besides to Custer that "it is(the mine Stevens) considered one of the richest mines of the Colorado."In the following years, but for other owners, the mine Stevens justified the optimistic forecasts of Hall (look: Frank Fossett "Colorado: its gold mines, farms and stock ranges, and health" and "pleasure resorts" C.G. Crawford pp 400-401; or, "Bureau of Mines Scrapbooks, vol 10 voice 640, in the collection of the Colorado Historical Society. Custer needed just more time, that destiny wanted not to let him.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 17 2005 :  2:46:59 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
If I understand you we should believe the French were a success with the Panama Canal because look what the Americans did with it when they made it work. That someone may or may not have made a success later does not reflect well on Custer then, and rather makes them look sillier, doesn't it? The fact is, he left his wife worse off than when she married him.

Regarding your understanding of the legal issues, you might want to consider this: should the United States government fight wars with Indians to protect gold mines claimed by the Army officers fighting those wars, possibly obtained illegally anyway? Leaving aside issues of theft, conflict of interest, maybe? Custer opens the Black Hills, would it be appropriate if he had investments in the Hills that might affect his supposedly objective reports to the government that employs him? These are hypothetical questions, not accusations, to answer your question about what difference it would make, but that's why what Custer owns or invests in is potentially important.

In any case, he was only involved with these things so people could use his name, and if he lost the battle his name would be worth almost nothing. What had he done lately, after all.....

I don't doubt he wanted success and tried, but he was incompetent at this.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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prolar
Major


Status: offline

Posted - January 17 2005 :  6:59:07 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Warlord: I, for one, enjoy Whistling Boy's posts. If he is you, keep it up. Ignoring the two trolls posts might be the best solution. I guess I'll struggle with them for a while yet.
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joseph wiggs
Brigadier General


Status: offline

Posted - January 17 2005 :  9:22:42 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Lorenzo, thank you for your efforts and factual explanation regarding a specific portion of the General and Libbie's life.
all of us seek to better ourselves in this materialistic world. Some succeed while other do not. Again, your presence makes this forum a better place for me.
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
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Posted - January 18 2005 :  10:14:40 AM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
Thank you, Joseph and Warlord, it's a relief to be understood as I saw that Dc misunderstood or wanted to misunderstood my all words. But is the same, I think that, who don't feel the same hate that Benteen felt for Custer, see in what I wrote, the proof that Custer loved his wife. She was'nt destitute. She just had problems as all the widows of 7th Cavalry had. She begged never! Instead, she refused help! That's in Jane Stewart foreword on the OU Press edition of "Following the guidon", for exemple. As now it seems quotes are so important: "At his death (of Custer)she found heself little better off than any of the other widows at Fort Lincoln (...) An article appeared in the Fargo "Argus" on February 15, 1882, stated that "Mrs Custer declined to spread her necessitious condition before the public"
Well, I suppose that if we would be judged with the same intolerance Custer is judged here, we would be all condemned, even his accusators.
A bovine wish.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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whistlingboy
Lieutenant

USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  11:26:24 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I read with great warmth your posts and enjoy the 'brightness' you bring in the midst of the 'dark and gray ' overcast skies that hover over Libby. If the truth be (if it is ever decided upon what 'that' is) that she was 'less fortunate' than others, so be it, just as long as aspersions are not cast upon her character due to perceived negligence on her part. Look forward to reading more from you, Lorenzo, and thanks for the posts.
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  1:48:48 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
Lorenzo,

I'm sorry your imagined great romance was composed of a flawed man and a woman who cheerfully refused to acknowledge her husband's debts for her own benefit, but that's the way it was. What do you expect from a woman who fabricated correspondence involving her husband and herself in her own books, when the actual letters do not concur? She is, therefore, a certified liar proveable and unassailable, and her lies are not to some greater good as much as her own income, which was dependent upon the unreal and rather silly image of her husband she composed. She was a talented and smart woman, a very good writer, and her husband left her in terrible shape, and I do not blame her for making hay while the sun shone. I do blame you for refusing to acknowledge the lies and supporting known falsehoods. And I blame her for her selfish accusations against other people.

Your quote doesn't say what you think it does, and isn't compelling anyway. Again. There has only been one actual biography of Mrs. Custer - Leckie's - and you need to read it before you go off the deep end. It's quite readable.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
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Posted - January 18 2005 :  2:12:40 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
I blame you, because you still know nothing about Custer the man and is you, after all, that fabricate a myth, a negative myth, don't know for which reason. I blame you because you know very few things about that couple but you say who they was and who they were the Custers. Pretending to know also their intentions. Libbie never fabricate correspondence, all cited letters are quoted in Merington too and other books of correspondence.
I'm sorry Dark that your view in this matter is so poor and that you're so ready to jump at conclusions, for exemple, saying that I have'nt readed Leckie's book. Of course, one book that partly support what you're saying, that only one book, against thousand of others contrary, is the Bible for you, simply because it tells what YOU believe is the truth. And please, don't start again that silly joke "you don't mean what you write", cause other members understand very well what I'm talking about. And me too.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  2:26:55 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
Another thing: Leckie is not the only one serious book about Libbie.
"Pastures in the sun: The story of the man General George A. Custer and his wife Elizabeth Bacon Custer" by Della Tyler Key


"Bride of glory: The story of Elizabeth Bacon Custer"
by Margaret Leighton

"Elizabeth: A biography of the girl who married General George Armstrong Custer of "Custer's last stand."
by Ruth Painter Randall

"General Custer's Libbie"
by Lawrence A. Frost

"A Life Within a Life: The Story and Adventures of Libbie Custer, Wife of General George A. Custer "
by Pat Kines

Maybe, you have to read this books before to form your opinion.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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joseph wiggs
Brigadier General


Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  4:40:06 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
D.c., show me a man, any man who is not flawed. When you've accomplished that feat, please show me a woman, any woman who would "cheerfully" refuse to acknowledge a critical condition as owning others monies. To refuse to acknowledge a thing, anything is certainly possible. To "cheerfully" refuse is indicative of an idioctic state of mind. Surely you are not suggesting that Libbie was an idiot. Movingrobewoman's earlier post clearly informed us that Libbie paid so much on a dollar to satisfy her husbands debts. How then can you suggest she ignored same, let alone cheerfully.

You blame Libbie for her "selfish" accusations against others. Since you did not specify which accusations you are referring to my comments must be limited. I will say this, could the unexpected and terrible death of a man she loved dearly be the primary reason that she accussed anyone at all. What evidence, other than your personal perspective, do you have that she was selfish in her actions. History eagerly awaits this heretofore unknown revelation.

I have not read Libbie's books although I plan to do so soon. I would imagine that she, like most authors, felt free to utilize poetic license in her works. I am also certain that her personal love for Custer permeated thoughout each line of work as she did so. I would hesitate to refer to such creativity as lies, but then you and I differ on many things.

Having established, in your own way,that Libbie Custer was a liar, you then proceed to legalize you unsubstantiated finding with a final and formidable proclamation that she is a "certified liar."
Perhaps your condescending,unprovable, obnixious retorts against a digified and classy individual, such as Libbie Custer, is the catalysis for Lorenzo's antagonism towards you. Last, but certainly not least, are you aware of how often you use the word liar? Could your definition include anyone who disagrees with the great and terrible Oz?
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  6:49:31 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
That looks like you went to the WEB and listed some books, Lorenzo. You haven't read them all either, because you wouldn't have listed at least one of them if you had as a serious book. That's something Wiggs would do. But I've read Frost, and I admit I'd forgotten it. Point taken. It's nowhere near what Leckie's is, though.

Margaret Leighton wrote books for little girls, and that volume is a child's book. If that is your criteria of a serious book, you're dead in the water. It makes no pretense of being a biolgraphy. I don't believe the others are written by academics and researched as academics would do, but bodice ripping tales essentially taken from Mrs. Custer's works. Further, Pat Kine's talks about Libbie's yarn manufacture ability, so it doesn't help you.

Mrs. Custer lied about the contents of the letters in her books, because the actual letters exist. You know this, Lorenzo. That qualifies as a lie. And because the evidence is clear and in print, it's certifiable. Deal with it.

You also don't understand Oz either, Wiggs, although I hated that book. It's not me creating things out of thin air: it's the proveable words and actions of the Custer duet. We're not talking about whether or not the Custers had faults: they were loaded down as everyone is. We're talking about Lorenzo's romantic claptrap.

Aside from you, Wiggs, I haven't called anyone here a liar until forced to by Lorenzo's balderdash, and it's in print and proveable and there it is.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com

Edited by - Dark Cloud on January 18 2005 6:56:35 PM
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joseph wiggs
Brigadier General


Status: offline

Posted - January 18 2005 :  7:50:56 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
None are so blind as he who refuses to see.
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
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Posted - January 19 2005 :  10:58:09 AM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
Dark, You said there are no books on Elizabeth Custer but the one of leckie. I showed you that you was wrong. And that before to spit your sentences you should be more carefull. First, if I show you what is on market about Libbie, there are more books of this ones. I just give you the titles of the more interesting - without make citation of all the interesting analysis included on Custer's biographies. Second: What is not serious? Margaret Leighton? Her biography of Libbie is very interesting. Also if is a child book. It's honest. Not lying. She wrote also a life of General Custer and this book too is good, though with the classical sketch for children, the book report the truth about Custer, for what we knows, with all the anecdotes of his early days and last days. I use everything for my search, also books that I don't like as your Leckie! Then let me know, how do you know what scholars use? Oh, right you know everything. No serious the other authors? What are you telling? Painter Randall is a good author that wrote a lot of books, also a well known biography of Lincoln wife; Frost is a great historian that all we knows and, at my opinion, his Libbie book is much better then Leckie's one; Pat Kines book is very full of inside corners of Libbie. It shows Libbie in a unpartial and positive light. I Gave you this hoping you would have appreciated more this woman...but see was in vain. If here there is someone telling balderdash this one is you with your presumptuousness.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
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Posted - January 19 2005 :  11:06:15 AM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
You keep trying to redefine the argument, Lorenzo. If you think Margaret Leighton's is a work of heft and note, fine, nothing to be done for you.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
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Posted - January 19 2005 :  12:55:08 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
I redefine nothing. I just tell what I think.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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alfuso
Corporal

Status: offline

Posted - January 22 2005 :  11:56:59 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by lorenzo G.

Another thing: Leckie is not the only one serious book about Libbie.
"Pastures in the sun: The story of the man General George A. Custer and his wife Elizabeth Bacon Custer" by Della Tyler Key


"Bride of glory: The story of Elizabeth Bacon Custer"
by Margaret Leighton

"Elizabeth: A biography of the girl who married General George Armstrong Custer of "Custer's last stand."
by Ruth Painter Randall

"General Custer's Libbie"
by Lawrence A. Frost

"A Life Within a Life: The Story and Adventures of Libbie Custer, Wife of General George A. Custer "
by Pat Kines

Maybe, you have to read this books before to form your opinion.



You must add Louise Barnett's "Touched By Fire" She goes into some depth looking at the 19th century woman and her circumstances. And looks into the Custer marriage from that perspective. She and I both agreed that Custer had little business sense, looked upon investments as another form of gambling (which it was. Libbie was against Autie playing poker so he compartmentalized...). Barnett spends several after chapters on Libbie's life.

It's quite possible Libbie had little idea of her husband's "investments;" that is, how deeply he was in for. Men then handled the finances and gave their wives a household allowance.

Libbie didn't even begin writing her 3 books until the 1880's. Until then, she had a pension of about $50 a month. She went to New York City because she knew the best opportunities were there. women of "class" didn't hold "jobs," they took "positions" and so she worked for some society answering their mail 'cause the Custer signature gave it more clout/class.

BTW, Leighton's book cannot be counted as "serious" It's aimed too much at high school.


Deny Everything
Prepare to Panic
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alfuso
Corporal

Status: offline

Posted - January 22 2005 :  12:02:17 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
In her books, Libbie takes herself to task for her gossiping and her cold-shoulder treatment of people she perceived as being her husband's enemies.

She goes into some amusing tales of how GAC would imitate her being proper but icy at some gathering. Or the letters he wrote her cautioning her not to gossip since she was to set the tone for garrison wives.


Deny Everything
Prepare to Panic
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lorenzo G.
Captain


Italy
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Posted - January 22 2005 :  12:21:29 PM  Show Profile  Visit lorenzo G.'s Homepage  Reply with Quote
Dear Mr Alfuso, I agree with you and, if you read past posts, you will see that I already mention Touched by fire. However, as one member of the forum said there was just Leckie biography I felt compelled making a list just of specific Libbie's biographies, while touched by fire is on Custer subject.Only for this reason I have'nt included that title. But I said: if I show you what is on market about Libbie, there are more books of this ones. I just give you the titles of the more interesting - without make citation of all the interesting analysis included on Custer's biographies.
Libbie letters, yes I agree too. And they never were false. All of the letter published on the Libbie's narrative could be find on Merington aswell. She just cut, somewhere, some personal lines that are of no interest for historians.
Thank you Mr Alfuso.

If it is to be my lot to fall in the service of my country and my country's rights I will have no regrets.
Custer
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joseph wiggs
Brigadier General


Status: offline

Posted - January 22 2005 :  1:31:56 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
alfuso, you informative post goes a long way in establishing a case that Mrs. Custer was economically functional.
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Dark Cloud
Brigadier General


USA
Status: offline

Posted - January 22 2005 :  2:02:07 PM  Show Profile  Visit Dark Cloud's Homepage  Reply with Quote
I did not say there was only one book and that it was Leckie; I said only Leckie had written an academic biography of Mrs. Custer. In that I was wrong, as I said, having forgot Frost, but Touched by Fire isn't a biography of Mrs. Custer. Wiggs' utter incomprehension of Alfuso's post is most revealing. Alfuso is backing me up totally.

Just because there is a book, Lorenzo, doesn't mean it's worth anything.

And no. Leckie states and shows that Mrs. Custer rewrote some letters, because the originals exist and conflict with the versions in her books. Mrs. Custer lied, cheerfully, and wrote about this, hoping legend and fact would merge about her husband to his advantage. Read Leckie's book with her extensive citations. Then, we can talk again.

Dark Cloud
copyright RL MacLeod
darkcloud@darkendeavors.com
www.darkendeavors.com
www.boulderlout.com
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