5 hii Codatiiprmiooretlatiiglon By ELMO SCOTT WATSON IFTY-SIX years have passed since the career of Gen. George Armstrong Custer came to Its dramatic close, yet the glamor of his name has kept alive for more than half a century the memory of that tragedy while other battles much more im- portant historically have been all but forgotten. Scarcely a month passes without there appearing In the news of the day ho of “Custer's Last Battle” to recall to our minds what took place on the Little Big Horn river in Montana on that fate ful day in June, 1876. It may be an item referring to one of the “last survivors of the Custer battle” who have bobbed up with such regularity during the last five decades and who have so easily been proved to be fakes, As 8 matter of fact there were many “sur- vivors” of the Custer battle if the term “Custer battle” is interpreted to mean the whole action which took place on the Little Big Horn on June 29. 1876. Those were the o flicers and men who were in the detachment of the Seventh cavalry, commanded by Maj. Marcus A. Reno, Capt. Frederick W. Benteen and Capt. Thomas McDougal, when Custer divided his command to attack thé Indian village. They were the members of Troops A, G and M under Reno; Troops D, H and K under Benteen; and Troop B, which was guarding the pack train, under McDougal. But of Troops C, E, 1, F and L, which were pnder the immediate command of Custer and which were so quickly surrounded by the In- dians, there was one—and ONLY ONE—sur vivor of “Custer's last stand” and that was not a man, but a horse. That authentic “sole sur vivor” was Comanche, the claybank sorrel which was ridden into the battle by Capt. Myles W, Keogh of Troop 1. Two days after the battle he was found wandering about the battlefield, plerced by seven bullets and so wenk and emaciated that at first it was decided that the only humane thing to do was to kill him. But Lieut, H. I. Nowlan, field quartermaster on General Terry's staff and an intimate friend of Captain Keogh, prevailed upon the soldiers to spare Comanche’s life. His wounds were dressed and he was go well cared for on the steamer Far West, which carried the other wounded of Custer’'s command back to Fort Abraham Lin- coln, that he pulled through and lived to the age of twenty-eight years. When he dled in 1802 the Seventh was stationed at Fort Riley, Kan., and Professor Dyche, a naturalist con- nected with the University of Kansas, mounted the skin and today there stands in the Dyche museum at the University of Kansas the life Hike form of the only authentic survivor of *Custer's last stand.” Or it may be an item about some one who “fought with Custer” and who “escaped the massacre because he was detached from the regiment at the time.” In nine cases out of ten such Individuals weren't within several hun. fired miles of the Little Big Horn on that day and have no more right to clalm that they “fought with Custer” than have several hun. dred other men who were in the armies in the feld against the hostile Indians during the cam. paign of 1876. Then again it may be an item referring to some one who asserts that he was a “Custer scout,” although the name of every man who has a legitimate claim to that title Is well-known and all of them, with the possible exception of some of the Arikara Indian scouts who accompanied Custer on his last expedition, are now dead Considering the amount of publicity that has been given from time to time to all these “last survivors,” “Custer fighters” and “Custer scouts” it seems all the more remarkable that so little attention was paid recently to the passing of one important apd genuine sector In the Custer some tragedy. For when Brig. Gen. Edward 8. God- frey, U, 8. A, retired, died at his home In Cooks. town, N. J., last April, I marked the end of the last of Custer’s troop commanders. On the day that Custer perished, Genera 1 Godfrey was Lien- tenant Godfrey, commander of Troop K of the Seventh cavalry, and Troop K was a part of the battalion commanded by Capt. Frederick W. Benteen, the senior captain in the Sevointh, when Custer divided the regiment to make his attack on the Indian village strung along the banks of the Little Big Horn. Not only did General Godfrey play an impor- tant part In the fighting which took place after Benteen's command Joined forces with the de tachment commanded by Maj. Marcus A. Reno, but in later years he became known as the lead- ing authority on the Custer battle and the chief defender of Custer when the question was raised as to whether or not the disaster on the Little Big Horn was due to Custer’'s disobedience of the orders of his superior, Gen. Alfred H. Terry. Not the least of General Godfrey's services to the memory of his dead commander was in re- futing the slander that Custer had committed sulecide when he saw that the destruction of his command was inevitable and not the least of his contributions to the truthful history of the Custer battle was his part in showing up as impostors the various “last survivors” and “Cas ter scouts” who sought notoriety through the reflected glory of Custer's name and who enjoyed for a little while their spurious fame. General Godfrey was born In Ohlo and enlist. ed in the Union army at the outbreak of the Civil war, serving in the Twenty-first Ohio in fantry from April to August, 1861. He became a cadet In the United States Military academy at West Point July 1, 1863, and was graduated in June, 1867, being Immediately appointed a second leutenant in the Beventh cavalry. He was pro. moted to first lleutenant February 1, 1808, and while holding that rank took part in various Indian campaigns of the Seventh cavalry which added so much luster to Custer's reputation as an Indian fighter, Appointed a captain of the Seventh In Decem- ber, 1876, Godfrey took part in the campaign against Chief Joseph and his Nez Perces the next year and at the battle of the Bear Paw mountain on September 380, 1877, he won the brevet of major and the Medal of Honor for “most distinguished gallantry in leading his command into action where he was severely wounded,” At the time of his death he was not only the only surviving troop commander of Custer's regiment, but he was also sald to have been the oldest living graduate from West Point, Mention of West Point recalls the fact that another echo of the Custer tragedy was heard recently when President Hoover reappointed Gen. E.S. Godfrey (Pictures of Lieutenant Harrington, Courtesy United States Military Academy.) é Miss Grace Alleen Harrington us postmaster the United States M y the academy know Miss utive lady on whose ways a smile ag she them. But to others, i history, she Is the symbo tragic episodes in the greater traged Custer battle, For she Is the daughter of Lic Henry Moore Harrington, a subaltern in Tom Custer's C troop of 1e¢ Seventh caval who died on the Little Big Horn, A pative of New York, Harrington was grad uated from West Point In 1568. His first duty wns in North Carolina, but desiring more active gervice he was transfererd to the alry In 1872 and roined that regiment in time to participate in several minor Indian fights. He was on leave In 1876 when the Seventh cavalry was ordered to join General Terry's army, was to be sent into the field against the hostile Sioux and Cheyennes. Upon hearing of this, Harrington Immediately telegraphed that he was giving up his leave and rejoining his troop. So he was one of those who rode away from Fort Abraham Lincoln in North Dakota and took the trail ‘which led to the Little Big Horn, to death and to utter mystery as to his end. For Lieutenant three officers (the others being James E. Porter of 1 troop and James RR. Sturgis f E troop) whose bodies were never found, st least, not identified after the battle. noted authority on Indian history, E. A. stool, in his book, “A Trooper With ( aster.” writes: and while It has always been su; Seventh cav- which Harrington was one of the Lieutenants Of them a ‘Nothing was ever learned of thelr fate posed that they were killed, not beyond reason have escaped, badly way place that they were d but poss bly it identified, out-of-the tured to death that night which was flashed with The Sioux, howeve at they took no on of the Little Big Horn figh Not only Is the jgr one of the woman who go many of Cu but there Is another tragic memory whie hais carried through life—a memory of her mu er, who sudde ster's officers were once nly disappeared several years the Caster battle. “Amnesia It would be nowadays,” Miss Harrington says, “but at time It was ascribed to grief and the uncertain- ty of what had happened to my eral times we heard from Indians that a lady dressed in black had been seen on the battlefield. Other reports came from Indian Territory, We investi- gated all these rumors and finally after two years we found her in Texas where a severe at- tack of pneumonia had served to bring back her memory so that she knew who she was. But she wag never able to give any account of her wanderings while she was gone or why she was there” Tragedy also stalked through the life of Miss Harrington's great-aunt, Miss Blanche Be rard, who was postmaster at West Point for al- most 50 years. Appointed by President Polk In 1847, she served In that post anti] 1807. As a young girl she was engaged to an officer. “One afternoon this officer brought his horse to the pest office to show my great-aunt,” Miss Har rington tells the story: “While exercising him and demonstrating his good points, the officer was thrown and killed. This aunt never married, remaining true to the mémory of her first and only love, One big thrill did come to her In her later life. While on leave of absence from the post office, which she spent In Europe, Miss Pe. rard had the honor of being presented to Queen Victoria.” The war record of the Harrington family dates back to the birth of the United States, for among the family papers In Miss Harrington's possession is the honorable discharge of her great-great-grandfather, Niles, who was a sol- dier in the Continental army, This historic doe ument is signed by George Washington. In the Civil war members of her family participated in many engagements as volunteers, Over Miss Harrington's desk In the postoffice hang two piétures. There In the busy turmbil of mail distribution for the 1.200 cadets at the father. Sey cers and soldiers, Is a constant reminder of de- votion to duty, the cornerstone of Miss Har. rington’s life and that of her distinguished an- cestors. One of them is a picture of her father as a cadet and the others a picture of him as an officer in the regimentals of the Seventh eav- alry, the uniform worn when he disappeared forever. The picture of him in cadet uniform is enclosed In a frame made of beads and these beads were obtained by her mother from In- dians In Dakota—perhaps from members of the same tribe whose warriors rode over the troop ers of Custer and his captains and his leuten- ants In a red wave of savage triumph that fear. ful day on the Little Big Horn fifty-six years 1 ago (® by Western Newapaver Union.) MUCH OF INTEREST IN DESERT CAVES Railroad Engineers Find | Bronze Age Relics. British engineers who are survey. ing the unknown Transjordania-Syr- lan desert route for a railway from Haifa to Bagdad, have just made | some Important and most fascinat- | ing discoveries. To the south of caves, containing Amman great prehistoric relies, also Bronze age figures, pots and skulls have been found, The walls of the caves are covered with primi. | tive Inscriptions lar to those of old Assyrian times The engineer report that the region Is site y fearful recur. ring midnight winds which tea up their tents, i and Instrun long di frequently a sen, they At Halt} tween Damas i bag has heen planned to bulld bridge ver the river » site of the an towns of the Ta Mahtabe, gLances ancient mud COngLr . i1 have been found listrict, the vet deter cisterns jing of these regions are tall and wing Crus: attractive, blue-eyed der blood, while thelr pot the slightest re iblaned to the Semitics, despised by the though they are more rich than the others Thel and thelr fami! other Bedouins, al more =apable and dinlect is different {ife is more » than the other no mad Bedouin Ideal Dwelling Place for the “Simple Lifer” gome have or heard The vill wre work trom till sunset, take their relax tion in the taproom of oid Fox where the youngsters get excited over a “needle game” of darts vireless broades Long Railway Rails The longest rails In the world are to be laid in England soon They measure $0 feet in length, com pared with the usual length of 30, and 60 feet. 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