General Court Martial of General George A Custer
Documents relating to the famous general's 1867 court martial
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Timeline
Facts
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Description
Brevet Major General George Armstrong Custer, Lieutenant Colonel of the 7th US Cavalry, was brought before a military court in September 1867, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to face charges of "absence without leave from his command," and "conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline." Within each charge are specifications for which he was found guilty on most counts.
Custer was "suspended from rank and command for one year," and required to "forfeit his pay proper for the same time." The remainder of his sentence was remitted.
The photo to the right is of General George A Custer, available here at Footnote in the Mathew B Brady Collection of Civil War Photographs.
Contents of Custer Court Martial records, T1103
Court Documents
Special Order: Dated 27 August 1867, details those who will sit at trail, and a start date of 15 September 1867 at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. The handwritten version is on page 7 under Proceedings.
Proceedings: Trial documentation and process (186 pages).
Custer's Written Defense: "To this I invite your earnest and most patient attention," begins Custer, in his 45-page defense document, submitted at the conclusion of testimony.
Verdict: Custer is found guilty of several specifications within the two charges and sentenced "to be suspended from rank and command for one year, and forfeit his pay proper for the same time."
Miscellaneous: 39 pages of records pertaining to the trial.
Summary Report: Proceedings are summarized in this 24-page report, dated 8 November 1867.
Remittance Documents
Telegraph from William T Sherman, 23 September 1868, approving Custer's restoration to duty, at the request of General Sheridan.
Research Requests: Included in this title are requests by eight individuals for information or material pertaining to the Custer court martial.
Related Resources
George Armstrong Custer Court-Martial: 1867 - The court-martial, The Aftermath, at http://law.jrank.org/pages/2594/George-Armstrong-Custer-Court-Martial-1867.html
Published just a month before Custer's court martial, this page from the August 3, 1867, edition of Harper's Weekly illustrates Custer's encounters with Native American Sioux. It's available through the "History of the American West, 1860-1920: Photographs from the Collection of the Denver Public Library," within the American Memory pages on the Library of Congress website.
03 Jan 2008