From 9eebcae55a10cb2ac1aa3a4d3c06f954b168f664 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: kvvo <145585497+kvvo@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2024 16:06:11 -0400
Subject: [PATCH] Update Chapters.csv
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csv/Chapters.csv | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/csv/Chapters.csv b/csv/Chapters.csv
index c81e7e4..2f21683 100644
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Chapter,Location,Start Date,End Date,Latitude,Longitude,Zoom,Marker,Marker Color,Description,Notes,Media Link,Media Credit,Media Credit Link,Overlay,Overlay Transparency,GeoJSON Overlay,GeoJSON Feature Properties
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Scroll down through each day of the expedition to discover more.
,,,,44.39527778,-103.4219444,6,Hidden,,,,,,,https://cawm.lib.uiowa.edu/tiles/{z}/{x}/{y}.png,0.9,geojson/1868fltcombinedland.geojson,weight:2;color:gray;opacity:.6;fillColor:white;fillOpacity:0
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Scroll down through each day of the expedition to discover more.
,,,,44.39527778,-103.4219444,6,Hidden,,,,,,,https://cawm.lib.uiowa.edu/tiles/{z}/{x}/{y}.png,0.9,geojson/1868fltcombinedland.geojson,weight:2;color:gray;opacity:.6;fillColor:white;fillOpacity:0
1 JULY 1874: Ft. Abraham Lincoln,Fort Abraham Lincoln,7/1/1874,7/2/1874,46.76944444,-100.8491667,11,Plain,green,"On the first of July, Custer emerged from his headquarters and issued the order to depart at 8am the next day. This “caused great rejoicing in camp,” especially among the expedition’s “civilian attaches.” Apparently, a new shipment of guns had been slow to arrive, which caused a delay lasting more than one week. To maintain morale among scientists and others who had joined the expedition “on the invitation of the commanding officer, and without pay from the Government,” Custer hosted frequent soirees at his residence in the camp.
According to the New York World, the camp was also stirred up by an impassioned protest from Episcopal Bishop Hare and other so-called “friends of the Indians,” who accused the expedition of being in “direct defiance and violation” of the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie. Although the New York World dismissed the controversy as mere “rumors” spread by “disappointed filibusters and sensation mongers,” the newspaper nonetheless acknowledged that it would have been “graceful to notify the Indians of our intention.” Similar sentiments were voiced by Private Theodore Ewert as well, who complained that by ordering an “invasion of the Black Hills,” the United States “forgot its honor,” its “sacred treaty,” and its “integrity.”