In 1896, Anheuser-Busch commissioned from Otto Becker a lithographed, modified version of Cassilly Adams' painting Custer's Last Fight, which was distributed as a print to saloons all over America.[1] It is reputed to still be in some bars today.
Edgar Samuel Paxson completed his painting Custer's Last Stand in 1899. In 1963
Harold McCracken, director of the
Buffalo Bill Historical Center, deemed Paxson's painting "the best pictoral representation of the battle" and "from a purely artistic standpoint...one of the best if not the finest pictures which have been created to immortalize that dramatic event."[2]
The Great Sioux Massacre (1965) - with
Philip Carey as Custer. The film depicts Custer as a bastion of tolerance whose efforts to secure fair treatment for the Indians leads to several confrontations with corrupt government officials.
Custer of the West (1967) -
Robert Shaw depicts Custer as an Indian sympathizer, having disagreements with his superiors about fighting the Indians, but duty-bound as an officer of the U.S. Cavalry to enforce orders given to him.
The Legend of Custer (1968) - with
Wayne Maunder as Custer.
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) - with
Bill Hader playing Custer as a museum piece brought to life (along with other historical characters and museum pieces) and leads a charge against the villains. He is portrayed as a born leader but bumbling and unintelligent.
Custer was portrayed by
Grant Williams in "Longhair", a 1959 episode of the TV series Yancy Derringer, in which he wrongly accused series regular Pahoo (a
Pawnee) of several attempts on Custer's life during a visit to New Orleans.
Barry Atwater played Custer in a two-part episode of the TV series Cheyenne, broadcast in 1960. The first part was titled, "Gold, Glory and Custer - Prelude"; the second was titled "Gold, Glory and Custer — Requiem".
Custer appears as a prominent minor character in Flashman and the Redskins – the seventh of
George MacDonald Fraser's
Flashman novels – in which Flashman unwillingly becomes caught up in the Battle of the Little Bighorn after being captured by Lakota warriors.
Custer Died for Your Sins, a 1969 book by
Vine Deloria, Jr., with its title derived from a bumper sticker slogan, covers Custer and American relations with Indians in general.
American author
Michael Blake wrote his historical novel Marching To Valhalla as a first-person diary of Custer.[4]
Custer and the battle of the Little Bighorn are featured in Złoto Gór Czarnych (Gold of the
Black Hills), a trilogy of novels told from the perspective of the Santee
Dakota tribe, by Polish author
Alfred Szklarski and his wife Krystyna Szklarska.
Alternate history
The mythic quality of Custer's life has made him a popular subject for several
alternate history stories.
In the "Fallen Cloud Saga," a series of five novels by
Kurt R.A. Giambastiani, George Armstrong Custer survives an alternate campaign against the Plains Indians, becomes President of the United States, and confronts his own son as the two sides battle toward a resolution.
The Court-Martial of George Armstrong Custer, a novel by
Douglas C. Jones, is set in an alternate history built on the premise that George Armstrong Custer did not die at the Battle of Little Bighorn. Instead, he was found close to death at the scene of the defeat and was brought to trial for his actions. Blending fact and fiction, the novel portrays what might have happened at that trial. It was made into a TV movie in 1977 with
James Olson as Custer and
Blythe Danner as his wife Libbie.
In
Harry Turtledove's
Southern Victory Series alternate history novels, the Little Bighorn did not take place, and Custer is a full colonel in
Kansas in 1881, chasing Indians and then doing battle with rebel
Mormons in Utah Territory and joining
Theodore Roosevelt's "Unauthorized Regiment" in order to defeat an
Anglo-
Canadian column invading
Montana during the
Second Mexican War, becoming a war hero. Eventually, Custer becomes the commanding general of the US
First Army in the
Great War, fighting against the Confederates. Despite failing many times, he brings about the war's first breakthrough using tanks. After the war, he is appointed as governor of Occupied Canada and then forced into retirement under a new administration. He later dies in 1930.
In the short story "How the South Preserved the Union" by Ralph Roberts in the anthology "
Alternate Presidents" edited by
Mike Resnick, George Custer was elected President in or prior to
1888. He is named as the victor at the
Battle of the Little Big Horn (June 25–26, 1876).
In the novel "
1882: Custer in Chains" by
Robert Conroy, Custer survives and wins the Battle of Little Big Horn. As a result, he is elected president in
1880 and later provokes a war with
Spain two years later after a ship heading to
Cuba is massacred.
In the collection of short alternate history stories Drakas!, Custer became persona non grata after refusing to lead troops against apparently overwhelming Indian forces. Drummed out of the military in America, he responded to the invitation of an old associate to go to
Africa where the
Draka empire was looking for experienced field officers.
In
Percival Everett's novel God's Country, Custer is portrayed as a cross-dressing homosexual who eats raw meat.
A 1960 episode of Peabody's Improbable History has the General surviving the battle. When his boy Sherman questions Peabody about this historical twist, the dog points out a vendor's pushcart as being the actual Custer's Last "Stand".
In the alternate history short story Bloodstained Ground by
Brian Thomsen in the anthology Alternate Generals edited by
Harry Turtledove,
Roland J. Green and
Martin H. Greenberg, George Armstrong Custer survives and wins the Battle of Little Big Horn and is eventually elected as the President of the United States, only to later be assassinated. Following Custer's death, journalist
Samuel Clemens is assigned to write a memorial, but his interviews with Custer's nephew
Henry Armstrong Reed and Captain
Marcus Reno reveal some sickening facts about Custer.[5]
Music
Custer is one of only two Army officers to be referenced in
the army song (the other is
George Patton), whose lyrics were written in 1956.
The first and probably best-known Custer pop song was "
Mister Custer" ("Please Mister Custer, I don't wanna go"), a Billboard #1 novelty hit of 1960 for performer
Larry Verne, in which "a voice from the rear" of the Seventh Cavalry charge asks "What'm I doing here?" and "Mind if I be excused the rest of the afternoon?" The song's words and music were by Fred Darian,
Al DeLory, and Joe Van Winkle. In the UK, it was successfully covered by
Charlie Drake.
Custer is prominently featured in
Johnny Horton's 1960 song "Jim Bridger": "He spoke with General Custer and said 'Listen Yellow Hair/'The Sioux are a great nation, so treat 'em fair and square/'Sit in on their war council, don't laugh away their pride'/But Custer didn't listen, and at Little Big Horn Custer died."
The Kingston Trio recorded a song on their 1963 album The New Frontier titled "Some Fool Made A Soldier Of Me". The song's final verse has a trooper complaining of thirst to "General Custer", who retorts "...have no fear/There's a big river near."
On
Johnny Cash's 1964 album Bitter Tears, the song "Custer" mocks the popular veneration of George Custer. A truncated version of the song has been covered in concert by
Buffy Sainte-Marie as "Custer Song".
Influential
Americanpunk/
alternative band
The Minutemen mocked Custer's defeat and questioned the dignity - or lack thereof - in which he died during the Battle of the Little Bighorn, on the title track of their
1981 LP The Punch Line: "I believe when they found the body of General George A. Custer/Quilled like a
porcupine with Indian
arrows/He didn't die with any honor, dignity, or valor/I believe when they found the body of George A. Custer/American general, patriot, and Indian fighter/That he died with shit in his pants."
The 1983 satirical song "I Love America", in which Alice Cooper portrays a stereotypical American as naïve and ignorant (even when it comes to his own country's history), includes the lyrics "I love what the Indians did to Custer".
General Custer's legacy was memorialized by the
Italo disco group Swan in their 1986 hit "General Custer".
The Native American rock band
Redbone recorded the song "Custer Had It Coming" in 1989.
A 1991 album, Blazon Stone, by the German
Heavy metal band
Running Wild, includes a song about Custer's final battle called "Little Big Horn". It starts with the words "Hey Mr. Custer, why did you dare the hand of fate?"
The Arrogant Worms's 1995 song "History Is Made by Stupid People" mocks him with the line "General Custer's a national hero, for not knowing when to run."
On his 1996 album Cowboy Celtic,
Canadian singer David Wilkie sang "Custer Died A-Runnin'".
The 1999 song Bulimic Beats by the
Indie rock band
Catatonia includes the line "A front line with labels where I witness custard's last stand".
American composer and musicologist
Kyle Gann created a multimedia work titled Custer and Sitting Bull in which monologues by the two figures are recited, accompanied by a microtonal musical score and projected images from the time period. The piece premiered in Los Angeles in 1999 and played in New York to positive reviews in the year 2000.
The rapper
Nelly mentioned Custer in his song "Heart of a Champion" from his 2004 album Sweat: "My last stance be a stance of a General Custer, I hot dog cause I can, I got the cheese and mustard."
A 2004 album, Stripping Cane, by singer/songwriter
Jeffrey Foucault, includes a song called "Pearl Handled Pistol". It mentions G.A. Custer and Buffalo Bill: "He was a mighty handsome man. He loved dogs and children, he loved the military band."
In the 2009
Dave Matthews Band song "Little Red Bird" off their bonus disc to
Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King, Custer is mentioned in the second verse. "General Custer is sad / Overestimated his abilities to win / Sitting Bull turned the table on him / A comfort to count the battles won after the war is lost / Little red bird".
In 2013, underground rapper Will $teel of the hip-hop group Kush Klan released a tribute song titled "General Custer"[6]
Experimental-pop group Perky Custer derived their name from General George Custer and a generic version of
Dr Pepper.
Corb Lund's song "Horse Soldier, Horse Soldier" refers to Custer and the Battle of Little Bighorn in its first verse.
Video games
A controversial
adultvideo game known as Custer's Revenge was published for the
Atari 2600. This game consisted of Custer, depicted nude save for a cowboy hat and boots and with a visible erection, moving from the left hand side of the screen to the right hand side of the screen through a barrage of arrows emerging from the top of the screen, in order to rape a
Native American woman who is tied to a pole.
In the game Duke Nukem: Zero Hour, the level Fort Rosewell features Custer as an enemy of the protagonist.
In Age of Empires III: The WarChiefs, Custer makes an appearance but is seen as a stubborn leader who declares war on the
Sioux. In the end, the player defeats him and his army with help from the Sioux.
In the game Darkest of Days, the player starts out as a member of the 7th Cavalry with Custer at Little Big Horn. The player is saved by a time-travel organization just as Custer is killed in the background.
Custer is mentioned in the game Turok; when Turok finishes a flashback about using a
compound bow, Slade responds, "That would be a great weapon, if we were fighting Colonel Custer".
In the game Fallout: New Vegas, an achievement called "General Custer" was planned to be awarded to players who lead all of their companions to their death. It was cut from the final version.
In Angry Video Game Nerd Adventures, George Armstrong Custer appears as the boss of the level Beat It & Eat It, a level parodying various Atari Porn games.