Beyond Lewis and Clark - Timeline 1874
The Army Explores The West
General George A. Custer (1839-1876)
George Armstrong Custer was a Civil War veteran who gained national attention on the Western frontier. In 1874 the government sent Custer on one of the last military mapping excursions in the West. Commanding a 1,000-man force, he rode into the Black Hills to survey its resources, particularly gold. Custer’s mission also was to estimate the size and strength of the Sioux nation.
Beyond Lewis and Clark is an online exhibit developed by the Kansas Museum of History. It is the result of a partnership between the Kansas Historical Society, the Virginia and Washington State historical societies, the U. S. Army's Frontier Army Museum at Leavenworth, and the U. S. Army Center of Military History.
- Explorers
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Timeline
- 1800 - Jefferson elected President
- 1804-1806 - Lewis and Clark expedition
- 1803 - Louisiana Purchase
- 1806-1807 - Pike expedition
- 1812 - War of 1812
- 1819-1820 - Long expedition
- 1838 - Corps of Topographic Engineers created
- 1842-1846 - Frémont expeditions
- 1846-1848 - Mexican War
- 1846 - Emory expedition
- 1848-1855 - U.S.-Mexican Boundary Survey
- 1853-1854 - Pacific Railroad Survey
- 1861-1865 - Civil War
- 1867 - King expedition
- 1871-1879 - Wheeler expedition
- 1874 - Custer expedition
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Contact us at kshs.kansasmuseum@ks.gov