The Great Mystery of Little Bighorn | Custer: The Final Mystery (S1, E1) | Full Episode | History

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it's the most iconic battle of the american west the battle of the little bighorn long  shrouded in mystery has now become legend but the battle has one final  secret yet to be revealed   native american legend tells of a hidden treasure  taken from the battlefield they mutilated them and   took their clothes they took their weapons they  took everything that belonged to these soldiers   and hidden deep in the high cliffs beyond where  no white man dared to go there's got to be a   million crevices out there where that thing can  be but that stuff's out there i really believe it now armed with new evidence one montana family is  determined to uncover the truth behind a mystery   that's haunted them for generations my dad he  only had an eighth grade education but he had   a degree in common sense i never did agree with  the historians and their story they told up there   these hills was indian positions this is the  beginning of the battle new clues an unprecedented   investigation and a family legacy seek to  recover the lost artifacts of custer's last staff the american west from the  fields of the dakota territory   to the rugged rocky mountains and beyond while  this great frontier offers new beginnings for some   for others western settlement signals the end to a  way of life and nothing draws more americans west   than gold in the black hills of south dakota the  discovery of gold in 1874 sets off a gold rush   and as scores of white settlers stream in to  chase their fortunes the plains indians rise   to resist being uprooted from their ancestral  lands the us military responds with force   by 1876 the army is struggling to maintain order  the military sends reinforcements to the dakota   territory in the form of the seventh cavalry  under the command of a brash young colonel george   armstrong custer his single mission to  move hostile tribes onto reservations   and clear the land from mining  land that's still home to the sioux   cheyenne and crow indians in an unprecedented show  of resistance the three tribes joined forces under   the sioux chief sitting bull at the banks of  the little bighorn river in present-day montana on june 25th custer attacks the native encampment   the cavalry regiment with just 262 soldiers  is overwhelmed by sitting bulls 2500 warriors none of them survive this much is known  about the battle but in the aftermath   a new mystery emerges that's been  left unsolved for more than 140 years   when the bodies of custer and his men are found  two days later they're completely bare guns   ammunition uniforms personal effects everything  is gone they are never seen again but native   american legend offers a clue as to what  might have happened to the custer cash native american lore tells us after the battle  the indians stripped the soldiers of all their   possessions and hid them just beyond the  battlefield many people have tried to find   this cache and as of now nobody succeeded  but one man has come closer to finding the   treasure than anyone else montana rancher  turned maverick historian henry weibert   growing up on the crow reservation henry spent his  life farming this rugged hill country and raising   a family in the shadow of little bighorn southeast  of the little bighorn battlefield monument and the   headstones that mark where custer and his men  fought and died lies a remote area along reno   creek that's recorded in no history of the  last stand historians never suspected this   area on the edge of the known battlefield  played a role in the custer story but henry   spent decades combing this land for clues and  discovering secrets waiting to be unearthed   this unknown soldier there is no skull frame there  never was when we dug him up there was no skull   when henry and his father came across the remains  of an unknown cavalry soldier while plowing a   field in 1925 henry's interest in custer's last  stand became an obsession in 1968 i bought a real   good metal detector and found over half a dozen  shells away from the battlefield he dedicated   the rest of his life to finding the truth behind  the battle he would ultimately unearth hundreds   of seventh cavalry relics and go on to make many  profound discoveries over the next 60 years but   the one custer mystery he wasn't able to solve in  his lifetime was the location of the lost cache but now decades later his daughter penny and her  cousin craig are picking up where he left off   embarking on a quest to validate henry's theories  and to fulfill his dream of finding one of the   last remaining great american treasures my dad  he only had an eighth grade education but he   had a degree in common sense being raised with  the indians he used that logic in finding those   positions that the indians would have taken and  he knew how they thought he knew how they rode he   knew routes they took there's more to this story  of the custard luth and i think we'll find it henry weibert's nephew craig fellows gets the  lay of the land with professor shane doyle   a trusted advisor and member of the crow  nation wow this is incredible yeah you can   see why people would fight to protect  and save this if this was their land   my great uncle henry was very convinced that  the cache of weapons was somewhere up reno creek   and i think near the time of his death he was  on the precipice of a major discovery he was   never able to really search for it up in this area  because the crow are very protective of that land   so i've reached out to a good friend of mine shane  doyle who is going to help us get access to this   back country and i think if we can get permission  to mount a full archaeological dig up in the hills   we're going to turn up evidence to this cache  of weapons we need to put all of the clues   that we have together not just the scientific  information but we also need the oral stories   we need to understand this place as well as we can  from as many different resources as we can gather   as a crow historian shane is here to help collect  native oral legends that have been passed down for   generations to unlock secrets about the battle  and the custer cash when you said your oral   tradition is passed on like a song it hit a chord  with me because we don't forget songs and your   people don't forget these narratives we have the  knowledge i think we have the clues we know what   we're looking for we just need to go out and find  it all the research that we have up to this point   in time tells us the cash is in this location  but we've never had enough supportive evidence to   really justify an archaeological dig but i think  we have it now penny and i have stumbled across   a piece of information a map and i think it's  what we've been looking for if we can prove this   map is authentic i think it could be enough to  convince the crow to allow us to search this land the eagle map is a document that traces  the events of the battle of little bighorn   it was recently discovered in columbus montana  at the former residence of william white   and placed in the protection of local historian  frankie eagle craig believes that it holds the   key to the cache's location but to verify its  authenticity he's asked shane to investigate   they've brought on former fbi agent  bob whitman to lend his expertise   for the past 30 years i've been investigating  and pursuing prices artifacts stolen art and   antiquities some people seek riches others  are in pursuit of power i chase history all right hello welcome how are you hi frankie  come on in coming in to see frankie i'm skeptical   right now but i'm very interested because i think  that she must have something special on her hands   this is the map that you were interested in seeing  and the map was given to my husband his parents   bought william white's house in 1932.  wow okay and found the map rolled up   in the tube and the rafters upstairs wow  the map came from a very reliable source   william white is documented as one of the first  soldiers to reach the battlefield after the   massacre of custer and his men he later married  a crow woman who may have known details about   the whereabouts of the custer cash did white's  wife share secrets known only to native people   well i think it's really interesting shane is  there's these red xs here on the map itself and   that's not part of the actual printing of the map  not very many people have seen this map or where   the x's are what really stands out to me are the  red x's that have been drawn in by some individual   who seems to have knowledge about these areas  and it's curious that they would draw those red   x's in those areas because they don't really  correlate to much of what we know about the   incidents and events that happened in the battle  so they must be pointing to something else   they are remarkable because they take us in a  direction that's outside of the battlefield but   also on a path that's well known that would take  you east of the little bighorn valley and we know   from all the testimonials from the indians who  had been there that there had been stuff taken   from the soldiers we don't know who put the red  x's on there no and that's really intriguing   to verify if the map fits the time frame of an  eyewitness to the bloody aftermath of the battle   bob needs to determine its age it's definitely  always on good paper the stamp itself the stamp   is a george washington two-cent stand it was you  know that came into practice around 1912-1917   and the paper is of that period which is very  good we think it came from the crow agency   now that we've seen this map and we know  it's got the right age it came from the right   person it kind of puts us in the right direction  with what craig was saying it's very exciting what   a gift thank you so much frankie these red x's  are located in the exact same place where henry   focused his research for all those years if those  red x's signify what i think they do then i think   henry's probably right and that cash is hidden  somewhere up reno creek this is very exciting determined to get access to the reno creek  cliffs shane arranges for craig and penny to   meet with crow elder randy pretty on top shane  has already presented randy with their findings   and if they hope to search and dig on crow land  they need to have his permission randy i want   to thank you again for letting us into your life  and letting us be a part of this try to uncover   some history in my tradition in the crow tradition  they call these things wow acoustic got out of you   which means we pass it on very generous  of you absolutely don't forget to respect   all the people that fought the last battle as  a tribal elder and keeper of crow histories   randy reveals an enticing clue my dad would go  up there probably every spring or so and one   day when they were out here he happened to look  up and he saw this cave and he crawled in there   and when he got to to the end of it so to speak it  was a cabaret open cavern and he said that in that   cavern there was not only native american stuff  but there was also remnants of calorie soldiers wow which which gives you another clue it's one  thing to hear historians and treasure hunters   talk about the cash but when you hear a family  say the same thing who have lived on this land   for a hundred years then you know it's real you  know you're on to something i can't wait to begin   our search so we can prove him right i think it  is time to to unveil the secrets of this place   and to actually see what was out here and what you  guys are doing here is uh been a long time coming in the foothills of montana's bighorn mountains  one family is on a quest to reveal the truth   of custer's last secret a hidden cache of weapons  uniforms and artifacts stripped from the bodies   of the seventh cavalry that if discovered  could be worth millions amateur historian   henry weibert went to his grave believing he  had found the location of the hidden cache a newly discovered map seems  to corroborate his research   and now for the first time the wybert family has  secured unprecedented access to dig on crow land   fulfilling henry's dream and getting  closer than ever to the priceless treasure but they only have 30 days  to complete their search now we have this team of experts that are going to  help us prove out what we've been saying all this   time christian speckman is a anthropologist  and a historian for the custer battlefield   nobody knows more about the custer battle than  christian and then we have our battlefield   archaeologist blake ariela does a lot of  battlefield archaeology we have shane our   native american liaison for this case he'll be  working with us with the reservation and the   native americans shane and i we went out to see  frankie eagle as an 84 year old woman and bozeman   she came into possession of a map that craig  had told us about while we were there i was   able to take a photograph of the map and have it  blown up subsequently it was filled in by hand   the interesting thing to me is that those red x's  lead us back towards the site of the long teepee   where the large encampment was at my dad did  a lot of research on the lone tp location   he felt it was a very important part too  in addition to the missing artifacts hidden   somewhere beyond the battlefield is a long-lost  landmark that historians and archaeologists   have never been able to locate it's known as lone  tipi and henry weibert believed he'd found it now   just below where the village used to be two days  before the battle the indians had moved down on   the little bighorn but they left some dead indians  in a teepee there and it's called the lone teepee   the lone teepee sitting atop a hill  contained the body of a fallen warrior   when custer and the seventh cavalry passed  it on their way to sitting bull's village   they destroyed it when custer got to this long  teepee they did set the tepee on fire and burn the   indians up that was in there and then continued  an act of desecration that the team believes   may have been marked on the eagle map the red x  drawn on the map lines up with henry's research   could it mark the location of lone teepee and  these x's do come up in the areas that we're   talking about yes such as the lone teepee i think  we are on to something with only 30 days allowed   on crow nation land if the team can establish  the site of lone tp with archaeological evidence   and line it up with the red x it will give  a measurable scale to the hand-drawn map   allowing them to triangulate the distance to  the second x which they believe could mark   the location of custer's hidden cash and narrow  down their search for the priceless artifacts   so blake and craig what i'm thinking you guys are  going to be up in the area of this x here looking   for the bone teepee it's going to be challenging  but i'm extremely confident in the group of   archaeologists i've assembled if there's something  to be found out here i believe in full confidence   we're going to find it hey let's go let's get to  work before they begin the hunt some of the team   heads to ground zero of the custer story the  little bighorn battlefield national monument   they're here to learn more about the history of  custer's last stand welcome to little bighorn   oh great to be here the battlefield today has  agreed to let us look at the actual battlefield   and what a better person to show us around  but doug scott doug scott is a battlefield   archaeologist who's worked here for decades  he's recovered thousands of bullets from the   battlefield allowing him to precisely map the  flow of battle from the banks of the little   bighorn river to the top of last stand hill the  physical evidence is one thing that i think is   really really important because it's tactile this  cartridge case versus that cartridge case versus   that bullet or that button and then pull all  that together to understand the events of the day   and it was a major loss for the us army  at that time but it's also the high point   of the lakota and cheyenne on northern plains  does the physical evidence correlate with the   oral histories for the most part in my opinion i  think it correlates better with the oral histories   than it does with with the written accounts  the oral histories are coming from those who   participated or the next generation down it's like  a tapestry in my mind when you put this and this   and this together you just weave something that  just tells the story better i believe that all   tribal people understand the strength and the  accuracy of our oral traditions so to hear doug   say that he really believes the oral traditions  are more accurate than anything else that he's   seen that's really no surprise to me i really  believe that the narratives that have been handed   down from generation to generation are going to  be the key to unlocking this mystery so well i'm   going to start reaching out to folks in the tribal  communities to see what they know about this cache shane's search for answers begins with a member  of the sioux nation ernie lapointe the great   grandson of sitting bull himself i never spoke so  much about him you know before because my mother   swore me the secrecy in la cote she said your  life wouldn't be the same basically you know   so i never said anything for years until  my aunt came forward and said it's time   for you to come out of the shadows and tell this  world that there are descendants of sitting ball legendary lakota chief sitting bull was the  spiritual leader and holy man of the sioux nation   and cheyenne tribes that joined his encampment  along the little bighorn river at a time when   most of the planes native americans were being  moved onto u.s government reservations sitting   bull refused to surrender building a camp of  warriors from multiple tribes allied in resistance it humbles me to know that i have a powerful  bloodline from him you know for what he did i   will never be able to achieve anything that he's  done but i try to tell his story as accurately   as i can what we're interested in is your  perspective some of the stories that you've heard   that have to do with your great  grandfather's experience at the   battle and beforehand and afterwards he  said that there were brave men who came to   meet their maker you know it was it was a  quick battle you know it was close combat   yeah you know and and when when uh lakota shot  his soldiers the bullet went clean through here   like hooked on the other side and killed him too  so just the chaos of fighting in close quarters what about after the battle did they take any  possessions with them from the battle or well   see that's what he told him not to do he told the  people after this battle is over he did not take   anything that belonged to these soldiers nothing  he says don't even take their scalps but some   people took some stuff or they took everything  the cheyennes were really angry and they mutilated   them and they took their clothes they took  their food they took whatever their weapons   they're all stripped naked left laner butchers  and what happened to that stuff was it stashed   someplace was it taken with them they stashed  them different places and some of them had them if the oral history say it was the cheyenne and  not the sioux or the crow who stripped the bodies   against the wishes of sitting bull it could be  a significant clue would that act of defiance   influence where they'd ultimately hide the  forbidden spoils of war what an honor to hear your   stories you know i'm very humbled i hope you leave  here with a good understanding of what i said   and the people who see this hopefully  will understand who my people really are in the aftermath of little  bighorn the reno creek valley   at the edge of the known battlefield has  remained uninvestigated for 140 years now   blake and his team of archaeologists are some  of the first outsiders to explore this hallowed   ground since the time of custer what we're  really doing is taking all these different   lines of evidence from the accounts of both  the shine and the soup and we're taking all   of that to try and find period artifacts  that could potentially relate to lone tp   we've got the nice you with the sandstone bluffs  perfect description the native american accounts   we've got the nice deep ravine from what custer  scouts talk about we've got a nice real flat spot   up here i mean definitely level enough to where  you can put a tp up here guided by native oral   histories and decades of research from amateur  battlefield historian henry weibert blake and   his team are searching for evidence that this hill  was the site of the long-lost landmark lone teepee   you ready so we're going to space out 30 meters  apart and we're just really going to fine-tooth   comb this with the metal detector so once we can  kind of hone in and zero in on the area that's   when we're actually going to be able to try  and uncover something all right let's rock it   you guys see anything down there nope  not really all right they're looking   for clusters of metal that would have  marked a sacred site like lone teepee   or any indication that this could have  been the site of a native american settlement you got a hit yeah  can i get a couple of those flags   there's actually a lot of metal up  here the team cannot unearth anything   from a potential burial ground without a  representative of the crow nation present   in the meantime they flag every place there  is a sign of buried metal we are finding a   lot of metal concentrated in this area it's a  great sign for us that we're in the right spot after an initial sweep of the search area yields  a number of promising hits blake returns with   crow monitor courtney stewart in order to break  ground with my job with the tribal historical   preservation we watch out for the crow culture  since this is all crow indian territory whatever   we find out here on the field that that's our  history booking that's written on the land   the wreck head huh that was a direction that  was a good one all right look at this oh this is looking good i think this  actually may be a bullet casing it is it's a rifle round this is very cool it's  obviously been fired we found our first true   period artifact that bullet casing really shows  that we're in an area that was occupied around   that time this is exactly what we want to find  this is a fantastic find the casing is potentially   evidence of custer era activity and a potential  clue to the meaning of the mysterious red x   we have a period artifact we know that  people are occupying this area it's exciting in southeastern montana on the edge of one of  the most iconic battlefields in american history   a family's long quest to reveal the truth of  custer's final secret has unearthed its first clue   an artifact that could connect this site  to the location of the long-lost cache of   weapons and uniforms stripped from the fallen  soldiers after the battle of little bighorn   it's a rifle round it's obviously been fired  was the period bullet fired from a native   american rifle and if so does it mark the  location of the native landmark lone tipi   the search for answers leads back  to the battlefield national monument hey doug how's it going good blake good  to see you to present their evidence   to battlefield archaeologist doug scott  well hopefully doug's expertise will   uncover the origins of this bullet casing  if it was in fact fired from a native rifle   and from the correct time period then it would  confirm that we are in fact searching in the   right area for lone tp an examination of  the casing will reveal who may have fired it   custer's cavalry exclusively carried standard  military-issue springfield single-shot carbons   while sitting bulls warriors would  have carried a variety of weapons   if the casing is not from a springfield carbine  it was likely fired by a native american ward   it seems like you know this little guy  it's a 45 caliber it's certainly of the   type that the some of the warriors were using  because we found bullets of that same caliber   um where on it and everything is consistent with  kind of things that would happen out here and   it's remarkable it's a really remarkable piece  and we certainly found those kind of bullets   actually on the battlefield so yeah it's unlikely  that it would have ended up there in some other   event yeah or no i think more likely it was just  left behind one of the teepees or something yeah   that the bullet was fired from a  native rifle is an indication that   they inhabited the spot where it was found and  more evidence of lone tp may not be far behind   it just showed me that we were on the right track  as far as what we what we were looking for and   where we were looking for it this is amazing it  really is it's amazing thank you it's great stuff   and again that's what this what you can do from  a micro level analysis to taking it back out to   the big picture i wish my dad would have  been here he'd have been going crazy but   i really feel like all the stars are aligning  for certain things it's that's an amazing find encouraged by their recent finds the  archaeologists returned to reno creek the next day   to continue their search for lone teepee we've got several good hits so far so we're hoping  that this is going to be related to the lone tp   the period bullet already found here is a possible  sign that this was a native american encampment   but they'll need more evidence if  they're going to pinpoint where to dig when they talk about the pseudo  warrior that's buried inside   we know that when he was buried he probably  would have been ceremonially dressed and   they potentially could have some type of  metal objects on those pieces of clothing   let's go ahead and dig up a couple of these just  to see if their period what we're looking for   okay these are things that we can  actually find signatures of let's do it well not close to the surface  which is good that's what we want oh wow it just popped out guys what do you have   it's it looks like one of  those period trade ball buttons a trade ball is an ornamental item highly  prized by the plains indians that were   usually sewn into their clothing it's a unique  object that together with the bullet casing   strengthens the case that this hill was an area  of native american settlement and possibly lone   teepee the closer they get to lone teepee the  closer they are to finding the cash and fulfilling   the legacy of henry weiber and completing his  family's quest that trade ball button really shows   that we're in an area that was occupied around  that time this is exactly what we want to find   we want to find these more personal items more  domestic use stuff and this would be a personal   object that would have came off a shirt that the  native americans would have had on them this is   this is a fantastic find it is just one more  clue to help try and solve this great question   of where the loan tp was located bag it and tag  it one trade ball buttons awesome something now in a remote region of montana at the edge of  the bighorn battlefield a family's quest to   locate a lost treasure is close to becoming  a reality this actually looks pretty good   the priceless spoils taken from custer's  fallen soldiers have never been found   but the lost battlefield landmark lone  teepee may hold the clue to its whereabouts   there's some of the same stone  bluffs unearthing signs of the tp   would validate a family's long-held theory  and point the way to the hidden treasure   after discovering a ceremonial button thought  to be linked to the contents of the tp   the team of archaeologists returned  to take their search to the next level   looks like we've got some pretty good  indicators of where the lone tipi may be   i think we've got a really good spot to go ahead  and set up some grids for you to start doing mag   so for our investigation the next thing that  we're going to do is we're going to bring   a magnetometer in so where we see clusters of  artifacts we're going to drop a magnetometer grid   a magnetometer is a soil scanning device that is  far more powerful than a metal detector it can   identify a piece of metal buried up to 200 feet  deep since custer burned lone teepee on his way   to the little bighorn river the team expects to  locate evidence of fire where the teepee stood   when a burn goes on on the surface it's  going to change the soil rocks will get   burned in and they'll be left that way if we  find a lot of fire cracked rock in this area   it could be evidence that would lead us to it  being the lone teepee location so we're really   just fine tooth combing that way when we actually  pick a spot we can excavate it with confidence   that we're going to find something the team  will construct a grid for its search marking out   three large areas to scan based on the locations  of the artifacts they've already uncovered   50 centimeter intervals higher res when he  is running the magnetometer he's having to   walk in a grid and walk transects it's allowing  us to cover a larger area than what we could do   with just five people gradient equal to 1.73  each magnetic hit is matched to gps coordinates he's going to take the data that he has acquired   and he's going to stitch it together  which is going to make a nice image for us i've got the first results from the magnetometer  and i'm really excited to show you guys   all right and what we've got right here is a very  interesting hit and it's just in this one location   there's nothing else on this ridge line except  for this and we have a wonderful dipole right here   which is basically when you have an object all  objects have their own magnetism and this is what   you're seeing you've got a positive and a negative  that there's just one anomaly could be highly   significant a large village might show many areas  of fire cracked rock indicating small fire pits   but lone teepee was a large structure set on fire  and would presumably display one large single hit   so it just really pops out i mean it just really  stands out on that whole screen definitely see it   it really does penny this is where your dad henry  thinks that it is and we actually have a really   good signature yeah and this is that spot while  the magnetometer reading shows a significant hit   it doesn't show the nature of the object it  could be either fire cracked rock or metal   the only way to find out is to dig it up is  this something you're going to do tomorrow   this is so we're going to have the tribal monitor  out there with us and we're going to break ground   it's in our highest probability area and i'm  hoping that this is what's going to be related   to the wind tv for us locating lone tipi not  only supports henry's theory but it potentially   could help us triangulate over to the cache i  think tomorrow is going to be a really big day on june 25th 1876 george armstrong custer's troops desecrate  a native american burial site known as lone   tipi while hunting for lakota chief's sitting  bull and his warriors later that day the two   sides meet in one of history's most iconic  battles ever since this crucial landmark of   custer's last stand has been lost to history  but now the wybert family is closer than ever   to proving henry's long-held theory about the  location of lone teepee and the hidden custer cash we know that custer burn the teepees we would  be looking for signatures within the soil   that would show this evidence and fire crack rock  is one of these things that we would expect to see got anything no no just sandstone all right i  think we're pretty much done with this level right   here yeah so now we can take everything down to  10 centimeters make note in there that there's no   there's no soil changes there's no features   the magnetometer registers the location  of a metallic hit but not its depth the   team must sift methodically through  the soil to avoid missing a clue no beads no teeth yet no getting a lot of  bigger rock down there i think we're uh   hitting something like bedrock  or something on the right impermeable bedrock so close to  the surface is not a good sign   if it covers the entire hillside it could put  an early end to their search while i hope we can   find the landform itself i'm also going to be  realistic and say that i'm not quite sure if   we can it may just go unsolved maybe coming  down on something okay different strat layer i think i might have got something here yeah i think this is far cracked  rock that looks like fcr to me   we're obviously looking for our first  signs of maybe a fire out here and this   could lead us in the right direction so  uh let's get some more all right let's go more firecracker fart crack firefight all right  looks like yep awesome yeah yeah well it'd be in the right  position for the mag data yeah it would   this would be right in the middle of your mac  data well so far the mag's definitely picking   that up it really is just solidifying in our  mind that we are in fact in the right spot   we just need to find more of this evidence this  looks like charcoal there you look like it like   something burnt all the red red soil around  it right there yeah oh yeah that's a good eye there's something going on at home a bigger  piece of charcoal yeah that's a good sign   i mean we found the firecrack  rock we found some charcoal   i mean we've got some good identifying markers  the firecrack brock is really cool it's a great   sign for us that we're in the right spot and  i believe that it could be a lone tp location   signs now show that they may have found lone  teepee validating henry weibert's life's work   and pointing them toward the custer cash a  priceless trove of guns and valuables belonging   to the lost seventh cavalry if indeed this one red  x is lone tipi then what does the other one mean   it is confirmation in my mind that that other  red x is where the cache of weapons is next time there's got to be a million crevices  out there where that thing can be   native legend unlocks new clues the cheyennes  went east right into the sand cliffs pushing the   investigation to new heights you're kind of on  a lift there and buried evidence you know what   that is this is a custer error slug we're  seven and a half miles from the battlefield   what was it doing up there that reveals the  long-lost treasure holy this is incredible you
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Channel: HISTORY
Views: 236,436
Rating: 4.7863936 out of 5
Keywords: history, history channel, history shows, history channel shows, custer the final mystery, history custer the final mystery, custer the final mystery show, acuster the final mystery full episodes, custer the final mystery clips, mysteries, Custer The Final Mystery season 1 episode 1, Custer The Final Mystery s1 e1, Custer The Final Mystery s01 e1, Custer The Final Mystery se1 e1, watch history full episodes, Custer The Final Mystery season 1 clips, Great Mystery of Little Bighorn
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Length: 43min 9sec (2589 seconds)
Published: Sat Mar 06 2021
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