J D Allen

Franklin Anders

Richard Baron

Leo Broderick

Lyman Cary

Thomas Clark

Henry Coe

Daniel Collins

Libby Custer

George Custer

Elizabeth Bacon Custer (1842-1933)
Libby Custer was best known as wife to Lt. Col. George Amstrong Custer, widowed when her husband was killed during the Battle on the Little Big Horn in 1976. 
Elizabeth “Libbie” Bacon was born in Monroe, Michigan in 1842, the daughter of a wealthy and influential judge. As the only one of the judge’s children that would live to adulthood, her father doted on her. Elizabeth was both beautiful and intelligent, and her father hoped she would make a good marriage with a man from her own elevated social class.
She met her future husband in 1862 in the midst of the American Civil War. She fell deeply in love with him but her father refused to allow them to get married. Custer was from a poor undistinguished family and the Judge hoped Libby would have better than the life of an army wife. After Custer was promoted to Brevet Brigadier General, Judge Bacon finally relented and they were married on February 9, 1864.

Libby Custer accompanied her husband riding in the ranks everywhere he was stationed: from the front lines in Virginia - where he became a Major General - to postwar assignments in Texas, Kansas and the Dakota Territory.

Although Elizabeth lived fifty-seven years after her husband's death, she kept her marriage vows, fulfilling what she believed were her responsibilities as "the widow of a national hero" by lecturing around the world.  Known throughout her life for her undying devotion to her husband, she was the only officer's wife to live in a tent on the edges of the Civil War battlefield, ride in the ranks with the soldiers, and accompany the 7th Cavalry on many of its expeditions. During those adventures, she wore her own uniformed dresses to show her dedication to her husband and the US Army.

Forever a heated topic for debate, the controversy of George Armstrong Custer and his influence on the West fueled Libby Custer's efforts to author three books 
on her husband's military career and her lifelong mission to counter the claim by then US President Ulysses S. Grant the defeat at Little Big Horn was solely due to Custer's leadership. Her three books, Boots and Saddles, (1885), Following the Guidon (1890); and Tenting on the Plains, (1893) were brilliant pieces of propaganda aimed at glorifying her dead husband’s memory.  However she did not limit her publications to her husband and his military career.  In 1900, she authored the children's story "The Kid" which was published in the St Nicholas Magazine, complete with illustrations.

She died just days short of her 91st birthday on April 6, 1933 in her home in New York City.  She is buried next to her husband at West Point Military Academy in New York.
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