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Gazetteer
Custer, MT -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Montana
Population (2000): 145
Housing Units (2000): 79
Land area (2000): 0.257233 sq. miles (0.666231 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.257233 sq. miles (0.666231 sq. km)
FIPS code: 18700
Located within: Montana (MT), FIPS 30
Location: 46.128870 N, 107.556302 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 59024
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Custer, MT
Custer
Custer, SD -- U.S. city in South Dakota
Population (2000): 1860
Housing Units (2000): 934
Land area (2000): 1.799508 sq. miles (4.660704 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.799508 sq. miles (4.660704 sq. km)
FIPS code: 15140
Located within: South Dakota (SD), FIPS 46
Location: 43.768450 N, 103.597548 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Custer, SD
Custer
Custer, MI -- U.S. village in Michigan
Population (2000): 318
Housing Units (2000): 132
Land area (2000): 0.991568 sq. miles (2.568150 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.991568 sq. miles (2.568150 sq. km)
FIPS code: 19420
Located within: Michigan (MI), FIPS 26
Location: 43.950262 N, 86.219517 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 49405
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Custer, MI
Custer
Custer, WA -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Washington
Population (2000): 299
Housing Units (2000): 116
Land area (2000): 1.819226 sq. miles (4.711774 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.819226 sq. miles (4.711774 sq. km)
FIPS code: 16375
Located within: Washington (WA), FIPS 53
Location: 48.917705 N, 122.640880 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 98240
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Custer, WA
Custer
Custer -- U.S. County in Idaho
Population (2000): 4342
Housing Units (2000): 2983
Land area (2000): 4925.445220 sq. miles (12756.844014 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 11.344866 sq. miles (29.383068 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 4936.790086 sq. miles (12786.227082 sq. km)
Located within: Idaho (ID), FIPS 16
Location: 44.211630 N, 114.139033 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, ID
Custer County
Custer County, ID
Custer -- U.S. County in Montana
Population (2000): 11696
Housing Units (2000): 5360
Land area (2000): 3783.126170 sq. miles (9798.251384 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 10.090481 sq. miles (26.134225 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 3793.216651 sq. miles (9824.385609 sq. km)
Located within: Montana (MT), FIPS 30
Location: 46.324144 N, 105.766538 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, MT
Custer County
Custer County, MT
Custer -- U.S. County in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 26142
Housing Units (2000): 11675
Land area (2000): 986.512804 sq. miles (2555.056323 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 15.489671 sq. miles (40.118061 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1002.002475 sq. miles (2595.174384 sq. km)
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.601490 N, 98.920160 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, OK
Custer County
Custer County, OK
Custer -- U.S. County in Nebraska
Population (2000): 11793
Housing Units (2000): 5585
Land area (2000): 2575.709203 sq. miles (6671.055928 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.366782 sq. miles (0.949961 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2576.075985 sq. miles (6672.005889 sq. km)
Located within: Nebraska (NE), FIPS 31
Location: 41.386492 N, 99.631095 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, NE
Custer County
Custer County, NE
Custer -- U.S. County in Colorado
Population (2000): 3503
Housing Units (2000): 2989
Land area (2000): 738.887183 sq. miles (1913.708938 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 1.015921 sq. miles (2.631222 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 739.903104 sq. miles (1916.340160 sq. km)
Located within: Colorado (CO), FIPS 08
Location: 38.128672 N, 105.416939 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, CO
Custer County
Custer County, CO
Custer -- U.S. County in South Dakota
Population (2000): 7275
Housing Units (2000): 3624
Land area (2000): 1557.685747 sq. miles (4034.387392 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 1.449381 sq. miles (3.753880 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1559.135128 sq. miles (4038.141272 sq. km)
Located within: South Dakota (SD), FIPS 46
Location: 43.693106 N, 103.515230 W
Headwords:
Custer
Custer, SD
Custer County
Custer County, SD
Wikipedia
Custer (disambiguation)

Custer generally refers to George Armstrong Custer (1839–1876), an American Civil War general and Indian fighter.

Custer may refer to:

Custer (surname)

Custer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Boston Custer (1848–1876), brother of George Armstrong Custer
  • Cole Custer (1998–), American racing driver
  • Elizabeth Bacon Custer (1842–1933), wife of George Armstrong Custer
  • George Armstrong Custer (1839–1876), American Civil War general
  • Omer N. Custer (1873-1942), American politician
  • Thomas Custer (1845–1876), brother of George Armstrong Custer, two-time recipient of the U.S. Army Medal of Honor
  • Willard Ray Custer (1899–1985), inventor of channel wing airfoils
Custer (song)

"Custer" is a single from American metal band Slipknot. Released on October 10, 2014, it is the third single from their fifth studio album .5: The Gray Chapter.

Custer (TV series)

Custer, also known as The Legend of Custer, is a 17-episode military- western television series which ran on ABC from September 6 to December 27, 1967, with Wayne Maunder in the starring role of then Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer. During the American Civil War, Custer had risen to the rank of major general, the youngest in the Union Army. He was demoted after the war during force reductions to the rank of Captain, but was reinstated in 1866 as a Lieutenant Colonel in command of the Seventh Cavalry, stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas. Many of the soldiers in the regiment were derelicts, former Confederates, or even criminals. The series was cancelled before the script timeline would have reached the Little Big Horn River of southeastern Montana, where all perished on June 25, 1876, in a Sioux Indian ambush,

Robert F. Simon played Custer's commanding officer, U.S. General Alfred H. Terry, who disapproved of Custer's long hair and much of his methodology of fighting Indians. Slim Pickens starred as a scout named California Joe Milner. Michael Dante appeared as Sioux Chief Crazy Horse. Peter Palmer played Sergeant James Bustard, a former Confederate soldier. Grant Woods appeared as Captain Myles Keogh. Read Morgan, formerly a cavalry officer on NBC's The Deputy, appeared in the episode "Spirit Woman" in the role of a medicine man.

A 20th Century Fox Production, Custer was created by Samuel A. Peeples and David Weisbart, and is unique in carrying the credit "Series Suggested By Larry Cohen." Leo Penn, the father of Sean Penn, directed some episodes.

Guest stars included Lloyd Bochner, Rory Calhoun, Philip Carey, James Daly, Burr DeBenning, Yvonne De Carlo, Gene Evans, Arthur Franz, Billy Gray, Barbara Hale, Stacy Harris, Earl Holliman, Robert Loggia, Darren McGavin, Ralph Meeker, Mary Ann Mobley, Agnes Moorehead (as Watoma), Edward Mulhare, Kathleen Nolan, Larry Pennell, Paul Petersen, Donnelly Rhodes (as War Cloud), Chris Robinson, Ned Romero, Barbara Rush, Albert Salmi, William Smith (as Chief Tall Knife), Dub Taylor, Ray Walston, James Whitmore, Terry Wilson, and William Windom. In the last episode entitled "The Raiders", Custer enlists the aid of Kiowa Indians to help him to locate the parties responsible for a series of wagon train raids.

Custer faced competition from NBC's long-running 90-minute western The Virginian starring James Drury and Doug McClure and CBS's Lost in Space starring Guy Williams, June Lockhart, and Mark Goddard.

Maunder was twenty-eight when he was cast as the 28-year-old Custer. The show was canceled due to wide protest of Native American tribes throughout the United States.

Usage examples of "custer".

Without a word, Custer displayed the embossed, signed, and notarized bench warrant he'd managed to get issued in close to record time.

Custer had seen their kind drinking and raising hell in the cowtowns of the west—or staring out from WANTED posters, or dangling from the ends of ropes.

William Curtiss had an opportunity to draw Miss Victoria Custer away from the others upon some more or less hazy pretext that he might explain for her ears alone just why he had suddenly found Beatrice, Nebraska, such a desolate place and had realized that it was imperative to the salvation of his life and happiness that he travel half way around the world in search of a certain slender bit of femininity.

It was Barney Custer, and behind him came Curtiss, Butzow and a half dozen others of the searching party.

All aboard for Custer City, Camp Robinson, Laramie, an' Chey-enne!

We were afterwards ordered to Fort Custer, where Custer city now stands, where we arrived in the spring of 1874.

When, however, he started west on the car he forgot, and was only reminded of his delinquency by an item in the “Evening News”—a small three-line affair under the head of Secret Society Notes—which stated the Custer Lodge of the Order of Elks would give a theatrical performance in Avery Hall on the 16th, when “Under the Gaslight” would be produced.

Theres a Lieutenant Custer at Fort Dodge leading the Seventh Cavalry.

His oath to Patton is also suspect because, with the war's end, the tanks were given to the infantry, and Custer, rather than go with them, chose to return to the horse cavalry.

And for those who want to know something of Little Bighorn that cannot be got from books, let them travel up the Yellowstone valley, past the Powder and Tongue to the mouth of Rosebud Creek, and then take the Lame Deer road, past the great modern mining works which Custer and Crazy Horse never dreamed of, and follow the Rosebud to Custer's camp-site, and so to the bluffs and the river, and walk across the Greasy Grass.

Eisenhower, newly named Supreme Commander of Allied Expeditionary Forces, decided he would have enough prima donnas in the Mediterranean, between Mark Clark, Montgomery, other British Generals like Alexander and Leese, New Zealanders like Freyberg, and took Custer with him to England, to prepare for the Normandy Invasion.

In a moment they were gone, like water absorbed into a sponge, leaving Manetti and Custer and the two frightened staffers alone by the reference desk.

To his surprise he met a sword-arm that none might have expected in an American, for Barney Custer had been a pupil of the redoubtable Colonel Monstery, who was, as Barney was wont to say, "one of the thanwhomest of fencing masters.

I'd been with Campbell's Highlanders at Balaclava, when they broke the Ruski cavalry with two volleys, and I still bore the scars of Little Big Horn, where Reno's troopers held off half the Sioux nation (the other half were killing Custer and me just down the valley, but that's another story).

As for Indians, the Shoshones were friendly, but there were roving bands of renegade Sioux who had taken to the rough country after the Custer fight and had never returned to the reservation.