Moving Robe Woman

[5] When she was 23, she heard news from her parents that her brother was killed by Pehin Hanska (the Lakota name for Custer) and his soldiers.

Shortly thereafter, a troop of soldiers charged on horseback into the large Lakota village near the Greasy Grass River and began firing their guns.

[5] Later in the battle an Oglala Lakota warrior named Fast Eagle claimed that he had held Custer's arms while Moving Robe Woman stabbed him in the back.

The Standing Rock Family Information Survey notes that in 1923 at age 70, Moving Robe Woman was living alone in a one room log house with a connected barn on the Grand River west of Bullhead, South Dakota.

[3] An interview with Moving Robe Woman, made at Fort Yates, North Dakota by Frank B. Zahn,[3][4] is published in Richard G. Hardorff's book, Lakota Recollections of the Custer Fight, New Sources of Indian-military History.

[9] The American artist Thom Ross has created a 200-piece installation of the battle, including a painting of Moving Robe Woman.