Talk:7th Cavalry Regiment (United States)

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Contents

[edit] Little Bighorn

This is the first article about the 7th Cav I've ever read that completely omits any mention of Custer or Little Bighorn. That's kind of like writing an article on George Washington and forgetting the part where he was president. - Hephaestos 04:12, 25 Jan 2004 (UTC)

True... thanks for relating to me the need for that information :-). ugen64 03:55, Mar 18, 2004 (UTC)
Actually, inside the Army, Custer is only mentioned as one of the first commanders of the Regiment, and litle more. The Massacre is totally glossed over, and the unit was restored as if it never ceased to exist. SSG Cornelius Seon (Retired) 22:22, 5 February 2006 (UTC)

Lt. Col George A. Custer only commanded in the field. The regiments commander was Col. Samuel D. Sturgis. Sturgis spent most of the time before Little Big Horn in the east, recruiting. His son, 2nd Lt. James G.(Jack) Sturgis died with E company (Gray Horse Troop) of Custer's battalion. After Little Big Horn, Sturgis returned to field commmand of the regiment

Also, all the 7th did was "being present" at the Wounded Knee Massacre? Hm... --Odoakerston 12:35, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

The current version of the article corrects these obvious oversights. --Habap 14:46, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
Not anymore, with the criticism section taken out. ArekExcelsior 06:53, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Wrong. It is covered in the Indian Wars section, where it belongs:
Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer's disaster at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25 and 26, 1876, while a stunning defeat, demonstrated the sheer bravery of the 7th Cavalrymen despite the sheer stupidity of its commander: fourteen soldiers received the Medal of Honor during that battle. The regiment perpetrated the Wounded Knee Massacre on December 29, 1890, the end of the Indian Wars.
Please re-read the entire article and identify the parts that are POV. --Habap 13:32, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
That section is in fact POV. Firstly, the article attributes "bravery" and "stupidity" to historical forces and individuals, a clear sign of POV. (A very questionable one indeed in this case, since whether a group coming in to help whites secure gold rights and so on is being "brave" when repelled by the individuals who live in the area is certainly not obvious). Second, in line with Custer's alleged "stupidity", it fails to mention a historical viewpoint that attributes Custer's defeat at the Bighorn to the rampant government corruption of the 19th century, which led his intelligence about Native American warriors to be inaccurate. Third, after complimenting the group glowingly, it merely mentions in passing that the group committed an infamous massacre, violating the uneven focus standard.
However, the article is improving substantially, with references to No Gun Ri. The criticism of their actions as a unit during the Phillipines conflict needs to be added, and I believe some of their lesser-known actions during the Indian Wars (some under Custer, some not) have also been omitted. Later on I'll work on a "Global symbolism" or similar section that describes their public perception in the world.
(EDIT): After seeing the sources, I also see that the sources for the No Gun Ri and other data is limited, specifically deleting the ZMag article I found. The allegations of an internal coverup are also missing. There are also those who argue that the "bravery" and skill of the 7th at Little Bighorn is overrated, as apparently twenty-five Blue Coats killed each other through friendly fire. ArekExcelsior 22:56, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Imperialism

The 7th Cavalry is often cited as being a symbol of American imperialism. An article that doesn't discuss that is as biased as an article that just discusses the force structure of the Nazi military. -ArekExcelsior

So you are comparing America to the Nazi military??? Why is somebody who is a self proclaimed anarchist allowed to defame the US military on Wikipedia? This is a travesty.
Some would say that this article is biased. You should put a criticisms paragraph in every single article in wikipedia. I usually only see criticism paragraphs in articles related to the USA.
No, I am not (at least in this argument) comparing the US to the Nazi military. Read carefully, please. I simply stated that an "objective" overview of a force structure without mention of its alleged (not even seriously questioned, at least not pre-Korea) particular involvement in arguable genocide is not even remotely NPOV. The removal of the criticism section smacks of a violation of NPOV and also leaves out a historically quite frequent and very specific criticism of this very unit. My criticism contribution was phrased neutrally and made clear the sources of criticism (if I could find rebuttals to claims, I would note them as well). On this very talk page, even a SSG has described the problem my criticism section cited.
The anarchist bit is an ad hom runby, nothing else. My political opinions do not disqualify me from contributing about the military. As far as criticism being needed elsewhere, I'm absolutely sure the format needs to be improved to include criticism when it is historically available and frequent, I was just editing the particular topic I saw. ArekExcelsior 06:53, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
By choosing to compare an article to articles on Nazi military units you are, in fact, comparing the two. Though, the Wounded Knee massacre isn't unlike ethnic cleansing performed by some such units.
If you have sources on the 7th itself being considered a symbol of imperialism, please post those. I don't think the appropriate title for the section would be "Criticism", but rather something like "Symbolism" or "Global image". --Habap 13:37, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
Again, no, I could make the same argument about Iraqi units, North Korean units, Chinese units, etc. Simply put, under NPOV standards, if a unit has been seriously alleged to have been involved in atrocities, it must be noted within that unit's history or elsewhere in an easily accessible article linked from the core article. And you are correct, not only the Wounded Knee massacre but the massacre of South Koreans and the involvement in the invasion of the Phillipines is very much like Nazi units. Even the CIA has admitted that, say, the US-backed Indonesian exterminations under Suharto were of a type consistent with Hitler, Stalin and Mao. (Not relevant for this section, of course).
The article I linked to did contain such references, but I wanted to focus less on global perception (an interesting topic in and of itself) and more on specific crimes attributed to the unit. At the very least, the Wounded Knee, some of the atrocities under Custer, and the involvement in the Phillipines (and subsequent criticism) has to be listed, as this data is not seriously questioned.
It seems that the formatting is an issue: Any recommendations? I think it would be worthwhile to combine Habap's suggestion of the unit's global perception or symbolism with concrete information that leads many to have that symbolism... Either allegations should be interspersed within the article at relevant historical periods or combined at the bottom in such a section. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by ArekExcelsior (talkcontribs) 16:57, 26 January 2007 (UTC).

[edit] Location

Although the 4th Squadron is listed at Camp Casey, it is really Camp Hovey (yes, part of the same "enclave" and connected, But there was a world of difference between the two camps for us over there.) If proof is needed, I'm sure I can dig some up somewhere.--71.87.188.160 08:51, 22 December 2006 (UTC)

Proof is not needed. I served with A/4/7 Cav (Out Front!) at Camp Hovey. I'm not contributing to the discussings about our squadron regimental history, because I find it immaterial to my purposes. Feel free to discuss. <christopher.curtiss@us.army.mil>

[edit] Vandalism?

Someone who knows about this topic, please verify the edits of 214.13.167.254 on 02:25, 13 February 2007. This user has been making very strange edits. If the edits are incorrect, please report the user for vandalism, reverse the edit, and reply to this message. If the edits are correct, please just reply to this message to say so. Yessopie 08:55, 17 March 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Yellow Submarine

Should be something about the scene with the 7th cavalry in the Beatles' Yellow Submarine movie...

[edit] Vehicles- M551 Sheridans, not M60 Pattons

Vehicles--For what's it's worth and for the sake of accuracy, I was in the 3/7 in the late 1970's and we had M551 Sheridans, not M60 Pattons, as stated in the article. AnonMoos 19:09, 15 April 2007 (UTC)