Captain Thomas Weir
In his book, A Terrible Glory:Custer and the Little Bighorn - the Last Great Battle of the American West,
James Donovan details what are clearly manifestations of Post -Traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD) among the survivors of the Battle of the Little Bighorn. The case of Captain Thomas Weir is
illustrative. Weir died less than six
months after the battle, “rapidly destroying himself with alcohol (Weir) spent
most of his days in a state of depression and nervous exhaustion.” Donovan attributes Weir’s condition to
“battle fatigue, the traumatic loss of so many close friends, the method of
their destruction, (and) the slander of Custer’s good name….”(Donovan, 348)
Captain Thomas French appears to have
suffered a similar fate. In 1879 French
was found guilty of three counts of drunkenness and one count of conduct
unbecoming an officer. He was suspended
at half pay for a year. In 1880, he was
determined to be “mentally unfit and physically incapable to perform any
military duties.” He died two years
later. “Like Weir, his breakdown was
likely brought on by ‘soldier’s heart,’ the era’s phrase for combat fatigue or
shell shock.”(Donovan, 365)
1 comment:
Weir had been drinking heavily for years before LBH, though I’m sure the battle didn’t help. Annie Yates mentions his excessive drinking in her diary in 1870.
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