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February 17, 1793: In Pensacola Florida, Creek Chief Alexander McGillivray dies. February 17, 1909: Geronimo (Goyathlay)
dies at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
BACKGROUND: Words Spoken - Goyathlay
Goyathlay (Geronimo) (1829-1909) Chief, Chiricahua Band, Apache Nation
"We are vanishing from the earth, yet I cannot think we are useless
or Usen (God) would not have created us.... For each tribe of men Usen
created, He also made a home.... When Usen created the Apaches, He also
created their homes in the West. He gave them such grain, fruits, and game
as they needed to eat. To restore their health when disease attacked them
He taught them where to find these herbs, and how to prepare them for medicine.
He gave them a pleasant climate and all they needed for clothing and shelter
was at hand. Thus it was in the beginning: the Apaches and their homes
each created for the other by Usen himself. When they are taken from these
homes they sicken and die. How long will it be until it is said there are
no Apaches?"
"We are now held on Comanche and Kiowa land, which are not suited to our needs.... Our people are decreasing in number here, and will continue to decrease unless they are allowed to return to their native land.... There is no climate or soil which, to my mind, is equal to that of Arizona. We could have plenty of good cultivating land which the Almighty created for the Apaches. It is my land, my home, my father's land, to which I now ask to be allowed to return. I want to spend my last days there, and be buried among those mountains. If this could be I might die in peace, feeling that my people, placed in their native homes, would increase in numbers, rather than diminish as at present, and that our name would not be extinct. I know that if my people were placed in that mountainous region lying
around the headwaters of the Gila River (in New Mexico) they would live
in peace and act according to the will of the President. They would be
prosperous and happy in tilling the soil and learning the civilization
of the white man, whom they now respect. Could I but see this accomplished,
I think I could forget all the wrongs that I have ever received, and die
a contented and happy old man. But we can do nothing in this matter ourselves
- we must wait until those in authority choose to act. If this cannot done
during my lifetime, if I must die in bondage - I hope that the remnant
of the Apache tribe may, when I am gone, be granted the one privilege which
they request - to return to Arizona."
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>From http://www.axel-jacob.de/chiefs.html
Geronimo, or Goyathlay ("one who yawns"), was born in 1829 in what is today western New Mexico, but was then still Mexican territory. He was a Bedonkohe Apache (grandson of Mahko) by birth and a Net'na during his youth and early manhood. His wife, Juh, Geronimo's cousin Ishton, and Asa Daklugie were members of the Nednhi band of the Chiricahua Apache. He was reportedly given the name Geronimo by Mexican soldiers, although few agree as to why. As leader of the Apaches at Arispe in Sonora, he performed such daring feats that the Mexicans singled him out with the sobriquet Geronimo (Spanish for "Jerome"). Some attributed his numerous raiding successes to powers conferred by supernatural beings, including a reputed invulnerability to bullets. Geronimo's war career was linked with that of his brother-in-law, Juh, a Chiricahua chief. Although he was not a hereditary leader, Geronimo appeared so to outsiders because he often acted as spokesman for Juh, who had a speech impediment. Geronimo was the leader of the last American Indian fighting force formally to capitulate to the United States. Because he fought against such daunting odds and held out the longest, he became the most famous Apache of all. To the pioneers and settlers of Arizona and New Mexico, he was a bloody-handed murderer and this image endured until the second half of this cent To the Apaches, Geronimo embodied the very essence of the Apache values, agressiveness, courage in the face of difficulty. These qualities inspired fear in the settlers of Arizona and New Mexico. The Chiricahuas were mostly migratory following the seasons, hunting and farming. When food was scarce, it was the custom to raid neighboring tribes. Raids and vengeance were an honorable way of life among the tribes of this region. By the time American settlers began arriving in the area, the Spanish had become entrenched in the area. They were always looking for Indian slaves and Christian converts. One of the most pivotal moments in Geronimo's life was in 1858 when he returned home from a trading excursion into Mexico. He found his wife, his mother and his three young children murdered by Spanish troops from Mexico. This reportedly caused him to have such a hatred of the whites that he vowed to kill as many as he could. From that day on he took every opportunity he could to terrorize Mexican settlements and soon after this incident he received his power, which came to him in visions. Geronimo was never a chief, but a medicine man, a seer and a spiritual and intellectual leader both in and out of battle. The Apache chiefs depended on his wisdom. When the Chiricahua were forcibly removed (1876) to arid land at San Carlos, in eastern Arizona, Geronimo fled with a band of followers into Mexico. He was soon arrested and returned to the new reservation. For the remainder of the 1870s, he and Juh led a quiet life on the reservation, but with the slaying of an Apache prophet in 1881, they returned to full-time activities from a secret camp in the Sierra Madre Mountains. In 1875 all Apaches west of the Rio Grande were ordered to the San Carlos Reservation. Geronimo escaped from the reservation three times and although he surrendered, he always managed to avoid capture. In 1876, the U.S. Army tried to move the Chiricahuas onto a reservation, but Geronimo fled to Mexico eluding the troops for over a decade. Sensationalized press reports exaggerated Geronimo's activities, making him the most feared and infamous Apache. The last few months of the campaign required over 5,000 soldiers, one-quarter of the entire Army, and 500 scouts, and perhaps up to 3,000 Mexican soldiers to track down Geronimo and his band. In May 1882, Apache scouts working for the U.S. army surprised Geronimo in his mountain sanctuary, and he agreed to return with his people to the reservation. After a year of farming, the sudden arrest and imprisonment of the Apache warrior Ka-ya-ten-nae, together with rumors of impending trials and hangings, prompted Geronimo to flee on May 17, 1885, with 35 warriors and 109 women, children and youths. In January 1886, Apache scouts penetrated Juh's seemingly impregnable hideout. This action induced Geronimo to surrender (Mar. 25, 1886) to Gen. George CROOK. Geronimo later fled but finally surrendered to Gen. Nelson MILES on Sept. 4, 1886. The government breached its agreement and transported Geronimo and nearly 450 Apache men, women, and children to Florida for confinement in Forts Marion and Pickens. In 1894 they were removed to Fort Sill in Oklahoma. Geronimo became a rancher, appeared (1904) at the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, sold Geronimo souvenirs, and rode in
President Theodore Roosevelt's 1905 inaugural parade. Geronimo's final
surrender in 1886 was the last significant Indian guerrilla action in the
United States. At the end, his group consisted of only 16 warriors, 12
women, and 6 children. Upon their surrender, Geronimo and over 300 of his
fellow Chiricahuas were shipped to Fort Marion, Florida. One year later
many of them were relocated to the Mt. Vernon barracks in Alabama, where
about one quarter died from tuberculosis and other diseases. Geronimo died
on Feb. 17, 1909, a prisoner of war, unable to return to his homeland.
On This Day on History |
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