CHIEF
GERONIMO
Angie Debo, Geronimo:
The Man, His Time, His Place (1976).
1829-1909,
Apache Indian chief.
When Geronimo died, he had been a legend for more than a generation. But
his courage and determination did more than provide a battle cry for paratroopers
of another day. It helped sustain the spirits of his people, the Chiricahua
Apaches, in the last desperate days of the Indian wars.
Geronimo was born in the upper Gila River country of Arizona. He came to
maturity in the final years of Mexican rule of the region. His antagonism
toward the Mexicans was as deep-rooted as it was understandable. In one
fateful encounter, Mexican soldiers killed his mother, his wife, and his
three small children. This tragic event steeled the young man for a long
life of frequent conflict.
In 1848, soon after the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which
Mexico ceded extensive lands in the Southwest to the United States, the
Anglo-Americans made it clear they intended to restrict the old patterns
of raiding and territorial use by the different Apache bands. The Anglo-American
mines, ranches, and communities disrupted established Apache lifeways. The
intruders set limits on where the Apaches could live and how. The Apaches,
of course, had other ideas.
The initial reservation established for the Chiricahua Apaches in 1872 included
at least a portion of their homeland. The Chiricahuas were unhappy with
the prospect of any reservation life, but their dismay turned to anger when
they were evicted from this reserve and forcibly gathered with other Apache
groups on the San Carlos Reservation in Arizona in the mid-1870s. Geronimo
bitterly resented the move, and he especially disliked San Carlos. For the
next decade he and his followers repeatedly broke out from what they saw
as imprisonment. Once clear of San Carlos, they were difficult to locate
and bring back, for they knew well the country of southern Arizona and northern
Mexico. Time after time, Geronimo sought a more unfettered existence, despite
the best efforts of the U.S. Army.
Geronimo's repeated escapes embarrassed and provoked politicians, army officers,
and the non-Indian populace of the Southwest. His very name brought terror
to the people who continually heard of his evading capture and occasionally
killing Anglo-Americans and Mexicans. Territorial newspaper headlines blared
his name, time and again.
His final surrender to Gen. Nelson Miles in Skeleton Canyon, Arizona, just
north of the Mexican border, on September 4, 1886, truly marked the end
of a chapter in Apache and western American history. It meant exile for
himself and almost four hundred of his fellows. They were sent by train
to incarceration at Fort Pickens, Florida; Mount Vernon Barracks, Alabama;
and finally, in 1894, Fort Sill, near Lawton, Oklahoma. Geronimo spent more
than fourteen years at Fort Sill, although he was allowed sporadically to
appear at world's fairs and other gatherings. He was a celebrity in defeat
but still a captive when he died and was buried at Fort Sill in the new
state of Oklahoma.