
Historical Figures: Archbishop Lamy, Charles Bent, Billy the Kid, Kit Carson, Willa Cather, Flying Priest, Pat Garrett,
Greer Garson, Geronimo, Conrad
Hilton, Mable Dodge Lujan, Fred
Lambert, John Gaw Meems, Robert
Ollinger, Millicent
Rogers, Will
Schuster, Carrie
Tingley, Lew
Wallace
Museums:
American
International Rattlesnake Museum,
City
of Las Cruces Log Cabin Museum,
Cleveland
Roller Mill Museum,
E.L. Blumenschein
Home & Museum,
Kit
Carson Home & Museum,
Farmington
Museum, El
Malpais National Monument,
Fort
Selden State Monument,
Fort Union
National Monument,
Harvey
House Museum,
Historical
Center For Southeast New Mexico,
Lincoln
State Monument,
Las
Vegas City Museum & Rough Rider Memorial,
Miles
Mineral Museum,
New
Mexico Farm & Ranch
Heritage Museum,
Old
Mill Museum,
Palace of the Governors,
Pecos
National Historical Park,
Raton
Museum,
Roosevelt
County Museum,
Silver
City Museum,
Tucumcari
Historical Museum
Geronimo
Goyaałé (Geronimo) was born to the Bedonkohe band of the Apache, near Turkey Creek, a tributary of the Gila River in what is now the state of New Mexico, then part of Mexico, but which his family considered Bedonkohe land.
Geronimo's father, Tablishim, and mother, Juana, educated him according to Apache traditions. He married a woman from the Chiricauhua band of Apache; they had three children. On March 5, 1851, a company of 400 soldiers from Sonora led by Colonel Jose Maria Carrasco attacked Geronimo's camp outside Janos while the men were in town trading. Among those dead were Geronimo's wife, Alope, his children, and mother. His chief, Mangas Coloradas, sent him to Cochise's band for help in revenge against the Mexicans. It was the Mexicans who named him Geronimo. This appellation stemmed from a battle in which he repeatedly attacked Mexican soldiers with a knife, ignoring a deadly hail of bullets. In reference to the Mexicans' plea to Saint Jerome, the name stuck.
The first Apache raids on Sonora appear to have taken place during the late 17th century. To counter the early Apache raids on Spanish settlements, presidios were established at Janos (1685) in Chihuahua and at Fronteras (1690) in northern Opata country. In 1835, Mexico had placed a bounty on Apache scalps. Two years later Mangas Coloradas or Dasoda-hae (Red Sleeves) became principal chief and war leader and began a series of retaliatory raids against the Mexicans. Apache raids on Mexican villages were so numerous and brutal that no area was safe.
While Geronimo said he was never a chief, he was a military leader. As a Chiricahua Apache, this meant he was also a spiritual leader. He consistently urged raids and war upon many Mexican and later U.S. groups.
He married Chee-hash-kish and had two children, Chappo and Dohn-say.
Then he took another wife, Nana-tha-thtith, with whom he had one child.
He later had a wife named Zi-yeh at the same time as another wife, She-gha,
one named Shtsha-she and later a wife named Ih-tedda. Some of his wives
were captured, such as the young Ih-tedda. Wives came and went, overlapping
each other, being captured and added to the family, lost, or even given
up, as Geronimo did with Ih-tedda when he and his band surrendered. At
that time he kept his wife She-gha but abandoned the younger wife, Ih-tedda.
Geronimo’s last wife was Azul.
Though outnumbered, Geronimo fought against both Mexican and United States troops and became famous for his daring exploits and numerous escapes from capture from 1858 to 1886. At the end of his military career, he led a small band of 38 men, women, and children. They evaded 5,000 U.S. troops (one fourth of the army at the time) and many units of the Mexican army for a year. His band was one of the last major forces of independent Indian warriors who refused to acknowledge the United States Government in the American West. This came to an end on September 4, 1886, when Geronimo surrendered to United States Army General Nelson A. Miles at Skeleton Canyon, Arizona.
Geronimo and other warriors were sent as prisoners to Fort Pickens, Florida, and his family was sent to Fort Marion. They were reunited in May 1887, when they were transferred to Mount Vernon Barracks in Alabama for five years. In 1894, they were moved to Fort Sill, Oklahoma. In his old age, Geronimo became a celebrity. He appeared at fairs, including the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis, and sold souvenirs and photographs of himself. However, he was not allowed to return to the land of his birth. He rode in President Theodore Roosevelt's 1905 inaugural parade. He died of pneumonia at Fort Sill in 1909 and was buried at the Apache Indian Prisoner of War Cemetery there.
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