Apache Wars
The Apache Wars were fought during the nineteenth century between the U.S. military and many western tribes. These wars depleted the Native Americans' numbers, divided their leadership, and drove them onto reservations, often located far from their homelands and in inhospitable climates.
Related Topics:
U.S. military - Native American
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As was often the case, the U.S. military fought the Navajos and Apaches (known by themselves as Inde, T`Inde, N`ne = "people") largely for their lands. The Civil War brought many soldiers to the Southwest, including General James Carleton, who decided to remove the Navajos and Apaches to reservations so that the lands of the Rio Grande Valley could be used for settlement and mining. Carleton enlisted the one-time friend of the Navajos, Kit Carson, to force them from their homelands through starvation.
Related Topics:
Navajos - Apache - Inde - Civil War - James Carleton - Rio Grande Valley - Kit Carson
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Before his campaign against the Navajos, Carleton began forcing the various bands of Mescalero Apaches onto the reservation at Fort Sumner. Apache leaders like Mangas Coloradas of the Bedonkohe, Cochise of the Chokonen (also known as Chiricahua), Victorio of the Chihenne band, Juh of the Nednhi band, Delshay of the Tonto and Geronimo of the Bedonkohe led raids to drive European Americans from their land and resisted the military's attempts, by force and persuasion, to relocate their people to a reservation.
Related Topics:
Mescalero - Fort Sumner - Mangas Coloradas - Bedonkohe - Cochise - Chokonen - Chiricahua - Victorio - Chihenne - Juh - Nednhi - Delshay - Tonto - Geronimo
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Soldiers and civilians, especially from Tucson, constantly pursued the Apaches through the 1860s and 70s. After two decades of guerrilla warfare, Cochise chose to make peace and agreed to relocate to a reservation in the Chiricahua Mountains. Not long afterward, Cochise died. When the U.S. government came to move the Chiricahuas to the San Carlos reservation, half of them complied. The other half, led by a man named Geronimo, escaped to Mexico.
Related Topics:
Tucson - 1860s - 70s - Chiricahua Mountains - Geronimo - Mexico
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In the spring of 1877, the U.S. captured Geronimo and brought him to the San Carlos reservation. He stayed there until September 1881, when a gathering of soldiers around the reservation caused him to fear that he would be imprisoned for his past deeds. He fled to Mexico, taking 700 Apaches with him. In April of the following year, Geronimo returned to San Carlos with horses and guns and liberated the rest of the Apaches, leading many of them back to Mexico.
Related Topics:
1877 - September - 1881 - April
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In the spring of 1883, General George Crook was put in charge of the Arizona and New Mexico reservations. With 200 Apaches, he journeyed to Mexico, found Geronimo?s camp, and persuaded him and his people to return to the San Carlos reservation. Crook instituted several reforms on the reservation, but local newspapers criticized him for being too lenient and demonized Geronimo. On 17 May 1885, Geronimo, drunk and intimidated by demands for his death printed in the papers, escaped once again to Mexico.
Related Topics:
1883 - George Crook - Arizona - New Mexico - Reservation - 17 May - 1885
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Again, Crook went after Geronimo, but this time the negotiations fell through. The War Department reprimanded Crook for the failure and he resigned. He was replaced by Brigadier General Nelson Miles who sent 5,000 soldiers, 500 Apache scouts, and thousands of civilian militia after Geronimo and twenty-four warriors. Geronimo was quickly found and persuaded to surrender. He and many other Apaches were sent to Fort Marion in Florida, where many died because of the climate. Many Apache children were taken to the Carlisle school in Pennsylvania, where fifty of them died.
Related Topics:
War Department - Brigadier General - Nelson Miles - Pennsylvania
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