Thursday, April 26, 2012

GERONIMO IN MEXICO: “A summation”


Most of us know of the Apache leader Geronimo but most of what most of us know we learned at the movies.  Leader of the Chiricahua Apaches, Geronimo led the fight against the expansion into Apache tribal lands by the United States during the Apache Wars.  But you knew that much from the movies.  It is true that the greatest wrongs that were visited upon the Apaches were from the United States government.  But the history of Geronimo’s war parties started in Mexico…and we have spent the last few months publishing our adaptation of Geronimo’s own recollections.  As we conclude our study of Geronimo in Mexico, we look at his name, his power and his injuries.

Geronimo was born on June 16, 1829, a birth date he gave himself, near Turkey Creek; a tributary of the Gila River, in what is now the western part of the state of New Mexico.  It was in Old Mexico then but in reality it was Bedonkohe land.  He was given the name, “One Who Yawns,” or Goyathlay in English (often Gokhlayeh or Goyahkla and spelled Goyaałé in the Chiricahua dictionary).  In more recent times, the Fort Sill (Oklahoma) Apaches have suggested that his birth name meant, “Intelligent, shrewd, clever.”

Goyathlay became exceedingly fierce and unafraid in his war against the Mexicans.  It was his Mexican adversaries who gave Goyathlay the nickname of "Geronimo." It is said that Goyathlay was given the name Geronimo (Jerome) by Mexican soldiers because of the daring feats he performed.  Few historians agree to the reasons but it is said that each time they saw him the Mexican soldiers would cry out in terror, "Cuidado!  Geronimo!"  In one battle, ignoring a deadly hail of bullets and armed only with a knife, Goyathlay repeatedly attacked and stabbed the Mexicans, purportedly causing them to call out supplications to Saint Jerome, allegedly the Patron Saint of the Mexican Army.  Although in the Roman Catholic Church, Jerome is recognized as the patron saint of translators, librarians and encyclopedists, he did write quite a bit about the horrors of hell and perhaps it was in this context that the Mexicans were asking for Saint Jerome’s aid.

          Geronimo attributed his numerous raiding successes to his special spiritual insights and abilities known to Apache people as "Power.”  He had a reputed invulnerability to gunshot, the faculty to walk without leaving tracks; the abilities now known as telekinesis and telepathy.  He was wounded by buckshot and bullets many times but survived.  

During his many wars with the Mexicans Geronimo received many major but not fatal wounds. He was shot in the right leg above the knee, and carried the bullet all his life.  He was also shot through the left forearm.  In addition, Geronimo was shot just below the outer corner of the left eye, shot in left side, and shot in the back.  Other major wounds Geronimo received included being slashed in the right leg below the knee with a saber and being injured on top of the head with the butt of a musket.

Apache men chose to follow him of their own free will, and the warriors offered eye-witness testimony regarding Geronimo’s “Power."  They declared that this was the main reason why so many chose to follow him. The Apaches believed that Geronimo was favored or protected by "Usen", the Apache high-god.  Geronimo believed that the bitter loss of his family at Kas-ki-yeh brought him his "Power."  While sitting with his head bowed in sorrow, he heard a voice tell him that ‘no gun can ever kill you, and I will guide your arrows.’ The fact that he was often wounded, but remained alive, strengthened his conviction in this power.

Geronimo was responsible for the deaths of many Mexicans; no one knows how many, because normally Geronimo did not count them. Some of them, he said, were not worth counting.  Until his dying day Geronimo had no love for the Mexicans. Geronimo felt that the Mexican military leaders were treacherous and malicious with him and always deceitful and cruel.   Even when he was old and knew that he would never go on the warpath again, Geronimo said that if he were young, and followed the warpath, it would lead into Old Mexico. 

Goyathlay had officially become Geronimo and the name caught on. His “Power” served him well and his exploits in the Southwest have become international legend.  

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

GERONIMO IN MEXICO: “His final battle, 1884”


Most of us know of the Apache leader Geronimo but most of what most of us know we learned at the movies.  Leader of the Chiricahua Apaches, Geronimo led the fight against the expansion into Apache tribal lands by the United States during the Apache Wars.  But you knew that much from the movies.  It is true that the greatest wrongs that were visited upon the Apaches were from the United States government.  But the history of Geronimo’s war parties started in Mexico…and we continue our adaptation of Geronimo’s own recollections.

After the Mexican treachery and massacre at Casa Grande the Apaches did not reassemble for a long while, and when they did they returned to Arizona. The Apaches remained in Arizona for some time, living on the San Carlos Reservation, at a place on the reservation now called Geronimo.

In 1883 Geronimo and his band left the reservation and went into Mexico again. The Apaches remained in the mountain ranges of Mexico for about fourteen months, and during this time Geronimo and his warriors suffered from many skirmishes with Mexican troops. The Indians were beginning to tire of being chased about from place to place. To make things even more difficult for Geronimo, the Mexicans began assembling troops in the mountains where the Indians had been ranging.  At this point the Mexican soldiers so outnumbered the Apache warriors that Geronimo could not hope to fight them successfully. 

In 1884 the Indians returned to Arizona to convince other Apaches to leave the reservation and to come with them into Mexico to assist in battling the Mexican Army.  This ploy did not work out well for Geronimo.  In Arizona, off the San Carlos Reservation, Geronimo ran into trouble with the United States army and lost about fifteen warriors in battle.  Geronimo’s attempt to convince warriors to leave the reservation had gained no recruits. Now under increasing pressure from United States troops, Geronimo fled once again to Mexico.

Geronimo and his reduced number of Apaches camped in the mountains north of Arispe.  Mexican troops were observed moving in several directions by Indian scouts. The United States troops were coming down into Mexico from the north.  Although the Apaches were well armed with guns and well supplied with ammunition, Geronimo did not care to be surrounded by the troops of two governments, so he started to move their camp southward, deeper into Mexico.

One night Geronimo made camp by a stream some distance from the mountains. There was not much water in the brook, but a deep channel was worn through the lowland and small trees were beginning to grow here and there along the bank of this watercourse.

In those days Geronimo never camped without placing scouts, because he knew from experience that the Indians were liable to be attacked at any time. The next morning, just at daybreak, Apache scouts came in, aroused the camp, and notified Geronimo that Mexican troops were approaching. Within five minutes the Mexicans began firing on the Indians. The warriors took to the ditches made by the stream, and had the women and children keep busy digging these ditches even deeper. Geronimo gave strict orders to waste no ammunition and keep under cover.

The fight lasted all day.  The Apaches killed many Mexicans that day and in turn the Mexicans took many Apache lives.  Repeatedly, Mexican troops would charge at one point, be repulsed, then rally and charge at another point.

At about noon the Apaches began to hear the Mexicans speaking Geronimo’s name with curses. In the afternoon a Mexican general came took to the field to encourage the soldatos and the fighting became more furious.  Geronimo gave orders to his warriors to try to kill all the Mexican officers.

About three o’clock in the afternoon the Mexican general called all of his officers together at the right side of the field. The place where the Mexican officers assembled was not very far from the main stream, and a little ditch ran out close to where the officers stood.  Cautiously, Geronimo crawled out along this ditch very close to where the Mexican council was being held. A breeze was blowing in the direction of the Indians and because of that Geronimo able to overhearall that the general said.  Geronimo, being somewhat fluent in Spanish, understood most of it.

Geronimo, in his memoirs, related what the general told his officers: “Officers, yonder in those ditches is the red devil Geronimo and his hated band. This must be his last day. Ride on him from both sides of the ditches; kill men, women, and children; take no prisoners; dead Indians are what we want. Do not spare your own men; exterminate this band at any cost; I will post the wounded to shoot all deserters; go back to your companies and advance.”

Just as the general’s command to go forward was given, Geronimo took deliberate aim at the general, fired, and the general fell. In an instant the ground around Geronimo was riddled with bullets, but he remained untouched. The Apaches had seen what had taken place and from all along the ditches there arose the fierce war-cry of Geronimo’s people. The Mexican columns wavered for an instant but the Mexicans swept on and did not retreat until the Apache’s fire had destroyed the front ranks.

After this barrage and the death of their commanding officer, the Mexican’s fighting was not so fierce, yet they continued to rally and continued to advance until dark. The Mexicans also continued to speak Geronimo’s name with threats and curses.

That night, before the firing had ceased, a dozen Indians crawled out of the ditches and set fire to the long prairie grass behind the Mexican troops. During the confusion that followed Geronimo and his war party escaped to the mountains.

This was the last battle that Geronimo ever fought with Mexicans. United States troops trailed the Apaches continually from this time until the treaty was made with General Miles in Skeleton Canyon.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

ESCAPE FROM THE ALAMO by Dac Crossley


They called him “Possum” because of his grin.  That’s what fellow Tennessean David Crockett called George Hanks at the Alamo.  But by the time author Dac Crossley takes the reader to the conclusion of this adventure, red headed George Hanks is known as Don Colorado.

The brave defenders of the Alamo gave their lives for freedom and the new Republic of Texas.  History claims that no one survived that battle but this South Texas quest for manhood postulates that someone might have.  The escapades of young George Hanks take him from his awakening alone and confused on the battlefield of San Jacinto to a career with the Texas Rangers, and confrontations with Anglo war refugees, Comanches, bandits, Apaches, two Mexican armies and a lovely Senorita along the way.  Escape From The Alamo mixes early Texas history with the excitement of the traditional Western novel and might have been written to order for fans of Western adventure.

A retired professor and noted ecologist, Dac Crossley was raised in South Texas, on tales of forgotten trails and railroad tracks, bandits raiders and Indian attacks, getaways and gunfights, and the strong women who held Texas together.  A graduate of Texas Tech, Dac majored in Biology and earned his Doctorate at the University of Kansas.  He retired at the University of Georgia and, from there in the Deep South, hit his stride in writing about his home state.  His two South Texas novels, Guns Across The Rio and Return Of The Texas Ranger, both won awards for excellence.   Escape From The Alamo carries on South Texas traditions in an earlier time, when Texas was an independent republic.

Escape From The Alamo, as well as Guns Across The Rio and Return Of The Texas Ranger are available from Amazon.com.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

GERONIMO IN MEXICO: “Sko-la-ta, Nokode and the Massacre at Casa Grande, 1880”


Most of us know of the Apache leader Geronimo but most of what most of us know we learned at the movies.  Leader of the Chiricahua Apaches, Geronimo led the fight against the expansion into Apache tribal lands by the United States during the Apache Wars.  But you knew that much from the movies.  It is true that the greatest wrongs that were visited upon the Apaches were from the United States government.  But the history of Geronimo’s war parties started in Mexico…and we continue our adaptation of Geronimo’s own recollections.

Around the year 1880, when Geronimo was in his camp in the mountains south of Casa Grande, Mexico, called by the Indians Sko-la-ta, a company of Mexican troops attacked. There were twenty-four Mexican soldiers and they faced about forty Indians. The Mexicans surprised the warriors in camp and fired on them, killing two Apaches in the first volley.  This attack by the Mexicans was totally unexpected.

Geronimo related that he did not know how the Mexicans were able to find his camp unless, of course, they had excellent scouts and unless Geronimo’s own guards were careless, but there the Mexicans were, shooting at the Indians before the Apaches knew that the Mexicans were in the vicinity.  If the Mexicans had known how outnumbered they were they might not have assailed the Indian camp.

The Indians were situated in a wooded area, and Geronimo gave his men the order to move forward and fight the Mexican troopers at close range. The warriors kept behind rocks and trees until they came within ten yards of the Mexican line, then they stood up and both sides shot until all twenty four of the Mexicans were killed. Geronimo lost twelve Apaches in this battle. When the warriors had buried their dead and secured what supplies the Mexicans had, they headed to the northeast.

At a place near Nacori, called by the Apaches Nokode, Mexican troops attacked them again.  Gathered in this camp were about eighty warriors, both Bedonkohe and Nedni Apaches. There were three companies of Mexican troops.

The Mexican army attacked the warriors in an open field, and the Indians scattered, firing as they ran. The Mexicans followed them, but the Apaches dispersed, and soon outran the army.  Geronimo’s warriors reassembled in the Sierra Madre Mountains. Here a council was held, and since the Mexican troops were attacking without warning and coming from many directions, Geronimo and the warriors decided to disband.

After about four months had passed, and pressure from the Mexican army had lessened, the Apaches reassembled at Casa Grande.  Here they decided that it would be advantageous for the Indians to make a treaty of peace with the Mexican people. The alcaldes of the town of Casa Grande, along with all of the men of Casa Grande, made a treaty with the Apaches. The people of Casa Grande and the Indians shook hands and promised to be as brothers. This done, they began to trade, and the Mexicans, in a classic act of deceitfulness, gave the Indians mescal.  Soon nearly all the warriors were intoxicated.  While the Apaches were under the influence, two companies of Mexican troops, who had been headquartered in another town, attacked the Indians.  The Mexican troops slaughtered twenty Indians and captured many more.  The Apaches fled in all directions. After the treachery and massacre of Casa Grande the Apaches did not reassemble for a long while, and when they did, even though there was pressure from the American army, Geronimo and his Apaches returned to Arizona.



Tuesday, April 10, 2012

CHIMERA’S WALTZ by Bibi Brock Davis


In 1898 the Klondike gold rush was in full swing, the era of the Old West was coming to a close and the battleship USS Maine exploded and sank in Havana harbor, precipitating the Spanish-American War.

In Chimera’s Waltz, a book of fiction with a rich historical background, Bibi Brock Davis takes the reader back to the Spanish-American War in the Philippines and the ensuing Filipino insurrection.  The evil Royal Harley volunteers to join Teddy Roosevelt in Cuba but, instead, is sent to the Philippines.  His innocent young wife Tilda joins him there and a love triangle with young Lieutenant Evan Winslow is set in motion.  The reader has to experience the rest.

Bibi Brock Davis is a third-generation Californian.   She is a contributing editor for “California Homes Magazine,” writer, editor, and four of her short stories have been dramatized.  Her grandfather, Leopold Royalton Brock and grandmother, Matilda Hadley lived the history that Davis writes but she is quick to point out that none of the events that her Chimera’s Waltz characters experienced ever happened to her grandparents.  This book is the result of extensive research into the history of the Philippines, the U. S. Navy, American diplomacy and more.  This, combined with Davis’ flair for constructing believable and understandable characters and for involving the reader in the story, makes Chimera’s Waltz a must-read.

Chimera’s Waltz by Bibi Brock Davis is available on line at www.iuniverse.com or through the SASS Mercantile at www.sassnet.com/mercantile or 505.843.1320

Thursday, April 5, 2012

GERONIMO IN MEXICO: “The Battle of White Hill, 1879”


Most of us know of the Apache leader Geronimo but most of what most of us know we learned at the movies.  Leader of the Chiricahua Apaches, Geronimo led the fight against the expansion into Apache tribal lands by the United States during the Apache Wars.  But you knew that much from the movies.  It is true that the greatest wrongs that were visited upon the Apaches were from the United States government.  But the history of Geronimo’s war parties started in Mexico…and we continue our adaptation of Geronimo’s own recollections.

Almost every year the tribe would live a part of the time in Old Mexico. Because there were at this time many white settlements in Arizona and plenty of pressure from the United States Army, the Apaches would move to Mexico, move back to Arizona, and then return to Mexico.  Geronimo had said that the reason was that game was no longer plentiful in Arizona and, besides, the Indians liked to go down into Old Mexico.  The lands of the Nedni Apaches, Geronimo’s friends and kinsmen, extended far into Mexico. Their Chief, Whoa, was like a brother to Geronimo, and Geronimo’s tribe spent much of their time in Nedni Apache territory. Geronimo’s Chiricahua Apaches would go into hiding in the Sierra Madre Mountains. 

In 1879, their camp was near Nacori, and Geronimo had just organized bands of warriors for raiding the country, when scouts discovered Mexican cavalry coming toward the camp to attack.

Instead of running and hiding, Geronimo marched all of his warriors toward the Mexican troops and met them at a place about five miles from the Indians’ encampment. Using an interesting tactic that best demonstrated Geronimo’s fighting style, the warriors showed themselves to the soldiers and, as expected, the Mexicans quickly rode to the top of a hill and dismounted, placing their horses on the outside for breastworks. It was a round hill, very steep and rocky, and there was no timber on its sides. There were two companies of Mexican cavalry, and the Apaches had about sixty warriors. The Indians crept up the hill behind the rocks and the Mexicans kept up a constant fire.  Geronimo cautioned the warriors to lay low behind the boulders and not to expose themselves to the Mexicans and to fire sporadically.

Geronimo knew that the troopers would waste their ammunition.  It wasn’t long before the Apaches had killed all the Mexican cavalry’s horses, but the Mexican soldiers would lie behind their dead steeds and shoot at the Indians.  While the Apaches had killed several Mexicans, the warriors had not yet lost a man.  However, it was impossible to get very close to the Mexicans in this way, and finally, Geronimo considered it best to lead a charge against them.
The Apaches had been fighting ever since about one o’clock, and about the middle of the afternoon, seeing that they were making no further progress, and considering that the Mexicans were almost out of ammunition, Geronimo gave the sign for the move forward. The war-whoop sounded and the Indians leaped forward from behind every stone, jumping over the Mexicans’ dead horses, fighting hand to hand. The warriors closed on the cavalry with lightening speed.  The attack was so sudden that the Mexicans, running first this way and then that, became so confused that in a few minutes the Apaches had killed them all with spears, tomahawks, and knives.  Then the Indians scalped the slain Mexicans, carried away their few Apache dead, and gathered up all the weapons they needed.

That night Geronimo moved the camp eastward through the Sierra Madre Mountains into Chihuahua. No troops molested them here and after about a year the Apaches returned to Arizona.