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Native American Heritage Month
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November 1st - Geronimo
November 2nd - Crazy Horse
November 3rd - Tecumseh
November 4th - Sitting Bull
November 5th - The Code Talkers
Nov. 6th - Ben Nighthorse Campbell
November 7th - Ira Hamilton Hayes
November 8th - Sacagawea
November 9th - Will Rogers
November 10th - Betty Mae Jumper
November 11th - Chief Joseph
Nov. 12th - John Bennett Herrington
November 13th - Notah Begay III
November 14th - Tomo Chi Chi
November 15th - V.P. Charles Curtis
November 16th - Jim Thorpe
November 17th - Chief Seattle
November 18th - Wilma Mankiller
November 19th - Quanah Parker
November 20th - Pocahontas
November 21st - Mary Musgrove
November 22nd - Dr. Arthur C. Parker
November 23rd - Tisquantum
November 24th - Hiawatha
November 25th - Osceola
November 26th - Black Elk
November 27th - LaDonna Harris
November 28th - Blue Jacket
November 29th - Joseph Idlout
November 30th - Sequoyah
CORRECTION Blue Jacket
CORRECTION Quanah Parker

Thomas B. Lockamy, Jr. Ed.D.
Superintendent of Schools
Savannah-Chatham County
Public Schools
208 Bull Street
Savannah, GA 31401
(912) 395-5600

© 2008, All Rights Reserved





 Portrait of Geronimo
  Portrait of Geronimo

Geronimo  {jur-ahn'-i-moh}, or Goyathlay ("one who yawns"), was born in 1820's in what is today western New Mexico, but was then still Mexican territory.

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 name Geronimo (Spanish for "Jerome"). Some attributed his numerous raiding successes to powers conferred by supernatural beings, including a reputed invulnerability to bullets.

By the 1850's Geronimo was married with three children and also supporting his widowed mother. The entire Bedonkohe group went to Mexico in the summer of 1858 to trade with the Mexicans living in a town Apache's called Kas-ki-yeh (probably Janos). After their camp was established, the women and children remained behind while a group of men went into town to trade. On the third day, the men returned to the camp to discover that a band of Mexican soldiers from another town had come and massacred many people, mostly women and children. Among the dead were Geronimo's mother, wife, and children. From that day, he vowed vengeance upon the Mexican troopers. He became a War Chief, leading the Chiricahua Apache in raids on Mexican towns and villages as well as attacking people throughout southern Arizona and New Mexico.

Some people give Geronimo the distinction of being the last Indian to surrender to the United States but actually he surrendered several times. In 1884, Geronimo, the Bedonkohe tribe, and members of other Apache groups surrendered and were taken to the San Carlos Indian Reservation. In 1885, he and 144 others escaped from the reservation, but surrendered to U.S. authorities ten months later in Mexico. As they were brought back across the United States-Mexico border, however, Geronimo and a small band escaped fearing they would be murdered. This band remained at large for the next five months despite being hunted by 5,500 men in a sweeping search that ranged over 1645 miles.

The negotiations for Geronimo's final surrender took place in Skeleton Canyon, near present day Douglas, Arizona, in September, 1886. He and approximately 40 others, as well as Western Apache scouts who had faithfully served the U.S. military in tracking Geronimo's band, were taken into custody. General Nelson A. Miles promised that they would be able to return to Arizona after a short incarceration in Florida.

The group was sent by train to Florida where they were detained for a year at Fort Pickens and their families at Fort Marion (in St. Augustine). The warriors were reunited with their families the following year at Mount Vernon, Alabama. The entire group was moved to Fort Sill, Oklahoma in 1894, still classified as "prisoners of war". Geronimo lived at Fort Sill until his death, in 1909, at the age of 85. During his later life Geronimo was a celebrity. He made appearances at the 1898 Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition, the 1901 Pan American Exposition, and the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition and was often presented as the "Apache terror." He was also given the honor of riding in Theodore Roosevelt's inaugural parade after which he was given a personal audience with the President. Although he pled "Let me die in my own country, an old man who has been punished enough and is free," he was never allowed to return to Arizona.

Quotations

"I was warmed by the sun, rocked by the winds and sheltered by the trees as other Indian babes. I was living peaceably when people began to speak bad of me. Now I can eat well, sleep well and be glad. I can go everywhere with a good feeling. "

"The soldiers never explained to the government when an Indian was wronged, but reported the misdeeds of the Indians. We took an oath not to do any wrong to each other or to scheme against each other."

"I was born on the prairies where the wind blew free and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures."

Source

Turner, Frederick W. (1970) - "Geronimo: His Own Story: The Autobiography of a Great Patriot Warrior" (Introduction) Dutton, New York

Burncombe, Andrew in Washington "Geronimo's family call on Bush to help return his Skeleton" - The Independent (June 1, 2006)