This Day In History - September 4:
1886 : The last American Indian warrior surrenders
For almost 30 years he had fought the whites who invaded his
homeland, but Geronimo, the wiliest and most dangerous Apache warrior
of his time, finally surrenders in Skeleton Canyon, Arizona, on this
day in 1886.
Known to the Apache as Goyalkla, or "One Who Yawns,"
most non-Indians knew him by his Spanish nickname, Geronimo. When he
was a young man, Mexican soldiers had murdered his wife and children
during a brutal attack on his village in Chihuahua, Mexico. Though
Geronimo later remarried and fathered other children, the scars of that
early tragedy left him with an abiding hatred for Mexicans.
Operating
in the border region around Mexico's Sierra Madre and southern Arizona
and New Mexico, Geronimo and his band of 50 Apache warriors succeeded
in keeping white settlers off Apache lands for decades. Geronimo never
learned to use a gun, yet he armed his men with the best modern rifles
he could obtain and even used field glasses to aid reconnaissance
during his campaigns. He was a brilliant strategist who used the Apache
knowledge of the arid desert environment to his advantage, and for
years Geronimo and his men successfully evaded two of the U.S. Army's
most talented Indian fighters, General George Crook and General Nelson
A. Miles. But by 1886, the great Apache warrior had grown tired of
fighting and further resistance seemed increasingly pointless: there
were just too many whites and too few Apaches. On September 4, 1886,
Geronimo turned himself over to Miles, becoming the last American
Indian warrior in history to formally surrender to the United States.
After
several years of imprisonment, Geronimo was given his freedom, and he
moved to Oklahoma where he converted to Christianity and became a
successful farmer. He even occasionally worked as a scout and adviser
for the U.S. army. Transformed into a safe and romantic symbol of the
already vanishing era of the Wild West, he became a popular celebrity
at world's fairs and expositions and even rode in President Theodore
Roosevelt's inaugural parade in 1905. He died at Fort Sill, Oklahoma,
in 1909, still on the federal payroll as an army scout.