WHO HAS GERONIMO'S SKULL?

Started by Teresa, March 05, 2005, 12:32:44 PM

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flo

#30
anyone remember the words of "yellow hair" to his soldiers who asked if they were to also kill children as they were raiding the indian village? "nits grow into lice" - this was just before they killed all moving things, men, women and children.  There were needless killings on both sides of the fence.  My objection to the "humor" about Geronimo's skull was the lack of compassion shown for a deceased, whether an indian chief or a soldier.  I refrain from saying "American" because at that time, the Indians were the true Americans.  We were merely the "whites"
MY GOAL IS TO LIVE FOREVER. SO FAR, SO GOOD !

Teresa

flo..
point taken.. and I apologize for chuckling.  :-[

But dang it.. you KNOW how I am.. in the most serious circumstances.. someone can say or do one teeny weeny little itty bitty thing and I start laughing..
glad we were not all in a room all serious....and you gave the scolding look to Warph..

I would have been a goner..  ;D
Well Behaved Women Rarely Make History !

Warph

Quote from: pam on July 14, 2008, 11:28:20 AM
Maybe you can send one of his grandchildren one of YOUR relatives skulls to use for an ashtray.................

If his grandchildren are still living they can have ol' Tad Warph's skull.  Hung as a hoss thief back in 1862 and buried in Goldsboro, N.C.,
he was a part time tobacco farmer and horse wrangler.  They say he rolled his own cigars and smoked like a chimney.  He was also known to poison his neighbors tobacco plants before harvest time so he could make a higher price on his own crop.  A real SOB!  His demise came when he tried to steal back seven horses he sold to the confederate army, was caught, was hung, end of story. 

Here's the rundown on ol' Geronimo's life from thewildwest.org:

Geronimo / Goyathlay (1829-1909)


To other members of the Chiricahua (chair-i-cow-ah) Apache, Geronimo seemed to reflect all things they embraced as a people - courage, diligence and aggressiveness - qualities that for years kept them relatively safe from the increasing white encroachment in Arizona and New Mexico. The Chircahuas were nomadic, following game and farming in the warmer months. But when times were tough and food was scarce raids on other tribes was the way of life, and considered honorable.

Geronimo was born Goyathlay (One Who Yawns) in Arizona, grandson of a chief of the Nedni Apache, but his father married a Bedonkohe Apache and joined her tribe, thereby forfeiting his hereditary right as leader. Therefore, contrary to popular ideas, Geronimo was never a chief. He was a dutiful follower of many great chiefs though, including Cochise and Coloradas.

While many Europeans were trickling into the area, the Spanish were already firmly in place for years. The whites were a problem, but it was Mexican soldiers who raided and killed Geronimo's family - his mother, wife and three children. Prior to this event, Geronimo had been considered more a holy man than a warrior, but as a result of his loss he often spoke of his hatred for whites and coveted a vengeance that would bring him to kill as many as he could.

Geronimo's "white name" came as a result of his fearless and resourceful as a warrior. While leading a charge against Mexicans they began to shout "Geronimo!" seeking help from their patron saint, Jerome, or Geronimo in Spanish. Emerging conqueror over the Mexicans, the warriors bestowed the name of Geronimo on their fearless leader. To this day the name remains a battle cry.

The army tried to place all the Chiricahua on reservation in 1876, but Geronimo fled to Mexico and escaped capture for a decade. While the press is accused of "making news" these days, so it was then. The press had Geronimo everywhere and doing everything, often at the same time. The media image of Geronimo made him the most high-profile and feared of all the Apache. It wasn't all myth however. His name was associated with terror in the Southwest and ultimately it took more than 5,000 soldiers and 500 scouts to track down Geronimo and his followers.


He finally surrendered after hearing his people were being sent East. He was the very last renegade Indian to surrender to white authority. Geronimo was sent to a reservation in Florida for two years, where many died of malaria or tuberculosis. Geronimo longed to return to his beloved Arizona, but that was not to be so. He was to make another stop in Alabama before finally being placed on a reservation in Oklahoma, which at least bore a climate more similar to that of the Southwest. It was here, at Fort Sill, that he spent the last 14 years of his life.

In his old age, Geronimo learned a little English and how to write his name. He became very enterprising in his ability to market himself and his legacy, selling buttons from his coat for a quarter apiece, his hat for five dollars or bows and arrows that he made. For 50 cents, he would sign his name. If asked he would show off his battle wounds with pride. He also made personal appearances at places like Oklahoma fairs, the Exposition in Omaha in 1898, the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo in 1901, the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904 and Teddy Roosevelt's inaugural parade in 1905.

Despite making the rounds as an "attraction," Geronimo was never allowed to return to Arizona. As an old man, he remained a crack shot, and he enjoyed good health well into his 80s. Geronimo also drank, sometimes to excess and this ultimately was his demise. On a cold night in February of 1909, drunk, he fell off his horse and lay undiscovered on the cold ground. This brought on pneumonia and he died a few days later.
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

pam

Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.
William Butler Yeats

Catwoman

There is also reams of documentation on the fact that Native Americans were totally ruthless with each other, too...they would slaughter entire villages, enslave the survivers, toture those who who were unlucky enough to fall prey to the attacking tribe, etc.  Sad as it may be, this is the tale told over and over again in the history of the world...conquerers and the conquered.  I'm sure that if the Greek Library had survived without being burned to the ground, the ancient scrolls would tell similar tales.  I've often wondered what was in that Library...

frawin

Quote from: flo on July 14, 2008, 05:18:16 PM
anyone remember the words of "yellow hair" to his soldiers who asked if they were to also kill children as they were raiding the indian village? "nits grow into lice" - this was just before they killed all moving things, men, women and children.  There were needless killings on both sides of the fence.  My objection to the "humor" about Geronimo's skull was the lack of compassion shown for a deceased, whether an indian chief or a soldier.  I refrain from saying "American" because at that time, the Indians were the true Americans.  We were merely the "whites"
Maybe at the Little Bighorn "old Yellow Hair " said don't kill any Indians we are here to Smoke the pipe and drink JD and Branch water, and look what happened to him. I guess we will never know, I think the only survivor on our side was a horse.

Catwoman

Wait a minute...I thought there was one dude who escaped or missed the action?  You mean to tell me that the only surviver was an animal?

W. Gray

One of the tales of the Comanche that I recall was when a lone tribal enemy was captured by a few men when out in a hunting party.

Alive, he was staked to the ground and then cooking wood placed over his body.

A fire would be started and the Comanche would cook their dinner over the man. 
"If one of the many corrupt...county-seat contests must be taken by way of illustration, the choice of Howard County, Kansas, is ideal." Dr. Everett Dick, The Sod-House Frontier, 1854-1890.
"One of the most expensive county-seat wars in terms of time and money lost..." Dr. Homer E Socolofsky, KSU

W. Gray


Custer split his 7th Cavalry into three battalions.

A lot of men survived at Little Big Horn, mainly those under Captain Benteen and Major Reno.

The group under Custer, however, did not.

There are some rumors that one man survived but nothing definitive has ever been established.

A common misperception is that a horse named Comanche belonging to Lt Miles Keogh was the only survivor.

However, there were several Army horses that survived the ordeal, many of them wounded, but the Army chose to tell the story of Comanche.

His body (the horse) is preserved at the University of Kansas.

"If one of the many corrupt...county-seat contests must be taken by way of illustration, the choice of Howard County, Kansas, is ideal." Dr. Everett Dick, The Sod-House Frontier, 1854-1890.
"One of the most expensive county-seat wars in terms of time and money lost..." Dr. Homer E Socolofsky, KSU

frawin

Waldo, that is about the most vicious thing I have heard of, can you imagine the pain and suffering. I wonder why the Lord would allow that.

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