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Chiricahua ( / ˌ tʃ ɪr ɪ ˈ k ɑː w ə / CHIRR -i- KAH -wə ) is a band of Apache Native Americans .

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59-868: Warm Springs may refer to: Warm Springs Apache, a subdivision of the Chiricahua Apache Warm Springs, California , in Riverside County Warm Springs, Fremont, California Warm Springs Elementary School , elementary school in Fremont, California Warm Springs/South Fremont station , a Bay Area Rapid Transit station in Fremont, California Warm Springs, Georgia , location of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Little White House Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation . Warm Springs (film) ,

118-728: A 2005 movie about Roosevelt's struggle with paralytic illness Warm Springs, Montana Warm Springs, Nevada Warm Springs Natural Area Warm Springs Indian Reservation , Oregon Warm Springs, Oregon , located on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation Warm Springs bands, common contemporary name of the Tenino people Warm Springs (Utah) , at Warm Springs Mountain, east Goshen Valley, Utah Warm Springs, Virginia An early alternative name for Berkeley Springs, West Virginia Warm Mineral Springs, Florida Topics referred to by

177-511: A bounty on Apache scalps which further inflamed the situation. In 1837 Warm Springs Mimbreños ' head chief and famed raider, Soldado Fiero also known as Fuerte was killed by Mexican soldiers of the garrison at Janos (only two days' travel from Santa Rita del Cobre), and his son Cuchillo Negro succeeded him as head chief and went to war against Chihuahua for revenge. In the same 1837, the American John (also known as James) Johnson invited

236-774: A common area, language, customs, and intertwined family relations with their fellow Apaches. At the time of European contact, they had a territory of 15 million acres (61,000 km ) in Southwestern New Mexico and Southeastern Arizona in the United States and in Northern Sonora and Chihuahua in Mexico . Today Chiricahua live in Northern Mexico and in the United States where they are enrolled in three federally recognized tribes :

295-470: A female householder with no husband present, and 31.1% were non-families. 27.6% of all households were made up of individuals, and 15.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.50 and the average family size was 3.06. In the town, the population was spread out, with 29.6% under the age of 18, 9.2% from 18 to 24, 26.1% from 25 to 44, 19.4% from 45 to 64, and 15.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age

354-742: A national language of Mexico and is regulated by the Instituto Nacional de Lenguas Indígenas . Several loosely affiliated bands of Apache came improperly to be usually known as the Chiricahuas. These included the Chokonen ( recte : Tsokanende), the Chihenne (recte: Tchihende), the Nednai ( Nednhi ) and Bedonkohe (recte, both of them together: Ndendahe). Today, all are commonly referred to as Chiricahua, but they were not historically

413-558: A nightmare to settlers and military garrisons and patrols. In the meantime, the great Victorio , Delgadito (soon killed in 1864), Nana , Loco , young Mangus (last son of Mangas Coloradas) and other minor chiefs led on the warpath the Mimbreños, Chiricahuas' cousins and allies, and Juh led the Ndendahe (Nednhi and Bedonkohe together). In 1872, General Oliver O. Howard , with the help of Thomas Jeffords , succeeded in negotiating

472-632: A peace with Cochise . On December 14, 1872, President Ulysses Grant issued an Executive Order establishing the Chiricahua Reservation in the southeast Arizona Territory encompassing the Chiricahua Mountains, Mexico–United States border , and New Mexico Territory border. Jeffords and John Clum were designated as the U.S. Indian Agents for the Chiricahua Reservation residing near Apache Pass, Arizona and Fort Bowie . It remained open for about 4 years, during which

531-575: A raid against the Navahos. Some Apaches, including Cuchillo Negro himself, were killed. In December 1860, after several bad incidents provoked by the miners led by James H. Tevis in the Pinos Altos area, Mangas Coloradas went to Pinos Altos, New Mexico to try to convince the miners to move away from the area he loved and to go to the Sierra Madre and seek gold there, but they tied him to

590-681: A single band nor the same Apache division, being more correctly identified, all together, as "Central Apaches". Many other bands and groups of Apachean language -speakers ranged over eastern Arizona and the American Southwest. The bands that are grouped under the Chiricahua term today had much history together: they intermarried and lived alongside each other, and they also occasionally fought with each other. They formed short-term as well as longer alliances that have caused scholars to classify them as one people. The Apachean groups and

649-701: A southern Mescalero band (which was often called Aguas Nuevas by the Spanish). The Spanish referred to the Apache band by the same name of Tsebekinéndé. These two different Apache bands were often confused with each other. (Similar confusion arose over distinguishing the Janeros-Nednhi of the Chiricahua ( Dzilthdaklizhéndé ) and the Dzithinahndé of the Mescalero. For people after the 19th century, see

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708-622: A stronghold in the Chiricahua Mountains , part of which is now inside Chiricahua National Monument , and across the intervening Willcox Playa to the northeast, in the Dragoon Mountains (all in southeastern Arizona). In late frontier times, the Chiricahua ranged from San Carlos and the White Mountains of Arizona, to the adjacent mountains of southwestern New Mexico around what is now Silver City, and down into

767-611: A treaty at Fort Webster in April 1853, but, during the spring of 1857 the U.S. Army set out on a campaign, led by Col. Benjamin L.E. deBonneville, Col. Dixon S. Miles (3°Cavalry from Fort Thorn) and Col. William W. Loring (commanding a Mounted Rifles Regiment from Albuquerque), against Mogollon and Coyotero Apaches: Loring's Pueblo Indian scouts found and attacked an Apache rancheria in the Canyon de Los Muertos Carneros (May 25, 1857), where Cuchillo Negro and some Mimbreño Apache were resting after

826-459: A tree and whipped him badly. His Mimbreño and Ndendahe followers and related Chiricahua bands were incensed by the treatment of their respected chief. Mangas had been just as great a chief in his prime (during the 1830s and 1840s), along with Cuchillo Negro, as Cochise was then becoming. In 1861, the US Army seized and killed some of Cochise's relatives near Apache Pass , in what became known as

885-467: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Chiricahua Based in the Southern Plains and Southwestern United States, the Chiricahua (Tsokanende) are related to other Apache groups: Ndendahe (Mogollon, Carrizaleño), Tchihende (Mimbreño), Sehende (Mescalero), Lipan, Salinero, Plains , and Western Apache. Chiricahua historically shared

944-587: Is said that all Apaches referred to the Americans and European settlers (with exception of the Mexicans) as Bi'ndah-Li'ghi' / Bi'nda-li'ghi'o'yi ("White Eyes"), but this seems a name from Mescalero and Lipan Apache bands, as the Chiricahua bands called them Daadatlijende , meaning "Blue/green eye people" or Indaaɫigáí / Indaaɫigánde meaning "White skinned or pale colored people" or literally "Strange, non-Apache people, which are white-skinned"). Łigáí means "it

1003-467: Is simply (depending on dialect) Nde, Ne, Néndé, Héndé , Hen-de or õne ("The People, Men", "the People of"); they never called themselves ″Apaches". The Chiricahua referred to outsiders, such as Americans, Mexicans or other Indians, as Enee , ⁿdáa or Indah / N'daa . This word has two possible meanings, the first being "strange people, non-Apache people" or "enemy", but another being "eye". Sometimes it

1062-448: Is used in many Chiricahuan rituals. John Gregory Bourke recorded that the Chiricahua offered hoddentin to the sun, threw it after snakes, and used it in medicine dances and around dying people. Other traditional practices include death rituals and puberty ceremonies for young women. Caves, waterways, and birthplaces hold special spiritual significance. The Athabaskan ancestors of the Chiricahua people migrated south from Canada along

1121-457: Is white" or it can be translate as "it is pale colored". The í on the end usually translates as "the one that is", but in the context of human beings, can mean "the group who are". The Chiricahua language (n'dee biyat'i) is a Southern Athabaskan language from the Na-dene language family. It is very closely related to Mescalero, and more distantly related to Western Apache . It's considered

1180-531: The American Southwest . From the beginning of European-Apache relations, there was conflict between them. The two groups contested the control of land and trade routes in Apacheria , and their cultural differences made it oftentimes difficult to negotiate treaties and policies between. Their encounters were preceded by more than 100 years of Spanish colonial and Mexican incursions and settlement on

1239-676: The Bascom Affair . Remembering how Cochise had escaped, the Chiricahua called the incident "cut the tent." In 1863, Gen. James H. Carleton set out leading a new campaign against the Mescalero Apache, and Capt. Edmund Shirland (10°California Cavalry) invited Mangas Coloradas for a "parley" but, after he entered the U.S. camp to negotiate a peace, the great Mimbreño chief was arrested and convicted in Fort McLane , where, probably on Gen. Joseph R. West's orders, Mangas Coloradas

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1298-648: The Comanche and Kiowa . Among the last of such splits were those that resulted in the formation of the different Apachean bands whom the later Europeans encountered: the southwestern Apache groups and the Navajo. Although both speaking forms of Southern Athabaskan, the Navajo and Apache have become culturally distinct. The "Chihenne (Tchihende)", "Nednai/Nednhi (Ndendahe)" and "Bedonkohe" intermarried sometimes with Mescalero Bands of New Mexico and Chihuahua and formed alliances with them; therefore their Mescalero kin did know

1357-539: The Coppermine Mimbreños in the Pinos Altos area to trade with his party (near the mines at Santa Rita del Cobre , New Mexico) and, when they gathered around a blanket on which pinole (a ground corn flour) had been placed for them, Johnson and his men opened fire on the Chihenne with rifles and a concealed cannon loaded with scrap iron, glass, and a length of chain. They killed about 20 Apache, including

1416-651: The Fiesta de los Remedios in Comonfort , Guanajuato representing and performing their traditional dances and other ceremonies. The major Chiricahuan deity is called Ussen, an all-powerful creator figure. Other figures in Chiricahuan mythology include White Painted Woman, a virgin who offered herself in sacrifice to end a drought, and her son, Child of the Waters. Hoddentin , ceremonially prepared cattail pollen,

1475-726: The Fort Sill Apache Tribe , located near Apache, Oklahoma , with a small reservation outside Deming, New Mexico ; the Mescalero Apache Tribe of the Mescalero Reservation near Ruidoso, New Mexico ; and the San Carlos Apache Tribe in southeastern Arizona. The Chiricahua Apache, also written as Chiricagui , Apaches de Chiricahui , Chiricahues , Chilicague , Chilecagez , and Chiricagua , were given that name by

1534-596: The Rocky Mountains . Historians disagree on the exact dates of the migration, with estimates ranging from the early 1100s to about 1500. Historian Jack D. Forbes speculates that there may have been two or more mass migrations during this time period. The Tsokanende ( Chiricahua ) Apache division was once led, from the beginning of the 18th century, by chiefs such as Pisago Cabezón , Relles , Posito Moraga , Yrigollen , Tapilá , Teboca , Vívora , Miguel Narbona , Esquinaline , and finally Cochise (whose name

1593-507: The United States Census Bureau , the town has a total area of 2.0 square miles (5.2 km ), of which, 2.0 square miles (5.2 km ) is land and 0.49% is water. As of the census of 2010, there were 1,444 people living in the town. The population density was 799.0 inhabitants per square mile (308.5/km ). There were 712 housing units at an average density of 352.0 per square mile (135.9/km ). The racial makeup of

1652-559: The Apache lands, which pushed Apache tribes northward and exacerbated the martial nature of their society. The United States settlers were newcomers to the competition for land and resources in the Southwest , but they inherited its complex history, and brought their own attitudes with them about American Indians and how to use the land. By the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848, the US took on

1711-699: The Chiricahua culture, the "band" as a unit was much more important than the American or European concept of "tribe". The Chiricahua had no name for themselves (autonym) as a people. The name Chiricahua is most likely the Spanish rendering of the Opata word Chihuicahui or Chiguicagui ('mountain of the wild turkey') for the Chiricahua Mountains , later corrupted into Chiricahui/Chiricahua. The Chiricahua tribal territory encompassed today's SE Arizona, SW New Mexico, NE Sonora and NW Chihuahua. The Chiricahua range extended to

1770-471: The Chiricahua groups from using the border as an escape route, and as they could gain little time to rest and consider their next move, the fatigue, attrition and demoralization of the constant hunt led to their surrender. The final 34 hold-outs, including Geronimo and Naiche, surrendered to units of General Miles' forces in September 1886. From Bowie Station, Arizona, they were entrained, along with most of

1829-769: The Chiricahuas consisted of three bands: Schroeder (1947) lists five bands: The Chiricahua-Warm Springs Fort Sill Apache tribe in Oklahoma say they have four bands in Fort Sill: (some of the Arizona Apaches did not return to San Carlos or Fort Apache, White Mountain Apache warrior Eyelash is buried in Fort Sill cememtry, Southern Tonto Apache Chief/Scout Hosay is buried in Fort Apache cememtery, Hosay has family in Fort Sill and San Carlos today) Today they use

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1888-679: The Mexican Army and police. Most were eventually captured or killed by soldiers or by private ranchers armed and deputized by the Mexican government. Eventually, the surviving Chiricahua prisoners were moved to the Fort Sill military reservation in Oklahoma. In August 1912, by an act of the U.S. Congress, they were released from their prisoner of war status as they were thought to be no further threat. Although promised land at Fort Sill, they met resistance from local non-Apache. They were given

1947-774: The Navajo peoples were part of the Athabaskan migration into the North American continent from Asia, across the Bering Strait from Siberia . As the people moved south and east into North America, groups splintered off and became differentiated by language and culture over time. Some anthropologists believe that the Lipan Apache and the Navajo were pushed south and west into what is now New Mexico and Arizona by pressure from other Great Plains Indians, such as

2006-731: The Spanish. The White Mountain Coyotero Apache , including the Cibecue and Bylas groups of the Western Apache , referred to the Chiricahua by the name Ha'i’ą́há , while the San Carlos Apache called them Hák'ą́yé which means ″Eastern Sunrise″, or ″People in the East″. Sometimes they adapted this appellation and referred to themselves also as Ha’ishu Na gukande ('Sunrise People'). The Mescalero Apache called

2065-669: The Western Apache and Chiricahua bands to their west Shá'i'áõde ("Western Apache People", "The People of the Sunset", "The People of the West"), when referring only to Chiricahuas they used Ch'úk'ânéõde ("People of a ridge or mountainside [made of loose rocks]") or sometimes Tã'aa'ji k'ee'déõkaa'õde ("The Ones who are Covered [with breech cloths]"). Navajo refer to the Chiricahua as Chíshí ("Southern People"). The Chiricahua autonym , or name by which they refer to themselves,

2124-474: The chief Juan José Compá . Mangas Coloradas is said to have witnessed this attack, which inflamed his and other Apache warriors' desires for vengeance for many years; he led the survivors to safety and subsequently, together with Cuchillo Negro , took Mimbreño revenge. The historian Rex W. Strickland argued that the Apache had come to the meeting with their own intentions of attacking Johnson's party, but were taken by surprise. In 1839 scalp-hunter James Kirker

2183-582: The chief Cochise died (from natural causes). In 1876, about two years after Cochise's death, the US moved the Chiricahua and some other Apache bands to the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation , still in Arizona. This was in response to public outcry after the killings of Orizoba Spence and Nicholas Rogers at Sulpher Springs. The mountain people hated the desert environment of San Carlos, and some frequently began to leave

2242-480: The choice to remain at Fort Sill or to relocate to the Mescalero reservation near Ruidoso, New Mexico. Two-thirds of the group, 183 people, elected to go to New Mexico, while 78 remained in Oklahoma. Their descendants still reside in these places. At the time, they were not permitted to return to Arizona because of hostility from the long wars. in 1912 many different Apache bands returned to San Carlos Apache lands after their release from Fort Sill Apache Reservation. In

2301-744: The east as far as the Rio Grande Valley in New Mexico and to the west as far as the San Pedro River Valley in Arizona, north of Magdalena just below present day Hwy I-40 corridor in New Mexico and with the town Ciudad Madera (276 km northwest of the state capital, Chihuahua , and 536 km southwest of Ciudad Juárez (formerly known as Paso del Norte ) on the Mexico–United States border ), as their southernmost range. According to Morris E. Opler (1941),

2360-673: The end of the 19th century, surviving Apache no longer identified these groups. They may have been wiped out (like the Pinaleño-Nednhi) or had joined more powerful groups. For instance, the remnant of the Carrizaleño-Nedhni camped together with their northern kin, the Janero-Nednhi. The Carrizaleňo-Nednhi shared overlapping territory in the surroundings of Casas Grandes and Aguas Nuevas with the Tsebekinéndé ,

2419-578: The land now occupied by Apache as a townsite. He had expected the community would be named "Richards" in his honor. Instead, officials of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway (Rock Island) named the community Apache. A land run for lots in Apache was held on August 6, 1901, which was the last land run in Oklahoma. According to the Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture , five lumberyards and six saloons opened for business within hours after

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2478-450: The meanwhile, was led by Mahko and, after him, Mano Mocha , Coleto Amarillo , Luis , Laceres , Felipe , Natiza , and finally Juh and Goyaałé (known to the Americans as Geronimo). After Victorio's death, Nana, Gerónimo, Mangus (youngest Mangas Coloradas' son) and youngest Cochise's son Naiche were the last leaders of the Central Apaches, and their mixed Apache group was the last to continue to resist U.S. government control of

2537-435: The migration to the Southwest of the previous two decades. This forced the Apachean people to change their lives as nomads, free on the land. The US Army defeated them and forced them into the confinement of reservation life, on lands ill-suited for subsistence farming, which the US proffered as the model of civilization. Today, the Chiricahua are preserving their culture as much as possible, while forging new relationships with

2596-420: The mountain sanctuaries of the Sierra Madre (of northern Mexico). There they often joined with their Nednai Apache kin. General George Crook , then General Miles' troops, aided by Apache scouts from other groups, pursued the exiles until they gave up. Mexico and the United States had negotiated an agreement allowing their troops in pursuit of the Apache to continue into each other's territories. This prevented

2655-513: The names of Chiricahua bands and local groups: Chíhéõde ("The People of Red Ceremonial Paint", "The Red Ceremonial Paint People"), Ndé'ndaa'õde / Ndé'ndaaõde ("The Apache People (who live among) Enemies") and Bidáõ'kaõde / Bidáõ'kahéõde ("The People whom We Met", "The People whom We Came Upon"), The Mescalero use the term -õde, -éõde, -néõde, or -héõde ("the people of") instead of the Chiricahua Nde, Ne, Néndé, Héndé, Hen-de or õne ("the people of"). Chiricahuas from Mexico participate every year in

2714-404: The other remaining Chiricahua (as well as the Army's Apache scouts), and exiled to Fort Marion , Florida . At least two Apache warriors, Massai and Gray Lizard, escaped from their prison car and made their way back to San Carlos Arizona in a 1,200-mile (1,900 km) journey to their ancestral lands. After a number of Chiricahua deaths at the Fort Marion prison near St. Augustine, Florida ,

2773-489: The pages of specific tribes: Fort Sill Apache Tribe , Mescalero Apache Tribe of the Mescalero Reservation , and San Carlos Apache Tribe . Apache, Oklahoma Apache is a town in Caddo County , Oklahoma , United States. The population was 1,444 at the 2010 census . Before opening the Kiowa , Comanche , and Apache Reservation on August 1, 1901, for unrestricted settlement by non-Indians, Land Lottery Director William A. Richards had recommended setting aside

2832-441: The peoples around them. The Chiricahua are a living and vibrant culture, a part of the greater American whole and yet distinct based on their history and culture. Although they had lived peaceably with most Americans in the New Mexico Territory up to about 1860, the Chiricahua became increasingly hostile to American encroachment in the Southwest after a number of provocations had occurred between them. In 1835, Mexico had placed

2891-418: The reservation and sometimes raided neighboring settlers. They surrendered to General Nelson Miles in 1886. The best-known warrior leader of the "renegades", although he was not considered a 'chief', was the forceful and influential Geronimo . He and Naiche (the son of Cochise and hereditary leader after Tahzay's death) together led many of the resisters during those last few years of freedom. They made

2950-482: The responsibility to prevent and punish cross-border incursions by Apache who were raiding in Mexico. The Apache viewed the United States colonists with ambivalence, and in some cases enlisted them as allies in the early years against the Mexicans. In 1852, the US and some of the Chiricahua signed a treaty, but it had little lasting effect. During the 1850s, American miners and settlers began moving into Chiricahua territory, beginning encroachment that had been renewed in

3009-433: The run. A tent served as a market for groceries. An election of the town's first city officials was held in an outdoor meeting on the evening of August 6, 1901. E. E. Blake was elected as mayor and F. E. Richey as city clerk. Appointed officials included I. F. Crow, city attorney, and Sam Wass, city marshal. Apache was incorporated on July 22, 1902. Apache is located 23 miles (37 km) north of Lawton . According to

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3068-459: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Warm Springs . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Warm_Springs&oldid=789716463 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

3127-519: The survivors were moved, first to Alabama , and later to Fort Sill, Oklahoma . Geronimo's surrender ended the Indian Wars in the United States. However, another group of Chiricahua (also known as the Nameless Ones or Bronco Apache ) were not captured by U.S. forces and refused to surrender. They escaped over the border to Mexico, and settled in the remote Sierra Madre mountains. There they built hidden camps, raided homes for cattle and other food supplies, and engaged in periodic firefights with units of

3186-401: The town was 70.79% White , 0.12% African American , 25.12% Native American , 0.25% Asian , 0.06% Pacific Islander , 0.56% from other races , and 3.09% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.47% of the population. There were 646 households, out of which 35.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.8% were married couples living together, 15.0% had

3245-503: The word Chidikáágu (derived from the Spanish word Chiricahua ) to refer to the Chiricahua in general, and the word Indé , to refer to the Apache in general. Other sources list these and additional bands (only the Chokonen and Chihuicahui local groups of the Chokonen band were considered by Chiricahua tribal members to be the real Chiricahua people ): The Chokonen, Chihenne, Nednhi, and Bedonkohe had probably up to three other groups, named respectively after their leaders or homelands. By

3304-408: Was 34 years. For every 100 females, there were 89.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 84.7 males. The median income for a household in the town was $ 26,953, and the median income for a family was $ 32,431. Males had a median income of $ 25,391 versus $ 19,853 for females. The per capita income for the town was $ 12,790. About 11.4% of families and 16.2% of the population were below

3363-593: Was derived from the Apache word Cheis, meaning "having the quality of oak") and, after his death, his sons Tahzay and, later, Naiche , under the guardianship of Cochise's war chief and brother-in-law Nahilzay , and the independent chiefs Chihuahua , Ulzana , Skinya and Pionsenay ; Tchihende ( Mimbreño ) people was led, during the same period, by chiefs as Juan José Compa , Fuerte also known as Soldado Fiero , Mangas Coloradas , Cuchillo Negro , Delgadito , Ponce, Nana , Victorio , Loco , Mangus ; Ndendahe ( Mogollón and Carrizaleño / Janero ) Apache people, in

3422-539: Was employed by Robert McKnight to re-open the road to Santa Rita del Cobre. After the conclusion of the US/Mexican War (1848) and the Gadsden Purchase (1853), Americans began to enter the territory in greater numbers. This increased the opportunities for incidents and misunderstandings. The Apaches, including Mangas Coloradas and Cuchillo Negro, were not at first hostile to the Americans, considering them enemies of their own Mexican enemies. Cuchillo Negro, with Ponce, Delgadito , Victorio and other Mimbreño chiefs, signed

3481-466: Was killed by American soldiers (Jan. 18, 1863). His body was mutilated by the soldiers, and his people were enraged by his murder. The Chiricahuas began to consider the Americans as "enemies we go against them." From that time, they waged almost constant war against US settlers and the Army for the next 23 years. Cochise , his brother-in-law Nahilzay (war chief of Cochise's people), Chihuahua , Skinya , Pionsenay , Ulzana and other warring chiefs became

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