Posted on Oct 15, 2020
Chiricahua Apache leader Victorio is killed south of El Paso, Texas
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on October 15, 1880, Mexican soldiers killed Chiricahua Apache leader Victorio, one of the greatest Apache military strategists.
LEGENDS OF THE OLD WEST presented by Black Barrel Media. Apache chief Victorio leads his people off the San Carlos Reservation in search of a better home. The search leads to two years of desperate fighting across the American southwest and northern Mexico. And the end of the campaign opens the door for the last great Apache leader to step forward.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCDMn4Kf82Q
Click on the video link
Images
1. Chief Victorio Beduiat
2. Victorio Beduiat frontal profile
3. Victorio Beduiat with a revolver
4. Chief Victorio Beduiat statue
Background from {[https://www.legendsofamerica.com/na-victorio/]}
Chief Victorio – Fighting for Ancestral Lands
Known as Bidu-ya or Beduiat to his Apache people, Victorio was a warrior and chief of the Chihenne band of the Chiricahua Apache in what is now New Mexico.
Born on the Black Range of New Mexico around 1825, Victorio was raised as a member of the Chihenne Apache. Though little is known of his early life, it is said that he may have been part Mexican. His sister was the famous woman warrior, Lozen, or “Dextrous Horse Thief”.
By the early 1850s, he was considered a Chief in his band and in his twenties, he began to ride with Geronimo, Nana, and other Apache leaders making numerous raids into northern Mexico. In 1862, he joined with Mangas Coloradas in making raids not only into Mexico but also upon the encroaching white settlers.
When Mangas Coloradas met with the U.S. Army in January 1863, under a flag of truce, instead of maintaining the peaceful negotiations that were alleged, the army took Mangas Coloradas prisoner and later executed him on January 18th. This, of course, very much angered not only Victorio but also Cochise, another powerful leader.
Afterward, Victorio formed a band of Eastern Chiricahua and Mescalero, numbering some 300 and began to retaliate against the Army. Those military officers who fought against Victorio regarded him as a sound tactician and a leader of men. However, by 1869, Victorio and his band had been subdued and convinced to move to a new reservation near Ojo Caliente, New Mexico. In 1869, they were settled near Fort Craig, New Mexico waiting for the completion of the reservation.
The following year, Victorio, together with 500 Mimbrenos, Mogollones, and Mescaleros, were assigned to the Ojo Caliente Reservation some 15 miles northwest of present-day Monticello.
The area, claimed by Victorio to be their ancestral homeland, initially served the Apache well and generally, they were content. The population on the reservation grew to more than 3,000. However, the rations provided by the government were not substantial enough to feed them all and they soon started to stray from the reservation, foraging on their own. Before long, they were blamed for every depredation in the surrounding area, most of which were actually the work of Mexican bandits. In August 1871, the Army recommended removal of the Apache from Ojo Caliente to the Tularosa Valley, some seventy miles to the northwest.
By April 1872, the new reservation was established, and the next month the first Indians began to move. By June, about 450 Apache, including Victorio, had arrived, but the rest of them had simply taken off, many of them joining with their Chiricahua cousins in Arizona. In the summer of 1874, Tularosa was abandoned and the remaining Apache were allowed to return to Ojo Caliente.
The Ojo Caliente Reservation was officially closed and in May 1877, Taza, son, and successor to the deceased Cochise began to lead his people to Arizona. The reservation conditions at San Carlos were abominable and in early September, Victorio, with about 300 followers, fled the San Carlos Reservation and began three years of intermittent attacks in Mexico, Texas, and New Mexico. In Texas, he was hotly pursued by Buffalo Soldiers of the 9th and 10th Cavalries, as well as Texas Rangers.
In April 1880, Victorio was said to have led his band in the “Alma Massacre,” where a number of settlers’ homes were raided and several people killed. As a result, U.S. Army troops were sent out in force from Fort Bayard, New Mexico to capture Victorio and his band. The soldiers outpaced Victorio to the water holes in the Sierra Diablo Mountains, and after two unsuccessful attempts to reach water, the Apache retreated into Mexico.
On October 14, 1880, Victorio and his people were surprised by Mexican troops who killed Victorio and his warriors. Only women and children survived the confrontation and were held prisoners in Chihuahua City for the next several years.
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick MSG Felipe De Leon Brown SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj Kim Patterson PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. SSG Robert Pratt
LEGENDS OF THE OLD WEST presented by Black Barrel Media. Apache chief Victorio leads his people off the San Carlos Reservation in search of a better home. The search leads to two years of desperate fighting across the American southwest and northern Mexico. And the end of the campaign opens the door for the last great Apache leader to step forward.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCDMn4Kf82Q
Click on the video link
Images
1. Chief Victorio Beduiat
2. Victorio Beduiat frontal profile
3. Victorio Beduiat with a revolver
4. Chief Victorio Beduiat statue
Background from {[https://www.legendsofamerica.com/na-victorio/]}
Chief Victorio – Fighting for Ancestral Lands
Known as Bidu-ya or Beduiat to his Apache people, Victorio was a warrior and chief of the Chihenne band of the Chiricahua Apache in what is now New Mexico.
Born on the Black Range of New Mexico around 1825, Victorio was raised as a member of the Chihenne Apache. Though little is known of his early life, it is said that he may have been part Mexican. His sister was the famous woman warrior, Lozen, or “Dextrous Horse Thief”.
By the early 1850s, he was considered a Chief in his band and in his twenties, he began to ride with Geronimo, Nana, and other Apache leaders making numerous raids into northern Mexico. In 1862, he joined with Mangas Coloradas in making raids not only into Mexico but also upon the encroaching white settlers.
When Mangas Coloradas met with the U.S. Army in January 1863, under a flag of truce, instead of maintaining the peaceful negotiations that were alleged, the army took Mangas Coloradas prisoner and later executed him on January 18th. This, of course, very much angered not only Victorio but also Cochise, another powerful leader.
Afterward, Victorio formed a band of Eastern Chiricahua and Mescalero, numbering some 300 and began to retaliate against the Army. Those military officers who fought against Victorio regarded him as a sound tactician and a leader of men. However, by 1869, Victorio and his band had been subdued and convinced to move to a new reservation near Ojo Caliente, New Mexico. In 1869, they were settled near Fort Craig, New Mexico waiting for the completion of the reservation.
The following year, Victorio, together with 500 Mimbrenos, Mogollones, and Mescaleros, were assigned to the Ojo Caliente Reservation some 15 miles northwest of present-day Monticello.
The area, claimed by Victorio to be their ancestral homeland, initially served the Apache well and generally, they were content. The population on the reservation grew to more than 3,000. However, the rations provided by the government were not substantial enough to feed them all and they soon started to stray from the reservation, foraging on their own. Before long, they were blamed for every depredation in the surrounding area, most of which were actually the work of Mexican bandits. In August 1871, the Army recommended removal of the Apache from Ojo Caliente to the Tularosa Valley, some seventy miles to the northwest.
By April 1872, the new reservation was established, and the next month the first Indians began to move. By June, about 450 Apache, including Victorio, had arrived, but the rest of them had simply taken off, many of them joining with their Chiricahua cousins in Arizona. In the summer of 1874, Tularosa was abandoned and the remaining Apache were allowed to return to Ojo Caliente.
The Ojo Caliente Reservation was officially closed and in May 1877, Taza, son, and successor to the deceased Cochise began to lead his people to Arizona. The reservation conditions at San Carlos were abominable and in early September, Victorio, with about 300 followers, fled the San Carlos Reservation and began three years of intermittent attacks in Mexico, Texas, and New Mexico. In Texas, he was hotly pursued by Buffalo Soldiers of the 9th and 10th Cavalries, as well as Texas Rangers.
In April 1880, Victorio was said to have led his band in the “Alma Massacre,” where a number of settlers’ homes were raided and several people killed. As a result, U.S. Army troops were sent out in force from Fort Bayard, New Mexico to capture Victorio and his band. The soldiers outpaced Victorio to the water holes in the Sierra Diablo Mountains, and after two unsuccessful attempts to reach water, the Apache retreated into Mexico.
On October 14, 1880, Victorio and his people were surprised by Mexican troops who killed Victorio and his warriors. Only women and children survived the confrontation and were held prisoners in Chihuahua City for the next several years.
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Thomas Vick MSG Felipe De Leon Brown SGT Denny Espinosa SSG Stephen Rogerson SPC Matthew Lamb LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj Kim Patterson PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SSG Franklin Briant SPC Woody Bullard TSgt David L. SSG Robert Pratt
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LTC Stephen F.
Naelyn Pike: Sacred Chiricahua Apache Sites - With Vanessa Nosie & Elder Tom Goldtooth
*You-Tube Personnel: ALL music in this video is cleared for world-wide viewing.., on all devices..,' (*as per the "You-Tube Music Policies Page - * Today - *...
Naelyn Pike: Sacred Chiricahua Apache Sites - With Vanessa Nosie & Elder Tom Goldtooth
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJC1-liWnt4
Images:
1. Apache warriors
2. San Carlos Reservation
3. Victorio Beduiat
4. U.S. Army Apache Scouts who chased Victorio.
Biographies
1. theamericanhistory.org/biography-facts-victorio-apache.html
2. themazatlanpost.com/2019/04/11/the-apache-terror-that-arrived-the-story-of-the-bloodthirsty-leader-victorio/
Background from {[http://theamericanhistory.org/biography-facts-victorio-apache.html]}
Biography and Facts about Victorio Apache
Known as Beduiat or Bidu-ya to the people of Apache, Victorio Apache was a warrior and the chief of the Chihenne tribe of the Chiricahua Apache which is now known as New Mexico.
TRIBES NAMES
Biography and Facts about Victorio Apache
Known as Beduiat or Bidu-ya to the people of Apache, Victorio Apache was a warrior and the chief of the Chihenne tribe of the Chiricahua Apache which is now known as New Mexico.
Victorio Apache
Born 1825 on the Black people of New Mexico, Victorio grew up as a part of the Chihenne Apache. Although little is known about his childhood, it is believed that Victorio was part Mexican. Lozen, his sister, was a known woman warrior who was also called as “Dextrous Horse Thief”.
In the early 1850’s, Victorio was regarded as the Chief of his group. He began to travel with Nana, Geronimo and the other Apaches leaders in his twenties, doing several attacks in the Northern Mexico. He joined the Mangas Coloradas in 1862 where they made attacks in Mexico and upon the meddling of the white settlers.
In 1863, the Mangas Coloradas converged with the U.S. troops under a treaty. Instead of aiming a peaceful negotiation, The U.S. Army took a Mangas Coloradas prisoner and then executed him on the 18th of January. This made Victorio and Cochise, also a powerful leader, very angry.
Victorio Apache’s War
Soon after, Victorio Apache formed a group of Mescalero and Eastern Chiricahua with around 300 members and they began to hit back against the U.S. Army. The military officers who battled against Victorio considered him as a leader of men and a sound strategist. In 1869, Victorio’s group was subjugated so they moved to a new reservation close to Ojo Caliente, New Mexico. They settled in Fort Craig, New Mexico for the meantime while waiting for the reservation to be completed.
The next year, Victorio and the 500 Mescaleros, Mimbrenos, and Mogollones were assigned to Ojo Caliente Reservation about fifteen miles Northwest of now known as Monticello.
Victorio claimed the land as their ancestral homeland and they were initially contented with the land because it had served them very well. Their population increased to around 3,000 and so the supplies coming from the government were not ample to nourish them all. Soon, they stray from the reservation searching on their own. Prior to that, they were held responsible for the damages in the nearby area, which was actually done by the Mexican bandits. In August of 1871, the U.S. Army endorsed the Apaches to be removed from Ojo Caliente towards Tularosa Valley which is seventy miles northwest.
In April of 1872, the new reservation was launched and then the first Indian occupants began moving. In June 1872, Victorio together with around 450 Apaches arrived. The rest of the Native Americans joined their relatives in Arizona. In 1874, Tularosa was deserted.
The remaining Apaches returned to Ojo Caliente.
In 1877, Ojo Caliente was officially closed so they moved to San Carlos, Arizona reservation. Taza, descendant, and heir of the deceased Cochise led the people to Arizona. The conditions in the reservation were horrible so Victorio and his 300 followers fled from San Carlos reservation and started three years of attacks in New Mexico, Mexico, and Texas. Victorio was strongly pursued by the Texas Rangers and the Buffalo Soldiers.
In April of 1880, Victorio led the “Alma Massacre” together with his group. Many of the settlers became homeless and several people were killed. U.S. Army sent their troops from Fort Bayard in New Mexico to arrest Victorio and his group. The troops pursued Victorio towards the water holes in Sierra Diablo Mountains but after two unsuccessful endeavors to reach the water, the Apaches finally fled into Mexico.
On the 14th of October, 1880, the Mexican troops surprised Victorio and his group. They killed Victorio Apache as well as his followers. Only the women and the children survived and they were held captives in Chihuahua City for so many years.
how tall was victorious, Victorio sister, nana apache, chief Victorio quotes, tres Castillos massacre, tres Castillos mountains, Victorio family, alma massacre'
Background from {[https://themazatlanpost.com/2019/04/11/the-apache-terror-that-arrived-the-story-of-the-bloodthirsty-leader-victorio/]}
With these nomadic cultures we identify little, but they left us an important lesson that we must recover.
The Apaches are not usually a strong reference in the Mexican imaginary; at least, in the center of the country. So far north we locate them, that we forget that, to begin with, they are not exactly a uniform ethnic group and that many of them inhabited (and a few continue to inhabit) the states of Sonora, Coahuila, and Chihuahua.
It is even less likely that we know that the word Apache means “enemy” and was a Spanish denomination to refer disparagingly to the multiple groups that populated northern Mexicoand a good stretch of the southern United States. And yes, apache is a word, in that sense, creepy; but let’s leave ultra-tolerances, the Apaches were the enemies and they were honored.
The Apaches were great warriors
A very peculiar story (even among the Apaches) is that of the Victory leader, a true hero to the people who followed him and a magnificent warrior. Little recognized in the history of this country, at least of him we have a memory in the Plaza Mayor of Chihuahua, the capital: a large statue that shows him on horseback and with a serious, calculating and penetrating look , like all portraits what of him we have
It is said that he was born in Chihuahua itself in 1825, under the name of Pedro Cedillo .Originally a mestizo who lived with his parents on a farm, he was kidnapped by Apache Chiricahua when he was just a child. But the rapture transformed him into the man who changed his double nature by his Indian roots and soon became the leader of his group. He fought alongside other greats such as Mangas Coloradas and Cochise in the Apache Passwars . His multiple confrontations with the national authorities had as a personal reason, according to the account: to find a quiet place to live.
If anything identifies the groups that shared the denomination of “apache” it was an exceptional skill for battles. This did not fall from heaven: it was the result of a long history of persecution, abuse and theft of their lands . Already, the geographical spaces where they settled made their lives extremely complex , but, above, they were standing in the conquest zone of two different outsiders: gringos and the recently called “Mexicans”.
Their societies were organized and administered with a fundamental attachment to the family so that the wise parents and grandparents occupied the position of leaders and battle strategists. Fishing and hunting what could be done, although in some moments they did it as farmers, their settlements were not as large and ostentatious as those of the cultures of central and southern Mexico and between so much war they were constantly in motion. One could almost say that they were eternal fugitives. First of all, because they were criminals wanted by the authorities on charges of robbery, murder and other corruption. Secondly, because they were escaping (and rightly so) from being captured by the Mexican and American states in desert reserves that offered no less than terrible living conditions.
One of its magnificent leaders was Victorio
A very peculiar story (even among the Apaches) is that of the Victory leader, a true hero to the people who followed him and a magnificent warrior. Little recognized in the history of this country, at least of him we have a memory in the Plaza Mayor of Chihuahua, the capital: a large statue that shows him on horseback and with a serious, calculating and penetrating look , like all portraits what of him we have
It is said that he was born in Chihuahua itself in 1825, under the name of Pedro Cedillo .Originally a mestizo who lived with his parents on a farm, he was kidnapped by Apache Chiricahua when he was just a child. But the rapture transformed him into the man who changed his double nature by his Indian roots and soon became the leader of his group. He fought alongside other greats such as Mangas Coloradas and Cochise in the Apache Passwars . His multiple confrontations with the national authorities had as a personal reason, according to the account: to find a quiet place to live.
It is claimed that Victorio, before Pedro, was a quiet, serious and sober man, who only had one wife and who did not drink too much. Perhaps his only fault was the tremendous and bloodthirsty outbursts of anger that seized him between leaks and battles. His acts were terrible. When he and his men assaulted the haciendas they killed, kidnapped and raped; in other words, their political acts had little rhetoric: Victorio and his allies and allies lived on; bleeding and bleeding. It is said that he was followed by more than 300 men, women and children and that the women affirmed: “If Victorio dies we will eat it so that no white man can see his body!”.
It was not surprising that by 1880, Colonel Joaquin Terrazas himself and his army of 350 men armed with modern rifles were commanded in Mexico to get rid of Victorio and his great family. It is said that Terrazas was impeccable in his work of hunting Apaches ; He was also accompanied by Tarahumara scouts, brilliant to find even the weakest trail ofenemies . So they found Victorio, camping in Tres Castillos. The big boss saw them coming and decided to fight . In an unexpected turn a Tarahumara shot him in the chest , they called him Mauricio Corredor. At the death of Victorio it was already evident that the Apaches would lose this battle. They gave a fight, but no adult man survived.
A curious anecdote states that a few years after the battle of Tres Castillos Mauricio Corredor, the Tarahumara who shot Victorio’s last bullet, was killed by Mexican soldiers , because they confused him, in his eternal prejudice and ignorance of his own people, with an apache.
The Apaches were a vanishing point
Whoever said that the Apache wars inspired the revolutionary movement in Mexico cannot be far from the truth. The Apaches had no scruples when it came to defending their land. The feats and bravery of men like Victorio prove it. In addition, both movements wanted to destabilize national states that took their own laws for granted as natural. Both were the response to a phenomenon that disappointed and inspired the great Zapata alike: even the greatest revolts end and, when this happens, the world reorganizes and new leaders impose their interests on others. And this, simply, can not be left like this. The fight has to stay alive.
After the Independence of Mexico, it was these nomadic cultures, those of the so-called Apaches, who, led by terrible men, transformed themselves into escape points , which questioned what was already built in the two countries they went through. And it was not only the structural unity of the countries, but also their social projects of modernity.
As it would happen to the next century, with Zapata in the South, the Apaches were unable to join the colonial regime and then the national one; they simply did not want to be slaves of the hacendados. Thus, they became bandits, later caricatured in the gringo cinema, whose attacks were responsible for corrupting the fragile peace of nations. Unfortunately,modernity won and the State won. And it was precisely at the death of Victorio, because at that moment the Apache columns ended up disintegrating.
However, the statue of the great chief remains erect, as a reminder of something we should have learned but we keep forgetting . The Apaches moved like water in the desert : they filtered and slithered and did not let themselves be gripped by hands. They remained as flexible as the Sun would allow them and they refreshed that partial State that had already taken for granted itself. When, finally, they evaporated, the one who lost was the land and they finished raising the modern complexes, which still tremble in the presence of other vanishing points.
Today more than ever: we must remember the lesson that they left us
In a land distributed without the consent of its inhabitants; In a politicized space like “the men armed with rifles” they wanted, the Apaches were not building territories: they were undoing it. In that arbitrary division between Mexico and the United States, between Indian lands and landowners, the Apaches little cared about the differences: they mocked Mexican, Mexican and Spanish authorities without discriminating. His screams and blood stained the borders.
The Apaches did not give a damn who claimed to own what territory ; the end of the day(and this is the great lesson) politicians (those of then and now) the world are fighting as if they had forgotten that outside their spheres there are people circulating, exchanging, living,in spite of they.
Without fear and galloping, shouting and with the spear held high, the Apache terror arrived; and so, too, he left."
FYI SGM Gerald FifeMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill Frazer
CSM (Join to see)SSG Jeffrey LeakeCSM Bruce Trego]SSG Chad HenningSPC Chris HallgrimsonMSG Glen MillerCWO3 Randy WestonSSG Samuel KermonSSG Robert Mark OdomCpl (Join to see)SSG Jimmy CernichSSG Robert Pratt SMSgt David A Asbury CPL Dave Hoover Maj Marty Hogan SMSgt David A Asbury PVT Mark Zehner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJC1-liWnt4
Images:
1. Apache warriors
2. San Carlos Reservation
3. Victorio Beduiat
4. U.S. Army Apache Scouts who chased Victorio.
Biographies
1. theamericanhistory.org/biography-facts-victorio-apache.html
2. themazatlanpost.com/2019/04/11/the-apache-terror-that-arrived-the-story-of-the-bloodthirsty-leader-victorio/
Background from {[http://theamericanhistory.org/biography-facts-victorio-apache.html]}
Biography and Facts about Victorio Apache
Known as Beduiat or Bidu-ya to the people of Apache, Victorio Apache was a warrior and the chief of the Chihenne tribe of the Chiricahua Apache which is now known as New Mexico.
TRIBES NAMES
Biography and Facts about Victorio Apache
Known as Beduiat or Bidu-ya to the people of Apache, Victorio Apache was a warrior and the chief of the Chihenne tribe of the Chiricahua Apache which is now known as New Mexico.
Victorio Apache
Born 1825 on the Black people of New Mexico, Victorio grew up as a part of the Chihenne Apache. Although little is known about his childhood, it is believed that Victorio was part Mexican. Lozen, his sister, was a known woman warrior who was also called as “Dextrous Horse Thief”.
In the early 1850’s, Victorio was regarded as the Chief of his group. He began to travel with Nana, Geronimo and the other Apaches leaders in his twenties, doing several attacks in the Northern Mexico. He joined the Mangas Coloradas in 1862 where they made attacks in Mexico and upon the meddling of the white settlers.
In 1863, the Mangas Coloradas converged with the U.S. troops under a treaty. Instead of aiming a peaceful negotiation, The U.S. Army took a Mangas Coloradas prisoner and then executed him on the 18th of January. This made Victorio and Cochise, also a powerful leader, very angry.
Victorio Apache’s War
Soon after, Victorio Apache formed a group of Mescalero and Eastern Chiricahua with around 300 members and they began to hit back against the U.S. Army. The military officers who battled against Victorio considered him as a leader of men and a sound strategist. In 1869, Victorio’s group was subjugated so they moved to a new reservation close to Ojo Caliente, New Mexico. They settled in Fort Craig, New Mexico for the meantime while waiting for the reservation to be completed.
The next year, Victorio and the 500 Mescaleros, Mimbrenos, and Mogollones were assigned to Ojo Caliente Reservation about fifteen miles Northwest of now known as Monticello.
Victorio claimed the land as their ancestral homeland and they were initially contented with the land because it had served them very well. Their population increased to around 3,000 and so the supplies coming from the government were not ample to nourish them all. Soon, they stray from the reservation searching on their own. Prior to that, they were held responsible for the damages in the nearby area, which was actually done by the Mexican bandits. In August of 1871, the U.S. Army endorsed the Apaches to be removed from Ojo Caliente towards Tularosa Valley which is seventy miles northwest.
In April of 1872, the new reservation was launched and then the first Indian occupants began moving. In June 1872, Victorio together with around 450 Apaches arrived. The rest of the Native Americans joined their relatives in Arizona. In 1874, Tularosa was deserted.
The remaining Apaches returned to Ojo Caliente.
In 1877, Ojo Caliente was officially closed so they moved to San Carlos, Arizona reservation. Taza, descendant, and heir of the deceased Cochise led the people to Arizona. The conditions in the reservation were horrible so Victorio and his 300 followers fled from San Carlos reservation and started three years of attacks in New Mexico, Mexico, and Texas. Victorio was strongly pursued by the Texas Rangers and the Buffalo Soldiers.
In April of 1880, Victorio led the “Alma Massacre” together with his group. Many of the settlers became homeless and several people were killed. U.S. Army sent their troops from Fort Bayard in New Mexico to arrest Victorio and his group. The troops pursued Victorio towards the water holes in Sierra Diablo Mountains but after two unsuccessful endeavors to reach the water, the Apaches finally fled into Mexico.
On the 14th of October, 1880, the Mexican troops surprised Victorio and his group. They killed Victorio Apache as well as his followers. Only the women and the children survived and they were held captives in Chihuahua City for so many years.
how tall was victorious, Victorio sister, nana apache, chief Victorio quotes, tres Castillos massacre, tres Castillos mountains, Victorio family, alma massacre'
Background from {[https://themazatlanpost.com/2019/04/11/the-apache-terror-that-arrived-the-story-of-the-bloodthirsty-leader-victorio/]}
With these nomadic cultures we identify little, but they left us an important lesson that we must recover.
The Apaches are not usually a strong reference in the Mexican imaginary; at least, in the center of the country. So far north we locate them, that we forget that, to begin with, they are not exactly a uniform ethnic group and that many of them inhabited (and a few continue to inhabit) the states of Sonora, Coahuila, and Chihuahua.
It is even less likely that we know that the word Apache means “enemy” and was a Spanish denomination to refer disparagingly to the multiple groups that populated northern Mexicoand a good stretch of the southern United States. And yes, apache is a word, in that sense, creepy; but let’s leave ultra-tolerances, the Apaches were the enemies and they were honored.
The Apaches were great warriors
A very peculiar story (even among the Apaches) is that of the Victory leader, a true hero to the people who followed him and a magnificent warrior. Little recognized in the history of this country, at least of him we have a memory in the Plaza Mayor of Chihuahua, the capital: a large statue that shows him on horseback and with a serious, calculating and penetrating look , like all portraits what of him we have
It is said that he was born in Chihuahua itself in 1825, under the name of Pedro Cedillo .Originally a mestizo who lived with his parents on a farm, he was kidnapped by Apache Chiricahua when he was just a child. But the rapture transformed him into the man who changed his double nature by his Indian roots and soon became the leader of his group. He fought alongside other greats such as Mangas Coloradas and Cochise in the Apache Passwars . His multiple confrontations with the national authorities had as a personal reason, according to the account: to find a quiet place to live.
If anything identifies the groups that shared the denomination of “apache” it was an exceptional skill for battles. This did not fall from heaven: it was the result of a long history of persecution, abuse and theft of their lands . Already, the geographical spaces where they settled made their lives extremely complex , but, above, they were standing in the conquest zone of two different outsiders: gringos and the recently called “Mexicans”.
Their societies were organized and administered with a fundamental attachment to the family so that the wise parents and grandparents occupied the position of leaders and battle strategists. Fishing and hunting what could be done, although in some moments they did it as farmers, their settlements were not as large and ostentatious as those of the cultures of central and southern Mexico and between so much war they were constantly in motion. One could almost say that they were eternal fugitives. First of all, because they were criminals wanted by the authorities on charges of robbery, murder and other corruption. Secondly, because they were escaping (and rightly so) from being captured by the Mexican and American states in desert reserves that offered no less than terrible living conditions.
One of its magnificent leaders was Victorio
A very peculiar story (even among the Apaches) is that of the Victory leader, a true hero to the people who followed him and a magnificent warrior. Little recognized in the history of this country, at least of him we have a memory in the Plaza Mayor of Chihuahua, the capital: a large statue that shows him on horseback and with a serious, calculating and penetrating look , like all portraits what of him we have
It is said that he was born in Chihuahua itself in 1825, under the name of Pedro Cedillo .Originally a mestizo who lived with his parents on a farm, he was kidnapped by Apache Chiricahua when he was just a child. But the rapture transformed him into the man who changed his double nature by his Indian roots and soon became the leader of his group. He fought alongside other greats such as Mangas Coloradas and Cochise in the Apache Passwars . His multiple confrontations with the national authorities had as a personal reason, according to the account: to find a quiet place to live.
It is claimed that Victorio, before Pedro, was a quiet, serious and sober man, who only had one wife and who did not drink too much. Perhaps his only fault was the tremendous and bloodthirsty outbursts of anger that seized him between leaks and battles. His acts were terrible. When he and his men assaulted the haciendas they killed, kidnapped and raped; in other words, their political acts had little rhetoric: Victorio and his allies and allies lived on; bleeding and bleeding. It is said that he was followed by more than 300 men, women and children and that the women affirmed: “If Victorio dies we will eat it so that no white man can see his body!”.
It was not surprising that by 1880, Colonel Joaquin Terrazas himself and his army of 350 men armed with modern rifles were commanded in Mexico to get rid of Victorio and his great family. It is said that Terrazas was impeccable in his work of hunting Apaches ; He was also accompanied by Tarahumara scouts, brilliant to find even the weakest trail ofenemies . So they found Victorio, camping in Tres Castillos. The big boss saw them coming and decided to fight . In an unexpected turn a Tarahumara shot him in the chest , they called him Mauricio Corredor. At the death of Victorio it was already evident that the Apaches would lose this battle. They gave a fight, but no adult man survived.
A curious anecdote states that a few years after the battle of Tres Castillos Mauricio Corredor, the Tarahumara who shot Victorio’s last bullet, was killed by Mexican soldiers , because they confused him, in his eternal prejudice and ignorance of his own people, with an apache.
The Apaches were a vanishing point
Whoever said that the Apache wars inspired the revolutionary movement in Mexico cannot be far from the truth. The Apaches had no scruples when it came to defending their land. The feats and bravery of men like Victorio prove it. In addition, both movements wanted to destabilize national states that took their own laws for granted as natural. Both were the response to a phenomenon that disappointed and inspired the great Zapata alike: even the greatest revolts end and, when this happens, the world reorganizes and new leaders impose their interests on others. And this, simply, can not be left like this. The fight has to stay alive.
After the Independence of Mexico, it was these nomadic cultures, those of the so-called Apaches, who, led by terrible men, transformed themselves into escape points , which questioned what was already built in the two countries they went through. And it was not only the structural unity of the countries, but also their social projects of modernity.
As it would happen to the next century, with Zapata in the South, the Apaches were unable to join the colonial regime and then the national one; they simply did not want to be slaves of the hacendados. Thus, they became bandits, later caricatured in the gringo cinema, whose attacks were responsible for corrupting the fragile peace of nations. Unfortunately,modernity won and the State won. And it was precisely at the death of Victorio, because at that moment the Apache columns ended up disintegrating.
However, the statue of the great chief remains erect, as a reminder of something we should have learned but we keep forgetting . The Apaches moved like water in the desert : they filtered and slithered and did not let themselves be gripped by hands. They remained as flexible as the Sun would allow them and they refreshed that partial State that had already taken for granted itself. When, finally, they evaporated, the one who lost was the land and they finished raising the modern complexes, which still tremble in the presence of other vanishing points.
Today more than ever: we must remember the lesson that they left us
In a land distributed without the consent of its inhabitants; In a politicized space like “the men armed with rifles” they wanted, the Apaches were not building territories: they were undoing it. In that arbitrary division between Mexico and the United States, between Indian lands and landowners, the Apaches little cared about the differences: they mocked Mexican, Mexican and Spanish authorities without discriminating. His screams and blood stained the borders.
The Apaches did not give a damn who claimed to own what territory ; the end of the day(and this is the great lesson) politicians (those of then and now) the world are fighting as if they had forgotten that outside their spheres there are people circulating, exchanging, living,in spite of they.
Without fear and galloping, shouting and with the spear held high, the Apache terror arrived; and so, too, he left."
FYI SGM Gerald FifeMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill Frazer
CSM (Join to see)SSG Jeffrey LeakeCSM Bruce Trego]SSG Chad HenningSPC Chris HallgrimsonMSG Glen MillerCWO3 Randy WestonSSG Samuel KermonSSG Robert Mark OdomCpl (Join to see)SSG Jimmy CernichSSG Robert Pratt SMSgt David A Asbury CPL Dave Hoover Maj Marty Hogan SMSgt David A Asbury PVT Mark Zehner
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LTC Stephen F.
La muerte de VICTORIO, el jefe de los apaches CHIRICAHUAS
Los apaches hubieran podido evitar a los mexicanos con cierta facilidad escondiéndose en la Sierra Madre, un auténtico santuario para ellos, con prados, agua...
The death of VICTORIO. The chief of the Apaches CHIRICAHUAS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUCTLfc-P2k
Images:
1. Chief Victorio
2. Members of the 10th Cavalry. Buffalo Soldiers
3. Apache's on horseback
FYI CWO3 Dave Alcantara Sgt Kelli Mays SFC (Join to see) SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth PFC Rick Schuetz SPC Diana D. TSgt David L. MSG Felipe De Leon Brown
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUCTLfc-P2k
Images:
1. Chief Victorio
2. Members of the 10th Cavalry. Buffalo Soldiers
3. Apache's on horseback
FYI CWO3 Dave Alcantara Sgt Kelli Mays SFC (Join to see) SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth PFC Rick Schuetz SPC Diana D. TSgt David L. MSG Felipe De Leon Brown
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