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Free Essays on Indian
GERONIMO - A Warrior No More      	Among famous Native American chiefs, Geronimoââ¬â¢s name is synonymous for     bloody raids and fierce battles.   Although there were no records kept of his birth, he was     probably born in 1829 in the mountains of Arizona.  His Indian name was Goyahkla [One     Who Yawns] and his early years were spent as a typical youth of the Apache tribe.  As an     adult he married and started a family but when Mexican soldiers killed his wife and      children in 1858, he vowed revenge.  His ferocious attacks earned him the nickname of     ââ¬Å"Geronimoâ⬠ and his vengeance continued for decades.  When the Americans came to the    Southwest, they became his new enemy and he fought them until his surrender in 1886.    For the next twenty-three years, until his death in 1909, he remained a prisoner-of-war.    	Geronimoââ¬â¢s life has been the subject of numerous books and a recent movie but     they rarely focus on his last decades as a prisoner-of-war of the American Army.  When     he surrendered in 1886, the Americans promised to eventually return him and his people     to their home land.  Instead, Geronimo spent the rest of his life in various military camps.    He tried to learn the ways of the Americans and he would, in his own way, become a     successful businessman.  But he would never see his native Arizona again.    	After Geronimoââ¬â¢s surrender in 1886, the army moved his Apache band to     Alabama, where they lived for several years.  But the climate of the South, very unlike     the mountains and deserts of their native Arizona, was unsuitable for them and in 1894    they were relocated to Fort Sill, Oklahoma.  This was considered a positive change     because the Apache people had expressed a desire for a drier climate and for land to     farm.  [Martin, Geronimo, p.151]    	Geronimoââ¬â¢s arrival in Oklahoma stirred considerable controversy because the   stereotype of the ââ¬Å"savage Indianâ⬠ was still co...  Free Essays on Indian  Free Essays on Indian    GERONIMO - A Warrior No More      	Among famous Native American chiefs, Geronimoââ¬â¢s name is synonymous for     bloody raids and fierce battles.   Although there were no records kept of his birth, he was     probably born in 1829 in the mountains of Arizona.  His Indian name was Goyahkla [One     Who Yawns] and his early years were spent as a typical youth of the Apache tribe.  As an     adult he married and started a family but when Mexican soldiers killed his wife and      children in 1858, he vowed revenge.  His ferocious attacks earned him the nickname of     ââ¬Å"Geronimoâ⬠ and his vengeance continued for decades.  When the Americans came to the    Southwest, they became his new enemy and he fought them until his surrender in 1886.    For the next twenty-three years, until his death in 1909, he remained a prisoner-of-war.    	Geronimoââ¬â¢s life has been the subject of numerous books and a recent movie but     they rarely focus on his last decades as a prisoner-of-war of the American Army.  When     he surrendered in 1886, the Americans promised to eventually return him and his people     to their home land.  Instead, Geronimo spent the rest of his life in various military camps.    He tried to learn the ways of the Americans and he would, in his own way, become a     successful businessman.  But he would never see his native Arizona again.    	After Geronimoââ¬â¢s surrender in 1886, the army moved his Apache band to     Alabama, where they lived for several years.  But the climate of the South, very unlike     the mountains and deserts of their native Arizona, was unsuitable for them and in 1894    they were relocated to Fort Sill, Oklahoma.  This was considered a positive change     because the Apache people had expressed a desire for a drier climate and for land to     farm.  [Martin, Geronimo, p.151]    	Geronimoââ¬â¢s arrival in Oklahoma stirred considerable controversy because the   stereotype of the ââ¬Å"savage Indianâ⬠ was still co...    
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