• Home
  • Chiricahua Apache POW History
    • Apaches Before 1886
    • The Prisoner of War Years (1886-1914)
      • Chiricahua Apaches at Fort Sill, OK (1894-1913)
        • “Civilizing” the Apache Savages
        • Apache Life at Fort Sill
        • Chiricahua POWs Freed and Moved from Fort Sill
        • Chiricahua POWs Moved to Fort Sill (1894)
        • Theft of the Chiricahua Apache Homeland
      • Chiricahua Children POWs Sent to Carlisle Indian School, PA
        • “Educating” the Chiricahua Children at Carlisle (1890s)
        • Chiricahua Casualties and Heros at the Carlisle Indian School
        • First Apache Children Taken from their Parents (Oct & Nov 1886)
        • When the Chiricahua Apaches Lost their Children
      • Chiricahuas at Fort Marion and Fort Pickens, FL (1886-1888)
        • Apache Life as POWs at Fort Marion (1886-1887)
        • Taming the Chiricahua Apaches
        • The Apache POWs at Fort Pickens
      • Mount Vernon Barracks, AL (1887-1904)
        • A U.S. Calvary Troop of Apache POWs at Mount Vernon (1891)
        • Good Indians at Mount Vernon Barracks
        • Life and Conditions at Mount Vernon Barracks
      • The Chiricahua Apaches become Prisoners of War (1886)
        • Peace Negotiations (March 1886)
        • Chihuahua Sent to Fort Marion, FL (April 1886)
        • Miles Negotiates Peace with Naiche and Geronimo (Sept 1886)
        • San Carlos Chiricahuas Sent to Fort Marion, FL (Sept 1886)
        • Naiche and Geronimo Sent East (Sept 1886)
        • Naiche and Geronimo Sent to Fort Pickens, FL (Oct 1886)
        • The Loco and Chatto Peace Delegation to Washington, DC (1886)
        • Mangas Sent to Fort Marion (Oct 1886)
        • Apache Train Rides to Internment (1886)
    • The Post-POW Years (1914-Present)
      • The Human Cost of Chiricahua Apache Imprisonment
      • Post-POW Years in Oklahoma (1914 – Present)
      • Chiricahuas on the Mescalero Apache Reservation, NM (1913-Pres)
      • Epilogue
  • Galleries
    • Audio and Video Galleries
    • Maps
    • Photograph Galleries
      • Apache Leaders
      • Carlisle Indian Industrial School (1886 – 1900)
      • Chiricahua Apache Children
      • Chiricahua Apache Women
      • Chiricahua Apache Women POWs (April 1886)
      • Exposition and Public Display
      • Fort Bowie, Arizona (1886)
      • Fort Marion, St. Augustine, Florida (1886 – 1887)
      • Fort Pickens, Florida (1886 – 1888)
      • Fort Sam Houston, Texas (Sept – Oct 1886)
      • Fort Sill, Oklahoma (1894 – 1914)
      • Geronimo
      • Mount Vernon Barracks, Alabama (1887 – 1904)
      • Naiche
      • Negotiations with Gen. George Crook (March 1886)
      • Non-Apache People in Chiricahua History
      • Peace Delegation to Washington (July – August 1886)
      • San Carlos and Fort Apache, Arizona (1876 – 1886)
      • Trans-Mississippi International Exposition, Omaha (1898)
      • U. S. Military and Apache Scouts
      • White Tail, Mescalero Apache Reservation (Post-1913)
  • Supporting Materials
    • Additional Readings
    • Chiricahua Apache Bibliography
    • Selected Treaties and other Historical Documents
      • Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, February 2, 1848
      • Treaty with the Apaches (1852)
      • Creating the Gila Reserve (1860)
      • Creating the Chiricahua Apache Reservation (1871)
      • Creating the Tulerosa Valley Reserve (1871)
      • Revoking the Tulerosa River Reservation (1874)
      • Creating the Hot Springs Reservation (1874)
      • Cancelling the Chiricahua Apache Reservation (1876)
    • Chiricahua Apache Historical Timeline
  • About This Project
  • Links
  • Sitemap & Search

Additional Readings

An Apache Campaign in the Sierra Madre. By John G. Bourke (1886).

On the Border with Crook. By John G. Bourke (1896).

The Apache Prisoners in Fort Marion, St. Augustine, Florida. By Herbert Welsh (1887),

Geronimo’s Story of His Life. By Geronimo (1907).

Copyright © 2009-2010 Chiricahua-Apache.com | All Rights Reserved.

Web Design by Art Schobey Interactive