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Learn the truth about Geronimo, one of the most complex historical figures of the American West.
Born around 1820, Geronimo grew into a leading warrior and healer of the Chiricahua.
But after his tribe was relocated to an Arizona reservation in
1872, he became a focus of the fury of terrified white settlers and
of the growing tensions that divided Apaches struggling to survive
under almost unendurable pressures. To angry whites, Geronimo
became the archfiend, perpetrator of unspeakable savage cruelties.
To his supporters, he remained the embodiment of proud resistance,
the upholder of the old Chiricahua ways. To other Apaches,
especially those who had come to see the white man's path as the
only viable road, Geronimo was a stubborn troublemaker, unbalanced
by his unquenchable thirst for vengeance, whose actions needlessly
brought the enemy's wrath down on his own people. At a time when
surrender to the reservation and acceptance of the white man's
civilization seemed to be the Indians' only realistic options,
Geronimo and his tiny band of Chiricahuas fought on. The final
holdouts, they became the last Native-American fighting force to
capitulate formally to the government of the United States.