Wild West Extravaganza on MSN

The last wild Apache

On September 4th, 1886, the mighty Apache leader Geronimo surrendered to the U.S. Army. The last American Indian warrior to formally surrender to the United States. And with him, so went the Indian ...
Where the Apaches lived – The tribes and their way of life – The long wars with the U.S. Army – The regions they were forced ...
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Geronimo's descendants have sued Skull and Bones -- the secret society at Yale University linked to presidents and other powerful figures -- claiming its members stole the remains ...
HARTFORD, Conn. — Geronimo’s descendants have sued Skull and Bones — the secret society at Yale University linked to presidents and other powerful figures — claiming that its members stole the remains ...
Produced in conjunction with the exhibition Beyond Geronimo: the Apache Experience organized by and held at the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Ariz., Feb. 11, 2012-Jan. 20, 2013. An Arizona Centennial Legacy ...
NEW HAVEN — In the late 1980s, Ned Anderson Sr., then-chair of the San Carlos Apache Tribe in Arizona, told reporters about an astonishing document he received. At the time, Anderson was part of a ...
This year, officials with the Texas Trail of Fame in Fort Worth selected Geronimo as one of nine people to be honored for their major contributions to the creation or preservation of the Western way ...
A. Frank Randall took this picture of Geronimo, the first time he was photographed, in 1884 at San Carlos, Ariz. When modern shoppers see Geronimo staring back at them from postcard racks, this is the ...
No white man was ever able to capture this warrior whose surrender brought an end to the Indian wars.