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Cochise

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Cochise
Bronze bust of Cochise, Fort Bowie National Historic Site, AZ
Bornc. 1805
Chiricahua country, under Spanish occupation
Died(1874-06-08)June 8, 1874
Territory of New Mexico
Years of service1861–1872
RankHigh Cheifton
Battles/warsApache Wars
Dragoon Mountains, where Cochise hid with his warriors

Cochise (/[invalid input: 'icon']kˈs/; Cheis or A-da-tli-chi, in Apache K'uu-ch'ish "oak"; c. 1805 – June 8, 1874) was leader of the Chihuicahui local group of the Chokonen ("central" or "real" Chiricahua) and principal chief (or nantan) of the Chokonen band of the Chiricahua Apache and the leader of an uprising that began in 1861. Cochise County, Arizona is named after him.[1]

Biography

Cochise (or "Cheis") was one of the most famous Apache leaders (along with Geronimo and Mangas Coloradas) to resist intrusions by Americans during the 19th century. He was described as a large man (for the time), with a muscular frame, classical features, and long black hair which he wore in traditional Apache style. He was about 1.78 m (5'10") tall and weighed about 175 lbs.[2] In his own language, his name "Cheis" meant "having the quality or strength of oak."[3]

Cochise and the Chokonen-Chiricahua lived in the area that is now the northern Mexican region of Sonora, New Mexico, and Arizona, which they had moved into sometime before the coming of the Europeans.[4] As Spain and later Mexico attempted to gain dominion over their lands, the various Chiricahua groups became increasingly resistant. Cycles of warfare developed, which the Apaches mostly won. Eventually, the Spanish tried a different approach; they tried to make the Apaches dependent (thereby placating them) upon poor-quality firearms and liquor rations issued by the colonial government (this was called the "Galvez Peace Policy"). After Mexico wrested control of the territory from Spain, and didn't have the resources (and/or possibly the will) to continue it, the practice was ended. It had worked for quite a number of years, but the various Chiricahua bands resumed traditional raiding to acquire what they needed after the Mexicans no longer made provisions for them (in the 1830s).

As a result, the Mexican government began a series of military operations in order to either capture or neutralize the Chiricahuas, but they were fought to a standstill by the Apaches. As part of their attempts at controlling the Chiricahuas, Mexican forces began to kill Apache civilians. Oftentimes this would be accomplished with the help of American and Native American mercenaries, and paying bounties for scalps was not uncommon. Cochise's father was one of these victims. This hardened Cochise's resolve and gave the Chiricahuas Apaches more rationale for vengeance. Mexican forces did capture Cochise at one point in 1848 during an Apache raid on Fronteras, Sonora, but they exchanged him for nearly a dozen Mexican prisoners.

Border tensions and fighting

The region inhabited by the Apache had experienced strife and tension between the Apache and European settlers beginning with Spanish occupation around 1600 until the greater part of the area was acquired by the United States in 1850, which ushered in a brief period of relative peace. In the late 1850s, Cochise may have even supplied firewood for the Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach station at Apache Pass.[5]

The tenuous peace did not last as American encroachment into Apache territory continued, ending in 1861 with the Bascom Affair. An Apache raiding party had driven away a local rancher's cattle and kidnapped his twelve-year-old son (Felix Ward, who later became known as Mickey Free). Cochise and his band were falsely accused of the incident (which had actually been perpetrated by Coyotero Apaches).[4] An unsuspecting Cochise was invited to the Army's encampment by an inexperienced Army officer (Lt. George Bascom), who assumed that Cochise was responsible. Although the Apache leader truthfully maintained his innocence, and offered to look into the matter with other Apache groups, the young officer attempted to arrest him. Cochise jumped to his feet and immediately escaped by drawing a knife and slashing his way out of the tent.[4] Cochise may have been shot as he fled.[4] Bascom did succeed in capturing some of Cochise's relatives, who apparently were caught by surprise as Cochise escaped. Cochise eventually also took hostages to use in negotiations to free the other Indian hostages.[4] However, the negotiations fell apart, mostly because of Bascom's intransigence, but also because the arrival of more U.S. troops made Cochise believe that the situation was spiraling out of his control. Both sides eventually killed all their remaining hostages, and the Apache leader went to Mexico while things cooled off. Cochise's brother and two of his nephews were among the hostages executed by Bascom, which served to further enrage the Apache leader and foment about 11 years of relentless warfare which left southern Arizona a mostly burned-out wasteland (in terms of white and Mexican civilization). The death toll may have reached as many as 5,000 settlers and travelers (many historians believe this number is an extreme exaggeration, that the toll was more likely a few hundred).[6][7] The treachery of Lt. Bascom is still remembered by the Chiricahuas' descendants today—they remember it as "Cut the Tent."[8]

Cochise joined with his father-in-law Mangas Coloradas (Red Sleeves, Kan-da-zis Tlishishen), the powerful Chihenne-Chiricahua chief, in a long series of retaliatory skirmishes and raids on the white settlements and ranches.[4] The Battle of Dragoon Springs was one of these engagements. During the raids, many people were killed on both sides, but the Apaches quite often had the upper hand, mostly because the United States was distracted by its own internal conflict—the looming Civil War, and did not have the resources in the area to deal with the Apaches from any position of strength. Additionally, the Apaches' were highly adapted to living and fighting in the hostile and unforgiving terrain of the southwest. It was many years before the Army, using tactics conceived by General Crook[9] and later adopted by General Miles,[10] were able to effectively challenge the Apache fighter on his own lands.

Battle of Apache Pass

Naiche (or Wei-chi-ti), son of Cochise, with wife. c1884

At Apache Pass in 1862, Cochise and Mangas Coloradas, with around 500 fighters, held their ground against a New Mexico-bound force of California volunteers under General James Henry Carleton until caisson-mounted howitzer artillery fire was brought to bear on their positions in the rocks above.

According to scout John C. Cremony and historian Dan L. Thrapp, the howitzer fire sent the Apaches into an immediate retreat. But Carleton's biographer, Aurora Hunt, wrote, "This was the first time that the Indians had faced artillery fire. Nevertheless, they fought stubbornly for several hours before they fled." Geronimo later recalled in his autobiography that his people were winning the fight until "you fired your wagons at us." The Battle of Apache Pass was one of the rare pitched battles the Apaches fought against the United States Army. Normally, the Apaches' tactics involved "guerrilla-style" warfare. Capt. Thomas Roberts was persuaded by the engagement that it would be best to find a route around Apache Pass, which he did. Gen. Carleton thus continued unhindered to New Mexico and subsequently took over as commander of the territory.

In January 1863 Gen. Joseph Rodman West, under orders from Gen. Carleton, was able to capture Mangas Coloradas by duping him into a conference under a flag of truce. During what was to be a peaceful parley session, the Americans took the unsuspecting Mangas Coloradas prisoner and later murdered him.[11] This was just one more in a series of incidents that fanned the flames of enmity between the encroaching Americans and the Apache. For Cochise, the Americans held nothing sacred and had violated the rules of war by capturing and killing Mangas Coloradas during a parley session. Cochise and the Apaches continued their raids against American and Mexican settlements and military positions throughout the 1860s.

Capture, escape, and retirement

Cochise Stronghold, Dragoon Mountains, southeastern Arizona.

Following various skirmishes, Cochise and his men were gradually driven into the Dragoon Mountains but were nevertheless able to use the mountains for cover and as a base from which to continue attacks against the white settlements. Cochise managed to evade capture and continued his raids against white settlements and travelers until 1872. A treaty was finally negotiated by General Oliver O. Howard with the help of Tom Jeffords, who was Cochise's only white friend.

After making peace, Cochise retired to his new reservation, with his friend Jeffords as agent, where he died of natural causes (probably abdominal cancer) in 1874. He was buried in the rocks above one of his favorite camps in Arizona's Dragoon Mountains, now called Cochise Stronghold. Only his people and Tom Jeffords knew the exact location of his resting place, and they took the secret to their graves.

Cochise's descendants are said to currently reside at the Mescalero Apache Reservation, near Ruidoso, New Mexico.[4]

The best-selling novel by Elliott Arnold in 1947 titled Blood Brother gives a fictionalized account of the latter part of this struggle and the friendship between Jeffords and Cochise.[12]

In 1950, director Delmar Daves turned Arnold's novel into a movie re-titled Broken Arrow, featuring James Stewart as Jeffords and Jeff Chandler as Cochise. This was one of the first Hollywood movies to give a sympathetic picture of Native Americans in conflict with European Americans encroaching upon Indian land, and helped change the popular image of Native American people from negative to positive. The tall, handsome, deeply tanned Chandler, a Jewish actor born in Brooklyn, N.Y., portrayed Cochise as a noble, nearly tragic character forced to fight against the treacherous U.S. Army officers who led incursions into Apache territory.[12] John Ford's representation of Cochise in the 1948 film Fort Apache was also positive to Native Americans. Broken Arrow (TV series) was a Western series which told a fictionalized account of the historical relationship between Indian agent Tom Jeffords (played by John Lupton) and the Chiricahua Apache chief Cochise (played by Michael Ansara). The show ran on ABC in prime time from 1956 through 1958 on Tuesdays at 9 PM Eastern time.

Cochise's grandson (Taza's son) played Cochise in the pilot episode of the classic 60s western series The High Chaparral despite being 92 years old and missing a leg (Cochise would not have yet have been 60 in 1870 when the series was set, and he remained bipedal throughout his life). Nino repeated the portrayal in episode 4 of the first series.

In the Lethal Weapon film franchise, Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson), calls Roger Murtagh (Danny Glover) "Cochise" at least once in each film. For example, in Lethal Weapon 2, during a scene where Murtagh has a bomb under his toilet and asks if they are going to jump on 3, Riggs replies, "Well, it's your ass, Cochise!"

One character in The Warriors goes by the name of Cochise.

The 1975 film Cooley High has a main character named Cochise, played by Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs.

In Friday the 13th a police officer tells one of the counselors to "can it Cochise!"

In "Sabotage", a 1994 Beastie Boys music video and action-show satire, one of the actors is credited as "Nathan Wind as Cochese".

In the 2005 comedy film Waiting... opens with Dean (Justin Long) saying "Thanks, Cochise" after he enters a house party and catches a beer tossed to him by Monty (Ryan Reynolds). Monty later calls Dean by the same nickname, as well as Mitch (John Francis Daley).

In the 2001 movie Zoolander, Owen Wilson (as Hansel) calls Ben Stiller (as Derek Zoolander) Cochise just before the "Walk Off" scene.

The Audioslave song Cochise is about the Native chief.

Family

He married Dos-teh-seh (Dos-tes-ey, Doh-teh-seh – “Something-at-the-campfire-already-cooked”, b. 1838), the daughter of Mangas Coloradas, the leader of the Warm Springs and Mimbreño local groups of the Chihenne band, their children were Taza (1842–1876) and Naiche (1856–1919).

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cochise County Arizona". County Website. Cochise County. 2009. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
  2. ^ Roberts, David (1993). Once They Moved Like the Wind. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 21. ISBN 0-671-70221-1.
  3. ^ Roberts (1993), p. 22.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Barrett, Stephen Melvil; Turner, Frederick W. (1970). "Introduction". Geronimo: His Own Story: The Autobiography of a Great Patriot Warrior. New York: Dutton. ISBN 0-525-11308-8. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |lastauthoramp= ignored (|name-list-style= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Roberts (1993), p. 21.
  6. ^ Thrapp, Dan L. (1988). The Conquest of Apacheria. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 15–18. ISBN 0-8061-1286-7.
  7. ^ Thrapp (1988), p. 18f.
  8. ^ Debo, Angie (1989) [1976]. Geronimo – The Man, His Time, His Place. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 64. ISBN 0-8061-1828-8.
  9. ^ Thrapp (1998), p. 95-100.
  10. ^ Thrapp (1998), p. 350-1.
  11. ^ Roberts (1993), p. 41-2.
  12. ^ a b Holsinger, M. Paul (1999). War and American Popular Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Greenwood. p. 152. ISBN 0-313-29908-0. Retrieved September 17, 2011. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Further reading

  • Thrapp, Dan L.. The Conquest of Apacheria. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1967 LCCCN 67-15588 ISBN 0-8061-1286-7
  • Bourke, John G.. On the Border with Crook. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1971 LCCCN 74-155699 ISBN 0-8032-5741-4
  • Cochise, Ciyé. The First Hundred Years of Nino Cochise. New York: Pyramid Books, 1972 ISBN 0-515-02838-X
  • Roberts, David. Once They Moved Like the Wind. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993 ISBN 0-671-70221-1

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