Reprint of 28-part regional history series by Lori Davisson originally published in the Fort Apache scout newspaper between June 1973 and October 1977. Contents Editor's introduction: Ndee history ...
In the spring of 1870, more than a hundred Apaches — men, women and children — were massacred after surrendering to the U.S. Army at Camp Grant near Tucson in the Arizona Territory. They were killed ...
Her birth name is not spoken by the Apache people. She is known as Gouyen, meaning “Wise Woman” or “the one who is wise.” The ...
Elizabeth Hightower Allen's Introduction to First & Wildest: The Gila Wilderness at 100 illuminates that “in 1924, the Forest Service officially created the Gila Wilderness.” The term 'Gila,' however, ...
A visit to Fort Bowie National Historic Site in southeastern Arizona requires some effort. It’s a long drive into Cochise County, the last mile on a dirt road, and then that’s followed by a 1.5-mile ...
November is Native American Heritage Month. Indigenous peoples lived in what’s now the Lubbock area, or the Llano Estacado, for hundreds and hundreds of years. It’s a history many locals may know some ...
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