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Cochise, War Chief of the Chiricahua
On the Sonoita River, about twelve miles
west of Fort Buchanan, in the early sixties,
lived an Irishman named John Ward with Jesus
Martinez, a Mexican woman, and her son-later
known as Mickey Free, whom Ward had adopted.
The boy was in the meadow watching Ward's
cattle one day in October, 1860, when a band
of Apaches raided the ranch and stole both
the boy and the stock. Following the trail
of the Indians as far as the San Pedro
River, Ward became convinced that the
raiders were Chiricahuas belonging to
Cochise's band; so he rode to Fort Buchanan
and reported his loss to the commanding
officer, Colonel Pitcairn Morrison, Seventh
Infantry, with the request that the troops
assist him in an effort to recover the boy
and the cattle.
Many weeks elapsed before any action was
taken by the military. But on January 28,
1861, Morrison ordered Second Lieutenant
George N. Bascom, Seventh Infantry, a West
Point graduate in the class of 1858, to
proceed to Apache Pass and vicinity with
fifty-four men to recover the stolen boy and
stock. If, as was expected, the trail led to
the encampment of Cochise near the Overland
Mail Station in Apache Pass, Bascom was to
enter Cochise's camp and demand that the
captive and the stolen animals be returned,
using force if necessary to bring this
about.
Bascom left Fort Buchanan, January 29, and
arrived at Apache Pass, February 3. (Wood,
Charles Morgan. Extracts from Records, in
the War Department. November, 1856, to
February, 1861.) He marched eastward with
his command, past the Overland Mail Station,
halting there only long enough to supply his
men with water and inform the station keeper
that he was en route to the Rio Grande. He
then moved on and went into camp about three
quarters of a mile east of the station.
Cochise had observed the passing of the
soldiers, and the next day, February 4, he
came down to the station to inquire why they
were there. Some accounts state that Bascom
had sent for him. He was told by the station
keeper that the troops were on their way to
the Rio Grande. With his wife and boy, a
brother, and two nephews, he then proceeded
down the canyon. Ward and an interpreter
named Antonio were with Bascom; and Ward,
recognizing Cochise as he approached said:
"There comes Cochise!"
At Bascom's invitation, the chief and his
companions entered the officer's tent to
partake of his hospitality. After Cochise
had been seated, Bascom began talking with
him through the interpreter. He explained
the object of the expedition and demanded
that Cochise deliver up the boy and the
stolen stock. Cochise declared that he did
not have the boy or the cattle, and that
neither he nor any of his people had any
knowledge of the depredation. He offered to
make inquiry as to what band was guilty and,
if possible, recover both the boy and the
stock by purchase from those who held them,
as was the custom among Indians. Cochise's
statement that he was not guilty of the
offense was later proved to be true. The
raid had been made by Pinal Apaches, not by
the Chiricahuas. (De S. R. Long The History
of Arizona, p. 29. 1905. Farish T. E.
History of Arizona, Vol. II, p. 31. 1915.
Connell Charles T. "The Apache Past and
Present," Chap. 15. In Tucson, Citizen, May
29, 1921.)
Meantime, Ward had slipped out to inform the
soldiers that Cochise was within the tent.
They at once surrounded the tent, and as
soon as Bascom was informed of this fact, he
told his guest that he and his people would
be held as hostages until Ward's boy was
surrendered. Almost before the words were
out of the interpreter's mouth, Cochise had
drawn his sheath knife, and with the spring
of a tiger, had slashed the tent wall and
leaped through into the midst of the
soldiers, who were so astonished that they
had not the wit to stop him, though they did
recover sufficiently to send a fusillade of
bullets after him. Another member of the
party also tried to make his escape, but was
knocked down and pinned to the earth with a
bayonet. The rest remained quietly in the
tent and were held as prisoners.
Once free and in his native canyons, Cochise
collected a band of his followers and,
coming out on the crest of the hill some
distance above the station, called out to
Culver the station keeper, Walsh the
hostler, and Wallace a stage driver, none of
whom as yet had any inkling of the scene of
violence that had occurred at Bascom's camp
and all of whom had been on friendly terms
with Cochise, that he wanted them to come
out and talk with him. They walked over to
where he was, unarmed, and in their shirt
sleeves. The Indians instantly made a rush
and seized all three of them. Culver and
Walsh broke away, and ran for the station,
followed by a shower of bullets. Culver fell
at the door of the house with a bullet in
his back. Meantime, without the knowledge
either of the employees or Cochise, Bascom
had marched back to the station and occupied
it with his men; and now, as the soldiers
within heard the firing and, much excited,
looked out and saw Walsh's head appearing
over the outer wall as he sought safety
within the inclosure, supposing him to be an
Apache, fired at him and killed him. It was
not until Bascom and some of the men ran to
the door to aid the fallen Culver that the
Indians knew Bascom had occupied the
station. The evening that Wallace was
captured a wagon train went into camp two
miles west of the mail station. About dusk
Cochise surprised the party, bound two or
three of the men to the wheels, and burned
the wagons, the goods, and his human
victims. Two Americans who were traveling
with the wagon train he carried away. On the
same day, or the following, the regular mail
stage from the west drove into the canyon
just after dark and was fired upon by
Apaches who had concealed themselves in the
rocks on each side of the road. The driver,
King Lyons, was disabled by a shot in the
leg and almost at the same moment one of the
lead mules fell dead. The men inside the
coach leaped out and cut the mule loose;
William Buckley, Superintendent for the mail
line, mounting the driver's seat whipped the
remaining mules onward through a hail of
bullets down the steep incline that led to
the bridge across the ravine. Cochise had
ordered that a part of the bridge be cut
away and had supposed that his victims would
be stopped there subject to his will. But,
leaping the broken portion, the mules
dragged the coach safely across, and on up
the hill to the station. No sooner had the
stage come to a halt that one of the wheel
mules fell dead. Had this happened five
minutes earlier, the entire company would
have been at the mercy of the Apaches.
Buckley at once sent a messenger to William
Oury at Tucson with an account of all that
had happened at Apache Pass and the request
that a courier be dispatched immediately to
the troops at Fort Breckenridge on the San
Pedro. Oury did as requested; and with a
small party from Tucson set out as soon as
possible for the scene of action. When he
reached Ewell's Station, fifteen miles west
of Apache Pass, he learned that Lieutenant
R. S. C. Lord and Lieutenant Isaiah N.
Moore, in command respectively of Companies
D and F, First Dragoons, had preceded him.
These officers marched from Fort
Breckenridge, February 10. Oury overtook
them at the rock tank, two miles west of the
Pass, and they all arrived at the station in
the evening, more than a week after Cochise
made his escape. About the same time that
word was sent to Tucson, Bascom dispatched a
courier to Fort Buchanan for medical aid.
This daring soldier led his mule up the
mountainside in the dark, and reaching
Dragoon Springs in the early morning,
secured a remount and completed his journey
before the end of the second night.
Assistant Surgeon B. J. D. Irwin, together
with James Grayson, a former soldier, and
fourteen infantrymen mounted on mules, set
out in a snowstorm to relieve Bascom and
care for the wounded men at the Mail
Station. It required two days to make the
march. While Irwin's command was crossing
the Sulphur Spring Valley, a party of
Coyotero Apaches returning from a raid and
driving a herd of cattle and horses before
them were encountered and pursued in a
running fight, during which thirty horses
and forty cattle were recovered and three
Indians captured. For gallantry in action on
this occasion, Irwin was many years later
awarded a medal of honor by Congress.
Meantime there was plenty going on at the
Mail Station. On February 8 the soldiers and
employees drove the stock to a spring some
six hundred yards east of the corral to let
them drink. Ever on the watch, Cochise had
placed a number of his warriors in ambush in
the canyon through which the animals had to
be driven; and, as the men drove the stock
before them on the return trip, the Indians
fell upon the party, stampeding the stock,
killing Mose Lyons, an employee of the
station, and wounding two other men. The
following day Cochise came out within
hailing distance of the station, bringing
Wallace along as interpreter, demanded the
release of the prisoners held by Bascom and
offered to free Wallace and the other two
American prisoners he had taken. Bascom
refused to make the exchange unless Ward's
boy was also turned over. Again Cochise
declared that he did not have the boy and
that he knew nothing about his capture.
Baffled once more in his effort to secure
the release of his relatives, Cochise
disappeared, taking Wallace with him.
Finally, a day or two later, mounted and
horribly decked out in war paint, Cochise
and his followers again appeared on the
rocky slope, leading Wallace whose hands
were tied with a rope, one end of which was
attached to the saddle of Cochise. Once more
Wallace, who spoke the Apache language, made
known Cochise's demand for an exchange of
prisoners. He said that he had already
suffered greatly from cold, and torture at
the hands of the Indians; and he pleaded
with the Lieutenant to accept the proffered
terms, as otherwise he and his companions
would certainly be put to death. Sergeant
Reuben F. Bernard, of Bascom's command,
added his entreaties to those of Wallace,
and so persistent was he in his opposition
to the action of his superior that he was
placed in arrest. All efforts on the part of
Cochise to secure the release of his friends
having now failed, he dragged Wallace to
death behind his galloping horse, and, as
later appeared, also put the other two
Americans to a cruel death. When the command
reached Fort Buchanan on February 23,
Bernard was tried by the Commanding Officer
for insubordination, but was released.
Writing eight years later, Bernard, who had
shown himself one of the bravest and most
efficient Apache fighters in the Army and
had risen steadily through the various
grades to the rank of LieutenantColonel,
said he "knew personally of thirteen white
men whom Cochise had burned alive, five of
whom he tortured to death by cutting small
pieces out of their feet, and fifteen whom
he dragged to death after tying their hands
and putting lariats around their necks." In
conclusion he wrote: "This Indian was at
peace until betrayed and wounded by white
men. He now, when spoken to about peace,
points to his scars and says, 'I was at
peace with the whites until they tried to
kill me for what other Indians did; I now
live and die at war with them.'" (Russell
Don. One Hundred and Three Fights and
Scrimmages. United States Cavalry
Association, Washington, 1936.)
And now comes the sequel of the horrible
blunder made by Bascom. Irwin, Lord, Moore,
and Oury, with the infantry from Fort
Buchanan, the dragoons from Fort
Breckenridge, and the civilians from Tucson
seem all to have united at the Mail Station
by February 15. After Cochise and his band
dashed off dragging Wallace to his death,
nothing more had been seen or heard of them.
Well aware that a large force had now been
brought together to punish them, the Indians
had scattered and gone into hiding. The
morning after the arrival of Oury and the
dragoons, the soldiers were early in the
saddle and off to search for Cochise among
the Chiricahua Mountains. Cochise's village
was found after a scout of two days and was
destroyed; but the Indians easily eluded
their pursuers. On the return march, when
the troops were nearing the Mail Station,
they rode into a small valley on the western
side of the Chiricahuas where three bodies
were found perforated with lance wounds. One
of these bodies Oury was able to identify as
that of Wallace. At the foot of a mound
studded with oak trees, the three Americans
were interred. The little valley led down
toward the stage road. As the detachment
proceeded toward the station a discussion
arose among the men, which was soon taken up
by the officers, as to the propriety of
taking all of Bascom's hostages and hanging
them to the trees that shaded Wallace's
grave. Almost immediately it was decided
that this should be done. Accordingly,
Lieutenant Moore went to Bascom and informed
him of this determination.
" 'No,' said Bascom, 'I am in control of the
Indians, and I should incur censure if I
disposed of them in that way.'
"' Moore replied, 'I am the ranking officer,
and I will assume all responsibility.' "
Irwin's version of the matter is as follows:
"It was then and there decided to execute an
equal number of the Indian warriors confined
at the Mail Station. It was I who suggested
their summary execution, man for man. On
Bascom expressing reluctance to resort to
the extreme measure proposed, I urged my
right to dispose of the lives of the three
prisoners captured by me, after which he
then acceded to the retaliatory proposition
and agreed that these prisoners and three of
the hostages taken by him should be brought
there and executed." (Irwin B. J. D. "The
Apache Pass Fight." In The Military Surgeon,
October, 1933. Washington, D.C.)
So, early the next morning, February 19, the
six Indians were marched out to the mound
that sloped down toward the grave of Wallace
and his companions, and were hanged upon the
largest oak tree. (The author has identified
the spot and visited it more than once.) The
two remaining prisoners, a boy and a woman,
were placed in a wagon, taken to Fort
Buchanan, and there released.
When Cochise learned the fate of his three
relatives, his fury knew no bounds. He swore
he would exterminate or drive out the entire
white population of Arizona. From his
impregnable strongholds he dispatched far
and wide small bands of his picked warriors
to plunder wagon trains, stampede cattle and
horses, and murder unprotected settlers.
They would rarely attack in the open.
Concealed in some lofty lookout, the scouts
would scan the valleys and mesas for small
parties of careless travelers or unguarded
wagon trains, and then, at a favorable ford
or pass would ambush them--stay, burn, and
loot, with little loss on their part. Or
they would creep up to some isolated
ranch--kill the men, plunder the house,
destroy the crops, drive the cattle and
horses before them into their mountain
fastnesses, and carry the women and children
into captivity. Pursuit was vain, since the
Indians knew every trail, canyon, and cave
for a hundred miles in every direction,
could travel on foot fifty or even
seventy-five miles a day over the roughest
mountains and mesas, had a secret code of
smoke signals by which they could
communicate across wide reaches of country,
could conceal themselves behind rocks,
cactus, and tufts of bear grass, and pick
off at will either soldier or settler who
dared to risk himself in their
retreats--vain, because in courage, energy,
and intelligence Cochise was incomparable as
a leader and a strategist.
The result was that by the summer of 1861
terror reigned supreme. Ranches, mines and
small settlements were desolated and
abandoned. Even the military was
intimidated; and nowhere was there safety
except in Tucson and two or three fortified
mines and ranch houses where the embattled
pioneers, armed to the teeth, would outface
and outfight even Apaches. Raphael Pumpelly,
metallurgist for the Santa Rita Mining
Company, gives a vivid account of his own
experiences during the spring of 1861, and
also of the havoc wrought among his
neighbors. For weeks at the Santa Rita Mine
east of Tubac, Pumpelly had been in hourly
danger of death. Two of his Mexican
teamsters had been ambushed and slain, and
his friend, Grosvenor, the superintendent of
the Company, had met a like fate a few hours
later. Pumpelly himself escaped only by
chance.
A few days later, on his return from a trip
to Fort Buchanan, whither he had gone to
seek military aid, he was pursued and
attacked by Indians. Riding to the hacienda
of an American named Elliot Titus, Pumpelly
found him and two of his men dead and
mutilated. A watch belonging to one of the
victims was still ticking, so recent had
been the murderous assault. A few minutes
later, riding like the wind with his single
companion to escape the pursuing savages, he
met a company of settlers burying a man who
had been to the Fort to give notice of the
slaughter of a neighboring family in the
Sonoita Valley.
Pumpelly and Poston had made their plans to
get out of the country as soon as they
could. But on the night previous to the day
they had set for their departure a Mexican
herdsman galloped into Tubac with the news
that he and a ranchman, named Bill Rhodes,
had been chased by a large band of Apaches,
most of them mounted, and that Rhodes had no
doubt been killed. The next morning Poston
and Pumpelly rode northward to see what had
been the fate of Rhodes and two other
Americans and a Papago Indian at the Canoa
Inn on the road to Tucson. To their
astonishment, they soon met Rhodes, his arm
in a sling, but with spirit undaunted. When
the Apaches were almost upon him, he had
turned aside into a dense thicket, and
there, buried in a dried up mudhole, he had
single-handed stood off the whole band of
Apaches, killing six or eight of them as, in
single file, they attempted to thread the
narrow passage to his lair. At the Canoa
Inn, the bodies of the two white men and the
Papago were found in terribly mutilated
condition and pierced by scores of lance
wounds. While some of the party kept watch,
the others buried the three victims. Knowing
that Mr. Richmond Jones, a superintendent of
the Sopori Mining property, had come by
Canoa the previous day, search was now made
for his body. It was found, pierced by
bullet and lance wounds, and was taken to
Tubac for burial.
By early summer, word had reached Arizona
that war had broken out between the North
and the South, and in June orders came to
the commanding officers of Forts Buchanan
and Breckenridge to abandon these posts
because of the advance of the Confederate
forces, and to destroy all stores and
supplies that could not be removed. All
Federal troops that had not already been
withdrawn were ordered to proceed to the Rio
Grande. There was, of course, great
rejoicing among the Apaches; for, as they
knew nothing about the death grapple in
which the two sections of the nation were
locked, they naturally assumed that the
Americans were conquered and were
withdrawing with terror. Very soon they were
to learn how sadly they were in error; but
the story of the Civil War period in the
Southwest I leave for later treatment, as I
desire to devote the rest of this chapter to
an account of Cochise's character and
personal fortunes to the end; for I consider
him the most powerful and tragic figure in
Apache history.
At this place in my story I must introduce
the potent and unique figure of Captain
Thomas J. Jeffords, who, in the long run,
was to prove the beneficent resolving force
in this bloodiest of Apache tragedies.
Jeffords first came to Arizona in the summer
of 1862, when he was thirty years old. He
came as a Government scout, bearing
dispatches from General E. R. S. Canby at
Mesilla, New Mexico, to General James H.
Carleton, in Tucson. He then returned as
guide to the advance companies of the
California Column on their march to Fort
Thorn on the Rio Grande. He was a tall,
erect, athletic man, more than six feet in
height. Because he had rather long reddish
hair and whiskers, he was known among the
Indians by a name signifying "Sandy
Whiskers." In the mid-sixties he was
Government Superintendent of mails between
Fort Bowie and Tucson; and for a time he
drove a stage over the Butterfield route.
While thus engaged, he was wounded by arrows
shot from ambush by Apaches and to his death
he carried the scars of these arrows on his
body. He said that, to his knowledge, during
the period of sixteen months that he was in
charge of the mails between Fort Bowie and
Tucson, fourteen of his men were killed by
Apaches. At last, disgusted because the
Government was unable to protect his
carriers, he resigned his post, and went
back to prospecting in the mountains. But he
made up his mind that he would first have a
face to face talk with Cochise in order that
for the future he might work on friendly
terms with him. Having been so long among
the Apaches as scout, trader, stage driver,
and superintendent of mails, he had picked
up some knowledge of their language, and
had, of course, grown wise to all their
ways. He found a friendly Apache who knew
where Cochise was making his temporary camp
and had him go with him part of the way and
then send up a smoke signal indicating the
approach of a solitary messenger on a
peaceful mission. Then Jeffords rode into
the encampment of Cochise, armed and alone.
It had been seven years since any white man
had come within the reach of Cochise's arm
and escaped alive. The first thing Jeffords
said was:
"I want to leave my arms with you or with
one of your wives to be returned to me in a
couple of days, after I have had a personal
talk with you."
" Cochise seemed to be surprised, but
finally consented to my proposition, took
possession of my arms, and I spent two or
three days with him, discussing affairs, and
sizing him up. I found him to be a man of
great natural ability, a splendid specimen
of physical manhood, standing about six feet
two, with an eye like an eagle. This was the
commencement of my friendship with Cochise,
and although I was frequently compelled to
guide troops against him and his band, it
never interfered with our friendship. He
respected me, and I respected him. He was a
man who scorned a liar, was always truthful
in all things. His religion was truth and
loyalty. My name with Cochise was Chickasaw,
or Brother. The following will illustrate a
point in Cochise's character: He said to me
once, 'Chickasaw, a man should never lie.' I
replied: 'No, he should not, but a great
many do.' He said: 'That is true, but they
need not do it; if a man asks you or I a
question we do not wish to answer, we could
simply say, I don't want to talk about
that.'" (Farish Thomas Edwin. History of
Arizona, Vol. II, p. 229. Phoenix, 1915.)
To return to Jeffords' visit to Cochise:
After he had been relieved of his arms, he
calmly approached the wickiup of Cochise,
and sitting down near him remained in
silence for a considerable time, as was the
Indian manner. Then he told Cochise that, as
he trusted him, and believed that he was one
who liked straight-speaking, he had come to
see if some agreement could not be entered
into so that he might pursue his work
unmolested. Cochise, in his turn, sat for a
good while in silence. Jeffords could not
tell whether the outcome would be friendship
or death on the spot. It was plain that
Cochise, too, was in a quandary. However,
having talked over the situation at some
length, Jeffords' candor and courage won the
day. He remained in camp with Cochise as
long as he desired; and having come to a
full and amicable understanding with his
former enemy, when he was ready to go, his
arms were brought to him and an escort was
sent with him down toward the valley. Murder
and ravage went on as usual, but he was
never again disturbed by any member of
Cochise's band.
By the end of 1871 President Grant's "Peace
Policy" toward the hostile Indians was
proving successful, throughout most of the
tribes. However, the Apaches were still
giving much trouble; and Cochise and his
Chiricahuas, in particular, were a constant
menace and source of anxiety. So far, no
peace commissioner or other representative
of the Government had been able to locate
Cochise or get into communication with him.
His scouts were on the lookout for a hundred
miles in every direction, and by their smoke
signals and swift runners they kept the
great chief posted as he lay concealed in
his favorite strongholds high in the
inaccessible mountains. At last, the
President requested the brave and discreet
General O. O. Howard to go a second time as
special commissioner to settle a number of
distracting problems among the Indians of
the Southwest. The chief object of his
mission was to seek out Cochise and enter
into terms of peace with him.
After striving fruitlessly for weeks to make
some contact with Cochise, at a garrison in
New Mexico, Howard had the good fortune to
fall in with Jeffords who was then serving
as guide to a troop of cavalry in their
pursuit of a band of raiding Apaches.
General Howard gives this account of his
first meeting with Jeffords:
"The first tent I entered, a tall, spare
man, with reddish hair and whiskers of
considerable length, rose to meet me. He was
pleasant and affable, and I was in the
outset prepossessed in his favor. Giving my
name, I asked:
"'Is this Mr. Jeffords?' "'Yes, sir, that is
my name.'
"'Can you take me to the camp of the Indian
Cochise?'
"He looked steadily and inquiringly into my
eyes and asked: 'Will you go there with me,
General, without soldiers?'
"'Yes,' I answered, 'if necessary.' "'Then I
will take you to him.'"
Something in his face and manner convinced
Howard that he would do as he said, so he
put himself completely into Jeffords' hands.
First, Jeffords set out to secure as guides
and intermediaries two young Apache chiefs
in that part of New Mexico. One was a nephew
of Cochise--Chie, by name--and the other,
Ponce, was the son of Mangas Coloradas, who
had been put to death by Union soldiers, as
will be related in the next chapter. Both of
these young warriors were dear to the heart
of Cochise; so Howard's quest was half
accomplished when they consented to go with
him.
The party, consisting of six white men and
the two Apaches, started westward toward
Fort Bayard. The time was late September.
Jeffords had promised Howard that he would
locate Cochise within a week. Four days had
passed when they came to the foothills of
the Stein's Peak Mountains. Chie sent up a
peace signal, and then hurried ahead nearly
a quarter of a mile. He stopped at a spring
and imitated the bark of a coyote. A reply
came back from the mountain. He ran up the
steep slope and soon came back with another
Indian who proved to be one of Cochise's
scouts. He told Howard that he had looked
into his last night's camp forty miles back.
After having something to eat with them, he
went back to his lookout, but in a short
time returned on horseback, with his wife
and child. Before dark, sixty Indians, men,
women, and children, had gathered about the
camp. Their horses and mules were left to
graze with those of Howard's party, and the
conversation was most friendly. Howard was
told that he would have to cut down his
escort, so he sent three white men over to
Fort Bowie, there to await news from him.
The next morning the company, now reduced to
five, continued their journey over the
Stein's Peak Range and across the San Simon
Valley. The September day was scorching hot
and the route was waterless. But at twilight
they reached a fine spring in the Chiricahua
Mountains and made camp there. The following
day they passed over the mountains and
across the broad Sulphur Spring Valley to
the spring that gives the valley its name.
After eating and drinking, and resting a
short time, they continued the march to the
lower slope of the Dragoon Mountains, where
they made a dry camp, though grass was found
for the animals. Rising early the next
morning, they pushed on until they came to a
spring where they breakfasted and watered
their animals.
The guides now informed Howard that they
were nearing the camping place of Cochise.
After resting for a couple of hours, they
entered the Middle Pass of the Dragoons and
wound their way through the mountains for
fifteen miles to a point on the west side of
the Dragoons. Again the Indians sent up
smoke signals--this time to give notice of
the number in the party and the purpose for
which it came. Under an oak tree, on the
bank of a dear stream, the mounts were
unsaddled, and all but Chie gave themselves
to food and repose. He, however, hurried off
over the sharp rocks and steep hills to the
fortress where Cochise was thought to be,
though so far no sign of his whereabouts had
been given. At night two Indian boys, both
on one horse, came. They ate and drank but
did not deign to make known their mission.
At last, though, they delivered a message
from Chie, and then led the way through a
narrow canyon for seven miles, and brought
them into a natural fortification of great
extent and grandeur.
"There were canyons to enter by and canyons
to leave by, but surrounded by a wall,
varying in height from one hundred to two
hundred feet. This wall incloses about
thirty acres of swamp near the center, and
many good natural springs and a fine stream
of water. We encamped under a tree, and soon
were surrounded by numbers of the wild
Indians." (Howard O. O. "Account of His
Mission to the Apaches and Navajos." In
Washington Daily Morning Chronicle, November
10, 1872.) But no Cochise!
Next morning after breakfast a strange cry
was heard at some distance, and therewith
Ponce cried in excitement:
"He is coming!"
At once preparations were made for his
entrance. The circle was extended and a
blanket was placed on the ground for him to
sit on. There was silence and solemnity
throughout the assemblage as they waited.
"In a few minutes there came riding rapidly
down a ravine a single Indian, who looked
very fierce as he approached, carrying a
long lance in his hand. He was short, and
thick-set and painted in that ugly way where
vermillion is combined with black paint. As
soon as he reached us he dismounted and flew
to Captain Jeffords, standing near by, and
embraced him very warmly. Jeffords said,
very quietly, 'This is his brother,' neither
Captain Jeffords nor any of the Indians ever
speaking the name of Cochise. . . .
"A mounted party following came in sight.
This consisted of a fine-looking Indian,
accompanied by a young man and two Indian
women. I hoped it was Cochise. He dismounted
and saluted Captain Jeffords like an old
friend. He then turned to me, and I was
introduced in this phrase:
"'General, this is he, this is the man!
"As I took his hand I remembered my
impression. A man fully six feet in height,
well proportioned, large, dark eyes, face
slightly painted with vermillion,
unmistakably an Indian; hair straight and
black, with a few silver threads, touching
the coat collar behind. He gave me a grasp
of the hand, and said very pleasantly:
"'Buenas dias.'
"His face was really pleasant to look upon,
making me say to myself, 'How strange it is
that such a man can be the robber and
murderer so much complained of.' In my
frequent interviews afterward I perceived
that when conversing upon all ordinary
matters he was exceedingly pleasant,
exhibiting a childlike simplicity; but in
touching upon the wrongs of the Apaches, in
public council, or on horseback, in fact,
when he considers himself to be specially on
duty as the Chiricahua Chief, he is
altogether another man. We walked together,
and sat down side by side on the blanket
seat beneath a fine spreading oak, which
sheltered us from the scorching sun."
(Ibid.)
Cochise now questioned Chie and Ponce as to
how and why they came and as to their
knowledge of Howard and his designs. After
about ten minutes of such probing, he very
pleasantly turned to the General and asked
him through an interpreter the purpose of
his visit.
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