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The Primitive Apache
The earliest Americans who came in
contact with the Apache were able to study
him in his original condition. As yet he was
untouched by the ways of civilized man. He
was strictly the creature of his
environment; and, for her part, Nature had
turned him out a perfect physical specimen.
In appearance he was attractive rather than
repulsive. The head, well formed and
somewhat broad, was set firmly on a short,
muscular neck. He had high cheekbones,
well-formed nose, black eyes that blazed
with fire and energy, strong jaws, and
firm-closed lips-not thin, yet not too full.
The hair, black, thick, and very coarse, was
allowed to fall to the shoulders, but in
front was trimmed straight across at the
level of the eyebrows. Apache men had sparse
beards. Such scattered hairs as did grow on
their faces were plucked out one at a time
with tweezers made of bent strips of tin.
The lean, supple, sinewy body of the Apache
was capable of extraordinary activity and
endurance. The legs and arms of an Apache
brave, neither round in contour nor scrawny
and thin, were shapely enough, and lacked
nothing in agility and dexterity. The back
was well developed and sturdy, the chest
both broad and very deep, the waist slender.
Rarely did the Apache attain a height of
more than six feet, and just as seldom did
he fall below five feet. Dr. John B. White
in 1873 actually measured one hundred
Arizona Apache men and one hundred women.
The average results he reported as follows:
"The men measured without any selection five
feet, six and one-half inches and the women
about five feet. The tallest man measured,
standing in his bare feet, six feet and the
tallest woman five feet, two inches, though
there are doubtless many women among them
who may exceed this height.
"The shortest man measured five feet and
three-fourths of an inch, and the shortest
woman four feet and seven and threefourths
of an inch."
All writers who describe the Apaches as they
were when they became known to Americans
emphasize their superior mental qualities.
They showed instinct and sagacity akin to
that of animals. They were endowed with
great acuteness of perception; marked
ingenuity in overcoming the asperities of
climate, soil, and topography; shrewdness in
forecasting the actions of their enemies and
in coordinating their plans, though
operating in widely scattered bands over a
vast region of country. They were witty,
possessed of a quick sense of humor,
cheerful, companionable, and little disposed
to heed the annoyances and uncertainties of
life. They were ever on the alert, however,
and were excitable. Unusual sounds or
happenings would arouse them at once to
tremendous activity.
It is a mistake to suppose that the Apaches
were not a moral people. The fact is, their
code of morals was as deep-rooted and
binding as that of civilized men. To be
sure, they were guided in their conduct by
principles very different from those
professed by the white man. Their highest
conception of a virtuous man was that he
engage in war and excel as a thief; of a
woman that she toil hard and faithfully. All
other people they looked upon as their
enemies. Their occupation was murder and
robbery. The man who could kill without
being killed, and could steal without being
caught, was the most honored and admired
individual among them. These ideals were
held be fore the child from his infancy; and
the whole ambition of the growing boy was to
be--a brave warrior, yes--most of all a
successful raider and killer. Daring and
gallant action, in itself, meant little to
him. Indeed, it seemed very foolish. But to
outwit and destroy his foe by craft was
meritorious in the highest degree; and the
evidence of such cunning and hardihood was
the bringing home of the bacon. The suitor
who throve best in the eyes of the maid he
desired to marry was the one richest in
stolen horses and cattle and best able to
deck her out with spoils snatched from his
murdered foe. And it was to the standard of
such a leader that the ambitious young
braves eagerly pressed. It is true that the
very highest admiration was reserved for the
very ablest warriors and chieftains, who,
because of their preeminence in action and
diplomacy, were equal to the task of
protecting and leading the whole tribe in
times of supreme emergency. To the qualities
of raider, such a chief added those of
intellect, strategy, and indomitable
resolution. Cochise and Victorio were such
leaders, and Mangas Coloradas in diplomacy
and intellect, though not in military
powers.
Pity was a feeling unknown to the Apache;
cruelty an ingrained quality. It must be
admitted that he was never able to conceive
of pains more cruel than those he had
suffered from his Christian enemies. The
only difference between them and him was
that the Apache openly confessed and
practiced his creed of cruelty and rapacity,
whereas the white man hypocritically
professed mercy and honesty and at the same
time surpassed the Apache in deeds of
dishonor and blood.
So much with respect to the Apache in his
attitude toward the rest of mankind. The
story is a very different one if we study
his conduct as it affected his own people.
From birth to death he was held irrevocably
to well-defined attitudes and duties toward
his family and his clan or group, and
disloyalty to the standards erected by his
people brought pains and penalties upon him
quite as severe as those that rule civilized
society. Indeed, viewed from this
standpoint, he was as moral a man as is the
typical white man. In fact, he adhered more
strictly to his social code than the white
man does to his. For one thing, the Apache
held it a high virtue to speak the truth.
Again, he did not steal from his own
tribesmen; nor would he fail to pay his
debts. He was openhanded--would share what
he had with his fellows. Parents fondly
loved their children, and they supported
other dependent members of their families.
Also, at whatever the cost to their own
safety and comfort, they demanded just
satisfaction for injuries to their kith and
kin. The labor and expense involved in
marriage and burial ceremonies were shared
by relatives; and in many other ways
habitual regard was given to ties and
obligations universally recognized among
them. And, to an extraordinary degree, their
women were loyal to their marriage vows and
patient in the discharge of the heavy menial
tasks laid upon them.
The primitive Apache man went unclothed save
for breechclout, mocassins, and, on raids or
in battle, a dose-fitting helmet of hide
decorated with feathers. Originally the
breechdout was made of dressed deerskin, but
at a later date, a strip of muslin about six
feet long was used for this purpose. This
band was passed between the legs and around
the loins and so adjusted that the ends fell
to the knee, both in front and behind. The
moccasins were of buckskin and were
peculiarly fitted to protect the feet and
legs from venomous reptiles and thorny
desert plants. They reached halfway up the
thigh, and had tough soles extended and
curved up at the toe, terminating in a sort
of button the size of a half-dollar. The
tops were often pushed down below the knees
and the folds were used as pockets for such
small articles as the Apache might desire to
carry on his person. After the coming of the
Americans, an Apache warrior nearly always
wore a band of flannel or cotton cloth
tightly bound about his head to hold his
hair in place. The women wore skirts of
deerskin extending from the waist to the
knees, with a fringe of thongs and,
possibly, ornamented with bits of bright
metal or glass. The moccasins worn by the
women were of a different kind from those
used by the warriors.--not of such great
length nor so durable. They came only a
little above the ankle, though they had the
usual buttonlike projection at the toe.
The Apache dwelling place was a circular or
oval shack, called a wickiup. It was built
by the women from saplings and brush. The
long, slender poles were thrust into the
ground about two feet apart, bent inward
until they met, and then bound together at
the top, a little hole being left to let the
smoke out. Brush or branches were now woven
into the framework, and in some instances
the whole was covered with bark, or even
with deerskins. After the structure had been
completed, a place was scooped out in the
floor, from eighteen inches to two feet
deep, to serve as bedroom. The dirt was
packed around the base of the wickiup and
was useful both in giving solidity to the
shack and in affording protection against
driving storms. In cold weather a very small
fire was made in the center, and around this
the family huddled. When an Apache moved
from one place to another, and after a
member of the family had died, the wickiup
was burned. These huts were from ten to
twelve feet by about eight or nine feet in
dimensions. The doorway was low, and
sometimes there extended from it on each
side a little windbreak made of poles and
brush. The Apache never erected his wickiup
at a distance from others; ordinarily four
or five of these shelters were built in
proximity to each other.
The food of the Apache was exceedingly
varied. Of course he ate abundantly of
flesh. He liked mule meat best of all, and
next to that horse flesh. The fact is,
almost any sort of animal suited his
taste--from deer and buffalo to gopher and
lizard. He did not eat bear meat or pork or
the flesh of the turkey. He would not eat
fish, nor devour any other creature that
lived in the water. Yet he hunted the
turkey, as well as the hawk and the eagle,
for their feathers, and the mink, the
beaver, and the muskrat for their skins. At
times, of course, so arid and destitute was
the country, that he was compelled to
subsist for the most part on roots, berries,
and nuts, and the seeds of grasses. Acorns,
mescal, and mesquite beans were staple
articles of food. The pulpy head of the
mescal meant almost as much to the Apache as
bread does to us. Available nearly
everywhere on the desert, it was gathered by
the women and roasted in pits. It could be
stored and carried about. The mesquite bean
and the acorn were pounded into meal and
made into cakes. The fruit of the giant
cactus, and the pitahaya were much in favor;
and, indeed, in times of necessity the fruit
of various other species of cactus was
acceptable, as well as that of the yucca.
Travelers likened the taste of these fruits,
when cured, to the fig, the date, and the
banana. After being ground or pounded to a
powder on a large flat stone, the grass
seeds were made into a paste with water, and
were shaped into cakes.
The Apaches were a sociable people. After
the chief meal of the day, which was usually
eaten in the evening, they would sit or lie
about their camp talking endlessly about the
happenings of the day or exchanging tales of
past deeds in raids and battles. On many
occasions they met for feasting, or dancing;
and there were innumerable ceremonial
dances. Before and after battle the braves
indulged in characteristic war dances while
the women looked on. There were social
dances in which the young men and young
women were the chief participants, the older
people looking on, commenting and conversing
enjoying themselves as much apparently as
did the young people. They all swam well,
and in summer swimming was a favorite sport.
Every Apache was a gambler, man, woman, and
child; and there was nothing they would not
stake, from their horse to their shirt (or
what, in the Apache mind, took the place of
the shirt). There were ball games of various
kinds --the most popular and famous, that
played with hoop and pole, from which women
were excluded. The women raced and played
games akin to our modern shinny. There were
guessing games, too, and wrestling matches,
and games of skill in the shooting of arrows
and the tossing of rocks at a hole.
After children were big enough to run about,
parents made little effort to control them
and rarely scolded or punished them. Small
boys ran races, tussled together, threw
stones at each other, or practiced with bow
and arrow. The little girls were more given
to play than were the boys. They made mimic
houses with sticks and stones, shaped dolls
from bits of rag or buckskin, or from
bunches of flexible plants, tied around at
the top. Their miniature houses were built
in imitation of their own homes and their
dolls were placed in them, very much as
little white children do; and, when mud
could be had, they molded it into the forms
of dolls, horses, men and women, even
mounting their men and women upon animals.
The Apaches seem to have had little desire
to create things of beauty. This is not
strange in view of their nomadic and
marauding propensities. In the designing and
shaping of devildance masks, medicine
shirts, and violins, they did display some
decorative and pictorial skill; but their
most notable achievement in art is to be
seen in their basketry. This work was of two
kinds--burden baskets and water jugs.
Originally, in both kinds, beauty was
subordinated to function; though in course
of time Apache women attained considerable
skill in the shaping and decorating of these
very useful and durable domestic articles.
Two techniques were employed: the twined and
the coiled. Specimens of their work are
preserved in various museums. The finest
examples of craftsmanship and beauty are to
be seen in their coiled work. It is
difficult to determine to what extent the
art of basketry was original and distinctive
among the Apaches and to what degree it was
a cultural borrowing. Very likely the
development of the art among them was
influenced by the work in the same kind of
the Pueblo, Pima, and California Indians. A
certain intermediate, very ornate, and
florid type may have been derived from the
Yumas. Probably influences from the sources
just named were introduced by individuals
held as captives among the Apaches who, by
some chance, had come in contact with
California, Yuma, or Pima Indians.
Both socially and economically the family
was the basic unit in the integration of the
Apache nation. Each family was bound
together by rights and duties that were
formal and well defined. Families camped
together. The home of the mother was the
family center. She was the head. If there
were married daughters, their husbands came
to dwell in the maternal camp; though it was
forbidden them to look upon the face of
their mother-in-law or to hold converse with
her. Once for all, an individual was bound
to his family. Robert Frost writes in one of
his most perfect poems:
Home is the place where,
when you have to go there,
They have to take you in.
Most assuredly this was true
in the Apache economy. The family was
supremely interested in each of its members,
was responsible for his education, had much
to say with respect to his choice when he
married, partook of his disgrace and shared
in his glory, braved defilement and the
possibility of "ghost sickness" in preparing
him for burial after his death, and in case
he suffered a violent and undeserved death,
was under solemn obligation to avenge him.
When an Apache girl reached puberty there
was a simple family celebration of the
event. It might last a day or two, though it
was in no way formal or ceremonial. As an
indication that she had arrived at
womanhood, she was told to run toward the
east whence the sun arises. A month or two
later, however, she was given a grand
coming-out party. This was as much a society
event as a formal ball given in honor of a
Washington débutante by her proud mother. It
lasted four days, and relatives and friends
from far and near were invited to attend.
The festival, considered as a whole, was as
beautiful in design and symbolic
significance as the most involved and
elaborate pattern woven upon a richly
artistic Navajo rug.
The expense was borne by the parents, though
other relatives often assisted, as the cost
was not inconsiderable. Sometimes a father
would begin saving up and making
preparations many months ahead, and not
infrequently closely related families would
give a joint party for two or more girls.
When the appointed day arrived, people from
a distance would begin to make their camps
near the silvan spot selected for the
exercises. Here on a smooth space, properly
laid out and marked off, a tepee had been
set up in which the girl was to spend the
next four days and nights in strenuous
vigils and ceremonial dances. The host
engaged a medicine man to take charge of the
religious rites and made abundant provision
for the feeding and feasting of the crowd.
After gifts and food had been carried to the
lodge of the maiden, she would make her
appearance in her finest array. Bright
ornaments were displayed to the best
advantage on the fringe of her buckskin
skirt and along the sides of her moccasins.
With her attendants she entered the tepee.
Outside there were social dances, and
within, the girl would alternately kneel for
long hours in statuesque supplication and
dance her stately measures. The second day,
morning and afternoon, there was dancing by
the crowd; and at night the girl resumed her
vigils and her exhausting dancing. The
second or third night, disguised in the
skins of various savage animals, the devil
dancers would come and dance around a
central fire. At first the warriors and the
old women would seem alarmed at the
appearance of these wild beasts, but, when
they found that they were unable to drive
them away, they would join with them in the
dance, and the young girl would dance with
them also. The climax came on the fourth
night. All that night the dancing of the
girl, as well as the social dancing outside,
continued. At sunrise the final ritualistic
exercises were completed by the medicine
man. Then the tepee was demolished, and the
girl ran swiftly toward the east. Dr. M. E.
Opler writes: "It is a sun ceremony--a
prayer that the force which causes all plant
life to thrive, may also grant this young
Apache girl health and vigor." (For a full
and scholarly account of this festival, read
Dr. M. E. Opler, An Analysis of Mescalero
and Chiricahua Apache Social Organization.
In Mrs. White Mountain Smith's Indian Tribes
in the Southwest, there is a fragmentary but
attractive description. I have drawn upon
these accounts, as well as upon oral
descriptions given me by the Reverend Frank
Uplegger and others who live in the Apache
reservations.)
For an Apache girl, the mother's wickiup was
the hub of the universe. Mother and daughter
were almost constantly together. They toiled
side by side in domestic work, accompanied
each other on expeditions to gather food;
and, after the maiden had made her debut,
she went with her mother to dances and other
social affairs where she met the young men.
In the social dance she chose her own
partner. Cupid was no less adept with Apache
than with Greek bow and arrow; in spite of
the severity of the social code by which
they were hedged about, young people found
ways to make known their mutual love. It is
true that the families both of young men and
young women exerted a powerful influence
over them in their choice of a life partner.
Yet in most cases they chose for themselves.
After an Apache youth had made his choice,
he must secure the consent of his own family
to the union. Next it was necessary to make
known to the girl's parents, his desire to
marry their daughter. His father or his
brother would probably discharge this office
for him. Now came the actual proposal. This
formality consisted in the offering of
presents to her and her family. As his
wealth consisted chiefly of horses, in the
night he would take one, or two, or more
animals, and tie them near the girl's
wickiup. The number of horses he brought
indicated to the family the measure of his
riches and the degree of his ardor for the
girl. The offer of only one horse would be
thought a "one-horse affair." If the girl
took care of the animals--led them to water
and fed them--the youth knew that his suit
was successful; but if they were left
uncared for, it was all too plain that he
was rejected. The maiden was allowed four
days to come to a decision. It was not good
form to care for the animals the first day;
but on the other hand, if she allowed them
to suffer without forage or drink more than
two days, she would be thought vain and
proud. If the horses remained on the picket,
neglected and starving at the end of the
fourth day, there was nothing for the lover
to do but to take them back.
After a suitor had been accepted, there
followed a wedding feast that extended over
three days. During this time the engaged
couple were not allowed to speak to each
other; but on the third night they would
suddenly disappear--eluding, supposedly, the
vigilance of the older people--and escape to
the temporary wickiup provided by the groom
in some hidden place in the woods not far
away. After an absence of a week or more,
they would return to the parental camp as
suddenly as they had departed, unheralded
and unnoticed. They would now erect their
wickiup near that of the girl's mother, but
facing in an opposite direction. "Avoidance"
was the term applied to the very definitely
fixed formality that forbade a son-in-law to
see his mother-in-law or to talk with her.
In order to observe the strict amenities,
the son-in-law, even though his own wickiup
faced in an opposite direction from that of
his wife's mother, had to acquire a good
deal of skill in quick dodging and sudden
skipping. A man was not limited to one wife.
If he was able to do so, he might at any
time marry one or more additional wives,
though he would be limited in his choice to
sisters or unmarried cousins of his first
wife. In case of the death of his first
wife, he would be expected to remain in
mourning for one year and then to espouse a
sister or a cousin of his former wife.
When once married, a man said good-by
forever to his own family. They no longer
had any claim upon him. His whole obligation
after that was to the family of his
mother-in-law. As long as he lived he must
support and protect the domestic circle into
which he had married. He must bring to them
the spoils of the chase and must be their
avenger in case they suffered unjust injury.
When he returned from the hunt, loaded with
game, it was carried by the daughter to her
mother's wickiup; was there dressed and
cooked, along with other food; and then
their share was brought by the wife to be
eaten with her husband and children in their
wickiup. Divorces were few. No matter how
dissatisfied a husband might become, or how
hard his lot, he dare not seek separation
except upon good and well-established
grounds; and to run away would be to make
him a social outlaw and to draw upon his
head the animosity of the entire family into
which he had married.
The local group was the next unit of
organization after the domestic family. It
was made up of several affiliated families,
though blood relationships were not
obligatory for membership in such a group.
It was community of interest that drew
members of a particular group together and,
if mutually desirable, any person might
attach himself to it. Such a community found
that in union there was increased security
and efficiency, both in economic and in
warlike activities. A group was always known
by some geographic name descriptive of the
spot they chose for their settlement. The
place might be a mountain, a canyon, a
stronghold, or a spring. It might have been
selected merely because it was a pleasant
region in which to camp, with plenty of wood
and water at hand, or because it offered
unusual advantages for the storing of food
and supplies, or because it was a good
rallying point and easy to defend.
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