Never let what may be the great day in the lift of Geronimo, the late Apache chief. That day – September 4 – is today.
It was on that day when Captain Henry Lawton, who had command of B Troop, 4th Cavalry, which was based out of Fort Huachuca, Arizona. It was Lawson who had been tapped by General Nelson Miles to lead an expedition to capture, in typical cowboy fashion – dead or alive – the Apache chief the U.S. government considered a renegade: Geronimo.
Tags: 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, 1904 World's Fair, 1905 inaugural parade, 500 Nations, after-action report, Alabama, Apache nation, Apache Prisoner of War cemetary, Apache warriors, Apaches, Arizona, B Toop 4th Cavalry, border fence, Captain Henry Lawton, celebrity, dead or alive, expedition, fairs, Florida, Fort Huachuca, Fort Marion, Fort Pickens, Fort Sill, General Nelson Miles, genocide, Geronimo, Geronimo surrendered, Indigenous Nations, Mexico, Mount Vernon Barracks, Oklahoma, pneumonia, President Theodore Roosevelt, prisoners, September 4 1886, sideshow, Skeleton Canyon, souvenirs, St. Louis, Teddy Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, U.S.-Mexico border, White Man, World's Fair