Chasing Geronimo
Geronimo
How the book was made
General Crook and his staff in 1885
The West Half of the San Carlos Reservation, a military campsite in 1880
Lieutenant Gatewood's Native Scout Company in camp at the White Mountain Reservation
Navajo scouts waiting to get paid at Fort Wingate, New Mexico, 1886
A Scene in Geronimo's campsite in 1886
Ze-Da-Ke-a Navajo scout from Fort Wingate, New Mexico, in the campaign against Geronimo along and below the Mexican border in 1885-1886
Troop A, 6th Cavalry, in camp on the Mexican border during the Geronimo Campaign
Geronimo and his band on their way to Florida
Captain Henry W. Lawton with detachment and Native prisoners of war at the Bowie Station in 1886
Chief Geronimo (right) and 3 of his warriors
Apache scouts enlisted for 6 months of service
Brigadier General Nelson A. Miles (center) and his staff
Captain Nicholson's troops of the 7th Cavalry at the San Carlos agency training their horses
Officers and their families on a picnic near Fort Thomas, Arizona
Son of Mangus, Chief of the Warm Springs Apache
Bonito, White Mountain Apache Chief
The last of the Bedonkohe Apache tribe
Chief Chatto
Old Nana, famous Apache chief
Colonel Forthsythe of the 4th US Cavalry
Chief Geronimo bidding farewell to Arizona for the last time
A Cavalry camp near the San Carlos reservation on the banks of the Gila River in Arizona
1st Lieutenant Eugene Overton, 6th US Cavalry
Colonel Eugene A. Carr, commanding the 6th US Cavalry
General Geo. C. Crook
Dress Parade at Fort Stanton, New Mexico, Troops D and H 6th Cavalry, Company E and I, 13th Infantry
Daughter of Naiche, Chief of the Chiricahua Apache
Chato, Chiricahua Apache sub-chief
Al Sieber (Right) and Group of Apache Scouts
Geronimo, Nanne, Ozone, Chihuahua, and Loco
Naiche, his mother, two wives, and children
Non-commissioned officers of the 13th Infantry
A group of 6th US Cavalry soldiers at Fort Grant in 1883
Company G, White Mountain Apache scouts enlisted for 6 months of service
Chihuahua, Chiricahua Apache Chief
Chatto, Chief of the Chiricahua Apaches
Taza, son of Cochise
Geronimo, as he looked before he died at Fort Sill, Oklahoma
Loco, Chief of the Warm Springs Apache
Company B, 10th Infantry crossing the Gila River at the San Carlos agency in 1881
Mrs. Asa Deklugie, niece of Geronimo and daughter of Chihuahua and Eva Geronimo, Geronimo's youngest daughter of 16 years old
Ready for church