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An Apache Campaign in the Sierra Madre / An Account of the Expedition in Pursuit of the Hostile Chiricahua Apaches in the Spring of 1883 cover

An Apache Campaign in the Sierra Madre / An Account of the Expedition in Pursuit of the Hostile Chiricahua Apaches in the Spring of 1883

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

The narrative reproduces a firsthand military journal of an expedition into the Sierra Madre pursuing hostile Chiricahua Apache bands, blending campaign-day reports with descriptive field observations. It chronicles marches, scouting missions, ambuscades, skirmishes, and the logistical strains of moving troops and supplies through difficult terrain, while detailing the tactics and roles of Apache scouts and soldiers alike. Interspersed with illustrated plates and catalogues of Apache dress, weapons, and material culture, the account also reflects on reservation disputes, rationing controversies, and the broader challenges of conducting operations against mobile indigenous groups.


PREFACE.


The recent outbreak of a fraction of the Chiricahua Apaches, and the frightful atrocities which have marked their trail through Arizona, Sonora, New Mexico, and Chihuahua, has attracted renewed attention to these brave but bloodthirsty aborigines and to the country exposed to their ravages.

The contents of this book, which originally appeared in a serial form in the Outing Magazine of Boston, represent the details of the expedition led by General Crook to the Sierra Madre, Mexico, in 1883; but, as the present military operations are conducted by the same commander, against the same enemy, and upon the same field of action, a perusal of these pages will, it is confidently believed, place before the reader a better knowledge of the general situation than any article which is likely soon to appear.

There is this difference to be noted, however; of the one hundred and twenty-five (125) fighting men brought back from the Sierra Madre, less than one-third have engaged in the present hostilities, from which fact an additional inference may be drawn both of the difficulties to be overcome in the repression of these disturbances and of the horrors which would surely have accumulated upon the heads of our citizens had the whole fighting force of this fierce band taken to the mountains.

One small party of eleven (11) hostile Chiricahuas, during the period from November 15th, 1885, to the present date, has killed twenty-one (21) friendly Apaches living in peace upon the reservation, and no less than twenty-five (25) white men, women, and children. This bloody raid has been conducted through a country filled with regular troops, militia, and “rangers,”—and at a loss to the enemy, so far as can be shown, of only one man, whose head is now at Fort Apache.

JOHN G. BOURKE.

Apache Indian Agency,
  San Carlos, Arizona
,
    December 15th, 1885.