Skeleton Canyon

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File:Geronimo surrender site.jpg
A pile of stones marking the site of Geronimo's surrender.
File:Skeleton Canyon.JPG
An aerial view of the mouth of Skeleton Canyon
File:Devils Kitchen Skeleton Canyon Peloncillo Mountains.JPG
Devils Kitchen at the mouth of Skeleton Canyon, Peloncillo Mountains

Skeleton Canyon, called Cañon Bonita by the Mexicans,[1] is located Script error: No such module "convert". northeast of the town of Douglas, Arizona, in the Peloncillo Mountains, which straddle the modern Arizona and New Mexico state line, in the New Mexico Bootheel region.[2]

This canyon connects the Animas Valley of New Mexico with the San Simon Valley of Arizona, and was once a main route between the United States and Mexico for both legal and illegal traffic. While originally known as Guadalupe Canyon, the area came to be called Skeleton Canyon, owing to the bones of cows and humans left behind by cattle drives from Mexico.[3]

Battles

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The canyon was the site of several battles during the American Old West. In 1879, a group of outlaw Cowboys attacked a group of Mexican Rurales and stole their cattle. In July 1881, Curly Bill Brocius attacked and killed about a dozen Mexican smugglers carrying silver and heading to the United States. In retribution, the Mexican government attacked and killed Newman Haynes Clanton and others as they were driving cattle through Guadalupe Canyon. In 1883, Apache Indians from Chihuahua's band surprised eight troopers of Troop D, Fourth Cavalry, killed three men, burned the wagons and supplies, and drove off forty horses and mules.[1]

Geronimo's surrender

Geronimo's final surrender to General Nelson A Miles on September 4, 1886, occurred at the western edge of this canyon. As the surrender site is now on private property, commemorative monument has been erected to the northwest along SR 80, where it intersects with Skeleton Canyon Road in Arizona, at geographic coordinates Script error: No such module "Coordinates".. The mouth of the canyon lies about Script error: No such module "convert". to the southeast just west of the Arizona – New Mexico line.[2]

Murders and shootouts

On November 4, 1889, Judson "Comanche" White was found dead in Skeleton Canyon after being killed by person or persons unknown; all his possession had been stolen as well.[4]

On August 12, 1896, a shoot-out between the Christian gang and a posse resulted in the Skeleton Canyon shootout.

See also

References

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  1. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. a b Chiricahua Peak, Arizona – New Mexico, 30x60 Minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS 1994
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  4. The Deseret News November 7, 1889

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External links

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