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Like an oasis in the desert, the Chiricahua Apache Plaza in Akela, east of Deming, is an eye-catcher while traveling along Interstate 10.
From the U.S.-Mexico Border to military prisons in Alabama and Florida, the Chiricahua Apache tribe would find itself as the last Native American group to be relocated to Indian Territory.
The Chiricahua Apaches were imprisoned in 1886 by the United States and removed from their homelands of southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona and held in Florida, Alabama and Oklahoma ...
“There was never a border to us,” Chiricahua Apache Nation Attorney General Bill Bradford told an audience at Western New Mexico University on Nov. 15. “We’re trying to get the word out of ...
Today members of this group officially reside among Mescalero Apache in New Mexico and Fort Sill Apache in Oklahoma. This essay assesses the historic and contemporary impact of geographical borderland ...
AKELA, N.M. – The Fort Sill Apache Tribe broke ground on Tuesday on its new Chiricahua Plaza, a state-of-the-art full-service truck plaza, convenience store, and retail center. The ground ...
The effort to make Chiricahua a national park gives us the opportunity to provide some redress for historical injustices. Chiricahua Apaches should work with Arizona’s congressional delegation ...
AKELA, N.M. – The Fort Sill Apache Tribe broke ground on Tuesday on its new Chiricahua Plaza, a state-of-the-art full-service truck plaza, convenience store, and retail center. The ground ...
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