State history. Native Americans. Chiefs. 1937-05-02
Rating |
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Original index title |
State history. Native Americans. Chiefs. 1937-05-02 |
Newspaper |
Spokesman-review ; 1937-05-02 |
Title |
Indian woman comes to aid of Geronimo and his raiders. |
Description |
Indian woman comes to aid of Geronimo and his raiders. - Mary Lloyd, W1 Fourth avenue, Spokane, herself an Indian and a spokesman for them on many occasions, comes to the defense of the Apache chief, Geronimo, for whom a monument is being erected in the southwest, over the protest of white residents who remember his activities in the 80's. The story was recently printed as a syndicated feature in the magazine section of The Spokesman-Review. Richard Marsh, pioneer Spokane assayer and prospector, who knew Geronimo and hauled supplies for the American troops chasing him, took exception to some statements in that article and denied the old Indian's right to a monument. Mrs. Lloyd offers some facts giving the Indian's side of the controversy. Her letter to the Spokesman-Review follows: |
Subject Keys |
State history; Native Americans; chiefs; Chief Geronimo; Apache Indians; Richard Marsh; Mary Lloyd; Native American uprisings |
Date.Original |
1937 |
Resource Identifier |
sh139-392 sh139-393 sh139-393a sh139-395 |
Resource Type |
Text |
Genre |
Clippings |
Format.Use |
Image/JPEG |
Source |
State history box 139 |
Language |
English |
Rights |
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 |
Rights Notes |
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. |
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