Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Dahteste

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Dahteste Dahteste


Dahteste Warrior Woman Tahdaste Dahteste in partial native

Died
  
1955 (aged 94–95) Mescalero Apache Reservation, New Mexico

Born
  
c. 1860

Relations
  
Chihuahua (brother-in-law)

Nickname
  
Mrs. Coonie

Lozen y Dahteste #nativeamerican #apache #nativosamericanos #geronimo


Dahteste (circa 1860–1955) was a Choconen Apache woman warrior.

Contents

Dahteste httpsredpowermediafileswordpresscom201506

Family

Dahteste Dahteste northierthanthou

Dahteste was the sister of Ilth-goz-ay, the wife of Chihuahua (also known as Kla-esh), chief of the Chokonen local group of the Chokonen band of the Chiricahua.

Career

Dahteste LOZEN c18401890 Chiricahua Apache sister of Chief

In her youth she rode with Cochise's band in southeastern Arizona. Despite being married with children, Dahteste took part in raiding parties with her first husband Ahnandia. She was later a compatriot of Geronimo and companion of Lozen on many raids. Dahteste was fluent in English and acted as messenger and translator for the Apache. With Lozen, she became a mediator and trusted scout at times for the U.S. Cavalry and was instrumental in negotiating Geronimo's final surrender to the U.S. Cavalry in 1886.

Prison

Dahteste N Pom La Rose

She spent eight years as prisoner of war at Fort Marion in St. Augustine in Florida, where she survived pneumonia and tuberculosis. Thereafter she was shipped to a military prison in Fort Sill, Oklahoma. During the confinement she and Ahnandia divorced in the "Apache way".

Later life

After nineteen years of imprisonment at Fort Sill, Dahteste lived out the rest of her life at Whitetail on the Mescalero Apache Reservation in New Mexico. She married a former Apache Scout named Kuni, dressed traditionally and refused to speak English. She was known to others as "Old Mrs. Coonie" until her death in 1955.

References

Dahteste Wikipedia