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Join the
Double E Ranch and horseback ride through the Gila
National Forest Region which was once the home of the
ancient people. Allow yourself a glimpse into the homes
and lives of the people of the Mogollon culture who
lived in the Gila Wilderness Region from the 1280s
through the early 1300s. The surroundings probably look
today very much like they did when the cliff dwellings
were inhabited. The Double E Ranch is surrounded by the Gila National
Forest and lies at the edge of the Gila Wilderness, the
nation's first designated wilderness area. This
designation means that the wilderness character of the
area will not be altered by the intrusion of roads or
other evidence of human presence. The area in which you
will explore is now known as The Double E Ranch.
Pre-Historic Cultures...
Before
the Apaches, the region was home to the Mimbrenos, an
advanced pre-historic Indian culture. Highly artistic,
they are known for their exquisite black-on-white
pottery featuring nature motifs. The Mimbres made their
homes farming and hunting along the Gila River and Bear
Creek, living in pit houses, shallow caves and small
cliff dwellings. Earlier Indian cultures most certainly
lived in the area. Limited evidence of hunting by the
earliest inhabitants (9500-6000BC) has been found in
several highland areas. Widespread evidence of the
Archaic Culture, which is considered part of the Cochise
Culture dating from 6000 BC to 300 AD, has been found in
the region. The sites you will visit are all located on
Double E Ranch and privately protected.
The
Mimbres Valley region is historically significant
primarily because of the Mimbres Indians who lived here
almost a thousand years ago. The Mimbres people are an
enigma to archeologists, because they can only speculate
about their beginnings and especially about their
ultimate fate.
The Mimbres culture was relatively
isolated in southwestern New Mexico and eastern Arizona.
It reached its zenith about C.E. 1050 in the Mimbres
river valley 20 miles east of Silver City, New Mexico.
Resource stress (sound familiar?) caused by
overpopulation, drought and pressure (perhaps)
from the
emerging Chichimec Casas Grande power base, 100 miles to
the south, put them out of business by 1130 C.E. They
appear to have been a peaceful bunch with regular
contact with other
contemporaneous Southwestern cultures (Anasazi, Mogollon
Tularosa, Hohokam and the Chichimec trading cultures).
Archeologists believe the Mimbres culture evolved from
the Mogollon culture, which itself possibly evolved from
the Anasazi and/or the Hohokam cultures. During the
Mimbres phase, the move was made from pit houses, to
semi-pit houses, and then to above ground pueblos. The
dead were often buried under the floor inside the house,
with a pot covering their head. The big puzzle is what
happened to the Mimbres people. It is speculated that
the original Mimbrenos moved away, and were integrated
into other cultures, possibly to the south. It is not
likely that they were driven from the area by warfare,
as evidence points to an exodus extending over a period
of years.
Mimbres
pottery is the most famous artifact of the Mimbres
culture. Pottery was made in plain and corrugated brown
clay, polychrome, black and red, and the famous black
and white. The black and white pottery usually depicted
animals encountered in daily life, daily routines, or
geometric designs. Cranes, turkeys, fish, mosquitoes or
hummingbirds, small mammals, and humans often grace
Mimbres pottery. The expertise of the Mimbres potters
is considered superior to that of any other Native
American potters. A characteristic of pots found
associated with a burial is that of the "kill hole". A
piece was broken out of the bottom of the pot. It is
postulated that this might have been to release the soul
of the deceased. Approximately
10,000 ceramic bowls have been unearthed and easily that
many remain buried in hundreds of small ruins located
where ever water was regularly found.
Apaches, Pioneers
and Ranching...
It
has only been 114 years since the Apache Chief
Geronimo's surrender permitted miners and homesteaders
to explore and settle the Gila-Bear Creek region without
fear of Indian attack. Geronimo, Cochise, Mangus
Coloradas, and Victorio knew Bear Creek, the Gila River
and the Gila Wilderness well. The countless side canyons
and adjoining peaks provided a vast natural safe haven
during their People's fight. The roughness of the land
probably contributed to the Apache cultural stability,
keeping the push of newcomers to a minimum.
Geronimo:
Born: 1829 or 1834 in
the region of Janos River in Mexico
Died: February 17, 1909 at Fort Sill, Oklahoma
A
Mimbreno Apache Indian known as Goyathlay, Geronimo
revenged the killing of his family by the Mexicans. This
started a long trail of blood and made famous the
warning cry Geronimo is on the war path
Geronimo was a Apache
Indian warrior who followed Mangas Colorado and
Cochise with raiding parties. During the Apache
Indian wars, Geronimo became a leader of the Chiricahua
Apache Indians
Geronimo fled the
reservation with his Apache Indian war party on numerous
occasions. In his absence from the reservation
Geronimo carried on his personal guerilla warfare
against the white settlers with a small war party of
Chiricahua Apache Indians. Geronimo was worn down by
the Cavalry after years of skillful fighting. The
Surrender of Geronimo regretfully took place in 1886
Soon to experience a
fate worse than death to a Chiricahua Apache Indian,
Geronimo was cruelly transported to Florida as a
prisoner of war. In 1894 Geronimo and his band of
Chiricahua Apache Indians were moved to Fort Sill,
Oklahoma. Geronimo remained a conquered prisoner of
war deprived of freedom and the meaning of life till
his death
Homesteaders and
ranchers eventually moved into the Gila Valley near the
turn of the century and the area was opened for
exploration and settlement. In the late 1990s, the
Ranch was acquired by Alan and Debbie Eggleston, your
hosts for the Gila Wilderness Nature Ride.
Join us
at Double E Guest Ranch and let us lead you on a
nature-focused horseback riding adventure your senses
will not soon forget. You're offered a rare
opportunity to visit an extraordinary place in time. |