Episode Details
Back to EpisodesCochise: The Apache Leader Who Refused to Be Captured by History
Description
In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life of Cochise, the principal leader of the Chokonen band of the Chiricahua Apache, whose name meant having the strength of an oak. The episode begins with a mystery: Cochise fought an eleven-year war across the American Southwest after being accused of a crime he did not commit, and when he died, he disappeared so completely that his grave remains unknown today. Born around 1805 in Chiricahua territory spanning present-day northern Sonora, New Mexico, and Arizona, Cochise grew up in a world shaped by Spanish, Mexican, and later American expansion. His early life was defined by fragile peace policies, colonial manipulation, raiding, and violent retaliation, including the death of his father at the hands of Mexican forces.
The episode also follows the turning point that shattered Cochise’s attempt at peace with the United States: the Bascom Affair of 1861. After a rancher’s cattle were stolen and a boy named Felix Ward was kidnapped, Lieutenant George Bascom wrongly blamed Cochise, even though a different Apache band was responsible. Invited to a supposed diplomatic meeting, Cochise was nearly arrested, cut his way out of the tent with a knife, and escaped under gunfire. That violation of trust led to hostage-taking, executions, and a war that devastated the Southwest. The discussion traces Cochise’s alliance with Mangas Coloradas, Apache guerrilla tactics, the Battle of Apache Pass, the betrayal and execution of Mangas under a flag of truce, and Cochise’s retreat into the Dragoon Mountains. Peace finally came only through the rare trust Cochise placed in Tom Jeffords, the one white American he considered a friend, who helped General Oliver O. Howard negotiate the 1872 treaty. Cochise died two years later, likely of abdominal cancer, and was buried in a hidden location known only to his people and Jeffords. No verified photograph of him exists, making his final act of sovereignty almost perfect: he denied history both his face and his grave.
Key topics covered:
• Cochise’s Chiricahua Apache homeland, Spanish policy, Mexican conflict, and family loss
• The Gálvez Peace Policy, dependency, raiding, and Cochise’s early leadership
• The Bascom Affair, “cut the tent,” false accusation, hostages, and the start of war
• Mangas Coloradas, guerrilla warfare, Apache Pass, howitzers, and broken truces
• Tom Jeffords, the 1872 peace treaty, Cochise Stronghold, hidden grave, and legacy
Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical and Indigenous history sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.