Bud Shapard is retired as Chief of the Branch of Acknowledgment and Research in the Bureau of Indian Affairs. During his career he assisted more than 120 Indian tribes and conducted research on the history of the Chiricahua Apache and Tonto Apache Indians.
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Description
"Shapard's balanced use of archival sources, secondary sources, and extensive interviews with well-known Apaches like Wendell Chino and Ronnie Lupe, along with his invaluable interviews with Chief Loco's own descendents, including Moses Loco, Norman Loco, and Raymond Loco, make his book a valuable source of information about this critically important Chiricahua leader and his role in a tempestuous period in Apache, New Mexican, and U.S. history. Shapard's study will prove useful to historians, ethnographers, and Native American scholars alike, providing them with a readable and comprehensive picture of the man and his period in a single volume."--Indigenous Peoples Issues and Resources