Natives of Pensacola often refer to "The curse of Geronimo" when explaining their simultaneously itinerant and vacuous feelings associated with residency. Many locals express an almost unnatural and essentially random craving to flee this area, only to find that they will almost always return. In Pensacola, it seems the need to exodus is exceeded only by the lure of return. When Geronimo was held captive here, he was said to have "cursed the land of Pensacola." The accepted interpretation of the curse is that once you come to Pensacola, you will be driven to leave, and compelled to always return.
Geronimo died at Fort Sill OK. in1909
Pensacola. Ft. Pickens
Geronimo, the famous Apache leader, was held as a prisoner of war by the U.S. government after his surrender in 1886. He arrived in Pensacola, Florida, in 1898 when he and other Apache prisoners were sent to the area for a brief period. Geronimo was later released and became a prominent figure in American history, symbolizing Native American resistance.
Geronimo Stilton saves someone from a gigantic cat in the book titled "The Curse of the Cheese Pyramid." This adventurous tale is part of the Geronimo Stilton series, where the characters navigate thrilling escapades with humor and bravery.
113 pages
roughly 900 miles
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the battle of Pensacola was held in Pensacola, Florida
They were incarcerated froom 1886 to 1887 at Fort Pickens in Pensacola, Florida after formally surrendering to General Miles on 4 September 1886 at Skeleton Canyon, Arizona.
Because it has a guardian from tutankhamun a god protecting his land
Geronimo was an apache Indian.