Manuelito
Manuelito (c. 1818–1893), known in Navajo as Hastiin Chʼil Haajiní or Hashkeh Naabaah ("Angry Warrior"), was a principal war chief of the Diné (Navajo) people who led raids and military resistance against Mexican settlers, rival tribes, and later United States forces encroaching on Navajo territory in the mid-19th century.[1][2] Born near Bears Ears Peak in southeastern Utah to the Bít'aa'níí (Folded Arms People) clan, he emerged as a warrior in the 1830s, participating in attacks on Mexican, Hopi, Zuni, Ute, Comanche, and Apache groups, and allying with Chief Narbona, whose daughter he married.[1][2] During the Navajo Wars (1849–1866), Manuelito opposed American expansion following the 1846 Bear Springs Treaty, leading assaults such as the 1860 attack on Fort Defiance with 1,000 warriors and sustaining guerrilla operations against Kit Carson's scorched-earth campaign that aimed to force Navajo relocation.[1][2] He was among the final holdouts, refusing the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo until surrendering in autumn 1866 due to starvation, after which his people endured internment until the 1868 treaty allowed their return to ancestral lands.[1][2] In the post-reservation era, Manuelito served as head chief and tribal police leader, meeting President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington, D.C., and advocating for Navajo children to attend American schools to foster adaptation while defending tribal interests, until his death from measles and pneumonia at age 75.[1][2]Early Life and Background
Birth and Clan Affiliation
Manuelito was born around 1818 near Bears Ears Peak in southeastern Utah.[1][3] This region, part of traditional Navajo territory, featured rugged landscapes conducive to the pastoral and raiding economy of the Diné (Navajo people).[1] In Navajo tradition, clan membership is matrilineal, inherited from the mother, which determines social identity, marriage prohibitions, and kinship networks.[4] Manuelito belonged to the Bit'ahnii (Folded Arms People) clan through his mother.[1][5] This clan affiliation placed him within a group known for resilience and leadership roles among the Navajo, influencing his early upbringing and later status as a headman.[5] His father, Cayetano (or Tall Leader), was also a recognized Navajo figure resistant to Mexican incursions, providing familial ties to warrior traditions.[1] Some accounts suggest a paternal link to the Hashk'aa (Yucca Fruit) clan, but primary affiliation remains Bit'ahnii.[6]Family Origins and Upbringing
Manuelito was born circa 1818 near Bears Ears in southeastern Utah to the Bit'ahnii (Folded Arms People) clan, following Navajo matrilineal tradition where clan affiliation derives from the mother's side.[1][7] His father, Cayetano, was a prominent Navajo leader noted for resisting Mexican and early American incursions into Navajo territory.[1][7] Specific details on his mother remain undocumented in primary historical records, though family lore preserved by descendants emphasizes a lineage of leadership, with his father reportedly holding him aloft at birth in a ritual blessing for future prominence.[8] Raised in the Bears Ears region and later the Teec Nos Pos area near the Four Corners, Manuelito grew up immersed in traditional Navajo pastoralism, herding sheep and goats while learning warrior skills amid ongoing intertribal conflicts and raids.[9] As a youth, known then as Holy Boy or Hastiin Ch'il Haajiní ("Black Weeds"), he participated in an ambush against Pueblo adversaries, earning early recognition for martial prowess that foreshadowed his rise as a war chief.[7] This upbringing in a family of resistant leaders instilled values of autonomy and defense of Navajo lands, shaping his lifelong opposition to external domination.[1]Rise as War Chief
Early Raids on Settlements
Manuelito emerged as a warrior in the 1830s, engaging in raids against Mexican settlements in New Mexico Territory as part of the Navajo practice of acquiring livestock, including sheep and horses, to sustain their pastoral economy amid ongoing territorial disputes.[10] These operations targeted villages and ranchos, reflecting a cycle of raiding and counter-raiding that had persisted since Spanish colonial times, with Navajos seeking to replenish herds diminished by disease, drought, and retaliatory Mexican expeditions.[11] A pivotal early action came in 1835 at Narbona Pass in present-day New Mexico, where Manuelito, then a young fighter, joined Navajo forces in repelling an incursion by roughly 1,000 Mexican troops and settlers intent on punishing Navajo raids; the Navajos inflicted heavy casualties, securing victory and earning Manuelito the name Hashkeh Naabaah ("Angry Warrior") for his ferocity.[1] This defensive success bolstered his standing, transitioning him toward leading offensive expeditions in the ensuing years.[1] By the mid-1840s, following the Mexican-American War and U.S. annexation of the region in 1848, Manuelito directed small war parties against remaining Mexican-American holdings and Pueblo communities, coordinating with leaders such as Ganado Mucho to strike remote settlements for captives and goods, thereby establishing his reputation as a capable tactician in the Navajo-U.S. frontier conflicts.[1] Such raids, typically involving 20-50 warriors using speed and terrain knowledge, yielded livestock but escalated tensions, prompting U.S. military responses by the late 1840s.[12]Emergence in Navajo Leadership
Manuelito's emergence as a Navajo war chief began with his participation in defensive battles against Mexican incursions in the 1830s. In 1835, at approximately age 17, he fought in the Battle of Narbona Pass (also known as Washington Pass), where Navajo forces led by Chief Narbona repelled an attack by around 1,000 Mexican troops from New Mexico, resulting in significant Navajo casualties but ultimate victory. This engagement marked his first major combat experience and earned him the epithet Hashkeh Naabaah ("Angry Warrior") for his ferocity.[1][13] His status rose further through a strategic marriage around 1836 to Juanita, daughter of Narbona, a prominent Navajo headman whose band operated near the Chuska Mountains. This alliance integrated Manuelito into a respected leadership lineage and provided a platform for commanding warriors. Following Narbona's killing by U.S. soldiers in 1849 during a peace parley, Manuelito assumed headmanship of the band, leveraging his growing reputation from repeated raids on Mexican villages, Hopi, and Zuni communities throughout the decade. Standing over six feet tall, he cultivated a persona of unrelenting resolve, leading small parties that captured livestock and goods essential to the Navajo raiding economy.[1][14][10] By the late 1840s, Manuelito's prowess had elevated him to one of the Navajo's principal war leaders, as evidenced by his role among the 14 chiefs signing the Bear Springs Treaty with U.S. officials on November 22, 1846, which aimed to curb raids but was soon violated amid escalating tensions post-Mexican-American War. He allied with other emerging figures like Ganado Mucho and Barboncito, coordinating larger operations against American settlers after 1848. This period solidified his influence in a decentralized Navajo society, where leadership derived from martial success rather than hereditary title alone, positioning him to direct resistance as U.S. military presence intensified.[1][10]Navajo-U.S. Conflicts
Initial Clashes and Raiding Economy
The Navajo economy in the early 19th century relied heavily on pastoralism supplemented by raiding expeditions targeting Mexican settlements, Pueblo villages, and other indigenous groups for livestock, captives, and material goods, which served both economic sustenance and social status enhancement.[11] These raids, often conducted by organized war parties, were not primarily destructive but aimed at acquisition, with captives integrated as laborers or traded, fostering a cycle of retaliation that solidified Navajo influence in the region prior to extensive U.S. involvement.[11] Manuelito, emerging as a war leader in the 1830s, participated in such raids, including a 1835 battle at Narbona Pass against approximately 1,000 Mexican troops, where he earned recognition for his combat prowess.[1] Throughout the 1840s, he led parties alongside chiefs like Ganado Mucho and Barboncito against Mexicans, Hopi, Puebloans, Utes, Comanches, and Apaches, capturing horses and sheep that bolstered Navajo herds and wealth.[1] This raiding tradition persisted after the U.S. annexation of New Mexico in 1846, despite Manuelito's participation in the Bear Springs Treaty that November, as Navajo groups continued strikes on New Mexican settlers, prompting U.S. military responses including failed expeditions in the late 1840s and 1850s.[1][11] Initial direct clashes between Manuelito's band and U.S. forces escalated in 1858 near Fort Defiance, established in 1851 within Navajo territory, when soldiers demanded exclusive use of reserved Navajo pastures for hay production.[15] Manuelito refused to relocate his grazing livestock, leading troops to kill eight of his horses and 48 cattle, marking the first overt hostilities tied to his leadership and intensifying retaliatory raiding patterns. This incident highlighted the friction between Navajo economic reliance on mobile herding and U.S. fort-based encroachment, setting the stage for broader conflict as raids on American settlers increased amid mutual grievances.[15][11]Escalation in the 1850s-1860s
In the 1850s, U.S. military authorities constructed forts deep within Navajo territory to curb persistent raiding on Anglo-American and Hispanic settlements in New Mexico Territory, encroaching on traditional Navajo grazing lands and water sources. Fort Defiance was established on August 15, 1851, by Colonel Edwin V. Sumner near the present-day site of Window Rock, Arizona, serving as a base for operations against Navajo horse-raiding parties that targeted livestock and captives as part of the Navajo economy.[16][17] Additional posts, such as Fort Wingate (initially Fort Lyon) in 1851, further intensified territorial competition, as Navajo herds competed with U.S. government stock for forage amid recurring droughts.[18] Manuelito, emerging as a key war leader during this decade, directed numerous raids on outlying farms and wagon trains, amassing wealth in sheep, horses, and captives while evading early punitive expeditions like those in 1849 under Lieutenant Colonel John M. Washington, which failed to subdue Navajo resistance.[19][20] These actions reflected Navajo adaptation to Mexican-era raiding patterns but clashed with expanding U.S. settlement, prompting retaliatory strikes by soldiers who killed Navajo livestock, exacerbating food shortages. By the late 1850s, Manuelito's band, allied with other headmen, controlled significant eastern Navajo strongholds and rejected calls for peace councils that demanded land cessions.[21] Tensions peaked in early 1860 amid a severe drought, when U.S. troops at Fort Defiance slaughtered Navajo horses grazing near the post's hay fields, prompting Manuelito and Barboncito to lead an initial assault on the fort's supply camp in January.[22] The decisive escalation occurred on April 30, 1860, when approximately 1,000 warriors under Manuelito and Barboncito launched a pre-dawn attack on Fort Defiance itself, overrunning outer defenses, killing several soldiers, and capturing livestock before being repelled by howitzer fire and disciplined rifle volleys that inflicted heavy casualties.[23][17] This bold offensive, the largest direct assault on a U.S. fort by Navajo forces, demonstrated Manuelito's tactical coordination but highlighted the asymmetry of firepower, spurring U.S. commanders to authorize a major expedition later that year under Colonel Kit Carson's predecessor, which pursued scorched-earth tactics without decisive victory.[24]Kit Carson's Campaign and Resistance
In July 1863, Colonel Christopher "Kit" Carson, under orders from General James H. Carleton, initiated a military campaign against the Navajo to enforce surrender and relocation, employing a scorched-earth strategy that targeted their agricultural economy by destroying cornfields, orchards, and livestock herds numbering in the tens of thousands.[25][26] Carson established forward bases at Fort Canby (near present-day Fort Wingate, New Mexico) and advanced into Navajo territory from Fort Defiance, systematically burning hogans, slaughtering sheep and horses, and contaminating water sources to induce starvation among an estimated 9,000 to 12,000 resisting Navajo.[27][25] The campaign culminated in the January 1864 expedition into Canyon de Chelly, a Navajo stronghold in northeastern Arizona, where Carson's forces of about 370 men pursued fleeing bands, killing an estimated 200 Navajo and capturing livestock while facing minimal direct combat due to the terrain's defensiveness.[28] This action broke organized resistance for many, prompting surrenders at Fort Canby, but pockets of holdouts persisted, with Carson reporting the destruction of over 3,000 peach trees and vast crop fields by early 1864.[29][25] Manuelito, as a prominent war chief, actively resisted Carson's forces by leading mobile bands in guerrilla tactics, evading major engagements and continuing raids on settlements while protecting his followers from encirclement.[1] Unlike chiefs such as Barboncito who surrendered in early 1864, Manuelito refused terms, relocating his group—estimated at several hundred—to remote areas including Hopi lands, sustaining them through limited foraging and intermittent livestock captures amid the induced famine.[30] His defiance prolonged the conflict, as U.S. troops, supplemented by Ute and Hopi auxiliaries, failed to capture him during 1864-1865 pursuits.[1] By autumn 1866, starvation compelled Manuelito and 23 surviving followers to surrender at Fort Wingate on September 1, marking one of the final Navajo submissions after the campaign's broader success in depopulating Dinétah.[30][3] This resistance highlighted the limits of Carson's resource-denial approach against dispersed, adaptive leaders, though it ultimately yielded to unrelenting pressure, with Manuelito later negotiating from Bosque Redondo.[1]The Long Walk and Internment
Forced Relocation to Bosque Redondo
Manuelito's band persisted in resisting U.S. military efforts to enforce relocation even after the primary Long Walk marches of 1863–1864, which displaced thousands of Navajo to Bosque Redondo. Along with approximately 4,000 other Navajo, his group conducted guerrilla operations from strongholds in the mountains of western New Mexico during this period.[1] The relentless scorched-earth campaign led by Kit Carson, involving the destruction of crops, livestock, orchards, and water sources, progressively eroded the resisters' ability to sustain themselves. By late 1866, facing acute starvation, Manuelito and his followers surrendered to U.S. forces.[1][26][31] Following surrender, Manuelito's group was compelled to join the ongoing forced removals to the Bosque Redondo internment site near Fort Sumner, New Mexico Territory, under military guard. Although late in the process compared to the initial waves that covered 250–450 miles from northeastern Arizona, their trek from western New Mexico strongholds still entailed significant hardship over rugged terrain.[26][1] This policy of concentration, directed by Brigadier General James H. Carleton in 1863, sought to terminate Navajo raiding patterns and impose agricultural settlement, ultimately interning over 10,000 Navajo at Bosque Redondo by 1866 alongside several hundred Mescalero Apache. Manuelito's arrival integrated his band into this confined population, marking the effective end of organized resistance to the relocation mandate.[31][26]Conditions and Survival Strategies
The internment at Bosque Redondo, from 1864 to 1868, subjected approximately 8,500 to 9,000 Navajo to severe environmental and logistical hardships on unsuitable land along the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico. The sandy soil proved infertile for large-scale agriculture, while the river's alkaline and saline water contaminated supplies, exacerbating health issues. Rations, consisting primarily of cornmeal, white flour, coffee beans, and often spoiled beef, were insufficient and culturally unfamiliar, leading to widespread malnutrition and diseases such as scurvy from vitamin deficiencies.[32][33][34] Harsh weather compounded the suffering: bitterly cold winters lacked timber for fuel, forcing internees into inadequate shelters like earthen pits, mud huts, or tents, resulting in exposure-related illnesses including pneumonia and dysentery. A smallpox-like epidemic originating from military personnel further decimated the population, with high infant mortality rates reflecting overall vulnerability. An estimated 2,000 to 2,500 Navajo perished during the internment due to these factors, representing roughly one in four internees, many buried in unmarked graves.[32][33][34] Navajo survival drew on a multifaceted approach of cooperation, resistance, and initiative, as analyzed by historian Katherine M. B. Osburn. Cooperative efforts included communal labor on irrigation ditches and small-scale farming, alongside learning trades such as blacksmithing to secure resources from military overseers. Resistance manifested in food theft and the production of approximately 3,000 fraudulent ration coupons to supplement meager allotments.[34][35] Initiative encompassed spiritual resilience through ceremonies and prayers to maintain cultural cohesion, as well as practical adaptations like weaving for barter and women's occasional resort to prostitution for sustenance. Escapes provided another outlet, with nearly 1,000 Navajo fleeing the camp, though recapture rates were high; these actions paralleled the successful 1865 breakout of about 350 Mescalero Apache. Such strategies, combined with persistent negotiations by leaders like Barboncito, underscored a refusal to fully assimilate into imposed American practices like intensive farming or Christianity, preserving communal identity amid duress.[34][33][32]Surrender Negotiations
Manuelito, having evaded capture during Kit Carson's scorched-earth campaign of 1863–1864, continued guerrilla-style resistance in the Chuska Mountains with a small band of followers, sustaining themselves through raids on U.S. supply lines and limited agriculture.[1] By mid-1866, however, the systematic destruction of Navajo crops, livestock, and water sources had depleted resources across the region, leaving Manuelito's group facing imminent starvation amid harsh winter conditions.[31] U.S. military reports from Fort Wingate documented ongoing reconnaissance efforts to locate remaining holdouts, pressuring them through encirclement rather than direct assault.[1] On September 1, 1866, Manuelito and approximately 23 surviving followers formally surrendered to U.S. forces at Fort Wingate, New Mexico Territory, marking the effective end of organized Navajo resistance.[3] This capitulation followed no prolonged diplomatic parleys but was driven by survival imperatives, as Manuelito's band could no longer procure food or evade patrols; contemporary accounts describe it as a pragmatic submission to avoid total annihilation, with U.S. officers providing minimal rations upon arrival.[21] Unlike earlier surrenders by leaders like Barboncito, who had briefly escaped internment in 1865 before rejoining holdouts, Manuelito's action closed the final chapter of the Navajo Wars' active phase, compelling the group to join over 8,000 interned Navajo already at Bosque Redondo.[31] The surrender terms were unilateral, offering no concessions beyond transport to the reservation and basic subsistence, reflecting U.S. policy under General James H. Carleton to enforce concentration regardless of negotiation.[1] Manuelito's compliance, while reluctant, preserved a core of leadership for future advocacy, as he later participated in the 1868 treaty talks at Bosque Redondo that enabled repatriation.[21] This event underscored the asymmetry in the conflict, where Navajo persistence yielded to logistical exhaustion rather than battlefield defeat.[31]Post-Release Leadership
Treaty of 1868 and Return to Dinétah
The Treaty of 1868, formally signed on June 1, 1868, at Fort Sumner (Bosque Redondo), New Mexico Territory, between U.S. commissioners Lieutenant General William T. Sherman and Colonel Samuel F. Tappan and Navajo representatives including Barboncito, concluded the Navajo internment and established a reservation of approximately 3.5 million acres in the traditional Dinétah homeland, bounded by the Navajo people's four sacred mountains: Sisnaajiní (Blanca Peak) to the east, Tsoodził (Mount Taylor) to the south, Dookʼoʼo sludge (San Francisco Peaks) to the west, and Dibé Ntsaa (Hesperus Peak) to the north.[36][37] The agreement pledged perpetual peace, required the Navajo to cease hostilities against the United States and its citizens, permitted U.S. agents and schools on the reservation, and obligated the federal government to supply 30,000 sheep and goats, agricultural tools, seeds, and annual provisions including clothing and subsistence for three years to facilitate self-sufficiency.[36][38] Manuelito, having surrendered with his band in September 1866 after prolonged resistance and joined the interned population at Bosque Redondo, participated in the negotiations alongside Barboncito and other headmen, advocating for return to ancestral lands despite initial skepticism toward U.S. promises; historical accounts note his presence and statements emphasizing resilience, such as "Life does not end. It goes on," reflecting pragmatic acceptance amid dire conditions.[32][38] Although not among the primary signatories—primarily Barboncito and 28 other headmen—Manuelito's influence as a holdout leader from the wars shaped the delegation's demands for sovereignty recognition and land restoration within Dinétah, provisions that preserved Navajo cultural continuity by rejecting full assimilation.[39][40] Ratified by the U.S. Senate on August 12, 1868, the treaty enabled the return of roughly 7,000 to 9,000 surviving Navajo beginning June 18, 1868, via a 300-mile journey northward; 56 wagons transported the elderly, ill, and children while most able-bodied individuals walked, arriving by late August at the designated reservation along the San Juan River and encompassing Canyon de Chelly, a site of prior resistance.[41][42] This relocation to Dinétah, distinct from the barren Pecos River confines of Bosque Redondo, allowed reestablishment of traditional farming, herding, and ceremonies, with Manuelito emerging as principal headman by 1870, guiding adaptation to reservation life while enforcing treaty terms against encroachments.[43][7] The treaty's land grant, later expanded, marked the Navajo as the only Indigenous nation to negotiate return from exile via federal agreement, underscoring causal failures of prior U.S. relocation policies evidenced by high mortality rates at Bosque Redondo (estimated 2,000-2,500 deaths from disease and starvation between 1864-1868).[42][44]Role as Principal Headman
Following ratification of the Treaty of 1868, which permitted the return of approximately 9,000 Navajo to a 3.5 million-acre reservation in their ancestral homeland, Manuelito emerged as the principal headman, guiding the tribe's transition to reservation life.[2] As one of the signatories to the treaty, he focused on stabilizing the community amid challenges like resource scarcity and cultural adaptation, emphasizing self-sufficiency through herding and limited agriculture supported by government-issued tools, seeds, and livestock.[9][45] In 1871, after the death of Barboncito, Manuelito was formally appointed head chief, consolidating his authority over tribal affairs.[1] The following year, in 1872, he was named commander of the inaugural Navajo police force, tasked with enforcing order, curbing internal theft, and preventing raids on non-Navajo settlements—a role that underscored his shift from wartime resistance to governance amid tensions with U.S. agents.[46] By 1876, Manuelito traveled to Washington, D.C., to confer with President Ulysses S. Grant on expanding reservation lands for grazing, reflecting his pragmatic diplomacy to secure resources for the growing herds central to Navajo economy.[2] Manuelito actively promoted Western education as a means of empowerment, urging Navajo children to attend schools established on the reservation and famously advising, "My grandchildren, education is a ladder. Tell our people to take it."[21] This advocacy aligned with treaty provisions for schooling but faced resistance from traditionalists; nonetheless, under his leadership, enrollment increased, though tragedies like his son's death at a Carlisle Indian School in the 1880s contributed to his later resignation amid personal grief and alcoholism.[9] His tenure as principal headman, lasting until the mid-1880s, marked a pivotal era of reluctant accommodation to U.S. policies while preserving Navajo autonomy and cultural resilience.Advocacy for Education and Adaptation
In the post-resettlement era after the 1868 Treaty of Bosque Redondo, Manuelito promoted education as a pragmatic tool for Navajo adaptation to reservation constraints and U.S. oversight, emphasizing its role in fostering self-reliance amid enforced shifts from raiding and nomadic pastoralism to settled agriculture and wage labor. He supported the integration of Western schooling to equip the Diné with skills for treaty-mandated farming, literacy for legal dealings, and vocational training, recognizing that resistance alone could not sustain the population against superior American military and economic power.[47][7] Demonstrating personal resolve, Manuelito enrolled multiple children in early reservation and off-reservation boarding schools, such as those established under Bureau of Indian Affairs auspices starting in the 1870s, despite high mortality rates from infectious diseases like tuberculosis that claimed at least two of his sons. This reflected his calculated assessment that educational access outweighed isolationist alternatives, even as schools imposed cultural assimilation through English-only policies and manual labor programs focused on crop cultivation and animal husbandry.[48] On his deathbed in 1893, Manuelito reiterated education's instrumental value, directing relatives to inform the Navajo: "Go and tell the Navajo people that education is the ladder. We should send our kids to school despite what they (the white man) did to us." This directive underscored his causal view that climbing this "ladder" via adaptation—learning American agricultural techniques, governance structures, and negotiation tactics—offered the best path to preserving Diné sovereignty and averting further subjugation, a stance informed by four decades of direct conflict and diplomacy rather than abstract ideology.[49]Personal Life and Death
Marriages and Family Dynamics
Manuelito practiced polygyny in accordance with traditional Navajo customs, reportedly maintaining as many as eight wives at one time.[7] His most prominent wife was Juanita (c. 1845–1910), whom he married after capturing her during raids on Mexican settlements in the mid-19th century.[50] Born to a Mexican family but integrated into Navajo society, Juanita wed Manuelito as a teenager around the onset of the American Civil War and remained his partner through decades of conflict and relocation.[50][51] The couple's marriage exemplified the strategic alliances and absorptions common in Navajo raiding practices, where captives, including women, were often incorporated into households via marriage.[50] Juanita contributed to family stability and cultural continuity, notably through her weaving, with artifacts from her work preserved and repatriated to descendants in 2010.[52] Historical accounts highlight her role alongside Manuelito in post-internment negotiations and household management, underscoring women's centrality in Navajo family structures for economic and social resilience.[51][53] Manuelito and Juanita had multiple children, including at least one son photographed with the family and a blind daughter documented in early 20th-century images.[54] Family dynamics reflected matrilineal Navajo kinship, where maternal lines influenced inheritance and clan affiliations, though Manuelito's leadership extended paternal authority in wartime decisions affecting the household.[55] Descendants, such as historian Jennifer Nez Denetdale, trace their lineage through Juanita, preserving oral histories of the family's endurance amid U.S. encroachment.[56]Character Traits and Physical Description
Manuelito was noted for his imposing physical presence, standing over six feet tall and weighing approximately 200 pounds, which contributed to his reputation as a formidable warrior.[1][57] He typically dressed in traditional Navajo attire, including fringed deerskin clothing with silver buttons and his long black hair bound by a red woolen band.[57][58] As a leader, Manuelito exhibited determination and fearlessness, evident from his early participation in raids and battles, including his first fight at Narbona Pass in 1835 against Mexican forces.[1][21] He admired martial prowess, as seen in his respect for his father-in-law Narbona's bold stance, yet also internalized lessons on the value of peace alongside warfare.[1] This duality shaped his character, allowing him to rally Navajo resistance against U.S. military incursions while later engaging in diplomatic efforts for his people's survival.[21][58] Manuelito's traits included strategic acumen and resilience, as he led prolonged guerrilla campaigns against superior forces, sustaining Navajo autonomy until surrender in 1866.[10] Post-relocation, his adaptability emerged in advocating for education and selective integration of American practices, reflecting a pragmatic temperament amid adversity.[21] Historical accounts portray him as a "splendid fellow" capable of eloquent advocacy for peace when circumstances demanded, underscoring his versatility beyond mere belligerence.[58]