On December 28, 1872, Crook's men encountered the
Yavapai stronghold at
Skeleton Cave, located in the
Salt River Canyon northeast of present-day
Phoenix, Arizona. Crook's force was composed of 130 troopers from the
5th Cavalry Regiment led by
Captain William H. Brown and another thirty
Apache scouts. The army took up a position around the mouth of Skeleton Cave and surprised a Yavapai band when they were dancing in celebration over a recent raid. Surrounding the cave, the soldiers opened fire. Some of Brown's men aimed for the roof of the cave, as the Yavapai band refused to surrender. Others, who were personally accompanied by Crook, rolled rocks and boulders down from the cliffs above. One warrior escaped the last volley by crawling on his belly. Realizing that he got out of the cave safely, he jumped on a large stone and let out a war cry, while firing at the soldiers' position. He was shot by a soldier from approx. 800 yards away, hitting the warrior in the chest and killing him. About 75 dead were found in the cave, including a number of women and children. No warriors survived the massacre. The women and children survivors were captured and taken to
Camp Grant. Among the dead within the cave was
Chief Nanni-chaddi, who had said that no soldier would ever find his stronghold there. This stronghold was only known to the Yavapai and
Tonto Apache. Apache scouts led the Army to the stronghold, betraying their own people. Crook followed up this massacre, with another at
Turret Peak several weeks later, both considered victories by the Government. The Yavapais soon made peace at
Camp Verde in 1873 though some skirmishing continued into 1875. ==References==