"I am a full-blooded Apache Indian, born around the year 1866... somewhere near
Four Peaks,
Arizona Territory", wrote Dr. Montezuma, introducing himself in a letter written in 1905 to the
Smithsonian Institution. His father, Cocuyevah, was a chief, and his mother was Thilgeya. In October 1871, at the age of five, he and other children were captured by
Akimel O'odham raiders and enslaved. Wassaja was brought to
Adamsville, a mixed Anglo and Mexican village, and offered for 30 silver dollars to itinerant Italian photographer Carlo Gentile, who happened to be in the area for his ethnographic work on Native Americans. Gentile, an educated man from
Naples who had moved to America in the 1850s, adopted Wassaja as his own son and renamed him "Carlos Montezuma" as an enduring and proud reminder of the child's cultural heritage, partly after himself, partly from the
Montezuma Ruins near Adamsville. In the following years, Wassaja accompanied his adoptive father in his pioneering photographic and ethnographic expeditions in Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado. For a few months in 1872 and 1873, they joined the theatrical troupe of Ned Buntline and Buffalo Bill, where the boy Wassaja was featured as Azteka, the
Apache-child of Cochise in the Wild West melodrama
The Scouts of the Prairie in cities such as Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Cleveland and Pittsburgh, while Gentile produced and sold promotional
cartes de visite of the cast members. Gentile and Montezuma resided in Chicago and then New York for some years until the loss of all his belongings in a fire in 1877 forced Gentile back to his itinerant life and on to Chicago. Being regularly homeschooled by Gentile and attending public schools in Chicago (1872–1875), Galesburg (1875–1877), and Brooklyn (1877–1878), Wassaja had been revealed to be a committed and talented student. Realizing that he needed a more permanent setting to complete his education, in the fall of 1878 Gentile asked for the assistance of the Reverend George W. Ingalls of the Indian Department of the
American Baptist Home Mission Society. Wassaja was placed in the care of Baptist minister William H. Steadman, of Urbana, Illinois, while Gentile was busy reviving his business as a photographer and editor in Chicago. == Education ==