Hunjiang District, Baishan, Jilin.

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Hunjiang District, Baishan, Jilin.
Ruggie: There was an error in the paperwork.
Chef!Yuu: What do you mean?
Ruggie: The kit we are supposed to take home. It the file said she was 3 but she's actually 8.
Chef!Yuu: We aren't prepared for an 8-year-old. We'll have to get new clothes ready and get her a big girl bed. She'll be twice as old as Baishan. That's exciting.
Ruggie: It may take her longer to adjust. We'll have to meet her soon.
Chef!Yuu: What food do you think she'll like? I hope she wants to cook with us.
Ruggie: I hope she'll help out in the restaurant. She's old enough to be a server right? I could use the extra hands. Speaking of cooking where is Baishan?
Baishan: *digging up roots and picking berries outside*
Would you rather visit
Jabal Abyad, Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦
White Mountain, Alaska 🇺🇸
Baishan, China 🇨🇳
Montaña Blanca, Canary Islands 🇮🇨
Belaya Gora, Russia 🇷🇺
Weißenberg, Germany 🇩🇪
Nosey; San Carlos Apache scout
The nighttime walk along Daxitai River, at the foot of Changbai Mountain, in Jilin Province, just bordering Northern North Korea.
Domingo; Mescalero Apache
~
Circa 1885
Chief Baishan, circa 1846
Baishan, son of the famed Chief Fuerte, also known as Soldato Fiero, was a most respected war leader among the Tchihende bands along almost three decades from the beginning of 1830s, and the principal chief the Warm Springs local group of the Tchihende (Mimbreño) Apaches after Fuerte's death in 1837 near Janos; he was also the second principal chief of the whole Tchihende Apaches after his long-time companion (and possibly brother-in-law) Mangas Coloradas, chief of the Coppermine local group of the same Tchihende Apaches. His name was translated by the Mexicans as Cuchillo or Cuchillo Negro, because of the Apache practice of blackening their weapons to make them less conspicuous. About 1835, Fuerte, chief of the Warmspring Mimbreño Apache, was killed near Santa Rita del Cobre by Mexican troops belonging to the garrison of Janos, but Juan José Compa, the old leader of the Coppermine Mimbreño Apaches who was friendly to the Mexicans, rejected Baishan's request of help to assault and destroy Santa Rita; Baishan led a bloody raid to Sonora. After Juan José Compa too was killed for bounty money in 1837 in the massacre at Santa Rita del Cobre, Baishan joined Mangas Coloradas in his revenge, the two chiefs operating a series of retaliatory raids against the Mexicans, killing and destroying all around the mining town and placing Santa Rita under siege, finally attacking the column of fleeing Mexicans and slaughtering a large number. In he was falsely claimed to have been killed by Mexican troops in the Oputo Mountains. In 1847, to revenge the Galeana massacre, Baishan called a council with the Tchihende (Mimbreño), Tsokanende (Chiricahua) and Ndendahe (Mogollon) chiefs. Late in that autumn he, Mangas Coloradas, and, probably, the Tsokanende leaders Miguel Narbona, Tapilà and Yrigollen went to raid Chihuahua with 200 warriors, occupying Ramos, near Janos, and killing most of the inhabitants. In 1848 Mangas Coloradas and Baishan with their Mimbreños, and Miguel Narbona and Yrigollen with their Chiricahuas, attacked Sonora, and on February 18 they burned Chinapa, killing or capturing many Mexicans. Baishan's name is mentioned in military and civilian records of treaties and other dealings with Apaches during the early years of U.S. jurisdiction over the New Mexico Territory. In 1851 the settlement at Santa Rita del Cobre of the U.S. delegation (with General J.R. Bartlett) in the Mexican-American Border Commission and the reopening of the Santa Rita del Cobre copper mines effected a meeting with the Anglo-American newcomers; and Baishan, just as Mangas Coloradas, Delgadito, Ponce, Coleto Amarillo and all the most important Tchihende and Ndendahe chiefs, had to face new problems. In June 1851 Mangas Coloradas, with Delgadito, Ponce and Coleto Amarillo, went to Santa Rita del Cobre to meet General Bartlett. The discussions went on until the Apaches no longer felt themselves disappointed and betrayed by the newcomers. Baishan, too, had to face some problems in connection with some young Mexican boys who had been adopted into his band. In 1853, along with Ponce, Delgadito and Victorio, he signed a treaty in Fort Webster with Indian agent Edward H. Wingfield, who had been sent by the governor of the New Mexico Territory, William Carr Lane.