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Geronimo (exclamation)
Geronimo (exclamation)
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Geronimo is a United States Army airborne exclamation occasionally used by jumping paratroopers or, more generally, anyone about to jump from a great height, or as a general exclamation of exhilaration. The cry originated in the United States.

Origins

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At least two different explanations place the origins of the exclamation in Fort Benning, Georgia, where some of the first of the US Army's parachute jumps occurred in the 1940s.

According to paratrooper Gerard Devlin, this exclamation dates from August 1940 and is attributed to Private First Class Aubrey Eberhardt, member of parachute test platoon at Fort Benning. The parachute had only recently been adopted for troop drops, and this platoon was the first to test it. On the eve of their first jump, the platoon decided to calm their nerves by spending the day before taking in a film at the Main Post Theatre and a night at the local beer garden. The film they saw was a Western featuring the Native American Geronimo. Its title is uncertain, but it was probably the 1939 film Geronimo with Andy Devine and Lone Ranger star Chief Thundercloud in the title role. On the way back to barracks, Eberhardt's comrades taunted him saying that he would be too scared to remember his name. Eberhardt retorted, "All right, dammit! I tell you jokers what I'm gonna do! To prove to you that I'm not scared out of my wits when I jump, I'm gonna yell Geronimo loud as hell when I go out that door tomorrow!" Eberhardt kept his promise, and the cry was gradually adopted by the other members of his platoon.[1]

In his book Beyond Band of Brothers: The War Memoirs of Major Richard Winters, Winters offers a different explanation: The 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment at Fort Benning was due to go on the first jump. At the time there was a popular song called "Geronimo" on the radio, which quickly became a favorite amongst the troops. The cry became known to the commanding officer who insisted they would instead jump out and cry "Currahee", the name of a mountain at Camp Toccoa, their first training camp. The paratroopers had run up and down the mountain frequently during training, the run known to the troops as "3 miles up, 3 miles down".

There is also a third explanation. Medicine Bluffs at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, where Geronimo was jailed as prisoner of war and his grave is located, are steep cliffs and have come to be known as Geronimo's Bluff.[2][3] Tall tales were told about Geronimo while at Fort Sill. It was said that one day Geronimo, with the Army in hot pursuit, made a leap on horseback down an almost vertical cliff, a feat that the posse could not duplicate. The legend continues that in the midst of this jump to freedom he gave out the bloodcurdling cry of "Geronimo-o-o!"[4][5] when in reality the source of the tale is expected to have come from a famous incident called McColloch’s Leap.

Response

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501st Parachute Infantry Regiment Distinctive Unit Insignia
World War II pocket patch and beret flash of the 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment

Initially, the top brass were wary of the cry, claiming that it constituted a lack of discipline. Others said that it showed bravery and should be encouraged. Eventually the latter view won out, and when the Army's paratrooper regiment grew, the cry grew with it. In the early 1940s, the Army's 501st and 509th Parachute Infantry Regiments incorporated the name "Geronimo" into its insignias, with the permission of Geronimo's descendants.[6][7][8] By then, the coverage of the paratroopers' exploits during World War II had made the cry "Geronimo" known to the wider public, and its use spread outside the military and U.S. Army.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
"" is an exclamation shouted by paratroopers as they leap from aircraft during airborne operations, symbolizing resolve and tradition in military jumps. The phrase originated in August 1940 at Fort Benning, Georgia, when Aubrey Eberhardt of the U.S. Army's test yelled "" throughout his descent from a training jump, having been inspired by the 1939 film Geronimo starring and challenged by comrades doubting his fearlessness. Eberhardt's bold utterance, repeated from exit to landing, quickly spread among fellow paratroopers in the nascent airborne units, becoming a standardized cry by deployments despite no historical tie to the leader himself, whose name was popularized in the movie as a defiant war whoop. Over time, the exclamation extended beyond military contexts to civilian activities involving heights, such as skydiving and amusement rides, though its core association remains with paratrooper heritage in units like the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion, nicknamed the "Geronimos."

Historical Context of the Name

The Apache Leader

, born Goyahkla around June 1829 in No-Doyohn Canyon near the present-day Arizona-New Mexico border, belonged to the Bedonkohe band of the tribe. As a young man, he participated in traditional raids into and Chihuahua, , targeting settlements for livestock and goods, a practice rooted in intertribal and cross-border resource competition. In March 1858, Mexican troops under Colonel José María Carrasco massacred his family—including his wife Alope, mother, and three young children—during an attack on an Apache encampment near Janos, Chihuahua, an event that prompted 's shift toward sustained retaliatory warfare against Mexican forces. From the late 1850s through the 1870s, led cross-border raids that inflicted casualties on Mexican civilians and military personnel, escalating tensions amid Mexico's bounties on scalps and U.S. territorial expansion into lands. After U.S. forces confined Apaches to reservations under the 1871 San Carlos agreement, repeatedly evaded confinement, escaping in 1876 (recaptured 1877), 1881, and 1884, often fleeing to Mexico's Sierra Madre with small bands to continue guerrilla operations that killed American settlers, miners, and soldiers. His 1885 breakout on May 17, involving about 135 Apaches under leaders like , triggered a final campaign marked by hit-and-run attacks across , , and . U.S. Army reports from the era, including those by General , document Geronimo's tactical audacity, such as leading charges against outnumbered forces and evading pursuits by forces exceeding 5,000 troops through superior mobility in rugged terrain. Apache oral accounts, preserved in later ethnographies, similarly depict him invoking spiritual protection in battle, charging foes despite risks, though these narratives also highlight pragmatic decisions like temporary surrenders when logistics faltered. His campaigns resulted in documented civilian deaths, including ranchers and travelers, underscoring the reciprocal violence of frontier conflicts rather than unilateral aggression. Geronimo's final surrender occurred on September 4, 1886, to General Nelson Miles in Skeleton Canyon, Arizona, ending major resistance after 30 years of intermittent warfare.

Symbolism of Bravery in Geronimo's Legacy

Geronimo's reputation as a symbol of bravery emerged from U.S. military encounters in the , where he was depicted as an elusive and audacious leader who prolonged resistance against numerically superior forces for over a decade. General , commanding the campaign that culminated in Geronimo's surrender on September 4, 1886, described him in official reports as employing "bold and cunning" strategies that frustrated conventional pursuits, relying on intimate knowledge of rugged terrain to evade 5,000 troops over 1,500 miles of pursuit. This portrayal, echoed in contemporaneous accounts, highlighted his tactical ingenuity in rather than sheer force, fostering an image of defiant resilience amid inevitable defeat. Central to Geronimo's mythic bravery is the unverified legend that he shouted his own name as a while charging enemies, a notion absent from primary Apache or U.S. records of the period. Such anecdotes, popularized in post-campaign narratives, likely arose from misattributions of troops' invocations of San Jerónimo—the saint after whom Geronimo's name was anglicized during raids—rather than of vocalizations. Historians assessing original dispatches and oral traditions find no corroboration for personalized war whoops, attributing the persistence of this tale to romanticized adaptations that amplified his fearsome aura without literal basis. This distilled legacy of —as an of under existential threat—transcended his specific raids, embodying the psychological mastery of in scenarios demanding bold action against odds. In U.S. , his elusiveness symbolized raw valor derived from necessity, where outnumbered fighters leveraged mobility and resolve, a dynamic observable in guerrilla operations irrespective of ethical valuations of the conflicts involved. Such causal framing prioritized observable human agency in high-risk adaptation over narrative glorification, distinguishing his emblematic role from isolated .

Origins of the Exclamation

The 1939 Film "Geronimo"

Geronimo is a 1939 American directed by Paul Sloane and produced by . The story follows U.S. Army efforts to capture the Geronimo, portrayed by , amid raids triggered by personal tragedy, complicated by a gunrunner arming the warriors and feuds among officers, including between General Steele and his son. appears as Sneezer, a comic-relief character, alongside as Captain Starrett, emphasizing military dynamics and frontier conflict. The film depicts leading bold charges and evasive maneuvers that underscore resilience against superior forces. A key sequence shows leaping from a cliff into a while shouting his name to escape pursuers, serving as a dramatic of defiant . These elements romanticize the leader's resistance, blending action with portrayals of warrior audacity in line with 1930s Western conventions that highlighted over nuanced historical accuracy. Though centered on Army pursuits hampered by internal strife, the movie's vivid scenes of high-stakes jumps and assaults captured immediate audience interest in spectacles of bravery, influencing perceptions of as a figure of unyielding resolve in .

Adoption by U.S. Paratroopers in 1940

During airborne training at Fort Benning, Georgia, members of the U.S. 's Parachute Test Platoon watched the 1939 film Geronimo on the evening before a mass training jump in 1940. Private Aubrey Eberhardt, a 6-foot-3-inch from Georgia, faced teasing from fellow paratroopers about his potential despite his size and toughness. To demonstrate his fearlessness, Eberhardt declared over beers that he would shout "Geronimo!"—the name of the leader portrayed in the film—upon exiting the aircraft. The following day, Eberhardt fulfilled his promise during the jump, yelling "!" audibly from exit to landing, which inspired many in the to adopt the cry on subsequent exits. This practice quickly spread within the unit, serving as a to bolster and reduce anxiety associated with high-altitude exits, fostering esprit de corps among the early . Accounts from paratrooper M. Devlin, who documented the event in his 1979 book Paratrooper!, and contemporary reports such as a May 1941 article on the 501st Parachute Battalion, confirm Eberhardt's role in initiating the tradition. The exclamation became emblematic of the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, appearing on early unit insignia and solidifying as a motivational tool tied to the perceived bravery of the . Senior officers later endorsed its use during demonstrations for dignitaries, embedding it in the platoon's culture before formal airborne regulations curtailed such vocalizations in favor of count procedures.

Military Usage and Tradition

World War II Airborne Operations

U.S. paratroopers employed the "Geronimo!" exclamation during World War II combat jumps, including the Normandy invasion on June 6, 1944, where members of the 101st Airborne Division shouted it upon exiting aircraft into scattered drops and enemy fire. The 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, part of the 101st, integrated "Geronimo" into its unit identity, as reflected in its patch, and participated in the operation's airborne assault amid approximately 2,500 casualties among the division's paratroopers. The tradition persisted in later operations like Market Garden, commencing September 17, 1944, where the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions executed large-scale drops to seize bridges, facing intense resistance and sustaining heavy losses, including over 3,000 U.S. airborne casualties. Veteran recollections, such as those from D-Day participants, portray the yell as a pre-jump ritual that instilled bravado and mitigated fear, with one paratrooper noting the collective cry of “Go, geronimo!” during the exit to affirm resolve. Empirical accounts from airborne veterans indicate the exclamation enhanced by channeling adrenaline without imposing tactical drawbacks, as no document it compromising jump discipline or operational effectiveness. Some units supplemented it with alternative shouts, such as "Bill Lee" honoring airborne commander William C. Lee, yet "Geronimo!" endured as a distinctive emblem of U.S. amid the era's grueling airborne campaigns. Post-operation media reports further disseminated the practice, embedding it in national perceptions of airborne valor.

Post-War Continuation in U.S. Military Culture

After World War II, the "Geronimo" exclamation persisted as an informal tradition among U.S. Army airborne forces, symbolizing courage during parachute jumps in training and combat operations. Airborne units, including those deployed in the Korean War's limited airdrops such as the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team's operation on October 19-20, 1950, at Sukchon-Sunchon, maintained the practice as part of paratrooper culture, though specific shouts are not documented in after-action reports. In the Vietnam War, regiments like the 501st , which conducted airborne assaults, continued associating the term with their identity, reinforcing its role in fostering and resolve. The 501st formally adopted "Geronimo" as its , institutionalizing the exclamation within the unit's heraldry and ceremonies, a tradition carried forward in assignments to divisions such as the 82nd Airborne. U.S. Army field manuals on airborne operations, such as FM 3-99, emphasize tactical procedures and morale enhancement through unit rituals but do not mandate specific exclamations like "," leaving it as a voluntary custom tied to historical airborne ethos rather than doctrine. This endurance is evident in modern routines of the , where paratroopers invoke the shout during jumps to evoke bravery, as seen in recent exercises like the 2023 operations by the . The term's symbolic value extended to operational nomenclature in the 2011 raid on , codenamed Operation Neptune Spear, where "Geronimo" designated the enemy kill (EKIA), drawing on its legacy of denoting audacious action against formidable foes. This usage underscored the military's pattern of employing historical figures' names for motivational resonance in high-stakes missions, without altering the paratrooper tradition's core function.

Expansion into Civilian Contexts

Adoption in Extreme Sports and Recreation

Following World War II, the exclamation "Geronimo!" entered civilian extreme sports through the influence of military veterans on emerging recreational parachuting communities, where it served as a ritualistic shout to summon before jumps. Sport skydiving, which gained popularity in the late 1940s and 1950s using surplus military gear, saw participants adopting the cry as a nod to heritage, with skydivers yelling it upon exiting to mark the thrill of freefall. The practice extended to other adrenaline activities like and , where leapers invoke "Geronimo!" for excitement rather than tactical purpose, as seen in footage and accounts from the 1980s onward when BASE jumping formalized. This cultural diffusion lacks evidence of impacting safety or performance outcomes, functioning instead as a symbolic expression of bravado in non-combat settings. In mid-20th-century , the exclamation "Geronimo!" was frequently employed to dramatize leaps or audacious maneuvers, broadening its connotation from military bravado to everyday exhilaration. shorts, produced by Warner Bros., integrated the shout into comedic sequences, such as Daffy Duck's cry during a chandelier swing escape in the 1943 cartoon Porky's Feat. Audio excerpts from the series further link it to parachute jumps, as in the line "Time to hit the old silk. Geronimo!" from archived Golden Collection material, parodying airborne rituals for humorous effect. Live-action television has sporadically featured the exclamation in adventure scenarios, often evoking thrill despite occasional historical inaccuracies. In the 2017 episode of The Durrells set in the 1930s, a character shouts "Geronimo!" while diving into water, referencing the phrase's post-1940s origins tied to paratrooper lore. Video games have perpetuated its role as a prompt for high-stakes descents, embedding it in mechanics simulating jumps or falls. Hitman 3 (2021) includes a "Geronimo" challenge in its Dubai level, tasking players with a skyscraper leap that nods to the term's adrenaline-fueled legacy. These interactive portrayals, alongside animated precedents, have reinforced "Geronimo!" as a universal cue for committing to perilous action, primarily disseminated through U.S.-centric media exports.

Controversies and Debates

Claims of Cultural Insensitivity

In May 2011, following media reports that U.S. military forces used "Geronimo" as a code name for during the operation that resulted in his death on May 2, several Native American organizations and leaders expressed outrage, viewing the choice as a disrespectful equation of the leader—a symbol of resistance against U.S. expansion—with a terrorist figure. The (NCAI) issued a statement condemning the usage, arguing it perpetuated harmful stereotypes and dishonored 's legacy as a who fought for his people's sovereignty, while also noting the sacrifices of Native American service members in U.S. wars. Similarly, President wrote to President requesting clarification and an apology, asserting that the association undermined 's status as a hero to many . Harlyn Geronimo, a great-grandson of the Apache leader, publicly criticized the code name on behalf of surviving , demanding a federal apology for what he described as an offensive linkage that ignored Geronimo's historical in defending lands against encroachment. These objections extended to broader military traditions invoking the name, including the paratrooper exclamation adopted during , with critics like Apache tribal members arguing that such uses trivialized the violent subjugation of Native nations and reduced a figure of Indigenous defiance to a casual or adversarial trope. Advocacy groups, including the NCAI, framed these practices within a pattern of cultural insensitivity in U.S. institutions, where Native symbols are often repurposed without regard for their origins in resistance to conquest. Critiques of the exclamation specifically as cultural appropriation have appeared in opinion pieces and activist commentary, positing that its enthusiastic adoption in airborne jumps and extreme activities diminishes the gravity of Apache struggles for amid 19th-century U.S. campaigns, though such claims largely echo the 2011 backlash rather than cite widespread empirical offense among Native populations. These objections, primarily from advocacy outlets and tribal leaders, highlight perceived colonial remnants in popular idioms but remain contested in scope, with no large-scale surveys documenting offense rates tied directly to the tradition.

Responses Defending the Tradition

Defenders of the tradition maintain that the "Geronimo" exclamation emerged from admiration for the chief's reputed fearlessness, not derision toward heritage. Accounts trace its adoption to U.S. paratroopers invoking Geronimo's legendary leaps from cliffs to evade pursuers, symbolizing the bold resolve required for airborne assaults. This usage parallels historical practices of drawing battle cries from adversaries' formidable traits to steel troops for combat, as seen in various cultures adopting enemy nomenclature for motivational purposes. Such interpretations emphasize the exclamation's role in perpetuating Geronimo's image as a of defiance and prowess, rather than diminishing his legacy. Native commentators have described it as a war cry akin to those used in perilous feats, underscoring heroism over insult—for example, in references to its employment during jumps into enemy territory. Empirical observation reveals no documented erosion of Apache cultural esteem attributable to the practice; Geronimo's prominence as a resistance figure has endured and amplified through such references, without correlating declines in tribal efforts or public historical regard. Critics of sensitivity claims highlight Geronimo's own campaigns, which involved raids killing over 100 non-combatants including settlers' families between and , positioning him as a strategic rather than an unalloyed innocent in narratives framing the as victimizing. In 2011 responses to analogous controversies, opinion pieces argued that prioritizing and expressive liberty outweighs subjective offense, as the cry salutes indigenous martial tenacity without causal links to cultural derogation. These defenses, often from outlets skeptical of institutional sensitivities, prioritize verifiable over unsubstantiated harm assertions, noting the ritual's 80-plus years of uninterrupted military observance absent protests from leadership.

References

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