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・ John Davison
・ John Davison (clergyman)
・ John Davison (composer)
・ John Davison (cricketer)
・ John Davison (politician)
・ John Davison (theologian)
・ John Davoren
・ John Davoren (Australian politician)
・ John Davy
・ John Davy (chemist)
・ John Davy (cricketer)
・ John Davy (journalist)
・ John Davy Hayward
・ John Davys
・ John Davys (died 1689)
John Daw
・ John Dawes
・ John Dawes (disambiguation)
・ John Dawkins
・ John Dawkins (South Australian politician)
・ John Dawnay
・ John Dawnay (MP)
・ John Dawnay, 1st Viscount Downe
・ John Dawnay, 4th Viscount Downe
・ John Dawnay, 5th Viscount Downe
・ John Dawney
・ John Dawson
・ John Dawson (Australian politician)
・ John Dawson (musician)
・ John Dawson (surgeon)


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John Daw : ウィキペディア英語版
John Daw

John Daw (1870 – 1965) was the last surviving U.S. Army Indian Scout veteran that had served in the Indian Wars. He was a Navajo Indian given the Navajo name at birth. His parents, grandparents, as well as other close relatives were part of the Long Walk of the Navajo to Fort Sumner, and were confined with the other Navajo at Fort Sumner in the 1860s.
He enlisted in the U.S. Army on May 7, 1891, with the name John Daw. He was assigned to the U.S. Army 2nd Cavalry, which was posted at Fort Wingate in the New Mexico Territory. After being issued uniforms, guns, ammunition, and horses, he felt the cavalry soldiers' training was very thorough. He stated that the target practice and other military training was continued until they were very highly trained soldiers.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Indian Wars Remembrances )〕 He worked as a tracker, specifically looking for Apache Indians, and he served in this capacity until he left the service on December 5, 1894.
In the last years of his life he lived in a hogan with his wife at the Red Lake Trading Post near Tonalea, Arizona on Navajo Nation land. At that time, he was a sheep herder, drove his own wagon, and claimed he could hear an approaching automobile from 10 miles away, although his eyesight was no longer good.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Indian Wars Remembrances )〕 His wife Susie's eyesight was good, but her hearing was poor.
He died in 1965, and he was buried on Navajo Nation land in Coconino County, Arizona. His grave site is in Red Lake, and it is listed as a historic grave site in the county. There is also a mountain summit named after him called John Daw Mesa, which is located just east of Red Lake.
==See also==

*Last surviving United States war veterans
*Frederick Fraske

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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