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While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!

 

 

 

Mescarlero Apache Indian History

    Mescaleros (Spanish: `mescal people,' from their custom of eating mescal). An Apache tribe which formed a part of the Faraones and Vaqueros of different periods of the Spanish history of the southwest. Their principal range was between the Rio Grande and the Pecos in New Mexico, but it extended also into the Staked plains and southward into Coahuila, Mexico.
      They were never regarded as so warlike as the Apache of Arizona, otherwise they were generally similar. Mooney (field notes, B. A. E., 1897) records the following divisions:
Nataina
Tuetinini
Tsihlinainde
Guhlkainde
Tahuunde
     These bands intermarry, and each had its chief and suhchief. The Guhlkainde are apparently identical with the "Cuelcajenne" of Orozco y Berra and others, who classed them as a division of the Llaneros; the "Natages" are probably the same as the Nataina rather than the Lipan or the Kiowa Apache, while the Tsihlinainde seem to be identifiable with the "Chilpaines." In addition Orozco y Berra gives the Lipillanes as a Llanero division.
     The Mescaleros are now on a reservation of 474,240 acres in southern New Mexico, set apart for them in 7873. Population 460 in 1905, including about a score of Lipan, q. v.

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Handbook of American Indians, 1906

 

Index of Tribes or Nations

 


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