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Jumano Indian Tribe
In studying the history and the effect of the contact of the Southwestern
Indians with civilization, the writer was baffled by what appeared to be the
sudden and almost complete disappearance of a populous tribe which played a
rather prominent part in the history of the early exploration and colonization
of the Southwest, which occupied villages of a more or less permanent character,
and among whom missionaries labored in fruitless endeavor to show them the way
to Christianity. It is not usually difficult to account for the decimation or
even for the extinction of a tribe ravaged by war or by epidemics, of which
there are numerous instances; but of the Jumano Indians, of whom this paper
treats, there is no evidence that they were especially warlike in character,
that they had a greater number of enemies than the average tribe, or that they
had suffered unusually the inroads of disease.
The Jumano were first visited by Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca and his three
companions of the ill-fated Narvaez expedition, while making their marvelous
journey across Texas and Chihuahua in 1535. The name of the tribe is not given
by them: they are called merely the "Cow Nation"; but the relation of an
expedition nearly half a century later makes it evident that no other people
could have been meant. The narration of Cabeza de Vaca is so indefinite that
from it alone it would be difficult even to locate the place where the Jumano
were found; but the testimony, meager though it be, tends to indicate that in
1535, as in 1582, they lived on the Rio Grande about the junction of the Rio
Conchos and northward in the present state of Chihuahua, Mexico.
Page 4
The first Jumano seen by Cabeza de Vaca was a woman, a captive among an unknown
tribe, members of which were guiding the forlorn Spaniards across the desolate
and broken country toward the west in southwestern Texas. Reaching the Rio
Grande, Castillo and the Negro Estevanico, who had journeyed ahead, came to a
town at which the captive woman's father lived, "and these habitations were the
first seen, having the appearance and structure of houses." The inhabitants
subsisted on beans and squashes, and the Spaniards also had seen maize. Besides
food, the natives gave the white men buffalo-robes seemingly the first of their
sort mentioned in history. The Indians came in numbers and took the Spaniards
"to the settled habitations of others, who lived upon the same food." It may, I
think, be assumed that these other habitations were those of other Jumano,
although Cabeza de Vaca mentions that from the second settlement of houses
onward was another usage. "Those who knew of our approach, " he says, "did not
come out to receive us on the road as the others had done, but we found them in
their houses, and they had made others for our reception. They were all seated
with their faces turned to the wall, their heads down, the hair brought before
their eyes, and their property placed in a heap in the middle of the house. From
this place they began to give us many blankets of skin; and they had nothing
they did not bestow. They have the finest persons of any people we saw," he
continues, "of the greatest activity and strength, who best understood us and
intelligently answered our inquiries. We called them the Cow Nation, because
most of the cattle [buffalo] killed are slaughtered in their neighborhood,1 and
along up that river for more than fifty leagues they destroy great numbers."
The narrator continues: "They go entirely naked after the manner of the first we
saw.2 The women are dressed with deerskin, and some few men, mostly the aged,
who are
1 The neighborhood here referred to was
not the immediate vicinity, and the stream
alluded to was much more likely to have been
the Pecos than the Rio Grande, up which they
were now journeying, the former river having
been named "Rio de lac Vacas" by Espejo in
1583.
2 The rude Indians of the eastern coast of
Texas.
Page 5
incapable of fighting. The country is very
populous. We asked how it was they did not
plant maize. They answered it was that they
might not lose what they should put in the
ground; that the rains had failed for two
years in succession, and the seasons were so
dry the seed had every where been taken by
the moles, and they could not venture to
plant again until after water had fallen
copiously. They begged us to tell the sky to
rain, and to pray for it, and we said we
would do so. "
Seeking information regarding their route
westward, the Spaniards were told that "the
path was along up by that river [the Rio
Grande] towards the north, for otherwise in
a journey of seventeen days we could find
nothing to eat, except a fruit they call
chacan, that is ground between stones, and
even then it could with difficulty be eaten
for its dryness and pungency, which was
true. They showed it to us there, and we
could not eat it. They informed us also
that, whilst we traveled by the river
upward, we should all the way pass through
a. people that were their enemies, who spoke
their tongue, and, though they had nothing
to give us to eat, they would receive us
with the best good will, and present us with
mantles of cotton, hides, and other articles
of their wealth . . . Their method of
cooking is so new that for its strangeness I
desire to speak of it; thus it may be seen
and remarked how curious and diversified are
the contrivances and ingenuity of the human
family. Not having discovered the use of
pipkins, to boil what they would eat, they
fill the half of a large calabash with
water, and throw on the fire many stones of
such as are most convenient and readily take
the heat. When hot, they are taken up with
tongs of sticks and dropped into the
calabash until the water in it boils from
the fervor of the stones. Then whatever is
to be cooked is put in, and until it is done
they continue taking out cooled stones and
throwing in hot ones. Thus they boil their
food."
We dwell thus at length on Cabeza de Vaca's
account, as it is the first reference to the
Jumano in history, and because it affords
the earliest information as to what manner
of people they were. There are few Indian
tribes, whose
Page 6
history forms part of that of our own land,
that have a record traceable to the first
half of the sixteenth century.3
The next Spaniards to pass through the
Jumano country were Francisco Sanchez
Chamuscado and his party in company with
three missionaries, in 1581; but no new
light is thrown on the tribe in question,
and indeed there is no definite evidence in
the account of two of the soldiers4 who were
members of the little party that they were
seen at all, although the Rio Grande was
followed northward from its junction with
the Conchos.
Much more definite information, however, is
afforded by the next Spaniards to traverse
their territory, led by Antonio de Espejo,
who, in November, 1582, set out from San
Bartolome", in Chihuahua, and followed the
bank of the Rio Grande northward from the
mouth of the Conchos. From about the
junction onward for twelve days' journey
Espejo was among these people, who, he says,
occupied five villages with an aggregate
population of ten thousand perhaps four-fold
the actual number, as Espejo's estimates are
always greatly exaggerated. The Jumano did
not at first receive the strangers with the
same friendliness as was shown Cabeza de
Vaca and his companions, although it might
be said that the latter met with a
reception, owing to the magic power that
they were supposed to possess and the awe
inspired by it, such as perhaps has never
been experienced by white men since their
time. Espejo gives a rather definite account
of the Indians under discussion, who, it
will be observed, occupied the valley of the
Rio Grande from the Conchos northward almost
to the boundary of the present New Mexico.
He says they were called Jumanos, and by the
Spaniards Patarabueyes. Some of their houses
were terraced, while others were of straw.
The faces of the Indians were striated,
evidently meaning
3 See Relation of Alvar Nunez Cabeca de
Vaca, translated by Buckingham Smith, New
York, 1871; The Journey of Alvar Nunez
Cabeza de Vaca, translated by Fanny
Bandelier, New York, 1905; The Narrative of
Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, edited by F. W.
Hodge, in Original Narratives of Early
-American History, New York, 1807.
4 See the Relacion of Barrundo and
Escalante, and other documents bearing on
the journey, in Coleccion de Documentos
Ineditos del Archive de Indias, xv, pp.
80-150, Madrid, 1871.
Page 7
tattooed, as the sequel will show. They
cultivated maize, calabashes, and beans;
hunted animals and birds, and especially the
buffalo, and caught fish of many kinds in
the two streams that united within their
territory. They had lakes within their
domain, from which they obtained salt during
certain seasons as good as that from the
sea. Of special importance in the
identification of the people met by Cabeza
de Vaca, Espejo states that three Christians
and a negro had passed through the Jumano
country years before, in whom he naturally
recognized "Alvaro Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, y
Dorantes, y Castillo Maldonado, y un Negro,
" who, as is well known, finally reached
Culiacan and the City of Mexico after trials
and suffering almost beyond belief.5
Juan de Onate, colonizer of New Mexico and
founder of Santa Fé, passed over Espejo's
route for a part of his journey through
Chihuahua to the new province, but instead
of traversing the Conchos to its junction
with the Rio Grande, he made a more
northerly course to the crossing of the
latter stream at the present El Paso,
consequently leaving the country of the
Jumano on his right.
Whether the Jumano had entirely shifted
their habitat between 1582 and 1598 is not
definitely known, but it seems probable that
they had not. Espejo had returned to Mexico
by way of the Rio Pecos, leaving it for the
Conchos some 120 leagues below Pecos pueblo,
hence missing the Jumano territory of
eastern New Mexico which later became known.
And, as we have seen, Onate did not follow a
course in the journey northward with his
colonists that would have enabled him to see
the Jumano of the Conchos-Rio Grande
junction.
But we have definite knowledge that the
Jumano lived in the present New Mexico at
least as early as the time of Onate, i. e.
in 1598, for on October 6 of that year he
departed with the father commissary "to the
salinas of the Pecos, which are of many
leagues of indefinite salt, very beautiful
and white; and to the pueblos of the Xumases
or
5. For the Espejo expedition, see
Coleccion de Documentos Ineditot del Archive
de Indias, xv, 101 et seq., 1871.
Page 8
Rayados, which are three: one very large,
and they saw the others."6
There were in reality four instead of three
important villages of the Jumano in New
Mexico at the close of the sixteenth
century, their names, according to Oñate,
being Atripuy, Genobey, Quelotetrey, and
Pataotrey.7 These, with many villages of the
Pueblo Indians from Pecos south ward through
the country known as the Salinas, were
placed under the ministration of Fray
Francisco de San Miguel; but there is no
evidence that the friar visited all of them,
and it is quite certain that no churches
were built in this immediate region at so
early a date.8
The Salinas referred to are situated in the
central portion of that part of Valencia
county, New Mexico, lying east of the Rio
Grande. Bounding the salt lagoon area on the
south is the Mesa de los Jumanos, or, as it
is termed on present-day if not altogether
"modern" maps, "Mesa Jumanes." This landmark
of course derived its name from the tribe,
which formerly occupied the vicinity, a fact
illustrating the persistency with which
aboriginal names are sometimes retained in
the Southwest, even where good excuse may
exist for forgetting them.
The Salinas country, although known far and
wide for its generally inhospitable and
forbidding character, was inhabited at the
opening of the seventeenth century and for
6. Discurso de las Jornadas, Documentos
Ineditos del Archivo de Indias, xvi,
266-267, Madrid, 1871.
7 Bandelier (Final Report, pt. i, p. 167,
1890) suggests that the pueblos of Cuelóce
Xenopué, and Patasce, mentioned in the
Obediencia y Vasallaje a Su Magested por los
Indies del Pueblo del Cuéloce (Doc. Ined. de
Indias, xvi, 123-124) are identifiable with
Quelotetrey, Genobey, and Pataotrey,
respectively. Indeed, it seems practically
certain that such is the case. The
Obediencia says: ... "el Pueblo de Cuelóce
que llaman de los rayados. . . Yolhá,
Capitan que dicen sér del Pueblo y gente
deste Pueblo de Cuelóce; Pocastaquí, Capitan
del Pueblo de Xenopué; Haye, Capitan del
Pueblo de Patasce y Chili [pueblo of Chililí
by error?], Capitan del Pueblo de Abo" These
names are transcribed in the hope that
eventually they may prove of some linguistic
service.
8 " Al Padre Fray Francisco de Sant Miguel,
la provincia de los Pecos con los siete
Pueblos del a Ciénega que le cae al Oriente,
y todas los baqueros de aquella cordillera y
comarca hasta la Sierra Nevada, y los
Pueblos de la Gran Salina, . . . i asi mismo
los tres Pueblos grandes de Xumanas ó
rrayados, llamados en su lengua, atripuy,
genobey, quelotetrey, pataotrey con sus
subgetos. " Obediencia y vasallaje a Su
Magestad por los Indies del Pueblo de San
Juan Baptista, Doc. Ined. de Indias, op.
cit., xvi, 113-114.
Page 9
twenty-five years later, by the eastern
divisions of the Tigua and Piro (the latter
sometimes being known as Tompiro), as well
as by the Jumano. The former two groups
belong to the Tanoan linguistic family and
inhabited several pueblos similar to those
of their Rio Grande congeners. When, in
1626, Fray Alonso Benavides, the Father
Custodian of the missions of New Mexico,
appealed for additional missionaries, he had
particularly in mind the conversion of the
tribes of the Salinas region, especially the
Jumano, among whom Fray Juan de Salas had
already been. Says Benavides, writing in
1630, " I kept putting off the Xumanas who
were asking for him [Salas], until God
should send more laborers." Through their
affection for Salas, the founder of the
mission of Isleta, the Jumano went year
after year for some six years prior to 1629
to visit him at that Rio Grande mission
station in the hope, they asserted, that he
might come to live among them. Finally, on
July 22, 1629,9 a delegation of some fifty
Jumano visited the pueblo of San Antonio de
Isleta, where the custodian (probably
Estevan de Perea) was then staying, for the
purpose of again asking for friars; and "
being questioned as to what induced them to
make this demand, they said that a woman
wearing the habit had urged them to come;
and being shown a picture of Mother Luisa de
Carrion, they rejoiced, and speaking to each
other said that the lady who had sent them
resembled the picture, except that she was
younger and more beautiful." Fray Juan de
Salas and Fray Diego Lopez volunteered to
go, accompanied by an escort of three
soldiers. They found the Jumano this time
more than 112 leagues (about 300 miles) to
the eastward from Santa Fe", or possibly in
the western part of the present Kansas in
the vicinity of what later became known as
El Quartelejo. The cause of this shifting
may have been due to the hostility among the
tribes of the Salinas about this time, of
which Benavides speaks, for subsequent
history seems to indicate that the Jumano
were never an aggressive people. Not to
enter into detail regarding the miracles
which Salas and his companion are
9. Benavides, Memorial, 1630, in Land of
Sunshine, Los Angeles, California, vol. xiv,
p. 46, 1901. Vetancurt, Cronica, pp.
302-305, Mexico, reprint 1871.
Page 10
said to have performed among the Jumano on
the plains, some 30 or 40 leagues west of
the "Quiviras" (who are identified with the
Wichita tribe of Kansas), it may be said
that the missionaries found 2,000 of these
Indians, who, with many others from
neighboring tribes (Benavides says there
were 10,000 in all), clamored loudly for
baptism, while two hundred lame, blind, and
halt rose up well "when the sign of the
cross was made and the words of the Gospel
pronounced over them. "Indeed, they were
inspired "with so great devotion to the
cross that they fell on their knees before
every cross and adored it, and in their
houses,10 over their doors, they put
crosses. "
After remaining some days, the fathers
departed for the valley of the Rio Grande;
and it would seem that the Jumano soon
followed, for, according to Vetancurt,
"owing to the continual invasions, and wars
with their enemies the Apaches, this
conversion could not lead to a permanent
result in that place, and hence they removed
to the Christians near Quarac," whence they
were ministered.
There has been much discussion regarding the
location of the "pueblo" occupied by the
Jumano that was dedicated to "the glorious
Isidoro." We may assume that it was not
until after the visit of Salas to the Jumano
on the plains in July-August, 1629, that
this mission was founded, since the new
friars did not arrive from Mexico until
Easter of that year, and prior to that time
no permanent missionaries were available
even had the Jumano not been three hundred
miles away on the prairies. We learn from
the Relacion of Fray Estevan Perea,11 the
successor of Benavides as custodian of the
missions of New Mexico, and under whose
guidance the new missionaries came in the
spring of 1629, that there were sent to the
pueblos of the Salinas "in the great pueblo
of the Xumanas, and in those called Pyros
and Tompiras" six priests and two lay
religious, one of whom, Francisco de
Letrado, is known to have been assigned to
the Jumano alone. It does not seem necessary
to look for
10 According to Vetancurt, op. cit.,
Benavides says: "They each one placed it [a
cross] on the front of his tent, "
indicating that they were living in
temporary abodes while hunting the buffalo
on the plains.
11. Translated in the Land of Sunshine, xv,
BOS. 5 and 6, Nov. and Dec., 1901.
Page 11
the " great pueblo of the Xumanos" of which
Benavides speaks, among the ruins of eastern
New Mexico, from amongst the debris of which
the massive walls of former Spanish churches
and monasteries still rise, for it is
scarcely likely that the Jumano occupied a
village other than their own, or that the
settlement was anything but an aggregation
of dwellings of the more or less temporary
kind which they were found to occupy when
visited by Cabeza de Vaca and by Espejo on
the lower Rio Grande.12
That active missionary work was conducted by
Letrado among the Jumano is certain. We have
seen that this friar was assigned to the
tribe soon after his arrival in New Mexico
as a member of Perea's band in the spring of
1629; but three years later we find him at
Zuni on his way to convert the savage and
little-known "Cipias," although he was
murdered by the Zuni before he reached them,
on February 22, 1632 a century to the day
before the birth of Washington.
Why missionary work among the Jumano was
thus apparently abandoned, there is no
definite knowledge, but it would seem to
have been due to another shifting of the
tribe from New Mexico to the plains, and
another change from their erstwhile
sedentary life to that of buffalo hunters.
There is a suggestion of this, indeed, in an
account written by Fray Alonso de Posadas,
13 who states that Fray Juan de
12. Compare Bandelier, Gilded Man, p.
255, 1893, and Final Report, pt. 1, 131,
132, 168, and pt. n, p. 267; also Fifth
Annual Report of the Executive Committee of
the Archeological Institute of America, pp.
37, 85, 1884. We must assume that the four
"puercblos" occupied by the tribe in Onate's
time (1598) had all been abandoned and that
the "great pueblo of the Xumanos" mentioned
by Benavides had been established after the
Jumano had been induced by Salas to return
from the plains. Bandelier suggests that the
Piro pueblo of Tabirá was probably the
village of the Jumano, but I find no
evidence that the Piro and the Jumano
occupied a settlement together (Bandelier,
Final Report, pt., I, pp. 131, 132).
Escalante (op. cit., Land of Sunshine,
March, 1900, p. 248) states that on account
of Apache hostilities the pueblos of
Chililí, Tafique (Tajique), and Quarac of
the Tehua (Tigua) Indians; and Abó,
Jumancas, and Tabira of the Tompiros, were
abandoned. That "Jumancas" and the "Pueblo
de los Jumanos " were one and the same there
appears to be no doubt, consequently if
Jumancas and Tabira had been the same
village they would hardly have been
mentioned as distinct. Escalante, who wrote
in 1778, gathered his information from the
official archives at Santa Fe".
13. "Informe a S. M. sobre las tierras de
Nuevo Mejico, Quivira y Teguayo, " in
Fernandez Duro, Don Diego de Penalosa,
Madrid, 1882, p. 59. Posadas was custodian
of the missions of New Mexico in 1661-64,
during the governorship of the notorious Don
Diego de Penalosa y Briceño, and was a
missionary there for ten years previously.
His Informe was written after 1678.
Page 12
Salas and Fray Juan (Diego?) de Ortega, with
an escort, visited the Jumano on a stream
which they called Rio Nueces, and Ortega
remained among them for six months. From
this account the Rio Nueces might have been
almost anywhere in the country of the
plains, and not necessarily the present Rio
Nueces of Texas.14 The important point,
however, is the fact that Letrado had
abandoned his station among the Jumano in
eastern New Mexico in 1632, and that in the
same year Salas went forth again on the
plains apparently for the purpose of
bringing them back.
The history of New Mexico between Benavides'
time and the great Pueblo rebellion of 1680
is meager indeed, consequently of the
shiftings of the Jumano, if any there were
during that period, little is known. In 1650
they were evidently still on the plains,
for, according to Posadas, Captain Hernan
Martin and Diego de Castillo in that year
went with some soldiers and Christian
Indians 200 leagues from Santa F6 to the
"Rio Nueces" where the Jumano were again
found. They remained in the region more than
six months, going southeastward down the
river for 50 leagues, visiting the Cuitoas,
Escanjaques, and Aijaos, and finally the
Tejas. During their journey the party
traversed, from north to south, a distance
of 250 leagues, or, according to Posadas,
from the latitude of Santa Fe in 37 to that
of the Tejas in 28. It should here be noted
that the Escanjaques have always been
identified with the Kansas or Kaw Indians,
and such may be the case. The Cuitoas, the
Tejas (Texas or Hasinai), and the Aijaos,
however, were Texan tribes, and indeed the
last, as later will be seen, are
identifiable with no other than the
Tawehash, the name of the southern branch of
the Wichita, sometimes applied to the entire
Wichita group, as well as to the Wichita
proper. This point should be borne in mind,
as the Jumano and the Aijaos are here
mentioned as if two distinct tribes.
In 1654 another journey was made to the
Jumano on the Rio Nueces by
Lieutenant-Colonel Diego de Guadalajara,
with 30 soldiers and 200 Christian Indians.
The Cuitoas,
14. Compare Bandelier, Final Report, pt.
i, 167, note, 1890; Bancroft, North Mexican
State and Texas, i, 386, 1886.
Page 13
Escanjaques, and Aijaos were this time at
war. Captain Andres Lopez, of the party,
with twelve soldiers, together with some of
the Christian Indians and Jumano, were sent
forward, finding a rancheria of Cuitoas, 30
leagues eastward, whom they severely
defeated.
These facts are mentioned for the purpose of
showing that the Jumano, at least, although
friendly toward the Spaniards, had
apparently not occupied eastern New Mexico
for some twenty-two years prior to 1654, but
that they were living on the plains and
leading their customary semi-sedentary life.
As previously stated, Fray Juan de Salas,
earlier in the century, found the Jumano on
the prairies about 112 leagues eastward from
the Rio Grande. But distances given by the
early Spanish travelers must be regarded as
only approximate, and there is no reason for
believing that the tribe had moved farther
away simply because Captains Martin and
Castillo, in 1650, are said to have found
the Jumano on the Nueces 200 leagues from
Santa Fe. They may have been in practically
the same spot during this quarter century.
There is ground for strong suspicion that
the village or villages of the Jumano on the
plains at this time were in proximity to if
not actually at the Quartelejo, or
Cuartelejo, mentioned frequently by writers
of the 18th century. The distance of the
Jumano from Santa F, according to two
writers above cited, varied from 112 to 200
leagues (300 to 530 miles); while El
Quartelejo, according to the record, was
from 130 to 160 leagues (350 to 425 miles)
from the New Mexican capital.15 This Indian
outpost was situated in the valley of Beaver
creek, in northern Scott county, Kansas, as
has been shown by Williston and Martin.16
El Quartelejo first appears in history about
the middle of the seventeenth century, when
some families of Christian
15. Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, Am.
Series, v, 182, 183, 1890; Bancroft, Hitt.
Arizona and New Mexico, 237, 1889.
16. Some Pueblo Ruins in Scott County,
Kansas, " in Kansas Historical Collections,
vol. 6, p. 124, Topeka, 1900. See also a
comment on the article by the present writer
in American Anthropologist, vol. 2, 1900, p.
778. For the location of Quivira, which, as
we have seen, was beyond the Jumano
settlements on the plains, see Hodge,
"Coronado's March to Quivira," in Brower,
Harahey (Memoirs of Explorations in the
Basin of the Mississippi), St. Paul 1899.
Page 14
Indians of the pueblo and tribe of Taos
uprose, withdrew to the plains of Cibola [i.
e. the buffalo plains], and fortified
themselves in a place which afterward was
for this reason called the Cuartelejo. And
they were in it until Don Juan de Archuleta
[in 1652?], by order of the Governor, went
with 20 soldiers and a party of auxiliary
Indians and brought them back to their
pueblo. He found in the possession of these
revolted Taos, casques and other pieces of
copper and tin; and when he asked them
whence they had acquired these, they replied
'from the Quivira pueblos,' to which they
had journeyed from the Cuartelejo. . . .
From Cuartelejo in that direction one goes
to the Pananas [Pawnees]; and today it is
seen with certainty that there are no other
pueblos besides the said [Panana] ones, with
which the French were by then already
trading. Besides this in all the pueblos
which the English and French have
discovered, from the Jumano to the north or
northeast, we do not know any to have been
found of the advancement and riches which
used to be imagined of the Gran Quivira."17
It has been seen that the Jumano were still
on the plains in 1654, and that their former
settlement in the Salinas of New Mexico had
evidently long been abandoned. It is said
that, in 1670, " many Indians from the
Pueblo of the Jumanos were at El Paso, but
the roads to the [former] Jumano country
[the Salinas] were closed by the Apaches,"18
whose depredations soon became so serious
that between the years 1669 and 1675 every
settlement of the Piro and Tigua east of the
Rio Grande had been permanently abandoned on
their account. I find no evidence that any
Jumano inhabited that part of New Mexico at
this time, however,19 nor is there any
17. Letter of Fray Silvestre Velez de
Escalante, April 2, 1778, translated in Land
of Sunshine, Los Angeles, Cala., vol. xii,
p. 314, 1900. The citation tends also to
show the proximity of El Quartelejo and the
"Quivira" or Wichita settlements.
18. Libro Primer o de Casamientos de el Paso
del Norte, fol. 12, cited by Bandelier,
Final Report, pt. n, p. 267.
19. See Vetancurt (Cronica, p. 325, reprint
1871), who says: "San Gabriel Abbo [Abó]
tiene su sitio en el Valle de las Salinas .
. . Tiene dos pueblos pequenos, Tenabo y
Tabira, con ochocientas personas que
administraba un religiose: hasta aqui llega
la administracion hacia el Oriente, aunque
quince leguas de alli hay algunos xumanas,
que eran de Quarac [Quarrá or Cuaraí]
administrados. " This would indicate that
these Christian Jumano were settled a number
of miles east of their old villages or
rancherias at the Mesa de los Jumanos, which
is only 10 or 15 miles in a straight
Page 15
indication that they were in New Mexico at
the outbreak of the Pueblo rebellion of 1680
or that they participated in that bloody
revolt during the succeeding twelve years.
During this period the government of New
Mexico was administered from El Paso, the
provincial capital (Santa Fe) having been
completely abandoned in 1680. On October 20,
1683, more than 200 Jumano visited El Paso
for the purpose of asking for missionaries,
"stating that thirty-two tribes were waiting
for baptism, because, being on the point of
fighting a great battle, and anxious because
they were few while the enemy were more than
30,000 in number, they invoked the aid of
the holy cross, of which they had heard from
their forefathers, and at once there
descended through the air a cross wrought in
red, with a pedestal two yards in breadth. .
. and that when this cross was put on their
banner, they had conquered their enemies
without losing a man, and gaining much
spoils of war." Having acknowledged the
miracle, they came to ask for baptism. Three
friars went to them and found "a great
multitude of Xumanas and Tejas; they decided
to return with better preparation and a
greater number of ministers. . .Some friars
returned with the intention of going among
the Xumanas and Tejas, to Caracoles river,
where it is said that pearls are fished, in
order that they might ascertain the truth. .
. The apparition of the cross turned out to
be uncertain, because it was a ruse devised
by an Indian of the Tejas in order that the
Spaniards might help them to cross the Con
chas river to their land, which passage the
Apaches were trying to prevent; and such
chimeras are often tried by the Indians,
because they know how easily the Spaniards
can be made to believe them."20
This statement is generally too indefinite
to be of much value beyond the fact that the
Jumano or at least some of them again
ventured across the plains as far as El
Paso, with another miracle to unfold. We may
not assume from course east of the ruins of
Abo. Vetancurt, however, who wrote in 1692,
lost sight of the fact that all the pueblos
of the Salinas country had been abandoned on
account of Apache depredations prior to the
revolt of 1680, hence there is little
likelihood that the Jumano neophytes
remained.
20. Vetancurt, Cronica, pp. 302-306.
Page 16
the foregoing statement that the Jumano at
this time were dwelling in the neighborhood
of the Conchos-Rio Grande junction, where
they were first met, as there is definite
evidence that their old home had become
occupied by the Conchos, Julimes, and
Chocolomos,21 who, so far as is known, were
unrelated.
In December, 1683, according to Escalante,
"there arrived at El Paso, Juan Sabeata,22
an Indian of the Jumano nation, saying that
all his people wished to be reclaimed to the
Faith, and asked for ministers; and that not
very far from their country were the Tejas,
of whom he related so many things that he
caused it to be believed that that province
was one of the most advanced, fertile, and
rich in this America. For which reason Fray
Nicholas Lopez, then vice-custodian,
desirous of propagating the Gospel,
determined to go apostolically, without
escort or defense, to this exploration with
Fray Juan de Zavaleta and Fray Antonio de
Acevedo. " The governor, however, thought it
unsafe for the fathers to go alone, so he
formed an expedition of volunteers under
command of Juan Domingo (Dominguez) de
Mendoza, who accompanied the friars to the
junction of the Conchos and Rio Grande,
where the docile Conchos, Julimes, and
Chocolomos now resided. Father Acevedo
remained with them while the expedition set
out for the Rio Pecos, and after many days
"arrived at a rancheria of Indians who then
were called Hediondos ["Stinkers"]. Among
them were some Jumanes; and of the latter
[tribe] was Juan Sabeata."23 The party later
returned to El Paso.
21. See Escalante, op. cit., p. 311, and
compare Bandelier, Final Report, pt. i, pp.
80-81, 85, 167, 246. I do not find any
substantial evidence that the Julimes and
the Jumanos were identical, or that the
various small tribes mentioned in Spanish
documents of the period were in any way
related to the latter. Of the languages of
the myriad small tribes mentioned in the
annals of Texas, practically nothing is
known. Fray Nicolas Lopez recorded a
vocabulary of the Jumano language in 1684,
but it has disappeared.
22. Born in the Jumano pueblo of New Mexico,
according to Confessiones y Declaraci-ones,
etc., 1683, cited by Bandelier, Final
Report, pt. i, p. 132.
23. Escalante's Letter (1778) translated in
Land of Sunshine, Los Angeles, vol. xii, no.
5, April, 1900, p. 309. Confirmatory of this
account is the mention of the same Juan
Sabeata, of the Jumana tribe living on the
Rio Nueces, three days' journey eastward
from the mouth of the Conchos, by Cruzati,
evidently Governor Cruzat or Cruzate of New
Mexico, who assumed the office in 1683.
Sabeata refers to thirty-six tribes that
lived on the Rio Nueces in 1683 (Cruzati in
Mendoza, Viage, manuscript
Page 17
Henceforward historical references to the
Jumano are fewer and farther between.
Bandelier even asserts that they "were lost
sight of after the great convulsions of 1680
and succeeding years, and their ultimate
fate is as unknown as their original
numbers.24 This is largely true, yet there
are a few allusions to this erratic people,
under the name by which they were known to
the Spaniards, reference to which will prove
of interest.
In 1700, according to contemporary
documents,25 the Jicarilla Apache brought
word to Taos, the northernmost of the New
Mexican pueblos, that the French had
destroyed a village of the Jumano on the
eastern plains; and in 1702 a campaign was
made by the Spaniards in that direction
which resulted only in loss of life at the
hands of the Apache. It would seem from the
circumstance of the destruction of the
Jumano settlement, and from the facts that
the Jicarilla Apache at this time were at
the Quartelejo26 and the French had
penetrated as far westward as Nebraska or
Kansas,27 as well as into Texas, that the
Jumano village was in the north. 28 There is
distinct evidence, however, aside from that
already presented, that a part of the tribe
had been in Texas for several years, since
they are mentioned in French in Archive
General of Mexico, kindly communicated by
Professor H. E. Bolton, now of Leland
Stanford Junior University).
24. Final Report, pt. i, pp. 168, 169.
Bandelier quotes an early document to the
effect that "as late as 1697 a Jumano
Indian, a female described as 'a striated
one of the Jumano nation, ' was sold at
Santa F for a house of three rooms and a
small tract of land besides. This woman had
been sold to the Spaniards by other Indians,
who had captured her. "
25. Quoted by Bandelier, Contributions to
the History of the Southwestern Portion of
the United States, p. 181, 1890; also Final
Report, pt. i, p. 168, 1890. See also Ban
croft, Arizona and New Mexico, 222, 1889.
26. Bandelier, Contributions, Arch. Inst.
Papers, Am. Ser., v, 183-184, 1890;
Bancroft, Arizona and New Mexico, 222, 236,
237, 1889. The Quartelejo is here reported
to have been 130 leagues from Santa Fe.
27. Bancroft, History of Arizona and New
Mexico, states, on the authority of Padre
Niel, that about the year 1700 two little
French girls had been ransomed from the
Navaho, and that in 1698 "the French had
almost annihilated a Navaho force of 4,000
men. " The latter statement is probably an
error, while in regard to the former the
Navaho probably obtained the French girls
from some other tribe, perhaps their
kindred, the Apache.
28. I fear that Bandelier (Final Report, pt.
i, 168) has not sufficient ground for his
assertion that the Jumario village of 1700
could not have been beyond the confines of
New Mexico. The nearest Jicarilla settlement
was 40 leagues (100 miles) north east of
Taos, while the main body those of the
Quartelejo were 130 leagues (360 miles)
northeast of Santa Fe i. e. in Scott County,
Kansas. See page 13, note 16.
Page 18
documents of this period. Early in January
1687, for example, La Salle heard of the
Choumans, or Choumenes as they were called
by the Teao (Tohaha) Indians among whom he
then was, a short distance east of the
Colorado River of Texas. These people, he
was informed, were friends of the Spaniards,
from whom they got horses; "that most of the
said nation had flat heads, that they had
Indian corn, which gave M. de la Salle
ground to believe that those people were
some of the same he had seen upon his first
discovery.'29 Again, in 1691, we are
informed, a few rancherias of the Jumano
were visited by Governor Terán de los Bios,
Father Massanet, and others, on the Rio
Guadalupe of Texas.30
The cause of the disruption between the
French and the northern Jumano in 1700 does
not appear, but the breach seems to have
been healed by 1719, in which year Governor
Antonio Valverde y Cossio led an expedition
northward and northeastward from Santa Fe
against the Ute and Comanche. On a stream
called Rio Napestle (probably the present
main Arkansas river), the Governor met the
Apache of Quartelejo (i. e. the Jicarillas),
and found men with gunshot wounds "received
from the French and their allies, the
Pananas [Pawnees] and Jumanas. " Here31
again we have definite evidence that a
branch of the Jumano was still in the north
during the first quarter of the eighteenth
century. It should be noted also that the
Jumano here mentioned were allies of the
Pawnee.
No definite reference to the northern Jumano
between 1719 and 1750 has yet been found.
The members of the ill-fated Villazur
expedition from Santa Fe to the north
eastern plains, and probably as far as the
Missouri river, in 1720, saw nothing of
them, so far as the meager account of the
expedition32 shows, although other tribes
are mentioned.
29. Joutel's Journal in French,
Historical Collections of Louisiana, pt. I,
p. 139, 1846.
30. Terán and others cited by Bancroft,
History of the North Mexican States and
Texas, i, 416, 1886.
31. Bancroft, Arizona and New Mexico, 236,
1889; Bandelier, Contributions, 182-183
1890.
32. See Bandelier, Contributions, p. 179 et
seq.; also "Some Unpublished History -A New
Mexican Episode in 1748," Land of Sunshine,
viii, February, 1898, p. 129.
Page 19
In 1750, however, definite and important
testimony was offered by one Pedro Latren, a
Frenchman at Santa F6, who spoke of a tribe,
evidently the Tawehash (Taovayas), called by
the French "Panipiques (Panipiquets) alias
Jumanes." Latren referred to these Indians
as "parciales de los Franceses con los
Cumanches." He also called them Piniques and
said they were four or five days from the
French fort "Canes" or Arkansas.33 Here we
have more definite information regarding the
affiliation of the Jumano than has yet
appeared, and accounts to a greater or less
extent for the persistent references to the
existence of a Jumano band in the north
during a period of many years, as well as
explains the mention of the Jumano and the
Aijaos together in 1650. Now, the Paniques,
Panipiquets, etc., as they were designated
by the French, were the Wichita, the tribe
which, in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, was known to the Spaniards as
"Quiviras. " The French designation, of
course, had allusion to their common
practice of tattooing the face, and
indicates also relationship with the
Pawnees; that is, they were "pricked, or
tattooed, Pawnee," a designation recalling
the Jumanos or "Rayados" of Onate in 1598,
and the alliance between the Jumano and the
Paw nee mentioned by Valverde y Cossio in
1719. The name Jumano, it will also be seen,
was applied to both the Wichita and their
immediate relatives the Tawehash, or
Taguayazes, as they were called by the
Spaniards, a southern or Texas branch of the
tribe, long before the Wichita drifted south
ward from Kansas to the vicinity of the
mountains in Oklahoma that still bear their
name.
Another important item in the historical
testimony dates from 1778, on June 15 of
which year a junta de guerra was held in
Chihuahua, at which were present most of the
military authorities of the province. The
report of the junta says: "The Taguayazes
[Tawehash] are known in New Mexico by the
name of 'Jumanes' also."34
33. Declaration, recorded in Spanish, of
Pedro Latren, March 5, 1750, manuscript in
Archivo General de Mexico, Provincias
Internas, tomo 37. Information kindly
communicated by Professor Herbert E. Bolton.
34. Cabello, Informe, 1784, folio 20,
manuscript. Information kindly communicated
by Professor Herbert E. Bolton.
Page 20
The "Taguayazes" were then on upper Red
river, hence not far from the region of the
Wichita mountains, their subsequent and
present home.
A few years later, in 1789, M. Louis Blanc,
commandant at Natchitoches, Louisiana, wrote
General Ugarte urging the opening of trade
between New Mexico and Louisiana by
establishing a presidio among the Jumano;35
and in 1812, or thereabouts, it was said
(probably an inspiration due to the exploit
of Lieutenant Zebulon M. Pike in 1806-7)
that the Americans had established "gun
factories" among the Jumano and Caigues
(Kiowa), and that muskets and powder from
this source were obtained for New Mexico.36
The item is interesting as being probably
the first reference to the association of
the Wichita-Tawehash and Kiowa, who from
1866 occupied the same reservation in Indian
Territory and Oklahoma until a large part
was allotted and the remainder sold in 1901.
Reference has been made to the settlement of
the Wichita in the country of the Wichita
Mountains in the present Oklahoma, after
having occupied the so-called Quivira
country of Kansas in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. Further evidence of
the connection of the Wichita-Tawehash
people with the Jumano is afforded as late
as 1844 by Josiah Gregg, who was engaged in
the Santa Fe trade and was personally
familiar with the plains and their
aboriginal occupants. Gregg says that the
northern portion of the Wichita Mountains
was known to Mexican ciboleros and
comancheros as Sierra Jumanes,37 which
recalls the name still applied to the mesa
in the Salinas region of New Mexico. In the
same connection Gregg makes the interesting
statement that the range of hills known as
the Wichita mountains are also sometimes
called Towyash by hunters, "perhaps from
Toyavist, the Comanche word for mountain."
Gregg evidently was unaware that Tawehash,
or Towyash as he calls it, was the name of a
Wichita division, evidently
35. Manuscript cited by Bancroft, Arizona
and New Mexico, 276, note, 1889.
36. Pino, Exposition Sucinto, Cadiz, 1812,
and Noticias Historicas, Mexico, 1849, cited
by Bancroft, Arizona and New Mexico, 286,
note.
37. Gregg, Commerce of the Prairies, n, 147,
1844. Ciboleros were buffalo hunters, and
comancheros were New Mexican Indian traders.
Page21
for the reason that by his time the entire
group had become generally known to the
whites as Wichita, while at the same time
Indians of other branches of the Caddoan
stock, to which the Wichita belong,
designated, as they still designate, the
entire Wichita group as the Tawehash.38
The name Jumano, as applied to the tribe,
had disappeared by this time, so far as the
written record goes; but a trace of the
name, dating from the middle of the century,
lingered in the memory of an informant of
Bandelier about 1890. 39 Of these people he
says: " I have found a trace dating as late
as 1855. They were then living in Texas, not
far from the Comanches, and the
characteristic disfiguration of the face
through incisions which they afterward
painted, was noticed by my informant who
visited them about thirty-three years ago."
The facial decoration was plainly tattoo,
and their proximity to the Comanche accords
with information previously given.
We may now summarize the testimony as
follows: In 1535 and again in 1582 the
Spaniards found a semi-agricultural tribe
living in more or less permanent houses,
some of them built of grass, on the Rio
Grande at the junction of the Conchos in
Chihuahua and along the former stream
northward for a number of leagues. They
subsisted partly by hunting the buffalo, and
raised beans, calabashes, and corn. At the
date last mentioned they were called Jumano,
and the Spaniards named them also
Patarabueyes. A distinguishing feature of
the tribe was its tattooing, for which
reason, when found east of the Rio Grande in
New Mexico in 1598, they were called
"Rayados" by the Spaniards. They were
erratic in their movements. The Franciscans
established a mission among them in New
Mexico in 1629, but it does not seem to have
been successful, for the Indians appear to
have been here today but elsewhere tomorrow.
In the seventeenth century they were found
38. One of the latest references, from
personal knowledge, to the Tawehash and the
Wichita as distinct divisions, is that given
by Isaac McCoy in The Annual Register of
Indian Affairs, Washington, 1838, p. 27.
39. Bandelier, Final Report, pt. I, 246,
1890.
Page 22
on the plains of Texas, and again living on
the prairies to the northward, evidently in
Kansas, the name seemingly being applied to
each of two divisions of the same tribe or
confederacy. Their custom of tattooing, the
character of their houses, and their
semi-agricultural mode of life during the
century they were first known, suggest
relationship, if not identification, with
the Wichita people. References in
unpublished Spanish documents of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
indicate that the Jumano of the Spaniards of
New Mexico were the Tawehash of Texas; and
it is known that Tawehash, the name of a
division of the Wichita, was also the term
by which other Caddoan tribes knew the
Wichita tribe proper. There is direct
information from the beginning of the
nineteenth century that the Wichita
Mountains, which received their name because
the Wichita tribe dwelt thereabouts, were
also called "Jumanes Mountains" and
"Tawehash Mountains' thus further
substantiating the testimony that the Jumano
and the Tawehash were one people. The
Tawehash have been absorbed by the Wichita
proper, and their divisional name is now
practically lost. Likewise the term Jumano,
which, originating in Chihuahua and New
Mexico passed into Texas, but seems to have
been gradually replaced by the name
"Tawehash," which in turn was superseded by
" Wichita."
Thus is accounted for the disappearance of a
tribe that has long been an enigma to
ethnologists and historians.
Bureau of American Ethnology
Smithsonian Institution
Washington D.C.
Indian
Genealogy
The Jumano Indians, By Frederick Webb Hodge, 1910, The Davis Press,
Worcester, Massachusetts
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