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The Comanches and other Tribes of Texas
The Comanches And Other Tribes Of Texas; And The Policy To
Be Pursued Respecting Them.
By Ex-President David G. Burnet.
The eminent position in Texan history, of
the writer of the following paper his early
migration into the area of Texas; and the
opportunities of observation he has had, for
a long series of years, upon the manners and
customs, traits, character, and numbers of
the aboriginal population of that state,
give a value to it, which will not fail to
be recognised. Mr. Burnet was one of the
earliest Americans who migrated into that
country, during the era of the Austin
movement.
Austin, Texas,
September 29th, 1847.
SIR:
Major Neighbors, the special Indian Agent
for Texas, some time ago presented me a
pamphlet containing many queries in relation
to Indians, their history, habits, &c;1 and
requested I would furnish something
concerning the Comanches, among whom he knew
I had been.
Always willing to contribute any thing in my
power to the general mass of intelligence,
on a subject of such intrinsic interest, I
have prepared a paper of some length, it may
be of some little value, relating to the
Indians of Texas, but principally to the
Comanches, our most considerable tribe. In
the continued absence of Major Neighbors, I
take the liberty to transmit it to you. If
it will add any thing worth being
contributed to the amount of information
sought to be collected, I shall be fully
compensated for the trouble of preparing it.
The subject touched on in the two last
paragraphs, though somewhat extraneous, is
one of present interest to the General
Government, and to this new State.
Very respectfully,
Your obedient Servant,
DAVID G. BURNET.
Henry R. Schoolcraft, Esq.
August 20th, 1847.
SIR:
During the years 1818-19, I spent a
considerable time with, or in the vicinity
of, the Comanche Indians of Texas. My
purpose was the renovation of an impaired
constitution, seriously threatened with
pulmonary consumption, in which I succeeded
beyond my utmost expectations.
This residence in the Indian country,
enabled me to collect some facts in relation
to the Comanches, and some minor tribes of
Texas, which may possibly be worthy of being
communicated to the Department of Indian
Affairs, in reply to the very voluminous
inquiries concerning the aborigines of the
United States, lately promulgated by the
Chief of the Department, a copy of which you
have furnished me. My information is
entirely too limited and imperfect, for me
to attempt a specific answer to the several
queries propounded. The want of an adequate
interpreter would alone have precluded me
from acquiring the minute statistical and
other information necessary to that end, had
my mind been specially directed to such an
object. I shall therefore condense the
remarks I have to make, and which, in the
absence of all memoranda, I must draw from a
recollection of near thirty years.
The Comanches are the most numerous tribe of
Indians in Texas. They are divided into
three principal bands; to wit, the Comanche,
the Yamparack, and the Tenawa. The former,
with whom we have most intercourse, from
their geographical position, occupy the
region between the Rivers Colorado of Texas
and the Red River of Louisiana; ranging from
the sources of the Colorado, including its
western effluents, down to the Llano Bayou;
and from the vicinity of the Pawnees, on the
Red River, to the American settlements on
that stream. They are frequently at war with
the Pawnees, and sometimes make a hostile
incursion upon the Osages. The Yampa-racks
range the country north and west of the
Comanches; and the Tenawa again interior
from the latter. They are essentially one
people: speak the same language, and have
the same peculiar habits, and the same
tribal interests.
In 1819 the three bands consisted of 10,000
to 12,000 souls, and could muster from 2000
to 2500 warriors. They have been generally
estimated at much higher numbers, but I am
persuaded the above would comprise their
entire population and their utmost military
force. Since the period above named, I
presume they have rather diminished than
increased in numbers, as they are generally
engaged in depredating upon the proximate
Mexican settlements, by which they often
suffer loss of life; are also occasionally
at war with other tribes; and have within a
few years sustained some abatement of
numbers in their forays upon our
settlements.
The Comanches have no definite idea of their
own origin. Their loose tradition is, that
their ancestors came from the North; but
they have no precise conception of the time
when, or from what particular region. They
are nomadic in their manner of life; their
cattle consisting of horses and mules, which
they rob, for the most part, from the
imbecile Mexicans, who hold them in great
dread. They have no knowledge of
agriculture, but depend entirely on game for
subsistence, and chiefly on the buffalo,
which descend in large herds to their region
on the approach of winter. During the summer
months, when the buffalo return to their
northern pastures, these Indians are often
exposed to suffering, and find it difficult
to procure adequate sustenance; but they
have a rare capacity for enduring hunger,
and manifest great patience under its
infliction. After long abstinence they eat
voraciously, and without apparent
inconvenience.
I do not believe the Comanches, by which
term I intend the entire tribe, have any
traditions of the slightest verisimilitude,
running farther into bygone time than the
third generation. Their means of knowledge
of the past are altogether oral; unaided by
monuments of any description. I could never
discover that they had any songs, legends,
or other mementoes, to perpetuate the fetes
of arms, or other illustrious deeds of their
progenitors; and I question if the names of
any of their chiefs of the fourth generation
ascending are retained among them. They
perish with but little more note of
remembrance than does a favorite dog among
the enlightened of the people. In 1819 their
principal chief, who was generally
recognised as the head of the three bands,
was called Parrow-a-kifty; by
interpretation, Little Bear. He was a Tenawa,
and was a brave, enterprising, and
intelligent savage; superior to his tribe in
general. He was celebrated for his
taciturnity and sedateness; it was said of
him, that he never laughed, except in
battle. His habitual taciturnity was not of
that affected kind which is sometimes
adopted among the more enlightened, as a
convenient substitute for, and type of,
wisdom.
The authority of their chiefs is rather
nominal than positive; more advisory than
compulsive; and relies more upon personal
influence than investment of office. They
have a number, altogether indefinite, of
minor chiefs or captains, who lead their
small predatory bands, and are selected for
their known or pretended prowess in war. Any
one who finds and avails himself of an
opportunity for distinction in robbing
horses or scalps, may aspire to the honors
of chieftaincy, and is gradually inducted by
a tacit popular consent, no such thing as a
formal election being known among them. They
usually roam in small subdivisions, varying
according to caprice, or the scarcity or
abundance of game, from twenty to one
hundred families, more or less; and to each
of these parties there will be one or more
captains or head men. If any internal social
difficulty occurs, it is adjusted, if
adjusted at all, by a council of the chiefs
present, aided by the seniors of the lodges,
whose arbitrement is usually, though not
always, conclusive between the parties at
variance: but there are not many private
wrongs perpetrated among them, and family or
personal feuds seldom arise they live
together in a degree of social harmony which
contrasts strikingly with the domestic
incidents of some pseudo-civilized
communities, that vaunt of their
enlightenment.
They have no idea of jurisprudence as a
practical science, and no organized and
authoritative system of national polity. One
captain will lead his willing followers to
robbery and carnage, while another, and
perhaps the big chief of all, will eschew
the foray, and profess friendship for the
victims of the assault. Hence treaties made
with these untutored savages are a mere
nullity, unless enforced by a sense of fear
pervading the whole tribe: and it is
somewhat difficult to impress this sentiment
upon them; for they have a cherished
conceit, the joint product of ignorance and
vanity, that they are the most powerful of
nations.
They recognize no distinct rights of meum
and teum, except to personal
property; holding the territory they occupy,
and the game that depastures upon it, as
common to all the tribe: the latter is
appropriated only by capture. They are
usually very liberal in the distribution of
their provisions, especially in a time of
scarcity. Their horses and mules are kept
with sufficient caution, in separate
cavalcades or hordes. Industrious and
enterprising individuals will sometimes own
from one to three hundred head of mules and
horses, the spoils of war. These constitute
their principal articles of traffic, which
they exchange for the goods their
convenience or fancy may require. They sell
some buffalo robes, which are dressed, and
sometimes painted, by the women with
considerable taste. Prisoners of war belong
to the captors, and may be sold or released
at their will. While among them, I purchased
four Mexican prisoners, for each of whom I
paid, on an average, about the value of 200
dollars, in various articles, estimated at
their market value. One of them very soon
stole a horse and ran away; two were
worthless idlers; and one old man rendered
some remuneration by personal services.
These three cognate tribes cannot be said to
have any common tribal government. The
Tenawa and Yamparacks trade with the
Mexicans of Santa Fe, while the lower party
war upon the Mexicans of Chihuahua, and all
the lower provinces, including Tamaulipas.
Still, hostilities by the United States with
the one, would involve a conflict with all;
for the Comanches, the lower party, if
pressed, would retire to, and coalesce with,
their kindred, who would adopt the quarrel
without an inquiry into its justice or
expediency. But, ordinarily, there is no
political intercommunion between them,
although they sometimes cohabit and pursue
the buffalo in the same range. The two upper
parties have comparatively few mules or
horses, being less convenient to those
portions of Mexico where these animals most
abound; the regions of the mid and lower Rio
Grande. They have no established "game laws"
but they regard the ingress of stranger
hunters with a jealousy that is sometimes
fatal to the intruders. This seldom occurs,
unless the destruction can be consummated
with impunity. As before remarked, their
trade consists principally in the exchange
of horses and mules, for the usual articles
of Indian commerce. They are sufficiently
astute in dealing, although quite ignorant
of the real value of many articles they
purchase, and are liable to be egregiously
imposed upon. A prompt delivery on both
parts, is the best mode to secure payment.
"When goods are delivered to them on credit,
they are either gambled off, or distributed
by donations to friends, in a few days, and
then the improvident debtor "loves his
horses," and pays them with reluctance, if
at all. An obstinate refusal to pay, is
difficult to overcome though I have known
the chiefs in council to compel payment but
the combined influence of several of their
most powerful chiefs was necessary to effect
it.
The Comanches take no furs, and but few
deerskins, the most of which they consume at
home. There are very few beavers or otters
in their country, and they know nothing of
the art of trapping. The American trappers
have nearly extirpated these valuable
animals from the waters of Texas. They have
no idea of the value of money as a medium of
exchange. I have often seen dollars and
their several integrants, suspended in a
continuous line, terminating in picayunes,
to the hair of a Comanche dandy, elongated
by horse-hair or a cow's tail.
The Comanches compute numbers by the fingers
the digits, by single fingers extended
decimals by both hands spread out and the
duplication of decimals, by slapping both
hands together to the number required I do
not know the names of their digits, except
the unit, semus; nor to what extent they
carry these generic denominations; but doubt
if they have any term for a higher number
than twenty after that, they resort to the
names of the several digits for the
multiplication of the decimal number. They
keep no accounts in hieroglyphics, or
devices of any kind, but rely entirely upon
memory; their commercial transactions being
few and simple.
They have made but small advances in the
science of medicine, and have no determinate
knowledge of the pathology of diseases. The
country they inhabit is remarkably
salubrious, and I noticed among them several
instances of apparently great longevity,
accompanied with a notable retention of the
mental and physical faculties. There are no
marshes, swamps, or stagnant water-pools, to
send forth-miasmatic exhalations,
engendering "the pestilence that walketh in
darkness." I believe they have a very potent
and efficacious, if not a sovereign,
vegetable remedy for the bite of venomous
reptiles, unless a principal artery is
punctured. They are expert in curing gunshot
wounds, and in the treatment of fractured
limbs, which they bandage with neatness and
good effect. They have no knowledge of the
art of amputation, and if gangrene
supervenes in any case it is remediless.
They believe in divers amulets and other
mystic influences; and have a custom of
"singing for the sick," when a crowd
assembles at the lodge of the sick person
and makes all sorts of hideous noises, vocal
and instrumental, the object of which is to
scare away the disease; it is certainly
better calculated to affright than to
soothe. I did not inquire, with any
minuteness, into their materia medica,
believing that Comanche specifics were more
likely to be efficacious among themselves
than with others: their diet and all their
habits are simple, and they are strangers to
strong drink, or "fire-water," as they
significantly call alcoholic liquors. They
have no regular physicians, and have not
much use for any, for there are few diseases
prevalent among them. Fevers sometimes
occur, but are not understood either in
their pathology or manner of cure: they are
generally intermittent, and of a very mild
type, owing partly to the arid purity of
their atmosphere. They have no professed
practitioners in obstetrics. A woman will
accomplish her parturition without aid, and
sometimes on a journey, without losing an
entire day s march. The smallpox was
introduced among them the second year
previous to my visit, and swept off a great
number. It prevailed but a short time or the
nation would have become extinct, for I
believe very few who imbibed the virus
survived its ravages. Their mode of
treatment was calculated to increase the
mortality. The patients were strictly
confined to their lodges, excluded from the
air, and almost suffocated with heat. In
many instances while under the maddening
influence of the disease, exasperated by a
severe paroxysm of symptomatic fever, they
would rush to the water and plunge beneath
it. The remedy was invariably fatal.
The Comanche costume is simple, though often
variegated: it consists generally of a
buffalo robe, worn loosely around the
person, and covering the whole to the
ankles. This is sometimes painted, or
ornamented with beads on the skin side, or
both. They prefer a large mantle of scarlet
or blue cloth, or one half of each color,
except in very cold weather, when the robe,
the hair turned in, is more comfortable. The
breechcloth is usually of blue stroud, and
descends to the knees. The leggings, made
long, of dressed deerskin, or blue or
scarlet cloth, garnished with a profusion of
beads and other gewgaws. The headdress is as
various as their fancies can suggest, and
their means supply. Parrow-a-kifty's
parade headdress was a cap made of the scalp
of a buffalo bull, with the horns attached
in proper position. He ordinarily wore few
ornaments. The young men, the exquisites of
the tribe, and no people, savage or
civilized, are more addicted to the fanciful
in dress, bedaub their faces with paints of
divers kinds and colors red, black, and
white predominant these they obtain, for the
most part, from the different fossils of
their country, without chemical elaboration.
Vermilion is much admired, but is generally
too costly for habitual use. They sometimes
load their heads with feathers, arranged in
lofty plumes, or dangling in the air in
pensile confusion, or wove into an immense
hood. The hair is often besmeared with a
dusky-reddish clay; and horse-hair,
cow-tails, or any other analogous material,
is attached to the conglomerate mass, until
the huge compound cue will descend to the
heels of the wearer. They wear arm-bands,
from one to ten or more on each arm, made of
brass wire, about the size of a goose-quill;
nose-pieces, of shell, or bone, or silver,
attached to the division-cartilage; and
ear-pendants, of strung-beads or any thing
they fancy and can procure. They know
nothing of the origin of these customs of
the costume, and understand as little of any
sensible reason for them, as the more
civilized dandy does, of the rationale of
his changeful fancies of the toilet, which
are sometimes equally as ridiculous and
diverse from the simplicity and the symmetry
of nature. Their actual wardress approaches
to absolute nudity. "When about to attack an
enemy, which they always do on horseback,
they disrobe them selves of every thing but
the breech-cloth and moccasins. Their
saddles are light, with high pommels and
cantlins; and they never encumber their
horses with useless trappings.
The women are held in small estimation; they
are " hewers of wood and drawers of water"
to their indolent and supercilious lords.
But this is common to all people, on whom
the oracles of truth have never shed their
humanizing influence. The women, married and
single, pay much less attention to personal
adornment than the men, and appear, in the
degradation of their social condition, to
have retained but little self-respect. They
are disgustingly filthy in their persons,
and seemingly as debased in their moral as
in their physical constitution. They are
decidedly more ferocious and cruel to
prisoners than the men, among whom I have
sometimes witnessed a gleaming of a kind and
benevolent nature. It is an ancient custom
to surrender a prisoner to the women, for
torture, for the first three days of his
arrival among them. These fiends stake out
the unhappy victim by day, that is, fasten
him on his back to the ground, with his
limbs distended by cords and stakes. At
evening, he is released and taken to the
dance, where he is placed in the centre of a
living circle, formed by the dense mass of
his tormentors, and made to dance and sing,
while the furies of the inner line beat him
with sticks and thongs of raw-hide, with
great diligence and glee, until their own
exertions induce fatigue; when he is
remanded to his ground-prison, to abide a
series of small vexations during the coming
day, and a repetition of the fell orgies the
ensuing night. At the expiration of the
three days, he is released from their
custody, exempt from further annoyance, and
taken to the lodge of his captor, to enter
upon his servitude. This course is not
universal. Adult prisoners are sometimes
deliberately put to death with protracted
tortures, when the party taking them have
suffered much loss of life in the foray. At
such times, these savages will eat a portion
of the flesh of their victims; and so far
are liable to the charge of being cannibals.
But they eat to gratify a spirit of revenge,
and not to satiate a morbid and loathsome
appetite. Cannibalism, disgusting in all its
phases, is with them a purely metaphysical
passion. It is perhaps more abhorrent, to a
correct moral sense, though less loathsome
than that which results from mere brutal
appetite. When boys or girls are captured,
they are not subject to any systematic
punishment, but are immediately domiciliated
in the family of the captor. If docile and
tractable, they are seldom treated with
excessive cruelty. They are employed in
menial ser vices, and, occasionally, in
process of time, are emancipated and marry
into the tribe, when they become, de facto,
Comanches. There were a number of Mexican
juvenile prisoners among them. Those I saw
were reluctant to being redeemed, and a much
higher value was set on them than on adults.
Polygamy, to an indefinite extent, is
permitted. One chief, Carno-san-tua,
the son of America, a name I presume of
Mexican bestowment, had ten wives, all of
whom seemed to live together in
uninterrupted harmony, although one of them
was evidently the chief favorite. Wives are
divorced unceremoniously by the husbands,
and some times marry again. Infidelity, on
the part of the wife, is punished by cutting
off the nose; the excision is made from the
lower extremity of the cartilage, diagonally
to the lip. I saw several instances of this
revolting retribution. The women do all the
menial work. They often accompany their
husbands in hunting. He kills the game, they
butcher and transport the meat, dress the
skins, &c. One or more women will sometimes
accompany a war party, when they act as
hostlers and serviteurs generally. When in
the enemy s country, and near the scene of
intended assault, the party selects some
sequestered spot, in a dense thicket or
chapparal, if to be had, where they encamp,
deposit their feeble horses and surplus
baggage, with a few of the aged or
inefficient warriors, and the women, as a
camp-guard, while they sally out usually by
moonlight, in quest of prey. They war for
spoils, and their favorite spoils are horses
and mules. They often drive off several
hundreds of these from a single Mexican
ranche, on one foray. The Comanches are not
deficient in natural courage, and no people
excel them in the art of horsemanship, and
few, if any, in the use of the bow and the
javelin, both of which they handle with
great dexterity, on horseback. As foot
soldiers, they are comparatively of little
account; but they are seldom caught on foot
by an enemy, and never, except by surprise.
They use light shotguns, but have an
aversion to the weight of the rifle.
Experience has taught them to dread this
formidable weapon, in the hands of our brave
frontiers-men; and to this sentiment may be
attributed much of their forbearance from
hostilities. They are generally men of good
stature, with very few instances of
diminutive size or personal deformity. They
use a shield made of raw buffalo-hide,
contracted and hardened by an ingenious
application to fire. It is oval or circular,
about two feet in diameter, and is worn on
the left arm. It will effectually arrest an
arrow, but is not proof against a rifle-ball
in full force.
The geographical knowledge of the Comanches
is confined within the small limits of their
own actual observation. All beyond is, to
their benighted minds, obscure and doubtful,
and an Indian s doubt is positive,
unqualified disbelief. They are excessively
incredulous of any facts, in relation to
other countries, that conflict with their
own experience. They have no settled,
intelligible notion of the form or
constitution of our planet, and none of the
great planetary system. They know and can
discriminate the north star, and are guided
by it in their nocturnal journeys. They call
it karmead-tasheno; literally,
not-moving star. When or how this knowledge
was acquired, I did not learn, and presume
it is quite unknown to themselves. They
recognize the sun as the great fountain of
heat, but of its nature, or the manner of
its dispensation, they know nothing and care
nothing. They refer to time long past, by
colds and heats; that is, by winters and
summers; and although they pay much
attention to the phases of the moon, the
revolutions of that planet are too frequent,
and would soon involve too high numbers to
constitute a mean of computing the
chronology of events, that have transpired
more than a year. For short periods, past or
future, they count by moons, from full to
full. The time of day they note by the
apparent position of the sun in the heavens.
The Comanche notions of religion are as
crude, imperfect, and limited, as of
geography or astronomy. They believe in, or
have some indefinite traditional idea of,
the Great Spirit; but I never discovered any
distinct mode or semblance of worship among
them. I frequently observed, early in the
morning, a shield, such as they use in war,
elevated at the point of a javelin, (the
hilt in the ground,) and invariably facing
the east. Whether done in reverence to the
great rising luminary, and of Ghebir origin,
I did not ascertain. They believe in
witchcraft, and sometimes attribute their
ailments to the magical influence of some
subtle and malignant enemy of their own
species. They held the Kitchies, a
small and distinct tribe then residing on
the waters of the River Trinity, in peculiar
detestation, on account of their supposed
powers of sorcery. They imagine that good
men (and adroitness and daring in taking
scalps or stealing horses are capital
evidences of goodness) are translated at
death to elysian hunting-grounds, where
buffalo are always abundant and fat. The
reverse of this maximum of Comanche felicity
is assigned to the wicked. In order to
facilitate the posthumous enjoyments of a
deceased warrior, they sacrifice some of his
best horses, and bury in his grave his
favorite implements of the chase for his
future use. They have no determinate idea of
the locality of these imaginary hunting
grounds. They mourn for the dead
systematically and periodically with great
noise and vehemence; at which times the
female relatives of the deceased scarify
their arms and legs with sharp flints until
the blood trickles from a thousand pores.
The duration of these lamentations depends
on the quality and estimation of the
deceased; varying from three to five or
seven days: after which the curtain of
oblivion seems to be drawn around the grave.
Whether this bloody rite of scarification
has descended by tradition from the
worshippers of Baal, is a question in
elucidation of which they have no relic,
oral or material, or other adumbration of
evidence, beyond the obvious similitude of
the act itself with a custom of the heathen
of the antique Canaan.
I perceived no order of priesthood, or
anything analogous to it, among them; if
they recognize any ecclesiastical authority
whatever, it resides in their chiefs; but I
think their religious sentiments are
entirely too loose, vague, and inoperative,
to have produced any such institution. The
elevation of the shield is the only act I
ever noticed among them, that afforded the
slightest indication of religious
concernment; and I doubt if they have any
opinions relative to future rewards and
punishments that exercise any moral
influence upon them. They have nothing like
a system of mythology, and neither do they
entertain any religious myths of a
traditionary or settled character. That
impressions of this kind may be easily made
upon them, is probable; for they are
addicted to superstition, and apt to believe
any absurdity, natural or preternatural,
that does not conflict with their personal
or natural vanity. But their minds are too
little intent upon the subject of a future
state, ever to have formed a connected
system of opinions in relation to it. If the
doctrine of metempsychosis has ever been
presented to them, it has not received a
national or general credence: indeed, I
doubt if they have any common plan of
religious belief, or of a supernatural
agency operating on the affairs of this
life, beyond the mystic vagaries of
witchcraft; and of these, they do not
distinctly believe in anything beyond the
potentiality of human means. It may be
assumed of them, as to all the practical
results of religious sentiment, that " the
fool hath said in his heart, there is no
God."
The country inhabited by the Comanches, at
least that portion of it watered by the
Colorado and its tributaries, is of a broken
and varied surface hilly, not mountainous.
The valleys are generally small; some of
them timbered, principally with the musquit;
and some prairie: all of them covered with
the best musquit grass, and affording the
richest pasture. The soil, still in its
virgin state, has the appearance of great
fertility, but is, in general, too arid for
successful culture, without artificial
irrigation. The climate is exceedingly dry,
and the protracted heats of the summer
exhaust all humidity from the atmosphere,
and from the soil. During the hot months the
dews are light, and not very frequent. The
margins of the creeks, and of the Colorado,
are belted with timber of the several
varieties found in similar latitudes: the
live oak and pecan are abundant; the first
found in beautiful groves on the hills and
level uplands. Timber suitable for building
is scarce, but stone abounds. No country is
better adapted to raising stock of all
kinds, and especially of horses; and
Estremadura cannot excel it for sheep-walks.
The principal animals are the migratory
buffalo, bear, deer, some antelopes, wolves
of several varieties, panthers, and
mustangs, or wild horses, which last are
obviously of a superior quality to those
found on the level or coast prairies;
rabbits, of several kinds, pole-cats, and
prairie-dogs are abundant: these last burrow
in the ground, and live in little
subterranean villages; they partake more of
the qualities of the squirrel than of the
canine species. Of the feathered tribe, the
buzzard predominates; these serve to guide
the wanderer to an Indian camp, over which
they generally hover, in anticipation of a
plentiful repast at the evacuation. Wild
turkeys are seen in large flocks; the small
birds are scarce; owls, of several kinds,
are plentiful, and render the night vocal
with hoots and hideous screams; the cardinal
(red-bird) inhabits the thickets, but it is
seldom the ear is saluted with the carols of
nature s songsters in those sequestered
regions.
The country adjacent to the San Saba, a
principal western tributary of the Colorado,
exhibits frequent indications of minerals,
particularly of iron, lead, and silver; I
was shown a specimen of copper ore, found
near the Brazos, high up, which was,
apparently, almost pure. My informer, a Mr.
Peyton Johnson, a very worthy man whom I
found in the Comanche country, and who had
visited the copper locality, assured me
there were thousands of wagonloads of ore,
similar to the specimen, lying on the
surface of the ground. There is, beyond
doubt, more iron-ore in the inland regions
of Texas than timber to smelt it; and enough
to close hoop the globe with railroads.
Stone-coal will assuredly be found in
abundance, for the distribution of nature s
bounties is ordinarily too equable and
provident to permit the apprehension that a
country abounding in the most useful and
some of the precious metals should be
destitute of the means to render them
available.
I never discovered or heard of any remains
of ancient edifices or any tumuli,
indicating the previous existence of a more
enlightened race of men, in the Comanche
country. Flints neatly formed into
arrowheads, are frequently found throughout
Texas; some under ground, and some above
they are wrought into good shape and various
sizes. The manner of their cleavage I do not
know. The Indians now use iron points to
their arrows; but the use of the bow and
arrow is gradually diminishing, and giving
way to that. of fire-arms.
The Lipans are a tribe of considerable
importance, and may be ranked next to the
Comanches among the Indians of Texas. They
have affinity with the Seraticks and the
Muscalaroes; and if estimated as identical
with them, are very superior to the
Comanches in numbers. They have never made
war upon our frontier; and their present
equivocal condition is to be regretted. They
are more enterprising and war like than the
Comanches, who regard them with a respect,
in which fear is a chief ingredient. Their
habits are very similar to the Comanches in
some respects; but they have made somewhat
more progress towards civilization. Many of
them speak the Spanish language, having
formerly had much intercourse with the
Mexicans. They can now raise about 200
warriors of their own band. The Seraticks
live on the Rio Grande, above the Passo del
Norte. Very little is known among us, in
relation to them. The Muscalaroes inhabit
the river Puerco, a considerable eastern
affluent of the Rio Grande: from the best
information I have, they number 1000 to 1500
warriors are of dark complexion peaceable in
their habits cultivate the ground and raise
stock have many horses and mules also sheep,
goats, and black cattle.
The Tonkawas are a separate tribe, having no
traceable affinity to any other band of
Indians in the country. They are erratic
live on game, and are quite indolent and
often in extremity of suffering. They have
generally been friendly to the whites,
though often suspected of having stolen
horses from the frontier. A few of these
accompanied our small army in the campaign
against the Cherokees in 1839, and rendered
good service. There are about 150 warriors
of this tribe they have usually warred
within the limits of our settlements.
The Whacoes Tawacanies Tow-e-ash Aynics San
Pedro's Nabaduchoes Nacado-cheets, and
Hitchies, are small tribes or fragments of
tribes, and, separately considered, are
quite insignificant. They have been long
resident in Texas, and properly belong to it
but they are, originally, the Hitchies
excepted, of the Caddo stock, being offsets
from that family. The Whacoes are the most
considerable of these bands, amounting
probably to 150 warriors, it being
understood among Indians that every adult
male is a warrior. They are a stealthy,
thieving, faithless race, and have done much
mischief, first and last, on our frontier.
They live in a village on the Upper Brazos,
and raise corn, beans, pumpkins, &c., and
usually spend the winter months in hunting.
The other small parties, amounting to about
fifty families each, live in villages, on
the waters of the Trinity and Neches, and
cultivate the ground to a small extent.
The Hitchies, once a distinct and isolated
tribe, have so intermarried with their
neighbor bands, that they have lost their
identity, and may be considered as merged
into the common stock. The Caddoes formerly
resided on the Red River of Louisiana, above
Natchitoches and below the Great Raft, and
were included in the jurisdiction of the
Indian Agency stationed in 1819 at
Natchitoches. They removed to Texas a few
years ago, and now claim to be Texas
Indians.
The Caddoes, Cherokees, Shawnees, Delawares,
Kickapoos, and some others, parts of tribes,
who have been allured into Texas by the
amenity of its climate, the abundance of its
game, and its comparatively waste condition,
are altogether intruders here; and had no
right of habitation, until the late
government of Texas, with great folly and
indiscretion, entered into a treaty with
several of them in 1844. By this unwise act,
which would have proven vastly more
mischievous if the country had remained in
separate independence than it now can do,
those bands acquired a sanction to their
intrusion and a right of settlement,
irrespective of numbers; and their numbers
would in all probability have been
alarmingly increased by immigration from the
northern tribes of the United States.
Annexation has arrested this evil, and saved
Texas from a dangerous influx of the most
dissatisfied, loose, and savage of the
several tribes from which the first
intruders proceeded. And still it is
believed they are constantly accumulating;
and they are now thrown, by a silly and
improvident policy of the government of the
late Republic, upon the State of Texas and
her territory. That they are tenants without
title, and hold only at the will of the
government, does not divest them of a
recognised right of residence, to which they
naturally attach a right of soil. Their
peaceable removal, which the tranquility of
the State will soon require, is practicable
only by the Federal Government.
Although the subject is not comprised in the
queries propounded by the department, I will
suggest that the future peace and happiness
of the large inland frontier of Texas
requires an early intervention of the
General Government, to adjust our complex
Indian relations. It is quite impossible for
the State, acting within her limited
sovereignty, to control and peaceably
dispose of the various tribes resident
within her territorial limits. The entire
subjugation of the Comanches in particular,
and probably of other tribes, or their early
removal, will be inevitable. The spread of
our population will, in a very few years, so
crowd upon the Comanches ancient hunting
grounds, as to compel them either to recede
westward or to resist by arms a progression
which is perfectly irresistible to their
feeble powers. The result of such an issue
must be, their entire and absolute
extermination; which, by the way, will not
be effected without much disaster and
bloodshed on our part. The Federal
government alone is competent to prevent a
catastrophe, which, however oppressive to
the ancient occupants, is necessarily
consequent to the progress of civilization.
The State has not the means to extinguish
the Indian titles to the spacious territory
over which they roam in pursuit of the only
means of subsistence they know, and which
they claim by the emphatic right of
occupancy for "time immemorial" to them. She
cannot provide them another and more secure,
because remote, country for their future
habitation. Such country can be found only
in the region of the Rocky Mountains, beyond
the local jurisdiction of the States, and is
disposable only by the Federal government.
To effect this humane policy, the only
practical substitute for the actual
extermination of the Indians, it is
indispensable that the Federal government
should become the proprietor of the vacant
domain of Texas which comprehends the
territory over which these erratic people
wander in quest of game. To reclaim the
Comanches from the chase, and adapt and
reconcile them to the less attractive labors
of agriculture, if it be not utterly
impracticable, would require many years of
experimental tuition, to the very initiative
of which they are habitually averse, and
which they never would consent to receive
from the insulated and defective authority
of the State. The general government only
can manage this delicate subject, of so
deep, abiding, and growing interest, happily
for all parties, and without great
blood-guiltiness to some of them.
Tour Obedient Servant,
DANIEL G. BURNET.
Henry R. Schoolcraft, Esq.
1. Vide "Inquiries," issued by the "War
Department in 1847.
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
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