peace-making on the plains
They began arriving as planned, there along the Arkansas River, up in what is now Colorado: the warriors, the horses, the wives, the horses, the children, the horses. Whole populations came: Cheyennes; and a major northern band of the Comanches; and Kiowas; and Plains Apaches. This was not a few "chiefs" wandering in. It was everybody. They were there for diplomacy. What they agreed would be binding. It was the summer of 1840. Paths toward the PlainsTo get to that country, these peoples had come over long routes, since many years. Some bands, moving out of the upper Mississippi valley a century earlier, had joined up with small groups splitting off from the Lakotas, and built themselves into a nation: the Cheyennes. Other peoples, the Comanches, anciently out of the northern Rockies, were now spread out in some half-dozen separate bands, from the Arkansas south into Texas, toward the great sluggish river that flowed from New Mexico down into the Gulf. The Comanches had long been involved in exchanges with other indigenous groups, and with Mexicans, and recently with Anglo-Americans coming in across Texas. They traded Texas horses to New Mexico, and Mexican horses to indigenous nations farther nor
Some topics in this essay:
Taos Mexico, Santa Fe, Bent's Fort, Plains Apaches, San Antonio, St Louis, Paths PlainsTo, Texas Captive-taking, Mexico Mexican, River Colorado, plains apaches, particular religious morale, san antonio, indigenous nations, santa fe, particular religious, gathering arkansas, bent's fort, kiowas plains, kiowas plains apaches, kiowas comanches, st louis,
Join now to see the rest of the essay!
Approximate Word count = 1121
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
CUSTOMER SERVICES
| |
|