


Eventually, a clever, aggressive, and able American commander, Colonel Ranald Slidell Mackenzie led a coordinated and concentrated campaign to defeat the Comanches. However, with the defeat of Mexico in the Mexican-American War in 1848 and the relentless American invasion Westward, pressure against the Comanches mounted. The Comanches, due to their prowess as horse warriors, to the inability of their enemies (namely the Spanish and Americans) to adapt to warfare against them, and to the skirmish-style battles typical of the plains, were able to hold back many incursions into their lands. She gave birth to a son, Quanah Parker, who would lead the Comanches against the American army in the last days of the tribe’s freedom on the plains. In a raid that left many family members dead and others captured, the fates of the Comanches intertwined with that of the Parker family the reason for this is because one of Parker captives, a young girl named Cynthia Ann, would be adopted into the tribe and marry a Comanche chief. One of the earliest settlements to experience the brutality of a Comanche raid was owned by a renowned family, the Parkers.

The Spanish surrendered plans to conquer areas of Comancheria (the name given to the lands controlled by the Comanches).Īs American pioneers pushed further west, however, confrontation with the Comanches was inevitable. They also fought the once-mighty Spanish Empire to a standstill. They became so adept at mounted warfare that they were able to defeat their rivals, the Apaches, and exercise dominance over all the other southern plains tribes. The Comanches were a warring tribe, and raiding settlements and other Indian tribes was as central to their culture as was the buffalo hunt. The Comanches quickly learned to wrangle and tame those horses they even learned to breed them, something that no other tribe learned to do. There they discovered wild horses, escapees from the Spanish herds. The Comanches migrated from the northern regions of modern-day eastern Wyoming into the southern plains region comprising much of modern-day Oklahoma, Colorado, New Mexico, Kansas, and Texas.
