Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in Ameri
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By: S. C. Gwynne (Author)
Reviews
Grettir Strong –
Comanches: unpleasant reality and government corruption.
This is by far the most interesting and comprehensive account of life in central prairies of United States from the late 17 until late 19 centuries. What is now much of Texas and parts of surrounding states was referred to as Comancheria back then. It was populated by extremely war-like peoples whose fates were intertwined in myriads of ways with populations of two growing empires, Spanish and Anglo-American. War chief of Comanche, Quanah, personified it more than anybody else – his father was famous leader of his tribe and his mother was a Texan captive, who refused to go back to her folks even when she had clear opportunity to do so.Couple of things (other than the book is well written and very well researched) I would like to single out.1. Because of Hollywood movies with John Wayne (and for those who is from former Warsaw pact areas, German movies with Goiko Mitic) life of Indians from American West seem somehow romantic and even glamorous. Author does a very good job bringing back to reality anybody who still holds such views. There was nothing romantic or glamorous to live as Comanche in those days. It was very hard and unpredictable life or Stone Age hunter-gatherers who put heavy focus on military abilities of their members and were almost in constant state of war with its neighbours. Life expectancy was very short, especially for males, and dependence on buffalo herds and horse stocks was paramount. Rules of war were very different and tortures were widespread. Although life of Comanche and other prairie tribes was, as classic put it, nasty, brutish and short, it does not make it less interesting. Not romantic but extremely interesting I would say and reader can find many remarkable details of Comanche lifestyle. Some of them may be repulsive (like tendency to catch lice and crack it with teeth), some weird (like taboo for throwing a shadow over pot with cooking meat), some blood-chilling (like all those tortures) and all of them universe away from what we accustomed to nowadays. Reading descriptions of Comanches is like looking at the very dawn of humanity with all its features brightly unfolded.2. While reading, one inevitably will pose a question – did they ever had a chance to survive and adopt? I mean, yes, technically speaking some Comanches did survive and they even have the country in Oklahoma (see Wikipedia for more) but looking broader one can’t help noticing that this is not exactly survival Comanches might want. Yes, it is almost impossible to imagine peaceful coexistence of Anglo-American settlements and Comanche war culture. But after I have read the book I think such chance was there. When US president of the time established agency for dealing with Indians, where food and other stuff was supposed to be distributed and all disputes were supposed to be resolved, actual chance for making real long lasting peace with full inclusion of Comanches into American mainstream was there. It did not work though and the reason for that was powerfully banal – corruption. It may sound strange but Comanches were victims of corruption in that government agency almost as much as of notorious buffalo hunters who killed off their means of subsistence and of famous six-shooter that all Indian fighters were ultimately armed with.This is a very good book to read and contemplate upon.
Bruce Roeder –
Top notch history
A few months ago I watched the prequel to the Lonesome Dove series. I would rate the three part series 3 out of 5 stars. It wasn’t great, but it was good enough to watch all three episodes.One of the things I look for in a series like that is how historical is it. Since much of the series dealt with the Texas Rangers, pre-Civil War, and their interactions with the Comanches (and Mexican bandits) I have to admit that I knew little.So, I was surprised when the Comanche chief (played by Wes Studi and one of the most interesting of the characters in the series) Buffalo Hump gathered together a large Comanche force and attacked Austin, Texas! Since I’d never heard of this I did a little research to see if it really happened.What I found was a reference to Empire of the Summer Moon-Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches the most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History by S.C. Gwynne. I bought it and frankly had a hard time putting it down.Quanah Parker is the thread that the book revolves around but the book is about much more than that.The backdrop is what the author refers to as Comancheria, an area encompassing modern Texas, Oklahoma, parts of New Mexico, parts of Old Mexico, southern Colorado and southern Kansas. At the height of Comancheria (1836) approximately 20,000 Comanches in five major bands roamed free in their empire victimizing their neighbors, the Apaches, the Utes, the Navahos and any other tribe within range (except the Kiowa who were in alliance with the Comanche) as well as the Mexicans and Texans.Gwynne is an exceptional writer and he tells their story well, detailing the formidable military power the Comanches were and how they achieved that status. One US military observer rated the Comanche horse warriors as the finest light cavalry in the world and Gwynn gives the reader plenty of examples to make the case.We tend to think that the Texans and Mexicans would have had an advantage with their gun powder weapons over the Comanches with their bows and arrows. Prior to the advent of repeating rifles, post-Civil War this simply was not true.Pre-Civil War weapons were single-shot muzzle loading weapons that took time to reload, a difficult thing to do mounted in the middle of a battle. It was so difficult that the Texans who fought the Comanches probably the most often, fought dismounted, a serious mistake against Comanches who were excellent horse archers and could get off five arrows to a Texan’s single shot.After giving the reader the fascinating background of the Comanche, Gwynne begins to weave the story of the Parkers into the bigger story of the Comanche Empire of the Summer Moon. (Summer Moon refers to the Comanche habit of raiding in the summer by the light of the moon. The term “Comanche Moon” is still used in Texas to describe a bright summer moon.)Back in 1836, shortly after the famous Battle of the Alamo during the Texas War of Independence against Mexico, the Parker family moved to the frontier fringes of civilization. They built a family fort in Comancheria which was a direct challenge to the warlike Comanches.The fort was certainly a good idea because it negated the Comanches mobility and Comanches would rarely attack a fixed position held by determined men whose long range rifles had the advantage.Well, on May 19th, 1836, ten of the sixteen men of the Parker clan were out in the cornfields. Eight women and nine children were inside the fort, but the armored gate was left wide-open. The remaining men were unarmed. Clearly, the Parkers, despite the fact they built a fort perceived little danger. They were horribly wrong despite the fact that the Comanches were known to be raiding near-by.On the morning of the 19th a large band of Comanches rode up to the fort. Rachel Parker, age seventeen, guessed they were “friendlies” another bad mistake, common enough though since telling one Indian from another must have been a challenge. It was probably safer to pray for the best but arm yourself for the worst until you knew for certain what you were up against.The raiding party consisted of Comanches and Kiowas and into this large group of fierce warriors walked Ben Parker, one of the six men in the fort. Ben was certainly brave, but also foolhardy.The raiders said they wanted a cow to slaughter and directions to a water hole even though their mounts were dripping wet clearly indicating the Indians knew exactly where they were. Ben said no to the cow offering instead other food. Remarkably, Ben went back into the fort and spoke to his brother Silas about how ridiculous the Comanches demands were regarding the water hole. Even more remarkably Ben gathered up some supplies and went back out to give them to the raiders even though Silas warned against it!Silas was on to something and some of the Parker clan but not all tried to make a get-a-way while the remaining men (not all) decided to make a stand although not a not a one was armed at the time.Ben Parker meanwhile was surrounded by the Comanches and horribly killed probably scalped while still alive. Silas would die too as would others in the ensuing chaos.This was only the beginning of the horrors inflicted on the Parkers.Gwynne does not pull any punches when he describes what happens to victims of the Comanches nor what the Texans did to Comanches once the tide of war began to turn. To say that frontier warfare was brutal is to understate just how brutal.The Comanche culture dictated brutality to captives (most of horse tribes were the same but Comanches were among the worse of the worst). They tortured the captive men to death, killed babies that cried too much and gang-raped captive women, sometimes to death, although they frequently made women and older children captive. They had been doing this for years and their targets more often than not were other Indians, notably the Lipan Apaches who they nearly exterminated. What happened to the Parkers was par for the course and as barbaric as what the Comanches practiced on fellow Indians (and they on them when they had the chance).Cynthia Ann Parker was a nine-year-old girl who was taken captive at the raid. She witnessed all that happened to her family. Cynthia Ann would spend the next twenty-four years as a Comanche eventually becoming a wife of a Comanche war chief. She would give birth to three children, one of whom was Quanah Parker, a half-breed who would rank along with Sitting Bull, Red Cloud, Crazy Horse and Geronimo as one the Indians who gave the US Army the hardest time in the 1870’s.Cynthia was “rescued” in 1860 as the tide began to turn against the Comanches. But the fact is, by then, she did not want to be rescued and her story became a double-tragedy as she is forced to live among the whites and the culture she had long forgot.Quanah was twelve when his mother was “rescued” and father killed. His rise to war chief among the Comanches was remarkable for the fact he was a half-breed and after his father was killed a no-body among his band, the Quahadi Comanches (the word Comanche means “people”).Quanah was whatever else one might say about him was courageous, had a mind for strategy and tactics and as it turns out in the story a pretty savvy pragmatist and successful business man once the Comanches were forced to the reservation in present day Oklahoma.To say any more about this book would only serve as a spoiler and I don’t want to do that.I thought I knew something about the Indian Wars but Empire of the Summer Moon opened my eyes to much. The book is rich in detail and packed with human interest stories regarding all the major players and many minor ones as well. The amount of research the author did was massive as the bibliography illustrates.As for Buffalo Hump and the raid on Austin, it never happened.What did happen is that Buffalo Hump a chief among the Comanches did mange to assemble a rather large “army” of Comanches. The raid that Buffalo Hump led is known in Texas as the Great Linville Raid and it took place in 1840.Buffalo Hump had a vision of driving the Texans into the sea. He led a force of 1,000 Comanches south of San Antonio killing and looting along the river lines that led to the Gulf of Mexico. The river part is in the TV series. In the TV series the town being destroyed by the rampaging Comanches is Austin, but historically it’s probably Victoria and/or Linville.The Comanches rode through the surprised town of Victoria first, killed at least a dozen people before being driven off by rifle fire. Instead of closing in for the kill immediately which they could have done, the Comanches settled for looting concentrating on the horses and mules, the criteria for wealth among the Comanches. The Comanches did attack again but the delay had given the residents time to build barricades turning the town into a fort and thus discouraging the Comanches from getting to close to the long rifles of the Texans.The Comanches departed with two thousand horses and a young black girl who presumably became part of the tribe like Cynthia Ann had four years earlier.The Comanches continued their ride of terror, following Buffalo Hump’s vision all the way to the sea and small town of Linville on the coast.The town’s residents panicked (rightly so) and fled to boats in the harbor but not all got away. The usual was the killing of all the men and the gang-raping of all captive women.While the residents fled the Comanches discovered the town’s warehouses and that’s when the real looting took place. They took all they could carry of the white man’s goods and then burned the town as the sea-borne residents watched helplessly. The town would never be rebuilt.Buffalo Hump then lost control of his “army.” The fact of the matter is the Comanches were always, in those days, more interested in raiding and loot, than driving the Texans into the sea. It wasn’t until much later than some of the Comanches realized they were in a fight for survival and a fight to keep to the old ways.So, at this point, the Comanches decided to pack it in a return to their sanctuaries and cash in on the loot something they always had done primarily with the Comancheros of New Mexico.They were dogged all the way back by the aroused Texas militia fighting the Battle of Plum Creek along the way. Among the pursuers were some Texas Rangers and after a war chief was killed the mounted Texans actually charged the Comanches rather than fight in the old dismounted fashion. This began a shift in the tactics of fighting of Comanches. The advent of the Colt revolver by the time of the Mexican War (1846-48) that the Texas Rangers would purchase in quantity (the US Army would not, rather shortsightedly) would eventually shift the balance of military power into the hands of the Texans. The repeating rifle (the Henry and Spencer would seal the deal by 1866).The raid was however, from the Comanche point-of-view a success. Only a few hundred head of horses were recovered.Comanche raids would continue until 1874, many led in the later years by Quanah Parker. Quanah was eventually beaten by Ranald S. Mackenzie, a contemporary of George Armstrong Custer. Ironically, Custer would become famous for losing the biggest disaster on the plains and Mackenize would be forgotten for being the most successful of the Generals who fought the plains tribes.This book is history how it’s meant to be written.Empire of the Summer MoonQuanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the most Powerful Indian Tribe in American HistoryBy S.C. Gwynne (Scribner, 2010)Twenty-two chapters, 371 pages including notes, bibliography and index
Rick@Canada –
A little long and dry, but very interesting. Jumps around chronologically and with different (but related) characters. Worthwhile and recommended.
sergio –
Una maravilla de libro.
Amazon Customer –
great book – well written
Lou –
Very well researched book. Easy to read and extremely interesting. Would highly recommend.
Grettir Strong –
Comanches: unpleasant reality and government corruption.
This is by far the most interesting and comprehensive account of life in central prairies of United States from the late 17 until late 19 centuries. What is now much of Texas and parts of surrounding states was referred to as Comancheria back then. It was populated by extremely war-like peoples whose fates were intertwined in myriads of ways with populations of two growing empires, Spanish and Anglo-American. War chief of Comanche, Quanah, personified it more than anybody else – his father was famous leader of his tribe and his mother was a Texan captive, who refused to go back to her folks even when she had clear opportunity to do so.Couple of things (other than the book is well written and very well researched) I would like to single out.1. Because of Hollywood movies with John Wayne (and for those who is from former Warsaw pact areas, German movies with Goiko Mitic) life of Indians from American West seem somehow romantic and even glamorous. Author does a very good job bringing back to reality anybody who still holds such views. There was nothing romantic or glamorous to live as Comanche in those days. It was very hard and unpredictable life or Stone Age hunter-gatherers who put heavy focus on military abilities of their members and were almost in constant state of war with its neighbours. Life expectancy was very short, especially for males, and dependence on buffalo herds and horse stocks was paramount. Rules of war were very different and tortures were widespread. Although life of Comanche and other prairie tribes was, as classic put it, nasty, brutish and short, it does not make it less interesting. Not romantic but extremely interesting I would say and reader can find many remarkable details of Comanche lifestyle. Some of them may be repulsive (like tendency to catch lice and crack it with teeth), some weird (like taboo for throwing a shadow over pot with cooking meat), some blood-chilling (like all those tortures) and all of them universe away from what we accustomed to nowadays. Reading descriptions of Comanches is like looking at the very dawn of humanity with all its features brightly unfolded.2. While reading, one inevitably will pose a question – did they ever had a chance to survive and adopt? I mean, yes, technically speaking some Comanches did survive and they even have the country in Oklahoma (see Wikipedia for more) but looking broader one can’t help noticing that this is not exactly survival Comanches might want. Yes, it is almost impossible to imagine peaceful coexistence of Anglo-American settlements and Comanche war culture. But after I have read the book I think such chance was there. When US president of the time established agency for dealing with Indians, where food and other stuff was supposed to be distributed and all disputes were supposed to be resolved, actual chance for making real long lasting peace with full inclusion of Comanches into American mainstream was there. It did not work though and the reason for that was powerfully banal – corruption. It may sound strange but Comanches were victims of corruption in that government agency almost as much as of notorious buffalo hunters who killed off their means of subsistence and of famous six-shooter that all Indian fighters were ultimately armed with.This is a very good book to read and contemplate upon.
Bruce Roeder –
Top notch history
A few months ago I watched the prequel to the Lonesome Dove series. I would rate the three part series 3 out of 5 stars. It wasn’t great, but it was good enough to watch all three episodes.One of the things I look for in a series like that is how historical is it. Since much of the series dealt with the Texas Rangers, pre-Civil War, and their interactions with the Comanches (and Mexican bandits) I have to admit that I knew little.So, I was surprised when the Comanche chief (played by Wes Studi and one of the most interesting of the characters in the series) Buffalo Hump gathered together a large Comanche force and attacked Austin, Texas! Since I’d never heard of this I did a little research to see if it really happened.What I found was a reference to Empire of the Summer Moon-Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches the most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History by S.C. Gwynne. I bought it and frankly had a hard time putting it down.Quanah Parker is the thread that the book revolves around but the book is about much more than that.The backdrop is what the author refers to as Comancheria, an area encompassing modern Texas, Oklahoma, parts of New Mexico, parts of Old Mexico, southern Colorado and southern Kansas. At the height of Comancheria (1836) approximately 20,000 Comanches in five major bands roamed free in their empire victimizing their neighbors, the Apaches, the Utes, the Navahos and any other tribe within range (except the Kiowa who were in alliance with the Comanche) as well as the Mexicans and Texans.Gwynne is an exceptional writer and he tells their story well, detailing the formidable military power the Comanches were and how they achieved that status. One US military observer rated the Comanche horse warriors as the finest light cavalry in the world and Gwynn gives the reader plenty of examples to make the case.We tend to think that the Texans and Mexicans would have had an advantage with their gun powder weapons over the Comanches with their bows and arrows. Prior to the advent of repeating rifles, post-Civil War this simply was not true.Pre-Civil War weapons were single-shot muzzle loading weapons that took time to reload, a difficult thing to do mounted in the middle of a battle. It was so difficult that the Texans who fought the Comanches probably the most often, fought dismounted, a serious mistake against Comanches who were excellent horse archers and could get off five arrows to a Texan’s single shot.After giving the reader the fascinating background of the Comanche, Gwynne begins to weave the story of the Parkers into the bigger story of the Comanche Empire of the Summer Moon. (Summer Moon refers to the Comanche habit of raiding in the summer by the light of the moon. The term “Comanche Moon” is still used in Texas to describe a bright summer moon.)Back in 1836, shortly after the famous Battle of the Alamo during the Texas War of Independence against Mexico, the Parker family moved to the frontier fringes of civilization. They built a family fort in Comancheria which was a direct challenge to the warlike Comanches.The fort was certainly a good idea because it negated the Comanches mobility and Comanches would rarely attack a fixed position held by determined men whose long range rifles had the advantage.Well, on May 19th, 1836, ten of the sixteen men of the Parker clan were out in the cornfields. Eight women and nine children were inside the fort, but the armored gate was left wide-open. The remaining men were unarmed. Clearly, the Parkers, despite the fact they built a fort perceived little danger. They were horribly wrong despite the fact that the Comanches were known to be raiding near-by.On the morning of the 19th a large band of Comanches rode up to the fort. Rachel Parker, age seventeen, guessed they were “friendlies” another bad mistake, common enough though since telling one Indian from another must have been a challenge. It was probably safer to pray for the best but arm yourself for the worst until you knew for certain what you were up against.The raiding party consisted of Comanches and Kiowas and into this large group of fierce warriors walked Ben Parker, one of the six men in the fort. Ben was certainly brave, but also foolhardy.The raiders said they wanted a cow to slaughter and directions to a water hole even though their mounts were dripping wet clearly indicating the Indians knew exactly where they were. Ben said no to the cow offering instead other food. Remarkably, Ben went back into the fort and spoke to his brother Silas about how ridiculous the Comanches demands were regarding the water hole. Even more remarkably Ben gathered up some supplies and went back out to give them to the raiders even though Silas warned against it!Silas was on to something and some of the Parker clan but not all tried to make a get-a-way while the remaining men (not all) decided to make a stand although not a not a one was armed at the time.Ben Parker meanwhile was surrounded by the Comanches and horribly killed probably scalped while still alive. Silas would die too as would others in the ensuing chaos.This was only the beginning of the horrors inflicted on the Parkers.Gwynne does not pull any punches when he describes what happens to victims of the Comanches nor what the Texans did to Comanches once the tide of war began to turn. To say that frontier warfare was brutal is to understate just how brutal.The Comanche culture dictated brutality to captives (most of horse tribes were the same but Comanches were among the worse of the worst). They tortured the captive men to death, killed babies that cried too much and gang-raped captive women, sometimes to death, although they frequently made women and older children captive. They had been doing this for years and their targets more often than not were other Indians, notably the Lipan Apaches who they nearly exterminated. What happened to the Parkers was par for the course and as barbaric as what the Comanches practiced on fellow Indians (and they on them when they had the chance).Cynthia Ann Parker was a nine-year-old girl who was taken captive at the raid. She witnessed all that happened to her family. Cynthia Ann would spend the next twenty-four years as a Comanche eventually becoming a wife of a Comanche war chief. She would give birth to three children, one of whom was Quanah Parker, a half-breed who would rank along with Sitting Bull, Red Cloud, Crazy Horse and Geronimo as one the Indians who gave the US Army the hardest time in the 1870’s.Cynthia was “rescued” in 1860 as the tide began to turn against the Comanches. But the fact is, by then, she did not want to be rescued and her story became a double-tragedy as she is forced to live among the whites and the culture she had long forgot.Quanah was twelve when his mother was “rescued” and father killed. His rise to war chief among the Comanches was remarkable for the fact he was a half-breed and after his father was killed a no-body among his band, the Quahadi Comanches (the word Comanche means “people”).Quanah was whatever else one might say about him was courageous, had a mind for strategy and tactics and as it turns out in the story a pretty savvy pragmatist and successful business man once the Comanches were forced to the reservation in present day Oklahoma.To say any more about this book would only serve as a spoiler and I don’t want to do that.I thought I knew something about the Indian Wars but Empire of the Summer Moon opened my eyes to much. The book is rich in detail and packed with human interest stories regarding all the major players and many minor ones as well. The amount of research the author did was massive as the bibliography illustrates.As for Buffalo Hump and the raid on Austin, it never happened.What did happen is that Buffalo Hump a chief among the Comanches did mange to assemble a rather large “army” of Comanches. The raid that Buffalo Hump led is known in Texas as the Great Linville Raid and it took place in 1840.Buffalo Hump had a vision of driving the Texans into the sea. He led a force of 1,000 Comanches south of San Antonio killing and looting along the river lines that led to the Gulf of Mexico. The river part is in the TV series. In the TV series the town being destroyed by the rampaging Comanches is Austin, but historically it’s probably Victoria and/or Linville.The Comanches rode through the surprised town of Victoria first, killed at least a dozen people before being driven off by rifle fire. Instead of closing in for the kill immediately which they could have done, the Comanches settled for looting concentrating on the horses and mules, the criteria for wealth among the Comanches. The Comanches did attack again but the delay had given the residents time to build barricades turning the town into a fort and thus discouraging the Comanches from getting to close to the long rifles of the Texans.The Comanches departed with two thousand horses and a young black girl who presumably became part of the tribe like Cynthia Ann had four years earlier.The Comanches continued their ride of terror, following Buffalo Hump’s vision all the way to the sea and small town of Linville on the coast.The town’s residents panicked (rightly so) and fled to boats in the harbor but not all got away. The usual was the killing of all the men and the gang-raping of all captive women.While the residents fled the Comanches discovered the town’s warehouses and that’s when the real looting took place. They took all they could carry of the white man’s goods and then burned the town as the sea-borne residents watched helplessly. The town would never be rebuilt.Buffalo Hump then lost control of his “army.” The fact of the matter is the Comanches were always, in those days, more interested in raiding and loot, than driving the Texans into the sea. It wasn’t until much later than some of the Comanches realized they were in a fight for survival and a fight to keep to the old ways.So, at this point, the Comanches decided to pack it in a return to their sanctuaries and cash in on the loot something they always had done primarily with the Comancheros of New Mexico.They were dogged all the way back by the aroused Texas militia fighting the Battle of Plum Creek along the way. Among the pursuers were some Texas Rangers and after a war chief was killed the mounted Texans actually charged the Comanches rather than fight in the old dismounted fashion. This began a shift in the tactics of fighting of Comanches. The advent of the Colt revolver by the time of the Mexican War (1846-48) that the Texas Rangers would purchase in quantity (the US Army would not, rather shortsightedly) would eventually shift the balance of military power into the hands of the Texans. The repeating rifle (the Henry and Spencer would seal the deal by 1866).The raid was however, from the Comanche point-of-view a success. Only a few hundred head of horses were recovered.Comanche raids would continue until 1874, many led in the later years by Quanah Parker. Quanah was eventually beaten by Ranald S. Mackenzie, a contemporary of George Armstrong Custer. Ironically, Custer would become famous for losing the biggest disaster on the plains and Mackenize would be forgotten for being the most successful of the Generals who fought the plains tribes.This book is history how it’s meant to be written.Empire of the Summer MoonQuanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the most Powerful Indian Tribe in American HistoryBy S.C. Gwynne (Scribner, 2010)Twenty-two chapters, 371 pages including notes, bibliography and index
Rick@Canada –
A little long and dry, but very interesting. Jumps around chronologically and with different (but related) characters. Worthwhile and recommended.
sergio –
Una maravilla de libro.
Amazon Customer –
great book – well written
Lou –
Very well researched book. Easy to read and extremely interesting. Would highly recommend.