American settlers have removed the Tonkawa people …

Years: 1837 - 1837

American settlers have removed the Tonkawa people to the southwestern frontier of the new Texas nation by 1837, when the Tonkawa are among the tribes identified in Mexican territory.

The Tonkawa have a distinct language, and their name, as that of the leading tribe, is applied to their linguistic family, once composed of a number of small sub-tribes that lived in a region that extended west from south central Texas and western Oklahoma to eastern New Mexico.

They had been one of the most warlike tribes during nearly two centuries of conflict with their enemy tribes on the Western plains and with the Spanish and, later, American settlers in the Southwest.

Their men are famous warriors, and their chiefs bear many scars of battle.

The Tonkawa women are also strong physically and vindictive in disposition.

The people of this tribe were nomadic in their habits in the early historic period, moving their tipi villages according to the wishes of the chiefs of the different bands.

They planted a few crops, but were well known as great hunters of buffalo and deer, using bows and arrows and spears for weapons, as well as some firearms secured from early Spanish traders.

They became skilled riders and owned many good horses in the eighteenth century.

From about 1800, the Tonkawa had been allied with the Lipan Apache and were friendly to the Texans and other southern divisions.

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