Various Apache bands from the southern Plains, …

Years: 1744 - 1755

Various Apache bands from the southern Plains, having acquired horses from Spaniards in New Mexico in the mid-seventeenth century, had moved southeastward into the Edwards Plateau, displacing the native hunting and gathering groups.

One of these groups is known as Lipan (see Hodge 1907 Vol. I:769 for a confusing list of synonyms).

The government of New Spain finally negotiates a temporary peace with the Apache in 1749, and at the request of the natives a mission is established along the San Saba River northwest of San Antonio.

The Apaches shun the mission, but the fact that Spaniards now appear to be friends of the Apache angers the Apache enemies, primarily the Comanche, Tonkawa, and Hasinai tribes, who promptly destroy the mission.

The Spaniards of the San Antonio area begin referring to all Apache groups in southern Texas as Lipan or Lipan Apache (Campbell and Campbell 1981:62-64) after 1750, when most Apache groups of the central Texas highlands have been displaced by Comanche and move into the coastal plain of southern Texas.

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