While descendants of Cynthia Ann Parker may debate some details of her capture, many can recite the facts by heart. At around 10 a.m. on May 19, 1836, forty miles east of modern-day Waco, the ...
Amarillo honored the Panhandle's history and last chief of the Comanche nation Wednesday morning with the unveiling of a Quanah Parker statue as a permanent feature in the Rick Husband Amarillo ...
Long ago on the prairies of East Central Illinois lived a young, blond-haired, blue-eyed girl named Cynthia Ann Parker. She and her family settled along the Embarras River in the 1820s, building the ...
Editor’s Note: Jack Becker, Librarian Emeritus, TTU Libraries is the editor of Caprock Chronicles. He can be reached at jack.becker@ttu.edu. Today’s essay is the second in Tina Siemens' three-part ...
CACHE, Oklahoma -- Quanah Parker and Herbert Woesner Jr. never met each other. In fact they were born almost a hundred years apart. But these two men shared an appreciation for southwest Oklahoma and ...
Editor's Note: Caprock Chronicles are edited by Jack Becker, Librarian Emeritus, TTU Libraries. Today's essay is the third and last article written by Tina Siemens about Quanah Parker and the Comanche ...
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