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Uploaded a work by Drawn by Albert Gatschet, around 1884 from Jones, William K.: Notes on the History and Material Culture of the Tonkawa Indians SMITHSONLiN CONTRIBUTIONS TO ANTHROPOLOGY. VOLUME 2, Number 5. SMITHSONIAN PRESS, Washington: 1969. U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1969. with UploadWizard
The Tonkawa are a Native American tribe from Oklahoma and Texas. [2] Their Tonkawa language, now extinct, [4] is a linguistic isolate. [5] Today, Tonkawa people are enrolled in the federally recognized Tonkawa Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma, headquartered in Tonkawa, Oklahoma. [6] They have more than 700 tribal citizens. [1]
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Tonkawa history" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list ...
More than 100 years after Tonkawa people were forced out of Texas, the tribe is returning as a land owner
GAUSE, Texas — Almost exactly 140 years after the Tonkawa were expelled from Texas, they have returned to purchase Sugarloaf Mountain, a sacred site located in Milam County, northeast of Austin ...
The colonists soon began working on an alliance with the Tonkawa Indians of the region, whom they saw as "great beggars" who did not threaten their desires to settle on the land. [7] There were further battles and one-sided massacres , and by 1824 the local Carancaguase chief Antonio signed a treaty abandoning their homelands east of the ...
The Tonkawa massacre (October 23–24, 1862) occurred after an attack at the Confederate-held Wichita Agency, located at Fort Cobb (south of present-day Fort Cobb, Oklahoma) near Anadarko in the Indian Territories, when a detachment of irregular Union Indian troops, made up of the Tonkawa's long-hated tribal enemies, detected a weakness at Fort ...
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