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Quanah Parker - Wikipedia Quanah Parker (Comanche: Kwana, lit 'smell, odor'; c 1845 – February 23, 1911) was a war leader of the Kwahadi ("Antelope") band of the Comanche Nation
Quanah Parker | Biography, Facts, Family Tree | Britannica Quanah Parker (born 1848?, near Wichita Falls, Texas, U S —died February 23, 1911, Cache, near Fort Sill, Oklahoma) was a Comanche leader who, as the last chief of the Kwahadi (Quahadi) band, mounted an unsuccessful war against white expansion in northwestern Texas (1874–75)
Quanah, Texas City of Quanah Official Website, steeped in Cherokee history, The Medicine Mounds and more It is the City of the Legend, Quanah Parker Quality over Quantity, Quanah Texas is home grown in every way Stay, Explore, Relax, shop and experience the best of small town life
Parker, Quanah - TSHA Explore the life of Quanah Parker, the last chief of the Quahada Comanche Indians, his role in resistance and adaptation, and his legacy as a leader who bridged two cultures
Quanah Parker | Humanities Texas Born about 1845, Comanche leader Quanah Parker lived two vastly different lives: the first as a warrior among the Plains Indians of Texas, and the second as a pragmatic leader who sought a place for his people in a rapidly changing America
Quanah Parker – Last Chief of the Comanche - Legends of America The last Chief of the Quahadi Comanche, Quanah Parker, was both a major resistor to white settlers and a leader in the tribe’s adjustment to reservation life Quanah was born around 1845 to Chief Peta Nocona and Cynthia Ann Parker, a white captive of the Comanche near the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma
Tourism — Quanah, Texas Climbing, hiking and mountain biking, camping and fun for the family A few miles east of Quanah, four cone-shaped erosion mounds occupy landscape south of U S 287 These mounds, known today as the Medicine Mounds, permit a birds-eye view of the surrounding area for more than sixty miles
Quanah Parker - U. S. National Park Service Quanah Parker became a strong, pragmatic peacetime leader who helped his people learn to farm, encouraged them to speak English, established a tribal school district for their children, and lobbied Congress on their behalf