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Trevor Wardlaw honored his family's legacy by laying a medallion at Cynthia Ann Parker's gravesite at Fort Sill, uniting ...
The Comanche leader Quanah Parker was the only late nineteenth century Native American chief never defeated on the battlefield and became known as The Great Chief. Quanah Parker’s great-great ...
Born to Comanche horse culture in 1845 to a Chief of the Naconi Band and a mother, Cynthia Parker, who’d been captured as a girl by a raiding party in Texas. Quanah hunted the huge bison herds.
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 ...
One of the most fascinating people in U.S. history was Quanah Parker, the last chief of the American Indian tribe, the Comanche. He was the son of a Comanche warrior and a white woman who had been ...
The traveling photographic exhibit, which will be open through Oct. 12, features 45 rarely seen images of Comanche Chief Quanah Parker and his mother, Cynthia Ann Parker. In 1836, Cynthia was ...
Quanah Parker is known as the last chief of the Quahada branch of the tribe. Parker was the son of Comanche Chief Peta Nocona and Cynthia Ann Parker, a white woman who was captured as a child and ...
The man behind bars was not our Quanah Parker, however. The old chief had been dead and buried for three years, so who was this man the Star-Telegram called “Quanah Parker Jr.”? The newspaper ...
the fundraiser has grown to include community partnerships centered around the unveiling of the museum's new permanent exhibit including artifacts of Comanche Chief Quanah Parker. Beginning at 1: ...
A famous story from Texas history is supplementing the local ones contained in the History of West Museum as it’s hosting a touring exhibit on Comanche chief Quanah Parker and his mother Cynthia ...
Beneath the Oklahoma sun, the storied past of the American frontier came alive as Fort Sill welcomed members of the ...
The traveling photographic exhibit, which will be open through Oct. 12, features 45 rarely seen images of Comanche Chief Quanah Parker and his mother, Cynthia Ann Parker. In 1836, Cynthia was ...