First Peoples
The
Tabernacle
When the whole Indian thing came up,
Ken counseled that I should keep an open mind. He knew I’d run across white
settler stories detailing long years of Indian – Anglo conflict. He also knew
more than one flavor of Indian had lived in the Leon River Valley .
Ken has a twisted sense of humor,
once you get to know him. Most of Ken’s best stories I can’t include, knowing
mom will read this someday. During his decades as a pumper, stomping around the
pastures and creek beds of rural Eastland
County , Ken
discovered
artifacts. He was able to construct an important map detailing twenty-five
Native American camps within the county, based upon these discoveries. Ken
catalogued what he found through the years, creating a rich historical Native
American tapestry fueling this chapter.
To protect the integrity of those
sites, many of which are still relatively undisturbed, their locations are only
described in general terms. They all fall with the “Alameda – Cheaney Box” detailed on Map I,
however. Rather than recite a long list of amateur finds by Ken and others, I
include only those which document certain time periods and cultures.
Sparse archeological study in Eastland County flows from little invasive land
development and a suspicion by local landowners that control of their hard-won
real estate holdings might pass from their hands. Except for some sporadic
surface collection by deer hunters or pre-WWII school kids, whatever the Indians
left out there, still awaits collection and interpretation.
The dense Cross
Timbers barrier was quite striking for westbound Anglo explorers who had just
crossed a wide open Blackland Prairie, covered with chest-high
native grasses. Most of these
travelers recorded this radical change, giving us first hand accounts of what
this country looked like. Randolph Marcy traveled this country extensively
when, saying, “At six different points where I have passed through [the Cross
Timbers], I have found it characterized by the same peculiarities; the trees,
consisting principally of post-oak and black-jack, standing at such intervals
that wagons
can’t without difficulty pass
between them in any direction. The soil is thin, sandy, and poorly watered.”
George Wilkins
Kendall with the Texan Santa Fe Expedition of 1841, called the Cross Timbers
"almost impenetrable" and "full of deep and almost impassable
gullies. The ground was covered with a heavy undergrowth of briers and thorn-bushes,
impenetrable even by mules, and these, with the black jacks and post oaks which
thickly studded the broken surface, had to be cut away, their removal only
showing, in bolder relief, the rough and jagged surface of the soil which had
given them existence and nourishment.”
Josiah Gregg
(1844) ascribed the forest’s density to fires, natural or started intentionally
by Indians. “Most of the timber appears to be kept small by the continual
inroads of the 'burning prairies for, being killed almost annually, it is
constantly replaced by scions of undergrowth; so that it becomes more and more
dense every reproduction. In some places, however, the oaks are of considerable
size, and able to withstand the conflagrations. The underwood is so matted in
many places with grape-vines, green-briars, etc., as to form almost
impenetrable 'roughs'.”
If a band of
Native peoples were looking for a place in which to disappear, Eastland County ’s Leon River Valley would have been hard to beat. The
northern end of the Leon
River and its Colony
Creek tributary cuts through rougher terrain, more cut up with low mountains,
rock outcroppings, hollows, winding creeks and streams. As you move south down
the Leon ,
getting closer to the mid-point of the Alameda
– Cheaney Box, the valley widens to a smooth, gentle swale. Cliffs resurface on
the western side of this valley (Reid Ridge), just above Alameda Cemetery ,
continuing south to Nash Creek. Below
the Alameda Cemetery hill, Mansker Lake
and the Leon River are within sight of each other on
a broad, flat delta studded by giant pecan trees.
The Leon
River is punctuated by
several deep, rock bottomed “holes” where water would have stood for months
after rains ceased. Numerous springs (Duvall Springs, Young Springs, Winsett
Springs, Ellison Springs, McGough Springs, Nash Springs, Blackwell Springs, and
others) offered passing Native travelers cool, clear water during arid months.
Indians could hunt game that wandered up for a drink.
Many think of Central Texas as a land with plentiful lakes, reservoirs
and stock tanks. The vast majority of these are man-made, and those pretty
recently (1950s on). Before the impulse to impound runoff water for future use
began, large bodies of water like Mansker
Lake were rare.
Bill McGough
refers to Mansker’s waters as “the lake” from a distance of ten miles away as
late as the late mid-1800s. These peaceful waters were known to ancient
people, and were returned to often.
Its shorelines may have even been fought over, with the fallen dead buried in
the east-facing cliffs nearby (this Native gravesite long since desecrated).
Native peoples
visited Mansker Lake in waves. People capable of
recording Native presence (French or Spanish explorers, Republic of Texas
soldiers, early ranching settlers) didn’t hit this broad area of Texas until the
mid-1700s. There are no known eyewitness sightings of Native Americans in our
specific Eastland
County area recorded
until Big Foot Wallace explored just to our east in 1837. From that date until
1874 when the Indians disappeared to reservations or were killed (or driven
underground in at least one Cheaney case), few written accounts fail to mention
Native Americans, usually Comanches.
The natural food
basket that Natives sought was found in this stretch of the Leon River Valley . The valley is filled with giant
pecan trees (“protein that won’t run away,” my new friend and Comanche
ethnologist Linda Pelon reminds). The presence of deer, large panthers and
bears are recorded by early settlers (McGough and Mrs. Jim Hart). Corn would
have grown in these fertile bottoms without the need of soil preparation. Older
interviewees report a greater presence of walnut trees than is found today.
Bison would have
been hard pressed to get into this rough-terrain valley in large numbers, though
McGough reports them seven miles to the west. Big Foot Wallace also reports
bison near present day Victor, ten miles to the southeast. Either site is well
within the known range of Indian hunting parties. Theoretically, the McGough
Springs
bison to the west of Alameda could
have been herded to the Reid Ridge cliff on the western side of Alameda, and
driven over its edge into the fast moving waters below (like Natives did at the
Bonfire Shelter in Val Verde County…a similar, seventy foot high cliff). The
writer was unable to access the Reid Ridge land, to explore this theory, though
the topography, archeology and the nearby presence of bison fit.
If
Mansker Lake ’s human clock started 13,000 years
ago, more than 600 succeeding generations of people could have lived here
during that period of time. Hunters and gatherers looking for food and water,
would have found a sure supply, unlike other inland Texas areas. We cannot know for sure “who
these Indians were”. We cannot give those peoples definite names, like we later
can the Comanches, at least not yet. Additional investigation could fill those
voids.
All
these “could have” theories would have remained conjecture. That’s where Ken Falls
and others came to Alameda ’s
rescue. Ken and I built a ladder of civilizations
together, driven only by the nature of artifacts found. Those artifacts become
markers for amazing periods of civilization in what is now sparsely settled
farmland. Additional hard work by citizens of the City of DeLeon corroborated our story.
DeLeon is a bustling town of 2,424 people, located 16 miles
south of Alameda .
Amateur and professional archeologists made tremendous progress putting their
Indian puzzle together. The preponderance of DeLeon’s Indians are thought to be
Wichita ,
divided into the Waco
and the Tawakoni. Their culture was a mix of Caddo to the east,
and Great Plains Indians to the west. They farmed a little,
but made frequent hunting trips to the plains.
Indians
would have been on foot until the later arrival of the horse-borne Kiowa and
Comanche. The Leon
River bottom, cleared of
underbrush by seasonal flooding, would have been a clear thoroughfare to camps
above and below Alameda
and DeLeon. The water would have drawn game, just as it drew human life.
If Natives
preceding the Comanches also used smoke signals, smaller hilltop smoke sites
along its course could have reached the major Jameson Peak and Ranger Hill
regional smoke sites easily (a hilltop above Jim Neal Creek, the Schmick Ridge
below Alameda and the Staff (“Round”) Mountain sites all fit subsidiary smoke
signaling location profiles. Physical evidence was found at two of these sites.
Linda
told me to look for Indian footprints along paths of least resistance, when we
first met. She said that many settler roads (even a few highways) follow
prehistoric paths created by Native peoples. Plotting Mr. Falls findings, then
cross-referencing his work with the earliest known detailed road maps of Eastland County (1888 and 1917), yielded a
surprising breakthrough.
A north-south
roadway recorded on a 1917 U.S. Soil Conservation Map implies an ancient
roadway connecting several Indian campsites, dating from the Archaic Era, 8,000
years ago. That same route was widely used as a public road until late 1878 by
settlers and travelers, when a new county road was built to its east, on higher
ground. This Old Alameda Road
forms the spine of much of this region’s early history, though it is now
largely invisible.
Bill McGough
(1859) places the intersection of the two overland Comanche War Trails a mile
and a half east of Desdemona, beneath the most important Native regional
mountain landmark, Jameson
Peak . This seems to be
roughly corroborated by the 1839 “Map of Texas Compiled from Surveys on record
in the General Land Office of the Republic”, by Richard S. Hunt and Jesse F
Randel. The 1839 map shows a Y intersection that the Alameda – Cheaney Box lies completely within.
It is likely the Comanches were not the first to travel this well-defined
migration path, as earlier peoples were also always on the move. This
intersection is eight miles from Mansker
Lake , if McGough is
correct. The 1839 map plots it farther west.
The writer will
only identify the more stirring marker artifacts found, mostly arrowheads,
spear points and mano/metates, that suggest the timelines of the peoples who
left them behind. This discussion is informed by the extensive archeological
study undertaken around DeLeon.
The Clovis Culture of Paleo-Indian
presence begins with two Clovis points, found
inside the Alameda
– Cheaney Box. Nearby Native fire pits have not been carbon dated. Alameda ’s Clovis Man
lived for around 800 years, beginning 13,000 years ago. These Clovis
points were found near the Rock Ledge Shelter Camp.
mammoth, though the mastodon is the
only ancient megafauna whose remains have been found in this valley (to this
writer’s knowledge).
These early
Paleo-Indians are not thought to have been shelter builders. They might have
lived in the open, in trees, or beneath rock outcroppings. These outcroppings
are an easy walk from the Rock Ledge Shelter Camp site. Earlier shelter
outcroppings could have been softened or eroded away through the years by the
seasonally-flooding Leon
River and other man-made
alterations to this river’s nature. Caves lie at the western edge of this site
in two locations.
The Folsom Culture (9,000 – 8,000 B.
C.) hunted now-extinct ancient
bison, much taller than the animals alive today. These later Paleo-Indians were
slightly more sophisticated in their tool making than the Clovis
peoples. Folsom tips were found in the same area as the Clovis
tips, suggesting the site’s ongoing desirability, or perhaps even a linking
thread between the two people. When I later talked to Comanche Nation
representatives, they told me that their people believe that all Native peoples
share an eternal core linkage. Though it sounded like mystical allegory to me,
a part of their cosmic belief system, the Comanches’ spiritual legacy might
also literally explain the evolution of Native peoples at one location through
time.
The
Plano Culture is represented by Plainview
points, found at the Upper Leon Fulcrum Camp. This culture’s population lived
from 10,000 - 8,000 years ago. The sheer number of these people is thought to
be greater, as many more artifacts have been found. Metates show up as early as
this culture, but were used constantly until early
Historic
times. The Fulcrum Camp peoples widely roamed this
valley as flint scraping tools, several manos and metates and stone cleavers
have all been found as far south as the Alameda Cemetery
vicinity. An additional cleaver was found on the Hamilton Place near Jim Neal Creek , ironically, near the site of the
valley’s first Anglo settler foothold. Paths of least resistance.
A large year-round inland lake like Mansker Lake would have been necessary for
survival, attracting refugees from the Great Plains .
The Antithermal may have made West Texas
uninhabitable, scientists believe. If the Antithermal caused bison to
disappear, Indians would be forced to retool, to hunt smaller game along wooded
river bottoms, like rabbit, turtle and deer. This Leon River Valley ’s native pecan, walnut and
several seed-bearing plants surely added to Alameda-Cheany’s allure. Its
desirability probably produced conflict.
The
Archaic Stage began about 6000 B.C. – 200 B. C. A Bulverde
Point from the Early Archaic Period (3,000 – 2500 B. C.) was found at the Alameda Cemetery many years ago. A Trinity Tip
was also found farther north at the cornerstone Fulcrum Camp. More paths of
least resistance.
The
Native’s weapons transitioned to airborne delivery (arrows are shot, not
jabbed). Black-scarred middens begin to appear. There is no evidence of farming
at this stage, or constructed shelters, but again, cliffs and caves are
convenient to both sites.
The Middle Archaic Period (8,000 –
1,000 B. C.) announced cooler temperatures and more rainfall. Bison returned to
the recovering grasslands to the west. Pedernales points were found just north of Alameda
Cemetery .
The Late Archaic Period brought a marked growth of population and
intense interaction. These folks gathered berries, roots, nuts, pecan and the lemon
size bur-oak acorns. They hunted deer, small game, and bison. Refuse mounds
filled with discarded bones, shells, and broken hearth stones formed the “rock
middens” of Central Texas , found in two places
within the Alameda
– Cheaney Box. The dart was their primary weapon. They developed a wooden
device called an atlatl to increase the power of their throwing arm.
Pottery
began to be made during this time, as well as organized agriculture. The bow
and arrow replaced the atlatl. The arrow points were much thinner, smaller and
lighter. Though Ruth Terry Denney mentions pottery in her well-written 1941 A Short History of Ranger, the writer did not interview anyone who found
Native pottery within the Alameda
– Cheaney Box. Anecdotal stories reported pottery finds on the upper Jim Neal
Creek and also southwest
of Alameda Cemetery . Neither were confirmed.
The
Late Prehistoric Period (A. D. 600 – A. D. 1600) fully embraced
the bow and arrow, and pottery. Caddo and Plains Indian cultural influences
meld in this period, just prior to the first Spanish and French ventures into
this part of Texas .
Perdiz points found at Fulcrum Camp could point to a wide time frame, from the
1800 Historic Period as far back as the Late Prehistoric Period. Alba Points found at Fulcrum seem to better anchor the Late
Prehistoric I Period (1250-750 BP).
HISTORIC PERIOD (AD 1600 – Present). The Wacos seem to be in abundance in DeLeon, driven out
later by Lipan Apaches. The points found in the Alameda – Cheaney Box support DeLeon’s
discovery of a sizable Waco
civilization. Any Wacos left behind were surely eliminated by the Comanches,
beginning around 1740.
Indian campsites around DeLeon seem to be of two types –
the first contained flint arrow points. The second contained large spearheads,
hand axes, points with corner tangs, and grinding manos or “squaw rocks”.
Where the Leon and Sabanna merge south of DeLeon (eighteen
miles south of Alameda )
a large “war camp” was found. “It was in blow sand that was originally about
two and one half feet deep but has since exposed eleven small fire place mounds
about two feet in height and three feet in diameter at its base.”
“The major site of the second type was located east of De Leon on the
west bank of the Leon .
It covered an acre of ground and was a small hill so littered with mussel
shells as to resemble one of the shell heaps common on the coast. This site
produced a great many drills, mortars and manos, arrowpoints, large
spearpoints, hand axes and flint scrapers.”
Two professional digs near DeLeon found “Central Texas
Aspect” Clifton ,
Scallorn, Granbury and Perdiz points. A second division of the Neo-American
Stage called the Henrietta Focus found Harrell, Fresno and Young Points. The Edwards Plateau aspect of the Archaic Stage
found Pedernales, Martindale and Darl points. In rough terms, DeLeon’s
prehistoric history seems to mirror Alameda ’s,
a short distance to its north.
Ruth
Terry Denny believes that various flavors of Caddo were pushed into this area
from East Texas during this period by early
Anglo settlers. Earthen berms visually consistent with Caddo mounds were
observed at two sites in the Leon
River Valley ,
both on land the writer could not access.
Denny
tells us “the Indians inhabiting the central part of
the State when (the) white man was moving West were, for the most part, these
speaking dialects of the Caddo language. They were the Caddos, Wacos, Wichitas , Keechies,
Andarkos, Tejas, Ionies, Adaes, Bedias, Ayish, Towash, Tawakanas, and the
Nachodoches. These tribes were builders of permanent homes, and cultivated
corn, melons, and vegetables for their
own use. Those inhabiting the North Central part of Texas were the Caddos,
Wacos, Keechies, Witchitas, and Towash tribes”.
Denny offers fascinating clues. “The meal bowls, pestles,
stone-hoos, and most of the flint artifacts found in Eastland County
were left by the Caddos and kindred tribes. The meal bowls vary a great deal.
Some were made of thin rock which required experienced and skilled hands in
shaping them. Perhaps these were the ones taken with them when they moved camp.
Others have been found which were too heavy to have been moved any considerable
distance. Some times round holes about the size of post holes were found in
large sand rocks or in limestone boulders which seem to indicate the site of a
permanent camp. Some camp sites have been found where it seems that those bowls
were purposely broken. This is thought to have been done to prevent their
falling into the hands of their enemies. Arrowheads have been found in many
sizes and types. Tomahawks vary so much that hardly any two are very much
alike.”
When French, Spanish and Anglo explorers hit this land,
Native fortunes declined rapidly, on several fronts. Though scattered battles
killed both Indians and European explorers, the disease the fair-complected men
brought with them turned out to be their most effective weapon.
The introduction of the horse by the Spaniards near Taos and the rifle by the
French and Spanish helped the Apache and Comanche grow to dominate the region’s
more peaceful Caddo. Comanche hegemony continued to grow to the south,
eventually beyond the Rio Grande
into Mexico .
The Comanches probably beat Anglo covered wagons to the Leon River
Valley by no more than
120 years (1740 versus 1859). The Comanches are thought to have swooped down
from the north (Native roads tend to run north to south, unlike Anglo east to
west paths). Some Native historians believe conversely that earlier peoples
were mixed into the Comanche population. Either way, the Comanches (and Kiowas)
were operating full bore in Eastland
County when the first
Anglo settlers arrived at Mansker
Lake and Blair’s Fort to
its east.
First hand, written reports from this fated meeting
punctuate the beginning of Alameda ’s
recorded history. Though written in heroic language, and clearly from the Anglo
writers’ sole perspectives, they offer a look at this valley that is hard to
imagine today.
Pre-Comanche First Peoples arrived at Mansker Lake
and the Leon River Valley
in hundreds of waves through the years. They stayed for a while, got what they
needed, then history’s tide forced them to pack up and leave (or be killed
trying). The Native folks who stayed behind are buried here, in cemeteries off
in the woods, victims of disease or other tribes or old age or each other.
The parade of the Natives described in this chapter got the
wakeup call of their lives when “who came next” arrived. One morning many moons
ago, these mostly peaceful people heard the sound of mustang hoof beats in the
distance. Perhaps blood-curdling war cries filled the stilled air. Within the
space of a few years, the Comanche had displaced all who came before. And the
Comanche dug in, preparing for what came next.
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