The Comanchero commodities that flowed
eastward over the historic trails included flour, meal,
bread, sugar, coffee, cloth, pumpkins, onions, tobacco,
whiskey, beads, knives, tomahawks, lances, steel arrow
points, and more menacingly, muskets, pistols and ammunition.
The Comanche and Kiowa trade goods that flowed westward
included buffalo and deer hides, jerky, tallow and, especially,
pirated longhorns, horses and mules as well as captives
abducted in raids on the settlements of the Texas frontier
and the haciendas of northern Mexico.
Cast of Characters
Kenner said that the Comancheros, who most often headed
for the Plains to trade in the late summer and early
fall of each year, would earn a reputation that was "quite
paradoxical…" In the beginning, they were
considered to be "harmless rovers of the plains,
[but] later they were regarded as notorious villains;
yet during the interval, they changed very little. They
were the victims of a rapidly changing society in which
they, like their red-skinned customers, became a dangerous
anachronism…"
Early American frontiersmen regarded the Comancheros
almost as strange apparitions of the prairie. The "Comancheros," said
Josiah Gregg - who apparently coined the term - in his
classic Commerce of the Prairies, published in 1844, "are
usually composed of the indigent and rude classes of
the frontier villages, who collect together several times
a year and launch upon the plains with a few trinkets
and trumperies of all kinds, and perhaps a bag of bread
and maybe another of pinole [a flour made of ground corn
and mesquite beans], which they barter away to the savages
for horses and mules.
The entire stock of an individual trader very seldom
exceeds the value of twenty dollars, with which he is
content to wander about for several months, and glad
to return home with a mule or two as the proceeds of
his traffic." James William Abert, U. S. Army lieutenant
and a High Plains explorer, described the Comancheros
as "poor and shabby," as quoted by Kenner.
They dressed in "conical-crowned sombreros, jackets
with the stripes running transversely; large bag breeches
extending to the knee; long stockings and moccasins."
Indigent and rude, poor and shabby, the Comancheros
nevertheless left their mark across the land. As early
as 1820, the year before Mexico won its independence,
U. S. Army officer Stephen Long reported, according to
Kenner, that 20 parallel horse or mule trails followed
the Canadian River from New Mexico eastward to the plains.
Abert reported seeing a Comanchero wagon road. Famed
U. S. Army officer and guide Randolph B. Marcy spoke
of the "old Mexican cart-road."
While they used pack trains to transport their commodities,
the Comancheros also used the old-style carretas, hand-hewn
wooden carts drawn by one to four yoke of oxen. (The
Spanish had used carretas as transport vehicles for centuries,
from well before the time of the first Spanish colonization
of the Southwest.) In his Expedition to the Southwest:
An 1845 Reconnaissance of Colorado, New Mexico, Texas
and Oklahoma, Abert described the carreta:
Two eccentric wheels, not exactly circular, formed by
sawing off the ends of large logs, and rimming them with
pieces of timber to increase their diameter… They
were perforated in the neighborhood of the centre, to
receive an axletree of cottonwood. A suitable pole, and
a little square box of wicker wood completed the laughable
machine.
As Abert's party traveled westward along the rough Comanchero
trail on the Canadian River, he saw that it was littered
with broken axletrees of the Comanchero carretas.
The Comancheros' principal trading partners, the Comanches
and the Kiowas, ranked as perhaps the most fearsome of
all the tribes of the buffalo prairies. They had, in
fact, driven the legendarily fierce Apaches from the
plains of northern Texas, western Oklahoma and northeastern
New Mexico. They terrorized Hispanics and Anglos throughout
their range.
Like other Plains tribes, the Comanches and Kiowas found
liberation on the back of a horse. They thrilled to the
buffalo hunt, lived in teepees, transported camp gear
and small children by travois. A Comanche or Kiowa warrior
found his "medicine" and "power" in
a vision quest. Distinguished by a flowing feathered
headdress and protected by personal medicine symbols,
he won his tribe's recognition and respect by reckless
courage and wild daring on the battlefield, counting
coup by touching an enemy in the heat of combat. He built
wealth and trading stores - measured in terms of livestock
and captives - in raids on Anglo and Hispanic settlements
as well as other tribes from the Midwest to northern
Mexico. The Comanches and Kiowas looked to Comanchero
trading, not only as an occasion to acquire foods to
enrich their basic diet of buffalo flesh, but also as
an opportunity to satisfy their craving for tobacco and
alcohol and to meet their needs for weaponry and ammunition.
In the early days of the Comanchero trade, they sometimes
submitted to grossly unfair trades, but in the later
days, they would master the art of barter.
The Comancheros' market in New Mexico consisted of long-established
Hispanic settlers and merchants, newly arrived Anglo
settlers and merchants, and the U. S. Army. The Hispanics
had capitalized on the Comanchero trade from the time
of its origins. The Anglos seized on the trade as a means
for stocking newly established ranches and increasing
their mercantile profits. American soldiers and veterans
- ostensibly instruments of warfare, conquest, territorial
control and civil protection - viewed the trade as an
opportunity to profiteer, according to Kenner. Officers
at Fort Bascom, in northeastern New Mexico, exploited
the Comanchero trade to supply themselves with livestock.
A trooper with the Eighth Cavalry, said Kenner, "recalled
capturing a [Comanchero] burro train loaded with ammunition,
whisky, and about fifty bolts of red and blue cloth.
It was sold to a merchant…" and the soldiers
kept the proceeds.
The Comanchero trade suppliers - the frontier ranches
and settlements of Texas and the long- suffering haciendas
of northern Mexico - paid a heavy and bloody price for
their unwanted role in the enterprise. From the Cross
Timbers of north central Texas southwestward to the desert
lands of Chihuahua, Coahuila and Durango, livestock owners
lost hundreds of thousands of longhorns, horses and mules
to Comanche and Kiowa raiders. Communities raised crosses
over the graves of those who fell to the Comanche and
Kiowa muskets and arrows. Families mourned the losses
of women and children abducted by Comanche and Kiowa
warriors. The pioneering peoples of the prairies and
desert lands found themselves trapped in an epic Greek
tragedy.
Stark Terror, Dark Comedy, Bitter Fruit
Beginning at the frontier regions, the story of the
Comanchero trade vacillated wildly between sheer terror
and low comedy across the Texas plains into the New Mexico
desert.
"I think we dreaded the Indians in the early days
more than anything," Texas' Southern Plains pioneer
Fogg Coffey told an interviewer in the Federal Writers'
Project, American Life Histories. "We had to be
on the watch constantly or they'd take all we had.
"A bunch of Redskins (Comanches, I think they were)
visited our settlement on June 1, 1871. We had just got
all the cattle and horses rounded up. There were 1,050
head of cattle and 54 saddle horses. The men had left
a few boys to guard the herds while they went to take
another look for stragglers, and some to eat. Nobody
suspected an attack for they'd seen no Indians or signs
or nothin.'
"Well, before the men could get in their saddles
them low down Indians had drove off every cow and all
the horses except three or four. Two of our men were
killed and my brother John, then just a boy, was wounded.
"The very next Christmas them Indians come back
and drove off 350 head of cattle. There weren't more
than twenty men in the neighborhood and they were scattered
of course, so before they could get together, the Comanches
were gone."
Mrs. J. D. Rylee, a pioneering woman who lived with
her family on the frontier just south of today's Fort
Worth, Texas, told her Federal Writers' Project interviewer
that, "The Comanches made a raid and carried off
the wife and three little children of a doctor named
Box who lived in our part of the country. Two of the
children were girls, three and five years old, and the
other was a baby. The Indians tied the mother on a wild
horse which tried to throw her off, and they made her
carry the baby, which cried and she couldn't get it to
stop. The Indians didn't like that so one of them…grabbed
the baby and smashed its head against a tree. They took
the mother and two girls to their camp near San Angelo."
Another Texas Southern Plains pioneer, Tom Morgan, told
his interviewer that "My father's home was on Jim
Ned Creek and about 40 miles away at the mouth of the
Concho, lived their nearest neighbor, Rich Coffey. Rich
was a fine fellow and always joking. Early one morning,
Rich walked out to drive in the milk cows. Three Indians
spied him and began chasing him. Rich was a big fellow
but ran his best to reach the house. His wife stood in
the door, wringing her hands and calling, 'Run, Rich,
run!' Coffey reached the door, fell headlong into the
house and when he got up he said, 'wife, you don't think
I throwed off in that race, do you?'"
The drovers who pushed longhorn herds up the Pecos River
and the Goodnight and Loving Trail through eastern New
Mexico also faced the threat of Indian raids. Cowboys'
graves defined the route. After one was buried beside
the trail, said Haley, "the cowcamp poet, deficient
in Biblical allusion, arranged a couplet to be carved
in sandstone and seriously placed above the grave, so
that all who passed might read that:
"'He was young, and brave, and fair But the Indians
raised his hair'"
If the frontier became a theater of terror, the Comanchero
trading grounds sometimes became a festival of games,
audacity, connivance and wit. "Once among the Indians," said
Kenner, "the traders might remain for several days
or even weeks before completing their transactions. … the
trading was preceded by a 'sort of feast' and athletic
contests such as archery matches, wrestling bouts, and
horse races, all accompanied by vigorous wagering …
… a full-fledged Comanche warrior…recounted
the Indian side of the meetings:
. . . 'we traded, horse-raced, gambled and had a good
time while they got all we had, and then we left them,
to rob the palefaces.'
"… a white captive of the Comanches … recalled
that 'those fool Indians would let the Mexicans pick
their mules for a keg of whiskey; ten pounds of coffee
was accepted for a pack horse, five pounds of tobacco
would get a mule, and a buffalo robe would be exchanged
for little or nothing.'"
One of the Comancheros, Juan Trujillo, who sold whiskey
to the Indians, claimed that "he and his friends
hid kegs … in the hills, perhaps ten miles from
where they were trading," said Haley. The whiskey "entered
prominently into consideration, but was not delivered
until the cattle were two or three days on the trail.
Then Juan and another [Comanchero], who had been left
behind on good fast horses, piloted the Indians to the
keg…" Then they rode for their lives.
At the peak, the Comancheros, who totaled perhaps 1000
in any given year, according the Kenner, drove hundreds
of thousands of stolen livestock from the High Plains
to northeastern New Mexico. They came home to condemnation
by New Mexico news reporters, who savaged them for the
trade; scavenger prices from the opportunistic settlers,
merchants and military personnel, who profited at the
Comancheros' expense; and warm and festive welcomes home
by their fellow townsmen, who honored the Comancheros
as heroes. "The next few days were filled with feasting
and the nights with dancing," said one old Comanchero,
according to Kenner.
Inevitably, the Texas cowmen grew bitter toward the
Comancheros, the Comanches and Kiowas, and the New Mexico
profiteers.
One Texas rancher, a man named John Hittson, put together
a force of 80 armed cowboys, and he rode to New Mexico
to reclaim stolen longhorns. Hittson ran into one man
named Simpson, who proclaimed that he would not give
up cows he "had bought from the Comancheros," according
to Haley. A neighbor, Jim Duncan, warned Simpson that
the cowboys "'were damn sure going to take them.'
As the Texans threw down the poles to drive the stock
from his corral, Simpson jumped in the gate, and [the
cowboys] shot him and drove the cattle out over [his
body]. So the work sent on until Hittson had recovered
some 10,000 head…"
In spite of the campaign by Hittson, legal action by
ranchers, the pious protests of state politicians, and
half-hearted efforts by the federal government, the Comanchero
trade would go on until the mid 1870's, when the U. S.
Army finally defeated the Comanches and Kiowas on the
High Plains, sending the starving remnants of the tribes
to reservations in western Oklahoma. |