Empire of the Summer Moon (Actual Locations Today)

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Over the course of a few months, I traveled across Oklahoma and Texas, visiting and filming various places that hold historical significance to the Great Plains Indian Wars and were mentioned in Sam Gwynne's bestseller, Empire of the Summer Moon. It was an amazing adventure. In addition to historical events covered in the book, I did research a few other external places for information to try to make it as accurate as possible.
    All video was shot by me:
    GoPro Hero9 4K @ 60fps
    DJI Mavic Air 2 4K @ 60 fps
    iPhone 12 Pro Max 1080p @ 240 fps
    Pictures were pulled from various places on the WWW.
    Disclaimer: ALL locations were hiked with permission.

Комментарии • 409

  • @legscoll3296
    @legscoll3296 2 года назад +61

    When they built the Verrazano bridge here in NY there was a few native American iron workers who worked on it a few of them were neighbors and hung out in my father's bar they were so nice when I was 12 they took me to Oklahoma I sat and listened to a elder tell old stories my neighbor told me I was lucky cause they wouldn't allow outsiders in I always have had this inner thing about that area there was a aire about it and the people were so nice the older woman watched me like I was there own making sure I was fed I was warm the kids my age were fun and did not make me feel outta of place

    • @whatsname2649
      @whatsname2649 Год назад +1

      👍

    • @garyinman7696
      @garyinman7696 Год назад +2

      What a wonderful gift. You should write down their stories.

    • @dp5475
      @dp5475 7 месяцев назад

      What an amazing opportunity

  • @dndmat
    @dndmat 2 года назад +53

    Man, that was good sir. My father was born in a dugout on the Slaughter ranch near Morton Texas in 1929 and always told me that my grandmother was Commanche. I've never investigated any of it but it's fascinating and the timing makes sense. He's 92 and still with us but I really need to try and get more info. I appreciate your time and effort.

    • @sonsoftheedelweiss72
      @sonsoftheedelweiss72 Год назад +13

      Yes you do. Make sure to document in writing with dates and video now. DO NOT WAIT or it will be lost forever. Document every single word. Try to get your genealogy as much as you can!!!! Please don’t let this slip by. Good luck.

    • @marcrobots
      @marcrobots 11 месяцев назад +1

      😂❤❤😂😂😂 😊

    • @NA-yb9sj
      @NA-yb9sj 6 месяцев назад

      your grandma was a white squaw? Anglo concubine? damn...must be tough. how do you make peace with that? if someone had kidnapped my grandma and turned her into a concubine, i'd want revenge on these people...

  • @kjw1886
    @kjw1886 3 года назад +37

    I love this book. after I read it I went to as many of the locations as I could. I am from and live in Amarillo, so I have not had to travel real far.

    • @kurtcurtis2730
      @kurtcurtis2730 2 года назад

      I’m reading this book now. Lonesome dove a favorite movie so there’s that too. I appreciate this video and it’s very well made

    • @Techumsa
      @Techumsa 2 года назад +2

      Wow how fortunate you are, I live in the UK so I had to imagine those places, did you take photos?

  • @dbone7940
    @dbone7940 2 года назад +11

    For more on the Comanches, read Comanches by T.R. Fehrenbach. Plains Indian Raiders by Wilbur Sturtevant Nye is another although it covers more tribes than just the Comanche.

  • @philipinnewjersey2622
    @philipinnewjersey2622 Год назад +27

    As a kid in the 80s I lived in the Mosier Valley area of Euless, TX.. we used to go play in the creeks and woods, we would find arrowheads and things pretty often. Years later I learned about the Tribe that lived in that area and The battle of Village Creek. 30 something years later almost all of it's gone due to neighborhoods and warehouses...

    • @HateTheGameTX
      @HateTheGameTX Год назад +2

      My area of Texas is about the same. Caddos inhabited this area traditionally. But once the 1850s rolled around, the Caddo were and the Cherokee had moved in. Now there’s gated communities almost everywhere

    • @MoeBergOSS
      @MoeBergOSS Год назад +1

      My ancestor led the Rangers in that and other battles. General Edward Hampton Tarrant.

    • @user-pe2wq8rm1k
      @user-pe2wq8rm1k 11 месяцев назад

      What? I loved in south Euless and had no idea of any of that history, is this in the book?

  • @jedbunyon4057
    @jedbunyon4057 2 года назад +35

    I’ve read Empire of the Summer Moon three times over…you did a solid job sticking to the facts/book. Also, great job editing and shooting (those drone takes were awesome). Keep up the good work man. You should definitely do more of these videos where you visit a historical site while telling its background story. I feel it’s a niche market that would draw in a lot of viewers.

  • @georgegaiennie3747
    @georgegaiennie3747 2 года назад +16

    The book is outstanding. The Comanches were formidable, and their raids amazing; raid from Llano Estacado to Victoria - about 600 miles.
    Nice video.

    • @summervibes2147
      @summervibes2147 Год назад +2

      They raided as far south as about 100 miles north of Mexico City

    • @daviddigital6887
      @daviddigital6887 Год назад +1

      ​@@summervibes2147 so far down they said little men living in the trees that won't talk to us. Monkeys

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 Год назад +1

      @@daviddigital6887 l bet those little men sure did chatter at the Comache though!

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 11 месяцев назад

      It's good to come across people who understand that there was no US/MX border as far as the tribes were concerned.
      Gen MacKenzie and Sherman were hellbent on invading MX after the Civil War ended. I can't remember how they finally got it out of their systems. May have been orders from Grant himself.

  • @basemayn
    @basemayn Год назад +16

    I'm pretty familiar with the landscapes of West Texas and its small towns. You did a fantastic job with the photography! It's great to see the actual locations of these incredible historical events.

  • @ericharvey8576
    @ericharvey8576 2 года назад +31

    I live in England and am a keen student of the American West. I've just read the book and your video has been the perfect and very polished supplement to a superbly told story. (And it saves me a long trip!) Professional job. Thanks so much for posting it,

    • @kim79710
      @kim79710 2 года назад

      If you get the chance sir, read a book called (I'm Frank Hamer-The Life Of A Texas Lawman), he's the former Texas Ranger that killed Bonnie and Clyde

    • @brassteeth3355
      @brassteeth3355 2 года назад +2

      I'd recommend Blood and Thunder if you haven't read it yet. Greetings from Texas.

    • @Quantrills.Raiders
      @Quantrills.Raiders Год назад

      you should make the trip if you can, the American southwest is probably in my top 3 favorite places in the world and ive traveled everywhere. Check out fort bowie if you can, definitely a cool spot

    • @darrenmcg97
      @darrenmcg97 Год назад

      Me too

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 Год назад

      Sir, l'm from Texas and if you do venture to America. Only come in the Spring or Autumn, the Summers are brutally hot. 2023 has been a scorcher.
      I'm 61, and this hasn't been the hottest. But two days ago August 27th. It reached 111° F. in Beaumont, which is in Southeast Texas.
      I will foreware you Texas is vast, it comprises 12% of the lower 48 states in America. Even if you take a ten day holiday, you'll be hard pressed to see much. Just getting away from all the population of our major cities is a burden on a person's patience.
      I did not ask, but my Mom's ancestors were from Norfolk County, England. South of Norwich-at Shelton Hall. St. Mary's Church is where John Shelton and wife Anne Boleyn Shelton are entombed. She was The Queen Anne Boleyn's aunt. Take care and GOD bless.

  • @paladin7429
    @paladin7429 6 месяцев назад +3

    This was the best book I read last year! I've recommended it to a lot of people.

  • @ler3968
    @ler3968 2 года назад +12

    I grew up in the area (San Antonio-Austin) that was often mentioned in the book. I got hooked immediately, we were never taught this real Tx & Ok history in school. I never knew the power the native Americans exerted for several hundred years in this region. The early settlers paid a heavy price for invading these native lands.

    • @rosolinolosciuto3644
      @rosolinolosciuto3644 2 года назад

      I poteri della mente sono infiniti per cui i "poteri forti" li hanno fatti sterminare è occupato le loro terre con schiavi Africani

    • @thelordrico8109
      @thelordrico8109 10 месяцев назад

      You mean the English England ppl that has kids in America the first ever illegal aliens

  • @2904bennett
    @2904bennett Год назад +4

    I visited Adobe Walls last year. It's a hard place to find, but well worth it. I'm 67 from Illinois and have read much on Charles Goodnight. My great Aunt visited Goodnight Texas in 1908 all the way from Athens, IL as a young woman by car. Well done.

  • @SKC193
    @SKC193 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this! I got interested in the Comanche many years after reading “Ride the Wind”. Then read many more books about all this. My daughter & I drove down to the Texas panhandle to Palo Duro Canyon. I was born & still live in Oklahoma. Raised in Hominy, among the Osage. Then later found out that my 5th great grandfather was a famous Cherokee chief (Oconastada, Stalking Turkey). There’s a painting of him in Gilrease Museum. Then found out my great grandmother was Cherokee. Never knew any of this till I was in my 40’s! My mom’s side of the family just never talked about the past!

    • @helenfay9465
      @helenfay9465 Год назад

      In your forties?! Wow that's kind of mad that was not passed down sooner... Good that you have a little more idea of your roots now though!

  • @TexExpatriate1
    @TexExpatriate1 2 года назад +7

    Born in Southwest Oklahoma and raised there, I came to love the Comanche and Kiowa history. This is a great little video. Study of the book is absolutely essential if you love the history of Plains Indians.

  • @SteveSmith-zz4ih
    @SteveSmith-zz4ih 2 года назад +8

    Thanks for taking the effort and time to enlighten us, i'm half way through the book, always wondering what certain places looked like, imagine being able to ride through that massive expanse and there were no roads, fences, bridges etc. No one won in the end just a lot of deaths, pain and loss, nothings changed through the ages. The one person that tugged at my soul was Cynthia Ann, all she wanted was to go back and see her boys, what a cruel end to a tough woman, no justice!

  • @MichaelScott-tq3dd
    @MichaelScott-tq3dd 2 года назад +5

    I am reading the book now and often stop and look up names and places online but it is hard to grasp the vastness of Comancheria with maps and photos. You did an excellent job using the drone to bring all of that to life. You can clearly see that west of the 98th and 100th meridian, few trees were visible, only shrub, land and more land as far as the eye could see.

  • @loganmajeune5516
    @loganmajeune5516 2 года назад +8

    Man this is bad ass!!! I live around Clinton, Ok and I’ve been to the Star house in Cache I think we should set up some kind of go fund me to get that thing reconstructed along with the other historical buildings on that property. There’s a house that Frank James stayed in and an old school from Cache as well as an old wooden roller coaster. But the Quanah house has such historical value to this country it needs to be saved!!!

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  2 года назад +1

      Thx man. I agree about the Star House. Its sad to see it fall to pieces.

  • @discojelly
    @discojelly 3 года назад +14

    Man this is great! Excellent job sir! I LOVE learning about past Texas/Native American history!

  • @JLil
    @JLil Год назад +4

    Fantastic video, sir. I taught Texas History for a number of years and this would have been a great help to the students, actually seeing and hearing about what we were learning from different perspectives. I, myself being a native East Texan, often wondered about most of the Panhandle area locations while I was reading the book. We used to stop at Silver Falls outside of Crosbyton on the way out to visit family in Lubbock, but that was way back in the 80s. Google Earth could only show me so much, but you have gone above and beyond. Well done and thank you!

  • @whiskey_1_671
    @whiskey_1_671 Год назад +4

    I live in Comanche county Texas, I can show you two camps ( winter and summer) the honeyeater Comanche used after the railroad came thru. They traded for wealth and information from this spot until they were ostracized. One of the rental homestead places on the ranch I used to run was known as the Parker place. Contact me if you want to see what I'm talking about.

    • @summervibes2147
      @summervibes2147 Год назад +2

      I live not far away in blanket from about 2008 to 2010 had a property there on blanket Creek I used to find arrowheads in my own backyard problems with the wife and mother-in-law I ended up selling it I used to hike the riverbank the Leon River and the Colorado identifying Indian camps most of these being prehistoric camps

  • @ToddAutry
    @ToddAutry 3 года назад +35

    This thing is sick. I can’t start to say how good of a job you did with this. Insane. And the editing. Good grief. This is next level stuff and possibly the best you have done (IMO).

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  3 года назад +3

      Thx man I appreciate it. I’ve never satisfied :)

    • @chrishamilton1189
      @chrishamilton1189 2 года назад +2

      I agree. Def next level

    • @rosolinolosciuto3644
      @rosolinolosciuto3644 2 года назад +1

      Questa società è insana di "anima" e corpo

    • @rosolinolosciuto3644
      @rosolinolosciuto3644 2 года назад

      Come si può definire (santo) questo cielo irrorato di scie chimiche è cosparso di virus e microbatteri mettete la maschera

  • @pauljohnson957
    @pauljohnson957 2 года назад +2

    I am a descendant of Quanah Parker. Sadly I don't know much of the history of the Comanche. I will be reading this book. Great video!

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 Год назад +1

      wow love native american history from linda in scotland

  • @lostribe5130
    @lostribe5130 2 месяца назад

    I am part Cherokee and grew up in central Oklahoma. I am 71. We learned a little of the Native history but nothing close to what they know today. I had no idea Oklahoma was such a rich historic area. But I am glad that I grew up on the prairie riding horses bareback and felt my blood.

  • @brassteeth3355
    @brassteeth3355 2 года назад +4

    Fascinating companion material for the book. I've been to a few of those places in both Texas and Oklahoma. I'm an Okie myself, living down here in Texas.
    Thanks for the great material

  • @Realstuffadventures
    @Realstuffadventures 2 года назад +8

    very well done, thanks I have the book, great to be able to see the locations in this way. I have fond memories from childhood riding horses at Eagle Park visiting the Quanah Parker house in Cache in the early 60's. Love the history of Quanah Parker and Geronimo.

    • @tracyjohnson5023
      @tracyjohnson5023 2 года назад +1

      So very sad that I he Quanah Parker house has fallen into ruin

  • @joepalooka2145
    @joepalooka2145 2 года назад +3

    Excellent video for anyone who has read the book.. You have done a great job and this really makes the locations of the historical events come alive. The drone shots of the magnificent landscape are excellent, and make you visualize the time when the Indians ruled and the white man had not arrived, and millions of buffalo and other animals covered the ground everywhere. It was an incredible natural paradise that we today can only try to imagine. Sometimes I wish I could turn back the clock to the way it used to be. It's also one of the most tragic, violent, heart-breaking stories in human history.

  • @vowelsounds6312
    @vowelsounds6312 Год назад +1

    “Nine Years Among the Indians”
    another excellent portrait of the people, times, and places. By Herman Lehmann.
    As well as “Indian depredations in Texas” by Willbarger

  • @davidnorth3411
    @davidnorth3411 8 месяцев назад +1

    I found this to be a truly detailed reveal of the life and evolving time during the new world for settlers and a lost future for the Indian populations with their traditions .

  • @NumunuBeats
    @NumunuBeats Год назад +2

    Great work. I am a great great grandson of Chevato who married one of Quanah Parker’s nieces. My uncle William Chebahtah authored a book called “Chevato” if you’re interested in more literature.

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  Год назад +1

      Thank you, Dave! I am looking up that book right now. I am always looking for more literature!

  • @Im_T.O.
    @Im_T.O. 2 года назад +2

    Best book I've ever read. Excellent.

  • @SnakesonthePlains
    @SnakesonthePlains 3 года назад +10

    Bro, that was a heck of a job! I know you put a lot of time and effort into it and it shows! Really enjoyed it!

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  3 года назад +1

      Thx brother! This was def the most complex I’ve worked on….

    • @jacobjones3479
      @jacobjones3479 2 года назад +1

      @@GoWildHistory How do I get in touch with you guys about travels to oklahoma?

  • @scottbeaulieu8192
    @scottbeaulieu8192 2 года назад +2

    Grew up near Boston, and live in Lawton FT Sill OK for 10 years. It's such an amazing place the whole area as a whole... Comanche territory

  • @keepitclassc7551
    @keepitclassc7551 4 месяца назад

    I literally just finished reading empire of the summer moon an hour ago. As the battles grounds were mentioned i would look them up. Thank you for undertaking such a large effort to document these sites. Great video

  • @TAG77
    @TAG77 Год назад

    This is an EXCELLENT historical video. I’m a history addict and my son is becoming one as well being around me. Every time we move we have to know the history of where we move to, but couldn’t find any good history vids about ft sill and the Wichita tribe and mountains. We couldn’t understand why the government grouped up more than one tribe counting them all as the Witchita tribe until now. We’ve also discovered why they took their reserve and just gave them plots of land separate from your vid. We listened to a Comanche tell us they took our reserve and gave us plots because they feared another uprising and us conspiring with others to take them on again. Now we get it all pieced together. We still can’t find the history of Ft Sill and Lawton, but we didn’t know that signal hill was so important until now and we pass that driving past the ranges to explore the Wichita Mountain preserve on the weekends. Now we know. Thank you so much for caring about our history and passing it on to your kids and mine. ❤❤

  • @quinbagwell7515
    @quinbagwell7515 2 года назад +1

    Excellent job, with attention to detail, and accuracy. Thank you so much for your work.

  • @towanaspivey6394
    @towanaspivey6394 3 года назад +2

    Enjoyed the film and the narrative. A lot of history occurred in the southern plains that has been overlooked in the books and films in the past. Cut Throat Gap; Medicine Bluffs; the Adams Hill Tar Pit at Fort Sill (visited by Comanche and others) is the oldest tar pit in North America; and many other such sites all have unique histories.

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  3 года назад

      Thank you sir, I appreciate it. You set the bar very high for history knowledge here in Oklahoma!

  • @samuelbradley8382
    @samuelbradley8382 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for the video, time, and effort. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @brs89
    @brs89 Год назад +1

    10:13 I wish you had gone into more detail on the raid into Parker County that Nocona led. The Gage family were all direct ancestors who were wiped out in a pretty brutal manner. This is what led to the the chase for Nocona at Pease River. People go into detail about the recapture of Cynthia Ann and skip details why they were being pursued in that moment at all. It’s also interesting that Nocona didn’t possibly die at Pease River. Leaving behind his wife and daughter would be an odd choice, but who really knows, and in the end it didn’t change much.

  • @Russ_Looney
    @Russ_Looney 2 года назад +2

    Hey, you did great work with your research and traveling to locations across TX and OK. There are a lot of miles between many of these locations, which many may never realize if you had not been so careful to point out in maps. It was great to see the landscape of the particular areas as well. Thank you

  • @fokkerd3red618
    @fokkerd3red618 Год назад +1

    I really like how you went to the original locations for so much of this history. I can understand why the Comanche chose this as there homeland. Really beautiful country.

  • @tward81
    @tward81 2 года назад +2

    I found a historical marker south of Lubbock/north of lamesa that stated Quanah Parker was possibly born there. Some sort of salt late the buffalo used to frequent

  • @Techumsa
    @Techumsa 2 года назад +1

    I've just finished listening on Audible this book, my goodness, what a history of sadness, hurt, despair, fear, love, romance, greed, cheating etc, I can't believe how humans can be so cruel to each other, if ALL of these people, the tribes and the whites could understand that everything belongs to God and learn to share Gods creation peace would make the earth a paradise.

  • @wildcolonialman
    @wildcolonialman Год назад

    Fabulous effort and thank you. This man from NZ has Gwynne's book right in front of him, and all though harrowing, a indelible history that has riveted me for decades. A truly remarkable people, Hunter Gatherers that they were, there mastery of the Horse, including breeding, surely stands out, alongside there remarkable military horsemen ship.

  • @HaiNguyen-ii6bx
    @HaiNguyen-ii6bx 2 месяца назад

    Thank you,
    your video added more info. onto that great book .

  • @PatrickSmeaton
    @PatrickSmeaton 2 года назад +3

    Great job!
    If I recall correctly from the book, "Buffalo Hump" was the name the white's called him, but only because the actual translation of his name was too risqué for their sensibilities. I seem to recall that his name correctly translated was, "Man Who's Erection Won't Go Down."

    • @TedH71
      @TedH71 2 года назад

      I've also been told Buffalo Penis.

    • @joeday397
      @joeday397 2 года назад

      Sounds right,lots of Comanche names translate to things like Coyotes Vagina and Stinky Penis😄

    • @josephdowling3745
      @josephdowling3745 2 года назад

      No, that was me they were talking about, they wondered had I been bit by a Brazilian wandering spider because that's one of the signs of that particular arachnid biting someone.

  • @TheGoodfellas.
    @TheGoodfellas. 7 месяцев назад

    I have begun reading this book and your video will help add to my visualization of occurrences throughout the book. Thank you.

  • @helenfay9465
    @helenfay9465 Год назад

    Greetings from Portugal. I really enjoyed to see all the locations mentioned in the book. It's a saddening read in so many ways but shows what an incredible and well organised resistance the Comanche put up against the invasion of their beautiful land. I think most shocking for me was the fact that it all occurred so recently. I knew my great grandad who was born in 1890. This all happened just a few generations ago. It must of been heart breaking for all the indigenous communities.
    In my opinion Ranald Mackenzie was a sociopath who excelled in his military career. He was a brutal leader who was installed to wreak havoc as he used sheer will and determination to suppress the formidable plains peoples risking life and limb of all who served under him to navigate what was essentially an unmapped grass desert to outsiders. If the Comanche's tracks hadn't been betrayed to the army they would have held out much longer it seems.

  • @fatdogtavern
    @fatdogtavern 2 года назад +2

    2 points if I may. Overall, very good, but I would have appreciated physical points of reference for the locations, like "We're currently about 50 miles west of Waco", that kind of thing. Also, most folks I know won't watch a 15 second long commercial in the middle of an episode. We'll just leave the video. Five seconds is the absolute longest commercial before you can push the skip button, as far as I'm concerned. Just my opinion.

  • @markshields5883
    @markshields5883 Год назад +1

    What a book , got to say it's my fav book

  • @juliebaker942
    @juliebaker942 6 месяцев назад

    Thankyou I’ve read the book but live in England, so was great to see these places 😊😊

  • @kbirdmontgomery8181
    @kbirdmontgomery8181 Год назад

    Awesome video… I’m about to finish the book myself and this video A) helps clear my understanding of what I was reading, but B) helps visualize what it would’ve looked like all those years ago. Much appreciate your time and effort in creating this video.

  • @dontknow3792
    @dontknow3792 2 года назад +2

    No idea how your channel is so small. I've been watching every video lol wonderful job

  • @alonsocushing2263
    @alonsocushing2263 2 года назад +1

    Am presently reading and enjoying the book. This video has been very helpful for me in imagining the locations.

  • @gregdavidson670
    @gregdavidson670 Год назад

    I’m reading that book right now. I from the Houston area and attended Cynthia Ann Parker Elementary. Because of this and my love history I’ve been interested in the Comanches. Thank you, this was great and very interesting. I plan to see these sites after I do my third trip to Virginia and surrounding for Civil War and Revolutionary War sites. Again thank you.

  • @alishatollison878
    @alishatollison878 2 года назад +2

    Live close to this area the family and I go every summer! Also nice edits and over all whole video nice work!

  • @eyoung506
    @eyoung506 2 года назад

    You did American history a wonderful service by making this video. Thank you!

  • @thatbigguyyoyo8275
    @thatbigguyyoyo8275 7 месяцев назад

    Mate I love this video. I like the way you told the story in your own way 💯

  • @stevemolina8801
    @stevemolina8801 2 года назад +1

    I read the book and found it extremely interesting. This put so much into prospective. Thanks for sharing this!

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 Год назад

      read it only last month while on holiday to spain loved it from linda in scotland

  • @timothyjones1906
    @timothyjones1906 8 месяцев назад

    Great book . Tells the truth about the west . And brutally that existed on both sides . American Indians fought each other in a very brutally fashion . American Indians fought the Spanish in a very brutally fashion. The fight between settlers and the American Indians was very brutally. Everybody should be made to read this book to get a understanding of what life was really like on every side .

  • @brandonweatherly6764
    @brandonweatherly6764 Год назад +1

    I know some family owned ranches who have been passed down generations in southwest Oklahoma. The family said their many generation prior grandfather was a free range cattleman and saw Quanah Parker shoot a man for not paying grazing fees then he turned to their grandfather who was 14 at the time and asked if he wanted to graze there and the boy said yes and then quanah said well you make sure and pay.

  • @williamcramer7780
    @williamcramer7780 7 месяцев назад

    Very informative; compliments information I received from my two grandmothers who were born and raised on the pairy in southwest Kansas in the 1870's. I also read the book. Thank you.

  • @caaguilar82
    @caaguilar82 2 года назад +1

    Amazing job visiting all these sites and documenting the history that took place there. We always only imagine how events such as these may have taken place but you actually brought us there. Can’t imagine the time and expense incurred in finding these sites as well as documenting and editing everything. Thank you.

  • @nomadpi1
    @nomadpi1 Год назад

    Thanks. Just a survey format, but well done. I also was born and raised in this area of OK and do much reading re: the local histories. Now in my eighth decade, I wish for another 80 yrs. to read and explore more SW OK and Texas histories. I appreciate the elevated drone shots of these areas: a touch of panache.

  • @frdpate1
    @frdpate1 Год назад

    Great job of summarizing a great deal of information. I had always been fascinated by the story of Cynthia Ann Parker and was astonished to recently discover that she died and was first buried not 25 miles from my home in East Texas. I visited the cemetery just a few months ago.

  • @jimminter2340
    @jimminter2340 Год назад

    I have been to the Tavoya Indian camp in Oklahoma several times. It’s amazing to be able to walk in those places.

  • @baddogma
    @baddogma 2 года назад +5

    Cynthia Ann Parker (October 28, 1827 - March 1871),[1] also known as Naduah (Comanche: Narua),[4] was a white woman who was kidnapped in 1836, around age nine, by a Comanche war band which had attacked her family's settlement, and was then discovered and captured by the Texas Rangers, at approximately age 33, when they attacked her adopted tribe. Her Comanche name means "someone found" in English.
    Parker was adopted by the Comanche and lived with them for 24 years, completely discarding and forgetting her childhood culture and identity.[5] She married a Comanche chieftain, Peta Nocona, and had three children with him, including the last free Comanche chief, Quanah Parker.
    At approximately age 34, Parker was captured by the Texas Rangers during the Battle of Pease River, also known as the "Pease River Massacre", a raid on her adopted tribe in which somewhere between six and twelve people, mostly women and children, were killed. She was returned against her will to her extended biological family, and spent the remaining 10 years of her life refusing to adjust to life among them before committing suicide via voluntary starvation. At least once she escaped and tried to return to her Comanche family and children, but was recaptured and brought back. She found it difficult to understand her iconic status within the Euro-American culture she found herself in, which saw her as having been redeemed from the Comanches. Heartbroken over the loss of her daughter to pneumonia, she stopped eating and died in 1871.

    • @user-pe2wq8rm1k
      @user-pe2wq8rm1k 11 месяцев назад

      After I read this book I discovered something about her possibly living in Haltom City known as Birdville at the time. Can anyone verify this?

  • @WarriorPoet01
    @WarriorPoet01 2 года назад +1

    I just read the book a few weeks ago. My mom wanted to read it and enjoyed it as well.
    I’m emailing her the link to this video.
    Thanks for your work in making this.
    Regards, WP

  • @christopping5876
    @christopping5876 Год назад +1

    Great video, as I have just read the book. Thank you. Very slight issue, I found the moving cinema film a touch disconcerting. Waiting for the next video!

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 11 месяцев назад

      😄 I thought I was gonna have a seizure over that same special effect.

  • @nelly7834
    @nelly7834 2 года назад

    I grew up just north and later south of Ft. Sill. I've been to Star House several times, and I love the book.

  • @brucepeek3923
    @brucepeek3923 2 года назад +2

    A good example of simple logic and fairness are the historys of the Black Hills. Initially in historical times the hills were held by the Kiowa and some of the Crow.. In the late 1600's the Northern Cheyennes. The Norhtern Cheyennes had started out in Upper Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesotta. The Cheppewa who had obtained muskets from the French attacked the Sioux and Cheyennes and forced them out onto the plains. Continous pressure from better armed eastern tribes pushed the Cheyenne and Sioux west. The Cheyenne chased the Kiowa out of the hills showing them no mercy.. Subsequently the Sioux showed up and inflicted terrible casualties on the Cheyenne forcing them out of the hills.. So three tribes, Crow, Kiowa, and Cheyenne all had lived in the hills. All of them fought each other inflicting heavy casualties. None of them showed each other any mercy whatsoever.. or expected to be shown mercy.. Asking for mercy was only something they did when they fought the U.S. army.. So for sake of argument why should any Native tribe who fought the U.S. expect to be allowed to keep any of their land.. They NEVER let any of the opposing tribes they fought keep anything.
    best
    Bruce Peek

  • @andrewandrews6881
    @andrewandrews6881 Год назад +1

    As a Highland Scot I probably qualify as tribal...the destruction of the clan system here circa 1746 has some echoes in this story but I think we got off lightly compared to the Comanche....perhaps why I enjoyed the book so much. Saddened to see the state of Quanah's famous home today. Surely someone in USA will start a fund raiser...I am good for a few £'s. Good work, thank you.

  • @shoalmidbar
    @shoalmidbar Год назад

    Sir, I wanna thank you for a very moving and educational tour . I'll buy this book and follow sites you've mentioned. Thanks again for your great work.

  • @trentk268
    @trentk268 9 месяцев назад

    My family has direct descent with the Oklahoma tribes (Chickasaw and Choctaw) , as well as whites in Texas and Oklahoma. Your Summer Moon stuff is spot on. When I travel through west Texas, I see a lot of the same things that you see.

  • @luketdrifter2100
    @luketdrifter2100 3 года назад +1

    Excellent historical presentation and your research is evident.

  • @OlliesTreasures
    @OlliesTreasures 2 года назад +1

    Great book that I have read recently, so to be able to see the actual locations has been very helpful and informative. Excellent job fellas…..👏

  • @SugarBooger10
    @SugarBooger10 Год назад +1

    I love this book 🤩

  • @donnariffel4972
    @donnariffel4972 Год назад

    This is so great…I loved the this book and caught myself trying to identify some of the key locations.

  • @therealkevan8158
    @therealkevan8158 Год назад +1

    Thank you for making this, It's my favorite book and I've been trying to do the same. We went to the San Saba Presidio last spring.

  • @jbflores01
    @jbflores01 2 года назад +1

    Excellent! Excellent! Excellent! Very informative! I also red “empire of the summer moon “ and Carter’s “on the border with Mackenzie. Great books! I’ve also traveled to the sites you visited. I love walking in the footsteps of history! Great work!

    • @subhashnamey5562
      @subhashnamey5562 2 года назад

      From India, Pune City. This line captured my attention, " I love walking.....". ( I'm an Indian)

    • @subhashnamey5562
      @subhashnamey5562 2 года назад

      From India, Pune City. This line captured my attention, " I love walking.....". ( I'm an Indian)

  • @keitharterburn8593
    @keitharterburn8593 2 года назад +1

    Very good material! If one wants to revisit much of this history head to Young County Texas(Graham). Drive a few minutes north of town to Ft. Belknap, the man who is the caretaker and historian is a WONDERFUL source of all the History. He is actually doing his Doctorate thesis on Britt Johnson. 3 of John Wayne’s movies were made from true events in Young County. Many Historical markers all over the area. Great town to visit as well!

  • @acesnoopy
    @acesnoopy 2 года назад

    I agree with you about Nocona. This is an incredible video, read the book many times and you did a great job. Much appreciated

  • @crimsonmonk5876
    @crimsonmonk5876 Год назад +4

    What I would like to remind everyone is, the Western and Eastern Apaches were VERY VERY DIFFERENT! The Eastern Plains Apaches were less capable of fighting the Comanche and when the Comanche pushed west they began running into the Western Apache of which Geronimo, mangas coloradas, Nana, naiche, Victorio, Cochise, Alchesay, Lozen, all belong to. The Western Apache are the Apaches that were feared by everyone because their guerrilla warfare, and they were capable of pushing the comanche back.... Eastern Plains Apache had to seek help from the W3stern Apaches.... people keep clumping the Eastern Apache who fought like the Plains Indians, their culture was more like the Plains Indians and less like the Western Apaches. Plains Apaches also fought different, on horseback and in large numbers on the plains... the western apache utilized the mountains and divided the enemy... it was the Plains Apache who were pushed out of their homelands and almost wiped out...

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  Год назад

      This is great commentary. I am headed to the Chiracahuas next week for some filming.

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  Год назад

      And thank you for explaining that. I clearly have more research to do.

  • @carolinewilloughby7952
    @carolinewilloughby7952 7 месяцев назад

    Really cool video! Thanks for sharing it.

  • @mountainmuleman0311
    @mountainmuleman0311 2 года назад +1

    I loved this book. Another book id recommended is called Cult Of Glory. It's a Texas Ranger History book. When you read it, ot feels like the sequel to Empire of the Summer Moon. Written in a very similar no BS way

  • @johnr5926
    @johnr5926 3 года назад +2

    This is your finest work Steve!

  • @voxromantic3340
    @voxromantic3340 Год назад

    Great job!! From the Medicine Lodge area. Always love good exposé on this subjects!!! Watching this while working on a new oil well in Comanche County, Kansas at 8:30pm.

  • @reynan0012113
    @reynan0012113 2 года назад +2

    Would love to see a pinned map of these points of interest locations. Much love from the Philippines.

  • @jackphillips1383
    @jackphillips1383 3 года назад +2

    Loved the video. I read the book a while back and would look up the various locations on the map. It’s a treat to actually see the location of the various events. It’s a real shame that the house is in such bad shape.

    • @TedH71
      @TedH71 2 года назад +1

      The owner of the house wants lots of $$ to get it restored and sell it. However he's asking a lot of $. So nobody is gonna buy it.

    • @darrylmcginty1296
      @darrylmcginty1296 Год назад

      He just recently passed away so hopefully it can get into someone’s hands that will restore it.

  • @JamaniusFreebone
    @JamaniusFreebone 3 года назад

    FANTASTIC video!! I’ve been fascinated and obsessed with this local history since I moved here in 89. Man you’ve filled in a lot of gaps and answered some questions for me with this video! Excellent job sir! Keep em coming

  • @ghn49
    @ghn49 2 года назад

    Awesome video. Couldn't have been better..Excellent re-telling of the events and places. Please do more!!!

  • @melindaellzey1999
    @melindaellzey1999 Год назад

    Excellent-I was born in Dallas and amazed at your video- many thanks

  • @tshandy1
    @tshandy1 2 года назад

    I enjoyed the book, so this nicely done video spoke to me. I spent years not thinking much about Indians, but when I moved to the American West, I came to see the plains in a different way, a more respectful way. The summers are parched, the land isn't especially fertile, and the winters are brutal. This was the life of the plains Indian for centuries. They were a hearty folk. The Comanches in particular. I think the only reason whites were able to defeat this fierce tribe is by virtue of their numbers.

  • @chadmoss5900
    @chadmoss5900 2 года назад +1

    Great Video! I really appreciate you sharing this.

    • @GoWildHistory
      @GoWildHistory  2 года назад

      Thx man, I appreciate the kind words!

  • @lutherdean6922
    @lutherdean6922 Год назад

    Incredible, I actually read Empire of the Summer Moon, and a fiction partially based on that book called the Son. I read the Son twice. Thanks so much for sharing this! I'm half Mexican and feel connected to the history of these people and places. I live in Texas.

  • @e.s.8943
    @e.s.8943 5 месяцев назад

    I'm halfway through with the book and love it

  • @JScottCee
    @JScottCee 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video and work, man. Great job, and great information. Well done! 💯

  • @frankserra6709
    @frankserra6709 2 года назад

    I found your research and the numerous stories so fascinating that I had to subcribe.

  • @martinp1544
    @martinp1544 Год назад

    Very Cool. That is a lot of driving which is better than walking or riding a horse all that way! I read the book too and really liked it.
    Most modern people forget how brutal and precarious life was back on the frontier. Danger Danger everywhere!

  • @vickielewallen3799
    @vickielewallen3799 2 года назад +2

    Great vid and info! My grandfather and great gr, uncles, etc were born in San Saba. They dealt with Comanches now and then, at least one was killed by them. (Interestingly, now there are natives in my extended fam, cousins, but they are Chickasaw Nation). There's a good Journal online by a relative (gr uncle or gr gr uncle) named James T Wood if you can find it in Texas History archives, it describes the area and their lives way back when, the San Saba river, natives, Texas Rangers all that. Thx for this great video, loved it!

    • @josephdowling3745
      @josephdowling3745 2 года назад +2

      San Saba? That's where Buster Scruggs is from, right? Yeah he calls himself the San Saba Songbird. Small world huh?

    • @vickielewallen3799
      @vickielewallen3799 2 года назад

      @@josephdowling3745 I don't know that one, i will look him up

    • @vickielewallen3799
      @vickielewallen3799 2 года назад

      @@josephdowling3745 The movie? Thats about all i'm seeing on here..

    • @josephdowling3745
      @josephdowling3745 2 года назад

      @@vickielewallen3799 it's THE quintisental movie about a true man of the west.

    • @vickielewallen3799
      @vickielewallen3799 2 года назад

      @@josephdowling3745 Really! Looked at the trailer/or, it looked like a comedy. Is that right, comedy? If so was it worth it? Goin South was the only comedy type western I've liked, so far.

  • @polydueres
    @polydueres 2 года назад

    Fantastic job! One of the best if not the best video clip on you tube! Thank you