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145. DESHIELDS, James T. Cynthia Ann Parker. The
Story of Her Capture at the Massacre of the Inmates of Parker's Fort;
of Her Quarter of a Century Spent among the Comanches, as the Wife
of the War Chief, Peta Nocona; and of Her Recapture at the Battle of
Pease River, by Captain L. S. Ross, of the Texian Rangers..."Truth
is Stranger than Fiction." St. Louis: Printed for the Author,
1886. 80 pp., 4 plates, including frontispiece (photograph of Cynthia
Ann Parker, her hair chopped short to indicate mourning, and her daughter
Topsannah at her breast nursing): (1) Cynthia Ann Parker, (2) General
L. S. Ross, (3) Lizzie Ross, (4) Quanah Parker. 12mo,
original charcoal cloth, front cover with blind embossed bands, upper
cover with gilt lettering and gilt illustration of Fort Parker, original
pale green floral endpapers. A few minor flecks to binding, very slight
shelf wear, otherwise very fine, bright, and tight.
First edition. Ayer 63. Dobie, p. 22. Graff 1064.
Hoover 29: "One of the more unusual captivity stories, Cynthia Ann was the
mother of...Comanche chieftain, Quanah Parker. Her name was legendary for generations
in the Southwest." Howes D278. Notable American Women III:15-16.
Rader 1126. Raines, p. 67: "A story of painful but absorbing interest." Tate,
The Indians of Texas 2280.
Handbook of Texas Online (Cynthia
Ann Parker):
Cynthia Ann Parker (ca. 1825-ca. 1871), a captive
of the Comanches, was born to Lucy (Duty) and Silas M. Parker in Crawford
County, Illinois. According to the 1870 census of Anderson County she
would have been born between June 2, 1824, and May 31, 1825. When she
was nine or ten her family moved to Central Texas and built Fort Parker
on the headwaters of the Navasota River in what is now Limestone County.
On May 19, 1836, a large force of Comanche warriors accompanied by
Kiowa and Kichai allies attacked the fort and killed several of its
inhabitants. During the raid the Comanches seized five captives, including
Cynthia Ann. The other four were eventually released, but Cynthia remained
with the Indians for almost twenty-five years, forgot white ways, and
became thoroughly Comanche. It is said that in the mid-1840s her brother,
John Parker, who had been captured with her, asked her to return to
their white family, but she refused, explaining that she loved her
husband and children too much to leave them. She is also said to have
rejected Indian trader Victor Rose's invitation to accompany him back
to white settlements a few years later, though the story of the invitation
may be apocryphal.
A newspaper account of April 29, 1846, describes an
encounter of Col. Leonard G. Williams's trading party with Cynthia,
who was camped with Comanches on the Canadian River. Despite Williams's
ransom offers, tribal elders refused to release her. Later, federal
officials P. M. Butler and M. G. Lewis encountered Cynthia Ann with
the Yamparika Comanches on the Washita River; by then she was a full-fledged
member of the tribe and married to a Comanche warrior. She never voluntarily
returned to white society. Indian agent Robert S. Neighbors learned,
probably in 1848, that she was among the Tenawa Comanches. He was told
by other Comanches that only force would induce her captors to release
her. She had married Peta Nocona and eventually had two sons, Quanah
Parker and Pecos, and a daughter, Topsannah.
On December 18, 1860, Texas Rangers under Lawrence
Sullivan Ross attacked a Comanche hunting camp at Mule Creek, a tributary
of the Pease River. During this raid the rangers captured three of
the supposed Indians. They were surprised to find that one of them
had blue eyes; it was a non-English-speaking white woman with her infant
daughter. Col. Isaac Parker later identified her as his niece, Cynthia
Ann. Cynthia accompanied her uncle to Birdville on the condition that
military interpreter Horace P. Jones would send along her sons if they
were found. While traveling through Fort Worth she was photographed
with her daughter at her breast and her hair cut short-a Comanche sign
of mourning. She thought that Peta Nocona was dead and feared that
she would never see her sons again. On April 8, 1861, a sympathetic
Texas legislature voted her a grant of $100 annually for five years
and a league of land and appointed Isaac D. and Benjamin F. Parker
her guardians. But she was never reconciled to living in white society
and made several unsuccessful attempts to flee to her Comanche family.
After three months at Birdville, her brother Silas took her to his
Van Zandt County home. She afterward moved to her sister's place near
the boundary of Anderson and Henderson counties. Though she is said
in some sources to have died in 1864, the 1870 census enrolled her
and gave her age as forty-five. At her death she was buried in Fosterville
Cemetery in Anderson County. In 1910 her son Quanah moved her body
to the Post Oak Cemetery near Cache, Oklahoma. She was later moved
to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, and reinterred beside Quanah. In the last years
of Cynthia Ann's life she never saw her Indian family, the only family
she really knew. But she was a true pioneer of the American West, whose
legacy was carried on by her son Quanah. Serving as a link between
whites and Comanches, Quanah Parker became the most influential Comanche
leader of the reservation era.
($250-500)
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