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Native Americans of Tejas

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Native Americans of Tejas Joanne Howard Moore, Edward R & Texarch Assoc., Texas Indians, http://www.texasindians.com/ – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Native Americans of Tejas


1
Native Americans of Tejas
  • Joanne Howard

2
Objectives
  • By the end of this power point, I would like my
    students to be able to
  • Understand where the Indians first came from
  • Understand the different areas where Texas Native
    Americans lived
  • Be able to identify the type of food, clothing,
    and housing the Indians used
  • Identify unique attributes of certain tribes

3
The First Americans
  • It is thought that most Native Americans are
    descended from people that crossed over from Asia
    to America on a land bridge the Bering Land
    bridge.

This picture demonstrates the diminishing of the
bridge over thousands of years
4
Migration Paths
  • As the world's glaciers and ice sheets melted
    over the following millennia, rising sea level
    flooded the land bridge.

5
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6
The Plains Culture Area
  • The Great Plains stretches from Canada into
    Southern Texas. Many Native American groups lived
    along the edges of the plains to farm and entered
    the plains to hunt buffalo. With the arrival of
    the Spanish came the arrival of horses. Many
    plains Indians became excellent horsemen. Most
    lived in tepees.

7
  • Some buffalo weighed up to 1,600 pounds and were
    6 feet tall at the shoulder and 10 feet long.
    Indians used a variety of techniques to hunt
    buffalo.

8
The Comanche
  • Migrated from Wyoming
  • Hunters and gatherers
  • Used the horse for their main source of
    transportation and food-getting
  • Well dressed
  • The Comanche leaders often wore fine European
    clothes, with many silver conchos and fine
    leather boots.

9
The Comanche
  • Lived in tee-pees
  • Good warriors and traders (although, thieves)
  • Often spoke more than one language
  • Click here for more important facts

10
Comanche
  • The Comanche lived in bands headed by a peace
    chief. If you were the best fighter and rider you
    were the war chief. The Comanche were skilled
    buffalo hunters. Because of the their skills they
    soon controlled much of the plains including west
    and northern Texas.

11
The Tonkawa
  • Lived on the north-central plains and on the
    southeastern edge of the Edwards Plateau. They
    depended on the buffalo for food, clothing and
    shelter. They were considered hunter-gatherers.
    The Tonkawa were driven from their hunting
    grounds by the Apache.

12
The Tonkawa
  • The people of the wolf
  • Believed descended from mythical wolf
  • Totemic belief system
  • each clan had a mythical animal or spirit to
    guard them

Click the picture or the wolf on the next slide
for more information.
13
The Tonkawa
  • Tattooed bodies
  • Hill country of central Texas
  • Shared land with the Karankawa and Coahuiltecan
  • Friendly, but enemies with Comanche and Apache
    tribes
  • Hunted and gathered food
  • Fish, deer, blackberries
  • Lived in huts, wickiups and tee-pees

14
The Apache
  • The Apache culture originated in Canada but
    migrated to the Great Plains . Two Apache groups
    settled in Texas. These are the Lipan and
    Mescalero. Apaches were organized into bands that
    traveled, hunted and fought together. The Apaches
    were skilled horsemen and often teamed up when
    hunting buffalo. Lipan Apaches were also farmers
    which was very unusual for Apaches.

15
The Apaches
  • Migrated to Texas from Canada
  • Apache is probably Zuni which means enemy
  • The Apache and Navajo called themselves the Dine
  • Dine in Apache or Navajo means "the people
  • Built wickiups and teepees
  • Semi-sedentary
  • Farmed and hunted

16
  • Most Lipan Apache men cut their hair very short
    on the left side but allowed the hair on the
    right to hang long. They tied feathers and other
    decorations to their hair. The men had no facial
    hair and the women wore earrings. Apaches were
    feared throughout Texas.

17
The Apaches
  • Wore leather boots and wide cloth headbands
  • After the horse, stopped farming to hunt
  • Pushed further south by Comanche
  • Two groups Lipan and Mescaleros
  • Sought refuge in Spanish missions but treated
    like slaves
  • Geronimo- famous leader of the Mescalero Apaches
  • 1870s- led a famous raid in southern New Mexico
    and far west Texas

18
Kiowa
  • The Kiowa were the last plains group to arrive in
    Texas. They hunted buffalo, and gathered berries,
    fruits and nuts. They traded with other groups
    for what they did not have. The hair of the Kiowa
    men was long but over the right ear it was short.
    The Kiowa and the Comanche were allies.

19
The Southeastern Culture Area
  • Caddo-moved into Eastern Texas from Arkansas,
    Louisiana and Oklahoma. They built permanent
    villages and became expert farmers. They
    practiced crop rotation. The Caddo grew beans,
    corn, squash, sunflower seeds and tobacco. They
    organized their tribes into three confederacies.
    The Caddo built mounds and temples for religious
    events. In addition to a religious and political
    structure the Caddo had healers and craftspeople.

20
The Wichita confederacy included four groups.
They settled along the Red River. They lived
along creeks and rivers. They grew beans, corn,
melons and squash. The Wichita used horses to
hunt buffalo and deer. They lived in permanent
villages. Like the Caddo, the Wichita tattooed
their bodies. Theirs was more extreme.
21
The Wichita
  • Semisedentary lifestyle
  • farms and villages, but also moved around
  • Fall would migrate west to go on a buffalo hunt
  • In spring lived in grass huts in villages
  • grew maize, pumpkins, squash, beans and plums

22
The Wichita
  • Tattoos raccoon-eyed people
  • Wore clothes made of tanned hides
  • Men shirts, loin cloths and leggings
  • Women dresses that reached from their chin to
    their ankles
  • Moccasins
  • Elk teeth were very valuable
  • trade items with neighboring tribes

Click the picture for more info
23
The Caddo was a matrilineal society. This means
they traced their families through their mothers
side. Their houses were wooden poles covered with
grass. Some may have plastered the outside walls
with mud. Both men and women tattooed and painted
their bodies.
24
The Caddo
  • Lived in piney areas of East Texas
  • Grass huts like the Wichitas
  • Farmers
  • corn, beans, squash and other crops
  • Set fires in the woods to burn away clearings to
    farm
  • Women would gather wild plant food like acorns,
    black berries
  • Men would travel in hunting parties for buffalo
  • Buffalo robes

25
The Caddo
  • Texas is a Caddoan word
  • It means "those who are friends"
  • The Tejas Caddo tribes were all "friends
  • Made bows and arrows out of bois de arc wood
  • Made axes to cut down trees
  • Beautiful pottery
  • Click the ax for more information

26
  • Atakapan-between the Caddo and the Gulf of Mexico
    lived the Atakapan people. They were farmers with
    corn being their main crop. Not only did they
    farm but they hunted wild game and alligator.
    Little is known about their houses but it is
    thought they lived in huts made from brush.

27
Lets Review!
  • Where is it thought that the first humans that
    came to America came from?
  • Where did the Comanche Indians live? The Wichita?
    The Caddo?
  • What kind of house did the Comanches live in? The
    Wichita? The Caddo?
  • Which Native Texans were hunter/ gatherers?
  • Which were farmers?
  • What does Tejas mean?

28
The Western Gulf Culture Area
  • Karankawa-hunters and gatherers who lived in the
    area of Galveston to Corpus Christi. They were
    nomads. They used dug-out canoes to fish, hunt
    sea turtles and collect shells. They also hunted
    deer and small animals. They lived in wigwams.

29
The Karankawa did not need much clothing. Their
clothes were made out of deerskin or grass. They
painted themselves with bright colors. To keep
the insects away they rubbed alligator fat and
dirt into their skin. The Karankawa treated their
children with kindness. They gave their children
two names, one of which only their family knew.
30
The Karankawa
  • Galveston and Corpus Christi area
  • Food fish, fish, fish!
  • Clothing
  • Men breach cloths or nothing at all
  • Women grass skirts
  • Lived in wickiups during the winter
  • Got around in canoes
  • Could hold a family and all their possessions

31
The Karankawa
  • Larger than most Native Americans at 6
  • Often unfairly labeled as cannibals
  • Click on the fish for more information on the
    Karankawa culture

32
  • Coahuiltecan-hunted and gathered food in south
    Texas. They were nomadic and covered large
    distances following buffalo, deer and small
    animals. The Coahuiltecan also fished and hunted
    for wild plants. Their diets included ants, eggs,
    lizards, snakes, spiders and worms. They did not
    build permanent homes. Both men and women wore
    their hair long. They worked hard but they like
    to gather for feasting and dancing.

33
The Coahuiltecan
  • Many similar groups of Indians in the same area
  • called the Coahuiltican Indians out of
    convenience
  • South Texas, Eastern Mexico
  • Hunters and gatherers until people started to
    come to America
  • Dirty and smelly
  • Diseases
  • Became extremely poor

34
The Coahuiltecan
  • Wickiups, sometimes
  • Little clothing, if any
  • Made sandles out of lechuguilla plants
  • Click the cactus for more info.

35
The Pueblo Culture Area
  • Jumano-made permanent houses made of adobe. The
    Jumano lived along the Rio Grande River. They
    were able to grow corn and other crops because
    they settled near the river. They also hunted
    buffalo and gathered wild plants for food. The
    Jumano lived in large villages. They used bows
    and arrows and carried heavy clubs into battles.

36
Jumano
  • West Texas
  • Farmers
  • grew corn, beans and squash
  • grew cotton for clothes and blankets
  • Adobe houses

37
Jumano
  • Clean and neat
  • Men shaved their heads except for at the top
  • Traders
  • Supposedly naked except for when it was cold-
    wore blankets

38
Lets Review!
  1. What did the Tonkawa Indians call themselves?
  2. Which Native Texans lived in adobe houses?
  3. How did the Karankawa clans get around?
  4. Why were the Coahuiltecan clans dirty and
    smelly?
  5. What was Geronimos Indian heritage?
  6. What type of homes did the Tonkawa, Apache,
    Karankawa, Coahuiltecan, and Jumano Indians live
    in?

39
  • Before you go to the next slide, see if you can
    remember where these Native Texans lived! When
    you get to the next slide, try to guess the names
    in order before you click.

40


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