Longitude: -94.333986000000
- Harrison
James Pearson, his wife, daughter, and one son are killed by Caddos ten miles south of present-day Marshall. An eight-year-old son, Thomas Pearson, survives. Two years later he is found living among the Comanches and returned to his family.
Frederich Benjamin Page, Prairiedom: Rambles and Scrambles in Texas or New Estrémadura (New York: Paine & Burgess, 1845), 50.
Dorman H. Winfrey, ed. Texas Indian Papers, 1825-1843 (Austin: Texas State Library, 1959), 1:114.
Original Title: Cadós. Cadós où Caddoquis: Indigénes des environs de Nacogdoches.
Image Type: Watercolor and ink on paper
Creator: Lino Sánchez y Tapia after José María Sánchez y Tapia
Collection: Thomas W. Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Image Citation:
Berlandier, Jean Louis, The Indians of Texas in 1830. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Press, 1969, Plate 7
Longitude: -94.333986000000
- Harrison
James Pearson, his wife, daughter, and one son are killed by Caddos ten miles south of present-day Marshall. An eight-year-old son, Thomas Pearson, survives. Two years later he is found living among the Comanches and returned to his family.
- Caddos
- Comanches
Frederich Benjamin Page, Prairiedom: Rambles and Scrambles in Texas or New Estrémadura (New York: Paine & Burgess, 1845), 50.
Dorman H. Winfrey, ed. Texas Indian Papers, 1825-1843 (Austin: Texas State Library, 1959), 1:114.
Original Title: Cadós. Cadós où Caddoquis: Indigénes des environs de Nacogdoches.
Image Type: Watercolor and ink on paper
Creator: Lino Sánchez y Tapia after José María Sánchez y Tapia
Collection: Thomas W. Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Image Citation:
Berlandier, Jean Louis, The Indians of Texas in 1830. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Press, 1969, Plate 7