The famed Comanche Chief Quanah Parker certainly lived a very unique life.
The famed Comanche Chief Quanah Parker certainly lived a very unique life. Upon becom
ing a formidable warrior in a culture which came to dominate the Southern Great Plains, he strongly defended his people and their way of life. After Comanches were overtaken by disease, hunger, and other people who were more numerous than Comanches, Quanah dearly guided his Comanche people along a different path into a new way of living. He did it in a way that protected their shared identity as Comanches (Nummuhnuh).
ing a formidable warrior in a culture which came to dominate the Southern Great Plains, he strongly defended his people and their way of life. After Comanches were overtaken by disease, hunger, and other people who were more numerous than Comanches, Quanah dearly guided his Comanche people along a different path into a new way of living. He did it in a way that protected their shared identity as Comanches (Nummuhnuh).
The historian William Thomas Hagan expressed that Chief Quanah Parker had "one foot on the white man's road and the other on the old Comanche trail."
Outstanding picture of Chief Quanah Parker's headdress which he had worn at many events. His lance is also shown. The extraordinary headdress is impressively assembled with 62 golden eagle feathers. Each one trimmed on the top with red rooster or turkey hackles and horsehair all fastened to a felt cap. It's trailer gracefully descends almost to the ground. According to the museum, Quanah's last surviving wife Topay, gifted the item to them in 1960.

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