whispers in the wind:

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Whispers in the Wind: Rediscovering Native Americans of Texas Created By Carmen Phillips Krimmel Intermediate

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Whispers in the Wind:. Rediscovering Native Americans of Texas. Created By Carmen Phillips Krimmel Intermediate. West Texas Plains. Along Gulf Coast from Galveston to Corpus Christi. Piney Woods of East Texas. Mountains and Basins Region. South Texas Plains. Comanches. Caddo. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Whispers in the Wind:

Whispers in the Wind:

Rediscovering Native Americans of TexasCreated By Carmen Phillips

Krimmel Intermediate

Page 2: Whispers in the Wind:

Caddo

Jumanos

Comanches

West Texas Plains

Piney Woods ofEast Texas

South Texas PlainsMountains and Basins

Region

Along Gulf Coastfrom Galveston to

Corpus Christi

Page 3: Whispers in the Wind:

Comanches

(most feared tribe)

www.texasbeyondhistory.net

Page 4: Whispers in the Wind:

• Dirt storms and tornadoes• “Comancheria”• Battled intruders

Use of Land & Water

Page 5: Whispers in the Wind:

Clothing• Breechcloth made of

tanned buffalo hide• Leggings• Buffalo robes• Boots & snowshoes• Painted faces RED• Braided Hair• Feathered Headdresses

Page 6: Whispers in the Wind:

Foods

• Buffalo – every part of it used, boiled, broiled, eaten raw or as jerky

• Nuts and berries• Drank warm animal blood

Page 7: Whispers in the Wind:

Homes

• Buffalo hide Tepees

www.texasbeyondhistory.net

Page 8: Whispers in the Wind:

Customs• Life centered around 2 activities: Hunting & War• Horse = most important possession (buried with

them)• Expert Horsemen

Page 9: Whispers in the Wind:

Caddo

www.texasbeyondhistory.net/.../who.html

Page 10: Whispers in the Wind:

Use of Land & Water

• Fertile land for farming• Trotlines• Hunted Deer (most important animal)

Page 11: Whispers in the Wind:

Clothing

• Deerskin and fur capes• Shells • Tattoos• Men: Mohawks • Women: Long parted in middle

http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/kids/caddo

Page 12: Whispers in the Wind:

Do you see any similarities with today’s styles?

Marek Adney of Austin, TX

http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/kids/caddo/images/oldnew.html

Page 13: Whispers in the Wind:

Foods• CORN, ate beans, sunflowers,

melons, pumpkins, tobacco and squash

• Deer, buffalo and javelina• Used traps and trotlines

Page 14: Whispers in the Wind:

Homes

• Beehive shaped grass huts

• 25- 40 feet diameter. Up to 40 people in one hut

home.netcom.com/~wandaron/caddo.html

Page 15: Whispers in the Wind:

Customs• Huge burial mounds• Weepers• Confederacy with 2 leaders:

– 1 war & peace leader– 1 religious leader

• Made Pottery & wove mats from bamboo

www.texasbeyondhistory.net/.../who.html

Page 16: Whispers in the Wind:

Karankawas

Page 17: Whispers in the Wind:

Use of Land & Water

• Gulf of Mexico for food

• Dugout canoes

• LONG cedar bows

• 3 foot arrows made of sugar cane

• Weapons & tools from seashells or wood

Page 18: Whispers in the Wind:

Clothing• Nude or breechcloths and grass skirts• Sugar cane body piercings• Very tall and powerfully built • Coated bodies with alligator/shark grease

to ward off mosquitoes (VERY Stinky!!!)• Tattooed faces with blue lines and figures• Chokers of shell, glass, pistachio nuts or

metal

Page 19: Whispers in the Wind:

Foods• Oysters & Clams• Scallops & Fish• Turtles• Locusts• Prairie hens and quail

Page 20: Whispers in the Wind:

Homes• Winter months spent along coast: Small

huts of willow poles with draped animal skins and grass

• Summer months spent inland: several sticks with woven mats over it

Page 21: Whispers in the Wind:

Customs• Flattened babies heads with

cradleboards• Like other tribes they ate the

flesh of their enemies believing they would gain their enemy’s courage

• Karankawa = dog lovers• Wrestlers• Mitotes

"“Caw Wacham: Flathead Woman with Child”." Online Photograph. Britannica Student Encyclopædia. 2  Sept.  2008  <http://student.britannica.com/eb/art-94957>.

Page 22: Whispers in the Wind:

Coahuilticans

www.texasbeyondhistory.net

Page 23: Whispers in the Wind:

Use of Land & Water

• Very primitive• Spent most of their time in search of food• Nomadic

Page 24: Whispers in the Wind:

Clothing• Men: little or no clothing

(breechcloths)• Women: short skirts of buckskin• Small people• Black stripes painted over bodies &

faces• Earrings of shell & decorative

feathers

Page 25: Whispers in the Wind:

Food• Ate almost anything they could find and digest• Pecans, acorns, nuts, sunflower seeds• Mesquite beans & Prickly Pear Cactus• Rabbits, turtles, snakes, lizards, deer, dogs, horses,

pemmican (jerky made with meat/berries)• Spiders, ants, worms, rotten wood, deer dung• Fish and maggots!• Dirt!

Prickly Pear Cactus

Mesquite Beans

Page 26: Whispers in the Wind:

Homes• Brush Wickiups

• Circular shape made of willow bent into dome shape

• Covered with grass, brush or hides

www.TexasIndians.com

Page 27: Whispers in the Wind:

Customs• Shamans very important• Mitotes• Strong people known for

endurance

Mhln.com

Page 28: Whispers in the Wind:

Jumanos

Jumanos

http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/kids/about_texas/regions/big_bend/big_kids/

Page 29: Whispers in the Wind:

Use of Land & Water

• Settled along Concho river and farmed

• Hunted and gathered• Little Rainfall• Irrigation

Page 30: Whispers in the Wind:

Clothing• Striped Tattoos on faces

• COTTON tunics

• Capes or cloaks

• Color feathers

• Yucca Sandals

Page 31: Whispers in the Wind:

Food• Pinon nuts, mesquite beans &

squash

• Pottery and gourds to cook

• Buffalo

Gourds

Pinon Nuts

SquashMequite Beans

www.glennwalter.com/honey_mesquite_tree.htm

Page 32: Whispers in the Wind:

Homes• Pueblos made of stone or adobe (sun-dried mud)• Square flat roofs partially underground

www.texasbeyondhistory.net/firecracker/index.html

Page 33: Whispers in the Wind:

Customs• Striped facial tattoos =

peaceful trader (Middlemen)• Special house for visitors• Heads bowed = “welcome”• Arrows were so well-made

Eastern tribes were eager to trade

Mhln.com

Page 34: Whispers in the Wind:

Comanche

Kiow

a

Mescalero Apache Lipan

Apache

Tonka

wa

Wichita

Caddo

Atakapan

Karankaw

asCoahuiltecans

Concho

Juman

o

Page 35: Whispers in the Wind:
Page 36: Whispers in the Wind:

Interactive Websites

• How many ways to use a buffalo: http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/kids/buffalo.html

• Buffalo Matching Game: http://americanhistory.si.edu/kids/buffalo/matching/tail.html

• World of the Caddo: http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/kids/caddo/index.html

• Talking Hands http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/st-plains/kids/talking/index.html

• Imagine It: http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/kids/imagine.html