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===Native Americans=== The Brazos Indian Reservation, founded by General [[Randolph B. Marcy]] in 1854, provided a refuge from warring [[Comanche]] for the [[Lenape|Delaware]], [[Shawnee]], [[Tonkawa]], [[Wichita people|Wichita]], [[Yowani|Choctaw]], and [[Caddo]] peoples, who had migrated into Texas from other areas. Within the [[Indian reservation|reservation]], each [[tribe]] had its own [[village]] and cultivated agricultural crops. Government-contracted [[beef cattle]] were delivered each week. Most settlers were unable to distinguish between reservation and non-reservation tribes, blaming the reservation Indians for the raids by the Comanche and [[Kiowa]]. A newspaper in [[Jacksboro, Texas]], titled ''The White Man'' (or ''Whiteman''), advocated removal of all tribes from North Texas.<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Brazos Indian Reservation | id= bpb03| author=Crouch, Carrie J| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref><ref>{{Handbook of Texas | title=White Man | id= eew11| author=Minor, David| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> During December 1858, Choctaw Tom, a [[Yowani]] married to a [[Hasinai]] woman, at times served as an interpreter to [[Sam Houston]]. He was among a group of reservation Indians who received permission to hunt outside the reservation boundaries, but on December 27, Captain Peter Garland and a [[vigilante]] group attacked Choctaw Tom's camp, indiscriminately murdering and injuring women and children along with the men.<ref>{{cite web | title=Choctaw Tom | publisher=Fort Tours |url= http://www.forttours.com/pages/choctawtom.asp|access-date=May 5, 2010}}</ref> [[Hardin Richard Runnels|Governor Hardin Richard Runnels]]<ref>{{cite web | title=Texas Governor Harden Richard Runnels | publisher=State of Texas |url= http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/40009/tsl-40009.html|access-date=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Library and Archives Commission</ref> ordered Major [[John Henry Brown]] of the state militia to the area, with 100 troops to control potential retaliation and unrest.<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | title=John Henry Brown | id= fbr94| author=Baker, Erma| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> An examining trial was conducted about the Choctaw Tom raid, but no indictments resulted of any militia. In May 1859, [[John R. Baylor|John Baylor]]<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=John Robert Baylor | id= fbaat| author=Thompson, Jerry| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> led a number of whites who confronted the United States troops defending the reservation, demanding the surrender of certain men from the tribe whom they thought were responsible for raids. The military balked, and Baylor retreated, but he killed an Indian woman and an old man in the process.<!-- How was this a side event? --> Baylor's group was later attacked by Indians off the reservation, where the military had no authority to intervene. In May 1871, Kiowa [[medicine man]] [[Sitting Bear|Satank (Sitting Bear)]],<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Satank | id= fsa32| author=Hosmer, Brian C| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> and Kiowa chiefs [[Satanta (White Bear)]],<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Satanta| id= fsa33| author=Hosmer, Brian C| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> Addo-etta (Big Tree)<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Addo-etta Big Tree | id= fbi07| author=Hosmer, Brian C| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> and Maman-ti (Skywalker)<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Maman-ti | id= fmacz| author=Anderson, H. Allen | retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref> led a force of over 100 Kiowa, Comanche, [[Plains Apache|Kiowa-Apaches]], [[Arapaho]], and [[Cheyenne]] warriors from the Oklahoma [[Fort Sill]] Reservation into Texas. On May 18, the Indians attacked a [[wagon train]] belonging to [[Warren Wagon Train Raid|Henry Warren]], killing all but five who escaped. [[Commanding General of the United States Army]] [[William Tecumseh Sherman]] personally arrested Satank, Satanta, and Big Tree at Fort Sill and had them tried in civil court in [[Jacksboro, Texas|Jacksboro]]. Satank was killed in an attempted escape, and others were found guilty and sentenced to hang. Their sentences were commuted by [[Edmund J. Davis|Governor Edmund J. Davis]] at the request of a group of [[Religious Society of Friends|Quakers]], and they were later [[parole]]d. The incident was a key element that contributed to the [[Red River War]].<ref>{{Handbook of Texas | name=Warren Wagon Train Raid | id= btw03| author=Hamilton, Allen Lee| retrieved=May 5, 2010}} Texas State Historical Association.</ref>
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