The Comanches Wanted Her Red Hair: Alice Todd's Family Attacked By Indians in Mason County, TX, 1864

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2024
  • In this episode we read from the Spring 1961 issue of True West magazine, in an article written by William C.X. Hancock and illustrated by B.J. McCausey. This story is about Alice Todd, who went to school in San Saba, TX, and lived near Fort Mason where Robert E. Lee was stationed. When the federal troops left, Buffalo Hump's Comanches began a reign of terror on the settlers who remained on the western edge of Texas civilization.
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Komentáře • 135

  • @randomvintagefilm273
    @randomvintagefilm273 Před 16 dny +170

    My GreatX3 passed down a story of how they were traveling from Illinois to Nebraska and were camped out by a creek. His daughters were washing clothes by the creek when an Indian quietly rode up and grabbed the smallest girl. My G3 got on his horse and was able to catch up and there was a fight. He yelled to the girl to jump and run and when the Indian saw she escaped he gave up. He mentioned he was so happy that he had just bought a fast horse.

    • @rhonda8231
      @rhonda8231 Před 16 dny +13

      Oh, wow, that is an amazing story. Thank G-d that she was saved! How did they do after that?

    • @garyshearer895
      @garyshearer895 Před 15 dny

      😊​@@rhonda8231

    • @garyshearer895
      @garyshearer895 Před 15 dny +5

      ❤❤

    • @marshallfalconberry5187
      @marshallfalconberry5187 Před 15 dny

      why not have stories of how the rightful caretakers of the land,the Natives,we're cheated,tortured,women raped,babies bashed brains out ,killed on sight.Genocide just like the Nazi,s n now we get to hear stories glamorizing the taming of the West.Was the Author there? No! Just made up ,trying to fool us , just as they,ve always done. Simply Sickening!

    • @randomvintagefilm273
      @randomvintagefilm273 Před 15 dny +11

      @rhonda8231 The records show they made it to Nebraska where they had a claim. They were later forced off the land when a rich land barron came to the territory and said the land belonged to him. They then tracked back to Iowa.

  • @EstherSmith-uo2mr
    @EstherSmith-uo2mr Před 10 dny +21

    I like these old diaries that have been left for us. Un changed History for us. Thank you for sharing.

    • @EstherSmith-uo2mr
      @EstherSmith-uo2mr Před 10 dny +2

      So many families have stories not told . My family has a story. It was hard also.

  • @01Lenda
    @01Lenda Před 16 dny +41

    At the pictographs, on a ranch, near a town in Texas, is the native story of the raid, against the Todd family, by the Comanches. Was said to be one of the last pictographs, in that particular area, by the Comanches. I wondered what happened to Alice Todd. Some say she married a Kiowa Chief, some say she was killed, some say she married a Comanche Chief. No one really knows. Great story, thanks!

  • @lindacook8819
    @lindacook8819 Před 12 dny +39

    The Indians were nomads, the settlers wanted to find a place to settle. Two cultures clashing over land. Happened all over the world and is still happening today.

    • @gorgeous6737
      @gorgeous6737 Před 7 dny +3

      It just happened that it was their land...

    • @cuetlaxochitl
      @cuetlaxochitl Před 6 dny +3

      Not all Indians were nomadic

    • @80sGamerLady
      @80sGamerLady Před 2 dny

      No kidding

    • @alexialanda27
      @alexialanda27 Před 20 hodinami

      They were semi-sedendary with permanent and seasonal villages throughout their territory. Common misconception that Anglo-American settlers spread to justify taking land.

  • @kristinamikkelsoncasanova6287

    My grandmother had dealings with Natives and her daughter Vera ..my aunt back around 1909....an Indian in the store tried to buy my aunt Vera because of her red hair. This was back in northwestern Nebraska. The native grabbed at her and my grandmother grabbed a broom and wacked him.

  • @markgray6982
    @markgray6982 Před 16 dny +20

    I found a nice fleshing rock and several arrow heads and a friend found a dandy Lance head on Comanche creek in Mason County,,,,,and i found a Topaz the size of a Golfball also

  • @focuszx
    @focuszx Před 16 dny +31

    Story telling perfection.

    • @aprilmae274
      @aprilmae274 Před 16 dny +4

      On so many levels, it really is.

    • @cuetlaxochitl
      @cuetlaxochitl Před 6 dny

      It’s white coloniser storytelling. Think about it for the people that were here before.

  • @edwardkennelly677
    @edwardkennelly677 Před 16 dny +39

    That is a sad story. Always hoping for a happy ending😞

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward Před 16 dny

      There are graves all over Texas of whites killed by Comanches. No one could live with the Comanches, they were the most violent tribe in Texas.

    • @cuetlaxochitl
      @cuetlaxochitl Před 6 dny

      You mean a happy ending for the colonisers or for the people whom this land belonged to in the first place?

    • @breezymango4113
      @breezymango4113 Před 4 dny

      God inspired the people to come to America. The Native tribes/people could have had this land/country to themselves always, if they had been faithful to God and Jesus Christ.

  • @carlclarkarmyret137
    @carlclarkarmyret137 Před 16 dny +18

    Great stories, great story telling

    • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
      @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 Před 16 dny

      It is actually quite ridiculous if you know anything about the era or the real story. Indians didn't hang around white people or general stores, and the whites didn't praise the Idnans, either. The Todds were on the way to see a cousin's newborn baby when the Commanches struck and killed George Todd's wife, a female slave, and Mrs. Dwinzel Todd. Mr. Todd claimed his horse panicked and carried him away, but it looks like he fled in panic, But he spent many years trying to find Alice.

  • @reshmeytharakan9726
    @reshmeytharakan9726 Před 7 dny +6

    I’m sure it was far darker. Women were not treated equally back then. They were sold, even by colonial people as well. Not hard to believe the young girl was originally sold.

    • @elizabethoneill1995
      @elizabethoneill1995 Před 4 dny +1

      Yes before any white man ever set foot on the North American continent the Indians were capturing other Indians from neighboring tribes and making them slaves and they did sell them

  • @sheepdog1102
    @sheepdog1102 Před 16 dny +37

    How terrible for this family 😮

  • @socadream
    @socadream Před 13 dny +9

    Selling my late dad’s rock house in Brady, a town nearby Mason. Heard stories

  • @BarARanchMason
    @BarARanchMason Před 16 dny +16

    This is down the road from the ranch. Peter’s Creek is on the ranch.

  • @rhonda8231
    @rhonda8231 Před 16 dny +13

    That is so sad. The Todd's suffered so much.

    • @cuetlaxochitl
      @cuetlaxochitl Před 6 dny

      The Todd would’ve stayed in England this never would’ve happened.

  • @dogparty-tt8qw
    @dogparty-tt8qw Před 16 dny +11

    Thanks bro👍

  • @socadream
    @socadream Před 13 dny +7

    Can still visit Fort Mason.

  • @michaelfrost4584
    @michaelfrost4584 Před 14 dny +8

    Soo sad a story R.I.P

  • @aprilmae274
    @aprilmae274 Před 16 dny +6

    This is brilliant.

  • @lisacooper3991
    @lisacooper3991 Před 16 dny +32

    I enjoy the western and the frontier mountain men history.. but I never understood why the settlers instead of just getting a piece of land, building a cabin for themselves and living so far apart out in Indian territory, knowing of raids, they just didn't come together like a fort, so there would be more men to protect the women and children.. wonderful history and thank you for this story.. from South Carolina..

    • @theoriginalDAL357
      @theoriginalDAL357 Před 16 dny +11

      Same here, why DID they live in such vulnerable settings? It’s probably for some reason my contemporary mind can’t fathom. Damned if I’d put my family harm’s way like that. I understand wanting a piece of land to call your own, but the possible price to pay was way too high.

    • @deadhorse1391
      @deadhorse1391 Před 16 dny +8

      I understand what you are saying, I think many didn’t think it could happen to them. Seems that those that survived attacks were more careful afterwards

    • @FredSinclair-wc4og
      @FredSinclair-wc4og Před 16 dny

      @@theoriginalDAL357uh

    • @speakupriseup4549
      @speakupriseup4549 Před 16 dny +10

      Fort Parker and Fort Mims massacres of civilians by overwhelming indian forces

    • @cplmpcocptcl6306
      @cplmpcocptcl6306 Před 16 dny

      @@speakupriseup4549Exactly.

  • @Rectum_Rocketboost
    @Rectum_Rocketboost Před 12 dny +6

    Makes me think of my 2 redhrad sisters.

  • @jbflores01
    @jbflores01 Před 12 dny +5

    Excellent video!

  • @kickapootrackers7255
    @kickapootrackers7255 Před 16 dny +13

    Good Vid. Nothing has changed really, just more people and less truth. Thankya

  • @rickreese5794
    @rickreese5794 Před 16 dny +12

    GR8 post 😊

    • @theopinionisthighqualityopinio
      @theopinionisthighqualityopinio Před 16 dny +3

      Since YT isn't giving me the ability to post a comment at all, I'll post it here, as a reply.
      Thanks very much for the fascinating story! I watch them all, but rarely comment. Ironically, the time I decided to comment, there was no space in which to do it!
      Looking forward to the next one!! 💯

  • @deadhorse1391
    @deadhorse1391 Před 16 dny +28

    Another great video, can’t wait to the next one!
    Is unimaginable what these people went through, is there any wonder they hated the Indians ?

    • @robineggblue-bp3rq
      @robineggblue-bp3rq Před 16 dny +17

      Exactly. I’ve been listening to The Little House on the Prairie books recently, and also a book about flora and fauna that Laura mentioned in the books. The author made a remark about Carolynn Ingalls’ racist comments about Indians. I didn’t find them racist, only fearful. She had a rational reason for her fear. People today just aren’t taught WHY settlers had these attitudes. They don’t understand the history, recent events, or experiences of settlers.

    • @user-ho3bh4we4m
      @user-ho3bh4we4m Před 12 dny +5

      The Indians had good reason to hate the settlers. They themselves were hunted, murdered, given diseases had their sacred lands and symbols defaced and destroyed. I am not native American but have studied history and respect the native peoples.

    • @deadhorse1391
      @deadhorse1391 Před 12 dny +4

      @@user-ho3bh4we4m of course the Indians did most of those things to each other too.
      Don’t forget before the Europeans came to North America the natives there were a primitive Stone Age people

    • @jackiemack8653
      @jackiemack8653 Před 12 dny

      ​@@deadhorse1391The Comanches also murdered Spanish crossing the border

    • @elizabethoneill1995
      @elizabethoneill1995 Před 4 dny

      ​@@user-ho3bh4we4mbut they didn't have to kill innocent women and children the white man did the same and the Indians did the same they all went to hell you do not kill children

  • @WaferBrik
    @WaferBrik Před 7 dny +1

    Damn, what a sad story.

  • @vickiparrish3235
    @vickiparrish3235 Před 16 dny +10

    In the 60's I use to visit the Arrowwood Indian trading post in Catoose, OK. A very elderly chief owned/ran the post. He had his ancestors tall coup stick, complete with 7 scalps. 2 were from white people.

    • @elizabethoneill1995
      @elizabethoneill1995 Před 4 dny

      The whites are the ones who started scalping the French pay them money for enemy scalps white and Indian there was a bounty on them

  • @patriciau6277
    @patriciau6277 Před 13 dny +7

    Sounds as though she was murdered like her mother and brother. I don’t recall seeing any blonde Comanches either her of children she might’ve had.

    • @lisabaltzer4190
      @lisabaltzer4190 Před 9 dny +1

      Blonde hair is a recessive traits, so for a person to have blonde hair, the genetics have to come from both the father and mother. If that doesn’t happen, the trait is quickly bred out.

  • @desertrose2059
    @desertrose2059 Před 13 dny +11

    Im curious why was a photo of African eland antelope in the middle of this?

    • @user-wi9hv2pb2q
      @user-wi9hv2pb2q Před 13 dny +2

      saw that too lol

    • @junedalley7658
      @junedalley7658 Před 9 dny +3

      Oh come, come people. This is obviously authentic archival footage of these beasties before the colonists wiped them out. 🤣

    • @cuetlaxochitl
      @cuetlaxochitl Před 6 dny

      @@junedalley7658 what ia super racist thing to say. And not one person put you in your place already? Why don’t you say that to black people or Jewish people on here?

    • @elizabethoneill1995
      @elizabethoneill1995 Před 4 dny +1

      I guess you've never been to Montana or Wyoming they have antelopes roaming the plains they used to be all over the United States now that's mostly Wyoming and Montana

    • @hesavedawretchlikeme6902
      @hesavedawretchlikeme6902 Před dnem

      He is correct. There was a photo of the prong horn antelope which is still prolific in New Mexico, Texas panhandle, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, etc. But afterwards there was a photo of three larger species of antelope native to Africa.

  • @Slievenamon
    @Slievenamon Před 13 dny +19

    Think of it this way, if the Anglos had stayed east of the Mississippi and the Spaniards stayed west of the Rockies and left the rest to the Indians and Bison, you would not have millions of illegal immigrants flooding over the border every year, would you ? The Comanche and Apache would be quite a deterrent for them.

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 Před 16 dny +39

    If you want to read the real story without all of the nonsense, get a copy of Gregory and Susan, Michno's "A Fate Worse than Death." The book is a catalog of documented Indian captivity histories. There is no prelude concerning her being spied at a store by some "braves." who plotted to take her later. (Commanches did not hang out with whites or congregate around stores at the time!). The family was on a trip to visit relatives to see a newborn baby when the Commanches struck and killed her mother, a black female servant, and Mr. Todd's horse panicked and fled with George Todd on its back (or he panicked and fled. No one knows for sure). George Todd spent years trying to find his daughter, Alice. The story is likely a main influence on the epoch John Ford, John Wayne film "The Searchers." In Alice's case, it was never determined whether she had survived or as some Indians reported, been killed the first night for her hair. I knew a woman whose family came from Norway in around 1900. They rode in a wagon for the last part of their trip. They were followed by Indians until they cut off their blonde hair and left it on some rocks. Yes, the Indians would kill for a beautiful head of hair.

    • @cplmpcocptcl6306
      @cplmpcocptcl6306 Před 16 dny +6

      The Searchers was based on Quanah Parker’s mom, Cynthia.

    • @DebKC-bj9jo
      @DebKC-bj9jo Před 12 dny +1

      American Indians were ENTIRELY subjugated by 1900. The Norwegian family was passing on some mighty tall tales.

    • @jackiemack8653
      @jackiemack8653 Před 12 dny +3

      ​@@DebKC-bj9joNo they werent

  • @DW-nb2zc
    @DW-nb2zc Před 16 dny +8

    Just one of many stories The Searchers is based on.As well how Wayne's character might've reacted to his niece being held captive.We want her physically and mentally intact if not we might have to put her down

  • @sueamos3860
    @sueamos3860 Před 16 dny +5

    Very interesting

  • @sheilafoster6213
    @sheilafoster6213 Před 7 dny +5

    It's so sad, but look what was done to them. And it was there land.😢

  • @manleynelson9419
    @manleynelson9419 Před 16 dny +6

    Henrico pronounced Hen rye co

  • @markperrault5678
    @markperrault5678 Před 16 dny +6

    Not the battle of the wilderness yella tavern

  • @blackcats179
    @blackcats179 Před 21 hodinou

    Heard almost nothing about the red haired girl.😮 More of a history lesson.

  • @gabrielleangelica1977

    Oh my, I thought 💭 Native Americans were perfect angels?!

  • @kathycromwell7247
    @kathycromwell7247 Před 3 dny +4

    They should have covered her hair on the get go!

  • @fiddleback1568
    @fiddleback1568 Před 16 dny +3

    Makes you wonder who was the brainchild behind the This Land is my land video game.

  • @Malitesta
    @Malitesta Před 16 dny +6

    ….the actual Comanche happy hunting grounds to luxury gated ranchette communities …. “ We satisfy our endless needs and justify our bloody deeds "

  • @mikedbworks1122
    @mikedbworks1122 Před 16 dny +3

    llano pronounced yawn-o, not lan-o

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward Před 16 dny +6

      You must not be from Texas.

    • @01Lenda
      @01Lenda Před 16 dny +3

      What are you talking about? IT IS PRONOUNCED LANO. Troll.

    • @Carladc1956
      @Carladc1956 Před 15 dny +3

      My family has been in Llano over 100 years. It’s pronounced with an L, not the Spanish ya.

    • @Texasbluestunes
      @Texasbluestunes Před 13 dny +2

      The town is pronounced with an “L”. When referring to the panhandle staked plains, Llano Estacado, we Texans pronounce it in Spanish.

  • @beverlybalius9303
    @beverlybalius9303 Před 15 dny +7

    So much for the misunderstood Native American’s…This is why they had to be put on reservations… My Grandmother was Cherokee/Iraquoi,,,born in 1894.

    • @shanemcdowall
      @shanemcdowall Před 14 dny

      The indigenous Americans ranged from peaceful farmers to the worst cut-throats imaginable. The USA was built on genocide against the Indians, industrial scale slavery of Africans, and the ruthless exploitation of wave after wave of impoverished Europeans. God bless America.

  • @ashleyworkman1566
    @ashleyworkman1566 Před 15 hodinami

    Here is my tin foil hat theory when did they start making old folks home to put our grandparents in so that we would not be able to hear these stories these are the things we should have learned in school I literally use nothing that I spent 12 years in school my mom taught me to read and my homework that mom taught me is how I learned math literally school did nothing it actually I think made me dumber I've learned so much more homeschooling my kids than I did when I was in school my Grandpa would tell us amazing stories of Giants and things like that fossils and things he had and that is the things that we should have been learning but where are old folks that would tell us these things they are all put in homes and there is so much of a lack of respect for the older and our knowledge of real history

  • @user-eu1ur1yb9p
    @user-eu1ur1yb9p Před 2 dny

    What brouhaha...when I was young the school teachers said this same fable..only it was a small blonde child ..."whose hair was like gold.."
    Guess it happened...huh(?)
    But when criminals of any persuasions in everywhere need to make haircolor important vices ...weird..

  • @Lemonarmpits
    @Lemonarmpits Před 16 dny +3

    Storytellers are liars

  • @afellowamericanafellowamer5317

    So unworthy history is narrating fictional dialog now

  • @thomaswayneward
    @thomaswayneward Před 16 dny +11

    Are you a yankee, the way you talk about Lincolns war on the South, sounds like it. Plus it doesn't sound like you know much of the actual history of Lincolns war on the South.

    • @robineggblue-bp3rq
      @robineggblue-bp3rq Před 16 dny +8

      He was reading from that magazine he kept showing.

    • @kreigkubachi3732
      @kreigkubachi3732 Před 15 dny +5

      @thomaswayneward Don't waste your time. You are up against millions of expert historians all who perfected their knowledge under the watchful eye of the public school system.

    • @DebKC-bj9jo
      @DebKC-bj9jo Před 12 dny +1

      Ever open an actual book, thomas? I didn't think so.

    • @jackiemack8653
      @jackiemack8653 Před 12 dny

      Yankee? Chit still fighting the civil war huh? This guy is reading from a book. SMH

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward Před 6 dny

      @@DebKC-bj9jo I am 78 years old and have studied all my life on certain topics. When in high school the librarian in our school told me I read more books than any other student. Here is an example of what one can come up with by reading actual history.
      The Confederate States of America (1861-1865) started with an agrarian-based economy that relied heavily on slave-worked plantations for the production of cotton for export to Europe IF CLASSED AS AN INDEPENDENT COUNTRY, the area of the Confederate States would have ranked as the FOURTH-RICHEST COUNTRY OF THE WORLD IN 1860." (Wikipedia: Economy of the Confederate States of America).
      To "preserve the Union" Treasury, Lincoln could not afford to let the South secede. Five days after the evacuation of Ft Sumter, Lincoln published President Proclamation NO. 81 on April 19, 1861.
      "Whereas an insurrection against the Government of the United States has broken out in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and the laws of the United States FOR THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) can not be effectually executed therein conformably to that provision of the Constitution which requires DUTIES (REVENUE TAX MONEY) to be uniform throughout the UNITED STATES; ......"
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 82, April 27. 1861 (after more Southern States secede)
      "Whereas since that date, public property of the United States has been seized, THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) OBSTRUCTED, ....."
      Even the US House of Representatives joined in:
      Crittenden-Johnson Resolution issued by the US House of Representatives, 25 July, 1861 four days after the defeat of the invading US Army at Manassas, VA (Bull Run).
      "Resolved by the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the capital; that in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, WILL RECOLLECT ONLY ITS DUTY (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY; that this war is not waged upon our part in any spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, NOR PURPOSE OF OVERTHROWING OR INTERFERING WITH THE RIGHTS OR ESTABLISHED "INSTITUTIONS" (such as slavery) OF THOSE STATES, but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and TO PRESERVE THE UNION (Treasury), with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease.
      "The role of slavery became the proclaimed cause of [Lincoln's] war because it was necessary to put the South at a moral disadvantage by transforming the contest from a war for independence into a war waged for the maintenance and extension of slavery!" Woodrow Wilson, US President
      English author, Charles Dickens, author of A Christmas Carol and Oliver Twist:
      "The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for ECONOMIC CONTROL of the Southern states." (Google: Charles Dickens, piece of specious humbug).
      Dickens owned a magazine called All the Year Round. In it, an article attacked the tariff . “…under all the passion of the parties and the cries of battle lie the two chief moving causes of the struggle,” it said. “Union means so many millions a year lost to the South; SECESSION MEANS THE LOSS OF THE SAME MILLIONS TO THE NORTH. The love of money is the root of this, as of many other evils…”

  • @Slievenamon
    @Slievenamon Před 16 dny +15

    The Anglos should have stayed east of the Mississippi. And the Spanish should have stayed south of the Rio Grande and west of the Rockies and left the rest to the Native Americans. It looks like Anglo greed and stupidity will cost you the whole of the USA.

    • @Surge_LaChance
      @Surge_LaChance Před 16 dny +15

      Huh?

    • @jakeroberts7435
      @jakeroberts7435 Před 16 dny +21

      Where you from Scooter?

    • @nylanelson8660
      @nylanelson8660 Před 16 dny +1

      The Spanish were already in the states known as California, Arizona, New Mexico, & Nevada as they owned the land. It was the Mexican President that told the land to the U.S. government for monetary profit that Only went into his pockets. The land was sold for a mere pittance of what it was worth

    • @chrisruiz1215
      @chrisruiz1215 Před 16 dny

      Great statement

    • @deadhorse1391
      @deadhorse1391 Před 16 dny +28

      I am sure the Apache wished that the Comanche had staid north instead of invading their land and almost wiping them out