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"Treasure of the Wichita"
"Treasure of the Wichita"
"Treasure of the Wichita"
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"Treasure of the Wichita"

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A great treasure of the French people was brought to New Orleans from France in 1792 by the La Porte family. This treasure ultimately ends up in the hands of Waco Baptiste, whose mother was a Wichita Indian and whose father was a French trader. What Waco does with the treasure will certainly entertain and educate the reader. The book is divided into two parts. The first covers the period from 1750 to 1876. The second part jumps forward to 1995 through 2005, and follows the footsteps of Sara Wind Cloud, a young woman of the Wichita tribe, who makes a great discovery during her studies as a history major at Cameron University in Lawton, Oklahoma. Her discovery ultimately leads her to the treasure of the Wichita which Waco Baptiste swore in an oath of secrecy to his wife, Julian La Porte, to protect at all costs. Waco Baptiste certainly accomplished his mission, and Sara Wind Cloud brings closure to the mystery in a manner which the reader should find both fair and honorable to all parties.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherAuthorHouse
Release dateApr 3, 2006
ISBN9781467096324
"Treasure of the Wichita"
Author

Bob Balch

Bob is a native of Seymour, Baylor County, Texas, where he was born in 1947. Being a baby boomer and growing up in the post World War II era, he enjoyed the slow pace of small town America. He spent many leisurely days roaming the areas around his hometown with his friends. This included frequent trips to the Brazos River to hike, swim, seine for minnows, hunt, and trap game. Lake Kemp was another favorite spot for boating, swimming, water skiing, fishing, duck hunting, camping, and for just hanging out with friends. Between Seymour and Lake Kemp he enjoyed outings with his scouting buddies, and two of their favorite spots were the Craddock Ranch and the old George Place. It was on the Craddock Ranch that the famous Permian era bone bed was first discovered in the late 1800s which has attracted much attention from the scientific community down through the years. As a Boy Scout, Bob learned about these discoveries and even did some fossil hunting himself. He earned the Eagle Scout award along side his friends, Bill Whitley and Ken George, the current owners of the Craddock Ranch and the George Place, respectively. Bob graduated from Seymour High School in 1965 and went on to Baylor University in Waco, Texas, where he earned a BBA and JD degrees in 1971. He took a geology course as an undergraduate, and the field trips during that course brought back memories of his experiences on the Craddock Ranch and the old George Place. Now over forty years later serving as a director of the Whiteside Museum of Natural History in Seymour, his interest in this bone bed has been renewed. This eighth book, D-Don Lives! is his tribute to his hometown and the people who have made this story come to life. Bob has lived in Wichita Falls, Texas, since 1974 with his wife, Deborah Ann, where they raised two sons, Trey and Josh, both of whom are doctors who practice medicine in both Texas and Alaska in the fields of physiatry (physical medicine and rehabilitation) and interventional pain management. Bob practices law in Wichita Falls but maintains close contacts with his hometown about an hour away where his mother still resides at the age of 97. He hopes the readers of this book learn some history of the area and enjoy this tale of dimetrodons. A lot has transpired since I first started writing this book in 2014 and completing in 2015 with revisions through 2017. Many new specimens have been found and assembled for research, education of the public and study. New dig sites are opening up for study including the Ross Place owned by Joe Clay Ross. We appreciate the opportunities provided by all of the landowners in allowing us access to these sites. The future is bright for the Whiteside Museum of Natural History that has become a world class museum in the City of Seymour, Baylor County, Texas, my hometown which I am proud to say I grew up in and continue to visit regularly.

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    Book preview

    "Treasure of the Wichita" - Bob Balch

    Treasure Of The Wichita

    by

    Bob Balch

    USUK%20Logo.ai

    AuthorHouse™

    1663 Liberty Drive, Suite 200

    Bloomington, IN 47403

    www.authorhouse.com

    Phone: 1-800-839-8640

    AuthorHouse™ UK Ltd.

    500 Avebury Boulevard

    Central Milton Keynes, MK9 2BE

    www.authorhouse.co.uk

    Phone: 08001974150

    This book is a work of fiction. People, places, events, and situations are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or historical events, is purely coincidental.

    © 2010 Bob Balch. All rights reserved.

    No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.

    First published by AuthorHouse 8/24/2010

    ISBN: 978-1-4259-1092-1 (sc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4670-9632-4 (ebk)

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2006900451

    Printed in the United States of America

    Bloomington, Indiana

    Contents

    "ACKNOWLEDGMENT

    "DEDICATION

    I. "THE TAOVAYAS (WICHITAS)

    II. SAN TEODORO   

    III. WACO BAPTISTE  

    IV. "HISTORY OF FAMILY

    V. LIFE ON THE RIVER  

    VI. LIFE IN NEW ORLEANS  

    VII. THE MOVE TO ST. FRANCISVILLE, WEST FLORIDA

    VIII. THE RUMBLINGS OF WAR  

    IX. THE BRITISH PROTAGANISTS  

    X. THE BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS  

    XI. JULIAN’S SECRET  

    XII. THE LA PORTE TREASURE  

    XIII. THE WEDDING  

    XIV. THE PLANTATION  

    XV. MOON SONG RETURNS HOME  

    XVI. SAN ANTONIO DE BEXAR  

    XVII. THE QUEST  

    XVIII. THE TEXICANS  

    XIX. NORTH TO SAN ANTONIO  

    XX. THE FALLS OF THE WICHITA  

    XXI. BURIED TREASURE  

    XXII. THE LAST DAYS OF WACO BAPTISTE  

    XXIII. THE LETTER  

    XXIV. "THE STUDENT

    XXV. THE PROJECT  

    XXVI. THE PROFESSOR  

    XXVII. THE INTERPRETATION  

    XXVIII. THE ARCHAEOLOGIST  

    XXIX. THE LOCATION  

    XXX. THE FRENCH INTERVENTION  

    XXXI. THE DECEPTION  

    XXXII. THE INTRIGUE  

    XXXIII. THE DISCOVERY  

    XXXIV. D’UN BEAU VIOLET  

    XXXV. THE INDENTIFICATION  

    XXXVI. THE CONFUSION  

    XXXVII. THE DECISION  

    XXXVIII. SARA’S GOOD FORTUNE  

    XXXIX. THE AGREEMENT  

    XL. THE WINNER  

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR  

    "ACKNOW LEDGMENT

    The cover for my book Treasure of the Wichita is an original oil painting created by two talented artists working together, and they are Helen Lee Portwood and Carrolyn Barfield. Since the falls on the Wichita River were destroyed by a flood in 1886, this is a beautiful rendition of what those falls may have looked like during the times of the fictitious character, Waco Baptiste, who buried a great treasure near these falls in the spring of 1838. Helen Lee and I asked our friend, Smitty Browning, to do some research on this site and its location. His information and photographs helped the artists in their graphic rendition of the old falls site and showed it to be a landmark for Indians, Soldiers, Buffalo Hunters, Surveyors and Pioneers alike, and that it was a very desirable location for a campsite and was known as the Wichita falls. It became the name of a town established at the site and citizens of that early town often referred to the incessant roar of the falls. The Wichita, Comanche and other tribes had encampments at the site. Today, Wichita Falls is a thriving city of over 100,000 folks, and I’m proud to call it home. I want to thank Helen Lee and Carrolyn for this beautiful depiction of the Falls of the Wichita. Helen Lee also created the painting for the cover of my second book entitled Bridgetown on the Red, and she was most generous to offer her time again with the help of Carrolyn Barfield to create this work. I am most appreciative of their efforts and very proud of the results.

    Bob Balch

    10/20/05

    "DEDICATION

    This book is dedicated to my scout leaders and all of my teachers in Seymour, Texas, from kindergarten thru elementary, then junior and senior high school, and finally at Baylor University, who instilled in me the desire to learn about the history of our great country and then to write and speak about our great heritage. To all of them I say thanks. This book is also meant to be a tribute to this great community in which Debbie and I have made our home for over thirty years and where our boys were born, raised, and educated. I thank you Wichita Falls. Your history is rich and no better people can be found anywhere on this earth. From its history of the falls where the Wichita tribe camped in their beehive huts to the urban center it is today, I dedicate this book.

    Bob Balch, Wichita Falls, Texas, 9-7-05

    PART I.     1750-1876

    I.     "THE TAOVAYAS (WICHITAS)

    Between the years 1750 and 1757 a band of Indians established two permanent villages on opposite sides of the Red River, and the site on the south side of the river is today known as Spanish Fort. Looking on the map, Spanish Fort is located in north central Montague County, Texas, at the end of Farm Road 103 one mile south of the Red River. It began in the 18th century as a fortified Taovayas Indian settlement. It was misnamed later by Anglo settlers who found Spanish artifacts and ruins of a fort near the site. The Taovayas were a band of the Wichita tribe, who were part of the southern confederacy of Caddoan tribes and its linguistic family. The name Wichita is first found in historical records of French traders in the early seventeenth century. The French used the word Ousitas to identify one band which lived near the Arkansas River in present day Oklahoma. In the nineteenth century the name came to be used to refer to several confederated bands which recognized a common progenitor and had similar traditions and cultures. These Indians designed tattoos around the men’s eyes resembling the eyes of the raccoon. The Wichita therefore called themselves Kitikit‘sh which translated is raccoon eyes. In 1541 the Spanish explorer, Coronado, in search of great riches found the Wichita at a place called Quivira in present day Kansas and called them Quiviras. By 1719 these people had moved south to Oklahoma and were called Ousitas by French traders. Then in the 1750’s the Taovayas were on the Red in twin villages on both sides of the river at the Spanish Fort site. The Wichita became friends with the Comanche, the most dreaded and warlike tribe on the plains. Using the contacts with Louisiana merchants who sent traders up the Red, the Wichita became middlemen in the trade between the Comanche and the Louisiana merchants. The Wichita gained wealth, power, and prestige due to this relationship.

    In the year 1758 warriors from the Wichita band accompanied the Comanche in the attack on the Spanish Santa Cruz de San Saba’ Mission (near present day Menard, Texas) which was looted in the process. In 1759 Colonel Diego Ortiz Parrilla led a retaliation effort against the Taovayas village on the Red. Several hundred Spanish soldiers found the Taovayan village fortified with entrenchments, wooden stockades, and a moat, and protected by some 6,000 Indians flying the French flag. The battle raged on for four hours. Finally, the Spanish began to retreat and left their baggage train and two cannon behind. By 1771 the Spanish had made peace with the Indians, but due to continued theft of horses and other property, the Spanish lieutenant governor of the Natchitoches region, Athanase de Mezieres, paid a visit in 1778 and persuaded the Taovayas to surrender the two cannon.

    II.     SAN TEODORO

      

    On his visit to the twin village area, Mezieres named the region San Teodoro. Beginning in 1778 the population of the village was decimated by smallpox. The American encroachment after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 also hastened the downfall. In 1805 the American agent at Natchitoches identified one of the Red River villages as the Wicheta. This village was abandoned in about 1810. By 1841 the Taovayas had left their fortification to crumble in San Teodoro. They moved on to other locations on the Wichita and Brazos rivers. United States dragoons visited a Wichita village on the north fork of the Red River west of the Wichita village in Oklahoma in 1834, and for years afterward the Wichita lived in the vicinity of the mountains, including the site where Fort Sill was later established and Rush Springs, where their village was destroyed in 1858 by a United States military force pursuing hostile Comanche who were camped nearby. The survivors of this raid joined remnants of other bands of the Wichita confederacy on the Washita River in 1859, and fled to Kansas, after the Civil War broke out, they were relocated with their kinsmen, the Waco, Tawakonis, the Kichais, and other associated tribes on the Wichita Reservation near present day Anadarko, Oklahoma. In 1891 this reservation was opened to allotment in an agreement with the Wichita and affiliated bands. The Wichita group still existed as a federally recognized governmental entity into the 1990’s and continue as such into the 21st century.

    III.     WACO BAPTISTE

      

    In the early morning hours of April 30, 1789, Moon Song, a young Wichita Indian mother, gave birth to a son and named him Waco in honor of her band of the Wichita. The father, Jean Baptiste, was a French trader from the Louisiana settlements near the mouth of the Mississippi River who had taken Moon Song as his bride in 1788 in a trade for goods with her father who was moving the family to the south to an encampment on the Brazos River. When young Waco Baptiste made his appearance into this world, the newly independent nation to the east was inaugurating its first president in New York City. The great white father, George Washington, had led the colonies to freedom from the British, and the new Republic would soon begin its expansion to the West. The Wichita had long been trading partners with the French and their trading partners of the plains, the Comanche, who protected them from their Osage enemies. They also had contact with the Spanish. But, the world into which Waco Baptiste was born was beginning to change. Moon Song was only seventeen years old when Waco was born. Her family had moved south to escape the ravages of the dreaded smallpox which had killed many of the Wichita over the last few years. She and her husband moved up and down the Red in a boat picking up trade goods in Natchitoches and bringing them north

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