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she was born on colles illinois
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cynthia ann parker and her brother where taken by the comanches away from home
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his name was quanah.
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her name was toh-tsee-ah.
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and someone else named naudah.
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April - Texas Legislature grants a pension and land allotment to Cynthia Ann. A photo of her in a red and blue cape is taken in Austin. Isaac and Benjamin Parker are appointed guardians.
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Comanches battled Kit Carson and the US Soldiers at the first battle of Adobe Walls. The Indians won. Quanah’s sister Toh-Tsee-ah is believed to have died this year
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Victor M. Rose visited a Comanche camp in which Cynthia Ann lived. He asked her if she would like to return to her people and she replied in the negative." Pointing to her husband, and her babies, she was quoted by Rose as saying: "I am happily wedded. I love my husband, who is good and kind, and my little ones, too, are his, and I cannot forsake them."
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Cynthia Ann Parker listed on the Anderson County census at 45 years of age living in the home of her sister Orlena and J R O’Quinn. Cynthia Ann Parker dies and is buried first in Fosterville Cemetery, Anderson Co TX
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Quanah is a Judge in the Court of Indian Offenses
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Quanah has three of his children attending Carlisle Indian School join him in Washington DC while negotiating with the Commission. Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition and Indian Congress at Omaha NE
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Quanah’s son Harold joins him in Washington DC. Quanah visits Carlisle enroute back to Oklahoma accompanied by his daughter Laura.
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Quanah Parker and others ride in President Theodore Roosevelt’s Inauguration Parade in Washington DC president Roosevelt went on a wolf hunt with Quanah and cattlemen.
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February 23rd. Quanah dies in his home. Obituaries and stories were published all over the United States.