- The
Comanches: A
History 1706–1875. Lincoln, Nebraska:
University of
Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-7792-2. Kroeker,
Marvin E. (1997).
Comanches and...
- to keep the
Comanches in
Texas in check. Even more
aggravating from the
Comanches'
point of view were
posts like Fort
Stockton at
Comanche Springs, which...
-
being debated since the
Rangers reported 80
Comanches were
killed but only 12
bodies were
found The
Comanches claimed to have
killed 11
Texas Rangers. The...
-
introduction in 1987.
Comanches were
available in
either two or four-wheel-drive, with
solid axles front and rear (two-wheel-drive
Comanches used a
simple beam...
-
Theodore Reed. The
Comanches: The
Destruction of a People. New York: Knopf, 1974, ISBN 0-394-48856-3.
Later (2003)
reprinted as The
Comanches: The
History of...
-
Comanche County is the name of
three counties in the
United States:
Comanche County,
Kansas Comanche County,
Oklahoma Comanche County,
Texas This disambiguation...
- (EMD) phase. However,
during 2002, the
Comanche program underwent heavy restructuring; the
number of
Comanches that were to be
purchased was cut to 650...
-
captured in 1836 (c. age eight) by
Comanches during the raid of Fort
Parker near present-day Groesbeck, Texas.
Given the
Comanche name
Nadua (Foundling), she...
- was July 1845 – June 1846 when 652
Mexicans and 48
Comanches were
recorded as killed. The
Comanches had
turned northern Mexico into a "semicolonized landscape...
- seats. The
Comanche was
designed and
built by
Piper Aircraft and
first flew on May 24, 1956.
Together with the PA-30 and PA-39 Twin
Comanches, it made up...