169:, Big Tree (and, perhaps, Guipago himself), but he wasn't arrested nor involved in the trial in Jacksboro. On April 20, 1872 Zepko-ete and Tsen-tainte, with about one hundred of their Kiowa warriors and Comanche allies, attacked a government wagon train at Howard Wells station, along the San Antonio - El Paso trail, killing 17 Mexicans and kidnapping a woman; two companies (A and H) of 9th Cavalry from Fort Clark, led by capt. N. Cooney and lt. F. R. Vincent, got the Indians, but were forced to retreat after suffering two casualties (lt. Vincent himself, deadly wounded, and a "Buffalo Soldier"); ten Indians (four in the assault on the wagon train and six in the fight against the "Buffalo Soldiers") were reported to have been killed. After Adobe Walls' fight, in June 1874, he joined Guipago and the Comanche under
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In a raid on August 7, 1870 in
Montague County, they killed German immigrant farmer, Gottlieb Koozier, and took his wife and five children captive along with fourteen-year-old Martin Kilgore; the family was ransomed for $ 100 each at Fort Sill.
141:. They scattered a herd of cattle, killed two yoke of oxen, stole nine horses, one mule, a large amount of provisions, one tent, one wagon-cover, etc., all of which property was at the time owned by and in the possession of Colonel
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Annual report of the Bureau of
American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution Issue 17, Part 1 p. 216 By Smithsonian Institution
216:, for the ledgers they were drawn in. In 1878 he and the other Kiowa prisoners were returned to the reservation in Indian Territory near Fort Sill.
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bargained upon behalf of the hostages, not paying until they were all returned. White Horse took part in many raids, including the
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in the Red River War. The raiding would continue until April 19, 1875 when he and his band surrendered at Fort Sill.
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Report by Mr. Bowen of the
Committee on Indian Affairs submitted to the United States Senate on April 8, 1884
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Andele: or, The
Mexican-Kiowa captive. A story of real life among the Indians By J. J. Methvin p. 136
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to choose those among his tribe to be imprisoned in the east, White Horse was among those chosen by
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and stole seventy-three mules. On June 22 in an attack on a cattle drive on the
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30:"White Horse (chief)" redirects here. For other uses of "White horse", see
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On June 12, 1870, White Horse led a raiding party on an attack on
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On July 9, 1870, the Kiowa
Indians made a raid into
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252:Visual arts by indigenous peoples of the Americas
56:, unknown c. 1840/1845–1892) was a chief of the
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370:Native Americans imprisoned at Fort Marion
99:In 1867 White Horse joined a war party of
345:Native American people of the Indian Wars
103:and Kiowas on a revenge raid against the
68:in southern Kansas which resulted in the
27:Native American Kiowa warrior (1847–1892)
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41:White Horse holding his war shield
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375:Native American drawing artists
247:List of Native American artists
88:, he was often associated with
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390:19th-century Native Americans
76:. Follower of such elders as
242:Second Battle of Adobe Walls
32:White horse (disambiguation)
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64:and the United States at
365:Native American painters
350:Native American leaders
257:Warren Wagon Train Raid
176:When forced by General
159:Warren Wagon Train Raid
210:St. Augustine, Florida
139:Montague County, Texas
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70:Medicine Lodge Treaty
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143:Samuel Newitt Wood
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277:Tene-angopte
234:Texas portal
186:Tene-angopte
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182:Kicking Bird
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385:1892 deaths
206:Fort Marion
133:White Horse
109:Fort Sumner
54:Tsen-tainte
46:White Horse
18:Tsen-tainte
339:Categories
214:Ledger Art
282:Zepko-ete
163:Zepko-ete
116:Fort Sill
101:Comanches
220:See also
190:Comanche
90:Big Tree
84:and old
292:Ado-ete
287:Mamanti
267:Satanta
262:Guipago
202:Arapaho
167:Mamanti
105:Navajos
94:Ado-ete
82:Satanta
78:Guipago
272:Satank
171:Quanah
151:Quaker
86:Satank
298:Notes
194:Caddo
58:Kiowa
50:Kiowa
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