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ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

OCTOBER 8:

1971 Ottawa Ontario - Supreme Court of Canada rules Indian woman cannot be deprived of Indian status because of marriage to non-Indian; under the Bill of Rights.

1643 Montreal Quebec - Jeanne Mance 1606-1673 opens the Hôtel Dieu, Montreal's first hospital and the first lay hospital in North America; she will treat the French and Indian populations for over 30 years. 

October 8, 1779:  El Mocho ("Mutilated") was an Apache captured by the Tonkawas.  His bravery and natural leadership abilities eventually led the Tonkawas to make him their Principal Chief.  On this date (October 8, 1779), he met with Spanish Governor Athanase de Mezieres in San Antonio.  They signed a peace tready, and El Mocho was honored with a Medal of Honor.  The peace, however, only lasted for a few years.
 

BACKGROUND:
 

From "Handbook of Texas", at http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/EE/fel23.html
 

EL MOCHO (?-1784). El Mocho ("Mutilated", or Tosche ("Left Hand"), was the head chief of the Tonkawa Indians from 1779 until 1784. During that period he organized an alliance of tribes that attempted to oust the Spaniards from Texas. Little is known about his early life, except that he was born in a Lipan Apache ranchería in Central Texas and was captured as a child by the Tonkawas, who adopted him. Beginning in the 1750s he rose to prominence as a warrior, and by 1758 he was one of the tribal war chiefs. In 1758 he helped organize the attack on San Sabá de la Santa Cruz Mission. This mission, organized in 1754 for the Apaches, had alarmed the Tonkawas, Wichitas, Bidais, and Comanches, who feared the Apaches would use it as a supply base from which they could attack other tribes.

After the destruction of the San Sabá mission, El Mocho frequently clashed with the Tonkawa peace chief, Neques, who favored an alliance with the Spaniards. El Mocho, who hoped to drive whites from Texas, persuaded most of his fellow chiefs to continue the war against Spain and the Apaches, until the last Apache missions were abandoned in 1769. Throughout the 1770s El Mocho resisted the overtures of Neques to the Spaniards and acquiesced in a general peace only after Spanish officials agreed to pay the Tonkawas for taking Osage and Apache scalps. He assumed the leadership of the Tonkawas in 1779 after a smallpox epidemic killed Neques and most of the other Tonkawa elders.

El Mocho, who had participated in several conferences with Spanish leaders, hurried to the Taovayas' village near the Red River and assured the Spanish Indian agent, Athanase de Mézières,qv of his loyalty and friendship. Mézières escorted El Mocho to Bexar to visit the Spanish governor, Domingo Cabello y Robles.qv El Mocho received gifts from the governor and was invested as the chief of the Tonkawas. But despite these overtures, he continued to press for an anti-Spanish alliance among Texas Indians. Hoping to free his people from Spanish control, he formed a loose confederacy of groups that included the Tonkawas, the Lipan Apaches (with whom he had made peace in 1781), and some Comanches and Caddoes. In January 1784 El Mocho began leading war parties against Spanish settlements, carrying off captives, and stealing horses. The Spaniards' Indian allies attempted to halt these attacks but were defeated by the Tonkawas. In July 1784 El Mocho was invited to a conference at the presidio of La Bahía,qv and there he was assassinated.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: William E. Dunn, "The Apache Mission on the San Saba River: Its Founding and Failure," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 17 (April 1914). Elizabeth A. H. John, Storms Brewed in Other Men's Worlds: The Confrontation of Indians, Spanish, and French in the Southwest, 1540-1795 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1975).

Thomas F. Schilz
 
 
 
 


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On This Day on History

The original list was created by Phil Konstantin's web site.  It is used with permission and was distributed with the enlarged background information compiled by Neshoba and is now posted at Native News Online as an educational resource.
 
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