This out-of-print book by Texas author Betsy Warren gives details about the dress, food, and other customs of ten Native American groups that lived in the area we now call Texas. These tribes were the Caddo and the Wichita of Northeast Texas, the Karankawa, the Coahuiltecans, and the Atakapans of the Texas Gulf coast, the Jumanos who farmed in West Texas along the Rio Grande, the Tonkawa of Central Texas, and the hunting tribes of the West Texas plains: Kiowas, Lipan Apaches, and Comanches.
This book has been around for quite a while (first published in 1970), but the information and the treatment of the subject remain valid and respectful, other than the fact that the author uses the term “Indian” to refer to the native groups that lived in Texas. I gather that the preferred term is “Native American.”
I found two other books about native Texans while searching at Amazon and at my library’s website.
The first Texans: sixteen tribes of native peoples and how they lived by Carolyn Mitchell Burnett obviously covers more tribes of Indians. This book was published by Eakin Press in 1995.
Learn about– Texas Indians: a learning and activity book: color your own guide to the Indians that once roamed Texas, text and editorial direction by Georg Zappler. University of Texas Press, 2007. This one is the most up-to-date text that I found on the subject, but as noted, it’s a coloring book. My seventh and eighth graders might be a little insulted by being given a coloring book for informational purposes.
I think I’ll stick with Betsy Warren’s old stand-by survey of Texas Indians for my upcoming seventh/eighth grade Texas history class even if I have to buy multiple copies of the book from used book sellers. It’s a good book, 46 pages long, with pictures and maps showing the areas where each Native Texan tribe lived. Short, sweet, and informative. What more could you ask for?
You might consider finding a couple contemporary books to show where/how those tribes live now. I’ve just been weeding our juvenile nonfiction 900s and noticed that many older books about Native Americans give the impression that they and their culture no longer exist.
It sounds like a wonderful book! I too use the term Indian and rarely used the term Native American. It is only out of respect. I am not always politically correct. Having said that my new book, Between Two Worlds The Legend Of Quanah Parker is still worth the read. Please check it out now available at my publisher’s website,
http://www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/BetweenTwoWorldsTheLegendOfQuanahParker.html
Sincerely, Cynthia Kay Rhodes
Hi Sherry,
I don’t mean to criticize, because I think it’s great for folks to share nonfiction titles on Monday, but I have to agree with Jennifer. It’s so important to teach kids that American Indians still live in Texas today and still celebrate their cultures. We’ve learned so much since 1970 that I’d hope something more current exists.
For what it’s worth, I did find a really wonderful site for teachers at the Texas Indians site. It describes the tribes and provides historical as well as current information.
http://www.texasindians.com/teach.htm
Actually, the book does talk about what happened to each of the tribes/groups that are profiled. Most of them have been assimilated into the larger culture and no longer live in Texas as distinct groups. The books also mentions the groups of Indians that came to Texas later (1800’s) and still live in Texas as distinct groups.