In October 1719, the Spanish governor of
New Mexico,
Antonio Valverde y Cosio ventured onto the
Great Plains with a large force of Spanish and Indian soldiers to attempt to punish the Comanche and Ute Indians who were raiding Spanish and Jicarilla settlements. Valverde found no Comanches, but he met with
El Cuartelejo Apaches (the Dismal River people) on the
Arkansas (Napestle) River in what is now eastern Colorado. The Cuartelejo complained to him that the French were giving firearms to the
Pawnee and "Jumano" (
Wichita) peoples to their east. Valverde gives few details about the Cuartelejo but notably does not mention the existence of horses among them, commenting that they transported their goods with dogs. In October 1724, the experienced French frontiersman,
Étienne de Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont, visited the Dismal River people at an encampment in Central Kansas, probably located south and west of
Salina. He called the people "Padoucas." On approaching the encampment, Bourgmont encountered 80 mounted men, illustrating that some of the Dismal River people possessed horses by this time. Bourgmont described the encampment as having a population of more than 4,000 people, the people living in large dwellings occupied by about 30 persons each. The population was probably swollen by visitors who came from other villages to meet with Bourgmont. His observation that they lived in large dwellings (type of dwelling not described) is at odds with archaeological data. Bourgmont distributed gifts to the Indians, including a few guns. The Padouca had never seen such a variety of European goods. They were frightened of the guns. Bourgmont wrote that the Padouca maintained permanent villages. They sent out regular hunting parties, in groups of 50 to 100 households. As one hunting party returned, another would leave, so that the village was occupied at all times. They journeyed up to five or six days' travel from their village to hunt. The Padouca sowed corn and pumpkins. They obtained tobacco and horses from trade with the Spanish in New Mexico in exchange for tanned buffalo skins. The explorer noticed that some of the Apache still used flint knives for skinning buffalo and felling trees, an indicator that not much European trade had reached them. By 1725, the Dismal culture people had left Nebraska, and within a few years after Bourgmont's visit, the Padouca or Dismal River people whom he had met in Kansas were gone, pushed south by the Comanche. ==See also==