Several springs on a small tributary of
Onion Creek. The springs were named for Colonel
Jose Menchaca of the Army of the
Texas Republic. In 1709 the Spanish expedition under Espinosa, Olivares, and Aguirre is believed to have stopped here. That the Spanish were camping at Manchaca Springs is because it was on a branch of the
Camino Real leading into Austin before turning east to Nacogdoches. The Spanish usually followed pre-established Native trails, and Brune's book states, "Many projectile points have been found here." Later the springs would be utilized again, this time by followers of the
Chisholm Trail from 1867 to 1895. In 1840, seeking retribution for the
Council House Fight of 1840 in
San Antonio, a large group of Penateka Comanche mounted the "
Great Raid of 1840", said to be the largest raid ever mounted by Indians against cities in the United States, namely
Victoria and
Linnville, Texas (at the time, Texas was still an independent republic). James Wilson Nichols' account of the raid states that Comanches en route to Victoria and Linnville "emerged from the mountains into the prairie near the Manchac (sic) Springs in
Hays County". Natives – presumably Comanche – passing the springs en route to and from the "mountains" of the
Colorado River is a theme in other tales about Manchaca Springs. Wilbarger tells of an encounter at the springs between Texans and Native people in 1844 when a "party of Indians .. came down from the Colorado mountains .. where they succeeded in stealing a large number of valuable horses." On their return to the mountains, the Natives "camped for the night at or near a noted watering place known as the Manchaca Springs." Texans under the command of Captain Wiley Hill attacked their camp the next morning. The Indians were eventually able to make good an escape back to the mountains, and the Texans returned to Manchaca Springs where they retrieved their horses, plus the Natives' "camp equipage". John Holland Jenkins recounts another encounter between Texans trying to retrieve stolen horses, led by Captain Gillespie, attacking Indians camped at "Manshak Springs", "Manshak" being the common pronunciation of Manchaca. Texans didn't always fare well when encountering Indians at the springs. In 1845 two pioneer
German Texan authors, Friedrich Wilhelm von Wrede Sr. and Oscar von Claren, were killed and scalped by Indians at Manchaca Springs. Both were buried there by United States soldiers, who gave them military honors. Brune's book locates the springs on private property, near
Buda (as opposed to
Manchaca), half a kilometer west of
I-35, just north of the Hays County line. Today County Road 117, Old San Antonio Road, passes near and over part of the spring's drainage near the Hays and Travis County line (30.101939,-97.814569) ==Hamilton Pool==