In the early 18th century, the
Comanches expanded their territory into the Llano Estacado, displacing the
Apaches who had previously lived there. The region became part of the
Comancheria, a Comanche stronghold until the final defeat of the tribe in the late 19th century. The
Comanche war trail extended from Llano Estacado to the Rio Grande into
Chihuahua, "the trail ran southwesterly through
Big Spring to the
Horsehead Crossing of the
Pecos River, then forked southward to the Comanche Springs where it divided, one part of the trail crossing the great river near
Boquillas and the other at
Presidio."
Rachel Plummer, while a captive of the
Comanche in 1836, mentioned the "table lands between Austin and Santa Fe".
Robert Neighbors and
Rip Ford, guided by
Buffalo Hump, blazed the "upper route" trail from San Antonio to El Paso in 1849 for emigrants during the
California Gold Rush, "... travelling across an elevated plateau almost covered by rock ..." During the 1854 Marcy-Neighbors expedition, Dr. George Getz Shumard noted, "Beyond the
mountain appeared a line of high bluffs (the Llano Estacado) which in the distance looked like clouds floating upon the horizon."
Herman Lehmann was captured by the
Apache in 1870 and described the Llano Estacado as "open, but not exactly a desert".
Robert G. Carter described it in 1871 while pursuing
Quanah Parker with
Ranald S. Mackenzie, "... all were over and out of the canyon upon what appeared to be a vast, almost illimitable expanse of prairie. As far as the eye could reach, not a bush or tree, a twig or stone, not an object of any kind or a living thing, was in sight. It stretched out before us-one uninterrupted plain, only to be compared to the ocean in its vastness." In August 1872, Mackenzie was the first to successfully lead troops across the Staked Plains preparatory to the
Battle of the North Fork of the Red River.
Billy Dixon described the area while hunting
buffalo in June 1874: "All of us hunters acquainted with the habits of the buffalo knew that the herds would soon be coming north from the Staked Plains region where they had spent the winter ... moved by that strange impulse that ... caused them to change their home and blacken the Plains with their countless, moving forms."
Zane Grey, in his novel
The Thundering Herd (1925), offered the following explanation for the name Llano Estacado: "Thet name Llano Estacado means Staked Plain," said the Texan. "It comes from the early days when the Spanish Trail from Santa Fe to San Antone was marked by 'palos,' or stakes. There was only two trails across in them days an' I reckon no more now. Only the Indians know this plain well an' they only run in heah to hide awhile. Water an' grass are plentiful in some parts, an' then there's stretches of seventy miles dry an' bare as a bone." In the latter part of the 19th century, the Llano was a refuge for the bands of
Kiowas and Comanches who did not wish to be confined to reservations in
Indian Territory, in present-day
Oklahoma. One of their last battles against the US Army was fought on 28 September 1874 in the
Battle of Palo Duro Canyon.
Charles Goodnight described what it takes to be a scout: "... the trained ear should be able to tell the sound, whether it was made by man or beast or bird ... as a human voice echoes more than all others ... of course, on the Staked Plains we have not this advantage as there is nothing to create an echo." Today, most of the area's population is localized in the principal cities of
Amarillo,
Lubbock,
Midland and
Odessa, Texas. The vast majority of the area is
rural, covered by large ranches and irrigated farms. Several small- to medium-sized towns do exist, however, including
Andrews,
Hereford,
Plainview,
Levelland, Big Spring, and
Lamesa, Texas, and
Hobbs,
Clovis, and
Portales, New Mexico. File:Texas population map2.png| Map of
Texas counties with population density File:Downtown Lubbock from I-27 2005-09-10.jpeg|
Lubbock, Texas, the largest city on the Llano File:Amarillo_Texas_Downtown.jpg|A shot of downtown
Amarillo, Texas File:Midland44_Skyline.jpg|
Midland, "The Tall City" of West Texas File:Odessa_IMG_0319.JPG|Downtown
Odessa ==Geology==