In January–February 1841 Yellow Wolf led 80 warriors to the western outskirts of San Antonio, killing two Mexicans and a black sheepherder and then attacking a wagon train of Irish immigrants and catching their cattle; a Texas Rangers party (17 Rangers and two Lipan scouts) under John Coffee Hays reached them while coming back to the Comanche encampments between the Guadalupe and the Colorado Rivers. In the fight, near Pinta Trail Crossing on the Guadalupe River, the Comanches were reported to suffer 23 dead, 13 deadly wounded and 24 wounded, largely due to the superior weaponry of the Rangers’ Paterson Colts and one Colt revolving-wheel rifle, and Yellow Wolf too was rather seriously wounded; the Rangers suffered only several wounded. Resettled Houston as president, in August 1843 the Comanches and Kiowas made a truce agreement with Texas and, in October, the Comanches – Penateka, but also Nokoni, Kotsoteka and Kwahadi - interested in fixing the Comancheria borders, agreed to meet the Texan President and discuss a peace treaty similar to the one made with the Wichitas and the Indians removed from the East in the same 1843 at Fort Bird. Buffalo Hump (demonstrating his faith in Houston), the peace chiefs Amorous Man, Old Owl and others, the Kiowas and Katakas (“Kiowa Apahes”) and the
Wichitas (Kanoatino, Waco, Taweash, Tawakoni, Keechi) agreed to free their white prisoners and signed the
Treaty of Tehuacana Creek in October 1844, but Yellow Wolf and Santa Anna (believing perhaps in Houston, but not in the Texans) refused to sign. When, in ratifying the Tehuacana treaty, the Senate of Texas Republic erased the reference to the Comancheria borders, the Texan bad faith and Yellow Wolf and Santa Anna's suspicions were confirmed, so Buffalo Hump aligned with his cousin, who had proved himself to have been more realistic than the major leader in evaluating the white man's concern for a fair and lasting peace, and the third war chief, and denounced the Tehuacana treaty and resumed hostilities. Buffalo Hump declined an invitation to go to Washington and meet President James Polk, and joined Yellow Wolf in a great raiding party going to Mexico. In 1847 Yellow Wolf apparently didn't take part in the
San Saba River council, when some Penateka chiefs (Old Owl, Buffalo Hump, Santa Anna) met the Indian agent
Robert S. Neighbors, Johann O. von Meusebach and the German immigrants united in the “Adelsverein” and authorized them to settle Fredicksburg, in the grant they had bought between the
Llano and the
Guadalupe rivers. White men encroaching in “Comancheria” provoked clashes and, on November 16, 1850, Yellow Wolf led 100 Comanches to raid a wagon train at Cherry Spring, fourteen miles northwest of Fredericksburg: four teamsters were killed and three wounded. On December 10, 1850, anyway, Yellow Wolf joined Buffalo Hump in signing the
Fort Martin Scott treaty. In 1851 Yellow Wolf and Buffalo Hump, again together in the field, led their warriors in a great raid into Mexico, raiding the states of Chihuahua and
Durango. ==End of the Penateka freedom==