The Mennonite's allowed the Comanches to keep their given name and issue them a first name for registries purposes.
She was one of the first Comanche females to attend the Indian School established by the U.S. Army to civilize the Comanches.
Shown here dressed by the Mennonite women, in one of the first photographs taken at the Indian School.
She latter married a man know only as "Nahdayaka" from the Shoshone tribes of the Rocky Mountains who had lost all cultural contact with their onetime kinsmen who migrated South, and became Comanches.
The Mennonite's allowed the Comanches to keep their given name and issue them a first name for registries purposes.
She was one of the first Comanche females to attend the Indian School established by the U.S. Army to civilize the Comanches.
Shown here dressed by the Mennonite women, in one of the first photographs taken at the Indian School.
She latter married a man know only as "Nahdayaka" from the Shoshone tribes of the Rocky Mountains who had lost all cultural contact with their onetime kinsmen who migrated South, and became Comanches.
Family Members
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Moses Pe-be-as-sy
1914–1914
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Gertie Pebeahsy
1915–1922
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Rachel Nahdayaka Pebeahsy Poco
1917–2007
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Florence Pebeahsy
1921–1980
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Harold Lee Pebeahsy
1922–1997
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Hugh Pebeahsy
1924–1952
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Frank Rush Pebeahsy
1926–1990
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Charles William Pebeahsy
1927–1959
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Son Pebeashy
1930–1930
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Roland Gokey "Corkey" Pebeahsy
1931–2017
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Milton Lumer "Beans" Pebeahsy
1935–1996
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Marie Etta Pebeahsy Watson
1938–2018
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