On March 19, 1840, one of the seminal battles between Texans and Comanches took place in the San Antonio court house. Like many of today’s court house proceedings, it turned nasty because of misunderstandings on the part of both litigants. This one broke out into a slaughter, with major consequences for Comanches and Texans both.
The Council House Fight, as it’s called, pitted a dozen Comanche “Peace” chiefs and some of their warriors against a Texan militia.
The chiefs were invited to a Council of Peace; they arrived in good faith, bringing their women and children. The Penateka Chief Muguara wanted to secure western Texas – Comancheria – as their own territory, safe from white excursions.
The Texans wanted to recover all prisoners held by the Comanches, and were willing to trade various supplies for their safe return.
The various Comanche Indian bands had no central leadership – each acted independently most of the time – and so, no general agreement about hostages was possible (Buffalo Hump and Pete Nocona adopted all their captives). The Texans did not understand this. They thought Chief Muguara was speaking for all Comanches.
The Council started well, with the Chiefs sitting on the floor, the Texans on a stage facing them. The Comanches had brought a hostage with them, Matilda Lockhart, who’d been badly mistreated (Her nose had been burned off, for one thing).
“Where were the other captives?”
The interpreter explained that the Comanches wanted ransom for Matilda, and more for an additional dozen hostages they’d failed to bring along. When the ransom was paid, the other white captives would be released, too.
“How do you like that answer?” said Chief Muguara.
At a signal from the Texan leader, the militia walked into the room and stood along the walls, guns at ready.
“You will all be held prisoner here until the captives are brought in.”
(“If I tell them that,” said the translator, “They will fight.” After translating the message, he hurried out the door).
The Council of Peace was inviolable to Comanches. They would not be taken prisoner. When the message was delivered, they rose to their feet. They fought, attacking the Texans. Militia fired into the room, wounding Indians and Texan alike. The battle spilled into the streets of San Antonio.
By the next day, 35 Comanche had been killed (including 3 women and 2 children) and 29 taken prisoner (27 women and two old men). Seven Texans were killed.
One of the woman prisoners was sent to the Penateka camp, carrying the message that all Indians would be released when the white hostages were returned. The furious Comanches tortured and killed the hostages (except for two, who’d been adopted into the tribe and thus were Comanche).
The upshot of the Council House Fight was the Great Comanche Raid of 1840, in which Buffalo Hump lead a huge war party all the way down to the Gulf Coast, in the largest Indian raid ever mounted on a city in what is now the continental United States. The cities of Victoria and Linnville were sacked. Linville was a major Texas port. The town’s citizens took to the water in small boats where, secure from the Comanches, they watched as their stores were looted. That was the Comanche revenge for the Council House Massacre.
My information is from the Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick (recently acquired), The Handbook of Texas, and (of course) Wikipedia.