Library delves into Karankawa history for Native American Heritage month

CONTRIBUTED REPORT
Posted 11/21/24

In recognition of National Native American Heritage Month, Fort Bend County Libraries (FBCL) will present a special program on the Karankawa Indians of the Gulf Coast region of Texas on Tuesday, November 26, at 2 p.m., at the Fulshear Branch Library (6350 GM Library Rd, off Texas Heritage Parkway).

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Library delves into Karankawa history for Native American Heritage month

Posted

In recognition of National Native American Heritage Month, Fort Bend County Libraries (FBCL) will present a special program on the Karankawa Indians of the Gulf Coast region of Texas on Tuesday, November 26, at 2 p.m., at the Fulshear Branch Library (6350 GM Library Rd, off Texas Heritage Parkway).

Carol Beauchamp, from FBCL’s Genealogy & Local History Department, will talk about history of the Karankawa Indians, from their interactions with the French and Spanish explorers to their impact on the early Texas settlers who were part of Austin’s Old 300.

Originally semi-nomadic hunters and gatherers, the Karankawas were thought to have eventually merged with other tribes and become extinct as a separate entity. Recent developments and the evolution of DNA research, however, have led to a new interest in tracing the Karankawas’ existence to the present.

Beauchamp will also address the myth or reality of the tribe’s cannibalism and different viewpoints on the subject.

The program is free and open to the public. For more information, see the Fort Bend County Libraries website at www.fortbend.lib.tx.us.

National Native American Heritage Month, Fort Bend County Libraries (FBCL), Carol Beauchamp, from FBCL’s Genealogy & Local History Department, www.fortbend.lib.tx.us