Texan Edge

Texan Edge

Herman Lehmann, Captive

5 min · 26 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Herman Lehmann, Captive

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   Description  What happens when a captive no longer feels like a captive?  In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott introduces listeners to the remarkable story of Herman Lehmann, a young Texas boy captured on the frontier in 1870. Unlike many captives whose stories were lost to history, Herman lived long enough to tell his own tale—a story that challenges many of our assumptions about frontier life.  Taken from his German immigrant family at age eleven, Herman spent years living among Apache and Comanche tribes, learning their language, customs, and way of life. By the time he returned to Texas society, he found himself caught between two worlds, belonging fully to neither.  Herman's experience offers a powerful lens through which to better understand the captivity story of Cynthia Ann Parker, whose journey was even longer and more complicated.  This is a story about identity, belonging, and the difficult question of what "home" really means.   Show Notes  In this episode:  *  The capture of Herman Lehmann in Central Texas in 1870  *  Why frontier captivity was often more complicated than modern audiences imagine  *  Herman's life among Apache and Comanche tribes  *  How children adapted to entirely different cultures on the Texas frontier  *  The challenges of returning home after years away  *  Why captivity stories aren't always simple tales of rescue and reunion  *  The role of identity and belonging in frontier Texas  *  How Herman Lehmann's story helps us better understand Cynthia Ann Parker's experience  *  A preview of the conclusion of the Cynthia Ann Parker series  Key Historical Figures Mentioned   *  Herman Lehmann  *  Cynthia Ann Parker  Questions to Consider   *  What makes a place feel like home?  *  How much of our identity comes from where we live and the people around us?  *  Can someone truly belong to two different worlds?    This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

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228 episodios

Portada del episodio Herman Lehmann, Captive

Herman Lehmann, Captive

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   Description  What happens when a captive no longer feels like a captive?  In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott introduces listeners to the remarkable story of Herman Lehmann, a young Texas boy captured on the frontier in 1870. Unlike many captives whose stories were lost to history, Herman lived long enough to tell his own tale—a story that challenges many of our assumptions about frontier life.  Taken from his German immigrant family at age eleven, Herman spent years living among Apache and Comanche tribes, learning their language, customs, and way of life. By the time he returned to Texas society, he found himself caught between two worlds, belonging fully to neither.  Herman's experience offers a powerful lens through which to better understand the captivity story of Cynthia Ann Parker, whose journey was even longer and more complicated.  This is a story about identity, belonging, and the difficult question of what "home" really means.   Show Notes  In this episode:  *  The capture of Herman Lehmann in Central Texas in 1870  *  Why frontier captivity was often more complicated than modern audiences imagine  *  Herman's life among Apache and Comanche tribes  *  How children adapted to entirely different cultures on the Texas frontier  *  The challenges of returning home after years away  *  Why captivity stories aren't always simple tales of rescue and reunion  *  The role of identity and belonging in frontier Texas  *  How Herman Lehmann's story helps us better understand Cynthia Ann Parker's experience  *  A preview of the conclusion of the Cynthia Ann Parker series  Key Historical Figures Mentioned   *  Herman Lehmann  *  Cynthia Ann Parker  Questions to Consider   *  What makes a place feel like home?  *  How much of our identity comes from where we live and the people around us?  *  Can someone truly belong to two different worlds?    This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

26 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Cynthia Ann Parker

Cynthia Ann Parker

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   Episode Description Cynthia Ann Parker: The Girl Who Vanished In May of 1836, Texas was a brand-new republic struggling to find its footing. While leaders debated the future of the young nation, families on the frontier were focused on something more immediate: survival. One of those families lived at Fort Parker, a fortified settlement on the edge of a dangerous and uncertain frontier. There, a nine-year-old girl named Cynthia Ann Parker was growing up in a world where opportunity and danger walked hand in hand. Then, on May 19, 1836, everything changed. In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott begins the story of one of the most famous captives in Texas history. What started as a frontier raid would become a story spanning decades, crossing cultures, and challenging everything we think we know about identity, family, and belonging. Because Cynthia Ann Parker didn't simply disappear. She grew up. And that is where her remarkable story truly begins. Show Notes In this episode: * Texas in the uncertain months following independence in 1836 * Life on the frontier at Fort Parker * Why Fort Parker was a fortified settlement rather than a military fort * The risks faced by families settling contested territory * The attack on Fort Parker on May 19, 1836 * The capture of nine-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker * The desperate search efforts that followed * Why many assumed captivity would be temporary * How years turned into decades with no sign of Cynthia Ann * The danger of imagining captives as frozen in time * How a missing child can become part of an entirely different world * Setting the stage for one of the most remarkable stories in Texas history   This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

Ayer4 min
Portada del episodio Vanished

Vanished

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   Episode Description When Someone Disappeared For families living on the Texas frontier, few fears were greater than waking up one morning and watching riders appear on the horizon. In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott explores the reality of captivity in early Texas—a subject that is often simplified but rarely understood. Captivity was not unique to Texas, nor was it limited to one group of people. It was a harsh reality of frontier life that affected Native tribes, settlers, soldiers, and families throughout North America. But the story becomes far more complicated than most of us were taught. Not every captive shared the same fate. Some suffered greatly. Some never returned. Others, particularly children, adapted to their new lives, learning new languages, customs, and loyalties until the world they were born into became little more than a distant memory. These stories challenge our modern assumptions about identity, family, and belonging. They remind us that Texas history is rarely as simple as heroes and villains. This episode lays the foundation for one of the most remarkable stories in Texas history—the story of Cynthia Ann Parker. Show Notes In this episode: * What daily life looked like on the Texas frontier during the 1830s and 1840s * Why captivity became one of the greatest fears for frontier families * How raids could separate families in a matter of minutes * Why captivity was not unique to Texas or to any one culture * The different experiences captives faced after being taken * How some captives were traded while others were adopted into tribal families * Why children often adapted more easily to their new lives * The emotional challenges faced by captives who later returned to Anglo society * The difficult question of what "home" really meant for people caught between cultures * Why captivity stories rarely have simple endings * A preview of the remarkable life of Cynthia Ann Parker   This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

24 de jun de 20264 min
Portada del episodio The Map Kept Moving

The Map Kept Moving

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   The Map Kept Moving  The Texas we know today looks fixed and familiar on a map. Counties stay put. State lines don't move. But the Texas frontier was never that simple.  In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott continues his exploration of Native Texas by examining the forces that constantly reshaped the landscape long before statehood. Disease, migration, horses, warfare, trade, and survival all played a role in creating a frontier that was in perpetual motion.  Along the way, you'll learn how the arrival of the horse transformed life across the region, how the Comanches rose to become one of the most powerful forces on the Southern Plains, and why every generation inherited a different version of Texas.  Most importantly, this episode sets the stage for understanding the captive stories that would become some of the most famous—and often misunderstood—chapters in Texas history.   Show Notes  In this episode:  *  Why the Texas frontier was constantly changing  *  How disease dramatically altered Native populations across Texas  *  The devastating impact of smallpox, measles, and other European illnesses  *  The arrival of the horse and its revolutionary effect on transportation, hunting, trade, and warfare  *  How Native tribes adapted to a rapidly changing world  *  The origins of the Comanches in present-day Wyoming and Colorado  *  The rise of Comancheria and its influence across Texas  *  How Comanche expansion shifted the balance of power on the frontier  *  The displacement of Apache groups and the challenges faced by smaller tribes  *  Why Texas Indians should never be viewed as a single, unified culture  *  The complex frontier that existed by Texas Independence in 1836  *  A preview of the captive stories that will follow in upcoming episodes    Key Takeaway   Texas history isn't the story of a fixed place. It's the story of people adapting to constant change. The frontier map was always moving, and understanding that movement helps us better understand the people who lived through it.     This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

23 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Let's Talk Indians

Let's Talk Indians

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2509323/fan_mail/new]   Episode Description  Before There Was Texas  When most people picture early Texas, they imagine an empty frontier waiting to be settled. But the truth is far more interesting.  Long before the arrival of Stephen F. Austin's colonists, Texas was already home to dozens of distinct Native peoples, each with their own cultures, languages, territories, alliances, and histories. In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott begins a new series exploring the Native world of Texas before statehood and before the Republic.  From the farming villages of the Caddo in East Texas to the coastal expertise of the Karankawa and the diverse peoples of South Texas, this episode lays the groundwork for understanding a Texas that was already vibrant, complex, and constantly changing.  It's a story that helps explain not only the Texas frontier, but also the famous captive narratives that would later become part of Texas legend.   Show Notes  In this episode:  *  Why the idea of an "empty Texas" is one of history's biggest misconceptions  *  More than 30 tribal groups that lived in or traveled through Texas  *  The Caddo people and their established agricultural communities  *  The Karankawa and their mastery of the Gulf Coast  *  The diverse Native peoples of South Texas often grouped under the term Coahuiltecan  *  Why Native tribes should not be viewed as a single culture  *  How languages, customs, territories, and traditions varied across Texas  *  The importance of understanding Native Texas before discussing settlers and frontier history  *  How migration, disease, warfare, and alliances continually reshaped the Texas landscape  *  A preview of upcoming episodes on the rise of the Comanches and the famous Texas captive stories  Key Takeaway   Texas wasn't an empty wilderness waiting to be discovered. It was already a land filled with history, cultures, trade networks, rivalries, and people whose stories deserve to be remembered.     This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

22 de jun de 20264 min