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Karankawa Campsite

Jamaica Beach, Galveston County

Marker Text

In this area is one of several known Karankawa campsites or burial grounds. Now extinct, the nomadic Indians lived along the Texas coast, depending on the Gulf for survival. In 1528 they aided Spanish explorer Cabeza de Vaca, but resisted all intruders from the time of the French expedition of La Salle in 1685. The tribe later declined because of disease and warfare with pirates and Anglo-American settlers. Known for tall tribesmen and alleged practices of ceremonial cannibalism, they had virtually disappeared from Texas by the 1840s. This campsite was discovered in 1962. (1966)

Marker Details

Address Bob Smith and Jolly Roger roads
Location Description Bob Smith Rd. and Jolly Roger, Jamaica Beach
Marker # 7502
Dedicated 1966
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code forts; Native Americans
Latitude, Longitude 29.186988, -94.98108

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