Kiowa’s Keeper of the Flame
<p>Vivid and gruesome acts of violence cluttered Queton’s mind in his final years. Yet the elderly Kiowa warrior — a Mexican nationalist once captured as a child by the Comanche — still felt compelled to recount the most harrowing events of his past before his death. He did so with the person he probably trusted most with his life story, his grandson Parker Paul McKenzie.</p>
<p>The inquisitive McKenzie faithfully documented Queton’s memories for posterity sometime between 1924 and 1926 at the family’s old homestead near Mountain View, Okla. Fueled by passion and perhaps a sense of duty, McKenzie spent the entirety of his adult life amassing thousands of oral histories, folklore, and government documents pertaining to the Kiowa Tribe. McKenzie, a self-taught linguist, also helped develop a phonetic alphabet for the Kiowa language that resulted in the publication of two pioneering books.</p>
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