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Comanche Lookout

Comanche Lookout Park is a 96-acre public park owned by the City of San
Antonio. The site includes the fourth highest point in Bexar County with an
elevation of 1,340 feet. The Cibolo floodplain lies at the base of this
escarpment between the Gulf Coastal Plain and the Edwards Plateau. Vegetation on
the hill includes native ash juniper, Texas and Mexican buckeye, chinaberry,
graneno, Lindheimer hackberry, honey mesquite and huisache.
Native Americans used this hill as a vantage point for warfare and hunting.
The Apache, and later, the Comanche Indians dominated the area as they hunted
along waterways including nearby Cibolo Creek. The hill was also a prominent
landmark for travelers in the 18th and 19th centuries. The old Spanish road (one
of several routes of the Camino Real or Royal Road) from San Antonio to Bastrop
and Nacogdoches in East Texas extended past the base of the hill. The road
followed earlier American Indian travel routes, and today its remnants are known
as Nacogdoches Road.
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