Thursday, January 10, 2013

Journey To The Desert's Edge, Part 9

Note: this is the ninth in a series of occasionally appearing entries focusing on deserts in general and the drylands of West Texas in particular

 
Benjamin Henry Grierson developed a deathly fear of horses when, in 1834, he was an eight year old boy growing up in Pennsylvania.  One had kicked him and he nearly died from the injury.  He certainly had no intention of spending much time with equines if his decision to move to Illinois and become a music teacher offers any reliable clues about his goals in life...


Fate had other plans for Ben Grierson.  Well into his thirties when the Civil War broke out, the Illinois musician volunteered for military service, enlisting to become the aide-de-camp for Major General Benjamin Prentiss.  He found himself reassigned to the 6th Illinois Cavalry as its regimental commander less than two years later.  So much for a fear of horses...
Colonel Grierson leads his Buffalo Soldiers deep into the
Trans-Pecos in search of Victorio and his Apache warriors


[Civil War historians cite Grierson, who earned battlefield promotions to a rank of Major General, as one of the most brilliant cavalry commanders on either side during the Civil War.  He played a key role in severing the communications lines from Vicksburg to the Confederacy's Eastern Theater.  Throughout the war, Grierson's seemingly invincible forces demoralized Southern soldiers and civilians with daring attacks on railroads and property in their line of march.  Choosing to remain on active military service following Robert E Lee's surrender at Appomattox, he received a post-war rank of Colonel.]



Much of Grierson's career in the post-Civil War Army revolved around assignments in the barely populated Southwest.  For three years, 1878-1881, he commanded the vast Military District of the Pecos from his headquarters at Fort Concho in western Texas.  This district stretched across nearly four hundred miles of desert and desolation, from the small settlement at present day San Angelo to the outskirts of El Paso.  It included both the western Concho Valley and the Trans-Pecos...


The Military District of the Pecos had  three forts-- Concho, Stockton and Davis-- as well as a number of sub-posts scattered throughout its area of responsibility.  The most populous location  protected by the forts was the village of Santa Angela (renamed San Angelo in 1883) in Tom Green County where Camp Hatch was established in 1867.  It being something of an area tradition to rename settlements and facilities, Camp Hatch was transformed into Fort Concho a year later...

Muralist Stylle Read created this map as part of his Military
Heritage mural in downtown San Angelo, Texas.  The Military
District of the Pecos is shown in light red (coloring added by
the author).

In 1880, residents of Tom Green County told the US Government's census takers that their numbers included 3020 whites, 1132 Mexicans, and 142 blacks.  Most lived near Fort Concho but a few residents resided elsewhere in a county that was still the size of Massachusetts and Connecticut combined.  (When the state legislature created Tom Green County in March 1874, it covered over 60,000 square miles.  Two years later, legislators redrew its boundaries to encompass a much smaller area encompassing the present day counties of Coke, Crane, Ector, Glasscock, Irion, Loving, Midland, Reagan, Sterling, Tom Green, Upton, and Ward counties.  Tom Green County is today slightly larger than Rhode Island.  Its current boundaries came in 1903 following the creation of Reagan County in the western most part of the Concho Valley)...


Primary mission responsibilities for Fort Concho soldiers included scouting and mapping West Texas, building roads and setting up telegraph lines, escorting stage coaches and cattle drives through hostile Indian territory, surveying potential railroad routes, acting as a police force for a lawless land known throughout the rest of the country as a haven for outlaws.  One suspects they occasionally encountered descendants of camels imported into the area in 1856 at the direction of then United States Secretary of War Jefferson Davis (later the sole President of the rebellious Confederacy) who thought the "ships of the desert" would be useful supply animals in the southwestern drylands...  


Forts Stockton and Davis were truly in the midst of that vast desolation which is West Texas...
Fort Davis as it appeared in the late 19th Century


Over 160 miles of desert separated Colonel Grierson from his headquarters along the Concho River and Fort Stockton.  Beyond that, it was another 100 miles to Fort Davis...


Not very many people of European descent lived in this country where Native Peoples hunted and gathered.  Nor were there a tremendous number of these indigenous folk.  Among the earliest of them were the Jumanos who lived between the Rios Concho and Pecos during the time of Spanish settlement in the Southwest.  In 1629 and 1632, the missionary Juan de Salas traveled to the area of present day San Angelo at the request of the Jumanos to instruct them in the Roman Catholic faith.  Nearly two decades later, Hernán Martín and Diego del Castillo, came in search of rare freshwater pearls found in the Concho.  A few more explorers followed--  Diego de Guadalajara in 1654, Father Nicolás López and Juan Domínguez de Mendoza in 1684-- and all were impressed by the friendliness of the Jumanos...


By 1750, the Jumanos had essentially disappeared from the historical record.  Some likely died from new diseases imported to the New World by white men.  Others fell in battle against the encroaching Apaches who controlled southwestern Texas until they were forced deeper and deeper into the desert around 1800 by invading Comanches...

Lipan Apaches, originally a Great Plains people, migrated
southward into the area of modern-day Central and West
Texas before being displaced by nomadic Comanche warriors.

Comanche domination over the rugged and empty country between the Rivers Concho and Pecos faced no real challenge for more than six decades until the end of America's Civil War triggered an Anglo-American westward expansion.  In hindsight, the Indians likely knew what would happen after the United States annexed Texas in 1845 and sent soldiers to build forts, protect settlers, and eradicate the Native American threat.  By 1852, Army men had established Camp J E Johnston in what is now northwestern Tom Green County and Fort Chadbourne in modern day Coke County.  Butterfield Overland Mail Stage line coaches arrived several years later in 1857, going through today's small settlement of Carlsbad, crossing the Middle Concho River, and then swinging down to the Horsehead Crossing of the Pecos...


African-American soldiers, the so-called Buffalo Soldiers, from Fort Concho took part in three major campaigns of the Indian Wars fought in the American West and Southwest following the Civil War.


[Among these Buffalo Soldiers was Henry O Flipper, the first African-American officer to receive a West Point commission into the Regular Army.  Second Lieutenant Flipper reported to Fort Sill in Oklahoma following his graduation from the Military Academy in 1877.  Like many a soldier before him, he arrived at his duty station only to learn his orders had been amended and he was being sent to an infinitely less desirable locale.  In Flipper's case, this was Fort Concho in the West Texas desolation.
Henry Ossian Flipper, born a slave in Georgia, became the
first African-American graduate of the United States Military
Academy at West Point.  His career ended with a court-martial
on dubious charges likely motivated by racial prejudice.


Flipper's brief career in the military showed the Army of the Republic was infested with the same racism that informed the souls of many who fought for the South in the Army of the Rebellion less than fifteen years earlier.  Many objected to sharing a meal table with him at the officer's mess.  In 1881, some months after he'd been transferred to the even more remote Fort Davis, Flipper was court-martialed on a charge of embezzling $2000 while serving as the post's Quartermaster.  He was acquitted of the accusation but convicted of "conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman" when prosecutors added this catch-all charge during his trial and introduced into evidence letters written by him to a white woman.] 


Westward expansion by white settlers, slow in the pre-Civil War era, picked up rapidly as men disillusioned or displaced by the conflict looked towards the frontier for a new beginning.  Fort Concho troops engaged Native Americans in Mackenzie's 1872 campaign, the Red River War of 1874, and the Victorio campaign of 1879 and 1880...


One of the more shameful events in Fort Concho history was the imprisonment of more than 100 Indian women and children in a stone corral in 1872 and 1873...
Although the barren Llano Estacado of the Texas Panhandle fell
outside the Military District of the Pecos, soldiers from Fort Concho
had the additional responsibility of maintaining order in this dry
and empty country.


This degrading of non-combatants took place during Ranald Mackenzie's command of Fort Concho.  Described by Ulysses S Grant as the "most promising young officer" in the Union Army during the Civil War, Mackenzie was a harsh disciplinarian (called the "Perpetual Punisher" by men serving under him) who did not have the love of his troops.  In late September 1872, Mackenzie ordered soldiers to attack a Comanche camp that showed no sign of immediate hostility.  Twenty-three Native men died, unprepared to defend themselves.  Their wives and children, herded to Fort Concho, spent the winter in and outdoor pen.  In the spring, all were shipped to the Oklahoma Territory to enjoy the Great White Father's hospitality at a reservation near Fort Sill...


[Mackenzie, incidentally, provoked an international incident in 1873 when his men rode across the Rio Grande into Mexico in pursuit of Lipan Apache and Kickapoo raiders.]


Victorio proved to be the last major challenge of the Indian Wars for Fort Concho and its soldiers.  As a young man, he rode with Geronimo and Mangas Colorado, two of the Apache Nation's greatest warriors.  After Mangas Colorado died in 1863, Victorio slowly assumed leadership of a band of about 300 Chiricahua and Mescalero Apaches.  With no real desire for continued and ultimately futile bloodshed, Victorio moved his people in 1869 to a location near Fort Craig, New Mexico, to await completion of the reservation at Ojo Caliente...
Victorio



Apache willingness to submit to changing times ended in 1877 when the United States government ordered Victorio and his people moved to Arizona.  Protests by the Indians that their crops weren't ready for harvest were ignored.  Despite the hardship imposed, the Apaches relocated.  Conditions at the new reservation were extremely unpleasant and Victorio decided that enough was enough.  For three years, his band waged war in the deserts of New Mexico, West Texas, and Mexico...


Hearing reports in August 1880 that Victorio and his warriors had ridden across the Rio Grande once again and were now camped in the Guadalupe Mountains of Far West Texas, Colonel Grierson and his Tenth U S Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers headed west.  Black men from Fort Concho and the red men led by Victorio met in the Sierra Diablo range and then again at Rattlesnake Springs.  Grierson's troops prevailed after a three hour battle.  Victorio's band headed back to Mexico where they died in a confrontation with Mexican soldiers on October 15, 1880...


Exploring and mapping West Texas were, as noted previously, a key part of the Fort Concho mission...
Detail from Stylle Read's Military Heritage mural in downtown
San Angelo depicts a Buffalo Soldier patrolling the West Texas
desert country west of the city.


In 1875, William Rufus Shafter (one wonders if he was named for that wicked son of William the Conqueror so hated by the Church) and his men hunted for Indians in the barren Llano Estacado of the western Texas Panhandle.  In doing so, they came to know the area topography and the locations of its scarce water supplies, details of which were included in Shafter's official report.  His account encouraged settlement in the Panhandle through his descriptions of endless grasslands and countless bison...


Pioneers moving to the area obviously glossed over Shafter's mention of the extreme trouble he and his men had locating water.  On one occasion, the 450 men under his command rode for forty hours in hopes of reaching the Pecos River before thirst and summer heat killed them.  This desperate bid for survival earned Shafter a nickname:  Pecos Bill...


An earlier posting in this blog discussed how the search for relatively quick land routes across the Southwest took on a new importance in the aftermath of the California Gold Rush.  One expedition, tasked with determining the practicality of an "upper road" from San Antonio to El Paso through the Concho Valley, traveled the distance between the two cities from June 19, 1849 to July 29, 1849... 

Paisano Pete, the world's largest sculpted roadrunner, greets
visitors to contemporary Fort Stockton, Texas.

Its leader, Lieutenant Francis T Bryan, reported, in the words of historian J B Burnett writing in his 1970 Trans-Pecos Texas: A Study of Exploration, "that except for the dry region between the head of the Concho and the Pecos River, the route offered easy passage for wagons"...


Hardy Anglo-Saxon men and sturdy Anglo-Saxon women venturing into the western Concho Valley in late 1880 had little to fear from either Victorio or his men... 
Untold ages ago, a meteor struck the earth in what would become
the creosote flats dry country near Fort Stock.  The mountains in
the background of this photograph are at the rim of the impact area.


Colonel Grierson and his Buffalo Soldiers had accomplished their mission well.  They,  mayhap, encountered an occasional camel-- there were reported sightings of them in the desert country until around 1900.  But they surely saw no bison.  Even before the herds had been slaughtered to near extinction, the magnificent animals did not range south of the Twin Mountains near San Angelo and were total strangers to the Trans-Pecos if State Geologist S B Buckley reported accurately in his 1876 report to Texas legislators...


But, as the endless wind whipped across the hot and dry country, perhaps one or two of these hardy Anglo-Saxon men and sturdy Anglo-Saxon women saw the proud ghosts or heard the lost voices of the proud Jumanos and Apaches and Comanches who traveled the vast southwest Texas despoblados before them...

 
Future Confederate States of America President Jefferson
Davis envisioned a Camel Corps to facilitate exploration of
the American Southwest in the days before the Civil War
when he was Secretary of War for the United States.

 

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CREDITS

Note: All photographs for this essay were located through Google Images or Wikipedia, without authoritative source or ownership information except as noted: Fort Davis from nps.gov; Henry O Flipper from vitia.org, Benjamin Grierson tracking Victorio, Lipan Apache camp, and Victorio from texasbeyondhistory.net; Sierra Madera astrobleme near Fort Stockton from geologyabout.com; Camel Packtrain from thesocietypages.org; Caprock Sunrise from Texas Parks and Wildlife

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