Published by authority
of the General Assembly, under the direction of
Brig. Gen. Guy E. Logan, Adjutant General
A very
extended account of experiences of the organization known as Mormons or Latter
Day Saints - from the date of their settlement at Nauvoo, Ill., to the time of
their leaving that place and moving farther west - is given in Mr. Reid's
early history of Iowa. Limitation of space will only permit the compiler
to quote such portions of the official orders as relate to the action of the
War Department, in authorizing the organization of a battalion of
Infantry Volunteers, to be composed exclusively of men belonging to the Mormon
Church. This battalion - as will be seen - was to cooperate with and become a
part of an expeditionary force, whose ultimate destination was to
be some point on the Pacific Coast. The inducement to the Mormons to
engage in such service was mainly* the opportunity it would afford them to
found a new home for their people at some point in the far west. The
following extracts are made from a letter of instructions from W. L. Marcy,
Secretary of War, to Brigadier General S. W. Kearny, commanding United
States forces at Fort Leavenworth. The letter is dated at the War
Department, in Washington, June 3, 1846.
“…It has been decided by the
President to be
of the greatest importance, in the pending war with Mexico, to take
early possession of Upper California. An expedition, with that view, is
hereby ordered, and you are designated to command it. To enable you to
be in sufficient force to conduct it successfully, an additional force
of one thousand mounted men has been provided to follow you in the
direction of Santa Fe, to be under
your orders, or the officer you may leave in command at Santa Fe...I
need
not say to you that, in case you conquer Santa Fe, and with it the
Department or State of New Mexico, it will be important to provide for
retaining
safe possession. Should you deem it necessary to have still more troops
for the accomplishment of the object herein designated, you will lose
no
time in communicating your opinion on that point, and all others
connected
with the enterprise, to this department. Indeed, you are hereby
authorized to make direct requisition upon the Governor of Missouri for
troops.
"It is known that a large body of Mormon
emigrants are enroute to California, for the purpose of settling in
that country. You are
desired to use all proper means to have a good understanding with them,
to the end that the United States may have their co-operation in taking
possession
of and holding that country. It has been suggested here, that many of
these Mormons would willingly enter into the service of the United
States, and aid us in our expedition against California. You are hereby
authorized to muster into service such as can be induced to volunteer,
not,
however, to a number exceeding one-third of your entire force. Should
they enter the service, they will be paid as other volunteers, and you
can allow
them to designate, as far as it can properly be done, the persons to
act as
their officers. It is understood that a considerable number of American
citizens are now settled on the Sacramento River, near Suter's
establishment,
called Nueva Helvetica...Should you, on your arrival in that country,
find such to be the case, you are authorized to organize and receive
into the service of the United States such portion of these citizens as
you may
think useful to aid you to hold possession of the country. You will, in
that
case, allow them, so far as you may deem proper, to select their own
officers. A large discretionary power is invested in you in regard to
these
matters, as well as to all others in relation to the expedition
confided to your
command..."
General
Kearny lost no time in acting upon
the suggestion to recruit a battalion from the Mormon emigrants.
Captain James Allen, of the First U. S. Dragoons, was detailed for the
purpose of organizing the
battalion. He received minute instructions, which he carried out to the
letter. The additional inducement was offered the Mormons that, upon
the expiration of their term of service, they would be allowed to
retain as their private property the guns and accoutrements furnished
them by the government. The battalion was promptly organized and
mustered into the service of the United States. Its service is well
described in the
official report of Colonel P. St. George Cooke, describing the march
from Santa
Fe to San Diego, Cal. There were many interesting incidents connected
with the march of the battalion to Santa Fe, but it was after leaving
that
place that its most important and arduous service was performed, as
shown in the official report, which is here given in full:
REPORT OF LIEUTENANT
COL. P. ST. GEORGE
COOKE OF HIS
MARCH FROM SANTA FE,
NEW MEXICO, TO SAN DIEGO.
UPPER CAIlFORNIA
San Luis Rey, California,
February 5, 1847.
Sir: - In obedience to Army of the West Order
No. 33, of October 2nd, I returned from La Joya, New Mexico, to Santa
Fe, to take command of the Mormon Battalion. I arrived there on the 7th
of October.
I found that the paymasters, from whose
arrival you anticipated a plentiful resource of money for the
quartermaster department, had
brought so little specie that no payment of troops could be made. The
consequence was tbat Captain Hudson's Company of Volunteers for
California, which
you had assigned to my command, could not mount themselves; and the
quartermaster's department, which scarcely commanded a dollar, could
hardly have furnished the transportation. Owing to
these
difficulties, the Captain's new company was broken up by Colonel
Doniphan, commanding.
A portion of the battalion of Mormons arrived
the evening of the 9th of October, under First Lieutenant A. J. Smith,
First Dragoons, who had, in the capacity of Acting Lieutenant Colonel,
directed its march from
Council Grove. The rear of the battalion arrived the evening of the
12th. On the 13th, I assuned command, with the rank of Lieutenant
Colonel, by virtue of your appointment. Its aggregate present was four
hundred
forty-eight. I found that their mules were entirely broken down, and
that as many as sixty men had, from sickness and other causes, been
transported in wagons much of the march; and that there were
twenty-five women, besides many children. The Assistant Surgeon of the
battalion, Doctor Sanderson, and a senior officer of the department,
Doctor DeCamp,
reported on the cases of a very large number as subjects for discharge
for
disability. But the Colonel commanding determined, under all the
circumstances, to
retain them in service, and ordered them to be sent to winter at
"Pueblo," on the Arkansas River, above Bent's Fort. There the Mormons
have a
temporary settlement, and there Mr. Smith had sent, from the crossing
of the
Arkansas, a party of ten, commanded by Captain Higgins, in charge of a
large
number of families, which had theretofore been attached to the Mormon
Battalion. This detachment had orders to join the battalion at Santa
Fe. (They arrived after its march, and, I learned, obtained permission
to
return to the Pueblo.) About this time, I learned that you had left
your
wagons, in consequence of difficulties of the country; and was anxious,
for the
benefit of all, to disencumber the expedition of the twenty
laundresses.
Learning that the most of them wished to go with the detachment to the
Arkansas, I ordered them all to be sent there. With a sufficient number
of
ablebodied men (husbands of the women) to take care of it, the
detachment amounted to eighty-six, and was placed under the command of
Captain Brown.
I urged every preparation for the march, but
it was impossible to complete them before the 19th of October; the
battalion was paid, with treasury drafts, on the 16th and 17th. There
was no salt pork in Santa
Fe; a sufficiency did not arrive until the evening of the 16th. Beef
cattle, furnished under previous contract to the battalion, were
received on the night of the 17th; and a quantity of pack saddles the
same evening. On
the 19th of October, I marched out of Santa Fe, and encamped at Agua
Frio. At the earnest request of two captains and three sergeants, their
wives
were permitted to accompany the expedition; having their own wagons and
mules and provisions.
The rations had been issued to the companies,
and each had three mule wagons, and one was drawn by oxen (these last
were to be sent back on leaving the river). The rations were sixty days
flour and salt, sugar and coffee; thirty days of pickled pork, and
twenty of soap.
The mules furnished me were mostly poor and
worked down; the half of them were utterly unfit to commence an
ordinary march. A number, as well as of oxen, were left behind, unable
to walk, in the first forty miles. Thus, I was obliged to exchange them
two for one, and to purchase many others. For the first one hundred
fifty miles, on the Rio Grande, there was, at that season, no grass
deserving the name. I purchased,
when I could, corn and fodder, but in very small quantities. I had
three
hundred eighty sheep purchased, near Socorro, and beeves, to make up
the sixty
days' rations. About seventy-five miles below that point, I became
convinced that the march must fail, unless some
improvement was made. I was marching about eight miles a day, in as
many hours, through the deep sand; the mules, overworked, growing
poorer, giving out, dying and left behind each day.
From the opinions of the guides, there was
also reason to apprehend that the supply of provisions was inadequate;
and the ox wagons were then to go back. There were twenty-two men on
the sick report, who, with the arms and knapsacks of others, encumbered
the wagons. I called on the Assistant Surgeon and company commanders
for lists of those they believed worthless for the march; fifty-eight
names were soon given to
me. Captain Burgwin's camp was fifty-eight miles above. I resolved,
then, to send back those fifty-eight men, with twenty-six days'
rations, with one ox wagon, and to leave the other two there, to be
sent for, retaining
the teams, and to make another reduction of baggage. Many tents and
campkettles were left in the wagons, and all the upright poles, for
which muskets were used as substitutes. (The backs of the tents were
opened, and a piece inserted, so as thus to become very large and
nearly circular, in which ten men were accommodated.) The oxen I used
in mule wagons; packed those unfit for draught, and also, though very
lightly, the poor extra mules. The detachment went in command of a
lieutenant, who received orders to report, for ultimate instructions,
to the officer commanding in the territory. A calculation showed that,
by these measures, with
increased means of transportation, the loads were reduced twenty per
cent: and also that the rations (or half rations) of the battalion were
increased by eight days. Then, and only then, could I begin to see my
way to the end, with confidence. After these two weedings of the old,
the feeble
and sickly, from the battalion, lads and old grey-headed men still
remained.
The numerous guides and hirelings you sent to
me, I found at the lowest village; they had been idle for weeks, and I
found I was to
venture, with my wagons, into a wide region, unknown to any of them.
The river route improved greatly, and, opposite, was apparently a
practicable gap
in the mountain barrier, between mine and the Chihuahua Road (the fine
but badly watered stretch known as the Jornada del Muerto). About
thirty miles lower, and in the vicinity of a point called San Diego,
the
mountains which, so far, had confined the road to the river, break off,
and then I turned short to the right, on the arid table land of Mexico,
which I
found studded with the profusion of isolated mountains of volcanic
origin. My method, now, was this: Leroux (guide) with five, six or
seven others, would get a day in advance, exploring for water, in the
best practicable direction; finding a spring or a puddle (sometimes a
hole) in nearly
inaccessible rocks, he would send a man back, who would meet me and be
the guide. This operation would be repeated until his number was
unsafely reduced, when he would await me, or return to take a fresh
departure. This was the plan, but ever varying and uncertain, attended,
of course, with much anxiety; and sometimes, the inconvenience of
neglect
or tardiness, on the part of the guides, making the road once or twice,
to vary from the better course, which a more thorough examination, in
the first instance, would have discovered. Such, with some vicissitudes
of
risk and suffering, and the accidental aid of a little confused
information
from a trading party we encountered, was the manner of my progress for
about two hundred fifty miles from the Rio Grande to the San Pedro, a
tributary of the Gila. But I anticipate.
Thus I reached the Ojo de Vaca, about
twenty-six miles south from the copper mines, on an old road to Yanos,
used for transporting the
ore. To the west appeared a vast prairie opening, between the
mountains; it was the course; but the principal guides had each his
dread of it,
founded upon vague information, from Indians, of its destitution of
water; and watering places might exist and not be found by us. They had
explored about twenty-five miles of it, finding an out of the way and
insufficient hole of water ten miles distant.
I ascended a high peak, and there, taking the
bearings of distant land marks, which they professed to know, earnestly
consulted with them and the interpreter, who had lately passed through
Sonora, as to the
best course to be taken. They were deceived, themselves, as I believe,
and so deceived me, as to the direction of Yanos; and gave a decided
opinion
as to the unsafety of venturing into the prairie; and also, that it
would be
best to take the Yanos road, and thence, by an old trail, a road
formerly
used to connect the presidios or frontier garrisons, Yanos, Fronteras,
Fruson,
etc.
The next morning, having reluctantly
assented, I took the Yanos road. A mile or two convinced me (and them)
that its general direction
was very different from their representations; and east of south. I
then
took the responsibility of turning short to the right, and ordered them
to guide
me to the water hole. I had some confused information of water to be
found in the direction of San Bernadino. Mr. Leroux had been very
decided that it would be necessary to go by this southern point, even
if I ventured that far on the unknown prairie. I then marched forty
miles without water, except a drink for part of the men, where I had
hoped to find enough for encamping. The battalion was not prepared for
it and suffered much. These were anxious circumstances and the
responsibility I had taken weighed heavily upon me; their safety and my
success seemed both
doubtful. Fortunately, a large spring was reached on the second night,
after a
continuous march of thirteen hours; and when men and mules were at the
point of
exhaustion, for the weather was quite warm.
I was joined here by a party of New Mexicans,
who had been trading with the Apaches. I purchased twenty-one mules of
them, giving a check on the Assistant Quartermaster at Santa Fe. I also
hired one of them to conduct Leroux to the mountain valley, where they
had left the
Apaches, and sent him to seek an Indian guide. A day or two after, we
found a trail leading toward San Bernadino; and the fourth day, early,
just
after Chabonnaux, the only guide then present, had very unwarrantedly
gone off hunting, we fell into what was believed to be the trail or
road from
Yanos, to Fronteras; and it led us to a precipitous and
rocky
descent of perhaps a thousand feet, amongst broken, wild and confused
peaks, which extended as far as could be seen from our great height. I
soon found the trail could not be made passable for the wagons; and I
hunted myself for a more promising descent, and, in fact, saw a part of
the
proper one, but very inaccessible from the mountain height on which I
then was. My next care was to seek the nearest ground suitable for a
camp;
fortunately I found water about a mile off. All pronounced the country
before us
impassable for wagons; I, nevertheless, organized a large working
party, under Lieutenant Stoneman, and sent him to make a passage. That
night Leroux arrived, bringing an Apache chief, whom he had got hold of
with difficulty, and probably great address, so shy were they found.
Next morning it was owing to Leroux's decided assertions and arguments
that there could be, and was, no other known pass but the horse trail,
that I did not insist on his thorough examination.
He even asserted, but was mistaken, that he had examined the opening I
had seen and described, and believed might be a wagon road. Meanwhile,
the party continued the
second day hard at work, with crow bar, pick, etc.; whilst I sent one
company and about half the baggage, packed on mules, to the first water
on the
trail, in a deep ravine below. It was about six miles, and the mules
were
brought back in the evening. Next morning they took the rest of the
loading,
and I succeeded that day, with much labor and difficulty, breaking one,
in
getting the wagons to the new camp. Doctor Foster accidentally found
the outlet of an old wagon road, (into mine) and, following back, it
led him to the verge of the plain, about a mile from our point of
descent. He says
this is called the pass of Guadalupe; and that it is the only one, for
many
hundreds of miles to the south, by which the broken descent from the
great table land of Mexico can be made by wagons, and rarely by pack
mules. I hold it to be a question whether the same difficult formation
does not extend north, at least to the Gila. If it is so, my road is
probably the
nearest and the best route. But, if the prairie to the north is open to
the San
Pedro, and water can be found, that improvement will make my road not
only a good but a direct one from the Rio Grande to the Pacific.
San Barnadio [San Bernadino] is a ruined
ranch, with buildings
enclosed by a wall, with regular bastions. It overlooks a wide, flat
and rich valley, watered by a noble spring, which runs into one of the
upper
branches of the Huaqui River, which is but a few miles distant. Here I
succeeded in meeting a few of the Apaches, and obtained a guide, who
went about twenty miles, and described the rest of the route to the San
Pedro. He
was afraid to venture further, and return alone over the plain; the
point
where he turned back was within fourteen miles of the presidio of
Fronteras. It was in the mountain pass that we first saw the wild
bulls, from which the command obtained their exclusive supply of meat
for about two weeks. They are the increase from those abandoned, when
the two ranches of San Bernadio [San Bernadino] and San Pedro (on the
river of the same name) were broken up in consequence of incessant
Indian attacks. They have spread and increased, so as to cover the
country; they were as wild and
more dangerous than buffalo.
I made the next sixty-two miles to the San
Pedro River with little more difficulty than cutting my way through
dense thickets of mesquite and many other varieties of bushes, all
excessively thorny. It was but
twenty-seven mJles without water over the last divide; there was snow
one day, and for about two weeks, at that time, we suffered with cold.
I
descended the San Pedro fifty-five miles, to a point whence a trail
goes to Tucson. [FOOTNOTE: In the copy furnished by Mr.
Reid, this word is first spelled Tucson and afterwards Tueson. We have
followed the first spelling, althougii the original,
printed Report of Colonel Cooke (since found) gives the spelling
"Tucson" in
every case.] The guides represented that it was eighty-five
miles of very difficult, if practicable, ground, to the mouth of the
San Pedro, and
one hundred from there to the Pimos; also very bad, and little or no
grass: and, on the other hand, that it was only about ninety miles of
good
road, with grass, by Tucson to the same point. I reflected that I was
in no condition to go an unnecessary one hundred miles, good or bad;
and that, if their statements were true, the future road must go by the
town. I had previously sent Leroux, Foster and others to examine if
there was water on the thirty miles, which was the estimated distance
to Tucson. Leroux had just returned; he had found water at a "still
house," twenty miles from the river; and had encountered there a
Sergeant's party of dragoons. He had made up a story to get off; but,
to give it color,
Doctor Foster fancied it necessary to go on to the town. Leroux was
told by Indians that two hundred soldiers, with artillery, had been
there
concentrated. I reached the water next day, and probably
surprised the Sergeant's party. I found them cutting grass; but the
Sergeant, as if the bearer
of a flag, delivered me a singular message from the commander, which
amounted to a request that I should not pass his post. Next
morning I made prisoners of four others, who had come, probably, with
provisions; and, as Doctor Foster's long stay had made me uneasy for
him, I
dismissed one of them with a note stating that I should hold the others
as
hostages for his safety; and promised to release the prisoners if he
was sent to
me that evening. Deceived as to the distance, but expecting to encamp
without water, I marched late; and, having made twelve miles on road
very
difficult in places, I encamped at sundown on the high prairie. At
midnight,
Foster reached me; with him came two officers, one as a "commissioner,"
with written instructions to offer a kind of truce, by the terms of
which I
was to pass the town by a certain point, and to hold no communication
with
the people. I rejected them, and demanded a capitulation; which the
commissioner, with great form, wrote, after his own fashion, in
Spanish, and I signed it. The terms bound the garrison not to serve
against the United States during the present war; and, as the only
further tokens of
surrender, to deliver to me two carbines and three lances; my men to
enter freely
and trade with the inhabitants of the town. After a tedious conference
of
two hours, in which we had been very friendly, but very cold, the
officers
departed, assuring me my terms could not be accepted. Believing I was
eight or nine miles from town, I took measures to march at daylight;
but
unfortunately, the raules, being herded in mesquite bushes, and without
water, the half of them, in the darkness of night, escaped the guard;
and I
could not possibly march, with any prudence, before eight o'clock.
The distance proved to be sixteen miles.
About five miles from town I was met by a dragoon, or lancer, who
delivered me a letter, simply
refusing my terms. I told him there was no answer, and he rode off. I
then ordered the arms to be loaded. Immediately afterwards, two
citizens rode up and reported the place had been evacuated. I arrived
at one o'clock, and, having passed through the fort, encamped in the
edge of the town.
Two small field pieces had been taken off, and all public property of
value, except a large store of wheat.
The garrisons of Tubac, Santa Cruz and
Fronteras had been concentrated, and, I understood Doctor Foster, there
were altogether about two hundred thirty men; but I have lately learned
he only estimated them at one hundred thirty. I remained in camp the
next day, December 16th. There was very little grass, and I fed my
mules, cattle and sheep on the wheat, and brought off enough for two
more days in the adjoining desert. That day, to cover some small
parties of mule hunters, I made a
reconnaissance, with about sixty men, marching half-way to an Indian
village, about ten miles off, where the enemy were stationed. (I
intended attacking him under favorable circumstances, but the path led
me through a dense mesquite forest, very favorable to an ambush; I
learned,
however, that this demonstration caused him to continue his retreat.)
The garrison attempted to force all the
inhabitants to leave the town with them. Some of them returned whilst I
lay there, and I took pains
that all should be treated with kindness. The day that I arrived there,
a detachment of twenty-five men, who had been posted at the Pimos, to
observe or harass my march, having been sent for by express, passed
unobserved
around a mountain, near town, and joined the main body. (I afterwards
learned that they had made a threatening demand for the mules and goods
left for me with the Indian chief. He refused, and expressed his
determination
to resist, by force, any attempt to take them.) On leaving T., I sent
to its late commander. Captain Commaduran, by a citizen messenger, a
letter for the governor of Sonora, and I afterwards received an answer
that it would be transmitted. It is appended. All things considered I
thought it the
proper course to take toward a reputed popular governor of a state,
believed to be disgusted and disaffected to the imbecile central
government. It was intimated to me, whilst in Tucson, that, if I would
march toward the capital of the department, I would be joined by
sufficient numbers to
effect a revolution.
0n the 17th, I marched late, as I did not
expect to find water. At eight o'clock P. M., I encamped twenty-four
miles from Tucson, with no water or grass. Ten or fifteen miles further
there is a little water,
in a mountain, close to the road, but it could not be found; and I
marched
the second day thirty miles, and, at nine P. M., again encamped without
water; but the men, about sundown, had a drink from a small puddle, too
shallow for the water to be dipped with a cup. On the third day, I
marched
early, eight or nine miles, and encamped at rain water pools. The next
day I found it ten miles to the Gila, at a small grass bottom, above
the Pimo villages. The mules were forty-eight miles without water; the
men
marched twenty-six of thirty-six consecutive hours, and sixty-two miles
in
rather more than two days, in one of which no meat rations were issued.
Thus the ninety miles of the guides turned
out to be one hundred twenty-eight to the village; fifty-seven miles
nearer than the reputed
distance by the San Pedro. Excepting four or five miles, the road was
excellent, but over a true desert. There is, however, a better watered
road from Tucson, which strikes the Gila higher up. I believe this
route can
be well taken for six months in the year, and that, like much of the
road
on this side, it is impassable in summer, unless for travelers. It is a
great gold district; rich mines have been discovered in many of the
mountains in view, but it is so barren and destitute of water that even
a mining population can scarcely occupy it.
I halted one day near the villages of this
friendly, guileless and
singularly innocent and cheerful people, the Pimos. There Francisco met
me with your letter from Warner's ranch; he brought with him seven
mules found on the Gila, and, altogether, I obtained at the villages
twenty which had belonged to the dragoons. They were not sufficiently
recruited to be of much service. I traded the Indian goods and every
spare article
for corn. After feeding it several days, I brought away twelve quarts
for
each public animal, which was fed in very small quantities.
With the aid of a compass, and closely
estimating the distances, I had made a rude sketch of my route from the
point on the Rio Grande, where our roads diverged, to their junction,
near the villages. It is
herewith submitted. I have good reason to believe that even with pack
mules better time can be made on my route than on yours; and the mules
keep in good order, for mine improved on the greater part of it. On the
27th
of December, (after making the forced march, without water, across the
bend of the Gila,) in consequence of the information received in your
letter, I determined to send my useless guides, express, to give you
information of my approach, etc.; hoping thus, as I said, to meet
orders at Warner's
ranch on the 21st of January, and to be of service to your active
operations.
I also sent for assistance in mules, understanding that you had placed
a
number of them in that vicinity.
Sixty or seventy miles above the mouth of the
Gila, having more wagons than necessary, and scarcely able to get them
on, I tried the
experiment, with very flattering assurance of success, of boating with
two pontoon wagon beds and a raft for the running gear. I embarked a
portion of the rations, some road tools, and corn. The experiment
signally failed, owing to the shallowness of the water on the bars; the
river was very
low. In consequence of the difficulty of approaching the river, orders
mistaken, etc., the flour only was saved from the loading, and the
pontoons were
floated empty to the crossing of the Rio Colorado, where they were used
as a
ferry boat. I passed that river on the 10th and 11th of January. On the
first day and night, the loading of the wagons and many men were boated
over. On the morning of the 11th, the mules were driven two miles, from
grass; then drew the wagons through the long ford of a mile, nearly
swimming. The wagons were then loaded in the willow thicket, and I
marched nearly fifteen miles over the sandy road, to the first well,
the same day; a
great effort and labor. But, as there was no food for the mules on this
side, I
deemed it so necessary that I forced it, against every obstacle;
marching, in
fact, when one company's wagon was in a hole in the middle of the
river, the sheep and rear guard on the opposite bank. In the well I
found no water; and, when obtained by digging deeper, it was in quick
sand, and quite
insufficient for the men. I had another well dug, and, against hope
almost, when considerably below the water level of the old one, that of
the
river water suddenly boiled up.
I viewed this, as in other instances, a
Providential deliverance. It was the most trying hour of my long
military service. That water
failing, the next well would also; and all the circumstances well
considered, it
will be found that on obtaining it not only depended my military
success, but the lives of very many, who justly could hold me
responsible.
When of no real use to me, some wagons, which
were broken on the march, were left, in order to save the mules. At
this first well I
left three, because the mules were unequal to drawing them. I had then
remaining one for each company and two others. I sent forward a strong
party to the next well, to prepare it, and dig another. I arrived there
the
second day, soon after noon; and, during my stay, until eleven A. M.
the
following morning, I could not obtain enough water. There I left two
more wagons (arrangements were made for sending for all these wagons
the moment that I arrived at the first ranch).
I then took the direction of the 'pozo hondo'
- the deep well; sending a party through the first day. and arriving
before noon, the second. Although a second deep well had been dug, the
water was insufficient
even for the men to drink. I had spent the night without water, and
thirty miles of desert were still before me; the men wayworn and
exhausted, half fed, and many shoeless. But I met there a relief of
mules and some beeves. Mr. Leroux had sent back fifty-seven mules,
which were chiefly young, unbroken, and wild as deer, and the cattle,
in one body, (and by poor
hands) so a day's time had been lost, and twenty of the mules.
I immediately had a beef killed for a meal;
a drink of water issued to the men, the wild mules caught by their
Indian drivers, with the lasso,
thrown, haltered and harnessed; the poor animals, which then had not
drank for thirty-six hours, struggling desperately during the whole
process, which lasted above two hours under a hot sun. Then I marched
until an hour after dark, and halted to rest until two o'clock in the
morning. I had chosen a spot where there was some large bunch grass,
which was cut for the mules. There was no moon, but at two o'clock the
battalion marched again; and, at midday, having come eighteen miles
more, after long ascending its dry bed, met the running waters of the
Carizita. The
most of the animals had been without water for about fifty hours. Here
there was but little grass, and I marched next day fifteen miles,
through the
sands, to the Bajiocito, the poor men staggering, utterly exhausted,
into camp. At this time there should have been half rations of flour
for nine
days; but owing, probably, to inevitable wastage, the last of it was
eaten here.
I rested a day, and received at evening a letter from Commander
Montgomery. It advised me of your march to Pueblo; of the tardy arrival
of my express, and of communication with you being cut off. Next day I
encountered extraordinary obstacles to a wagon road, and actually hewed
a passage
with axes through a chasm of solid rock, which lacked a foot of being
as wide as the wagons. Two of them were taken through in pieces, whilst
the work was going on. So much was I retarded that I encamped at dark
on the mountain slope, making but seven miles, without water, and
without being prepared for it. San Philippi was six miles on this side,
but there was
a ridge between, so rough with rocks that, after much labor, it took
extreme
care to get the wagons over in daylight. At San Philippi I met one of
my express men, who had returned, according to instructions, to guide
me. Though
direct from San Diego, he brought neither orders nor news. I encamped
that night near the summit of the beautiful pass, overlooking the
valley of
Agua Calienta. On the 21st day of January I arrived and encamped at
Warner's ranch, the very day, as it happened, I had promised in my
letter of
December 27th.
This was seven miles off the road to San
Diego; but I had resolved, the night before, to march for the Pueblo de
los Angeles, where the
enemy had concentrated, unless I met orders or fresh information. That
which I had, placed your forces approaching it on the south, and
Lieutenant Colonel Fremont's from the north. Thus, I should advance
from the east, and from the only pass leading to Sonora. I halted at
Warner's the 22nd, to rest and refresh my men, before commencing, as I
hoped, active
operations. The day was required, in fact, to obtain beef cattle, and
to collect the new mules, many of which had escaped to their wonted
pastures in that vicinity.
On the 23rd, I marched eighteen miles on the
road to Pueblo. That night we were exposed to a drenching rain, and a
wind storm which
prostrated every tent. The storm continued the next day; I, however,
marched, over a very bad road, three or four miles, to more sheltered
ground,
and better grass for the animals. (A mountain torrent in front would
have forbidden further progress.)
On the 25th, I marched into the Temecala
valley, and encamped four days' march from Pueblo. There I received a
letter, written by your
orders, which had followed me by Warner's. From this letter I could
infer that
hostilities were suspended, and that I was expected at San Diego.
Accordingly, next morning, I left the valley by a very difficult
outlet, and,
descending into that of the San Luis, fell into the road leading from
Pueblo de los
Angeles.
At San Luis Rey I received your
instructions, by express, to marcli to San Diego Mission, and there
take post. I arrived there, by a very
bad cross road, on the 29th of January, and the same evening reported
to
you, in person, at San Diego.
This march from Santa Pe has extended, by my
daily estimate, to eleven hundred twenty-five miles. It has been made
in one hundred two days, in fourteen. of which no march was made; so
that the marching
days average slightly less than thirteen miles. The rest days have been
very nearly one in seven. It is believed, by many who have had
experience,
that the weekly day of rest is advisable on a long march, even for
speed. In looking back, I find that the half of mine were unavoidable
detentions.
I made, also, some twelve marches of less than nine miles, in
consequence of extraordinary bad road, or the delays of road making,
over difficult ground, and also the necessity, at times, of
accommodating the marches
and camps to inconvenient watering places. If I had continued on the
most direct route to San Diego, the distance would have been rather
under eleven hundred miles - about eighteen hundred miles from
Independence, Mo., by Santa Fe.
The constant tenor of your letters of
instruction made it almost a
point of honor to bring wagons through to the Pacific; and so I was
retarded
in making and finding a road for them. From this road, any that may
follow will have various advantages. The breaking the track, often
through thickets of mesquite and other thorny bushes, although worked
on by pioneers, was so laborious that I habitually relieved the front
wagons
about every hour; but a team on a firm open prairie labors much less,
if on a beaten track. Much of the difficult ground on the Gila,
consisting of
light porous clay, becomes a good beaten road. My journal and sketch
indicate some points where the road may be shortened; but, between the
Ojo de
Vaca and the point of leaving the San Pedro River, it is probable that
between eighty and one hundred miles may be saved, and some bad road be
avoided. It is only necessary for a small, experienced party, well
provided with
water, (with Indian guides, if practicable,) to explore the prairie,
and
discover the water places. The direct distance is about one hundred
sixty miles.
The worse road is on the Rio Grande, opposite
the upper and middle part of the Jornada del Muerto. It may probably be
avoided by coming the Jornada road half way down or more, and then
crossing to the west side.
I have reason to believe that there are gaps in the mountains, and
opposite where my road becomes good. This assumes that the great
highway will pass as far north as Santa Fe - which may not be the case.
The country from the Rio Grande to Tucson is covered with grama-grass,
on which animals, moderately worked, will fatten in winter.
An emigrant company may leave Independence,
Mo., from June 10th to late in August, or Van Buren, Ark., later. It
will subsist a short
time on buffaloes, and be able to lay up much of the meat, dried or
salted.
In New Mexico, it may rest, make repairs, and obtain supplies -
particularly
of mules, sheep and cattle - which, in that grazing country, will be
found cheap; it may pass through settlements for two hundred fifty
miles; and they will be much extended in the rich river bottoms to the
south, when
the Indians shall be subdued.
I brought to California both beeves and
sheep; the latter did, perhaps, the best, requiring little water; they
gave no trouble; two or three men can drive and guard a thousand. At
Tucson, or at the Pimo villages,
fresh supplies may be obtained. The Pimos and Maracopas, fifteen or
twenty thousand in number, wonderfully honest and friendly to
strangers, raise corn and wheat, which they grind and sell cheaply for
bleached
domestics, summer clothing of all sorts, showy cotton handkerchiefs,
and white beads. They also have a few mules and cattle. I gave them
some breeding sheep. Oxen will not do well for draught; their feet
become tender; and, west of the Pimos, their food is not found
sufficient or suitable.
Mules require no shoes; I cached a large quantity on the Gila, having
used none.
Undoubtedly, the fine bottom land of the Colorado, if not of the Gila,
will soon be
settled; then all difficulty will be removed. The crossing is about
one hundred miles from the mouth, and about sixty above the tide. For
six
months in the year, the river is said to be navigable by steamboats for
three hundred fifty miles; its bottoms are wide and rich; and sugar,
undoubtedly, may be grown. In winter, it is fordable at the crossing;
but I think
it has at least as much water as the Missouri at the same season, and
may be
navigable by steamers at the mouth of the Gila at all seasons.
In conclusion, much credit is due to the
battalion for the cheerful
and faithful [manner] in which they have accomplished the great labors
of
this march, and submitted to its exposures and privations. They would
much have preferred to lighten and abridge them, by leaving the wagons;
but,
without previous discipline, all was accomplished with unity and
determination
of spirit. To enable the mules to endure the extraordinary labor of
drawing these wagons without a road, and often without food or water,
the
duties ot guards were greatly increased to herd them safely, as they
did, over
tracts sometimes a mile in extent, sometimes two miles from the camp,
or
beyond a river; and ten times did the battalion encamp without water. I
am
indebted to Lieutenants Smith and Stoneman, of the First Dragoons, who
performed the duties of Assistant Commissary of Subsistence and
Assistant
Quartermaster, for valuable assistance, particularly in directing the
pioneers. Mr. Willard P. Hall, too, was ever ready to give me aid,
particularly in
the most active and venturous duties.
Thus, General, whilst fortune was conducting
you to battles and victories, I was fated to devote my best energies to
more humble labors; and all have cause to regret that the real
condition of affairs in this
territory was so little understood. But it is passed, and I must be
content with
having done my duty in the task which you assigned to me, if, as I
trust, to
your satisfaction.
Respectfully submitted,
P. St. George Cooke, Lieutenant Colonel,
Commmanding Mormon Battalion.
Brigadier General S. W. Kearny, Gommanding Army of
the West.
Sam Diego, Upper California.
It will thus be seen that the Mormon
Battalion had a very remarkable record of service. The subjoined roster
of the battalion was transcribed from Mr. Reid's early history without
abridgment. The compiler has
endeavored to describe the main incidents connecting the State of Iowa
with the War with Mexico, and, considering its sparse population, it
certainly must be conceded that its citizens made a record in that war
unsurpassed by
anyother State in the Union.
Mormon Battalion March
Map by Brian Cole
Click Map to Enlarge
IOWA
MORMON BATTALION
The official Muster-out Rolls of the Mormon
Battalion were supplied by the Assistant Chief, Records Division of the
Auditor of the Treasury
for the War Department. We have also a printed list of all the
companies of the battalion taken from "A Concise History of the Mormon
Battalion,"
written by Daniel Tyler, a Corporal and Sergeant in Company C. This
affords an opportunity for the comparison of the two lists, and, where
differences appear in the spelling of names or otherwise, they will be
noted. In a few instances some additional accounts of personal history
will be given, found in a Church Encyclopedia, printed in the December,
1889,
number of the Historical Record, a Church periodical published in Salt
Lake City. The detached service noted after the names of several of the
soldiers we find explained in the history of the battalion. A guard was
detached on September 16, 1846, from a point on the Arkansas River,
under Captain Higgins, to take a number of families
which had accompanied the battalion to Pueblo, a Mexican town located
farther up the Arkansas River - the present city of Pueblo, Colorado.
This guard appears on the official record as on detached service, by
order of
Acting Lieutenant Colonel A. J. Smith.
Again, on October 17th, those incapable, from
sickness and debility, were sent from Santa Fe to Pueblo, by order of
Colonel Doniphan,
Commanding the Army of the West. Again, on November 10th, the
twenty-second day after leaving Santa Fe, when about to turn off from
the valley of the Rio Grande to cross the mountains and deserts.
Colonel Cooke sent back Lieutenant W. W. Willis, with fifty-five sick
men, to Santa Fe,
and from there they also marched to Pueblo.
These detachments all remained at Pueblo
during the winter, and late in May took up their march for Salt Lake
City, where they arrived during July, and were there mustered out to
date July 16th, the expiration of
their term of service.
This
explains the note on the official roll. [See also record of Gilbert
Hunt, of Company A, for further explanation of muster out.]
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