Jicarilla War | |||||||
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Part of the Apache Wars, Ute Wars, American Indian Wars | |||||||
Kit Carson in 1854 by William Ranney. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States |
Apache Ute | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Philip St. George Cooke John Davidson Kit Carson |
Lobo Blanco† Flechas Rayada Chacon |
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The Jicarilla War began in 1849[1] and was fought between the Jicarilla Apaches and the United States military in New Mexico. Ute warriors also played a significant role in the conflict as they were allied with the Jicarillas. The war started when the Apaches and Utes began raiding against settlers on the Santa Fe Trail. Eventually, in 1853, the American army retaliated which resulted in a series of battles and campaigns that ended in 1854 when a large military expedition managed to quell most of the violence. However, some minor skirmishing contiuned into 1855.[2][3]
War[]
Dolores Gunnerson argues that "the Jicarillas would have transferred their allegiance to the Americans and served them as faithfully as they had served the Spaniards if the Anglos had been willing to accept them as "friends" and allies." She further states that "the Jicarilla were at war with the United States for only a year and a half and spent nearly all that period eluding the troops rather than fighting." [4]
The war began in 1849 when a wagon of settlers was killed by a band of Jicarillas and Utes. The event, sometimes referred to as the White Massacre received considerable publicity at the time and did much to prejudice the Anglo population against the tribe. A year later a group of mail carriers were killed in what is called the Wagon Mound Massacre. Various incidents in the next half decade would raise the tensions between the Americans and the Jicarillas, leading both sides to increasingly mistrust the other until the winter of 1853 to 1854 when the army began operations.[1]
In February 1854 a government beef contractor near Fort Union, New Mexico reported to the army that several of his cattle had been stolen by the Jicarillas so in response, a troop of dragoons from the 2nd Cavalry were sent to retrieve the stolen property. On March 5, Lieutenant Bell encountered a group of warriors under Chief Lobo Blanco, out on the Canadian River. It was uncertain whether Lobo Blanco and his followers were responsible for the stolen property but the army had long suspected Lobo Blanco's band of killing white and Hispanic settlers. A battle then ensued which left the chief and four of his warriors dead while the Americans lost two men. On the next day, the conflict escalated when a band of Jicarillas and Utes raided a herd of cattle near Fort Union, killing two herdsmen in the process. After that the United States Army 1st Cavalry Regiment launched an expedition into Apacheria. The first engagement was fought on March 30 when First Lieutenant John Davidson's launched an unauthorized attack on a Jicarilla village near the present day Pilar, New Mexico.[5]
In the subsequent Battle of Cieneguilla, sixty American cavalrymen fought an estimated 250 Apaches and Ute warriors under the war chief Flechas Rayada. Fighting began at around 8:00 am and lasted for over three hours, by the end of which, twenty-two soldiers were killed and another thirty-six were wounded. Davidson's command was forced to retreat having inflicted about twenty deaths on the native force. A week later, on April 8, a large force of about 200 American cavalrymen, 100 men of the 3rd Infantry, and thirty-two scouts, found the Jicarillas of Chief Chacon in Ojo Caliente Canyon. During the battle that followed, commander Philip St. George Cooke defeated about 150 warriors, killing five of them and wounding six others without sustaining any casualties to his own command. The Jicarillas where dispersed at that point and without a camp many of them died in the extreme cold weather. The battle was also notable for having involved Kit Carson, who guided the American army during the expedition, and First Lieutenant George Sykes, who later commanded the Army of the Potomac in the American Civil War. After the Ojo Caliente battle the war was mostly over with the exception of a few smaller raids and skirmishes over the next several months.[6][7][8]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 The Friend, pg. 343
- ↑ Tiller, "The Jicarilla Apache Tribe: a history, 1846-1970"
- ↑ http://www.flickr.com/photos/oldguardmuseum/3694655329/
- ↑ Gunnerson, Dolores A., The Jicarilla Apaches: a study in survival, Northern Illinois University Press, DeKalb, Illinois, 1974, p.295
- ↑ http://musketoon.com/2005/01/17/muster-rolls-battle-of-cieneguilla-30-march-1854/
- ↑ Carver, pg. 134-139
- ↑ Utley, pg. 144
- ↑ Carter, pg.134-139
Bibliography[]
- Tiller, Veronica E. (1983). The Jicarilla Apache Tribe: a history, 1846-1970. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-4409-6.
- Utley, Robert M. (1981). Frontiersmen in blue: the United States Army and the Indian, 1848-1865. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-9550-2.
- Carter, Harvey L. (1990). "Dear Old Kit": The Historical Christopher Carson. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2253-6.
- The Friend (1901). The Friend Volume 74.
The original article can be found at Jicarilla War and the edit history here.