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[[File:Traditional az map.gif|300px|right|thumb|First ("Arizona County") and second (CSA "Arizona Territory") incarnations of Arizona. Territorial Arizona would include Dona Ana, Mesilla, Ewell and Castle Dome counties.]]
[[File:Traditional az map.gif|300px|right|thumb|First ("Arizona County") and second (CSA "Arizona Territory") incarnations of Arizona. Territorial Arizona would include Dona Ana, Mesilla, Ewell and Castle Dome counties.]]


'''Traditional Arizona'''--legally '''Arizona County''', refers to the traditional boundaries of the first area of land known as Arizona. The region is south of the [[Gila River]], to the present day [[Mexican border]]. Also from the [[Colorado River]] on the [[California]] border to the [[Rio Grande]] river, east of the present day [[Mesilla, New Mexico]]. The region borders the present day states or countries of [[Southern California]], northern and southeastern [[New Mexico]], [[Northern Arizona]] and Old [[Mexico]].
'''Traditional Arizona'''--legally '''Arizona County''', refers to the traditional boundaries of the first area of land known as Arizona. The region is south of the [[Gila River]], to the present day [[Mexican border]]. Also from the [[Colorado River]] on the [[California]] border to the [[Rio Grande]] river, east of the present day [[Mesilla, New Mexico]]. The region borders the present day states or countries of [[Southern California]], northern and southeastern [[New Mexico]], [[Northern Arizona]] and Old [[Mexico]]. [[Mining]] and [[Ranch|Ranching]] were the primary occupations of traditional Arizona's inhabitants, though the growing [[citrus]] fruits had long been occuring in Tucson.
==History==
===Pre Civil War===
Socio-politically, some of the founders of Arizona were from areas which were once the [[Republic of Texas]], though many were from the area's heartland around [[Tucson, Arizona]], settlers who had flocked to the region during the [[California Gold Rush]] of the 1840s. They maintained their eastern links via Mesilla, on traditional Arizona's border with Texas, to [[San Antonio, Texas]]. Most others were from elsewhere in the [[United States of America]], as opposed to the Mexican citizens from Sonora and settlers from other settlements of the [[Midwest]]. Texas was the lifeline for Arizona, but only until California was established as a U.S. state, meaning Arizona had access to two seperate lines of communications and food for frontier settlements. The main line was the [[Butterfield Overland Mail]] company, which ran through southern Arizona. Briefly traditional Arizona was part of [[William Walker]]'s [[State of Deseret]] and [[Republic of Sonora]].


===Civil war===
Socio-politically, the founders of Arizona were from areas which were once the [[Republic of Texas]] and they maintained their eastern links via [[San Antonio, Texas]] (site of the [[Battle of the Alamo]]), with most others from elsewhere in what became the [[Confederate States of America]], as opposed to the Mexican citizens in Sonora and also the Mormons who simultaneously poured into New Mexico from Union settlements of the Midwest. Texas was the lifeline for Arizona in the same vein as Missouri being for Kansas in the proto-War affair known as [[Bleeding Kansas]]. The origin of [[William Walker (filibuster)|William Walker]], on par with the character of Texans, is the basic personality template for what drove the original settlers of Arizona as it differed from the [[Empire of Mexico]] or the [[State of Deseret]]. Arizona's borders were originally supposed to extend down South of the Rio Grande beyond Texas (to encompass the whole valley) and through Sonora to the [[Gulf of California]] (for a Southern Pacific railway and port), under James Gadsden's four or five options as set forth by President Pierce.
The closure of the mail line was one of the main reasons Arizona would secede from the Union and petition to join the [[Confederacy]], one other main concern for the creation of [[Arizona Territory (CSA)|Arizona Territory]] was the problem of constant [[Apache]] attacks in Arizona's southern frontier. Arizonans were angry that about how there was not enough U.S. soldiers in the region to protect them from attack. The aim of becoming a seperate American territory was realized after the [[Battle of Mesilla]] when future [[governor]], [[John R. Baylor]] defeated the Union [[garrison]] of [[Fort Filmore]] with help from Arizonan militia. Tucson was an old [[Spain|Spanish]] [[presidio]], protected by high adobe walls and had already been the scene of several Apache [[Second Battle of Tucson|battles]] in the past. Tucson was also the largest settlement in Southern Arizona at the time and had already considered secession as far back as 1859 when Tucson citizens and Mesilla citizens petitioned the U.S. government for the creation of a Union Arizona territory, this request was denied. Despite Tucson's presidio walls, the fortress had no garrison at the time of secession and therefore was an open city at first until the creation of a small militia force. [[Tubac, Arizona|Tubac]], to the south of Tucson was another old Spanish presidio. Tucson's militia rescued the Tubacans during the [[Siege of Tubac]] in spring of 1861, they were commanded by [[Captain]] [[Granville Henderson Oury]]. After John R. Baylor established himself as [[Governor of Arizona]], two district courts were created. The Confederates declared Mesilla the capital and home of the first district court, due to it's geograpghical location, close to Texas and not beyong the vast stretch of desert that lies beyon Tucson and Mesilla. Tucson was home of the second district court. Not long after the official creation of Confederate Arizona in early 1862, Texan and Arizonan rebels defeated a Union cavalry patrol at the [[Battle of Canada Alamosa]].


When Confederate [[General]] [[Henry Hopkins Sibley]] began his [[New Mexico Campaign]] to capture Union New Mexico, north of the 34th parallel, he dispatched a [[Company A, Arizona Rangers|company]] of mounted Arizona militia and Texas Mounted Rifles to hold Tucson. They were commanded by [[Captain]] [[Sherod Hunter]] and composed of about seventy-five men. General Sibley went on to fight the [[Battle of Valverde]], north of Mesilla, just before Confederate Arizona's border with Union New Mexico, several other engagements were fought as well. Ultimately his army, fueled by Arizona militia and the scant amount of supplies in the region, won a [[tactical victory]] at the [[Battle of Glorieta Pass]] but were forced to withdraw due to the loss of provisions. In the meantime, the region suffered from the worst Apache conflict in the American history of the area. In the early 1860s, [[Mangas Coloradas]] and [[Cochise]] led thousands of Apache warriors in several different battles. Apaches [[Battle of Pinos Altos|attacked]] the [[Pinos Altos, New Mexico (mining town)|Pinos Altos]] mining town in traditional Arizona, one of the major engagements between rebel Arizona militia and Apache warriors. [[Placito, New Mexico|Placito]] was also [[Battle of Placito|attacked]], again [[Confederate States Army]] troops and Arizona militia successfully warded off the Apaches. After the failure of the New Mexico Campaign, Confederate Arizona's days were close to an end. Union forces advanced south from [[Fort Union]] and the [[California Column]] invaded Arizona from the west. The Californians under [[Colonel]] [[James H. Carleton]] captured the Confederate [[Fort Yuma]] on traditional Arizona's side of the [[Colorado River]]. No fight occurred as the rebels cavalry garrison retreated into Mexico before Colonel Carleton's arrival. The Californians then moved on, using the old Butterfield Mail route as their path. Tucson's garrison was then tasked with delaying the Union invasion from the west. The garrison burnt several hay stations, the stations were actually former mail stations, abandoned before the war.
In effect, the Democratic White House and private citizen Walker had the same ambitions and yet, just as the Walker expeditions in Baja California and Sonora were contingent upon Texan success, so too was the establishment of Arizona as an outgrowth of the Confederate cause. Walker's pioneering spirit is usually not as well known as the [[Bear Flag Republic]], considering the fact that his motives were primarily of a proto-Confederate nature and Alta California was largely to be the reserve of Unionists, apart from some Southern support by the [[Los Angeles Mounted Rifles]] and in [[Imperial County, California]]--that is, until the 20th century [[Dust Bowl]] brought a new influx of Southerners to [[Bakersfield, California]]. Walker's fading from glory also had to do with Union support for the industry provided by [[Cornelius Vanderbilt]] in their war efforts against the South, including Walker's darling Mexican and Nicaraguan republics. The Union would eventually accede to Southern demands for Latin American involvement, during the [[Spanish American War]]. Panama, rather than Nicaragua, was to be the site of the canal zone of the American isthmus.


The Californians and rebels, under [[Second Lieutenant]] [[Jack W. Swilling]], fought the small [[Battle of Stanwix Station]]. Gradually Union pickets made there way to the [[Pima Villages]], a force of eight Union troops were captured there by the rebels without conflict. Once Carleton's main body reached the Pima Villages, they advanced on Tucson. Confederate pickets were waiting for the Union advance at [[Picacho Peak]], their mission was to wait for the Califoria Column and upon sighting, return to Tucson to alert Captain Sherod Hunter and his men. An advance Union cavalry patrol discovered the rebel camp at Picacho Peak and attacked. The [[Battle of Picacho peak]] was fought and the Union cavalry retreated, back to their main body. At this time, Tucson was at the verge of falling, no Confederate reinforcements had arrived in Tucson. Sherod Hunter, with only a company and some Tucson militia were facing a Union army of over 2,000. Victory was not possible so most of the garrison withdrew just before the [[Capture of Tucson (1862)|Capture of Tucson]]. A squad of the rebels were ordered to remain behind, under command of a [[Lieutenant]]. These men narrowly escaped the Union advance on the city. The lieutenant later reported that the Californians surrounded Tucson and then launched a full attack with infantry and cavalry, fulling expecting to fight a battle. The Union troops entered the town as the column's band played [[Yankee Doodle]]. The rebels almost put up a fight but the lieutenant was persuaded not to by an unknown Tucson women. Tucson fell so the Union advanced further south along the former mail route. In May, a foraging party of Sherod Hunter's company fought two [[Battle of Dragoon Springs|engagements]] with Apaches in the [[Dragoon Mountains]] of traditional Arizona. The Union forces made it to [[Mowry, Arizona]] and arrested the former [[United States Army]] Lieutenant [[Sylvester Mowry]] at his mining camp.
Arizona's economy in the early days was rather similar to that of early Texas, meaning what is largely romanticized in the Wild Western genre...cattle ranching, copper mining (Texas had not only oil in its southern region, but mining in the old, unreduced panhandle which stretched to Wyoming) and law enforcement--this also came to include cotton plantations as well as the maintenance of some citrus orchards. The earliest Anglos to remain in Arizona, were chiefly concerned with climate-based health issues. In fact, the first permanent Anglo was left behind in Tucson, to avoid holding up the entourage which he was part of. It is significant to note that the original Spanish, pre-Mexican founder of the Tucson Presidio was an [[Irish Catholic]], Hugh O'Connor, in the employ of the Bourbon King of Spain. He was one of those in the [[flight of the Wild Geese]].


The former lieutenant and Arizona Confederate sympathizer was charged with selling [[lead]] to rebels for use of ammunition. He was sent west and jailed in [[Yuma Territorial Prison]] from July 2, 1862 to November 9. He was released after trip to Yuma's courthouse. In his defence he talked about the basic American principles of [[United States Constitution|Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness]], after the judge heard this he was released. Many Arizonans at the time felt the same as Lieutenant Mowry. They felt that eastern [[New Mexico Territory]] was a place of great American progress on the frontier while the southwestern area, known as Arizona, was a war zone, unsuitable for life without contact with the east and protection against Apaches. Such was truly the case, Lieutenant Mowry's mine was destroyed by Apaches sometime after his arrest. The Californians advanced further, they occupied southern Arizona's [[fort]]s and left garrisons behind, including one at Tucson. Once in [[Apache Pass]], some of Carleton's men were ambushed by Apaches who were led by Cochise, Mangas Coloradas and [[Geronimo]]. They fought the [[Battle of Apache Pass]] in mid June 1862 and won. [[Fort Bowie]] was established as result, to do what Arizonans wanted all along, protect settlers against hostile native Americans and to protect the nearby Butterfield Overland Mail station. Soon after the battle in Apache Pass, Mesilla fell without bloodshed and Confederate Arizona was at an end. The Union created their own [[Arizona Territory]] in 1863, with Tucson as the capital but excluded Mesilla and it's surroundings. This meant Arizona no longer bordered Texas and the Arizonans of Mesilla, Pinos Altos and other towns were forced to remain New Mexican citizens.
== References ==
== References ==



Revision as of 07:24, 24 January 2010

The original Gadsden Purchase is shown in yellow, the same as the original scope of Arizona in the form of its own county, post-Purchase.
First ("Arizona County") and second (CSA "Arizona Territory") incarnations of Arizona. Territorial Arizona would include Dona Ana, Mesilla, Ewell and Castle Dome counties.

Traditional Arizona--legally Arizona County, refers to the traditional boundaries of the first area of land known as Arizona. The region is south of the Gila River, to the present day Mexican border. Also from the Colorado River on the California border to the Rio Grande river, east of the present day Mesilla, New Mexico. The region borders the present day states or countries of Southern California, northern and southeastern New Mexico, Northern Arizona and Old Mexico. Mining and Ranching were the primary occupations of traditional Arizona's inhabitants, though the growing citrus fruits had long been occuring in Tucson.

History

Pre Civil War

Socio-politically, some of the founders of Arizona were from areas which were once the Republic of Texas, though many were from the area's heartland around Tucson, Arizona, settlers who had flocked to the region during the California Gold Rush of the 1840s. They maintained their eastern links via Mesilla, on traditional Arizona's border with Texas, to San Antonio, Texas. Most others were from elsewhere in the United States of America, as opposed to the Mexican citizens from Sonora and settlers from other settlements of the Midwest. Texas was the lifeline for Arizona, but only until California was established as a U.S. state, meaning Arizona had access to two seperate lines of communications and food for frontier settlements. The main line was the Butterfield Overland Mail company, which ran through southern Arizona. Briefly traditional Arizona was part of William Walker's State of Deseret and Republic of Sonora.

Civil war

The closure of the mail line was one of the main reasons Arizona would secede from the Union and petition to join the Confederacy, one other main concern for the creation of Arizona Territory was the problem of constant Apache attacks in Arizona's southern frontier. Arizonans were angry that about how there was not enough U.S. soldiers in the region to protect them from attack. The aim of becoming a seperate American territory was realized after the Battle of Mesilla when future governor, John R. Baylor defeated the Union garrison of Fort Filmore with help from Arizonan militia. Tucson was an old Spanish presidio, protected by high adobe walls and had already been the scene of several Apache battles in the past. Tucson was also the largest settlement in Southern Arizona at the time and had already considered secession as far back as 1859 when Tucson citizens and Mesilla citizens petitioned the U.S. government for the creation of a Union Arizona territory, this request was denied. Despite Tucson's presidio walls, the fortress had no garrison at the time of secession and therefore was an open city at first until the creation of a small militia force. Tubac, to the south of Tucson was another old Spanish presidio. Tucson's militia rescued the Tubacans during the Siege of Tubac in spring of 1861, they were commanded by Captain Granville Henderson Oury. After John R. Baylor established himself as Governor of Arizona, two district courts were created. The Confederates declared Mesilla the capital and home of the first district court, due to it's geograpghical location, close to Texas and not beyong the vast stretch of desert that lies beyon Tucson and Mesilla. Tucson was home of the second district court. Not long after the official creation of Confederate Arizona in early 1862, Texan and Arizonan rebels defeated a Union cavalry patrol at the Battle of Canada Alamosa.

When Confederate General Henry Hopkins Sibley began his New Mexico Campaign to capture Union New Mexico, north of the 34th parallel, he dispatched a company of mounted Arizona militia and Texas Mounted Rifles to hold Tucson. They were commanded by Captain Sherod Hunter and composed of about seventy-five men. General Sibley went on to fight the Battle of Valverde, north of Mesilla, just before Confederate Arizona's border with Union New Mexico, several other engagements were fought as well. Ultimately his army, fueled by Arizona militia and the scant amount of supplies in the region, won a tactical victory at the Battle of Glorieta Pass but were forced to withdraw due to the loss of provisions. In the meantime, the region suffered from the worst Apache conflict in the American history of the area. In the early 1860s, Mangas Coloradas and Cochise led thousands of Apache warriors in several different battles. Apaches attacked the Pinos Altos mining town in traditional Arizona, one of the major engagements between rebel Arizona militia and Apache warriors. Placito was also attacked, again Confederate States Army troops and Arizona militia successfully warded off the Apaches. After the failure of the New Mexico Campaign, Confederate Arizona's days were close to an end. Union forces advanced south from Fort Union and the California Column invaded Arizona from the west. The Californians under Colonel James H. Carleton captured the Confederate Fort Yuma on traditional Arizona's side of the Colorado River. No fight occurred as the rebels cavalry garrison retreated into Mexico before Colonel Carleton's arrival. The Californians then moved on, using the old Butterfield Mail route as their path. Tucson's garrison was then tasked with delaying the Union invasion from the west. The garrison burnt several hay stations, the stations were actually former mail stations, abandoned before the war.

The Californians and rebels, under Second Lieutenant Jack W. Swilling, fought the small Battle of Stanwix Station. Gradually Union pickets made there way to the Pima Villages, a force of eight Union troops were captured there by the rebels without conflict. Once Carleton's main body reached the Pima Villages, they advanced on Tucson. Confederate pickets were waiting for the Union advance at Picacho Peak, their mission was to wait for the Califoria Column and upon sighting, return to Tucson to alert Captain Sherod Hunter and his men. An advance Union cavalry patrol discovered the rebel camp at Picacho Peak and attacked. The Battle of Picacho peak was fought and the Union cavalry retreated, back to their main body. At this time, Tucson was at the verge of falling, no Confederate reinforcements had arrived in Tucson. Sherod Hunter, with only a company and some Tucson militia were facing a Union army of over 2,000. Victory was not possible so most of the garrison withdrew just before the Capture of Tucson. A squad of the rebels were ordered to remain behind, under command of a Lieutenant. These men narrowly escaped the Union advance on the city. The lieutenant later reported that the Californians surrounded Tucson and then launched a full attack with infantry and cavalry, fulling expecting to fight a battle. The Union troops entered the town as the column's band played Yankee Doodle. The rebels almost put up a fight but the lieutenant was persuaded not to by an unknown Tucson women. Tucson fell so the Union advanced further south along the former mail route. In May, a foraging party of Sherod Hunter's company fought two engagements with Apaches in the Dragoon Mountains of traditional Arizona. The Union forces made it to Mowry, Arizona and arrested the former United States Army Lieutenant Sylvester Mowry at his mining camp.

The former lieutenant and Arizona Confederate sympathizer was charged with selling lead to rebels for use of ammunition. He was sent west and jailed in Yuma Territorial Prison from July 2, 1862 to November 9. He was released after trip to Yuma's courthouse. In his defence he talked about the basic American principles of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, after the judge heard this he was released. Many Arizonans at the time felt the same as Lieutenant Mowry. They felt that eastern New Mexico Territory was a place of great American progress on the frontier while the southwestern area, known as Arizona, was a war zone, unsuitable for life without contact with the east and protection against Apaches. Such was truly the case, Lieutenant Mowry's mine was destroyed by Apaches sometime after his arrest. The Californians advanced further, they occupied southern Arizona's forts and left garrisons behind, including one at Tucson. Once in Apache Pass, some of Carleton's men were ambushed by Apaches who were led by Cochise, Mangas Coloradas and Geronimo. They fought the Battle of Apache Pass in mid June 1862 and won. Fort Bowie was established as result, to do what Arizonans wanted all along, protect settlers against hostile native Americans and to protect the nearby Butterfield Overland Mail station. Soon after the battle in Apache Pass, Mesilla fell without bloodshed and Confederate Arizona was at an end. The Union created their own Arizona Territory in 1863, with Tucson as the capital but excluded Mesilla and it's surroundings. This meant Arizona no longer bordered Texas and the Arizonans of Mesilla, Pinos Altos and other towns were forced to remain New Mexican citizens.

References

  • Historical Atlas of Arizona, second edition, Henry P. Walker and Don Bufkin. U. of OK Press, Norman, Oklahoma 1979 & 1986

See also