
Fort Craig in the 1880's
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Narrative
from the Albuquerque Journal, 08/30/98. Written by James Abarr
From a sandy terrace above
the west bank of the Rio Grande, about 35 miles south of Socorro,
the scrub desert stretches out for miles to the distant mountain
ranges.
It's a lonely and desolate place baked by a hot sun in summer
and chilled by snow-laden storms in winter. It's a land of dry,
stunted grass, creosote and mesquite that inspired an Army officer
in 1867 to call it of "no earthly value."
Nonetheless, the Army selected this harsh land as the site of
Fort Craig, which more than 140 years ago became a strategic link
in the military defensive system of frontier New Mexico.
For 31 years, from 1854 to 1885, the fort protected settlers and
travelers in the lower Rio Grande Valley from raiding bands of
Apaches, Comanches and Navajos.
During the Civil War, Fort Craig presented a formidable barrier
to a Confederate brigade from Texas that sought to add New Mexico
to the Southern sphere. A few miles north of the post, the issue
was contested in early 1862 in the famous Battle of Valverde.
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The Texans prevailed in the battle, routing the
forces from Fort Craig, but it was merely a temporary success.
Today, only a few scattered adobe and rock walls
of the fort's buildings, surrounded in part by remains of earthen fortifications,
remain to mark where a stirring segment of New Mexico's heritage unfolded.
In
1851, the Army committed two blunders when it built Fort Conrad along
the Rio Grande, eight miles north of the later Fort Craig.
Not only was Fort Conrad mistakenly built on private land, but it also
was near a low, marshy area that proved to be unhealthy. Repeated outbreaks
of malaria plagued the garrison, often leaving many soldiers unfit for
duty.
As a result, Fort Conrad's life was short. It was soon abandoned, and
on April 1, 1854, Capt. Daniel Chandler led two companies of the 3rd Infantry
Regiment down river to the new post of Fort Craig. It had been under construction
for several months on 40 acres leased from the Armendariz land grant.
Named for Capt. Louis T. Craig, who had served in New Mexico and who later
was killed by deserters in California, the new post was spacious by frontier
standards.
Extending 1,050 feet east to west, and 600 feet north to south, Fort Craig
consisted of 22 buildings of adobe and rock construction around four sides
of a large parade ground. Major structures included the commanding officer's
quarters, enlisted barracks, officer's quarters, warehouses, commissary,
ordnance sheds, stables, hospital and sutler's store.
An adobe wall enclosed the post, and a sally port, or gate, in the west
wall provided the only entrance. Surrounding the fort outside the wall
was a defensive ditch, a feature unique in Southwestern frontier military
posts. Craig was designed for two companies, about 120 men, but it often
was garrisoned by four.
In its formative years, Fort Craig's mission was to defend against bands
of Indian raiders that plagued southern New Mexico throughout the middle
decades of the 19th century. Although the soldiers took part in major
campaigns against the Mimbres Apaches in 1856 and 1858, life at the post
was largely a never-ending round of patrols, often-futile pursuit of small
bands of raiders and an infrequent and minor skirmish.
Boredom was a bigger threat than the Apaches. A daily diet of guard mount,
infantry and cavalry drill, inspections, cleaning of weapons, stable call
and other routine chores weighed heavily on the garrison.
In
a letter to his sister in Illinois, Pvt. Andrew Ryan, who was stationed
at Fort Craig for more than a year, lamented:
"I never was in a place in my life that was so void of any news.
Month in and month out, it's the same monotonous routine from morning
to night. I am horribly sick of this place. I would rather be on the march
than lay around this garrison doing nothing."
In April 1861, the outbreak of the Civil War in
the East portended a more lively existence for the isolated post in far-away
New Mexico.
A month after the start of hostilities, Henry Hopkins Sibley, a major
of cavalry stationed at Fort Union, near Las Vegas, resigned his federal
commission to follow his native state of Louisiana into the Confederate
ranks.
Sibley traveled to Richmond, Va., where he won the support of President
Jefferson Davis for an ambitious plan to conquer New Mexico Territory
(which in 1861 included Arizona), Colorado and California. With a commission
as brigadier general in the Confederate Army, Sibley set up headquarters
in San Antonio, Texas, to recruit and train three regiments of cavalry—
about 3,500 men. By January 1862, they were ready, and Sibley's Brigade
marched on New Mexico.
Well aware of Confederate intentions, the N.M. Territorial Legislature
in Santa Fe passed the War Powers Act on Jan. 25, 1862, "to repulse
and drive from our soil the now invading army."
Gov. Henry Connally was authorized to call up the Territorial militia,
which was ordered to reinforce Fort Craig, where 1,200 federal troops
under Col. Edward R.S. Canby had been concentrated to await the Confederates
behind new earthern fortifications bolstered by cannons.
When the militia forces, which included Col. Christopher "Kit"
Carson's 1st New Mexico Cavalry, arrived, Canby had nearly 4,000 men.
In fact, the fort was so crowded that many of the soldiers were forced
to pitch tents outside the walls.
Writing to Secretary of State William Seward in Washington from Fort Craig
on Feb. 5, 1862, Connally was optimistic:
"I have no fears of the results here. We will conquer the Texan forces.
If not in the first battle, it will be done in the second or subsequent
battle. We will overcome them. The spirit of our people is high... ."
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Pushing north from El Paso,
where he had temporarily headquartered, Sibley led his troops up
the Rio Grande Valley in the teeth of a punishing winter storm.
As one Southern soldier reported: "The sleet was enough to
peel the skin off your face."
By Feb. 16, Sibley's Brigade was in sight of Fort Craig. The Texans
went into camp about five miles below the post while Sibley and
his officers assessed the strength of the federal bastion.
Four days later, the Confederate commander
decided he could not afford the casualties that a frontal assault
on the powerful fort would bring. He ordered his brigade to cross
to the east side of the Rio Grande in a bid to bypass the post and
draw the Union forces out.
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As Col. Canby stood on the porch of his quarters at Fort Craig on
the morning of Feb. 21 and watched the long gray line of Confederate
troops moving up the river on the opposite shore, he took Sibley's
bait and ordered the bulk of his forces out of the post to intercept
the Rebels. Three companies were left behind to protect the fort.
About
two miles north, near the base of the long volcanic escarpment of Mesa
de la Contadera, also known as Black Mesa, the federals forded the river
and attacked. The result was the Battle of Valverde, named for the small
river valley in which it was fought.
For two days the Union and Confederate forces waged a furious fight in
which the two armies maneuvered, charged and counter-charged before the
federals were defeated and fled to cover behind the walls of Fort Craig.
Union forces suffered a reported 263 dead, wounded and missing, while
the Texans listed total casualties of 187 men.
Although Fort Craig itself was untouched and most of its garrison survived,
Valverde was a tactical victory for Sibley, who now was free to strike
north toward Albuquerque and Santa Fe. In early March, his brigade captured
both towns. In the final analysis, however, Valverde would prove to be
a strategic error for the Texans, and Sibley would reap bitter fruit for
leaving an unconquered Fort Craig in his rear.
In assessing Canby's failure to stop the invaders at Valverde, a Union
staff officer, Capt. Gordon Chapin, in a report to Maj. Gen. H.W. Hallack,
Army chief of staff in Washington, blamed the instability of the militia
forces. Some had turned and swiftly fled from the battlefield in the face
of the Confederate attacks.
At the same time, Chapin had high praise for Canby:
"Col. Canby did everything that man could do ... to save the day.
He beseeched and begged, ordered and imperatively commanded ... and a
deaf ear met his supplications and commands."
Theo Noel, a Confederate cavalryman, was jubilant: "We carried everything
before us, routing the enemy. We drove them to the river, where they took
to the water on short notice, more like a herd of frightened mustangs
than men."
A notable exception was 25-year-old Capt. Alexander McRae, a West Pointer
and native of North Carolina who had remained loyal to the Union and been
ostracized by his family for his stand. McRae commanded a Union artillery
battery at Valverde and died at his guns when the Confederates overran
his position. An account of the battle published in the St. Louis Republican
on March 23, 1862, cited McRae's bravery:
"With his artillerymen cut down, his support
either killed, wounded or flying from the field, Capt. McRae sat down
calmly on one of his guns, and with revolver in hand, refusing to flee
or desert his post, he fought to the last."
McRae, for whom a later-day New Mexico Army post would be named, was buried
in the Fort Craig cemetery. In 1867, his body was removed and enshrined
at his alma mater, West Point.
With his triumph at Valverde and the capture of
Albuquerque and Santa Fe, Sibley pushed on toward Fort Union, the last
federal strong point blocking the way to his primary objective— the gold
and silver mines of Colorado.
Unlike their brother soldiers at Craig, however, the 700 federal troops
at Fort Union, reinforced by 900 Colorado volunteers, didn't wait for
Sibley to come to them. They marched to meet the Confederates in the field.
In late March 1862, they turned back the Texans in a three-day battle
at Glorieta Pass, 20 miles southeast of Santa Fe. In the course of the
fight, the entire Confederate supply train was destroyed in a skillful
flanking attack by Union cavalry. This placed the Texans in an impossible
position.
Defeated, short of food, ammunition and other
supplies and plagued by a hostile civilian population, Sibley's Brigade
embarked on a long and dreary retreat down the Rio Grande Valley. Along
the way, the once-confident Confederates were hounded by pursuing Union
troops, who engaged the Rebels in a running skirmish at Peralta, south
of Albuquerque.
When the fleeing Texans neared the vicinity of Fort Craig, Sibley paid
the price of leaving the post intact. His soldiers, instead of following
the fastest way home down the valley, were forced to detour through the
mountains, 25 miles to the west, to avoid the fort.
As the weary Rebel army struggled through forested canyons and up timbered
slopes, it nearly disintegrated. Discarded weapons, equipment and wagons
marked the route of the retreating column, which stretched out for 50
miles.
Morale and discipline vanished as the Southerners trudged through the
wilderness with little food or water. The fight had gone out of them.
They had suffered the loss of about 1,000 men from all causes during their
three-month campaign in New Mexico, and the only goal of the survivors
was to reach the safety of Texas.
As one soldier confided in his diary: "Now, it's every man for himself."
In the aftermath of Sibley's defeat, the soldiers
of Fort Craig returned to campaigns against the Navajos and Mescalero
Apaches. By 1868, both of these tribes had made permanent peace and Indian
troubles shifted to southwest New Mexico and Arizona.
For Fort Craig, it was the beginning of the end.
Garrison duty, routine patrol and boredom again became the way of life
at what cavalry Capt. John Bourke in 1869 described as "a lonesome
sort of a hole."
By 1879, the post had outlived its usefulness and was ordered abandoned.
However, the troops had scarcely pulled out when the fort was reactivated
to cope with an uprising of Victorio's Warm Springs Apaches. A year later,
Victorio was dead, killed by Mexican troops in the mountains of Chihuahua,
but Craig would hang on for another five years as a supply point and troop-staging
area.
It was not until July 1885 that the Army pulled out for good. When the
last contingent, a caretaker force of a lieutenant and seven enlisted
men, marched away, a post which had served for three decades was left
to melt back into the desert from which it came.
Through the years, a number of proposals to preserve Fort Craig were made,
but they came to naught. Finally, in 1981, the site came under the control
of the federal Bureau of Land Management, whose archaeologists moved in
to arrest a century of neglect and decay.
Today, Fort Craig is a National Historic Site. Trails lead visitors through
the scattered and heavily eroded ruins atop the desert bluff that looks
down on the green ribbon of the Rio Grande, a mile to the east. Most prominent
are walls of the commanding officer's quarters, the guard house and several
warehouses, which an inspecting officer in 1867 described as "the
best built I have seen in the district."
Above the spacious parade ground, now grown heavy with desert plants,
the American flag once again flies from a high staff. On the south side
of the post, the earthen fortifications built to repulse Sibley's army
are still visible.
Despite well-managed restoration efforts, Fort Craig is a mere shell of
what it once was. The desert landscape and the surrounding moutains have
changed little, but the fort has succumbed to the passing years.
As Capt. Charles King, a frontier officer, once put it: "It's all
a memory now, but what a memory to cherish!"
Caretakers
at the site have reported seeing a figure in Civil war dress lurking around
their trailer. Voices are often heard coming from the ruins and believing
that someone is in the fort, the caretakers investigate to discover that
no one is there.
The
caretakers at the fort rotate from site to site and not all of the caretakers
who have stayed at the fort have had experiences.
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Time
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Description
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5:00 |
Recon team arrives on site |
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5:30
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Initial walk through of fort. Recon photos
show orb activity only near the Commander's quarters. some activity
is also detected in one of the fort's commissaries. |
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6:00 |
Base camp is established in the heated men's
restroom in the fort's parking area. Plan of attack is developed. |
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6:30 |
Hitman sets up IR video camera is set up
at the Commander's quarters with the Natural EM meter on sum mode.
Rest of team searches the area around hospital row. Hitman spots
a ground light that looks similar to a flashlight beam while joining
up with the group at hospital row. Footsteps are heard on the trail
while in route. |
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6:45 |
Team does not capture any activity on film
or digital. No EM readings any where near hospital row. Bob and
Buck attempt to record EVP at the old and new hospital locations.
The Team then returns to the Commander's quarters to retrieve IR
video camera. |
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7:00 |
Team retrieves the IR video camera. The
batteries on both the camera and Natural EM detector are drained,
despite being fully charged before the investigation. Lori attempts
EVP recording while photos are taken that show possible orb phenomena.
Fluctuating EM fields are detected near the walls of the ruins of
the Commander's quarters. Spectral phenomena is also captured on
digital at this time. The team then moves back to base to await
the arrival of other investigators. |
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7:15 |
Team is at base when a floating ball of
light is seen streaking across the western end of the fort from
North to South. The visual phenomena is witnessed by 3 of the Team
members. Bob checks with the on-site caretakers to ensure that no
other people are on the site. The temperature around the parking
area, near the cars, fluctuates wildly with variances of up to 20
degrees. |
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7:35 |
Jerry and John arrive. Buck and Lori remain
at base while the rest of the team heads back to the Commander's
quarters and hospital row. Possible orb phenomena is captured along
the way to the Commander's quarters. |
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7:50 |
As the team nears the southern perimeter
of the fort's magazine, black powder is clearly smelled by all investigators. |
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8:05 |
Several series of "gun shots" are heard
in the distance, coming from the southeastern edge of the fort.
A faint glow is also seen in that direction. The team proceeds towards
the glow. |
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8:20 |
The glow seems to fade as the team approaches
closer. Several more series of "gun shots" are heard . They seem
to originate from the other side of the Rio grande, where a skirmish
occurred between the Union and the Confederacy.
Several shots show possible orb phenomena.
The team moves back to look at hospital row. |
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8:35 |
The Team photographs the area around hospital
row. A few possible targets are captured on film and digital. Once
again the smell of black powder is detected, along with the smell
of horse manure. |
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8:45 |
Team moves back towards the guard house.
No phenomena is reported. |
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8:50 |
Team moves back to base. |
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9:00 |
Investigation is terminated and investigators
depart the area. |
Photographs
Click on thumbnail to view the larger image
Arrival at the fort |
Commanders Quarters |
Dusk descends |
Buck and orb |
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Darkness arrives |
Activity at the fort
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Commander's quarters
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Buck |
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Lori and Bob |
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Bob at CMDR's quarters
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EVP session |
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Daniel and Lori |
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Daniel and Bob |
Daniel searching for activity
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Orb among the group |
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CMDR's quarters |
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Ruins |
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Electronic Voice Phenomena
(EVP)
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Investigator
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Question
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Answer
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EVP
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| Buck McCombs |
What injury do you suffer from?
Location: Old Hospital |
Sounds like "I'm deaf"
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| Buck McCombs |
How long have you been staying
here at the hospital?
Location:
Old Hospital |
November ?
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| Lori Anderson |
What is your name? Location:
Commander's Quarters |
Sounds like "Minnie"
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| Lori Anderson |
Why are you here? Location:
Commander's Quarters |
"I'm dead"
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| Lori Anderson |
Are you happy? Location:
Commander's Quarters |
Sounds lke "Muchos Gracias"
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| Lori Anderson |
Show me who you are. Location:
Commander's Quarters
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Badly garbled and hard
to make out
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| Lori Anderson |
Come out and play with us. Location:
Commander's Quarters |
Also hard to make out
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| Lori Anderson |
What are you doing here? Location:
Commander's Quarters |
Sounds like "What do we want"
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1.)
One of the research objectives was to determine if the activity at the
fort was repeating or cyclical. Our initial determination is that it is
repeating.
2.)
The "Gun shots" are still a mystery. Bob believes that several of the
noises sounded like musket fire while others resembled cannon fire. The
exact source is still undetermined.
3.)
The "black powder" smell is fascinating. The wind was blowing from north
to south, so even if the source was from the "gun shots", which were coming
from the southeast, we should not have been able to detect it due to the
fact that we were upwind.
4.)
Due to daytime observations, it was determined that the "glowing ball
of light" covered more than 800 yards in about 3 seconds. The ball glided
smoothly, but the actual terrain is quite rough and full of trenches and
dips. this quite possibly rules out a human source as an explanation for
the oddity.
5.)
The EM fields detected near the walls of the Commander's quarters are
unique and are not man made in origin. The nearest possible man made power
source was 1,500 feet to the west, at the restrooms. The EM field was
not detected on previous investigations or during the recon that night.
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