When most people think of the Civil War, they think of the
huge battles that raged from Gettysburg to Atlanta. Few even realize that the
Blue and the Gray also clashed in the arid Southwest, but they did because of a couple of Confederate schemers. Had their dreams come to pass, the outcome might have
changed the war entirely.
One of those schemers was Confederate President Jefferson Davis,
whose fascination with the Southwest probably began during his tenure there as
a lieutenant during the Mexican-American War. Like many men of the period, Davis
believed in Manifest Destiny: that the future lay in the west.
While he was President Franklin Pierce’s Secretary of War,
Davis advocated for the Gadsden Purchase, in which the United States bought
nearly 30,000 square miles of barren sand in what is now southern Arizona and
southwestern New Mexico from Mexico. Davis pushed for this $10 purchase so the
federal government could build a transcontinental railroad that would link the
southern states to the deep-water ports of California. That railroad never
materialized, in part because of the rancor the northern industrial states felt
for the south after the Civil War.
Davis’ interest in the Southwest also prompted him to lobby
Congress to purchase camels for a Camel Corps during his tenure as Secretary of
War. The camels, purchased in the Middle East and brought by ship to Texas,
worked as military pack animals because horses and mules had difficulty in the rocky
and dry western territories that the U.S. acquired. Although they could carry a
huge amount of baggage and travel for days without food or water, the fact that
they spooked horses and mules and most soldiers disliked them doomed the Camel
Corps.
Soon after he was chosen by acclamation to be the president
of the Confederacy, Davis received a visit from another schemer, Henry Hopkins
Sibley. A fellow graduate of West Point who had also served in the
Mexican-American War, Sibley left his post fighting Navajos in New Mexico to
travel to Richmond and talk Davis into supporting an invasion of New Mexico.
Although there is no record of their meeting, apparently Davis needed little
persuasion. Sibley walked in a Major and walked out a Brigadier General.
Sibley’s plan was to go to San Antonio, where he would organize
a brigade of three regiments of Texans. Once he’d taken New Mexico, he’d
proceed north and capture the gold mines of Colorado, then travel west and
procure California’s gold and ports for the Confederacy. Had Sibley’s plan
succeeded, the South might have had the economic means to better support its
army. Further, Davis was convinced that winning the west would convince England
and France to support the Southern cause.
Jennifer Bohnhoff teaches New Mexico History to 7th graders in Albuquerque. Her next book, Valverde, is a middle grade historical
novel that follows two protagonists. One is a packer who travels with Sibley’s army into New Mexico. The other is a New Mexican boy determined to see all Americans, both Northerners and Southerners, out of his land.
Valverde will be
available toward the end of this month. You can learn more about it and Jennifer's other books here.
I will definitely buy your book! My great-great grandfather fought in this battle. I have his Civil War records to prove it. I'd love to sit in on your classes.
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