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Battle of Glorieta Pass

The Battle of Glorieta Pass (March 26–28, 1862) in the northern New Mexico Territory, was the decisive battle of the New Mexico campaign during the American Civil War. Dubbed the "Gettysburg of the West" by some authors (a term described as one that "serves the novelist better than the historian"),[8] it was intended as the decisive blow by Confederate forces to break the Union possession of the West along the base of the Rocky Mountains. It was fought at Glorieta Pass in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in what is now New Mexico, and was an important event in the history of the New Mexico Territory in the American Civil War.

Battle of Glorieta Pass
Part of the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the
American Civil War

The Battle of Glorieta Pass, Roy Andersen
DateMarch 27–28, 1862
Location
Result Tactical draw, strategic Union victory[1][2]
Belligerents
United States Confederate States
Commanders and leaders
John P. Slough
John M. Chivington
Charles L. Pyron
William R. Scurry
Henry H. Sibley
Units involved
2nd New Mexico Volunteer Infantry
1st Colorado Infantry
2nd Colorado Infantry
1st Cavalry Regiment
2nd Cavalry Regiment
3rd Cavalry Regiment
2nd Texas Mounted Rifles
4th Texas Mounted Rifles
5th Texas Mounted Rifles
7th Texas Mounted Rifles
Strength
1,300 1,100
Casualties and losses
Apache Canyon
5 killed
14 wounded
3 missing[3]
Glorieta Pass
46 killed[4]
64 wounded
15 captured
Total:
51 killed
78 wounded
15 captured
3 missing
147 total
[5]
Apache Canyon
4 killed
20 wounded
75 captured[6]
Glorieta Pass
46 killed[7]
60 wounded
17 captured
Total:
50 killed
80 wounded
92 captured
222 total

There was a skirmish on March 26 between advance elements from each army, with the main battle occurring on March 28. Although the Confederates were able to push the Union force back through the pass, they had to retreat when their supply train was destroyed and most of their horses and mules killed or driven off. Eventually the Confederates had to withdraw entirely from the territory back into Confederate Arizona and then Texas. Glorieta Pass thus represented the climax of the campaign.

New Mexico campaign

The lower portion of the New Mexico Territory had been largely neglected by both the federal government and the territorial government in Santa Fe. As a result, Confederate sympathy was strong, in hopes of receiving better treatment by the new government. Following secession moves by residents,[9]: pp.40–41  Confederate forces seized Mesilla and captured the federal troops there, who made a halfhearted attempt to retreat to Santa Fe. In early 1862 the Confederacy established the Confederate Arizona Territory, which included the southern halves of both modern Arizona and New Mexico. The territorial capital was at Mesilla, some 45 miles (72 km) from El Paso and near today's major city of Las Cruces. The strategic goals were to gain access to the gold and silver mines of California and the Colorado Territory and the seaports in Southern California, and thus evade the Union naval blockade.[10][11]

The commanders of the New Mexico Campaign were Confederate Brig. Gen. Henry Hopkins Sibley and Union Col. Edward Canby. Sibley attempted to capture Fort Craig, completely outmaneuvering Canby at the Battle of Valverde in February and driving him back into his fort, but failed to force Canby's surrender. Sibley then bypassed the fort and advanced north through the Rio Grande Valley, occupying Santa Fe on March 10. Canby remained at Fort Craig, hoping to cut Sibley's logistical support from Texas and awaiting reinforcements before he dared to take the offensive. Sibley made his headquarters at the abandoned Union storehouse at Albuquerque.

In March Sibley sent a Confederate force of 200–300 Texans under the command of Maj. Charles L. Pyron on an advance expedition over the Glorieta Pass, a strategic location on the Santa Fe Trail at the southern tip of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains southeast of Santa Fe.[12] Control of the pass would allow the Confederates to advance onto the High Plains and make an assault on Fort Union, a Union stronghold on the route northward over Raton Pass. Sibley sent six companies under the command of Col. Tom Green to block the eastern end of Glorieta Pass, turning any Union defensive position in the Sangre de Cristos.[13]

Opposing forces

Union (North)

Confederate

Battle

 
Battle of Glorieta Pass: actions on March 28
  Confederate
  Union

The Confederates were led by[12] Charles L. Pyron and William Read Scurry. During the battle on March 26, Pyron had his battalion of the 2nd Texas Mounted Rifles,[14] four companies of the 5th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj. John Shropshire and two cannons. Scurry's force included nine companies of the 4th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj. Henry Raguet, five companies of the 7th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj. Powhatan Jordan and three additional cannons.[citation needed]

The Union forces were led by Col. John P. Slough of the 1st Colorado Infantry, with units under the command of Maj. John M. Chivington. In the action on March 26, Chivington had three infantry companies and one mounted company of the 1st Colorado and a detachment of the 1st and 3rd U.S. Cavalry regiments.[15] During the main battle on the 28th, Slough commanded, in person, nine companies of the 1st Colorado, a detachment from the 1st, 2nd and 3rd U.S. Cavalry regiments and two artillery batteries.[16] Chivington commanded five companies of the 5th U.S. Infantry, one company from the 1st Colorado, James Hobart Ford's independent company from the 2nd Colorado and some New Mexico militiamen.[17]

Prior to the battle Union forces performed a forced march from Denver, over Raton Pass, to Fort Union and then to Glorieta Pass, covering the distance of 400 miles (600 km) in 14 days. Combat commenced shortly after their arrival at the battlefield, leaving them little time to recuperate.[18]

Apache Canyon

 
Action at Apache Canyon

Pyron's force of 300 camped at Apache Canyon, at one end of Glorieta Pass, leaving a picket post of 50 men at the summit of the pass. Chivington led 418 soldiers to the pass and, on the morning of March 26, moved out to attack. After noon Chivington's men captured the picket post and found the main force behind them. Chivington advanced on them, but their artillery fire threw him back. He regrouped, split his force to the two sides of the pass, caught the Confederates in a crossfire, and soon forced them to retire. Pyron retired about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) to a narrow section of the pass and formed a defensive line before Chivington's men appeared. The Union forces flanked Pyron's men again and punished them with enfilade fire. Pyron ordered another retreat, but the withdrawal of the artillery caused the Confederates to become disorganized and start fighting in separate clusters of men. Chivington ordered a mounted Colorado company to make a frontal charge against the artillery; this succeeded in capturing several Confederates and scattering the rest. Not knowing if Confederate reinforcements were nearby, Chivington then retired and went into camp at Kozlowski's Ranch to await Slough with the main body. His small victory was a morale boost for Slough's army.[19][20]

No fighting occurred the next day, as reinforcements arrived for both sides. Scurry's troops arrived at 3:00 am on March 27, swelling the Confederate force to about 1,100 men and five cannons; as senior officer present, he took command of the entire Confederate force. Thinking that Slough would attack again and expecting Green to arrive in the Union rear at any time, Scurry chose to remain in place for the day, digging rifle pits.[21] Slough arrived early in the morning of March 28 with about 900 more men, bringing the Union strength to 1,300.[citation needed]

Glorieta Pass

 
Glorieta Pass battlefield. This photograph was taken in 1990 from Sharpshooter's Ridge, just north of Pigeon's Ranch. It was the location of the Union right flank during the last day's battle.

Both Scurry and Slough decided to attack on March 28 and set out early to do so. Expecting the Confederates to remain in Apache Canyon, Slough sent Chivington with two infantry battalions, under Lewis and Wynkoop, out in a circling movement with orders to go hide out at Glorieta Pass and hit the Texans in the flank once Slough's main force had engaged their front.[22] Chivington did as ordered and his men waited above the pass for Slough and the enemy to arrive. However, instead of remaining at Apache Canyon as Slough had expected, Scurry advanced down the canyon more rapidly than Slough had anticipated. Scurry believed the Union force was retreating to Fort Union. He intended to attack them until Green could arrive. One cannon and a small guard was left at Johnson's Ranch, while the rest of the Confederate force—more than 1000 men—marched eastwards along the Santa Fe Trail.[23]

When Slough found the Texans so far forward he launched an attack, hitting them about 11:00 am some 12 mile (800 m) from Pigeon's Ranch. A provisional battalion of four companies from the 1st Colorado, supported by both batteries, was commanded by Lt. Col. Samuel Tappan, who deployed his men across the trail.[24] The Confederates dismounted and formed a line across the canyon, but the terrain caused some companies to become intermingled.[25] Tappan was initially successful and held his ground for a half-hour, but the Confederates' numerical superiority enabled them to outflank Tappan's line by noon. The Union troops were thrown back in confusion but managed to take up position around the adobe ranch buildings.[26] Slough reformed his men several hundred yards closer to Pigeon's Ranch, with the four companies under Tappan and an artillery battery on a hill to the left, the other battery supported by two companies in the center across the road and the remaining two companies on the ridge to the right.[27]

Scurry then launched a three-pronged attack. Pyron and Raguet were ordered to attack the Union right, Shropshire the Union left, with the remainder led by Scurry against the Union center, and the artillery firing in support.[28] The attack on the Union left was beaten back, with Shropshire killed. The attack on the center stalled, while the artillery was forced to withdraw after one cannon was disabled and a limber destroyed. The attack itself then stalled, with the Confederates fighting by squads "with a desperation unequaled by any engagement of the war."[29] At around 3:00 pm the Confederates outflanked the Union right, but Raguet was mortally wounded. From the ridge (thereafter known as "Sharpshooters Ridge"), Confederate riflemen started picking off the artillerymen and infantry below them. Scurry again pressed the Union center, and the Union position became untenable. Slough reluctantly ordered a retreat, and Tappan formed the companies on the left into a rear guard. Slough reformed his line a half-mile east of Pigeon's Ranch, where skirmishing continued until dusk. The Union men finally retreated to Kozlowski's Ranch, leaving the Confederates in possession of the battlefield.[citation needed]

Johnson's Ranch

With the sounds of battle echoing in the distance, Lt. Col. Manuel Chaves of the 2nd New Mexico Infantry, commander of the New Mexican volunteers, informed Maj. Chivington that his scouts had located the Confederate supply train at Johnson's Ranch. After watching the supply train for an hour, Chivington's force descended the slope and attacked, driving off or capturing the small guard with few casualties on either side.[30] They then looted and burned 80 supply wagons and spiked the cannon, either killing or driving off about 500 horses and mules before returning with their prisoners to Kozlowski's Ranch.[31] With no supplies to sustain his advance, Scurry had to retreat to Santa Fe, the first step on the long road back to San Antonio, Texas. Thanks to Chaves' assistance, the Federals had turned a defeat into victory and stopped further Confederate advances in the Southwest. Glorieta Pass was the turning point of the war in the New Mexico Territory.[citation needed]

Parts of the Glorieta Pass Battlefield are preserved in Pecos National Historical Park and are the site of an annual NPS Civil War Encampment event commemorating the battle.[citation needed]

Controversy

Many New Mexicans disputed the view that Chivington was the hero of Johnson's Ranch. Many Santa Fe residents credited James L. Collins, a Bureau of Indian Affairs official, who had suggested the roundabout attack on the supply train.[9]: p.60  Chivington had actually been sent out in hopes of making a flank attack, and the discovery of the supply train was a lucky accident. He was also accused of almost letting the opportunity slip by him. On January 23, 1864, the New Mexico Territorial Legislature adopted a resolution that did not mention Chivington and instead asked President Lincoln to promote William H. Lewis and Asa B. Carey, both regular army officers, for "distinguished service" in the battle. On March 8 the Rio Abajo Press of Albuquerque complained about "Col. Chivington's strutting about in plumage stolen from Captain William H. Lewis" (it did not mention Carey). According to the newspaper editor, "Some one of the party" suggested the attack, which Chivington only agreed to after "two hours persuasion." Furthermore, Lewis had led the attack, while Chivington was "viewing the scene from afar".[32]

A more serious charge made against Chivington was that if he had hurried to reinforce Slough as soon as he heard gunfire coming from Pigeon's Ranch, his 400 men might have been enough to win the battle for the Federals, especially if he had attacked Scurry's flank as he had been ordered.[33]

Aftermath

 
Battle of Glorieta Pass marker at the Cuerno Verde Rest Area, Colorado

In the end, the Battle of Glorieta Pass was consequential. First, despite the fact that the Confederates took the field, they were forced to retreat to Santa Fe due to the destruction of their supplies and eventually abandon New Mexico Territory.[34] Second, the battle at Glorieta foiled Sibley's plan to obtain his key objective: the capture of the major federal base at Fort Union. That would have broken federal resistance in New Mexico and compelled Union forces to retire north of Raton Pass and back into Colorado Territory.[35]

In any case, the dream of a Confederate stronghold in the Southwest was impractical; New Mexico could not provide enough sustenance for any prolonged Confederate occupation.[36] Furthermore, the approach of the Federal "California Column" eastward through the New Mexico Territory during the summer of 1862 would have seriously jeopardized Confederate control of the region.[citation needed]

Battlefield preservation

 
The battlefield in 2012

In 1987 two Confederate burial sites were discovered at Pigeon's Ranch. One was the solitary grave of Maj. John Samuel Shropshire, the other was a mass grave of 30 Confederates. Only Shropshire and five others could be positively identified.[37] On August 5, 1990, Maj. Shropshire's remains were reburied next to his parents in his family's cemetery in Bourbon County, Kentucky. The remaining 30 Confederates were reinterred in the Santa Fe National Cemetery.[38]

In 1993 the congressionally appointed Civil War Sites Advisory Commission issued its "Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields."[39] The commission was tasked with identifying the nation's historically significant Civil War sites, determining their importance and providing recommendations for their preservation to Congress.[citation needed]

Of the roughly 10,500 actions of the U.S. Civil War,[40] 384 (3.7%) were identified by the commission as principal battles and rated according to their significance and threat of loss. The Battle of Glorieta Pass received the highest rating from the commission, priority I (class A). Class A battlefields are principal strategic operations having a direct impact on the course of the war. With this rating the commission placed Glorieta Pass on the same level as battles such as Gettysburg and Antietam. The priority I rating identified Glorieta Pass as being not only one of the most important, but also one of the most highly endangered battlefields in the country. Only ten other battlefields received the priority I (class A) rating. The commission recommended that Congress focus its preservation efforts on priority I, nationally significant battlefields.[41]

Since 1993 portions of the Glorieta Pass Battlefield have become a unit of the National Park Service. The Glorieta Pass unit (Pigeon's Ranch) comprises roughly 20% of the total battlefield. The remaining 80% is in private ownership. Glorieta Pass Battlefield is managed by Pecos National Historical Park and supported by the Glorieta Battlefield Coalition, a non-profit citizens' organization.[42] The Civil War Trust (a division of the American Battlefield Trust) and its partners have acquired and preserved 19 acres (7.7 ha) of the Glorieta Pass battlefield.[43]

The Glorieta Pass Battlefield is also designated as a National Historic Landmark.[44]

Depictions in popular culture

The 1966 Sergio Leone film The Good, the Bad and the Ugly refers obliquely to the battle, setting one scene during the post-battle retreat of Sibley's men.[citation needed]

The battle is described in the 1999 historical novel Glorieta Pass by P. G. Nagle.[45]

The events at Johnson's Ranch are depicted in Elmer Kelton's 2009 novel, Many A River, with some changes to fit them to his plot.[citation needed]

The journey of Scurry's Confederate and Slough's Union forces to the battleground as well as a detailed narrative of the fight are described in Tom Bensing's 2012 novel Silas Soule, A Short, Eventful Life of Moral Courage.[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ ABPP: Glorieta Pass
  2. ^ Civil War Trust: Battle of Glorieta Pass
  3. ^ Josephy, p. 81
  4. ^ Colorado Volunteers in the Civil War: The New Mexico Campaign in 1862 – William Clarke Whitford. Internet Archive. p. 112. Retrieved March 28, 2015. Major Buckholts killed 1862.
  5. ^ Frazier, p. 225
  6. ^ Frazier, p. 210
  7. ^ . Nm-scv.org. Archived from the original on March 28, 2015. Retrieved March 28, 2015.
  8. ^ Edrington, p. 4
  9. ^ a b William Wallace Mills,W.W. Mills (1901) Forty Years at El Paso (1858–1898) "Of the thirty-five hundred Texans who entered New Mexico only about eleven hundred returned to Texas. The others were dead, wounded, sick, prisoners or deserters. Many were buried on the west side of El Paso street, near where the Opera House now stands."
  10. ^ Frazier, p. 75
  11. ^ Whitlock, pp. 60–61
  12. ^ a b "GLORIETA, BATTLE OF | The Handbook of Texas Online| Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)". Tshaonline.org. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  13. ^ Frazier, p. 199
  14. ^ This battalion also included companies of Arizona Confederates.
  15. ^ Whitlock, p. 171
  16. ^ Frazier, pp. 205, 215
  17. ^ Whitlock, p. 188
  18. ^ Hudnall, p. 291
  19. ^ Josephy, pp. 79–81.
  20. ^ Frazier, pp. 208–210
  21. ^ Frazier, pp. 211–212.
  22. ^ Frazier, p. 214
  23. ^ Frazier, pp. 213–214.
  24. ^ Whitlock, p. 190
  25. ^ Frazier, p. 216
  26. ^ [1][dead link]
  27. ^ Whitlock, p. 200.
  28. ^ Frazier, p. 219.
  29. ^ Whitlock, p. 201
  30. ^ Three Confederates were killed and several wounded, including the regimental chaplain; two officers and 15 men were captured. The only Union casualty was one man injured by flying debris from the exploding ammunition wagons. Whitlock pp. 206–207.
  31. ^ Frazier, p. 226
  32. ^ Keleher, pp. 180–182.
  33. ^ One reason Chivington failed to come was due to an acoustic shadow that prevented him from hearing sounds from the battle. Whitlock, p. 205.
  34. ^ Frazier, p. 230.
  35. ^ Josephy, pp. 91–92.
  36. ^ Whitlock, pp. 240–241
  37. ^ [2] October 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Los Angeles Times
  39. ^ [3] March 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ Dyer.[page needed]
  41. ^ Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields. Washington, DC: The National Park Service, 1993.
  42. ^ 英会話を学ぶには海外留学が一番!留学生として勉強しよう. . Glorietapass.org. Archived from the original on May 18, 2008. Retrieved March 28, 2015.
  43. ^ [4] American Battlefield Trust "Saved Land" webpage. Accessed May 23, 2018.
  44. ^ "Pecos National Historical Park". nps.gov.
  45. ^ Nagle, P. G. (2011). Glorieta Pass. Cedar Crest, New Mexico: Book View Cafe. ISBN 978-1611380491.

References

  • National Park Service battle description
  • from the University of San Diego history department
  • Dyer, Frederick (1908). A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. Des Moines, Iowa: The Dyer Publishing Company.
  • Edrington, Thomas (1998). The Battle of Glorieta Pass: A Gettysburg in the West, March 26–28, 1862. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-1896-7.
  • Frazier, Donald S. (1995). Blood and Treasure: The Confederate Empire in the Southwest. College Station, Texas: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-639-6.
  • Hudnall, Ken (2005). Spirits of the Border IV: The History and Mystery of New Mexico. El Paso, Texas: Omega Press. ISBN 0-9754923-4-9.
  • Josephy, Alvin M. Jr. (1991). The Civil War in the American West. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-56482-0.
  • Keleher, William A. (1952). Turmoil in New Mexico, 1846–1868. Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-0631-4.
  • Nagle, P. G. (1999). Glorieta Pass [a novel]. New York: Forge. ISBN 0-312-86548-1.
  • Whitlock, Flint (2006). Distant Bugles, Distant Drums: The Union Response to the Confederate Invasion of New Mexico. Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 978-0-87081-835-6.
  • Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields. Washington, DC: The National Park Service. 1993.

Further reading

  • Alberts, Don. The Battle of Glorieta: Union Victory in the West. Texas A&M University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-89096-825-X.
  • Scott, Robert. "Glory, Glory, Glorieta: The Gettysburg of the West." Johnson Books, 1992. ISBN 1-55566-098-3.
  • Simmons, Mark. "The Battle at Valley's Ranch: First account of the Gettysburg of the West, 1862." San Pedro Press, 1987. ISBN 0-943369-00-2.
  • Whitford, William. "Battle of Glorieta Pass: The Colorado Volunteers in the Civil War." Rio Grande Press, 1990. ISBN 0-87380-171-7.

External links

  • The Battle of Glorieta Pass: A Shattered Dream, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
  • Glorieta and Raton Passes: Gateways to the Southwest, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
  • On this date in Civil War history – Battle of Glorieta Pass[dead link]

Coordinates: 35°34′20″N 105°45′14″W / 35.57222°N 105.75389°W / 35.57222; -105.75389

battle, glorieta, pass, march, 1862, northern, mexico, territory, decisive, battle, mexico, campaign, during, american, civil, dubbed, gettysburg, west, some, authors, term, described, that, serves, novelist, better, than, historian, intended, decisive, blow, . The Battle of Glorieta Pass March 26 28 1862 in the northern New Mexico Territory was the decisive battle of the New Mexico campaign during the American Civil War Dubbed the Gettysburg of the West by some authors a term described as one that serves the novelist better than the historian 8 it was intended as the decisive blow by Confederate forces to break the Union possession of the West along the base of the Rocky Mountains It was fought at Glorieta Pass in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in what is now New Mexico and was an important event in the history of the New Mexico Territory in the American Civil War Battle of Glorieta PassPart of the Trans Mississippi Theater of theAmerican Civil WarThe Battle of Glorieta Pass Roy AndersenDateMarch 27 28 1862LocationNew Mexico Territory United StatesResultTactical draw strategic Union victory 1 2 BelligerentsUnited StatesConfederate StatesCommanders and leadersJohn P Slough John M ChivingtonCharles L Pyron William R Scurry Henry H SibleyUnits involved2nd New Mexico Volunteer Infantry1st Colorado Infantry2nd Colorado Infantry1st Cavalry Regiment2nd Cavalry Regiment3rd Cavalry Regiment2nd Texas Mounted Rifles4th Texas Mounted Rifles5th Texas Mounted Rifles7th Texas Mounted RiflesStrength1 3001 100Casualties and lossesApache Canyon5 killed14 wounded3 missing 3 Glorieta Pass46 killed 4 64 wounded15 capturedTotal 51 killed78 wounded15 captured3 missing147 total 5 Apache Canyon4 killed20 wounded75 captured 6 Glorieta Pass46 killed 7 60 wounded17 capturedTotal 50 killed80 wounded92 captured222 total There was a skirmish on March 26 between advance elements from each army with the main battle occurring on March 28 Although the Confederates were able to push the Union force back through the pass they had to retreat when their supply train was destroyed and most of their horses and mules killed or driven off Eventually the Confederates had to withdraw entirely from the territory back into Confederate Arizona and then Texas Glorieta Pass thus represented the climax of the campaign Contents 1 New Mexico campaign 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Union North 2 2 Confederate 3 Battle 3 1 Apache Canyon 3 2 Glorieta Pass 3 2 1 Johnson s Ranch 4 Controversy 5 Aftermath 6 Battlefield preservation 7 Depictions in popular culture 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksNew Mexico campaign EditMain article New Mexico campaign The lower portion of the New Mexico Territory had been largely neglected by both the federal government and the territorial government in Santa Fe As a result Confederate sympathy was strong in hopes of receiving better treatment by the new government Following secession moves by residents 9 pp 40 41 Confederate forces seized Mesilla and captured the federal troops there who made a halfhearted attempt to retreat to Santa Fe In early 1862 the Confederacy established the Confederate Arizona Territory which included the southern halves of both modern Arizona and New Mexico The territorial capital was at Mesilla some 45 miles 72 km from El Paso and near today s major city of Las Cruces The strategic goals were to gain access to the gold and silver mines of California and the Colorado Territory and the seaports in Southern California and thus evade the Union naval blockade 10 11 The commanders of the New Mexico Campaign were Confederate Brig Gen Henry Hopkins Sibley and Union Col Edward Canby Sibley attempted to capture Fort Craig completely outmaneuvering Canby at the Battle of Valverde in February and driving him back into his fort but failed to force Canby s surrender Sibley then bypassed the fort and advanced north through the Rio Grande Valley occupying Santa Fe on March 10 Canby remained at Fort Craig hoping to cut Sibley s logistical support from Texas and awaiting reinforcements before he dared to take the offensive Sibley made his headquarters at the abandoned Union storehouse at Albuquerque In March Sibley sent a Confederate force of 200 300 Texans under the command of Maj Charles L Pyron on an advance expedition over the Glorieta Pass a strategic location on the Santa Fe Trail at the southern tip of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains southeast of Santa Fe 12 Control of the pass would allow the Confederates to advance onto the High Plains and make an assault on Fort Union a Union stronghold on the route northward over Raton Pass Sibley sent six companies under the command of Col Tom Green to block the eastern end of Glorieta Pass turning any Union defensive position in the Sangre de Cristos 13 Opposing forces Edit The template below Empty section is being considered for deletion See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus This section is empty You can help by adding to it March 2021 Union North Edit Further information Union order of battle Confederate Edit Further information Confederate order of battleBattle Edit Battle of Glorieta Pass actions on March 28 Confederate Union The Confederates were led by 12 Charles L Pyron and William Read Scurry During the battle on March 26 Pyron had his battalion of the 2nd Texas Mounted Rifles 14 four companies of the 5th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj John Shropshire and two cannons Scurry s force included nine companies of the 4th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj Henry Raguet five companies of the 7th Texas Mounted Rifles under Maj Powhatan Jordan and three additional cannons citation needed The Union forces were led by Col John P Slough of the 1st Colorado Infantry with units under the command of Maj John M Chivington In the action on March 26 Chivington had three infantry companies and one mounted company of the 1st Colorado and a detachment of the 1st and 3rd U S Cavalry regiments 15 During the main battle on the 28th Slough commanded in person nine companies of the 1st Colorado a detachment from the 1st 2nd and 3rd U S Cavalry regiments and two artillery batteries 16 Chivington commanded five companies of the 5th U S Infantry one company from the 1st Colorado James Hobart Ford s independent company from the 2nd Colorado and some New Mexico militiamen 17 Prior to the battle Union forces performed a forced march from Denver over Raton Pass to Fort Union and then to Glorieta Pass covering the distance of 400 miles 600 km in 14 days Combat commenced shortly after their arrival at the battlefield leaving them little time to recuperate 18 Apache Canyon Edit Action at Apache Canyon Pyron s force of 300 camped at Apache Canyon at one end of Glorieta Pass leaving a picket post of 50 men at the summit of the pass Chivington led 418 soldiers to the pass and on the morning of March 26 moved out to attack After noon Chivington s men captured the picket post and found the main force behind them Chivington advanced on them but their artillery fire threw him back He regrouped split his force to the two sides of the pass caught the Confederates in a crossfire and soon forced them to retire Pyron retired about 1 5 miles 2 4 km to a narrow section of the pass and formed a defensive line before Chivington s men appeared The Union forces flanked Pyron s men again and punished them with enfilade fire Pyron ordered another retreat but the withdrawal of the artillery caused the Confederates to become disorganized and start fighting in separate clusters of men Chivington ordered a mounted Colorado company to make a frontal charge against the artillery this succeeded in capturing several Confederates and scattering the rest Not knowing if Confederate reinforcements were nearby Chivington then retired and went into camp at Kozlowski s Ranch to await Slough with the main body His small victory was a morale boost for Slough s army 19 20 No fighting occurred the next day as reinforcements arrived for both sides Scurry s troops arrived at 3 00 am on March 27 swelling the Confederate force to about 1 100 men and five cannons as senior officer present he took command of the entire Confederate force Thinking that Slough would attack again and expecting Green to arrive in the Union rear at any time Scurry chose to remain in place for the day digging rifle pits 21 Slough arrived early in the morning of March 28 with about 900 more men bringing the Union strength to 1 300 citation needed Glorieta Pass Edit Glorieta Pass battlefield This photograph was taken in 1990 from Sharpshooter s Ridge just north of Pigeon s Ranch It was the location of the Union right flank during the last day s battle Both Scurry and Slough decided to attack on March 28 and set out early to do so Expecting the Confederates to remain in Apache Canyon Slough sent Chivington with two infantry battalions under Lewis and Wynkoop out in a circling movement with orders to go hide out at Glorieta Pass and hit the Texans in the flank once Slough s main force had engaged their front 22 Chivington did as ordered and his men waited above the pass for Slough and the enemy to arrive However instead of remaining at Apache Canyon as Slough had expected Scurry advanced down the canyon more rapidly than Slough had anticipated Scurry believed the Union force was retreating to Fort Union He intended to attack them until Green could arrive One cannon and a small guard was left at Johnson s Ranch while the rest of the Confederate force more than 1000 men marched eastwards along the Santa Fe Trail 23 When Slough found the Texans so far forward he launched an attack hitting them about 11 00 am some 1 2 mile 800 m from Pigeon s Ranch A provisional battalion of four companies from the 1st Colorado supported by both batteries was commanded by Lt Col Samuel Tappan who deployed his men across the trail 24 The Confederates dismounted and formed a line across the canyon but the terrain caused some companies to become intermingled 25 Tappan was initially successful and held his ground for a half hour but the Confederates numerical superiority enabled them to outflank Tappan s line by noon The Union troops were thrown back in confusion but managed to take up position around the adobe ranch buildings 26 Slough reformed his men several hundred yards closer to Pigeon s Ranch with the four companies under Tappan and an artillery battery on a hill to the left the other battery supported by two companies in the center across the road and the remaining two companies on the ridge to the right 27 Scurry then launched a three pronged attack Pyron and Raguet were ordered to attack the Union right Shropshire the Union left with the remainder led by Scurry against the Union center and the artillery firing in support 28 The attack on the Union left was beaten back with Shropshire killed The attack on the center stalled while the artillery was forced to withdraw after one cannon was disabled and a limber destroyed The attack itself then stalled with the Confederates fighting by squads with a desperation unequaled by any engagement of the war 29 At around 3 00 pm the Confederates outflanked the Union right but Raguet was mortally wounded From the ridge thereafter known as Sharpshooters Ridge Confederate riflemen started picking off the artillerymen and infantry below them Scurry again pressed the Union center and the Union position became untenable Slough reluctantly ordered a retreat and Tappan formed the companies on the left into a rear guard Slough reformed his line a half mile east of Pigeon s Ranch where skirmishing continued until dusk The Union men finally retreated to Kozlowski s Ranch leaving the Confederates in possession of the battlefield citation needed Johnson s Ranch Edit With the sounds of battle echoing in the distance Lt Col Manuel Chaves of the 2nd New Mexico Infantry commander of the New Mexican volunteers informed Maj Chivington that his scouts had located the Confederate supply train at Johnson s Ranch After watching the supply train for an hour Chivington s force descended the slope and attacked driving off or capturing the small guard with few casualties on either side 30 They then looted and burned 80 supply wagons and spiked the cannon either killing or driving off about 500 horses and mules before returning with their prisoners to Kozlowski s Ranch 31 With no supplies to sustain his advance Scurry had to retreat to Santa Fe the first step on the long road back to San Antonio Texas Thanks to Chaves assistance the Federals had turned a defeat into victory and stopped further Confederate advances in the Southwest Glorieta Pass was the turning point of the war in the New Mexico Territory citation needed Parts of the Glorieta Pass Battlefield are preserved in Pecos National Historical Park and are the site of an annual NPS Civil War Encampment event commemorating the battle citation needed Controversy EditMany New Mexicans disputed the view that Chivington was the hero of Johnson s Ranch Many Santa Fe residents credited James L Collins a Bureau of Indian Affairs official who had suggested the roundabout attack on the supply train 9 p 60 Chivington had actually been sent out in hopes of making a flank attack and the discovery of the supply train was a lucky accident He was also accused of almost letting the opportunity slip by him On January 23 1864 the New Mexico Territorial Legislature adopted a resolution that did not mention Chivington and instead asked President Lincoln to promote William H Lewis and Asa B Carey both regular army officers for distinguished service in the battle On March 8 the Rio Abajo Press of Albuquerque complained about Col Chivington s strutting about in plumage stolen from Captain William H Lewis it did not mention Carey According to the newspaper editor Some one of the party suggested the attack which Chivington only agreed to after two hours persuasion Furthermore Lewis had led the attack while Chivington was viewing the scene from afar 32 A more serious charge made against Chivington was that if he had hurried to reinforce Slough as soon as he heard gunfire coming from Pigeon s Ranch his 400 men might have been enough to win the battle for the Federals especially if he had attacked Scurry s flank as he had been ordered 33 Aftermath Edit Battle of Glorieta Pass marker at the Cuerno Verde Rest Area Colorado In the end the Battle of Glorieta Pass was consequential First despite the fact that the Confederates took the field they were forced to retreat to Santa Fe due to the destruction of their supplies and eventually abandon New Mexico Territory 34 Second the battle at Glorieta foiled Sibley s plan to obtain his key objective the capture of the major federal base at Fort Union That would have broken federal resistance in New Mexico and compelled Union forces to retire north of Raton Pass and back into Colorado Territory 35 In any case the dream of a Confederate stronghold in the Southwest was impractical New Mexico could not provide enough sustenance for any prolonged Confederate occupation 36 Furthermore the approach of the Federal California Column eastward through the New Mexico Territory during the summer of 1862 would have seriously jeopardized Confederate control of the region citation needed Battlefield preservation EditMain article Glorieta Pass Battlefield The battlefield in 2012 In 1987 two Confederate burial sites were discovered at Pigeon s Ranch One was the solitary grave of Maj John Samuel Shropshire the other was a mass grave of 30 Confederates Only Shropshire and five others could be positively identified 37 On August 5 1990 Maj Shropshire s remains were reburied next to his parents in his family s cemetery in Bourbon County Kentucky The remaining 30 Confederates were reinterred in the Santa Fe National Cemetery 38 In 1993 the congressionally appointed Civil War Sites Advisory Commission issued its Report on the Nation s Civil War Battlefields 39 The commission was tasked with identifying the nation s historically significant Civil War sites determining their importance and providing recommendations for their preservation to Congress citation needed Of the roughly 10 500 actions of the U S Civil War 40 384 3 7 were identified by the commission as principal battles and rated according to their significance and threat of loss The Battle of Glorieta Pass received the highest rating from the commission priority I class A Class A battlefields are principal strategic operations having a direct impact on the course of the war With this rating the commission placed Glorieta Pass on the same level as battles such as Gettysburg and Antietam The priority I rating identified Glorieta Pass as being not only one of the most important but also one of the most highly endangered battlefields in the country Only ten other battlefields received the priority I class A rating The commission recommended that Congress focus its preservation efforts on priority I nationally significant battlefields 41 Since 1993 portions of the Glorieta Pass Battlefield have become a unit of the National Park Service The Glorieta Pass unit Pigeon s Ranch comprises roughly 20 of the total battlefield The remaining 80 is in private ownership Glorieta Pass Battlefield is managed by Pecos National Historical Park and supported by the Glorieta Battlefield Coalition a non profit citizens organization 42 The Civil War Trust a division of the American Battlefield Trust and its partners have acquired and preserved 19 acres 7 7 ha of the Glorieta Pass battlefield 43 The Glorieta Pass Battlefield is also designated as a National Historic Landmark 44 Depictions in popular culture EditThe 1966 Sergio Leone film The Good the Bad and the Ugly refers obliquely to the battle setting one scene during the post battle retreat of Sibley s men citation needed The battle is described in the 1999 historical novel Glorieta Pass by P G Nagle 45 The events at Johnson s Ranch are depicted in Elmer Kelton s 2009 novel Many A River with some changes to fit them to his plot citation needed The journey of Scurry s Confederate and Slough s Union forces to the battleground as well as a detailed narrative of the fight are described in Tom Bensing s 2012 novel Silas Soule A Short Eventful Life of Moral Courage citation needed Notes Edit ABPP Glorieta Pass Civil War Trust Battle of Glorieta Pass Josephy p 81 Colorado Volunteers in the Civil War The New Mexico Campaign in 1862 William Clarke Whitford Internet Archive p 112 Retrieved March 28 2015 Major Buckholts killed 1862 Frazier p 225 Frazier p 210 Battle of Glorieta Confederate Soldiers Nm scv org Archived from the original on March 28 2015 Retrieved March 28 2015 Edrington p 4 a b William Wallace Mills W W Mills 1901 Forty Years at El Paso 1858 1898 Of the thirty five hundred Texans who entered New Mexico only about eleven hundred returned to Texas The others were dead wounded sick prisoners or deserters Many were buried on the west side of El Paso street near where the Opera House now stands Frazier p 75 Whitlock pp 60 61 a b GLORIETA BATTLE OF The Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association TSHA Tshaonline org Retrieved March 18 2016 Frazier p 199 This battalion also included companies of Arizona Confederates Whitlock p 171 Frazier pp 205 215 Whitlock p 188 Hudnall p 291 Josephy pp 79 81 Frazier pp 208 210 Frazier pp 211 212 Frazier p 214 Frazier pp 213 214 Whitlock p 190 Frazier p 216 1 dead link Whitlock p 200 Frazier p 219 Whitlock p 201 Three Confederates were killed and several wounded including the regimental chaplain two officers and 15 men were captured The only Union casualty was one man injured by flying debris from the exploding ammunition wagons Whitlock pp 206 207 Frazier p 226 Keleher pp 180 182 One reason Chivington failed to come was due to an acoustic shadow that prevented him from hearing sounds from the battle Whitlock p 205 Frazier p 230 Josephy pp 91 92 Whitlock pp 240 241 2 Archived October 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times 3 Archived March 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine Dyer page needed Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation s Civil War Battlefields Washington DC The National Park Service 1993 英会話を学ぶには海外留学が一番 留学生として勉強しよう 英会話を学ぶには海外留学が一番 留学生として勉強しよう 自分を知る Glorietapass org Archived from the original on May 18 2008 Retrieved March 28 2015 4 American Battlefield Trust Saved Land webpage Accessed May 23 2018 Pecos National Historical Park nps gov Nagle P G 2011 Glorieta Pass Cedar Crest New Mexico Book View Cafe ISBN 978 1611380491 References EditNational Park Service battle description The Battle of Glorieta Pass from the University of San Diego history department Dyer Frederick 1908 A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion Des Moines Iowa The Dyer Publishing Company Edrington Thomas 1998 The Battle of Glorieta Pass A Gettysburg in the West March 26 28 1862 University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 1896 7 Frazier Donald S 1995 Blood and Treasure The Confederate Empire in the Southwest College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 639 6 Hudnall Ken 2005 Spirits of the Border IV The History and Mystery of New Mexico El Paso Texas Omega Press ISBN 0 9754923 4 9 Josephy Alvin M Jr 1991 The Civil War in the American West New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 394 56482 0 Keleher William A 1952 Turmoil in New Mexico 1846 1868 Albuquerque New Mexico University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 0631 4 Nagle P G 1999 Glorieta Pass a novel New York Forge ISBN 0 312 86548 1 Whitlock Flint 2006 Distant Bugles Distant Drums The Union Response to the Confederate Invasion of New Mexico Boulder Colorado University Press of Colorado ISBN 978 0 87081 835 6 Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation s Civil War Battlefields Washington DC The National Park Service 1993 Further reading EditAlberts Don The Battle of Glorieta Union Victory in the West Texas A amp M University Press 1996 ISBN 0 89096 825 X Scott Robert Glory Glory Glorieta The Gettysburg of the West Johnson Books 1992 ISBN 1 55566 098 3 Simmons Mark The Battle at Valley s Ranch First account of the Gettysburg of the West 1862 San Pedro Press 1987 ISBN 0 943369 00 2 Whitford William Battle of Glorieta Pass The Colorado Volunteers in the Civil War Rio Grande Press 1990 ISBN 0 87380 171 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Glorieta Pass The Battle of Glorieta Pass A Shattered Dream a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan Glorieta and Raton Passes Gateways to the Southwest a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan On this date in Civil War history Battle of Glorieta Pass dead link Coordinates 35 34 20 N 105 45 14 W 35 57222 N 105 75389 W 35 57222 105 75389 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Glorieta Pass amp oldid 1139146603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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