Battle of Picacho Pass
32°37′52″N 111°24′56″W / 32.63111°N 111.41556°W
Battle of Picacho Pass | |
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Part of the Picacho Peak, Pinal County, Arizona | |
Result |
Confederate victory
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James Barrett †
The Battle of Picacho Pass, also known as the Battle of Picacho Peak, was an engagement of the American Civil War on April 15, 1862. The action occurred around Picacho Peak, 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Tucson, Arizona. It was fought between a Union cavalry patrol from California and a party of Confederate pickets from Tucson, and marks the westernmost battle of the American Civil War involving fatalities (though a skirmish known as the Battle of Stanwix Station was 40 miles further west and 80 miles from the California border in the direction of Fort Yuma).[1][2]
Background
After a Confederate force of about 120 cavalrymen arrived at Tucson from Texas on February 28, 1862, they proclaimed Tucson the capital of the western district of the
Like most of the Civil War era engagements in Arizona (
Battle
Twelve Union cavalry troopers and one scout (reported to be mountain man Pauline Weaver but in reality Tucson resident John W. Jones), commanded by Lieutenant James Barrett of the 1st California Cavalry, were conducting a sweep of the Picacho Peak area, looking for Confederates reported to be nearby. The Arizona Confederates were commanded by Sergeant Henry Holmes. Barrett was under orders not to engage them, but to wait for the main column to come up. However, "Lt. Barrett acting alone rather than in concert, surprised the Rebels and should have captured them without firing a shot, if the thing had been conducted properly." Instead, in the midafternoon the lieutenant "led his men into the thicket single file without dismounting them. The first fire from the enemy emptied four saddles, when the enemy retired farther into the dense thicket and had time to reload. ... Barrett followed them, calling on his men to follow him." Three of the Confederates surrendered. Barrett secured one of the prisoners and had just remounted his horse when a bullet struck him in the neck, killing him. Fierce and confused fighting continued among the mesquite and arroyos for 90 minutes, with two more Union fatalities and three troopers wounded. Exhausted and leaderless, the Californians broke off the fight and the Arizona Rangers, minus three who surrendered, mounted and carried warning of the approaching Union army to Tucson. Barrett's disobedience of orders had cost him his life and lost any chance of a Union surprise attack on Tucson.
The Union troops retreated to the Pima Indian Villages and hastily built
The bodies of the two Union enlisted men killed at Picacho (George Johnson and William S Leonard) were later removed to the National Cemetery at the
Aftermath
Before this engagement a Confederate cavalry patrol had advanced as far west as
Re-enactment
Every March, Picacho Peak State Park hosts a re-enactment of the Civil War battles of Arizona and New Mexico, including the battle of Picacho Pass. The re-enactments now have grown so large that many more participants tend to be involved than took part in the actual engagements and include infantry units and artillery as well as cavalry. The 2015 re-enactment, which was held March 22 and 23, also included re-enactments of the Battle of Valverde and the Battle of Glorieta Pass, both of which took place in relatively nearby New Mexico.[6] The skirmish site and the remains of the Butterfield station are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Re-Enactment discontinued until further notice.
Gallery
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Battle of Picacho Marker.
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Picacho Battlefield Marker.
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Battle of Picacho Monument.
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Side view of the monument.
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2007 re-enactment of the Picacho Pass battle.
Further reading
- "The Battle of Picacho Pass: Visiting the Battlefield and Historic Site". The War Times Journal. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
- Masich, Andrew E., The Civil War in Arizona; the Story of the California Volunteers, 1861–65; University of Oklahoma Press (Norman, 2006).
- Finch, Boyd (1969). "Sherod Hunter and the Confederates in Arizona". The Journal of Arizona History. 10 (3): 137–206. JSTOR 41695524. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- Bradley, Christopher M. (Summer 2021). Turpie, David C. (ed.). "Not Set in Stone: Civil War Memorialization at Picacho Pass and the Emergence of a Confederate Fantasy Heritage in Arizona". 62 (2). Tucson, AZ: )
See also
- Apache Wars
- New Mexico Campaign
- St. Albans Raid
References
- ^ Walters, John (15 April 2015). "Remembering the Day the Civil War Came to Arizona". Newsweek. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ISBN 978-0-8108-6336-1. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ *Hart, Herbert M. "The Civil War in the West". California and the Civil War. The California State Military Museum. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
- ^ Office, California Adjutant General's (December 13, 1890). "Records of California Men in the War of the Rebellion, 1861 to 1867". State office – via Google Books.
- ^ "Military History.com Barret is apparently buried where he was killed; a 1928 monument lists the names of the three union men killed".
- ^ The Arizona Republic, Skirmish in the Desert, Saturday March 14, 2015, page D! and D2