| |

New Mexico Campaign
The New Mexico Campaign (February to April 1862) was a military operation
during the War for Southern Independence. Confederate Brigadier General
Henry Hopkins Sibley invaded the northern New Mexico Territory in an attempt
to gain control of the Southwest, including the gold fields of Colorado and
the ports of California. Historians regard this campaign as the most
ambitious Confederate attempt to establish control of the American West and
to open an additional theater in the war. It was an important campaign in
the war's Trans-Mississippi Theater, and one of the major events in the
history of the New Mexico Territory in the War for Southern Independence.
The Confederates advanced north along the Rio Grande from Fort Bliss in
Texas. After winning the Battle of Valverde but failing to capture Fort
Craig and forcing the surrender of the main Union Army in the territory,
they continued north across the border towards Santa Fe and Fort Union.
Leaving that Union force in their rear at Glorieta Pass, the Confederates
defeated another Union force from Fort Union but were forced to retreat
following the destruction of their wagon train containing most of their
supplies.
Confederate success in this campaign would have denied the Union a major
source of the gold and silver necessary to finance its war effort, and the
Union navy would have had the additional difficulty of attempting to
blockade several hundred miles of coastline in the Pacific. A Confederate
victory would have also diverted Union troops which, following the invasion,
were used to fight Native American tribes on the plains and in the Rockies.
Opposing Forces
Union forces in the Department of New Mexico were led by Colonel Edward
Canby, who headquartered at Fort Craig. Under his immediate command at the
fort were five regiments of New Mexico volunteer infantry, a company of the
2nd Colorado Infantry, two provisional artillery units, eleven companies of
the 5th, 7th, and 10th U.S. Infantry, six companies of the 2nd and 3rd U.S.
Cavalry, and two regiments New Mexico militia. At Fort Union, under the
command of Colonel Gabriel Paul, were the 1st Colorado Infantry, a company
of the 2nd Colorado Infantry, a battalion of the 5th U.S. Infantry Regiment,
a detachment from the 1st and 3rd U.S. Cavalry, a company of the 4th New
Mexico Infantry, and two provisional artillery batteries.
The Confederate Army of New Mexico was led by Brigadier General Henry
Hopkins Sibley. His units included the 4th Texas Mounted Rifles and 5th
Texas Mounted Rifles (both of which had batteries of mountain howitzers),
five companies of the 7th Texas Mounted Rifles, six companies of the 2nd
Texas Mounted Rifles (which also had an artillery battery attached), and
several companies of Arizona Confederate mounted volunteers. Following his
arrival in New Mexico in January, Sibley organized his artillery into a
battalion under the command of Captain Trevanion Teel, whom he promoted to
major. Five additional companies of the 7th Texas arrived near the end of
February and served as the garrison of Fort Thorn at Mesilla.
Confederate Strategy
For years, residents in the southern part of the New Mexico Territory had
been complaining that the territorial government in Santa Fe was too far
away to properly address their concerns. The withdrawal of the Regular army
at the beginning of the war confirmed to the residents that they were being
abandoned. Secession conventions in Mesilla and Tucson voted to join the
territory to the Confederacy in March 1861, and formed militia companies to
defend themselves. In July 1861, Lieutenant Colonel John Baylor led of a
battalion of Texas mounted rifles into the southern portion of the New
Mexico Territory, seizing Mesilla after the Battle of Mesilla and
establishing the Confederate Territory of Arizona south of the 34th
parallel.
The 1862 campaign was a continuation of this strategy, formulated by
Sibley in a plan submitted to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
Sibley's strategy called for an invasion along the eastern side of the Rocky
Mountains, seizing the Colorado Territory (then at the height of the
Colorado Gold Rush) and Fort Laramie (the most important United States Army
garrison along the Oregon Trail), before turning westward to attack
mineral-rich Nevada and California. He planned to take minimal supplies
along with him, intending to live off the land and to capture the stockpiles
of supplies at Union forts and depots along the Santa Fe Trail. Once these
territories had been secured, Sibley intended to take the northern Mexican
states of Chihuahua, Sonora, and Lower California, either through purchase
or by invasion.
March Toward Santa Fe
On December 20, 1861, General Sibley, in command of the Army of New Mexico,
issued a proclamation taking possession of New Mexico in the name of the
Confederate States. He called on the citizens to abandon their allegiance to
the Union and to join the Confederacy, warning that those "who co-operate
with the enemy will be treated accordingly, and must be prepared to share
their fate." In February 1862, Sibley advanced northward from Fort Thorn up
the valley of the Rio Grande, toward the territorial capital of Santa Fe and
the Union storehouses at Fort Union. Along the way, Sibley detached 54 men
to occupy Tucson. The Confederate advance followed the west bank of the
river via Fort Craig, which was garrisoned by a 3,800-man Union force under
Canby. Knowing he could not leave such a large Union force behind him as he
advanced, Sibley attempted to lure the Union forces out into battle on
favorable terms.
On February 19, Sibley camped at the sand hills east of the fort with the
intention of cutting the Union lines of communications with Santa Fe. On
February 20, the Union forces advanced from the fort but were hit with heavy
Confederate artillery and were forced to retreat. The next day the
Confederates marched to Valverde Ford, six miles north of the fort, in an
attempt to outflank the Union forces. Canby attacked, but the Union forces
were driven back by the Confederates under Colonel Thomas Green, who took
command after Sibley was indisposed (some say of drunkenness). Canby's
forces retreated to Fort Craig but refused to surrender.
Since he had only enough rations for three days, Sibley could not attempt
a siege nor retreat back to Mesilla. Instead, he chose to disengage from the
fort and continued slowly northward towards Santa Fe, on the other side of
the border in New Mexico Territory. Hoping to reach the supplies located
there and also to cut Fort Craig's lines of supplies and communications. Due
to the loss of horses at Valverde, the 4th Texas had to be dismounted, with
the remaining horses, already in a weakened state, distributed among the
other units. They also had lost much of their transportation in the battle
at Valverde, causing them to carry the wounded. All this caused the column
to travel slower than it could have.
Meanwhile, Canby attempted to trap Sibley's army between his own
force and Fort Union. He disbanded his militia and most of the volunteer
units, and sent most of his mounted units northward to act as partisans and
to "obstruct [Sibley's] movements if he should advance, and cut off his
supplies, by removing from his route the cattle, grain, and other supplies
in private hands that would aid him in sustaining his force."
Starting out on February 23, the Confederate forces reached Albuquerque
on March 2 and Santa Fe on March 13, but due to their slow advance they
failed to capture most of the Union supplies located at these cities. The
slow advance also allowed reinforcements from Colorado under the command of
Colonel John Slough to reach Fort Union. Since he had been commissioned
colonel before Paul was commissioned the same rank, Slough claimed seniority
and took command of the fort. Canby had already ordered Paul to "not move
from Fort Union to meet me until I advise you of the route and point of
junction." After learning of the change in command, Canby told Slough to
"advise me of your plans and movements, that I may cooperate." He also
instructed Slough to "harass the enemy by partisan operations. Obstruct his
movements and cut off his supplies." Slough interpreted this as an
authorization to advance, which he did with 1,342 men from the fort's
garrison. The Union and Confederate forces meet at the Battle of Glorieta
Pass on March 28. The Confederates were able to push the Union force through
the pass, but had to retreat following the destruction of their wagon train,
which contained nearly all of their supplies and ammunition. Sibley pulled
his army back to Albuquerque to await reinforcements from Texas. Slough,
receiving orders from Canby to return immediately to Fort Union, also
retreated, fearing a court martial if he disobeyed this order. Once he
arrived at the fort, he resigned his commission and returned to Colorado,
leaving Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Tappan in command of the regiment and Paul
in command of the fort.
Canby initially ordered the Union force to retreat back to Fort Union,
but after discovering the weakness of the Confederates he ordered a
concentration of Union forces; small garrisons were left at Forts Craig and
Union, and the main forces were to rendezvous near Albuquerque. With limited
supplies and ammunition and outnumbered, Sibley choose to retreat to Texas,
leaving Albuquerque on April 12 after a small fight a few days earlier. On
April 14, Canby encountered the Confederates at Peralta, where the armies
skirmished until 2:00 p.m. when a sandstorm permitted the Confederates to
withdraw. The retreat continued through Mesilla to San Antonio, during which
hundreds of Confederates straggled and fell behind. A rearguard of four
companies of the 7th Texas and several companies of Arizona Confederates
(consolidated under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Philemon Herbert as
the 1st Arizona Mounted Rifles Battalion) was left at Fort Thorn, commanded
by Colonel William Steele. These forces, heavily outnumbered by Union units
arriving from California and Kansas, retreated to Texas in early July.
Aftermath
Following the Confederate retreat, units from the Union California Column
under the command of Colonel James Carleton occupied several forts in
western Texas. Canby was promoted to brigadier general and reassigned to the
eastern theater. He was succeeded as commander of the department by
Carleton, who was also promoted to brigadier general. The best men from the
New Mexico volunteers were formed into the 1st New Mexico Cavalry with Kit
Carson in command; the regiment spent the rest of the war fighting Indian
tribes in the territory.
Although the Confederates continued to consider Arizona part of the
Confederacy and made several plans for another invasion, they were never
able to put these plans into execution. Sibley's brigade would be called by
many the "Arizona Brigade" and continued to serve in various areas in Texas
and Louisiana during the remainder of the war. Sibley would eventually be
demoted to directing supply trains in 1863.
Battlefields Today
Approximately 678 acres of the Glorieta Pass battlefield are today protected
in the Pigeon's Ranch and Canoncito units of the Pecos National Historical
Park near Interstate 25. The Valverde battlefield is no longer preserved in
its original state, and the only commemoration of the battle is a marker
erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy near U.S. Route 85 in
1936.
Popular culture
The campaign is part of the backdrop for the 1966 motion picture The Good,
the Bad and the Ugly.
 |
|