In the 1840s,
westward expansion proceeded at a rapid pace. Promises of wide-open
spaces and inexpensive land with rich soil enticed many people in the
East to pack up their possessions and head West. As the population of
Americans on the West Coast increased, so too did the nation's desire
to actually own the land that these Americans were settling. The phrase
"Manifest Destiny" was coined to describe the philosophy shared
by many that the United States had a divine right to become a transcontinental
nation. To that end, the 1840s became a decade of rapid territorial
acquisition and expansion.
Dragoon soldiers from Fort Scott participated
in many activities that contributed to westward expansion. They provided
armed escorts for parties on the Santa Fe and Oregon Trails, surveyed
unmapped country, and maintained contact with Plains Indians. Each summer,
from 1843-45, several companies of dragoons, including Company A, 1st
U.S. Dragoons, from Fort Scott, participated in military expeditions
along the overland trails. The purpose of these expeditions was to protect
travel and trade along the trails and to keep the Plains Indians at
peace.
Trouble with Texans
The
first of these expeditions took place along the Santa Fe Trail - a trade
route between Missouri and Santa Fe - then part of Mexico. The United
States Dragoons, organized in 1833, had been charged with protecting
the traders along the trail from Indian attacks.
In 1843, trouble erupted along the Santa Fe Trail,
not from Indian attacks but from Texans. Ill will existed between Texas
and Mexico even before the Texan Revolution of 1836. Prejudice and hatred
on both sides, border squabbles and violence continued into the 1840s.
In 1843, Texas "freebooters" began attacking Mexican caravans
along the trail.
One group of Texans murdered Antonio Chavez,
a Mexican trader, on American soil. The army apprehended and punished
the killers but traders were fearful of further attacks and asked the
War Department to furnish a military escort that year from Missouri
to Santa Fe.
"We are not on American
soil"
Captain Philip St. George Cooke led five companies
of dragoons along the Santa Fe Trail to protect the trade. In route,
the dragoons encountered Jacob Snively, who held a commission from Texas
to raid Mexican caravans on Mexican soil. Two days prior to their meeting
with Cooke, Snively's men had attacked Mexican soldiers, killing several
of them and taking their weapons.
Upon their initial encounter, Snively's men and
the dragoons were across the Arkansas River from each other. The land
north of the river clearly belonged to the United States, but south
of the river, U.S. territory only extended west to the 100th meridian.
Snively claimed that he was forty miles west of the boundary,
but Cooke contended that Snively was on American soil. Therefore, he
ordered Fort Scott's dragoons under Captain Terrett, to cross the river
and disarm the freebooters. The dragoons left the freebooters only ten
guns for defense on their way back to Texas. A rumor persists that the
Texans had hidden their own guns and surrendered the previously confiscated
Mexican weapons to the dragoons.
The 1843 expedition earned Captain Cooke the
undying hatred of the Texans but was successful because it discouraged
any further attacks along the Santa Fe Trail that year.
Dragoons on Patrol
The
year 1843 also saw the first significant migration over the Oregon Trail.
To protect the emigrant traffic, the dragoons again went out on expeditions
in 1844 and 1845. To strengthen security in the area and to end the
fighting between the Pawnee and the Sioux, five companies of dragoons
(including Company A from Fort Scott) traveled to Pawnee country in
August of 1844. The next year, 1845, the dragoons met with the Sioux
and other tribes during what is known as the South Pass expedition.
One of the purposes of the expeditions was to
impress the Pawnee and Sioux with the strength of the dragoons. The
soldiers came armed with sabers, breech-loading Hall's carbines, pistols
and two howitzers or cannons. The dragoons requested the Pawnee to make
a truce with the Sioux and to refrain from horse stealing. The Pawnee,
at first refused to comply. The dragoons left the Pawnee camp, but as
they did so they fired their howitzers as a demonstration. The Pawnee
were impressed. They remained peaceful for the next four years.
The Sioux met with the dragoons near Fort Laramie
in 1845. They were equally awed by the firepower of the howitzers. They
thought that the dragoons were "a new and superior kind of white
people." They agreed to leave the emigrant traffic alone, if the
emigrants behaved themselves.
"54º 40" or Fight"
Colonel
Stephen Kearney commanded the South Pass expedition. He led the soldiers
along the Oregon Trail to Fort Laramie and then to South Pass, which
they reached in June of 1845. This was the first time that an active
U.S. military force traveled west of the Continental Divide.
An unstated purpose of the expedition was to
place a military force near Oregon in the event of war. The United States
and Great Britain both laid claim to all of the Oregon Territory and
were unwilling to relinquish. 54º 40" was the line of latitude
that marked the northern boundary of Oregon Territory.
The war cry "54º 40" or Fight",
heard during President Polk's presidential campaign, reflected the desire
of some Americans to control all of Oregon or go to war.r
The threat of war with Great Britain must have
loomed large in Colonel Kearny's mind as he awaited further instruction
at South Pass. He waited one day and with no word of war, he and his
troops began their return journey.
Compromise had staved off conflict. The problem
was solved by extending the existing boundary between the U.S. and Canada-the
49th parallel-to the Pacific Coast, which divided the Oregon Territory
in two.
"A straight forward, simple
and well-meaning people"
While patrolling the Oregon Trail, the soldiers
encountered several wagon trains heading west. This was of some concern
to the dragoons because the teams and herds of the wagon trains consumed
the grasses as effectively as a prairie fire, leaving little for the
dragoons' horses.
One
dragoon officer praised the Oregon emigrants as a "straight forward,
simple and well-meaning people." He reflected that the trip to
Oregon would take a great deal of courage and perseverance. For the
most part, the relationship between the emigrants and the dragoons was
mutually beneficial. The emigrants enjoyed the dragoons' protection,
while the dragoons enjoyed the attention that the emigrant girls lavished
on them.
Other pleasures of the trail included the scenery,
the buffalo hunts and the welcome break from the daily routine of garrison
life. The dragoons experienced the adventures of two trails in 1845.
They returned via the Santa Fe Trail in order to escort the wagons heading
east that year, completing a march of 2200 miles in just 99 days!
The dragoons accomplished a number of things
on their expedition. They gained valuable experience which would be
useful during the Mexican War. They attained knowledge of the terrain and
established friendly relations with many Indian tribes. They also made
the trail safer for overland travel, which encouraged further westward
expansion and contributed to the fulfillment of Manifest Destiny.
Suggested Reading