IN
MID-1800S, THE TERRAIN AND CLIMATE OF AMERICAN SOUTHWEST POSED A DAUNTING
CHALLENGE, SO A SOLUTION WAS FOUND: BUY CAMELS
A folk tale from the Old
West has it that in the 1880s, the Arizona territory was haunted by a menacing
creature known as the RED GHOST.
The red-eyed creature
was said to be 30 feet tall, had trampled a woman to death, and charged a man
who tried to capture it.
“Eyewitnesses said it
was a devilish looking creature strapped on the back of some strange-looking
beast,” Marshall Trimble, Arizona’s official state historian, told Smithsonian magazine
in 2015.
Years later, a rancher
shot a camel grazing in his garden. On the dead camel’s back, the rancher found
rawhide straps, evidence of a past rider.
The Red Ghost was dead, but
wait a second. A WILD CAMEL?, IN ARIZONA?
The American imperative
of Manifest Destiny bumped up against a serious obstacle in the Southwest in
the mid 1800s, namely the terrain.
Arid deserts, craggy
mountains, and the thin air of altitude proved difficult for man and beast
alike.
An undeterred Army
lieutenant studied the problem and sent a report to Washington with an
ingenious solution: camels.
The camel proposal
caught the eye of Mississippi Senator Jefferson Davis, fresh off the
Mexican-American war, who vigorously pushed the idea, even as he became
Secretary of War.
It took a few years, but
on March 3, 1855, Congress appropriated $30,000 “to be expended under the
direction of the War Department in the purchase and importation of camels and
dromedaries to be employed for military purposes.” THE U.S. CAMEL CORPS was born.
Gwinn
Heap’s illustration for Jefferson Davis’ (at that time Secretary of War) report
to the U.S. Congress in 1857. The drawings illustrated the journey of the
camels to the United States.
H. Crosman wrote in his report, “The ordinary loads for camels are from 7 to 9
hundred pounds each, and with these they can travel from 30 to 40 miles a day,
for many days in succession; they will go without water, and with but little
food, for 6 or 8 days, or it is said even longer, their feet are alike well
suited for traversing grassy or sandy plains, or rough, rocky hills and paths,
and they require no shoeing.”
Camel
at Drum Barracks, San Pedro, California (1863 or earlier)
One small problem: There
were no Camels in the United States, so Major Henry C. Wayne, another Camel
enthusiast, was deployed to the Mediterranean to obtain the beasts, travels
that took him to Malta, Greece, Turkey, and Egypt, where he managed to obtain a
total of 33 Camels for $250 each; the Camels were loaded aboard the aptly named
Navy Store Ship USS Supply for
their voyage to Texas, which, thanks to Horrendous Weather and Heavy Gales,
took 3 months.
Grave
of Hadji “Hi Jolly” Ali (1828 — December 16, 1902), a Greek-Syrian specialist
who was one of the first camel drivers ever hired by US Army in 1856 to lead
the camel driver experiment in the Southwest. Located in Quartzsite, Arizona. Author
“Jeremy Butler CC BY-SA 3.0
The Camels arrived
mostly healthy and unharmed, and after giving them a couple of weeks to
acclimatize, Wayne marched them inland to Camp Verde, near San Antonio, Texas,
where he established a CARAVANSARY; 6
months later, another load of Camels arrived, bringing the total to 70.
Over the next few
months, Wayne trained soldiers and civilians in the fine art of Camel handling:
how to feed the beasts, pack loads they could handle, put on their odd saddles,
and most importantly, treat them with respect.
Camels are mostly docile
animals but famously ILL-TEMPERED if
they are mistreated; they will spit large wads, bite, and kick abusers, also,
they stink, and their unusual smell frightened the horses.
In 1857, Wayne was transferred back to D.C. that same
year, Congress awarded a contract to Lieutenant Edward F. Beale, to survey a
route from Fort Defiance, New Mexico, to eastern California, along a trail that
would one day become ROUTE 66, with one stipulation: Beale had to use 25 of the
Camels.
The U.
S. Camel Corps State Historical Marker in Indianola, Texas, United States.
Author:Larry D. Moore CC BY-SA 4.0
Beale protested at
first, but by the second week of the expedition, the camels had proven their
worth, carrying up to 700 pounds and traversing terrains that caused the horses
to balk.
They ate scrub and
prickly cactus along the way, they could go 8 to 10 days without water, and
they weren’t the least bit bothered by the dry heat of the day and plunging
cold at night.
When the expedition got
lost in an impassable canyon and the lack of water made the mules frantic, a
small scouting party atop Camels found a river, literally saving lives… they
made the 1,200-mile journey to California, in 4 months.
“Certainly there never was anything so patient or
enduring and so little troublesome as this Noble Animal,” Beale wrote,
according to the U.S. Army Historical Foundation: “They pack their heavy load of corn, of which they never taste a grain;
put up with any food offered them without complaint, and are always up with the
wagons, and, withal, so perfectly docile and quiet that they are the admiration
of the whole camp…. at this time there is not a man in camp who is not delighted
with them.”
Hi
Jolly tomb
Beale completed another
survey with the Camels in 1858, this one from Fort Smith, Arkansas, to the
Colorado River, for use as a Wagon Road and Stage Line, an Expedition that took
him a year. THIS WAS TO BE THE CAMELS’
LAST SUCCESSFUL VENTURE.
The Civil War
effectively ended the great Camel experiment, and Camp Verde came under
Confederate control, and the Camels were mistreated, abused, and killed.
A herd of 37 Camels in
Los Angeles were sold at auction, and at the end of the war, the surviving
Verde Camels were likewise auctioned off; after a time, their owners tired of
the novelty and upkeep, many were set loose.
For years, Camels roamed
the Southwest, where they became a familiar sight until the early 1900s.
While the Camel experiment proved a failure, the idea
wasn’t unique to the U.S., in Australia, also landed on the idea of using the
animals for exploration, and between 1840 and 1907, as many as 20,000 Camels
were imported from India.
Today Australia has the largest wild population of Camels, in the world.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario