Presidio San Augustin del Tucson

Fort Tucson
Tucson, Arizona

The reconstructed northeastern bastion of Fort Tucson in 2009.
Type Army fortification
Built 1775–1783
Built by Spain
Construction
materials
adobe, mesquite, earth
In use 1776 - 1886
Current
condition
tourist attraction
Controlled by Arizona
Commanders Hugh O'Conor
Pedro Allande y Saabedra
Antonio Comaduron
Granville H. Oury
Sherod Hunter
James H. Tevis
James H. Carleton
Occupants Spanish Army
Mexican Army
United States Army
Confederate States Army
Battles/wars Mexican Apache Wars

Mexican-American War

Apache Wars
American Civil War

Presidio San Agustín del Tucsón or Fort Tucson was a presidio located within Tucson, Arizona. The original fortress was built by Spanish conquistadors during the 18th century and was the founding structure of what became the city of Tucson. Its original walls and bastions vanished over the years though a reconstructed bastion was built in 2008 over foundations of the original structure. Tucson has been inhabited by many different cutures over its 250 year history and had a role in several military conflicts.

Contents

History

Spanish Period

A company of Spanish Army soldiers founded Tucson in 1775 and completed it in 1783, they came from the Presidio San Ignacio de Tubac which is roughly sixty miles south of Tucson. The new presidio was chosen to be placed by Captain Hugh O'Conor, an Irish mercenary working for Spain. It was located on the right side of the Santa Cruz River near what was then a Pima pueblo. The fort was constructed to be in the shape of a large square, walls with bastions for corners. Over time the fort was built stronger and stronger due to several Apache attacks. By the time the Apache threat was over in the mid 1880s, the walls were mostly gone. The Spanish built the fort to protect communication and trade routes across northern Sonora and southern Alta California, now the present day states of Arizona, Mexico and California. O'connor commanded the construction of the fort and about fifty to sixty heavy cavalry men. After the structure began to take shape the families of the presidial garrison were sent for and upon arriving they established the settlement. Jacals sprang up both inside and outside of the walls, all of the buildings were originally built of adobe brick and mesquite tree limbs. The San Agustin church was also built. Three hundred years ago the Santa Cruz flowed well and several irrigation canals were dug around the presidio. They were used for citrus groves and other crops grown to support the population.

Tucson flourished under Spanish reign but the population never reached more than 500, not until the United States controlled the city. The colony managed to grow with the help of the fort and its occupants who launched several expeditions into Indian country to fight the Seri's, Opatas, Papago and primarily the Apache. The expeditions helped keep the hostile natives from the area, to prevent raids on Spanish property and civilians. Not all native tribes were unfriendly though, throughout the Spanish period the Pima's were mostly peaceful with the exception of two rebellions long before Fort Tucson was constructed. Over Tucson's history, several different native American groups lived in the city and the down river at the villages of Tubac, Tumacacori and elsewhere. Groups of Pimas, Apaches, Papago, Oaptas, Seris and others all eventually lived at the Spanish settlements in the Santa Cruz River Valley. Many of the men became scouts for the Spanish Army during the wars against the hostile tribes. At one point the entire garrison of Fort Tubac consisted solely of Papago warriors. By the time the Spanish period ended in 1821, most of the native groups were hostile again and old Spanish frontier settlements were being abandoned. The population of Tucson and Tubac each reached about 350 at their peaks. Tumacacori had about 100 Spaniards during its best years, the remaining population of the forts and villages were native American who usually outnumbered the Spanish by dozens to hundreds.

Fort Tubac was abandoned several times over 110 years due to repeated attacks at or near the fort. The garrisons remained relatively small, usually cavalry and some artillery. Captain Pedro Allande y Saabedra took command of Tucson after O'Connor, Allande commanded Fort Tucson during four different attacks. He also commanded many of the advances into Apacheria and Seri country. Native warriors also contributed to Fort Tucson's defense several times during its history of fighting Apaches, sometimes because the natives allied with the Spanish were already long-time enemies with the Apache. The wars grew into sort of a stalemate; eventually the Spanish growth in the presidio topped off resulting in the small company size garrisons. The Spanish at any given point had fewer than 300 soldiers in all their presidios and settlements in the area. Presidio Santa Cruz de Terrenate was built along the San Pedro River southeast of Tucson in 1776, by 1780 it had already been abandoned due to Apache attacks. Presidio de San Bernardino was built just east of the present day Douglas, Arizona in 1776 but was also abandoned in 1780. The contingents from most native groups which helped the Spanish were typically very small, about fifteen men but the Pimas contributed dozens of warriors to Captain Allande during the years who fought in most if not all of the frontier expeditions. Despite being outnumbered by the thousands the Spanish held the majority of their settlements but could not decisively defeat the natives in order to stop them from raiding. Tucson became a Mexican town in 1821.

Mexican Period

When Mexico achieved its independence from Spain in 1821, Fort Tucson still had a Spanish garrison that accepted Mexican freedom, likely because the Spanish aristocracy's hold on northern Sonora wasn't broken as result of the war. The aristocracy supported the independence of their country which fueled the rebellion, many also led the armies that won the war. Since 1775 and even longer due to the Pima villages, Tucson has always been inhabited, unlike several other Spanish settlements in the area. Durinhg the Mexican period at least seventy-five percent of Tucson was populated by native Americans. After independence Mexico slipped into a depression and frontier colonization quickly became under supplied with both men and food, old alliances between Spain and the natives ended. Other tribes continued to be peaceful, the Pimas remained friendly along with Yaquis and a few other groups in southern Arizona. Apaches remained a serious threat and most of the Spanish frontier settlements in Arizona and New Mexico were abandoned and the populations fled south. Generally the Mexicans remained only in the coastal states of Texas and California, creating more Indian country in between Mexico City and California. Landlocked settlements in what is now northern New Mexico survived with Tucson and a few other mission towns such as the San Xavier and the Tumacacori Mission. Apaches continued raiding and skirmished with Mexicans just outside Fort Tucson several times, they raided the livestock just like they did the Spanish herds. The Mexicans were less able to defend themselves due to the depression.

By the time the war between the United States and Mexico began in 1846, the depression was over and Mexican Army forces occupied the Tucson presidio. The area was prospering and held its largest garrison of around 200 dragoons or infantrymen with two cannons. In 1846 as the United States Army's Mormon Battalion moved through present day Arizona, they nearly fought a battle with the Mexican army as they approached the fort from the southeast. The Americans were on their way to reinforce the United States Navy's campaign against California. Mormon forces captured the presidio just after the Mexican commander Captain Antonio Comaduron decided not to fight,instead he withdrew his garrison to San Xavier and then to Tubac. The Mormons eventually left Tucson and it was reoccupied by the Mexicans. The war ended with a United States victory and the Mexican Cession in which the Mexican Government sold the Americans most of what is now the southwest United States in 1848. Tucson became part of the American New Mexico Territory after the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. Though the land was purchased the Mexican garrison did not leave Fort Tucson until 1856. By then most of the population was Anglo and Pima, basically all Apache groups were now hostile along with former colonist allies such as the Navajo and Opatas. The California Gold Rush in 1849 brought thousands of Anglos to New Mexico Territory and California, they recognized the mineral wealth in the region and began establishing mining towns.

American Period

The United States Army took control of Fort Tucson in 1856 after eighty-one years in existence and the city began to thrive once more. Famous military figures, prospectors, outlaws and warriors would all become part of Tucson's culture more than ever before. With the discovery of precious minerals in the area in the 18th century by the Spanish and in the 1860s by Americans, mining camps and later mining towns were built all across the desert frontier around Tucson. From 1850 to 1920, mining camps became the cewnter of industrialization, before; agriculture and ranching provided the best opportunity of prosperity along the Santa Cruz. The period from 1870 and on is when the speed of settling the frontier became most rapid around Tucson. Most of Arizona's towns and cities were built at this time. Hostile natives remained a problem for the development of unsettled land and continued justly until the late 1880s. Tubac was populated by Americans just after the Mexican War. A mining company town was made of the presidio which again made Tucson a little less isolated. During the early American period, the population grew for the first several years until a major outbreak of the Apache Wars between the Chiricahuas and the American Civil War which ended up creating Arizona into the state it is today. The Chiricahua Apache were commanded by the War Chiefs Mangas Coloradas, Cochise and Geronimo. They and their allies fought primarily a guerrilla war against the remaining Mexican and new American settlements throughout the Gadsden Purchase area, all of which was considered traditional lands of the Apache. The American Indian Wars ended in Arizona where military campaigns against native Americans continued as late as 1918.

The great war against the Chiricahua began in 1860. After a raiding campaign into American territory against frontier settlements and the Bascom Affair in which Cochise's brother was killed, Chiricahua Apache bands began to form alliances with each other. They built an army of unknown strength which was commanded by Cochise and another chief ally, Mangas Coloradas. The Apaches then began a campaign to rid Apacheria of all the whites and Mexicans. Attacks on settlers started around what is now southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico in the Apache heartland of the Dragoon Mountains, the Dos Cabezas Mountains, the Chiricahua Mountains and Apache Pass. In the area is where the main settlers trail east and west was located. Apaches killed, captured and tortured at least a 100 people within a year along the trail in and near Apache Pass. Hundreds more settlers were being killed elsewhere across the vast area Apaches controlled. Thousands of settlers were killed in total over the fifty years of conflict, no exact number will ever be known. Tucson was again under what was considered serious threat of attack. Apaches controlled all of the mountains around Tucson in the early 1860s, especially after the withdrawal of United States troops in 1861. Only white settlers, the remaining Tucson Mexicans, and the dwindling Pima tribe inhabited the Tucson area and the Santa Cruz Valley. Apaches were at their high point and controlled almost everywhere around the region but influence was weaker northwest of Tucson in what is now the Tohono O'odham reservation. The O'odham were generally peaceful, the Pimas are one of the larger O'odham bands as of today. When the American Civil War began, all of the forts protecting Tucson were abandoned and the Butterfield Overland Mail company closed just after. Both events left the isolated Tucson area with no military support against the Apache army.

Beginning just after the 1856 establishing of American Tucson, settlers in southern New Mexico Territory began petitioning the government for separation. They hoped to establish a new territory in Traditional Arizona. The petitions, signed in Tucson and Mesilla, were rejected by the United States government but accepted by the Confederates. Confederate Arizona Territory south of the 34th parallel was created but did not become official until the First Battle of Mesilla in July 1861. The Apache took advantage of the withdrawal of Union troops. By then Mangas and Cochise had increased their raids and attacks on settlements so Confederate reinforcements were eventually sent to the area. Fort Tubac was besieged in August 1861 and abandoned again along with the Tumacacori mission. This left Mesilla, New Mexico and Tucson as the only major settlements in southern New Mexico Territory. Tubac's surviving populace was rescued by Tucson militia under Captain Granville H. Oury. The survivors left for Mesilla just after only to be attacked again in Cooke's Canyon. Many of the male Tubacan refugees became militiamen in the Arizona Rangers and the Arizona Guards. From 1861 to 1863, several other towns were attacked by Apaches but they were usually defeated by minutemen, Confederate or Union forces. A company of Confederates under Captain Sherod Hunter reinforced the militia of Fort Tucson in late April 1862 and held a flag raising ceremony on May 1. The company was composed primarily of militia from Dona Ana, the Arizona Rangers, of which men from Tubac had joined after escaping their town a year earlier. The rest included Texas cavalrymen, the company counted to about seventy-five men. A major Apache attack on Tucson is believed to have been thwarted due to the arrival of Captain Hunter's company.

With such a limited force of men Hunter had orders to establish an alliance with the native Americans in the region, particularly the Pimas. He also was directed to observe the advance of the California Column under James H. Carleton which had already began their invasion of Confederate Arizona. Hunter dispatched several parties on foraging missions, they skirmished with Apaches twice in the Dragoon Mountains, he also sent a request east for more reinforcements. Other squads were sent to burn the Butterfield Overland Mail stations along the trail west where the Californians were advancing from. A Union spy before the Californian advance purchased several thousand pounds of grain and food before the campaign. It was stored in the abandoned mail stations and intended to be used by the California Column. A rebel squad under First Lieutenant Jack Swilling burned Union supplies at Stanwix Station on March 30, 1862, and skirmished with the Californians. By this time Swilling had founded what later transformed into Arizona's state capital of Phoenix. Rebels later fought the Battle of Picacho Pass just north of Tucson as the Union army approached the presidio, the Picacho Pass skirmish delayed Union forces for weeks after they retreated norths Finally Union troops captured the undefended Fort Breckenridge to the northeast of Tucson and then attacked the city. The same day the Union began their advance on Tucson, Sherod Hunter with only about 100 men withdrew from Tucson due to the lack of reinforcements which never arrived. He left ten militiamen and Lieutenant James H. Tevis behind to observe the Union attack. Confederate Tucson was captured without a shot fired on May 20, 1862, and James H. Carleton and his 2,000 men took command of the presidio, the Confederates escaped to Mesilla. The Union column moved on a week or so later, Carleton left a small garrison behind to occupy the rebel city. In 1863 with the help of Arizona's founding father; Charles D. Poston, Union Arizona Territory was created and Tucson became the capital. After the Civil War the fortress would nolonger play a direct role in warfare though the presidio walls would continue to serve as sought out refuge by settlers until Geronimo's surrender in 1886. Fort Lowell was built next to Tucson in 1873 and became a major army post. With the end of the Apache threat, the Tucson area was rendered peaceful and the fort useless.

From the 1860s to 1890s Tucson would become a major stop for United States armies on campaigns to fight the Apache, hundreds of Tucson militia served in the expeditions. By the Mexican Revolution of 1910, the next war fought in southern Arizona, only one portion of the remaining four presidio walls still stood, the others were apparently buried or demolished for new development around the turn of the 20th century. The wall was three feet thick and a few feet tall. It stood in between two later American buildings and was finally destroyed in 1918. A pair of local women made a plaque which marked the location of the wall. Years later in the early 1960s, an old liquor store was torn down to make way for a parking lot. When the earth was revealed another foundation of the presidio was found, it was a 3-foot-thick (0.91 m) portion of the northeastern bastion. An archaeological survey was being put together to examine the presidio, it was also proposed that a park be made of the area but the planned parking lot was built before the team could begin digging. In 2006 the issue was reopened and the parking lot was removed. A team of diggers investigated the site and found hundreds of artifacts from all of the fort's periods. It is suspected that much of Fort Tucson remains intact but underneath the present day city. A reconstructed bastion began to be constructed in 2006, including a row of jacals just outside of the new bastion.

See also

References