Fort Cummings

Fort Cummings
Location of Fort Cummings in New Mexico
Location Luna County, New Mexico
Coordinates 32°27′56″N 107°38′45″W / 32.46556°N 107.64583°W / 32.46556; -107.64583Coordinates: 32°27′56″N 107°38′45″W / 32.46556°N 107.64583°W / 32.46556; -107.64583
Designated December 21, 1969[1]
Reference no. 35

Fort Cummings is a former U. S. Army post located near Cooke's Springs, in Luna County, New Mexico. It is located 20 miles northeast of Deming, New Mexico.

Cooke's Spring

Cooke's Spring 32°27′46″N 107°38′55″W / 32.46277°N 107.64863°W / 32.46277; -107.64863 was named for Philip St. George Cooke 2nd U.S. Dragoons the former commander of the Mormon Battalion, that was exploring this area of New Mexico in 1853. It was the only large supply of fresh water between Mesilla and the Mimbres River for wagons heading to California on the Southern Emigrant Trail as well as the later Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach route. The Cooke's Spring Station of the Butterfield Overland Mail was located near Cooke's Spring from 1858 to 1861.

Cookes Springs were located at the eastern mouth of the upper part of Cookes Canyon[2] which led to Cooke's Pass a narrow gap in the Cookes Range32°47′32″N 107°43′17″W / 32.79218°N 107.72129°W / 32.79218; -107.72129. Between 1848 and 1861 the pass was a dangerous place for travelers who were often ambushed and killed by the Apache as they passed through it. Following the Bascom Affair things were even worse as the Apache, formerly friendly to the stage company destroyed most of the stations and destroyed many coaches and killed their passengers and for over a decade later hundreds of other travelers. Cooke's Pass was a favored location for ambushes and it acquired the name Massacre Canyon after incidents like the Battle of Cookes Canyon.

The Fort was first established nearby the stage station on October 2, 1863, by Captain Valentine Dresher, Company B, 1st California Infantry, of the California Column. Fort Cummings was established to control the Apache Indians, and to protect the Butterfield - Overland stage route and the southern overland road to California where it passed through Cooke's Pass.

The fort was built up over the next ten years as an adobe walled fort, surrounded by a 10-foot high wall that enclosed a parade ground, corral and several single-story adobe buildings around the wall.[3]

The fort was evacuated and entered a caretaker status in 1870 and abandoned in 1873. However it was reoccupied later when Apache under Victorio, launched a campaign against the white American settlers in 1880. It was known as "Camp at Fort Cummings" from 1880 to 1884 and in 1886 during later Apache troubles. Again abandoned it only remains as some eroding adobe walls, and along with the nearby site of the stage station and post graveyard to the south.

Garrisons

References

  1. "New Mexico State and National Registers". New Mexico Historic Preservation Commission. Retrieved 2013-03-13.
  2. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cookes Canyon
  3. A drawing of its layout and descriptions of its buildings uses in 1867 appears in Annals of old Fort Cummings, New Mexico, 1867-8 on the plate opposite page 17.
  4. Records of California men in the war of the rebellion 1861 to 1867, p.384
  5. Annals of old Fort Cummings, p. 48
  6. Annals of old Fort Cummings, p. 51
  7. Annals of old Fort Cummings, p.51
  8. 38th Infantry Regiment was consolidated into the U.S. 24th Infantry Regiment on March 15, 1869
  9. 1870 U.S. Census.

Sources

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