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Mr. Sedivy's
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Highlands Ranch High School - Mr. Sedivy
Highlands Ranch, Colorado
- Colorado History -
Fort Union
By David Sedivy
Early Arrivals to Fort Union
Captain Isaac Bowen and his wife Katherine were among the early arrivals
to Fort Union. Katie and Isaac wrote home frequently to her family.
In one of Katie Bowen's letters she noted that the winds at Fort Union
were very strong. According to her, they blew hard for a week from
the north, then quieted down, and then they blew hard from the south.
She had trouble keeping the dirt out of her new house, and she wrote
home that the dirt drifted in like snow in every unprotected crevice.
Occasionally she even had to shovel out her house because it was so
deep. She wrote to her parents:
"How I would like that you could
look in and see how primitive we are in our log houses, white-washed
logs overhead, chinked and covered with earth to shed snow and rain."12
Land Ownership
Fort Union was located on the Mora land grant. The United States government
was supposed to pay rent for the use of the land.13
Although the secretary of the interior tried to amend the Mora land
grant so that the improvements would belong to the United States,
it turned out that such an amendment was not legal. The grantees,
however could not compel the government to abandon the post. So, the
government concluded that it owned the buildings and improvements,
and could not be forced to leave the post. Thus, the federal government
had no land ownership at Fort Union.14
Daily Life at Fort Union
The barter system was a big part of daily life at Fort Union. Families
traded for vegetables, butter, eggs and herbs. Their reliance on supplementing
army rations had an impact on the physical appearance of the post.
The troops became creative in providing for extra food. They had small
gardens and raised stock. In September, 1859, the post commander issued
an order stating that from that time forward, hogs were prohibited
from running loose through the garrison. The hogs ate anything they
found and the troops in turn ate them.15
A settler woman gathers buffalo chips. Buffalo chips
were easily secured
and gave a steady hot fire, so they were often used for cooking.
An 1853 inspection of the fort by Joseph Mansfield noted some points
about Fort Union. He criticized the location of the fort, saying that
it was to close to the mesa for adequate defense. Mansfield found
the post "in a high rate of discipline and every department of
it in good order," especially when the troops had to do everything
from building quarters, gathering timber and hay, farming, escorting
trains, and pursuing Indians.16
Condition of the Buildings
The buildings at the first fort were deteriorating at a rapid rate.
They were not constructed as permanent buildings. In late 1856 Assistant
Surgeon Jonathan Letterman did an inspection report at Fort Union.
He wrote, when the rains came, the run-off drained down the mesa sometimes
which such force that the buildings were flooded. As far as the quarters
were concerned, he descibed them as made of unseasoned, unhewn, and
unbarked pine logs, placed upright in some and horizontal in other
houses. The logs were decaying fast. The unbarked logs afford excellent
hiding places for that annoying and disgusting insect, the cimex lectularius
(bedbug). By 1856, one barracks had been torn down, and others were
in imminent danger of collapse.17
The multiple functions at Fort Union-army post, supply depot, and
arsenal-led to some animosity between various units. The quartermaster,
the fort, and the arsenal all employed civilian employees. The depot
quartermaster often outranked the post commander. The military storekeeper
who ran the arsenal reported directly to the chief of ordnance in
Washington instead of to the post commander. Although the fort was
known as one large unit, it was really three units whose leaders reported
to three separate superiors.18
Fort Union
| The Sante Fe Trail and Fort Union |
| Sumner - Ninth Military Department / The
First Fort Union |
| Early Arrivals to Fort Union, Daily Life
at Fort Union |
| Captain Grover - The New Fort Union, the
Confederate Threat |
| Fort Union Arsenal, William Shoemaker,
End of Fort Union |
Bibliography is available by email
request.
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- Colorado History In Depth
-
Lecture Notes, Reading, and Information:
| The Cheyenne Migration
to Colorado |
| The Gratlan Affair, Massacre, Fort Laramie
Treaty |
The Cheyenne Social Club
| A Cheyenne War Story: Wolf Road, the Runner
|
| Cheyenne Traditions and Beliefs, Sacred
Stories |
| Horses, Warriors, War Pipe, Sweatlodge
Ceremony |
| Cheyenne War Parties and Battle Tactics
|
| The Scalp Dance and Other Cheyenne Dances
|
Americans from the East
| Thomas Jefferson, the Louisiana Purchase
|
| The Expedition of Zebulon Pike |
| Pikes Peak or Bust / Colorado Gold Rush
|
Colorado's Role in the US Civil
War
| The Civil War, Fort Wise / Fort Lyon
|
| Mace's Hole, Colonel Canby, F.C.V.R.
| Fort Weld |
| The Pet Lambs, John Chivington |
| General Henry Sibly, Battle of Valverde,
Fort Union |
Cripple Creek District Labor Strikes
| The Western Federation of Miners / State
Militia |
| The 1893 - 1894 Strike | The
Strike of 1903 - 1904 |
| The Mine Owners Association |
| Crimes and Military Rule in the Cripple
Creek District |
| Marshall Law in Cripple Creek District
/ End of the Strike |
Early Cripple Creek District
| Photos, Fire, and Life in Cripple Creek
|
| Other Colorful Towns in the Cripple Creek
District:
Gillett - Colorado's Only Bullfight, Victor, Independence |
| A Guide to the Miners' Gritty Lingo
|
More Colorado History
Information
| Bent's Fort Photos, Personalities, Plans,
and More |
| What Was Easter Like at Bent's Fort?
|
| Colorado Trivia,
Miscellaneous Old Photos,
Western Personalities, Forts, and More |
| Lullabies for Jittery Cows - Cowboy Ballads
|
| Heraldry of the Branding Iron |
| Project
Aims to Clear Infamous Cannibal, Alferd Packer |
| Lead Gives Alferd
Packer's Story More Weight |
| Legendary
Colorado Love Stories: Baby Doe Tabor & More
|
| Colorado Pioneer Women: Elizabeth Byers
|
| Early Denver Jokes / The History of April
Fools' Day |
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