■:^ -^0^ ,V ^ V<^^//ii^.^ "> 'v. * V ". ^ov- :«^^' -^^0^ :>^M« o_ 4< '■a^.-^^' T^ a' -iy" . ^^ c^ .K^^ -mMx %^ * A. .♦-^ ;g^/^ ^0 -V *o.o^ ' V A ,0- 0" y'.. V \^ -1^ • O' VV^ <^ 4 O '^<^ <>. .^ ,-^'^ ^, Mj v:h. '«. x*-^ r. ,0- ^ -'^S^/ N^ ^%' ^ V ^^ o r R // i 3 l-ATTLKS IN Ml-XlCU. ILLLSTIL\TEI» WITH KLKVKN KLKGANT FN^iUWlNnS r.ATTI.K-S OF FOIIT llAKlii^"^', aKKR-f'nO-UF.K. I'AI^) ALTU, KH^^AC'A l»K LA TALMA. MUNTKUKV, AMI liLKNAVIftll»KM» "i I V II 1 I. A P 1 1. I' i« ' ^ vM. V r. COLLINS. liUNTKUS i;KALLY TIIBOUCJHOUT int. ' 1- 4Z2 ^ t^ i* «?^ ADVERTISEMENT It was expected, by the publishers of this volume, that, according to their announcement, a Life of General Taylor, by R. T. Conrad, Esq., would be ready at the present time. To collect materials respecting the early years of General Taylor, Mr. Conrad visited Kentucky during the past summer, and was about to begin the work, when prevented by other engage- ments. His memoranda, however, were kindly placed at the disposal of the publishers, and have supplied interesting facts for the present volume, for the use of which they make this acknowledgment on their own behalf and that of the author. Philadelphia, October 10, 1847. (3) PEEFACE. The time is not yet mature for a biography of General Tay- lor, which will do thorough justice to his character and military services. Only eighteen months have elapsed, since his ability as a commander began to be generally recognized. His varied and extraordinary achievements within that period have justly excited popular curiosity regarding his early life, as well as his late career. To meet, therefore, a want of the day, this volume has been prepared. JNo profession is made respecting it, ex- cept that pains have been taken to procure accurate information touching the circumstances of Taylor's family, the incidents of his youth, and his services in the Indian wars. The outline of his proceedings in Mexico is drawn partly from private letters, but chiefly from his own official correspondence. It may be proper to add, that, to make this volume accepta- ble to a class of present readers^ it was thought expedient to be diffuse in some instances where permanent favour would have suggested condensation, and to be brief in others, where the same reason would have demanded comprehensive state- ments or remarks. Still it is believed that the narrative is neither impeded by irrelevant matter, nor deficient in any es- sential particular. (4) CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. The Taylor Family — Kentucky in 1775 — Birth of Zachary Taylor — Emigration of the Family to Kentucky — Hancock Taylor — Danger from the Indians — Zachary Taylor's Schoolmaster — His First Lesson in Tac- tics — His Prosperity as a Farmer — Peace with the Indians — Volunteers to oppose Burr's Designs — Commissioned a Lieutenant in U. S. Army — His Marriage — The Indiane under Tecumseh — Harrison's Expedition against them — Taylor promoted to a Captaincy — War with England- Attack on Fort Harrison — Taylor's Defence of it — His First Despatch — Further Services — Major by Brevet 13 CHAPTER IL Injustice to Army Officers — Taylor's Resignation and Reinstatement — ^Va- rious Services from 1816 to 1832 — Anecdote of his Habits — Promoted to a Colonelcy — Black Hawk War — Battle of Bad-Axe-«-Gen. Atkin- son's DespatA — Anecdote of Taylor — Services until 1836 29 CHAPTER IIL Destiny of the Indian Races — Causes of the Florida War — Osceola^ Commencement of the Florida War — Troops in Florida — Massacre of Dade's Command — Volunteers in Florida — Taylor ordered to the Seat of War Marches against the Indians — Difficulties of the March — Bat- tle of Okeechobee — Gallantry of the Troops — The Killed and Wounded Taylor's Account of the Battle — Its Results — Taylor applauded by the Country — Promoted to a Brigadier Generalship — Appointed to the chief Command in Florida — Use of Blood-hounds — Authority for the Use — Reasons for the same — Indian Murders, several Accounts — Their Perfidy — Taylor vindicated — He retires from the Command in Florida, ^f 1* (5) VI CONTENTS. CHAPTER IV. General Taylor in the South-west — Tender of a public Dinner — Mexico in 1S22 — Spirit of her Institutions — Injustice to Texas — Revolt of Texas — Annexation of Texas — Duly of a Soldier — Taylor ordered to defend Texas — Conditions of the Order — Invasion of Texas defined — Gen. Taylor embarks for Corpus Christi — Number of his Troops — Ordered to Matamoros — His Despatches from the date of embarking for Corpus Christi to the breaking up of the Camp at that point 68 CHAPTER V. The March from Corpus Christi to the Rio Grande commenced — Face of the Country — Suflerings of the Troops — Mexican Demonstration — American Action — Point Isabel invested — The Marchresumed — En- campment on the Rio Grande — Conference rejected — Entrenchments commenced — Despatches of General Taylor — Ampudia's Magnanimity — A Deserter shot — Fort Brown — Murder of Colonel Cross — Corve- spondencCj Ampudia and Taylor — General Arista — Blockade of the Rio Grande — Correspondence on the Subject — Mexicans crossing the River — Capture of I'hornton's Command — Mexican Exultation — Manifesto of Arista — Point Isabel in Danger — Requisition for Volunteers — Cap- tain Walker's First Exploit — Resolution to relieve Point Isabel 87 CHAPTER VI. ' Rejoicing in Matamoros — Arista, with his Forces, crosses the River His Disappointment at Taylor's Escape — Mexican Narrative of both Move- ments — Ardour*of the Mexicans — Terror of the Americans — Their Du- plicity and Treachery — Taylor's Ignominy — Bombardment of Fort Brown — Taylor's Instructions — May's and Walker's Mission — New Mexican Batteries — Their Fire not returned — Mexican Account of the Bombardment — Eternal Honour of Mexican Artillery-men — Barbarous Pleasure of the Americans — Their Cowardice and Stupidity — Mexican Triumph— American Loss — Mexican Superiority — Continuation of the Bombardment — Death of'Major Brown — New Mexican Batteries Cap- tain Hawkins summoned to Surrender — Arista's modest Letter — Haw- kins' presumptuous Answer — W^ant of Ammunition — Preparations for an Assault — Weariness of the Men in the Fort — Signals of Relief.. ... 108 CHAPTER VII. General Taylor leaves Point Isabel for Fort Brown — His Force The March — Enemy reported — Root before battle — Palo Alto — Enemy in CONTENTS. VH sight — Taylor's order of battle — Lieut. Blake's bold reconnoissance — Taylor's confidence — Arista's Force and order of battle — The Enemy's first Fire — The Answer and its Effect — Charge by the Lancers — Their repulse — Fail of Ringgold — The Prairie on fire — Charge on the Train — Duncan's Battery — May's gallantry — The last Charge — The Field won — The Loss — Taylor's first Despatch — His detailed account of the Action — Mention of Lieut. Blake — Of the Artillery — ^Of Lieut. Luther — Statement of Forces — Arista's Despatch — Misstatement of his Force — Explanations of Failure — False colouring — Acknowledgment of Loss — Remarks on the causes of the Victory 119 CHAPTER VHL Mexican Army retreating — Taylor's March resumed — Mexican Dead and Wounded — Skirmishes with the Enemy — Mexican Army formed — Its Position — La Resaca de la Palma — The Battle commenced — The Artil- lery — Infantry engaged — Close Quarters — The Enemy's Batteries — May ordered to charge them — Ridgely's Gallantry — May's furious Onset — Inge's and Sackett's Death — Batteries captured — La Vega a Prisoner — The Fifth Infantry's charge — Personal deeds — The Enemy's bra- very — Officers Wounded and Killed — Arista's Camp taken — The Tam- pico Battalion — Rout of the Enemy — The Booty — The Loss — Tay- lor's first Despatch — His detailed Account — Encomiums on his Troops — Mistakes of Arista — Misery of routed Troops — Gen. Taylor's care of the Wounded — His return to Point Isabel — Congratulates his Troops ^Mexican Commander's Manifesto — Remarks on causes of his Defeat — Inferiority of Officers — Authority cited — Self-devotion of American OfHcers — Examples — Anecdotes of Heroism — Ridgely — Page — Payne — Ringgold — Richey — Woods and Hays — Augur and Cochrane — Bar- bour — May — Melton — Lincoln and Jordan — Belknap and Scott — Mc- intosh — Letter of a Witness .- 136 CHAPTER IX. The 8lh of May at Fort Brown — Anxiety of the Garrison — News of Palo Alto — Bombardment on the 9th — Mexican Fugitives seen — Reck- lessness in their Panic — Disappointment and Suffering in Matamoros — The Wounded and Dead — Despatches from Taylor — Incidents of La Vega's Capture — Taylor's Courtesy to him — Taylor's return to the Rio Grande — Commodore Conner — Barita taken — Preparations to Bombard Matamoros — Armistice offered and refused — Arista's final Retreat — Oc- cupation of Matamoros — Despatch from General Taylor — Arista's report of his Retreat — Anecdote of Ampudia — Document found in Arista's Tent — Result of Taylor's Operations 160 Viil CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. War recognized by Congress — Men and Money voted — General Taylor embarrassed — Inadequate means of advancing — Letter to the Depart- ment — Difficulties and Wants explained — Further correspondence — Sug- gestions regarding his advance — Letter from the Secretary of War — Taylor recommended to advance on Monterey — His Views on the Cam- paign requested — Continued Difficulties — Further despatches — Arrival of Volunteers — Causes of Inactivity explained — Minor Expeditions — More Troops — Letter from General Scott — News of Taylor's Victories reaches the United States — Popular Enthusiasm — Created Brigadier General by Brevet — President's Letter — Thanks voted by Louisiana Legislature — Deputation to Taylor — His Speech to the Committee — Made a full Major General by Congress — Correspondence— Taylor's Views of future Operations — Camargo taken — Despatches 177 CHAPTER XL Civil Dissensions of the Mexicans — Tyranny of Paredes — Popular Defec- tions — Conspirators apprehended — Liberty of the Press abolished — Un- wise Policy of Paredes — News of Arista's Defeat received — Sensation in the Capital — Money refused by the Clergy — Decline of Paredes' authority — Movement in favour of Santa Anna — Civil War in Mexico — Blockade by the United States of Mexican Ports — Plans of the United States Government — Plans of General Taylor — Proclamation to the People of Mexico — Confidential Letter to Taylor — Taylor's Answer- Santa Anna proclaimed in Vera Cruz — Excitement in the Capital — Fall of Paredes — Santa Anna's return to Mexico — Government of de Salas — Santa Anna's triumphal entry into the Capital — His pledges to the Mexicans — Taylor's Arrangements complete for his Advance — His Difficulties explained — Enumeration of his Force — March of Worth's Division — Of Butler's and Twiggs' Divisions — Report of Forces against Monterey — Sufferings and Death of Volunteers — March of Worth's Di- vision towards Monterey 196 CHAPTER Xn. Enemy reinforced at Monterey — Taylor, with Twiggs' and Butler's Divi- sions, marches from Camargo — The March — Rest at Seralvo — Appear- ance of the Country — Mexican Forces discovered — The Advance before Monterey fired upon — Encampment at Walnut Springs — Description of Monterey — Its Fortifications — Mexican Forces in it — Ampudia's Ad- dress — Taylor's Reconnoissance — His Plan of Assault — Worth's Expe- dition — His movement on the 20th — Skirmish on the 21st — Occupa- CONTENTS. IX tion of the Saltlllo Pass — Movements of Butler's Division — First Fort in the Eastern Suburbs carried — Terrible Fire of the Enemy's Bat- teries — Repulse of the Lancers — Two Forts on the Heights carried — Losses on the First Day — Dispositions for the Night 215 CHAPTER XHL Independencia carried — Sortie from the Palace — Enemy repulsed and Pa- lace taken — Operations on the Eastern Quarter — Progress towards the Heart of the Town — Worth's Progress on Opposite Side — Command of the Main Plaza — Flag of Truce — Suspension of the Attack — Tay- lor's Despatch — Correspondence with Ampudia and the Governor — Tay- lor's Detailed Report of the Siege — Extract from Worth's Report — Com- ments on the Action — Conference between Ampudia and Taylor — Com- missioners on the Capitulation appointed — Proceedings of the Commis- sion — Terms of Capitulation — Report of Killed and Wounded 232 CHAPTER XIV. Occupation of the City by Worth's Division — Encampment of Butler's and Twiggs' Divisions — Consideration of the Terms of Capitulation — Implied Censure by Congress of the Terms — Defence of the same — Jef- ferson Davis' Views regarding the Capitulation — Taylor's Letter to the Adjutant General justifying it — Private Letter on the same Subject, and on his past Operations and future Plans — Concluding Remarks 263 ^ CHAPTER XV. Taylor's Force after the Capitulation of Monterey — Reflections on his Course — Advices from Washington — Instructions regarding Supplier- Regarding an Expedition against the Coast — Further Correspondence — Taylor's Replies — Opinions regarding his own future Operations — Re- garding the Force requisite to invest Vera Cruz — Assertion of his Rights as Commander — Answer to the Secretary respecting forced Supplies — General Wool's Entry into Monclova 274 CHAPTER XVI. March of Worth's Division for Saltillo — Taylor's Instructions — His reasons for holding Saltillo — Opinion regarding the Expedition against Vera Cruz — The Forces necessary — Taylor visits Saltillo — Protest of the Go- vernor — Relative position of the Divisions — Tampico occupied — Taylor «ets out for Victoria with Twiggs' and Quitman's Brigades — Returns with the former — Concentration at Saltillo — Arrival of Wool's Division expected — Taylor marches again for Victoria with Twiggs' Division — Occupation of Victoria — Forces there — Government Plans against Vera A 2 X CONTENTS. Cruz — Letter from General Scott to General Taylor — Forces withdrawn from General Taylor — Address to his Troops — Loss of May's Rear-guard — Capture of Majors Borland, Gaines, and C. M. Clay — Affairs of Mexico^Activity of Santa Anna — His advance to San Luis — General Wool's Camp — Taylor's advance to Saltillo — Camp at Agua Nueva — At Buena Vista — Enumeration of Santa Anna's Forces — of Taylor's Forces 289 CHAPTER XVn. Taylor's Position at Buena Vista — Washington's Birth-day — Summons of Santa Anna to Taylor to Surrender — The Reply — Taylor's Detailed Report of the Battle — His order of Battle on the 22d — Skirmishes-^ Minon's Cavalry in the Rear — Battle on the 23d — Attack of the Enemy on the Left and Centre — Partial success of the Attack — Service of the Artillery — Repulse of the Enemy — Ruse of Santa Anna — Death of Yell and Vaughan — Renewed Attacks of the Enemy — Bragg's Battery — The Day saved — Death of Hardin, McKee, Lincoln, and Clay — Incidents after the Battle — Comparative Losses — General Wool and other Officers and Corps distinguished — Official Return of Loss — Private Letter to General Butler — Taylor's Views of the Battle — Congratulatory Orders — Letters to Henry Clay and Governor Lincoln — Rejoicings in the United States — Mr. Crittenden — Repulse of Urrea and Romaro by Ma- jor Giddings — Taylor's purSuit of them — Return to his Head-quarters — Public Estimation of Taylor — The Presidency — His Personal Views as a Candidate — Concluding Remarks on his Character 899 M A F OF THE SEAT OF GENERAL TAYLOR'S OPERATIONS s:)cs 5^ s:^ 12 c^ ^:> {To face paffe 13.) TAYLOK'S FII^^T I.KS80N IN TUP. ART OF WAR. To faop cage 13. LIFE OF GENEEAL TAYLOE. CHAPTER I. The Taylor Family — Kentucky in 1775 — Birth of Zachary Taylor — Emigration of the Family to Kentucky — Hancock Taylor — Danger iom the Indians — Zachary Taylor's Schoolmaster — His First Lesson in Tactics — His Prosperity as a Farmer — Peace with the Indians — Volunteers to oppose Burr's Designs — (Commissioned a Lieutenant in U. S. Army — His Marriage — The Indians under Tecumseh — Harrison's Expedition against them — Taylor promoted to a Captaincy — War with England — Attack on Fort Harrison-^Taylor's De- fence of it — His First Despatch — Further Services — Major by Brevet. The republican principles and customs of our country hap- pily forbid personal distinction founded merely upon ancestral rank. Wc incline rather to celebrate a name first made illus- trious in our own day, than one which borrows its light from the glory of other gejierations. Yet we fail not in due re- spect for the character which worthily sustains inherited supe- riority. In this spirit, we commence a biograjjhy of General Taylor, by citing the honourable families whose blood is mingled in his veins. Original obscurity or early trials could not have shadowed his genius or repressed his energies. But springing from a stock, to be worthy of which were a singular merit, he has proved himself its noblest scion, and, amid a Italo of kindred names, his own has suddenly risen to be the highest and brightest. The family of the Virginia Taylors is allied to the oldest and most distinguished of that state. Its first representatives emigrated from England, and settled in the south-eastern part of the colony, towards the close of the seventeenth century. O (Kt) 14 THE TAYLOR FAMILY. In the different branches of it are found the Lees, thfe Bar- hours, the Madisons, the Conways, the Pendletons, the Hunts, the Taliaferros, the Gaineses, and others, whose public ser- vices and virtues, during a hundred years, are commemo- rated in our colonial and national history. Richard Taylor, the father of General Zachary Taylor, was born in Virginia, on the 22d day of March, 1744. He appears to have received a plain but solid education, and evinced in his boyhood the daring and adventurous spirit, which led him to seek a home and independence in the wilderness of the Mississippi valley. While. yet at school, he entered into a compact, with some of his mates, to visit Kentucky when they should grow up. He, at least, adhered to his purpose. When still very young, he set out, and reached " the dark and bloody ground," on which, at that time, the dwelling of a civilized man had not been reared. His survey of the country ex- tended to4he Mississippi, down which he proceeded as far as Natchez. From that point, his face was then turned home- ward; and, without guide or companion, through pathless woods, over rivers and mountains, fearless alike of the seasons, of savages, or of any peril of his long and lonely way, he walked back to his father's house in Virginia. All that he had seen served but to confirm, in his imagination, the charms of border life ; and, although he continued to reside many years in Virginia, he subsequently fulfilled his desire of making his home in the great west. On the 20th of August, 1779, when thirty-five years old, he was married to Sarah Strother, a young lady, of good family, then in her twentieth year. At this time, he held a colonel's commission in the Virginia Line, and served with zeal and honour through the revolutionary war. Five sons and three daughters were the offspring of this mar- riage, — the first child born in 1781. Zachary Taylor, the sub- ject of this memoir, the third son of Colonel Richard Taylor, was born in Orange county, Virginia, on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1784. In the following summer, his father ful- filled his long-cherished intention of emigrating to Kentucky, KENTUCKY PIONEERS. 15 Only ten years before, the first habitation of a white man had been erected in the vast region between the western boundary of Virginia and the Mississippi. Within this period, a few set- tlements had been made, insufficient, however, from their feebleness and isolated positions, to secure to the emigrant adequate protection from the Indians, much less to afford him the most usual comforts of civilized life. Peril and privation, to which only superior courage and fortitude were equal, were the lot of all who sought a home in the primitive woods, and in the hunting-grounds of hostile savages. In the emigration of Colonel Richard Taylor to this country, he had been preceded by his brother Hancock, a brave and intelligent man, who fell a sacrifice in the enterprise of sur- veying parts of the Ohio valley. He is said to have selected, for his farm, the site of the city of Louisville. He is thus mentioned in Marshall's History of Kentucky. " After Douglass, (a surveyor, who died on the Kentucky river, while engaged in his profession,) and pursued by a fate more malignant, was Hancock Taylor ; a surveyor aT^o, and a man of more enterprise. He, too, landed at the falls of the Ohio, and, after making a number of surveys, by virtue of mili- tary warrants, was killed by the Indians, who made a sudden onset before he was apprized of danger. Thus fell an intelli- gent and worthy man. One of his attendants had the pre- caution to secure and bring off his book of field notes, which was rendered effectual [adopted as authority,] by an act of the legislature." Under the guidance of such men, and under such* circum- stances for the development of his bold spirit and active intel- lect, Zachary Taylor passed his infant years. The hardships and dangers of border life w'ere to him as familiar as ease and security to the child of metropolitan luxury. His father had settled in Jefferson county, about two miles from the Ohio river, and five miles from Louisville, where he acqiiired a large estate by his industry and thrift, and honourable con- sideration by his intelligence, bravery, and patriotism. As Lo>'i^ville rose into importance, his own fortune and local dis IG TAYLOR'S SCHOOLMASTER. tinctlon increased. He received from President Washington a commission as collector of that port, New Orleans being then in possession of the Spar^iards. He had been a personal friend of Washington, prior to his emigration from Virginia, and his worth was, therefore, f^niliar to that great man, from early knowledge as well as later report. One of the chief cares of Colonel Taylor was the education of his children. During the first ten or fifteen years of his residence in Kentucky, the country being sparsely settled, and exposed to Indian enemies, this purpose could be accomplished only in a very partial degree. A school, for the rudiments of English merely, was established in his neighbourhood by Elisha Ayres, a native of Connecticut, who afterwards returned to that state, and now resides, a venerable gentleman of four- score years, at Preston, in the vicinity of Norwich. A letter from him, written during the past summer to the author of this volume, in answer to one of inquiry concerning the school-boy days of General Taylor, explains satisfactorily the circum- stances«in which they were passed, and exhibits the character of our hero, at that time, in a light worthy of his mature re- putation. In the language of Mr. Ayres, "the Kentuckians were then a warlike and chivalrous people, and they were often engaged in oflensive or defensive skirmishes with the Indians. A number were known to be in the woods not far distant from the school-house, and, on one occasion, one of them was shot, wearing a British uniform. In their hostility to the Americans, they were encouraged and sustained by the British authorities on the Northern frontier. There was a Mr. Whetsel, in 'the neighbourhood of the school, who, having been once chased by three or four Indians, loaded his rifle while running, and suc- cessively shot them all. This exploit made Whetsel famous, and he became the instructor of the young men and boys in the neighbourhood, in his mode of maintaining a running fire. Among his pupils, it is believed, was yoang Zachary." It may be remarked, upon this recital of " young Zachary's" first training in the art of war, that he has apparently forgotten TAYLOR A FARMER. 17 the " running" lessons, although, in other respects, he aban- dantly justifies the tuition of the valiant Whetsel. Among the anecdotes current in Kentucky respecting his childhood, is one of his watching at home with his brother, and casting bullets, w^hile his father was out engaged with the Indians. Such, in fact, was the constant necessity of guarding against these cunning and implacable foes, that the physician of the neighbourhood habitually rode with pistols at his saddlebows. AH attempts to placate or subdue the Indians had failed, prior to the date of Wayne's decisive victory over them. In 1795, the year following that important achievement, a general peace was concluded. From that period, the population of Kentucky increased rapidly, and civilized labour and enter- prise began to enjoy their due reward. Zachary Taylor was reated by his father to his own profession — that of a farmer ; and, until his majority, was practically engaged in it, working with his own hands, and laying the foundation of the robust health, hardy habits, and persevering industry, which have borne the test of various climate, rude fare, and severe duty, (luring a military life of more than thirty years. The service very early engaged his affections and excited his ambition. When Aaron Burr's movements in the west began to arouse suspicion, the patriotic young men of Kentucky formed volun- teer companies, to oppose his designs by arnfl, if occasion should demand such a resort. Zachary Taylor, and one or more of his brothers, were enrolled in a troop raised for this purpose. After the alarm had subsided, he returned to his farm, which he continued to cultivate successfully, until the death of hi^ brother. Lieutenant Taylor. The latter held a commission in the United States array, and, dying in the service, an oppor- tunity was afforded Zachary of obtaining the vacancy. Through the influence of his relative, James Madison, of his uncle, Major Edmund Taylor, and of his father, this object Was ac- complished ; and, on the 3d of May, 1808, he received his commission as first lieutenant in the seventh regiment of United States Infantry. At this time, he was already in the enjoyment 2* 18 W A R WITH GREAT BRITAIN. of a fortune, which, although moderate, was more than suffi- cient for his wants. But the activity of his mind, his aspira- tions for a larger sphere of employment, ^nd, it may be, for the distinction of an officer in the national service, were supe- rior to the inclination for the quiet and profitable occupation of landed proprietor. His first experience in his new vocation had nearly proved fatal. He was ordered to report himself to General Wilkinson in New Orleans ; and, being taken there with the yellow fever, was obliged to return home to recruit his health. He appears to have employed his time sedulously in the study of his profession, as we find him, three years from this time, fulfilling with honour a dangerous and important post. The aggressive policy of England had been meanwhile pre- paring the public mind for the declaration of war. The emis- saries of her government, employed among the Indian tribes north of the Ohio, had incited anew their hostility to the Ame- rican settlers, who were kept in constant apprehension of an attack. Under these circumstances, it was deemed advisable by the government to make the first (demonstration, and General Harrison, then Governor of the North-west Territory, was ordered to march a force into the Indian country. In the progress of this expedition he erected on the Wabash River, in Indiana, a block-house and stockade, which received the name of Fort Harrison. Lieutenant Taylor took part in this duty, and was. afterwards kept actively engaged in watching (he Indians and thwarting their adverse movements. His mar- riage had taken plac£ in 1810, and he left at home a young wife and child to join his command. Communications with • his family were difficult and infrequent, — at tim.es so long in- terrupted that he was supposed to have fallen a victim to the l)crilous enterprise in which he was employed. His' services wore appreciated by President Madison, who rewarded them by a captain's commission, in the beginning of the year 1S12. He was then placed in command of Fort Harrison, and soon afterwards Congress declared war against Great Britain. From this period may be dated his first actual encounter with an INDIAN HOSTILITIES. 19 enemy. Upon the character of this enemy a few words may be proper in this place. During the long struggle between the French and English for the ascendancy in the Mississippi valley, the Indians had been anxiously courted by both powers. While they were supplied with European arms, and partially instructed in mili- tary science by European officers, no effort appears to have been made to soften their ferocity, or to mitigate the barbarous customs which regarded war less as an act of national policy, than an opportunhy of mdulging all the worst of individual passions. If lack of discipline in their armies made them less formidable to an equal number of our own troops, their savage disregard of the rights of prisoners, made them terrible to an inferior force. At the time that Captain Taylor was first brought into conflict with the tribes in the region of Fort Har- rison, they had been particularly prepared for daring adven- tures by the encouragement of two chiefs, whose talents would have honoured far nobler followers. These were Tecumseh, *and his brother Olliwachica, — better known as the Prophet. For several years it had been the policy and ambition of these men to inflame the Indians of the Norlh-western Territory with fresh animosity against their white neighbours. Both leaders added to the qualities of courage, fortitude, and perse- verance, consummate knowledge of the arts by which the savage mind is controlled ; and they succeeded in inspiring their inferiors with a religious abhorrence of the whites, more effectual for their ends, than the national jealousy excited by the encroachments of the latter upon their ancient hunting- grounds. At no previous period, therefore, was the spirit of the Indians so fully aroused to the duty — such it was in their view — of exterminating our people, as when they resolved to attack Fort Harrison. Three months after war with England had been formally declared, they were banded for this purpose. Captain Taylor had some intimations of it, which were confirmed on the 3d of September, by the report of guns in the vicinity of the fort, ivhere two young men were at work in the fields. On the 20 NIG HTATTACKBY INDIANS. 4th their bodies were discovered by a party sent out in search of them, — the scalped heads bearing too apparent proof of In- dian hands. This incident added to the vigilance of Captain Taylor, and he made every effort for defence compatible with his limited means. The whole force under his command M'as about fifty men, of whom about two-thirds were invalids. He himself was just recovering from a fever. The Indians were aware of his weakness, but still preferred the exercise, in some degree, of their native cunning, to the hazard of an open attack. For this purpose a deputation of the Prophet's party came to the fort on the evening of the 4th, bearing a white flag, and affecting peaceable intentions. Captain Taylor was not deceived by this attempt to lessen his caution. He in- spected the arms of the men, served out 16 rounds of car- tridges to each, and made other dispositions of his meagre re- sources to guard against surprise and sustain an assault. His force was so small that a sufficient number of sentinels could not be posted to protect the whole extent of the outworks, but the officer of the guard was ordered to make the tour of the, inside through the night. With these precautions the commander, and that portion of his little band not on the watch, retired to rest. But an hour before midnight they were aroused by the report of a musket. Taylor sprang up from his brief sleep, and found his savage enemies upon him. On their approach, the sentinels had pre- cipitately retired within the house, and it was discovered that the lower building was already fired by the Indians. The sit- uation of the garrison was now one of extreme peril, the alter- native of death by fire or savage arms appearing imminent. The young captain, however, maintained his composure, and while he directed one party to carry buckets of water to extin- guish the flames, encouraged another in their efforts to repel the assailants. It chanced that the fire was first communicated to the store-room, which contained a quantity of whiskey. This was soon in a blaze, which reached the roof and defied every effort to suppress it. Meanwhile a host of savages, who, under cover of a very dark night, had previously approached close THE INDIANS REPULSED. 21 to the house, maintained the attack, yelling furiously in antici- pation of their triumph, which it seemed almost impossible to avert. But Taylor, not despairing even in this emergency, ordered the roofs of a portion of the buildings to be torn off, and by keeping that which remained continually wet, suc- ceeded in restricting the fire to the apartments where it originated. Animated by their leader, the men, who at first shrank from the unequal contest, kept up a steady discharge of musketry upon the assailants, who, during seven hours, abated no effort to carry the fort. In this protracted attack, only three of the garrison were killed and three wounded, while it was apparent that the Indians suffered severely from their exposed position. At six o'clock, on the morning of the 5th, dispirited by their loss, and abandoning the hope of wearying resistance at once so resolute and effective, they retired from the spot, after de- stroying all the provisions of the post, and killing or driving off the horses and cattle. The account of this affair, given to General Harrison, in a letter dated the 10th of September, 1812, being the first despatch from Taylor's pen, is appropriately inserted in this place. It has the unaffected spirit, if not the severe style, of his more mature productions. The following is an extract : — " On Thursday evening, 3d instant, after retreat beating, four guns were heard to fire in the direction where two young men, (citizens who resided here,) were making hay, about four hundred yards distant from the fort. I was immediately im- pressed with an idea that they were killed by the Indians, as the Miamies or Weas had that day informed me that the Pro- phet's party would soon be here for the purpose of commencing hostilities ; and that they had been directed to leave this place, which they were about to do. I did not think it prudenlfto send out at that late hour of the night, to see what had become of them, and their not coming convinced me that I was right in my conjecture. I waited until eight o'clock next morning, when I scDf: out a corporal with a small party to find them, if 22 CAi'T. Taylor's i i u s t despatch. it could be done without running too much risk of being drawn into an ambuscade. He soon sent back to inform me, that he had found them both killed, and wished to know my further orders : I sent the cart and oxen, had them brought in and buried. They had been shot with two balls, scalped, and cut in the most shocking manner. Late in the evening of the 4th instant, old Joseph Lenar, and between thirty and forty In- dians, arrived from the Prophet's town, with a white flag; among whom were about ten women, and the men were com- posed of chiefs of the different tribes that compose the Pro- phet's party. ,'< A Shawnee man that spoke good English, informed me that old Lenar intended to speak to me next morning, and try to get something to eat. After retreat beating, I examined the men's arms, and found them all in good order, and com- pleted their cartridges to sixteen rounds per man. As I had not been able to mount a guard of more than six privates, and two non-commissioned officers for some time past, and some- times part of them every other day, from the unhealthiness of the company, I had not conceived my force adequate to the defence of this post, should it be vigorously attacked, for some time past. As I had just recovered from a very severe attack of the fever, I w^as not able to be up much through the night. " After tattoo, I cautioned the guard to be vigilant, and ordered one of the non-commissioned officers, as the sentinel could not see every part of the garrison, to walk around on the inside during the night, to prevent the Indians taking any advantage of us, provided they had any intention of attacking us. About eleven o'clock, I was awakened' by the firing of one of the sentinels ; I sprung up, ran out, and ordered the men to their posts, when my orderly sergeant (who had charge otthe upper block-house) called out that the Indians had iired the lower block-house, which contained the property of the contractors, which was deposited in the lower part, (the upper part having been assigned to a corporal and ten privates as an alarm post.) The guns had begun to fire pretty smartly from T H E F O R T O N . F I R E . 2*{ ooth sides. I directed the buckets to be got ready, and watci brought from the well, and the fire extinguished immediately, as it was perceivable at that time ; but from debility, of some other cause, the men were very slow in executing my orders ; the word fire, appeared to throw the whole of them into con- fusion ; and by the time they had got the water, and broken open the door, the fire had unfortunately communicated - to a quantity of whiskey, (the stock having licked several holes through the lower part of the building, after the salt that was stored there, through which they had introduced the fire, without being discovered, as the night was very dark,) and in spite of every exertion we could make use of, in less than a minute it ascended to the roof, and baffled every effort we could make to extinguish it. "As that block-house adjoined the barracks that made part of the fortifications, most of the men immediately gave them- selves up for lost, and I had the greatest difficulty in getting my orders executed ; and, sir — what from the raging of the fire — the yelling and howling of several hundred Indians — the cries of nine women and children (a part soldiers' and a part citizens' wives, who had taken shelter in the fort) — and a de- sponding of so many of the men, which was worse than all — I can assure you that my feelings were very unpleasant ; and, indeed, there were not more than ten or fifteen men able to do anything at all, the others being sick or convalescent ; and to add to our other misfortunes, two of our stoutest men jumped the pickets and left. But my presence of mind did not for a moment forsake me. I saw by throwing off part of the roof that joined the block-house that was on fire, and keeping the end perfectly wet, the whole row of buildings might be saved, and leave only an entrance of eighteen or twenty feet for the Indians to enter, after the house was consumed ; and that a temporary breast-work might be formed to prevent their enter- ing even there. I convinced the men that this could be ac- complished, and it appeared to inspire them with new life ; and never did men act with more firmness or desperation. Those 24 THEINDIANSBAFFLED. that were able (while others kept up a constant fire from the* up- per block-house and the two bastions) mounted the roofs of the houses, with Doctor Clark at their head, (who acted with the greatest firmness and presence of mind, the whole time the attack lasted, which was seven hours,) under a shower of bullets, and in less than a moment threw off as much of the roof as was ne- cessary. This was done, with one man killed, and two wounded, and I am in hopes neither of them dangerously. The man that was killed was a little deranged, and did not get off of the house as soon as directed, or he would not have been hurt ; and although the barracks were several times in a blaze, and an immense quantity of fire against them, the men used such exertion, that they kept it under ; and, before day, raised a temporary breast-work as high as a man's head. Although the Indians continued to pour in a heavy fire of ball, and an innumerable quantity of arrows, during the whole time the attack lasted, in every part of the parade, I had but one other man killed — nor any other wounded inside the fort — and he lost his life by being too anxious ; he got into one of the gallies in the bastions, and fired over the pickets, and called out to his comrades that he had killed an Indian, and neglect- ing to stoop down in an instant, he was shot. f << One of the men that jumped the pickets, returned an hour before day, and running up towards the gate, begged for God's sake for it to be opened. I suspected it to be a strata- gem of the Indians to get in, as I did not recollect the voice ; I directed the men in the bastion where I happened to be to shoot him, let him be who he would, and one of them fired at him, but fortunately he ran up the other bastion, where they knew his voice, and Doctor Clark directed him to lie close to the pickets, behind an empty barrel that happened to be there, and at daylight I had him let in. His arm was broken in a most shocking manner, which he says was done by the In- dians, which I suppose was the cause of his returning, t think it probable that he will not recover. The other they caught about one hundred and thirty yards from the garrison, and T H E r O R T S A V E D . 25 cut him all to pieces. After keeping up a constant fire until about six o'clock the next morning, which we began to return with some effect, after daylight they removed out of reach of our guns. A party of them drove up the horses that belonged to the citizens here, and as they could not catch them very readily, shot the whole of them in our sight, as well as a num- ber of their hogs. They drove off the whole of the cattle, which amounted to sixty-five head, as well as the public oxen. I had the vacancy filled up before night (which was made by the burning of the block-house) with a strong row of pickets, which I got by pulling down the guard-house. We , lost the whole of our provisions, but must malce out to live upon green corn, until we can get a supply, which I am in hopes will not be long. I believe the whole of the Miamios or Weas were among the Prophet's party, as one chief gave his orders in that language, which resembled Stone Eater's voice, and I believe Negro Legs was there likewise. A Frenchman here understands their different languages ; and several of the Miamies or Weas that have been frequently here were recognised by the Frenchman and soldiers next morning. <vith surprise ? The failure of their enterprise against Fort Harrison morti- fied and disheartened the Indians, and they abandoned for the time any further attempts against it. The garrison, however, was ignorant of their feelings or intentions, and as a renewal of the attack was reasonably apprehended, its vigilance was not abated. The despatch cited above was entrusted to two men, who attempted to descend the river to Vincennes, oat the Indians being on the alert, and keeping up fires on the oanks through the night, obliged the beaiers to return. In THE GARRISON RELIEVED. 27 this emergency, Captain Taylor again addressed Governor Harrison, and sent his messengers by land. These were suc- cessful. The letter was in these terms : <«I wrote you on the 10th instant, giving you an account of the attack on this-place, as well as my situation, which ac- count I attempted to send by water, but the two men whom I despatched in a canoe after night, found the river so well guarded, that they were obHged to return. The Indians had built a fire on the bank of the river, a short distance below the garrison, which gave them an opportunity of seeing any craft that might attempt to pass, and were waiting with a canoe ready to intercept it. I expect the fort, as well as the road to Vincennes, is as well or better watched than the river. But my situation compels me to make one other attempt by land, and my orderly sergeant, with one other man, sets out to-night, with strict orders to avoid the road in the daytime, and depend entirely on the woods, although neither of them has ever been to Vincennes by land, nor do they know anything of the coun- try ; but I am in hopes they will reach you in safety. I send them with great reluctance from their ignorance of the woods. I think it very probable there is a large party of Indians way- laying the road betw^een this and Vincennes, likely about the Narrows, for the purpose of intercepting any party that may be coming to this place, as the cattle they got here will supply thern plentifully with provisions for some time to come." Immediately on the receipt of this communication, a large force, under the command of General Hopkins, was sent to the relief of the garrison, then reduced to the extremest need, by sickness, fatigue, and the loss of provisions. The conduct of Taylor at Fort Harrison was not overlooked by his superior officers, by the public, or by the government. General Hopkins, in a letter to the Governor of Kentucky, said of him: — "The firm and almost unparalleled defence of Fort Harrison by Captain Zachary Taylor, has raised for him a fabric of character not to be effaced by eulogy." The singu- lar force and refinement of this commendation are as honour- able to the writer as to the subject of it. An ardent response 28 Taylor's honours and promotion. to the sentiment was given by the whole country, and the Pre- sident aflbrded a more satisfactory proof of its justice, by con- ferring upon Taylor the rank of Major by brevet — the oldest instance in the service of this species of promotion. Pending the arrival of Hopkins' command at Fort Harrison, the Indians continued their depredations upon the peaceful inhabitants of the neighbourhood, destroying their houses and farms, and carrying on the war in their usual relentless mode, irrespective of age or sex in the objects of their attacks. De- cisive measures were necessary to arrest these atrocities, and an expedition was accordingly planned by General Hopkins against the Indian villages in the Peoria country. The march commenced in the middle of October, but was suddenly ended by the insubordination of the volunteers composing the force. This spirit was partially manifest on the fourth day, but on the fifth it was beyond control. The Indians had set fire to the prairie-grass, and a violent wind drove the flames in the direc- tion of the camp, which was saved with difficulty. Discontent ripened from this cause into alarm. At a coun- cil of officers, convened by General Hopkins, he oflTered to pro- ceed on the expedition, if followed by only five hundred men. But the voices of all the volunteers were against him, and their steps were accordingly retraced. The enterprise, however, was not altogether fruitless. The Indians, alarmed by the ap- proach of so large a force, collected their warriors to oppose it, leaving their villages unprotected. In this condition, they were attacked by a detachment under Colonel Russell, and destroyed. In the following month, General Hopkins under- took a second expedition, directed against the Prophet's and Winnebago Town, in which Major Taylor took part, and re- ceived the official commendations of the general. Several skirmishes occurred, in some of which our troops suffered se- verely. They succeeded in achieving their main objects, de- vastating the enemy's country, and destroying their settlements. The winter forced both parties into a cessation of active hos tilities. From this time, to the close of the war whh Great Britam, Major Taylor was engaged in the same vicinity, ac- INJUSTICE TO TAYLOR. 29 complishing the purposes of the government with unremitting vigilance. No further opportunity occurred of signalizing his special talents ; but he earned with others the distinction of reducing the Indians, for the time, to terms of peace, and of establishing among the white settlers security from their incursions. CHAPTER 11. Injustice to Army Officers — Taylor's Resignation and Reinstatement — Various Services from 1816 to 1832 — Anecdote of his Habits — Promoted to a Colonelcy — Black Hawk War — Battle of Bad-Axe — Gen. Atkinson's De- spatch — Anecdote of Taylor — Services until 1836. The restoration of peace was made the occasion by govern- ment of signal injustice to many officers of the army. Promo- tions earned by good service during the war were nullified when its exigencies ceased. Among the victims of this policy was Major Taylor, — certainly one of the last who should have been selected for a blow so unworthy. He was reduced to the rank of captain, and deprived alike of the reward and the honour earned by extraordinary talent and devotion to duty. Although his modesty — so well illustrated in later years — would at any time have shrunk from claiming preferment, yet his self-respect forbade submission to an indignity, implying the absence of common desert. With this feeling he resolved to quit a service, in which fidelity seemed to be regarded only in emergencies, and forgotten when no longer required. He accordingly resigned his commission and returned to the more grateful care of his family. His friends, however, were not content to witness calmly either his resignation or the cause of it, and their influence was powerfully exercised with the administration in his behalf. The result was that in the course of a year he was reinstated by President Madison, and con 3* 30 RESTOREDTOIIISRANK. sented again to leave his home and its interests for the labours of a profession, the dangers of which in war are preferable to its monotony in peace. In 1816, immediately after his restoration to his former rank. Major Taylor was ordered to Green Bay, and remained in command of that post for two years. Returning to Kentucky, he passed a year with his family, and was then ordered to join Colonel Russell at New Orleans. Except during a temporary absence, when recalled by the illness of his wife, he continued in the south for several years, generally engaged in some ac- tive duty. One of his labours was the opening of a military road, and another the erection of Fort Jesup — the latter in 1822. In 1824 he was engaged in Louisville in the recruiting service, and in the latter part of that year was ordered to Washington. He was appointed a member of the board for the planning and erection of Jeflerson Barracks. On the 20th of April, 1819, Taylor received the commission of a Lieute- nant Colonel. The following year he again returned to the south, but was recalled in 1826, to sit as a member of a board of officers of the Army and of the Militia, convened by Secre- tary Barbour, to consider and propose a system for the organi- zation and improvement of the militia of the United States. General Scott was president of this commission. The other members, besides Lieutenant Colonel Taylor, were Brigadier General Eustis, Lieutenant Colonel Cutler, Major Nourse of the Army, and Major General Cadwalader, Adjutant General Damil, and Adjutant General Sumner of the Militia. To the last-mentioned gentleman the writer is indebted for an account of the proceedings of this board. Its discussions were long and earnest, but a report was finally agreed upon, embracing several important provisions. It is unnecessary to introduce here an abstract of this doru- ment, but it is proper to state that Taylor — then Lieutenant Colonel — was strenuous in maintaining the militia strictly as citizen soldiery, in opposition to the views of some older officers in the board, who would have invested this body with HIS SEVERE DISCIPLINE. 31 more of the character of a regular army. The report, having been drawn by General Scott, was adopted on motion of Lieutenant Colonel Taylor, and was approved in Congress. Owing, however, to want of proper attention, a bill based upon it was suffered to slumber for some time in Committee on the Militia, and was finally forgotten. The duties of Taylor were subsequently resumed upon the north-western frontier, a field on which, soon afterwards, he again met an Indian enemy and sustained the reputation won in his first contest with him. Five years of peace, however, preceded this occasion, — years not idly spent by the man who seemed unconsciously preparing himself in every department of his profession for the splendid achievements of his later days. A writer in the Literary World thus mentions him : " As plain Lieut, Colonel Taylor I have often seen him putting his men through the battalion drill on the northern banks of the Wisconsin, in the depth of February. This would seem only characteristic of the man who has since proved himself equally " Rough and Ready" under the scorching sun of the tropics. But, looking back through long years to many a pleasant hour spent in the well-selected library of the post which Colonel Taylor then commanded, we recur now with singular interest to the agreeable conversations held in the room which was the Colonel's favourite resort, amid the intervals of duty." And the same chronicler of his severe habits of discipline and study continues : " Nor will the reader think these personal reminis- cences impertinent, when we add that our object in recurring to them here is simply to mention that, remembering alike the wintry drill and the snug book-room, Taylor's hardihood — the idea of which now so readily attaches to his sobriquet of Rough and Ready — would certainly not then have struck a stranger as more characteristic than his liberal-minded intelli- gence." In 1832 Taylor was promoted to the rank of Colonel. During the previous year, the difficulties betw^een the white settlers near Rock River, and the Sac Indians under the cele- brated chief Black Hawk, had been fomented by bad and B2 \ 32 T H E B L A C K H A W K W A R . interested men to a point of open hostilities. It must Le equally as painful to any American historian, as it would be unnecessary for the author of this biography, to recite the events which brought about the contest known as " the Black Hawk war." If, in former periods and in other places, the implacable aversion of tiie Indians to the peaceful encroach- ments of our people, induced the latter to resort to arms and the work of destruction as acts of simple self-defence, the same reason cannot be asserted for the war against Black Hawk and his unfortunate tribe. Once commenced, however, the security of all parties demanded its termination by the most vigorous measures. Black Hawk, whose flags of truce had been on two different occasions fired upon, and the bearers killed, defeated on the 14th of May, 1832, near Rock River, a large number of mounted volunteers, who fled precipitately before a small band of the brave chief. The force of the latter was vastly exag- gerated by the fears of the routed troops, and alarm spread through the state of Illinois. General Atkinson, then com- manding in the north-west, had his head-quarters at Dixon's Ferry, which he immediately proceeded to fortify. The governor of Illinois at the same time called out a fresh body of mounted volunteers, and the secretary of war ordered about one thousand regulars to the scene of action. General Scott then took the command of the army, and conducted the cam- paign. For three months a contest characterized by the M'orst acts of border ferocity was maintained. The Indians mur- dered many frontier families, and committed bold depredations in the face of our troops. In their turn they suffered in several skirmishes, but not to the extent of disheartening them. A party under Black Hawk attacked the fort at Buffdo Grove, and although they failed in carrying it, yet they killed several men, and afterwards defeated a detachment of volunteers who came to its rescue. General Atkinson arrived on the fourth of July with an army of twenty-five hundred men, including four hundred regulars under Col. Taylor, at Lake Coshconing, in the neighbourhood BATTLE OF THE BAD AXE. 33 of which the Indians had collected. The latter were reduced, at the time, to the greatest extremity for want of provisions, their fighting men being encumbered with women and children and their moveable property, as they had fled from their villages with no means of immediate subsistence. From Lake Cosh- coning, an extension of Rock River, they were pursued to- wards Fort "Winnebago by two brigades of mounted volunteers, under General Dodge, and overtaken on the banks of the Wisconsin, In this flight they suffered dreadfully from fatigue, famine and slaughter. Late in July, General Atkinson crossed the Wisconsin River and ordered the pursuit of the Indians. For this service thirteen hundred men, among whom were Taylor's regulars, were selected. They set forth immediately. The way was through a primitive wilderness, before untrodden by any body of white men. With forced speed the march was pressed over rocks and mountains, through woods and waters, often almost impassable for horses, and continually exhausting to the men. At last the enemy was overtaken on the Bad Axe, near the junction of the Mississippi and the Iowa. A battle, des- perate on the part of the Indians, ensaed, in which they were wholly routed, many falling by our arms, others perishing in the river, and the rest dispersing or submitting themselves prisoners. The chief. Black Hawk, who then escaped, was in the course of the month surrendered by some of his faithless allies, and with his capture ended the war. The following is General Atkinson's official account of '.he battle. " HeaJ Quarters, First Artillery Corps, North-western Army. " Prairie cles Chiens, Augt. 25, 1832. <' Sir : I have the honour to report to you that I crossed the Ouisconsin on the 27th and 2Sth ultimo, with a select body of troops, consisting of the regulars under Col. Taylor, four hundred in number, part of Henry's, Posey's and Alexander's brigades, amounting in all to 1300 men, and immediately fell upon the trail of the enemy, and pursued it by a forced march, through a mountainous and difficult country, till the morning 34 GENERAL ATKINSON'S DESPATCH. of the 2d inst., \vhen we came up with his main body on the left bank of the Mississippi, nearly opposite the mouth of the Iowa, which we attacked, defeated and dispersed, with a loss on his part of about a hundred and fifty men killed, thirty-nine women and children taken prisoners — the precise number could not be ascertained, as the greater portion was slain after being forced into the river. Our loss in killed and wounded, which is stated below, is very small in comparison with the enemy, which may be attributed to the enemy's being forced from his positions by a rapid charge at the commencement, and through- out the engagement — the remnant of the enemy, cut up and disheartened, crossed to the opposite side of the river, and has fled into the interior, with a view, it is supposed, of join- ing Keokuk and Wapello's bands of Sacs and Foxes. <' The horses of the volunteer troops being exhausted by long marches, and the regular troops without shoes, it was not thought advisable to continue the pursuit ; indeed a stop to the further efflision of blood seemed to be called for, till it might be ascertained if the enemy would surrender. " It is ascertained from our prisoners, that the enemy lost in the battle of the Ouisconsin sixty-eight killed and a very large number wounded ; his whole loss does not fall short of three hundred ; — after the battle on the Ouisconsin, those of the enemy's women and children, and some who were dismounted, attempted to make their escape by descending that river, but judicious measures being taken by Captain Loomis and Lieut. Street, Indian agent, thirty-two women and children and four men have been captured, and some fifteen men killed by the detachment under Lieut. Ritner, "The day after the battle on this river, I fell down with the regular troops to this place by water, and the mounted men will join us to-day. It is now my purpose to direct Keokuk to demand a surrender of the remaining principal men of the hostile party, which, from the large number of women and children we hold prisoners, I have every reason to believe will be complied with. Should it not, they should be pursued and subdued, a step Maj. Gen, Scott will take upon his arrival. ANECDOTE OF TAYLOR. 35 " I cannot speak too highly of the brave conduct of the regular and volunteer forces engaged in the last battle and the fatiguing march that preceded it ; as soon as the reports of officers of the brigades and corps are handed in, they shall be submitted with further remarks. " 5 killed, 2 wounded, 6th inft. 2 do. 5th inft. 1 captain, 5 privates, Dodge's Bat. mounted. 1 Lieut. 6 privates, Henry's. 1 private wounded, Alexander's. 1 private do. Posey's. I have the honour to be, with great respect. Your obedient servant, H. Atkinson, Brevet Brig. Gen. U. S. A. " Maj. Gen. Macomb, Com. in Chief, Wasliington." Black Hawk and his fellow prisoners were confided to the charge of Col. Taylor, who conveyed them to the Jefferson Barracks, where they arrived about the middle of September. On this, as on every other occasion, however trying, Taylor shrank from no obligation, the result of his position as an officer, carrying out the orders of his superiors. A portion of his task could not have been less painful to his feelings than difficult of execution." But it was accomplished promptly and thoroughly, in a manner worthy of himself. The writer in the Literary World, already quoted, relates the following anecdote of Taylor, while in pursuit of Black Hawk. If slightly erroneous in any particular, it is at least illustrative of the man. <' Some time after Stillman's defeat by Black Hawk's band, Taylor, marching with a large body of volunteers and a hand- ful of regulars in pursuit of the hostile Ladian force, tound himself approaching Rock River, then asserted by many to be the true north-western boundary of Illinois. The volunteers, as Taylor was informed, would refuse to cross the stream. They were militia, they said, called out for the defence of the state, and it was unconstitutional to order them to march beyond its frontier into the Indian country. Taylor thereupon halted 36 ADECISIVESPEECn. his command, and encamped within the acknowledged boun- daries of Illinois. He would not, as the relator of the story said, budge an inch further without orders. He had already driven Black Hawk out of the state, but the question of crossing Rock River seemed hugely to trouble his ideas of integrity to the constitution on one side, and military expediency on the other. During the night, however, orders came, either from General Scott or General xVtkinson, for him to follow up Black Hawk to the last. The quietness of the regular colonel, mean- while, had rather encouraged the mutinous militia to bring their proceedings to a head. A sort of town-meeting was called upon the prairie, and Taylor invited to attend. After listening some time very quietly to the proceedings, it became Rough and Ready's turn to address the chair. ' He had heard,' he said, <■ with much pleasure the views which several speakers had expressed of the independence and dignity of each private American citizen. He felt that all gentlemen there present were his equals — in reality, he was persuaded that many of them would in a few years be his superiors, and perhaps, in the capacity of members of congress, arbiters of the fortune and reputation of humble servants of the republic like himself. He expected them to obey them as interpreters of the will of the people ; and the best proof he could give that he would obey them, was now to observe the orders of those whom the people had already put in the places of authority, to which many gentlemen around him justly aspired. In plain English, gentlemen and fellow-citizens, the word has been passed on to me from Washington to follow Black Hawk, and to take you with me as soldiers. I mean to do both. There are the flat- boats drawn up on the shore, and here are Uncle Sam's men drawn up behind you on the prairie.' " It is unnecessary to state the effect of this appeal. After the Black Hawk war. Col. Taylor was for a short time in Louisville, and was thence ordered to Prairie du Chien, to the command of Fort Crawford, a work which had been erected under his superintendence. Here he remained until 1836, when his services were required in the Seminole war in Florida. FATE OF THE INDIAN RACES. 37 To that field he immediately repaired, although he might M'ith propriety have asked of the government a season of repose, having very rarely enjoyed the ease and tranquillity of home during a period of more than twenty-five years. CHAPTER III. Destiny of the Indian Races — Causes of the Florida War — Osceola — Com- mencement of the Florida War — Troops in Florida — Massacre of Dade's Command — Volunteers in Florida — Taylor ordered to the Seat of War — Marches against the Indians — Difficulties of the March — Battle of Okeecho- bee — Gallantr)' of the Troops — The Killed and Wounded — Taylor's Account of the Battle — Its Results — Taylor applauded by the Country — Promoted to a Brigadier Generalship — Appointed to the chief Command in Florida — Use of Blood-hounds — Authority for the Use — Reasons for the same — Indian Murders, several Accounts — Their Perfidy — Taylor vindicated — He retires from the Command in J'lorida. It is a fact, which speculative philanthropy seems no longer inclined to dispute, that the aboriginal races of this continent must decline and become extinct in the presence of our own civilized people. The minds and the habits of the white and the red man are not less irreconcilable than the colour of their skins. It appears idle, therefore, to mourn over the inevitable fate of the latter, or to regard as criminal the progress of the .former, when of necessity it is attended with the invasion and occupation of new territory. Justice and humanity may modify the apparent hardship of the Indian, banished from the land of his fathers and bereft of the rude privileges which endear it to him. But no ingenuity can devise a code, which will secure his national independence and his barbarous usages, when surrounded by a civilized community. His sovereignty under such circumstances must cease. Nor this alone. He must aiso recede before the advance of a superior in knowledge and virtue, as well as in power. His only temporary hope of re- taining the semblance of freedom, and of the personal and civil customs which are a part of his nature, is to retire beyond 4 38 THE SEMINOLE TROUBLES. the boundaries of his better neighbour. And as these bound- aries extend, he must still retire ; losing strength with every movement, destroying the associations which were the only safeguard of his political and religious system, and by certain decay wasting away sooner or later from the face of the earth. The Seminole Indians, occupying the region of Florida, were required by the federal government to emigrate to lands appropriated lor their occupation on the west of the Missis- sijipi River. The requisition may have been a little prema- ture — their vicinity to the white settlements may not at the time have been wholly incompatible with the security and comfort of the latter. 15ut the period of their removal could not have been long postponed, and had they been well advised they would have immediately yielded to the proposition of the government. No dilficulty, in fact, was anticipated in carry- ing it out. The local newspapers gave assurances of the rea- diness of the Indians to depart. Some unfairness, however, wliich it is needless to examine here, may have been practised in the negotiations with them. Their jealousy and pride were excited, and the task, which at first appeared so easy and certain of execution, proved to be one which bafiled the diplomacy of cabinets and the power of armies, and cost the nation tens of hundreds of lives and tens of millions of trea- sure. A treaty with the Seminoles for their removal was concluded at Payne's Landing, in Florida, in May, 1832, allowing three years for its fulfilment. The government was first advised in 1834 of their disinclination to depart. Yet as late as the sj)ring of 1835, there was in Florida a confidence in the public mind, regarding the calm dispositions of the Seminoles, un- clouded by a thought of the terrible storm which so soon after- wards desolated its homes, and menaced for a time even its capital with destruction. The St. Augustine Herald of that period, emphatically denied that there was any foundation for the reports of difficulties with the Indians, — adding this assu- rance of their harmless character: <' The Seminole of the pre- sent day is a different being from the warlike son of the forestj DESTRUCTION OF DADE'S COMMAND. 39 when the tribe was numerous and powerful. No trouble in the removal of it is anticipated." Yet before the close of the year, how sadly was this declaration falsified ! A chief had appeared among this tribe destined to hold a place in history with Philip of Pokanokee, Tecumseh, and Black Hawk., This was Osceola. Hatred for the whites had long been a smo- thered fire in his heart, and now the moment had arrived when it burst forth with implacable fury. By inheritance, Osceola enjoyed no title or distinction among the Seminoles. He derived his origin from the Creeks, and had affected, until up- wards of thirty years of age, the more pacific feelings of that people. But when the time for throwing off disguise appeared to have matured, he used among the more southern tribes, the influence obtained by his talents and courage. Declaring openly against the United States' government and citizens, he supplanted the legitimate chiefs of the Seminoles, and even put to death those who exhibited a desire for peaceful mea- sures. Relentless in his enmities, profound in his purposes of vengeance, reckless of danger, dehberate, cunning, and ambitious, he acquired perfect ascendancy over his red breth- ren, and when he gave the signal war-cry, murder, rapine and fire told of their dreadful response, from the everglades of central Florida to the very walls of St. Augustine. Conster- nation seized the quiet inhabitants, and the bolder spirits, aroused alike by grief and rage, snatched up their arms and banded together, some to protect their homes, others to pursue with terrible justice the foe who would spare nought that was dear to them. The United States' troops, at this time, in Florida numbered between five and six hundred men, stationed at several posts, — General Clinch being in command. On the 23d of Decem- ber, a detachment of two companies, amounting to one hundred and twelve officers and men, under Major Dade, marched from Fort Brooke for the purpose of joining the commanding gene- ral. On their route, anticipating no danger, they were sur- prised by a large body of the Indians; and, after a resistance, begun with cool bravery and protracted with fierce despair, 40 TAYLOR ORDERED TO FLORIDA. the unfoiUaiate party was utterly destroyed, with the exception of three men, wlio, exhausted with many wounds, reached the fort to tell the fate of their companies. From this memorable day, open war commenced. Many Creek warriors joined the Seminoles, and the government found it necessary to send in succession its most able generals into the field. From time to time, on their requisition, the gallant men of Louisiana, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri, promptly took up arms to aid their suffering brethren of Florida. On the part of the Indians, occasional success added vigour to their bold and cruel enterprises. In this slate of affairs, Colonel Taylor was ordered to the seat of war. An opportunity was not long wanting for a new exhibition of his perseverance in discovering, and. his skill in fighting, an Indian enemy. General Jesup had then command of the army in Florida, and, like his predecessors in the ofhce, had made fruitless efforts to bring the Seminoles to terms of treaty. The hope had been entertained, that a delegation of the Cherokees, acting as mediators, might be able to convince them of the ultimate folly of opposing the wishes of our govern- ment, and the immediate advantages of laying down their arms and acceding to its proposals. The intercession of these friendly Indians, however, was unavailing with 'the obstinate and ferocious dispositions of the resisting tribes, and no choice was left between absolute concession to their demands, or rigorous enforcement of our own. Active hostilities, which during two years had abated at intervals, were, therefore, de- termined upon ; and, in December, 1837, Colonel Taylor re- ceived orders to seek out any portion of the enemy, wherever to be found, and to destroy or capture his forces. On the 19th and 20th of December, 1837, the force under Colonel Taylor, amounting to about eleven hundred, officers and men, left Fort Gardner, in pursuance of the instructions of General Jesup. The country presented all the usual obstacles to the march of an army, which are found in the narrow peninsula of Florida, and which had baffled the plans of many former expeditions. A wet and soft soil, matted w^ith DIFFICULTIES OF A MARCH. 41 rank herbage, which clogged the feet at every step, and served as an impenetrable screen to a lurking foe ; the deep and slimy beds and the waters of many streams ; the dense thickets of the cypress, the palmetto, and other luxuriant underwood, — such was the surface over which Taylor led his troops to dis- cover and cope with the savages. The latter, anticipating his approach, and perfectly famihar with the labyrinths' and natu- ral fastnesses of their own country, had retired to one of its strongest and most inaccessible places, prepared to give him battle. The commander and his followers were not ignorant of the hazard and toil of their enterprise. • Many were the brave spirits who had peiished in similar duty, — a duty in which failure had often brought reproach ; and in which success, achieved with grievous wounds and death, had been un- honoured by the applause of the nation, unrewarded by the care of the government. Regardless of all this, so crushing to the soldier's energies, Taylor led on his generous little army. Never had worthy chief more worthy aid. The noble and brave Lieutenant Colonel Davenport, who like him had been in the border struggles of the north-west; the firm and daring Lieut. Cols. Thompson and Foster, of the army, the latter schooled in the wars with England and on the frontier, and the magnanimous Col. Gentry of the Missouri volunteers, divided the commands under him. The banks of the Kissimmee River marked the course of the march, which for five days was laboriously pursued. At times the long clotted grass of the swamps wholly arrested the advance of the horses, and the men only finished a wearisome progress through these obstacles, to plunge into the stagnant waters of low bottom lands. Oc- casionally a straggling Indian or the individuals of a family were captured, who served to assure Taylor that he was approaching the stronghold of their people. On the fifth day after leaving Fort Gardner he reached a cypress swamp, which bore the marks of the late presence of a large body of the enemy. Taylor disposed his army in order of battle, and ad- vanced expecting to find him. But the swamp was passed 4* 42 BATTLE OF OKEECHOBEE. without his appearing, and a large prairie disclosed, bounded on its farther side by an extensive hammock. In the latter, according to the report of a prisoner, the Indians were posted. Here, at noon on the 25th, the final preparations were made for the attack. Gentry's Missouri volunteers and Captain Morgan's " Spies" were formed in an extended line, and ordered to enter the hammock, to attack the enemy, and if repulsed to fall back under cover of the regular troops. The Fourth Infantry, under Lt. Col. Foster, and the Sixth, under Lt. Col. Thompson, formed a second line to support the volunteers. The First In- fantry, under Lt. Col. Davenport, was held in reserve. Eager for the action, the troops hurried forward in this order, but at the distance of a quarter of a mile entered a wide slough, which seemed to forbid farther progress. For horses the ad- vance was impossible, and they were abandoned, while the men, buried to their necks in the long tangled grass, and sinking frequently to their waists in slime and water, struggled on to charge the unseen foe. They had proceeded thus but little beyond the edge of the swamp, the volunteers and spies leading in the order assigned them, when suddenly the rustle of the grass and the plash of the water through which they moved, were smothered in the rattle of hundreds of rifles. The savages were close before them, and had reserved their fire until it would be surely answered with the death-cry of many a brave assailant. But the shock for a time was fear- lessly sustained, and the volunteers still charged on, until the impetuous commander, cheering them in the front rank, re- ceived a fatal shot and fell. Major Sconce, Capt. Childs, Lieutenants Rogers, Haas, and Gordon, staggered under their wounds. The men, discouraged, now gave way and retired from the storm which had swept down their leaders. But the regulars pressed forward through the deep morass, as compact and firm as if the solid ground were beneath them, and only a holiday crowd in front to admire their mancruvres. On the Sixth Infantry a torrent of bullets was poured, carrying havoc into their files. The dark cool waters beneath them grew THE INDIANS DEFEATED. 43 warm and red with their blood, and in the foremost ranks was not a heart but paid its tribute to swell the tide. Their leader, too, the heroic Thompson, regardless of two balls received in the first onset, courted and met death at their head, shouting the charge, and words of encouragement, with his last breath. Still they closed upon their foes, and with every step left behind a fallen chief or comrade. Adjutant Center, Captain Van Swearingen, and Lieut. Brooke perished. Capt. Andrews and Lieuts. Hooper and Walker were wounded, and every in- ferior officer of five companies in the advance was also killed or disabled, while of one company only four men were unin- jured. For more than an hour, before so terrible a fire, the gallant Sixth advanced, and when its leaders were lost, at last retired, but only for a time, to form again and renew the assault. Thrice the enemy w'avered and gave ground, and thrice re- turned to the most desperate conflict ever maintained by their arms. Meanwhile Lt. Col. Foster led on the Fourth, and finally drove the savages from their position ; and being joined "by Capt. Noel with the remaining companies of the Sixth, pressed them hotly to their camp on the borders of Lake Okeechobee. Capt. Allen, with two companies, having been detached to the right in the beginning of the action, Lieut. Col. Davenport, with the First Infantry, was ordered, when his advance was perceived, to turn the right flank of the enemy. This move- ment being executed with brave alacrity, and the enemy seeing the regiment in position, delivered one final volley from their rifles and fled, the three regiments of regulars and a portion of the volunteers following them in every direction, and only abating the pursuit when night closed in upon them. The force of the Lidians amounted' to several hundred warriors, and they had so chosen their defensive position as to give the utmost efficiency to their numbers. Their loss was not ascertained. The loss of our troops in this severe and memorable battle, included fourteen officers and one hundred and twenty-foui men, killed and wounded, being one-filth of the whole number engaged. Upon the merits of a victv)ry 44 C R E D IT O F T II E V I C T O 11 Y . gained under such circumstances, and at such cost of life and blood, what comment can be made to enhance respeC-t for the daunlloss spirits ^vho won it ? We look upon the exhausting march of five days from Fort Gardner, and the previous ad- vance of five weeks to that station, attended with hardships scarcely less appalling, and we ask in admiration, whence was the strength, whence the energy, whence the courage to engage for three hours on ground which scarcely admitted a foothold, and defeat and scatter a foe whom nature had entrenched and desperation animated ? Can any answer be found to the ques- tion, unless it be in the ability, the valour, the endurance, the inspiring presence of the chief himself? He had led them on the long and arduous march, sharing all their toils and priva- tions, and when they met the enemy, he was seen where the battle strewed the dead around him, calm amid its iron tempest, and giving assurance by his thrilling voice and flashing eye of victory, which, however long it may flutter around his standard, never fails to rest at last upon it. The contest over, the care of the wounded and the dead was the first thought of the commander. That his humanity may be appreciated, as well as his heroism, through the whole of the trying scenes which have been faintly sketched, it is proper to exhibit his own oflBcial narrative. "Head Quarters, First Brigade, Army south of the Withlacoochee. "Fort Gardner, January 4, 1838. <« On the 19th ultimo, I received at this place a communi- cation from Major General Jesup, informing me that all hopes of bringing the war to a close by negotiation, through the in- terference or mediation of the Cherokee delegation, were at an end ; Sam Jones, with the Mickasukies, having determined to fight it out to the last, and directing me to proceed with the least possible delay against any portion of the enemy I might hear of within striking distance, and to destroy or capture him. "After leaving two officers and an adequate force for the protection of my depot, I marched the next morning, with twelve days' rations (my means of transportation not enabling •]fe# Taylor's official account. 45 me to carry more,) with the balance of my command, consist- ino- of Captain Munroe's company of the Fourth artillery, total thirty-five men ; the First infantry, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Foster, two hundred and seventy-four ; the Sixth infantry, under Lieutenant Colonel Thompson, two hun- dred and twenty-one ; the Missouri volunteers, one hundred and eighty ; Morgan's spies, forty-seven ; pioneers, thirty ; pontoneers, thirteen; and seventy Delaware Indians, making a force, exclusive of officers, of one thousand and thirty-two men ; the greater part of the Shawnees having been detached, and the balance refusing to accompany me, under the pretext that a number of them were sick, and the remainder were with- out moccasins. " I moved down the west side of the Kissimmee, in a south- easterly course, towards Lake Istopoga, for the following reasons: 1st. Because I knew a portion of the hostiles were to be found in that direction ; 2d. If General Jesup should fall in with the Mickasukies and drive them, they might attempt to elude him by crossing the Kissimmee, from the east to the west side of the peninsula, between this and its entrance into the Okeechobee, in which case I might be near at hand to inter- cept them ; 3d. To overawe and induce such of the enemy who had been making propositions to give themselves up, and who appeared very slow, if not to hesitate in complying with their promises on that head, to surrender at once ; and lastly, I deemed it advisable to erect block-houses and a small picket work on the Kissimmee, for a third depot, some thirty or forty miles below this, and obtain a knowledge of the intervening country, as I had no guide who could be relied on, and by this means open a communication with Colonel Smith, who was operating up the Caloosehatchee, or Sangbel river, under my orders. '< Late in the evening of the first day's march, I met the In- dian cliief Jumper, with his family, and a part of his band, consisting of fifteen men, a part of them with families, and a few negroes, in all sixty-three souls, on his way to give him- self up, in comformity to a previous arrangement I had entered C 46 EVENTS ONTHE MARCH. into with him. They were conducted by Captain Parks and a few Shawnees, He (Parks) is an active, intelligent half- breed, who is at the head of the friendly Indians, both Shaw- nees and Delawares, and who I had employed to arrange and bring in Jumper and as many of his people as he could prevail on to come in. We encamped that night near the same spot ; and the next morning, having ordered Captain Parks to join me and take command of the Delawares, and having despatched Jumper, in charge of some Shawnees, to this place, and so on to Fort Frazier, I continued my march, after having sent for- ward three friendly Seminoles to gain intelligence as to the position of the enemy. "About noon the same day, I sent forward one battalion of Gentry's regiment, under command of Lieutenant Colonel Price, to pick up any stragglers that might fall in his way, to encamp two or three miles in advance of the main force, to act with great circumspection, and to communicate promptly any occurrence that might take place in his vicinity, important for me to know. About 10, P. M., I received a note from the colonel, stating that the three Seminoles sent forward in the morning had returned ; that they had been at or near where Alligator had encamped, twelve or fifteen miles in his advance ; that he (Alligator) had left there with a part of his family four days before, under the pretext of separating his relations, &c., from the Mickasukies, preparatory to his sur- rendering with them ; that there were several families remaining at the camp referred to, who wished to give themselves up, and would remain there until we took possession of them, un- less they were forcibly carried ofl' that night by the Mickasu- kies, who were encamped at no great distance from them. "In consequence of this intelligence, after directing Lieu- tenant Colonel Davenport to follow me early in the morning with the infantry, a little after midnight I put myself at the head of the residue of the mounted men and joined Lieutenant Colonel Price, proceeded on, crossing Istopoga outlet, and soon after dayliglit took possession of the encampment referred to, where I found the inmates, who had uot been disturbed. FURTHER INCIDENTS. 47 They consisted of an old man, and two young ones, and seve- ral women and children, amounting in all to twenty-two indi- Anduals. The old man informed me that Alligator was very anxious to separate his people from the Mickasukies, who were encamped on the opposite side of the Kissimmee, distant about twenty miles, where they would fight us. I sent him to Alli- gator to say to him, if he were sincere in his professions, to meet me the next day at the Kissimmee, where the trail I was marching on crossed, and where I should halt. " As soon as the infantry came up I moved on to the place designated, which I reached late that evening, and where I encamped. About 11 P. M., the old Indian returned, bring- ing a very equivocal message from Alligator, who, he stated, he had met accidentally ; also, that the Mickasukies were still encamped where they had been for some days, and where they were determined tQ fight us. " I determined at once on indulging them as soon as prac- ticable. Accordingly, next Siorning, after laying out a small stockade work for the protection of a future depot, in order to enable me to move with the greatest celerity, I deposited the whole of my heavy baggage, including artillery, &c,, and hav- ing provisioned the command to include the 26th, after leaving Captain Munroe with his company, the pioneer, pontoneers, with eighty-five sick and disabled infantry, and a portion of the friendly Indians, who alleged that they were unable to march farther, crossed the Kissimmee, taking the old Indian as a guide who had been captured the day before, and who accompanied us with great apparent reluctance, in pursuit of the enemy, and early the next day reached Alligator's encamp- ment, situated on the edge of Cabbage-tree Hammock, in the midst of a large prairie, from the appearance of which, and other encampments in the vicinity, and the many evidences of slaughtered cattle, there must have been several hundred individuals. "At anotncr small hammock, at no great distance from Al- ligator's encampment, and surrounded by a swamp, impassable for mounted men, the spies surprised an encampment contain- 48 SPIESCAPTURED. iiio- one old man, four young men, and some women and cliil- dren. One of the party immediately raised a white flag, when the men were taken possession of, and brought across the swamp to the main body. I proceeded with an interpreter to meet them. They proved to be Seminoles, and professed to be friendly. They stated that they were preparing to come in; they had just slaughtered a number of cattle, and were employed in drying and jerking the same. They also informed me that the IMickasukies, headed by A-vi-a-ka, (Sam Jones,) were some ten or twelve miles distant encamped in a swamp, and were prepared to fight. "Although I placed but little confidence in their professions of friendship, or their intentions of coming in, yet I had no time to look up their women and children, who had fled and concealed themselves in the swamp, or to have encumbered myself with them in the situation in which I then was. Ac- cordingly, I released the old man, who promised that he would collect all the women and children and take them in to Captain Munroe, at the Kissimmee, the next day. I also dismissed the old man who had acted as guide thus far, supplying his place with the four able warriors who had been captured that morning. " These arrangements being made, I moved under their guidance for the camp of the Mickasukies. Between two and three, P. M., we reached a very dense cypress swamp, through which we were compelled to pass, and in which our guide in- formed us we might be attacked. After making the necessary dispositions for battle, it was ascertained that there was no enemy to oppose us. The army crossed over and encamped for the night, it being late. During the passage of the rear, Captain Parks, who was in advance with a few friendly Indians, fell in with two of the enemy's spies, between two and three miles of our camp^, one on horseback, the other on foot, and succeeded in capturing the latter. He was an active young warrior, armed with an excellent rifle, fifty balls in his pouch, and an adequate proportion of powder. This Indian confirmed the information which had been previously received from the DISPOSITION FOR BATTLE. 49 other Indians, and, in addition, stated that a large body of Seminoles, headed by John Cohua, (Co-a-coo-chee,) and, no doubt, AlHgator, with other chiefs, were encamped five or six miles from us, near the Mickasukies, with a cypress swamp and -dense hammock between them and the latter. " The army moved forward at daylight the next morning, and after marching five or six miles, reached the camp of the Seminoles on the border of another cypress swamp, which must have contained several hundred, and bore evident traces of having been abandoned in a great hurry, as the fires were still burning, and quantities of beef lying on the ground un- consumed. " Here the troops were again disposed of in order of battle, but we found no enemy to oppose us; and the command was crossed over about 11 A. M., when we entered a large prairie in our front, on which two or three hundred head of cattle were grazing, and a number of Indian ponies. Here another young Indian warrior was captured, armed and equipped as the former. He pointed out a dense hammock on our right, about a mile distant, in which he said the hostiles were situ- ated, and waiting to give us battle. " At this place the final disposition was made to 'attack them, which was in two hues, the volunteers under '^Gentry, and Morgan's spies, to form the first line in extended order, who were instructed to enter the hammock, and in the event of being attacked and hard pressed, were to fall back in rear of the regular troops, out of reach of the enemy's fire ; the second was composed of the 4th and 6th infantry, who were instructed to sustain the volunteers, the 1st infantry bemg held in reserve. " Moving on in the direction of the hammock, after pro ceeding about a quarter of a mile, we reached the swamp which separated us from the enemy, three-quarters of a mile in breadth, being totally impassable for horses, and nearly so for foot, covered with a thick growth of saw grass, five feet high, and about knee-deep in mud and water, which extended to the left as far as the eye could reach, and to the right to a 5 50 SANGUINARY ASSAULT. part of llie swamp and hammock we had just crossed through, ran a deep creek. At the edge of the swamp the men were dismounted, and the horses and baggage left under a suitable guard. Captain Allen was detached with the two companies of mounted infantry to examine the swamp and hammock to the right, and in case he should not fmd the enemy in that di- rection, was to return to the baggage, and in the event of his hearing a heavy firing to join me immediately. " After making these arrangements, I crossed the swamp in the order stated. On reaching the borders of the hammock, the volunteers and spies received a heavy fire from the enemy, which was returned by them for a short time, when their gal- lant commander, Colonel Gentry, fell, mortally wounded. They mostly broke ; and instead of forming in rear of the re- gulars, as had been directed, they retired across the swamp to their baggage and horses, nor could they again be brought into action as a body, although efforts were made repeatedly by my staff to induce them to do so. "The enemy, however, were promptly checked and driven back by the 4th and 6th infantry, which in truth might be said to be a moving battery. The weight of the enemy's fire was principally concentrated on five companies of the 6th infantry, which not only stood firm, but continued to advance until their gallant commander. Lieutenant Colonel Thompson, and his adjutant. Lieutenant Center, were killed ; and every officer, with one exception, as well as most of the non-commissioned officers, including the serjeant-major and four of the orderly sergeants, killed and wounded of those companies, when that portion of the regiment retired to a short distance and were again formed, one of these companies having but four members left untouched. " Lieutenant Colonel Foster, witla six companies, amounting in all to one hundred and sixty men, gained the hammock in good order, where he was joined by Captain Noel with the two remaining com.panies of the 6th infantry, and Captain Gentry's volunteers, with a few additional men, continued to drive the enemy for a considerable time, and by a change of C A R E O F T H E W O U iN D E D . 51 front, separated his line and continued to drive him until he reached the great lake, Okeechobee, which was in the rear of the enemy's position, and on which their encampment extended for more than a mile. As soon as I was informed that Captain Allen was advancing, I ordered the 1st infantry to move to the left, gain the enemy's right flank, and turn it, which order was executed in the promptest manner possible, and as soon as that regiment got in position, the enemy gave one fire and re- treated, being pursued by the 1st, 4th, and 6th, and some of the volunteers who had joined them, until near night, and until these troops were nearly exhausted, and the enemy driven in all directions. " The action was a severe one, and continued from half-past twelve until three P. M., a part of the time very close and se- vere. We suffered much, having twenty-six killed, and one hundred and twelve wounded, among whom are some of our most valuable officers. The hostiles probably suffered, all things considered, equally with ourselves, they having left ten dead on the ground, besides, doubtless, carrying off more, as is customary with them when practicable. "As soon as the enemy were completely broken, I turned my attention to taking care of the wounded, to facilitate their removal to my baggage, where I ordered an encampment to be formed. I directed Captain Taylor to cross over to the spot and employ every individual whom he might find there in con- structing a. small footway across the swamp; this, with great exertions, was completed in a short time after dark, when all the dead and wounded were carried over in litters made for the purpose, with one exception, a private of the 4th infantry, who was killed and could not be found. " And here I trust I may be permitted to say that I expe- rienced one of the most trying scenes of ray life, and he who could have looked on it with indifference, his nerves must have been differently organized from ray own. Besides the killed, there lay one hundred and twelve wounded officers and sol- diers, who had accompanied me one hundred and forty-five miles, most of the way through an unexplored wilderness, 52 RETURN TO FORT GARDNER. without guides, who had so gallantly beaten the enemy, under my orders, in his strongest position, and \vho had to be con- veyed back, through swamps and hammocks, from whence we set out, without any apparent means of doing so. This ser- vice, however, was encountered and overcome, and they have been conveyed thus far, and proceeded on to Tampa Bay on rude litters, constructed with the axe and knife alone, with poles and dry hides — the latter being found in great abundance at the encampment of the hostiles. The litters were carried on the backs of our weak and tottering horses, aided by the residue of the command, with more ease and comfort to suf- ferers than I could have supposed, and with as much as they could have been in ambulances of the most improved and modern construction. " The day after the battle we remained at our encampment, occupied in taking care of the wounded, and in the sad office of interring the dead ; also in preparing litters for the removal of the wounded, and collecting, with a portion of the mounted men, the horses and cattle in the vicinity belonging to the enemy, of which we found about one hundred of the former, many of them saddled, and nearly three hundred of the latter. " We left our encampment on the morning of the 27th, for the Kissimmee, where I had left my heavy baggage, which place we reached about noon on the 28th. After leaving two companies and a few Indians to garrison the stockade, which I found nearly completed on my return, by that, active and vigilant officer, Captain Munroe, 4th artillery, I left the next morning for this place, where I arrived on the 31st, and sent forward the wounded next day to Tampa Bay, with the 4th and Gth infantry, the former to halt at Fort Frazer, remaining here myself with the 1st, in order to make preparations to take the field again as soon as my horses can be recruited, most of which have been sent to Tampa, and my supplies in a sufficient state of forwardness to justify the measure. " In speaking of the command, I can only say, that so far as the regular troops are concerned, no one could have been more efficiently sustained than I have been, from the com- HONOUR TO THE TROOPS. 53 mencement of the campaign ; and I ara certain that they will always be willing and ready to discharge any duty that may be assigned them. " To Lieutenant Colonel Davenport, and the officers and soldiers of the First Infantry, I feel under many obligations for the manner in which they have, on all occasions, discharged their duty ; and although held in reserve, and not brought into battle until near its close, it evinced by its eagerness to engage, and the promptness and good order with which they entered the hammoclc, when the order was given for them to do so, is the best evidence that they would have sustained their own characters, as well as that of the regiment, had it been their fortune to have been placed in the hottest of the battle. " The Fourth Infantry, under their gallant leader. Lieutenant Colonel Foster, was among the first to gain the hammock, and maintained this position, as well as driving a portion of the enemy before him, until he arrived on the borders of Lake Okeechobee, which was in the rear, and continued the pursuit until near night. Lieutenant Colonel Foster, who was favour- ably noticed for his gallantry and good conduct in nearly all the engagements on the Niagara frontier, during the late war with Great Britain, by his several commanders, as well as in the different engagements with the Indians in this territory, never acted a more conspicuous part than in the action of the 25lh ult. ; he speaks in the highest terms of the conduct of brevet Major Graham, his second in command, as also the officers and soldiers of the Fourth Infantry, who were engaged in the action. Captain Allen, with his two mounted compa- nies of the Fourth Infantry, sustained his usual character for promptness and efficiency. Lieutenant Hooper, of the Fourth Regiment, was wounded through the arm, but continued on the field, at the head of his company, until the termination of the battle. "I am not sufficiently master of words to express my admi- ration of the gallantry and steadiness of the officers and soldiers of the sixth regiment of infantry. It was their fortune to bear the brunt of the battle. The report of the killed and wounded, 0* C^ 54 GENTRYAND HIS SON. ^vhich accompanies this, is more conclusive evidence of their merits than anything I can say. After five companies of this regiment, against which the enemy directed the most deadly fire, was nearly cut up, there being only four men left uninjured in one of them ; and every officer and orderly Serjeant of those companies, with one exception, were either killed or wounded, Captain Noel, with the remaining two companies, his own company, " K.," and Grossman's, "B.," commanded by second Lieutenant Woods, which was the left of the regiment, formed on the right of the fourth infantry, entered the hammock with that regiment, and continued the fight and the pursuit until its termination. It is due to Captain Andrews and Lieu- tenant Walker, to say they commanded two of the five com- panies mentioned above, and they continued to direct them, until they were both severely wounded, and carried from the field ; the latter received three separate balls. " The Missouri volunteers, under the command of Colonel Gentry, and Morgan's spies, who formed the first line, and, of course, were the first engaged, acted as well, or even better, than troops of that description generally do ; they received and returned the enemy's fire with spirit, for some time, when tliey broke and retired, w'ith the exception of Captain Gillam and a few of his company, and Lieutenant Blakey, also with a few men,- who joined the regulars, and acted with them, until after the close of the battle, but not until they had suffered severely ; the commanding officer of the volunteers, Colonel Gentry, being mortally wounded while leading on his men, and en- couraging them to enter the hammock, and come to close quarters with the "enemy ; his son, an interesting youth, eigh- teen or nineteen years of age, serjeant major of the regiment, was severely wounded at the same moment. " Captain Childs, Lieutenants Rogers and Flanagan, of Gentry's regiment, acting Major Sconce, and Lieutenants Hase and Gordon, of the spies, were wounded, while encouraging their men to a discharge of their duty. '< The volunteers and spies having, as before stated, fallen Dack to the baggage, could not again be formed and brought OFFICERS SIGNALIZED. 55 up to the hammock in anything like order ; but a number of them crossed over individually, and aided in conveying the wounded across the swamp to the hammock, among whom were Captain Curd, and several other officers, whose names I do not now recollect. " To my personal staff, consisting of first Lieutenant J. M. Hill, of the second, and first Lieutenant George H. Griffin, of the sixth infantry, the latter aid-de-camp to Major General Gaines, and a volunteer in Florida from his staff, I feel under the greatest obligations for the promptness and efficiency with which they have sustained me throughout the campaign, and more particularly for their good conduct, and the alacrity with which they aided me and conveyed my orders during the ac- tion of tie 25th ult. " Captain Taylor, commissary of subsistence, who was or- dered to join General Jesup at Tampa Bay, as chief of the subsistence deparanent, and who was ordered by him to remain with his column until he (General Jesup) joined it, although no command was assigned Captain Taylor, he greatly exerted himself in trying to rally and bring back the volunteers into action, as well as discharging other important duties which were assigned to him during the action. " Myself, as well as all who witnessed the attention and ability displayed by Surgeon Satterlee, medical director on this side the peninsula, assisted by assistant surgeons McLaren and Simpson, of the medical staff of the army, and Doctors Hannah and Cooke, of the Missouri volunteers, in ministering to the wounded, as well as their uniform kindness to them on all oc- casions, can never cease to be referred to by me but with the most pleasing and grateful recollections. " The quartermaster's department, under the direction of that efficient officer. Major Brant, and his assistant. Lieutenant Babbit, have done everything that could be accomplished to throw forward from Tampa Bay, and keep up supplies of pro- visions, forage, etc., with the limited means at their disposal. Assistant commissaries Lieutenants Harrison, stationed at Fort Gardner, and McClure.,.at Fort Fraser, have fully met my ex- 56 T H O JI P S O N ' S LAST WORDS. pectations in discharge of the various duties connected with their department, as well as those assigned them in the quar- termaster's department. " This column, in six weeks, penetrated one hundred and fifty miles into the enemy's country, opened roads, and con- structed bridges and causeways, when necessary, on the greater portion of the route, established two depots, and the necessary defences for the same, and finally overtook and beat the enemy in his strongest position. The results of which movement and battle have been the capture of thirty of the hostiles, the coming in and surrendering of more than one iiundrcd and fifty Indians and negroes, mostly the former, in- cluding the chiefs Ou-la-too-gee, Tus-ta-nug-gee, and other principal men, the capturing and driving out of the country six hundred head of cattle, upwards of one hundred head of horses, besides obtaining a thorough knowledge of the country through which we operated, a greater portion of which was entirely unknown, except to the enemy. «' Colonel Gentry died in a few hours after the battle, much regretted by the army, and will be, doubtless, by all who knew him, as his state did not contain a braver man or a bet- ter citizen. ' " It is due to his rank and talents, as well as to his long and important services, that I parti ' God and Liberty ! To explain to you the many grounds for the just grievances felt by the Mexican nation, caused by the United States go- vernment, would be a loss of time, and an insult to your good sense; I, therefore, pass at once to such explanation as I con-, sider of absolute necessity. Your government, in an incredible manner — you will even permit me to say an extravagant one, if the usages, or general rules established and received among all civilized nations are regarded — has not only insulted, but has exasperated the Mex- ican nation, bearing its conquering banner to the left bank of 9 98 CORIlESrONDENCE WITH AMPUDIA. the Rio Bravo del Norte ; and in this case, by explicit and definitive orders of my government, which neither can, wiU, nor sliould receive new outrages, I require you in all form, and at latest in the peremptory term of twenty-four hours, to break up your camp and retire to the other bank of the Nueces river, while our governments are regulating the pending ques- tion in relation to Texas. If you insist on remaining upon the soil of the department of Tamaulipas, it will clearly result that arms, and arras alone, must decide the question ; and, in that case, I advise you that we accept the war to which, with so much injustice on your part, you provoke us, and that, on our part, this war shall be conducted conformably to the principles established by the most civilized nations ; that is to say, that the law of nations and of war shall be the guide of my opera- tions ; trusting that on your part the same will be observed. With this view, I tender you the considerations due to your person and respectable office. Pedro De Ampudia. Scnor General-in-Chief of the U. S. Army, Don Z. TiTLon. To this peremptory requisition General Taylor replied : Head Quarters, Army of Occupation. Camp near Matamoros, Texas, April 12, 1846. Senor ; I have had the honour to receive your note of this date, in which you summon me to withdraw the forces under my command from their present position, and beyond the river Nueces, until the pending question between our governments, relative to the limits of Texas, shall be settled. I need Jiardly advise you that, charged as I am, in only a military capacity, with the performance of specific duties, I cannot enter into a discussion of the international question in- volved in the advance of the American army. You will, how- ever, permit me to say, that the government of the United States has constantly sought a settlement, by negotiation, of the question of boundary ; that an envoy was despatched to Mexico for that purpose, and that up to the most recent dates BLOCKADE OF RIO GRANDE. 99 said envoy had not been received by the actual Mexican go- vernment, if indeed he has not received his passports and left the republic. In the mean time, I have been ordered to occupy the country up to the left bank of the Rio Grande, until the boundary shall be definitely settled. In carrying out these in- structions I have carefully abstained from all acts of hostility, obeying, in this regard, not only the letter of my instructions, but the plain dictates of justice and humanity. The instructions under which I am acting will not permit me to retrograde from the position I now occupy. In view of the relations between our respective governments, and the in- dividual suffering which may result, I regret the alternative which you offer ; but, at the same time, wish it understood that I shall by no means avoid such alternative, leaving the re- sponsibility with those who rashly commence hostilities. In conclusion^ you will permit me to give the assurance that on my part the laws and customs of war among civilized nations shall be carefully observed. I have the honour to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor. Scnor General D. Pedro De Ampudia. To confirm these declarations. General Taylor continued to fortify his camp, and to make every disposition to resist an attack. Ampudia soon gave place, as commanding officer at Mataraoros, to General Arista, commander-in-chief of the Northern Division of the Mexican army. The reported acces- sions to its force also created new expectations in the Ameri- can camp that a decisive demonstration would soon be made against it. On the 19th, intelhgence was brought General Taylor of the arrival of two vessels off the mouth of the Rio Grande with supplies for the Mexicans in Matamoros. He at once declared a blockade of the river, which he enforced by ordering the United States Brig Lawrence, and a revenue cut- ter, to guard its mouth. This measure elicited another note from Ampudia, in which, after mentioning the fact of the ves- 100 ampudia's protest. sels being sent to Brazos Santiago, he proceeds in the following strain : " The cargo of one of them is composed in great part, and of the other entirely, of provisions, which the contractors, charged with providing for the army under my orders, had pro- cured to fulfil the obligations of their contracts. You have taken possession of these provisions by force, and against the will of the proprietors, one of whom is vice-consul of her Ca- tholic Majesty, and the other of her Britannic Majesty ; and whose rights, in place of being rigorously respected, as was proffered, and as was to be hoped from the observance of the principles which govern among civilized nations, have, on the contrary, been violated in the most extraordinary manner, op- posed to the guarantee and respect due to private property. " Nothing can have authorized you in such a course. The commerce of nations is not suspended or interrupted, except in consequence of a solemn declaration of blockade, commu- nicated and established in the form prescribed by international law. Nevertheless, you have infringed these rules ; and, by an act which can never be viewed favourably to the United States government, have hindered the entrance to a Mexican port of vessels bound to it, under the confidence that commerce would not be interrupted. My duties do not allow me to con- sent to this new species of hostility, and they constrain me to require of you, not only that the vessels taken by force to Brazos Santiago shall be at liberty to return to the mouth of the river, but the restoration of all the provisions which, be- sides belonging to private contractors, were destined for the troops on this frontier. I consider it useless to inculcate the justice of this demand, and the results which may follow an unlooked-for refusal. " I have also understood that two Mexicans, carried down in a boat by the current of the river near one of the advanced posts of your camp, were detained, after being fired upon, and that they are still kept and treated as prisoners. The indivi- duals in question do not belong to the army, and this circum- stance exempts them from the laws of war. I therefore hope TAYLOR'S REPLY. 101 that you will place them absolutely at liberty, as I cannot be persuaded that you pretend to extend to persons not military the consequences of an invasion, which, without employing this means of rigour against unarmed citizens, js marked in it- self with the seal of universal reprobation." To this note General Taylor took occasion to reply at some length, in a strain both exculpatory, as regarded his own course, and declaratory of the exceptionable conduct of the Mexicans. After acknowledging Ampudia's note, he con- tinues as follows : " After all that has passed since the American army first approached the Rio Bravo, I am certainly surprised that you should complain of a measure which is no other than a natural result of the state of war so much insisted upon by the Mexican authorities as actually existing at this time. You will excuse me for recalling a few circumstances to show that this state of war has not been sought by the American army, but has been forced upon it, and that the exercise of the rights incident to such a state cannot be made a subject of complaint. " On breaking up my camp at Corpus Christi, and moving forward with the army under my orders to occupy the left bank of the Rio Bravo, it was my earnest desire to execute my in- structions in a pacific manner : to observe the utmost regard for the personal rights of all citizens residing on the left bank of the river, and to take care that the religion and customs of the people should suffer no violation. With this view, and to quiet the minds of the inhabitants, I issued orders to tlie army, enjoining a strict observance of the rights and interests of all Mexicans residing on the river, and caused said orders to bo translated into Spanish, and circulated in the several towns on the Bravo. These orders announced the spirit in which we proposed to occupy the country, and I am proud to say that up to this moment the same spirit has controlled the operations of the army. On reaching the Arroyo Colorado I was informed by a Mexican officer that the order in question had been re- ceived in Matamoros; but was told, at the same time, that if I attempted to cross the river it would be regarded as a declara- 9* E2 102 VINDICATES HIS PROCEEDINGS. tion of war. Again, on my march to Frontone* I was met by a deputation of the civil authorities of Matamoros, protesting against my occupation of a portion of the department of Tamau- lipaSj and declaring that if the army was not at once withdrawn, w^ar would result. While this communication was in my hands, it was discovered that the village of Frontone had been set on fire and abandoned. I viewed this as a direct act of war, and informed the deputation that their communication would be answered by me when opposite Matamoros, which was done in respectful terms. On reaching the river I despatched an officer, high in rank, to convey to the commanding general in Matamoros the expression of my desire for amicable relations, and my willingness to leave open to the use of the citizens of Matamoros the port of Brazos Santiago until the question of boundary should be definitively settled. This officer received for reply, from the officer selected to confer with him, that my advance to the Rio Bravo was considered as a veritable act of war, and he was absolutely refused an interview with the Ameri- can consul, in itself an act incompatible with a state of peace. " Notwithstanding these repeated assurances on the part of the Mexican authorities, and notwithstanding the most obviously hostile preparations on the right bank of the river, accompa- nied by a rigid non-intercourse, I carefully abstained from any act of hostility — determined that the onus of producing an ac- tual state of hostilities should not rest with me. Our relations remained in this state until I had the honour to receive your note of the 12th instant, in which you denounce war as the alternative of my remaining in this position. As I could not, under my instructions, recede from my position, I accepted ihe alternative you offered me, and made all my dispositions to meet it suitably. But, still willing to adopt milder measures before proceeding to others, I contented myself in the first in- stance with ordering a blockade of the mouth of the Rio Bravo by the naval forces under my orders — a proceeding perfectly consonant with the state of war so often declared to exist, and which you acknowledge in your note of the 16th instant, rela- * The town at Point Isabel. ANNOUNCES HIS RESOLUTION. 103 live to the late Col. Cross. If this measure seem oppressive, 1 wish it borne in mind that it has been forced upon me bv the course you have seen fit to adopt. I have reported this block- ade to my government, and shall not remove it until I receive instructions to that effect, unless, indeed, you desire an armis- tice pending the final settlement of the question between the governments, or until war shall be formally declared by either, in which case I shall cheerfully open the river. In regard to the consequences you mention as resulting from a refusal to remove the blockade, I beg you to understand that I am pre- pared for them, be they what they may. "In regard to the particular vessels referred to in your com- munication, I have the honour to advise you that, in pursuance of my orders, two American schooners, bound for Matamoros, were warned off on the 17th instant, when near the mouth of the river, and put to sea, returning probably to New Orleans. They were not seized, or their cargoes disturbed in any way, nor have they been in the harbour of Brazos Santiago to my knowledge. A Mexican schooner, understood to be the "Ju- niata," was in or off that harbour when my instructions to block the river were issued, but was driven to sea in a gale, since which time I have had no report concerning her. Since the receipt of your communication, I have learned that tv^ro persons, sent to the mouth of the river to procure information respecting this vessel, proceeded thence to Brazos Santiago, when they were taken up and detained by the officer in com- mand, until my orders could be received. I shall order their immediate release. A letter from one of them to the Spanish vice-consul is respectfully transmitted herewith. "In relation to the Mexicans said to have drifted down the river in a boat, and to be prisoners at this time in my camp, I have the pleasure to inform you that no such persons have been taken prisoners or are now detained by my authority. The boat in question was carried down empty by the current of the river, and drifted ashore near one of our pickets and was se- cured by the guard. Some time afterwards an attempt was made to recover the boat under the cover of the darkness; the 104 RECONNOITRING INCIDENTS. individuals concerned were hailed by the guard, and, failing to answer, w^ere fired upon as a matter of course. What be- came of them is not known, as no trace of them could be dis- covered on the following morning. The officer of the Mexican guard directly opposite was informed next day that the boat would be returned on proper application to me, and I have now only to repeat that assurance. " In conclusion, I take leave to state that I consider the tone of your communication highly exceptionable, where you stig- matise the movement of the army under my orders as " marked with the seal of universal reprobation." You must be aware that such language is not respectful in itself, either to me or my government; and while I observe in my own correspond- ence the courtesy due to your high position, and to the mag- nitude of the interests with which we are respectively charged, I shall expect the same in return." The position of the Army of Occupation began now to ap- pear painfully critical. Daily intelligence was received of the augmentation of the Mexican forces. To this was added, on the 24th, rumours that they were crossing the river, to the number of three thousand, above and below the camp, with the design of marching against Point Isabel, and thus cutting off the supplies at that depot on which the army was dependent. To ascertain the truth of these reports. General Taylor ordered Captain Ker, with a squadron of dragoons, to reconnoitre be- tween the camp and the mouth of the river, while another squadron, under Captain Thornton, was sent above for the same object. The former returned without having learned anything to confirm the unfavourable reports. The mission of the latter was less fortunate. Having ascended the river bank about twenty-five miles, he halted in consequence of the re- fusal of his guide to proceed, the latter declaring that large bodies of Mexican troops were in the neighbourhood. Doubt- ing the statement, however. Captain Thornton again moved forward ; and, stopping at a farm-house, the court of which was surrounded by a chapparal hedge, to make some enquiry, he was suddenly siirrounded by a large body of Mexican in- Thornton's command captured. 105 fantry and cavalry. A charge through it wtis attempted, but without success. Captain Thornton, by an extraordinary leap of his horse, which was wounded at the moment by a dis- charge of musketry, cleared the hedge. His command was un- able to follow ; and the second officer, Captain Hardee, after an attempt to retreat across the river, was obliged to surrender the party prisoners of war. Lieutenant G. T. Mason, a promising young officer, was killed in this affiiir. The prisoners were taken to Matamoros, and well treated. For some time. Captain Thornton was missing ; but, as was afterwards learned from him, his horse had fallen, and injured him, and, when endea- vouring to return to the camp on foot, he was taken within a few miles of it, and joined his men, a prisoner, in Matamoros. The capture of this handful of dragoons, was the occasion of extraordinary exultation on the part of the host of their con- querors. General Arista thus triumphantly congratulated Ge- neral Torrejon, who commanded in the affair: " This has been a day of rejoicing to all the Division of the North, it having this day been known of the triumph achieved by the brigade which your excellency so worthily commands. The rejoiced country will doubtless celebrate this preliminary of glorious deeds that her happy sons will in future present to her. Your excellency will communicate to your brave soldiers that I have seen with the greatest pleasure their valiant be- haviour, and that I await for the detailed despatch to elevate it to the knowledge of the supreme government, so that the nation may learn the triumph of your arms." On the day that Thornton's unfortunate party had left the camp, a messenger from General Arista brought to General Taylor the following manifesto, addressed on the cover to the commander-in-chief of the United States forces : — " The course of events, since the annexation of Texas to the United States was declared, has been so clearly hostile to Mexico, and so foreign to the dignity and principles which the Americans have proclaimed to the world, that we came to the conclusion, that their policy has been changed, and that 106 POINT ISABEL THREATENED. their moderation is turned into a desire of aggrandizement, en- riching themselves by humiliating their neighbours. " The respect and consideration that friendly nations show to each other have been trampled upon, by which reason, the justice and excessive moderation of Mexico shine forth still more. Pressed and forced into war, we enter into a struggle, which cannot be avoided, without failing in what is most sacred to man. "Political discussions do not appertain to military men, but to diplomatic agents. To us belongs the part to act, without it occasioning any surprise that the troops under my command should not wait for anything else to give battle. " We Mexicans have been calumniated as barbarous, in the most caustic and unjust terms. The occasion has arrived to how what we are ; and, I do not believe that, in the troops under my command, there will be any cause to confirm such suppositions, as they will render conspicuous the feelings of humanity and generosity which distinguish them. " For this time, I have the honour to offer your excellency my great consideration. " Mariano Arista. " God and Liberty ! " Head Quarters, Matamoros, April 24, 1S46." A private note to General Taylor accompanied this formal expression of modest assurance, in which the writer, after pay- ing a compliment to General Taylor's urbanity, pledged him- self, personally, that "justice and love of humanity" should be found in all his acts. The apprehensions already noticed for the safety of the little army on the banks of the Rio Grande were increased, by the fact, that bodies of Mexican troops, thrown between it and Point Isabel, had wholly debarred all intercommunication. To- wards the close of April, there were reports of a contemplated attack on this place. General Taylor shared the anxiety on the latter account — and he accordingly sent a despatch to the governors of Louisiana and Texas, asking an immediate rein- RELIEF FOR POINT ISABEL. 107 forcement of four regiments of volunteers from each state. From the time he had left Point Isabel, while on the march from Corpus Christi, Major Munroe, who was in command of that station, had been reinforced by a small body of Texan volunteers. Captain Walker, with a company of rangers, was among them, and occasion now offered for him to commence the career, in the Mexican war, which he has since followed with singular credit to his patriotism and courage. A wagon train,' under the escort of Captain Walker, having been driven back,\vith severe loss, while on the way from Point Isabel to the camp, by a large body of Mexican troops, who pursued the fugitive party to the neighbourhood of the former post. Major Munroe was anxious to give General Taylor immediate advice of the fact. To this perilous service. Captain Walker volunteered, and safely accomplished it. The danger which menaced Point Isabel was now too imminent to admit delay in relieving it, and General Taylor, therefore, resolved on marching thither, immediately, with his whole force, except the seventh regiment of infantry, and Captain Bragg's and Captain Lowd's companies of artillery, which w^ere to occupy Fort Brown, then sufficiently complete to sustain a bombard- ment. The cost of this movement was fully counted by the general ; — but he was prepared for any exigency, and resolved to meet any force which the enemy might bring against him. 108 TAYLOR LEAVES THE RIO GRANDE. CHAPTER VI. Rejoicing in Matamoros — Arista, with his Forces, crosses the River — His Dis- appointment at Taylor's Escape — Mexican Narrative of both Movements — Ardour of the Mexicans — Terror of the Americans — Their Duphcity and Treachery — Taylor's Ignominy — Bomhardment of Fort Brown — Taylor's In- structions — May's and Walker's Mission — New Mexican Batteries — Their Fire not returned — Mexican Account of the Bombardment — Eternal Honour of Mexican Artillery-men — Barbarous Pleasure of the A mericans — Their Coward- ice and Stupidity — Mexican Triumph— American Loss — Mexican Superiority — Continuation of the Bombardment — Death of Major Brown — New Mexican Batteries— Captain Hawkins summoned to Surrender — Arista's modest Letter — Hawkins' presumptuous Answer — Want of Ammunition — Preparations for an Assault — Weariness of the Men in the Fort — Signals of Relief. The first of May, 1846, was a day of great exultation among the good people of Matamoros, All classes forsook their oc- cupations, and gathered on the banks of the river. The merry bells were rung, and public joy was manifested by all modes known to the sanguine denizens of a tropical town. It so hap- pened, that his excellency, Don Mariano Arista, general-in- chief of the division of the north, had chosen the same bright morning to order a large body of his troops across the Rio Grande, ihat General Taylor had chosen to march to the relief of Point Isabel. A retrograde movement, on the part of the Americans, at any moment, would have been hailed by their confident neighbours as evidence of doubt and apprehension. But occurring simultaneously with the advance of their own forces to the left side of the river, the cheering conclusion was drawn, that the terror-stricken army of the United States was (lying before the brilliant legions of Mexico. The latter had selected a ford for crossing, several miles above the camp of •:. Z. Taylor, // '■ ' Brevet Brig. Gen. U. S. A., commanding. -, The Adjutant General of the Army, Washington, D. C. Thus, on the ISth of May, General Taylor had firmly planted the American flag on the battlements of a Mexican city. In fulfilling his professional duty, he was scrupulous in every precaution against the evils almost inseparable from hostile invasion. The persons and property of the people of Matamoros and its vicinity were rigidly protected. The American troops were distributed in the suburbs, only a guard being allowed in the city. Colonel Twiggs was appointed " Governor," his command being stationed above the town, on the river bank. That of General Worth — who, after a tem- porary absence, had again joined the army — was posted below. Fort Brown was gamsoned, and the seventh regiment encamped beneath its walls. General Taylor camped out, establishing his head-quarters where a few trees aided the shade of the canvass. Arista, with the remnant of his army, still more than equal to his conquerors in numbers, having commenced his retreat from the city, while the parley with Taylor was proceeding, continued to hasten up the river, in the direction of Camargo. Upon evacuating Matamoros, he made the following rather frank report to his superior in command of the District. The docu- ment is dated from " the Rancho de la Venada, May 18. '■'■ Blvision of the J\orth — Commnnder-in- Chief — All the means of subsistence of this division being consumed, its activity paralyzed, and its artillery diminished, while that of the enemy has been greatly increased in the number of pieces and .?i ANECDOTE OF AMPUDIA. 173 the calibre of his guns, in such a manner that, were he to open his fire, the city of Matamoros would be instantly destroyed, to the utter ruin of national and foreign interests, I have de- cided to retire from it, with the forces under my command, before being summoned, and obliged to evacuate it with dishonour, which I shall thus avoid : for the march is slow, our pieces being drawn by oxen, and our munitions in carts. My object now is to defend the soil of those departments which have been entrusted to me ; and, for that purpose, I am going to post myself at those points most convenient, and within reach of supplies, of which I will hereafter inform your highness, though your communications must seek me by the road of China, or that of Linares. The step to which I have referred has saved the national honour ; and I communicate it to your highness for your information, recommending you to secure the camp equipage, placing it in a convenient point, and preserving the sixteen pounders in that city, to which, moreover, I will order a reinforcement." The retreat of Arista commenced in good order. A news- paper of the day supplies an anecdote connected with the pur- suit which proves — if proof were wanting — how systematic was the deception practised upon the simple-minded Mexicans, by their military officers, regarding their own prowess and success in the field. The day following the occupation of Matamoros, lieutenant Colonel Garland, with all the regular and irregular *cavalry of the army, about two hundred and fifty dragoons and rangers, started in pursuit of the retreating Mexicans, with orders to harass their rear, and to capture prisoners and bag- gage. On the 22d, Colonel Garland returned from his pursuit. He succeeded in capturing a small rear party, after a sligh*: show of resistance on their part, in which two Mexicans were killed, twenty-two taken prisoners, and one wagon with am- munition and clothing of an artillery company captured. Two of our own troops were slightly wounded. The scarcity of W'ater, the barrenness of the country, and the condition of the horses, compelled Colonel Garland to return to Matamoros, 15* 174 arista's appeal to Americans. after having penetrated over sixty miles into the enemy's country. The army of the Mexicans, under General Arista, was but twenty-four hours ahead of our cavalry, retreating in good order — our officers stopping at the ranches where the enemy had, the night previous. A ranchero, at one of these stopping .places, inquired with great simplicity of Captain Graham, where the Americans were going. He was told in pursuit of the retreating Mexican army. "Retreating army!" said the iiellow with astonishment ; " why. General Ampudia stopped •at my house last night, and said that his troops had conquered the Americans, and that he was now on his way to Mexico to •take the news." The man was confounded, for it was impos- sible for him to believe his nation had been whipped in battle, and still more incomprehensible, that a small number of Ameri- ,can dragoons should seriously, and for purposes of war, really .drive before them over three thousand troops. To these painful and humiliating misrepresentations were the Mexican commanders driven, in order to secure respect and ordinary hospitality from their own countrymen. It affords a painful contrast with their boasts before they had been tested m the field. Among the papers found in Arista's tent on the field of Resaca de la Palma, was the following, addressed to Ameri- can soldiers, and designed to have been distributed among them. How little could its author have known his enemies! How little of the true means by which such enemies are over- come ! ^ " Head-Quarters at Matamoros, April 2G, 1846. "Soldiers! — You have enlisted in time of peace to serve in that army for a specific lerm ; but your obligation never im- l^lied that you were bound to violate the laws of God, and^ the most sacred rights of friends! The United States govern- ment, contrary to the wishes of a majority of all honest and honourable Americans, has ordered you to take forcible pos- session of the territory of a friendly neighbour, who has n^ver given her consent to such occupation. In other words, while INDUCEMENTS TO DESERTERS. 175 the treaty of peace and commerce between Mexico and the United States, presuming on her strength and prosperity, and on our supposed imbecihty and cowardice, attempts to make you the blind instruments of her unholy and mad ambition, and force you to appear as the hateful robbers of our dear homes, and the unprovoked violators of our dearest feelino-s as men and patriots. Such villany and outrage, I know, is perfectly repugnant to the noble sentiments of any gentleman, and it is base and foul to rush you on to certain death, in order to aggrandize a few lawless individuals, in defiance of the laws of God and man! "It is to no purpose if they tell you, that the law of the an- nexation of Texas justifies your occupation of the Rio Bravo del Norte ; for by this act' they rob us of a great part of Ta- mauUpas^ Coahuili, C/ilhuahua, and Mew Mexico; and it is barbarous to send a handful of men on such an errand ao-ainst a powerful and warlike nation. Besides, the most of you are Europeans, and we are the declared friends of a majority of the nations o[ Europe. The North Americans are ambitious, overbearing, and insolent as a nation, and they will only make use of you as vile tools to carry out their abominable plans of pillage and rapine. " I warn you in the name of justice, honour, and your own interests and self-respect, to abandon their desperate and un- holy cause, and become peaceful Mexican citizens. I guaranty you, in such case, a half section of land, or three hundred and twenty acres, to settle upon, gratis. Be wise, then, and just, and honourable, and take no part in murdering us who have no unkind feelings for you. Lands shall be given to officers, Serjeants, and corporals, according to rank, privates receiving three hundred and twenty acres, as stated. "If in time of action you wish to espouse our cause, throw away your arms and run to us, and we will embrace you us true friends and Christians. It is not decent nor prudent to say more. But should any of you render important service to Mexico, you shall be accordingly considered and preferred." 176 RESULT OF Taylor's successes. Arista continued his retreat to the interior, his unfortunate troops sufFering privations more trying than the toil and danger of battle. Provisions and water were scarce, and hastening on in fear of their victorious pursuers, the fatigue of forced marches added to their calamities. Under these circumstances his army became completely demoralized. A great portion of it de- serted, returning home, or forming marauding parties, of which their own countrymen were the victims. It was near the end of May, when Arista, with his shattered columns, reached the hacienda of Coma, upwards of a hundred miles from Mata- moros. His force had been, at the outset, sufficiently strong to enable him to leave detachments so posted as to prevent the Americans from communicating with the interior. From Coma, where he halted for repose when no longer pursued, he re- sumed his march and reached Monterey. Subsequently he was removed from his command, and ordered to Mexico to answer for his misconduct, or misfortunes, before a court-martial. Thus, freed from the presence of an enemy, and absolute master of the enemy's country in the entire region where he had first met with opposition, General Taylor was obliged to await further instructions from the government, and the arrival of new troops and means of advance, before he could duly prosecute the advantages he had gained. His labours for nearly two months had been various and incessant, taxing to an extreme both mind and body. At the end of March he had left the northern side of the Nueces, with an array apparently insufficient for any successful demonstration against an enemy disposed to resist it. Before the end of June, he found him- self on the southern side of the Rio Grande, having annihilated all opposition to his presence. The occupation of that ground defines the first period of his brilliant operations in Mexico. "WAR RECOGNIZED BY CONGRESS. 177 CHAPTER X. War recognized by Congress — Men and Money voted — General Taylor em- barrassed — Inadequate means of advancing — Letter to the Department — Difficulties and Wants explained — Further correspondence — Suggestions re- garding his advance — Letter from the Secretary of War — Taylor recom- mended to advance on Monterey — His Views on the Campaign requested — Continued Difficulties — Further despatches — Arrival of Volunteers — Causes of Inactivity explained — Minor Expeditions — More Troops — Letter from Gen- eral Scott — News of Taylor's Victories reaches the United States — Popular Enthusiasm — Created Brigadier General by Brevet — President's Letter Thanks voted by Louisiana Legislature — Deputation to Taylor — His Speech to the Committee — Made a full Major General by Congress — Correspondence — Taylor's Views of future Operations — Camargo taken — Despatches, The President of the United States announced to Congress, on the 11th of May, 1846, that hostihties had been actually commenced by Mexico. Two days afterwards, an act was passed by Congress, the preamble of which declared a state of "War to exist, " by the act of the republic of Mexico," and the first section of which appropriated ten millions of dollars, and empowered the President to accept the services of fifty thousand volunteers, for the army. The. action of Congress in thus voting men and money was prompt and unanimous, although the assertion quoted from the preamble, that the war was the act of Mexico, met with earnest opposition. Authorized by Congress, the President immediately issued a proclamation in- voking the nation to sustain the measures necessary to secure a peace. General Taylor, who, when the enemy yet untired in battle was in full force, had been embarrassed for the want of troops sufficient to ensure the safety of two posts, now began to find himself, when no enemy was near, equally embarrassed by the prospect of reinforcements too numerous for any operation which he then had in view. His call upon the governor of Louisiana for four regiments had met an instant and patriotic response — and other states, as well as this, were anxious to recruit for the service. The predicament menaced by this over- 178 VOLUNTEERS WITHOUT SUPPLIES. flow of men, unaccompanied with the means of subsistence or transportation, is partially set forth in a despatch dated the 20th of May, addressed to the Adjutant General, in which he remarks : '< On the 26th of April, I had occasion to advise the Depart- ment that hostilities had actually broken out, and that, in con- sequence, I had found it necessary to use the authority with which I was vested, and call upon the governors of Louisiana and Texas for a force, each, of four regiments. The eight regiments thus called for would make a force of nearly five thousand men, which I deemed sufficient to meet the wants of the service in this quarter. At the same time that I wrote to the governor of Louisiana requesting this volunteer force, I ad- dressed a letter to General Gaines, desiring him to assist in or- ganizing these regiments, and having them promptly supplied. In my communication to the governor, the organisation was very exactly prescribed, being that indicated from your office on the 25th of August, 1845. I find, however, that the orga- nization has been exceeded, and, moreover, that General Gaines has called for many more volunteers than I deemed ne- cessary, extending the call to other states besides Louisiana. It will, of course, be for the government to decide whether the future operations in this quarter will require the amount of force (entirely unknown) which is coming hither. I only de- sire to say, that this reinforcement, beyond the eight regiments mentioned above, was never asked for by me, and that in making the call of the 26th of April, I well knew that if the Mexicans fought us at all, it wotdd be before the arrival of the volunteers. It was for the purpose of clearing the river, and performing such further service as the government might direct, that I thought it proper to ask for reinforcements. It is ex- tremely doubtful whether the foot regiments from Texas can be raised, and I shall desire the Governor, who is expected here, to suspend the call for them. None of the mounted compa- nies, except Captain Price's, already in service, have reported to me. I fear that the volunteers have exhausted the supply of tents OPINION RESPECTING OPERATIONS. 179 deposited in New Orleans for the use of this army. We are greatly in want of them ; and I must request that immediate measures be taken to send direct to Brazos Santiago, say one thousand tents, for the use of the array in the field. The tents of the 7th infantry were cut up to make sand-bags during the recent bombardment of Fort Brown." His position was further explained in a letter dated the 21st of May, in which he remarks : " Our future movements must depend, in a great degree, on the extent to which the Rio Grande is navigable for steamboats, and I fear that my expectations in this particular will not be realized. Though at times navigable as high as Camargo, or even Mier, it is doubtful whether a boat can now be pushed higher than Reynosa. Indeed, the « Neva,' which is in the river, and accompanied the expedition under General Smith, has not yet reached this place, though hourly expected. Could we establish and keep up by water a depot at Camargo, opera- tions might be carried on in the valley of the San Juan toward Monterey, the first city of importance in that direction. A direct movement from this point to Monterey would require vast transportation, chiefly by pack-mules, and would, more- over, be hazardous in summer, on account of the scarcity of water, part of the route being supplied by wells only. The country between this and Monterey, by whatever route, cannot support an army. '< I shall lose no time in ascertaining the practicability of the river for steamboats, and shall occupy Reynosa, and such other points as a boat may be able to reach." We find that General Taylor continued to represent to the Department the inadequacy of his means to transport troops up the river, and to take a candid exception to the number of them unexpectedly pressed upon him. His military character demands that his frequent expositions of the embarrassments produced by these circumstances should be set forth in his own language. He addressed the Department as follows on the 3d of June : " I respectfully enclose herewith a field return of the forces 180 POLICY OF THE ENEMY. in and near Mataraoros, both regular and volunteer. The corps known to have arrived at Point Isabel, of which no re- turns have yet been received, will carry the entire force under my orders to nearly eight thousand men. "I am necessarily detained at this point for want of suitable transportation to carry on offensive operations. There is not a steamboat at my command proper for the navigation of the Rio Grande ; and without water transportation, I consider it useless to attempt any extensive movement. Measures have been taken to procure boats of suitable draught and descrip- tion, and one or two may now be expected. In the mean time, I propose to push a battalion of infantry as far as Rey- nosa, and occupy that town. For any operations in the direc- tion of Monterey, it will be necessary to establish a large depot at Camargo, which I shall lose no time in doing as soon as proper transports arrive, unless I receive counter-instructions from the Department. '< I trust the Department will see that I could not possibly have anticipated the arrival of such heavy reinforcements from Louisiana as are now here, and on their way hither. Without large means of t''ansportation, this force will embarrass, rather than facilitate our operations. I cannot doubt that the Depart- ment has already given instructions, based upon the change in our position since my first call for volunteers. " Our last accounts of Arista represent his force to be halted at Coma, an extensive hacienda on the Monterey road, about one hundred miles from this point. He has pickets covering the roads leading to Matamoros, with a view to cut off all com.- munication with the interior. The Departmental authorities have issued a decree denouncing as traitors all who hold inter- course with us, or whh those who do so. I am, nevertheless, disposed to believe that in some quarters, at least, our presence is not unfavourably viewed. We have no intelligence from the city of Mexico. " Ordnance stores, and other munitions of war, are continually ' discovered in the town. Five pieces of cannon, and a very LETTER FROM THE WAR DEPARTMENT. 181 large amount of balls, shells, and ammunition generally, have been brought to light." The uncertainty of Taylor's future movements, and the mode of prosecuting the war, generally seem to have been shared by the Department at home. This is shown in a letter, dated the 8th of June, from the Secretary of War to General Taylor, of which the following is part : "In my letter of the 2Sth ultimo, you were left to your own discretion and judgment as to the measures to be pursued be- fore the end of the unfavourable season shall be passed, and it is not now Lntended to control that discretion. You best know what amount of force you will have under your command, and what can be best accomplished with that force. "It is presumed you will hold both banks of the Rio Grande to a considerable distance from its mouth, and secure the un- interrupted use of that river for the transportation of supplies. I hope you will be able to take and hold in possession aJl places on it as high up as Laredo. " It is proper that I should advise you that a considerable force, which will be also under your command, wall soon as- semble at San Antonio de Bexar. The ultimate destination of this force is Chihuahua, if it should be determined that such an expedition would have a favourable operation in the conduct of the war ; but it might be at once used to take and secure the several places on the Rio Grande. Though we have no despatch from you since those giving an account of the battles on the 8th and 9th of May, we have such information as in- duces the belief that you are in possession of Matamoros, and that you are not now threatened with any considerable Mexi- can force. It is desirable that you should find yourself in suf- ficient strength to capture and hold Monterey with your present force. You are apprised that large reinforcements are preparing to join you. Besides the regular forces now under your com- mand, and which will be speedily augmented, you will soon have nearly twenty thousand volunteers, (including those to r^;ndezvous at San Antonio de Bexar,) who are to serve for one year. Your determination as to immediate movements 16 182 REINFORCEMENTS OF VOLUNTEERS. will, therefore, be somewhat influenced by the consideration of the additional force which will soon join you. " The President is desirous of receiving, and hopes soon to be favoured with, your views and suggestions in relation to the fall campaign. His determination is to have the war prosecuted with vigour, and to embrace in the objects to be compassed in that campaign, such as will dispose the enemy to desire an end of the war. Shall the campaign be conducted with the view of striking at the city of Mexico, or confined, so far as regards the forces under your immediate command, to the northern provinces of Mexico ? Your views on this point will, doubt- less, have an important influence upon the determination of the Government here. Should our army penetrate far into the in- terior of Mexico, how are supplies to be obtained? Can they be, to any considerable extent, drawn from the enemy's coun- try, or must they be obtained from the United States ? If the latter, what are the facilities and difficulties of transportation .-* These are very important questions, and the answers to them will have an essential bearing in settling the plan and objects of the campaign ; and it is desired that you should express your views fully in regard to them. " Again : it is important to know your opinion of the de- scription of troops best adapted to operations in the interior of Mexico ; what proportion should be infantry, artillery, and cavalry, &c. A peace must be conquered in the shortest space of time practicable. Your views of the manner of doing it are requested. It is not doubted that you will push your ad- vantages to the utmost extent it can be done, with the means at your command." Before the receipt of this letter Taylor continued to have constant accessions to his force, increasing it to an unwieldy bulk for the plans which he contemplated. For this he was not responsible. His requisition for troops had been explicit ; eight regiments, and no more, were called for. At the same . time he had urged the supply of all the materials of an invad- ing army. But while he was flooded with^men, he was kept comparatively inactive for the want of supplies commensurate TAYLOR EXPLAINS HIS INACTIVITY. 183 with his main undertaking. His own correspondence satisfac- torily proves that the means at his disposal were inadequate to purposes which he was expected to accomplish. Two letters may be cited as further examples. Addressing the Adjutant General of the Army on the 10th of June, he said : " I beg leave earnestly to invite the attention of the Depart- ment to the following points : "First. The great influx of volunteers at Point Isabel. Five regiments certainly from Louisiana, numbering, say 3600 men ; two regiments or battalions from Louisville and St. Louis, numbering, say 1200 more ; several companies from Alabama, and I know not how many from Texas ; the latter now begin- ' ning to arrive. The volunteer troops, now under my orders, amount to nearly 6000 men. How far they may be increased without previous notification to me, it is impossible to tell. " Secondly. The entire want of the proper kind of transporta- tion to push my operations up the river. The boats on which I depended for this service were found to be nearly destroyed by worms, and entirely unfit for the navigation of the river. At my instance, Major Thomas, on the 18th of May, required from Lieut. Col. Hunt a boat of the proper description, and followed it up in a few days by a requisition for another. At the last dates from New Orleans no boat had been procured. Captain Sanders, of the engineers, was despatched by me to New Orleans, to assist in procuring suitable boats, but I have yet received no report from him. " As I have previously reported, my operations are completely paralyzed by the want of suitable steamboats to navigate the Rio Grande. Since the 18th of May, the army has Iain in camp near this place continually receiving heavy reinforcements of men, but no facility for water transport, without which addi- tional numbers are but an embarrassment. " I desire to place myself right in this matter, and to let the Department see that the inactivity of the army resuhs from no neglect of mine. I must express my astonishment that such large reinforcements have been sent forward to join the army. 184 COMPLAINS OF EMBARRASSMENT. without being accompanied by the means of transportation, both by land and water, to render them efficient. As matters now stand, whatever may be the expectations of the Depai l- ment, I cannot move from this place ; and unless Captain San- ders shall succeed in procuring boats of the proper kind, I can give no assurance in regard to future operations." This language is sufficiently explicit and emphatic, exhibit- ing General Taylor's determination not to be held responsible for the delays in the movements of the army. Again, on the 17th of June, he wrote to the Adjutant General, and after re- marking that he had received no advices since the 10th, says : " No steamboats have been sent out from New Orleans for the navigation of the Rio Grande, and in the absence of all infor- mation on that point, or respecting the views of the govern- ment, I am altogether in the dark as to our future operations. I must think that orders have been given, by superior authority, to suspend the forwarding of means of transportation from New Orleans. I cannot otherwise account for the extraordinary delay shown by the Quartermaster's Department in that city. Even the mails, containing probably important despatches frora the government, are not expedited, << Lieutenant Colonel Wilson has occupied Reynosa without opposition. What remains of the Mexican army is understood to be still at Linares, and has sufTered from disease. General Torrejon has died, and Colonel Carasco, at last advices, was very ill. I learn that Generals Arista and Ampudia have gone to Mexico, probably for the trial of the former, or both. "Volunteer regiments have arrived from Louisville and St. Louis, making, with those from Louisiana, eight strong and organized battalions — mustering over 5000 men. "In addition, we have seven companies of Alabama volun- teers, and twelve or fifteen companies from Texas. Others from Texas are continually arriving. A portion of these volun- teers has been lying in camp at this place for nearly a month, completely paralyzed by the want of transportation. Exposed LETTER FROM GENERAL SCOTT. 185 as they are in this climate to diseases of the camp, and without any prospect, so far as I can see, of being usefully employed, I must recommend that they be allowed to return to their homes. ; " V'.'* ■•'---- << I have despatched Captain McCalfoch, a good partisan' offi- cer, in the direction of Linares, with his company, to gain in- formation touching the numbers and position of the enemy, and the resources of the country." It is proper to remark, with regard to the expression in the letter of the 10th of June, touching the increase of the volunteer force without notification to General Taylor, that notification had been forwarded by the Department of all the volunteers called out by its order. The excess was under the order of Gijneral Gaines. On the 12th of June, General Scott had written to General Taylor : , " Recruits to fill up the ranks of the regular companies which are with you, or ordered to join you, to (say) about seventy men each, sliall be sent forward as fast as practicable, so as to give you, we ho[)e, in a short time, a total force of about 23,070 men. " Without waiting for the arrival of that amount of force, but before, and as soon as you shall deem it safe in respect to the relative numbers and positions of the enemy, your know- ledge of the country, your supplies and means of trans- portation, it is the wish and expectation of the President that, with your accustomed energy, you take up lines of march beyond the Rio Grande, and press your operations towards the heart of the enemy''^ country ; that is, upon such important points as you may deem necessary to conquer and tft hold." It has been sufficiently shown, that the latitude thus allowed General Taylor in his operations, was a negative privilege. He was tied down by circumstances, which his own forecast had in vain attempted to obviate, to the spot from which he had driven the enemy. The splendid success of General Taylor and his army, was 16* 1 186 BRIGADIER GENERAL BY BREVET. learned with admiration and pride in every part of the United States. The fears for his safety, which, when he was supposed to be cut off from Point Isabel by Arista's army, were, in the beginning of May, wrought up to intensity, gave way to uni- versal rejoicing and confidence, when the victories were re- ported, which have made the 8th and 9th of that month for- ever glorious in the history of the national arms. Men of all parties, those who opposed the war as well as those wiio sus- tained it, united in awarding honour to the commander, who, undaunted by the number or position of his enemies, had moved irresistibly through their midst, fulfilling his plans as promptly and surely as though no obstacle, no danger, had been interposed to defeat them. In every city, meetings were held to express the exultation of the people at home, who sympathized with his triumphs in the distant scene of his trials and labours. On the 30th day of May, the President wrote to General Taylor in the following terms, transmitting a commission as Brevet Major General. Washington City, May 3.0, 1846. Sir : I transmit to you herewith a commission as Major General by brevet in the army of the United States, conferred upon you for gallant conduct and distinguished services in the successive victories over superior Mexican forces at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, on the 8th and 9th days of May, 1846. It gave me sincere pleasure, immediately upon the receipt of official intelligence from the scene of your achievements, to confer upon you, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, this testimonial of the estimate which your government places upon your skill and gallantry. To yourself and the brave officers and soldiers under your command the gratitude of the country is justly due. Our army have fully sustained their deservedly high reputation, and added another bright page to the history of American valour and patriotism. They VOTE OF LOUISIANA LEGISLATURE. 187 have won new laurels for themselves and for their country. My confidence in them never faltered. The battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma rank among our most brilliant victo- ries, and will long be remembered by the American people. When all the details of these battles, and of the noble defence of the camp opposite to Matamoros, shall have been received, it will be my pleasure, as it will be my grateful duly, to render to the officers and men under your command suitable testimo- nials for their conduct in the brilliant victories which a super- intending Providence has enabled them to achieve for their country. In transmitting to you this commission, and in communica- ting to the officers and soldiers under your command my pro- found sense of their meritorious services, I but respond to the patriotic enthusiasm manifested by the people in behalf of their brave defenders. Whilst my warmest thanks are tendered to the survivors, the nation mourns the loss of the brave officers and soldiers who fell in defence of their country upon the field of victory. Their names also shall be remembered, and ap- propriate honours be paid to their memory by a grateful country. You will cause this communication to be made known to the army under your command. James K. Polk. To Brnvet Major Gen. Z. Taylor, Commatuling U. S. army on the Rio Grande. The Legislature of Louisiana passed a resolution of thanks, and voted General Taylor a sword. A committee was ap- pointed to wait upon him and tender him the compliment. The committee arrived at his quarters on the 8tli of June, and the chairman, having been introduced to the General and his staff, made a brief address, to which the General replied, with much emotion, in these terms : " My heart feels too deeply and sensibly the high honour that has been conferred on me, my officers and men, to respond to your expressions of gratitude and thanks. I always felt as- sured that the patriotic state of Louisiana would be among the. 188 Taylor's speech in reply. first to rush to the assistance of our little army in time of need. I well knew, as did also my officers and men, that chivalry and noble daring were her attributes. Her volunteers have readily abandoned their homes and business to assist us in the hour of danger. We feel a deep debt of gratitude to them and to you. The generous and timely action of the Legislature of Louisiana will not be forgotten by us. We feel that we have only done our duty ; yet we cannot but feel gratified to have gained the approbation of our fellow-citizens. Together with the love of country, which is common to us all, it is that approbation which cheers and animates the soldier in the hour of battle. Gentlemen — I am unaccustomed to public speaking. I there- fore, in the name of my offi.cers and men, thank you, and the patriotic state which you represent, for the honour conferred on us." This is but a single example of popular feeling for Taylor and his army. The limits of a volume would not embrace the formal expressions of it, during the few days after the intelli- gence of his victories had spread through the country. Congress resolved to place Taylor at once in the highest rank of the service, and he was accordingly, by act of that body, promoted to be a full Major General. This advance- ment was communicated in a letter from the Secretary of War, of which the followinsr are extracts. o " War Department, "Washington, July 1, 1846. " Sir : It gives me pleasure to transmit herewith a commis- sion, issued to you by the President, of Major General in the army of the United States, pursuant to the first section of the act of Congress, passed 18th June lastj'a copy of which is also herewith enclosed. " On receiving your despatch No. 51, stating your want of means for transporting troops, supplies, &c., on the Rio Grande, I desired the quartermaster general to inform me what measures had been taken on that subject. I herewith send you his reply. I trust that the steps taken by your orders, and those of the quartermaster general here, will have furnished the ANSWER TO SECRETARY OF WAR. 189 means to enable you to prosecute active operations, as suo-- gested in my letters of the 28th of May and 8th of June. "I anticipated the embarrassments of which you complain, by the accumulation of troops before accommodations could be possibly provided, and arrangements made for the employ- ment of them. The only relief which can be applied to the case, is that contained in my previous communications to you on the subject, and in that from the adjutant general on the 25th of May." The narrative of General Taylor's operations and policy on the Rio Grande, in the commencement of the war, is continued by the insertion of the subjoined full, and very able letter, to the Secretary of War. The letter of the Secretary, dated the 28th of May, to which reference is made, has been given, in part, on a preceding page. V .-ric! Head-Quarters, Army of Occupation. Matamoros, July 2, 1846. Sir : In rejjly to the communications of the Secretary of War, dated May 28th, and June 8th, and to that of the gene- ral-in-chief, dated June 12th, I have the honour to submit the following views in regard to the operations against Mexico from this quarter. I will remark that my constant efforts to procure information in relation to the nature of the country, amount of supplies, &c., have not been as satisfactory as I could wish, tlie various accounts often differing even in im- portant particulars. Either from the ignorance or interested motives of those who profess to give information, it is ex- tremely difficult to obtain any upon which we can im.plicitly rely. In calling upon the States of Louisiana and Texas for an auxiliary force of about 5000 men, it was my expectation with that force to be able to clear the course of the Rio Grande as high as Laredo, and to occupy or control the country to the foot of the mountains, capturing and holding Monterey, if circumstances permitted. With the proper river transportation this could have been easily done, a depot would now hav^ 190 SUGGESTIONS OF THE CAMPAIGN. been established at Camargo, and our operations pushed up the valley of the San Juan. The difficulties and em- barrassments that I have experienced for want of such trans- portation have already been sufficiently made known. These difficulties have been increased by the great excess of volunteers that have been sent out — say 3000 men beyond the original call. I nevertheless propose, upon the arrival of the steamers now hourly expected, to throw forward this force, with the regular troops to Camargo, and establish there a depot and base from which to operate towards the mountains. My reasons for retaining these six-months' vol- unteers in service have been set forth in another commu- nication ; and I desire, from motives of health and other considerations, to keep them employed as actively as possi- ble. The twelve-months' volunteers can, in the mean time, form camps at healthy points in my rear; and, while receiving instruction, await the season for more extensive operations. The above dispositions can be made in the rainy season perhaps better than at any other time, as the river is then in a good navigable state. For operating with a heavy force — say 6000 men from this point — towards Monterey and Sal- tillo, through which passes the only artillery route across the mountains, it is indispensable to employ the river as a channel of supply, and the valley of the San Juan, on one of the heads of which Monterey is situated, as a line of operations. The direct land route from this point to Monterey is much longer than the line from Camargo ; in w'et weather impassable for artillery or heavy wagons, and in dry scantily supplied with water. Assuming, then, Camargo as the depot, and the val- ley of the San Juan as the line of operations, the question arises, what amount of supplies can be obtained, and how can a column be subsisted on this route ? It is pretty well deter- mined that we cannot depend upon any considerable supply of breadstuffs short of Monterey, or perhaps Saltillo, seventy-five miles further south. Beef in abundance, it is believed, may be procured, and on this, with perhaps occasional issues of mutton, we must mainly depend for the meat part of the ration. Taylor's letter continued. 191 From Camargo to Sallillo, then, we must expect to depend upon our depot for bread ; and I am of Opinion, from all I can learn of the resources of the country in pack mules and means of transportation generally, that a column exceeding six thousand men cannot be maintained in bread alone as far as Saltillo. Saltillo itself is at no great distance from two or three fertile grain-growing districts, but how far the production in those districts may exceed the supply I cannot with any certainty determine. ^^^^m^iOi^ :.uj The above calculations, in regard to subsistence, are made on the suppositions that we shall find the people of the country, if not friends, at least passive and willing to part with their produce to the best advantages. I believe we shall find such to be their temper on this side of the mountains ; whether this neutrality or indifference extends beyond, may well be a ques- tion. Should they prove hostile, destroy their crops, and drive away their stock, it will be an extremely difficult matter to sus- tain a column at Saltillo — still more so to pass beyond that city. Supposing a column of the above strength — say 6000 men — able to maintain itself at Saltillo, it will become a question, depending for its solution upon the elements above indicated, how far that force may be increased, or what amount of the twelve-months' volunteers maybe safely and profitably thrown forward from the rear, with a view to future operations. From Camargo to the city of Mexico is a line little, if any, short of 1000 miles in length. The resources of the country are, to say the best, not superabundant ; and, over long spaces of the route, are known to be deficient. Although the road, as we advance south, approaches both seas, yet the topography of the country, and the consequent chafacter of the communi- cations, forbids the taking up a new line of supply, either from Tampico or the Pacific coast. Except in the case (deemed improbable) of entire acquiescence, if not support, on the part of the Mexican people, I consider it impracticable to keep open so long a line of communication. It is, therefore, my opinion that our operations from this frontier should not look to the city of Mexico, but should be confined to cutting ofT the 192 TAYLOR'S LETTER CONTINUED. northern provinces — an undertaking of comparative facility and assurance of success. With a view of cutting off the northern provinces, the pro- jected expedition from San Antonio to Chihuahua may be of great importance. From the best information, however, which I now possess, I would suggest mounted troops alone for that exp (la on. I am satisfied that the route from that point to Chihuahua is not practicable for artillery or wagons, and in- fantry would rather embarrass the movement of a mounted expedition. Mountain howitzers, to be packed with their carriages on .mules, might be advantageously employed on that service, and indeed with the column designed to penetrate to Saltillo. There may be great difficulty in supplying any considerable force between San Antonio and Chihuahua, although the line is not very long, probably not exceeding 300 miles. I hope to pro- cure better information than any I now possess in regard to this route. It will be perceived that my remarks on the line of operations from the Rio Grande, southward, have been confined to the question of subsistence, which is certainly the most important one to be considered. There are military obstacles on the route, particularly in the space between Monterey and Saltillo, where the defile of " La Rinconada" is represented to be of great strength. This point, and perhaps others, if fortified, may give us some trouble ; but if they can be turned by light troops, and such I believe to be the case, they will not long impede our march. In regard to the " description of troops best adapted to operations in the interior of Mexico," I am scarcely prepared at this time to give a definite reply. The facility or difficulty of obtaining forage must necessarily control to some extent the amount of cavalry employed. At the estate of the Conde de Jarral, some forty leagues from Saltillo, there will, I understand, be no difficulty in obtaining a remount when necessary, and forage for the cavalry. The field artillery under my orders (four batteries, including Washington's) will, particularly if Taylor's letter continued. 193 filled up to the complement of guns, be quite sufficient for any operations in this quarter. We may have occasion for heavier guns, and I have directed two twelve-pounder field-guns to be procured, which, with the twenty-four-pounder howitzers now in depot at Point Isabel, will constitute an efficient battery. We shall have two, perhaps three regiments of horse from Texas under my original call. They are now organizing under the Governor's directions at Point Isabel. These are six months' men. Should I find it necessary to increase the cavalry force, I can draw certainly one regiment from San An- tonio, and still leave quite enough for the expedition to Chi- huahua. I have given my views on most of the points connected with the operations from this frontier, purposely abstaining from any reference to movements against Tampico or Vera Cruz. The former place, I am induced to believe, could have been easily taken a month since, and could be so even now ; but the yellow fever would not have permitted us to hold it, and I deemed it best to undertake no movement in that direction at this season of the year. Should we advance as far as San Luis Potosi, which has a communication (though not for wheels) with Tiimpico, the possession of the latter place would be im- portant. I am awaiting with utmost impatience the arrival of steam- boats suited to the navigation of this river, to establish a depot at Camargo, and throw the troops gradually forward to that point. The rainy season has commenced, and the river is now in the best possible condition for navigation. Several small boats were to leave New Orleans about the 20th of June. If not wrecked in the recent severe gales, they may be hourly expected here. I have the honour to be, respectfully, general, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Brevet Brig. Gen. U. S. A., commanding. The Adjutant General of the Army, Washington, D. C. 17 12 194 CAPTURE OF SMALL TOWNS. While General Taylor awaited at Matamoros the arrival of boats, necessary for the advance of the main body of his army, he had sent detachments to take possession of the accessible towns on the Rio Grande. Early in June, Lieutenant Colonel Wilson had taken peaceable possession of Reynosa. On the 14th of July, two companies of the Seventh Infantry, under Captain Miles, took possession of Camargo without opposition. Mier and Revilla were also successively occupied by other de- tachments. In a despatch mentioning these operations, dated the 22d, General Taylor adds : " Captain Miles, the day after he had taken possession of Camargo, was joined by the remainder of the regiment, two pieces of artillery, and a company of irregular cavalry. He has since been reinforced by the 5th infantry ; and the 1st brigade of infantry, under General Worth, is now en route to Camargo, except a guard of two companies, left to escort the train by land — the main body proceeding by water. The 3d brigade will immediately follow, and in a few days all the ac- •tive regular force will be at Camargo, or in motion thither. I am unavoidably compelled, much to my regret, to leave several companies of the artillery regiments to guard the different depots in ray rear. " We have now several steamboats in the river, and the business of sending up troops and supplies is urged as much as possible. I find the difficulty of throwing supplies up the river to be very great, in consequence of the rapidity of the current and the entire absence of dry steamboat fuel. But every effort will be employed to overcome these difficulties, and I have no doubt that we shall be able to keep up a depot at Camargo, quite sufficient for any operations from that point. " As yet the land route to Camargo is impassable for wagons, owing to the recent rains and freshets. As soon as it shall become practicable, the field artillery and train of the army will move forward to Camargo. '< As soon as I can complete the necessary arrangements for throwing forward the volunteer troops to Camargo, I propose CONDITION OF MEXICO. 195 to establish my head-quarters at that point, and organize, with- out delay, a marching column to move on Monterey." Before proceeding in the narrative of General Taylor's opera- tions, a glance at the civil condition of Mexico, and at the purposes and measures of the United States government in the prosecution of the war, will aid an understanding of the cir- cumstances affecting his progress. His own views of the mode of bringing the war to a successful issue, have already been partially developed in his correspondence. Other letters remain to be cited which will further illustrate his opinions on the general subject. These several matters will be embraced in the following chapter. CHAPTER XL . Civil Dissensions of the Mexicans — Tyranny of Parades — Popular Defections — Conspirators apprehended — Liberty of the Press abohshed — Unwise Policy of Parades — News of Arista's Defeat received — Sensation in the Capital — Money refused by the Clergy — Decline of Paredes' authority — Movement in favour of Santa Anna — Civil War in Mexico — Blockade by the United States of Mexican Ports — Plans of the United States Government — Plans of Ge- neral Taylor — Proclamation to the People of Mexico — Confidential Letter to Taylor — Taylor's Answer — Santa Anna proclaimed in Vera Cruz — Excite- ment in the Capital — Fall of Paredes — Santa Anna's return to Mexico — Go- vernment of de Salas — Santa Anna's triumphal entry into the Capital — His pledges to the Mexicans — Taylor's Arrangements complete for his Advance — His Difficulties explained — Enumeration of his Force — March of Worth's Division — Of Butler's and Twiggs' Divisions — Report of Forces against Monterey — SulTerings and Death of V^olunteers — March of Worth's Division towards Monterey. At the moment that the government and people of Mexico, regarding the annexation of Texas to the United States as an aggressive act, should have smothered civil dissension, and united firmly in the single purpose of settling amicably their disputes with so powerful a neighbour, or of carrying on war with all their energies, that unfortunate country presented its wonted scenes of mal-administration on the one hand, and re- bellion on the other. Within the same week that Texas had been admitted into the Union by act of Congress, a revolution, 196 TYRANNY OF PAREDES. the joint project of the army and the church, had placed Pa- redes in the executive chair of Mexico. Adverse, as we have seen, to the conciliatory policy of Herrera, whom he had su- perseded, the new President signalized his accession to power by refusing to receive an American diplomatic agent, and by declaring war to exist between the two nations, as soon as General Taylor had crossed the Nueces. This course, regard- ing a foreign government, imposing on Paredes the manifest duty of winning the affections and support of all parties, was, on the contrary, attended by measures odious to a large por- tion of his countrymen, and incompatible with their hearty support of his administration. The letter, as well as the spirit, of the constitutions acknowledged by his predecessors was changed ; and even the affectation of regard for popular rights, which had been maintained by some of them, was by him dis- carded, and he assurned an authority nearly allied to absolut- ism. By an executive decree, the elective franchise was taken from the mass of the people and confided to a small and privileged class. Yucatan, w-earied with the oppressions of former administrations, had already refused her aid in placing Vera Cruz in a condition of defence ; and the intelligent and independent citizens of that city, in turn resisted the decree, which abrogated their free choice of representatives to the na- tional congress. Organized discontent appeared also in other departments, and the means of an expedition, destined to de- fend the Californias against the United States, were appropri- ated by a revolted garrison to a scheme of overthrowing the home government. Other military bodies imitated this example, and factious or ambitious chiefs fomented popular ill-will, until their party became extended and formidable. The discovery of a correspondence among them, implicated many citizens of the capital, who were accordingly seized and imprisoned. On the day that these things passed in the interior and the city of Mexico, Taylor hoisted the American flag on Fort Paredes. Instead of assuaging the ill-will, manifestly so general, the next step of Paredes was to trample on the press. The editors of the journals which exposed his tyrannous acts were arrested,' REVOLUTION IN PROGRESS. 197 and with summary disregard of law, banished or confined in the common jails. This new measure of despotism had just been effected, when the intelligence of Arista's defeats, and the surrender of Mataraoros, reached the capital. Paredes was mortified, the citizens enraged. "Death to the Americans!" echoed from street to street, and from city to city. But with this sentiment in their hearts, civil discord still occupied the time of factions daily growing more powerful. The dictator, who felt the responsibility of having declared war with the United States, found himself not only embarrassed by the de- fection of whole provinces, but unable to prosecute his foreign policy for want of revenue. While his energies were in one direction devoted to quelling the insurgents, his ingenuity was taxed in another to supply an empty treasury. He resolved on an appeal to the clergy, who had been instrumental in placing him in power, and who had sanctioned his war mea- sures on the ground that the United States aimed at the subver- sion of the national religion. This appeal was duly considered, and the ecclesiastical council arrived at the conclusion, that the church fund could not be diverted from its special uses. The authority attained by Paredes in January, he saw rapidly departing from him in June. Already the revolutionary party had acquired sufficient strength to overthrow a local govern- ment, to issue a formal protest against the central power, and to declare the basis of a new order of things. A provisional government asserted its existence, and Santa Anna, then an exile in Cuba, was presented as the patriotic head of it. The congress of Paredes assembled, and his opening address to that body set forth the evils under which the country suffered — civil contention, a foreign war, an exhausted treasury. There was deliberation, but no action equal to the emergency. The troops of Paredes, and of the revolutionists, were in the field against each other, fighting for the supremacy, while two com- panies of United States Infantry marched into Camargo, with- out an arm to oppose them. Paredes enjoyed a temporary success, but his power daily melted away before the ardent opposition of Santa Anna's partisans. They were fiirmly estab 17* 198 PLANS OF INVASION. lished in the southern and western provinces. Paredes still held the capital. Such was the relative position of Mexican parties in the beginning of July, 1846. On the same day that General Taylor took possession of Matamoros, an American squadron anchored off Vera Cruz, and the blockade of that, and other ports of Mexico on the Gulf, commenced. The blockade of the Pacific coast was also or- dered. The operations on land, contemplated by the govern- ment of the United States, embraced three distinct invasions of Mexico. The progress of the main army under Taylor will be presently shown. The second division, commanded by General Wool, was directed against Chihuahua ; and the third, under Col. Kearney, against Santa Fe, in New Mexico. Be- tween the tv/o latter divisions and General Taylor, there was no concert, and their movements, therefore, do not enter into this narrative. During the month of July, General Taylor continued to discipline his new troops, and to make preparations for the ad- vance of his main body up the Rio Grande, and ultimately in the direction of San Luis Potosi — distant about three hundred miles from Matamoros — by way of Saltillo and Monterey. Camargo, already occupied by a division under General Worth, was destined to be his head-quarters, from which the column marching on Monterey would be organized. General Taylor had meanwhile received from his government the annexed form of a proclamation to the Mexican people, designed to facilitate his advance, and to accomplish the objects of the war. A Proclamatiox by the General commanding the Army of the United States of America. To THE People of Mexico : — After many years of patient endurance, the United States are at length constrained to acknowledge that a war now exists between our government and the government of Mexico. For many years our citizens have been subjected to repeated insults and injuries, our vessels and cargoes have been seized PROCLAMATION TO MEXICANS. 199 and confiscated, our merchants have been plundered, maimed, imprisoned, without cause and without reparation. At length your government acknowledged the justice of our claims, and agreed by treaty to make satisfaction by payment of several millions of dollars ; but this treaty has been violated by your rulers, and the stipulated payments have been withheld. Our late effort to terminate all difficulties by peaceful negotiation has been rejected by the dictator Paredes, and our minister of peace, whom your rulers had agreed to receive, has been re- fused a hearing. He has been treated with indignity and insult, and Paredes has announced that war exists between us. This war, thus first proclaimed by him, has been acknowledged as an existing fact by our President and Congress with perfect unanimity, and will be prosecuted wdth vigour and energy against your army and rulers ; but those of the Mexican people who remain neutral will not be molested. Your government is in the hands of tyrants and usurpers. They have abolished your state governments, they have over- thrown your federal constitution, they have deprived you of the right of suffrage, destroyed the liberty of the press, despoiled you of your arms, and reduced you to a state of absolute de- pendence upon the power of a military dictator. Your arm} and rulers extort from the people by grievous taxation, by forced loans, and military seizures, the very money which sustains the usurpers in power. Being disarmed, you w-ere left defenceless, an easy prey to the savage Camanches, who not only destroy your lives and property, but drive into a captivity more horrible than death itself, your wives and children. It is your military rulers who have reduced you to this deplorable condition. It is these tyrants, and their corrupt and cruel satellites, gorged with the people's treasure, by whom you are thus oppressed and impoverished, some of whom have boldly advocated a monarchical government, and would place a European prince upon the throne of Mexico. We come to obtain reparation for repeated wrongs and injuries ; we come to obtain indemnity for the past, and security for the future ; we come to overthrow the tyrants who have destroyed your liberties ; but we come 200 PROCLAMATION CONTINUED. to make no war upon the people of Mexico, nor upon any form of free government they may choose to select for themselves. It is our wish to see you liberated from despots, to drive back the savage Camanches, to prevent the renewal of their assaults, and to compel them to restore to you from captivity your long- lost wives and children. Your religion, your altars, and churches, the property of your churches and citizens, the emblems of your faith, and its ministers, shall be protected, and remain inviolate. Hundreds of our army, and hundreds of thousands of our people, are members of the Catholic church. In every state, and in nearly every city and village of our Union, Catholic churches exist, and the priests perform their holv functions in peace and security under the sacred guarantee of our Constitution. We come among the people of Mexico as friends and republican brethren, and all who receive us as such shall be protected, whilst all who are seduced into the army of your dictator shall be treated as enemies. We shall want from you nothing but food for our army, and for this you shall always be paid in cash the full value. It is the settled policy of your tyrants to deceive you in regard to the policy and character of our government and people. These tyrants fear the example of our free institutions, and constantly en- deavour to misrepresent our purposes, and inspire you with hatred for your republican brethren of the American Union. — Give us but the opportunity to undeceive you, and you will soon learn that all the representations of Paredes were false, and were only made to induce you to consent to the establish- ment of a despotic government. In your struggle for liberty with the Spanish monarchy, thousands of our countrymen risked their lives and shed their blood in your defence. Our own commodore, the gallant Porter, maintained in triumph your flag upon the ocean, and our government was the first to acknowledge your indepen- dence. With pride and pleasure we enrolled your name on the list of independent republics, and sincerely desired that you might, in peace and prosperity, enjoy all the blessings of free government. Success on the part of your tyrants against LETTER FROM WAR DEPART xM E .\ T . 201 the army of the Union is impossible ; but, if they could suc- ceed, it would only be to enable them to fill your towns with soldiers, eating out your substance, and harassing you with still more grievous taxation. Already they have abolished the liberty of the press, as the first step towards the introduction of that monarchy, which it is their real purpose to proclaim and establish. Mexicans! we must treat as enemies, and overthrow the tyrants, who, whilst they have wronged and insulted us, have deprived you of your liberty ; but the Mexican people who remain neutral during the contest, shall be protected against their military despots by the republican army of the Union." The War Department, advised by the President, followed this document with the subjoined confidential letter, which, with General Taylor's answer, forms an interesting link in the chain, both of his instructions and views touching the conduct of the war generally, and of that branch of operations with which he had been entrusted. Secretary of War to General Taylor. War Uepartment, Washington, July 9, 1840. Sir : — The proclamation which you were directed to spread among the Mexican people will have put you in possession of the views of the government in relation to the mode of carrying on the war, and also in relation to the manner of treating the inhabitants. The war is only carried on to obtain justice ; and the sooner that can be obtained, and with the least expenditure of blood and money, the better. One of the evils of war is the interruption of diplomatic communications between the respective authorities, and the consequent ignorance under which each party may lie in relation to the views of the other. The natural substitute of these interrupted diplomatic commu- nications is the military intercourse which the usages of war allow between contending armies in the field, and in which commanding generals can do much towards reopening nego- tiations, and smoothing the way to a return of peace. 202 Taylor's policy approved. The President has seen with much approbation the civihty and kindness with which you have treated your prisoners, and all the inhabitants with whom you have come in contact. He wishes that course of conduct continued, and all opportuni- ties taken to conciliate the inhabitants, and let them see that peace is within their reach the moment their rulers will consent to do us justice. The inhabitants should be encouraged to remain in their towns and villages, and these sentiments be carefully made known to them. The same things may be said to officers made prisoners, or who may visit your head-quarters according to the usages of war; and it is the wish of the Pre- sident that such visits be encouraged, and also that you take occasions to send officers to the head-quarters of the enemy for the military purposes, real or ostensible, which are of ordinary occurrence between armies, and in which opportunity may be taken to speak of the war itself as only carried on to obtain justice, and that we had much rather procure that by negotia- tion than by fighting. Of course, authority to speak for your government will be disavowed, but a knowledge of its wishes will be averred, and a readiness will be expressed to commu- nicate to your government the wishes of the Mexican govern- ment to negotiate for honourable peace, whenever such shall be their wish, and with the assurance that such overtures will be met in a corresponding spirit by your government. A dis- creet officer, who understands Spanish, and who can be em- ployed in the intercourse so usual between armies, can be your confidential agent on such occasions, and can mask his real, under his ostensible, object of a military interview. You will also readily comprehend that, in a country so di- vided into races, classes, and parties, as Mexico is, and with so many local divisions among departments, and personal divisions among individuals, there must be great room for operating on the minds and feelings of large portions of the inhabitants, and inducing them to wish success to an invasion which has no desire to injure their country, and which, in over- throwing their oppressors, may benefit themselves. Betv^-een the Spaniards, who monopolize the wealth and power of the SUGGESTIONS RESPECTING INVASION. 203 country, and the mixed Indian race who bear its burdens, there must be jealousy and animosity. The same feelings must exist between the lower and the higher orders of the clergy, the latter of whom have the dignities and the revenues, while the former have poverty and labour. In fact, the curates were the chief authors of the revolution which separated Mexico from Spain, and their relative condition to their superiors is not much benefited by it. *««## * ***** If, from all the information which you may communicate to the Department, as well as that derived from other sources, it should appear that the difficulties and obstacles to the con- ducting of a campaign from the Rio Grande, the present base of your operations, for any considerable distance into the interior of Mexico, will be very great, the Department will consider whether the main invasion should not ultimately take place from some other point on the coast — say Tampico — or some other point in the vicinity of Vera Cruz. This sugges- tion is made with a view to call your attention to it, and to obtain from you such information as you may be able to im- part. Should it be determined that the main army should in- vade Mexico at some other point than the Rio Grande — say the vicinity of Vera Cruz — a large and sufficient number of transport vessels could be placed at the mouth of the Rio Grande by the time the healthy season sets in — say early in November. The main army, with all its munitions, could be transported, leaving a sufficient force behind to hold and oc- cupy the Rio Grande and all the towns and provinces which you may have conquered before that time. In the event of such*being the plan of operations, your opinion is desired: what increased force, if any, will be required to carry it out with success ? We learn that the army could be disembarked a few miles distant from Vera Cruz, and readily invest the town in its rear, without coming within the range of the guns of the fortress of San Juan d'UIoa. The town could be readily taken by land, while the fortress, being invested by land and sea, and all communication cut off, must soon fall. ?04 HIS OPINIONS REQUIRED. The distance from Vera Cruz to the city of Mexico is not more than one-third of that from the Rio Grande to the city of Mexico. Upon these important points, in addition to those mentioned in my letter of the 8th of June, your opinions and views are desired at the earliest period your duties will permit you to give them. In the mean time, the Department confi- dently relies on you to press forward your operations vigor rously to the extent of your means, so as to occupy the im- portant points within your reach on the Rio Grande and in the interior. It is presumed that Monterey, Chihuahua, and other places in your direction will be taken and held. If in your power to give the information, the Department desires to be informed of the distance from Chihuahua to Guyamas on the Gulf of California. Whether there be a road over which ordnance and baggage wagons could be taken, and whether it be practicable for an army to march from the former to the latter place, and what time would probably be required for mounted men, and what time for infantry or artillery to do so ? This information is desired before the department can be pre- pared to decide upon the propriety of sending forward such an expedition. Your answer to this communication you will please to ad- dress directly to the President of the United States. I have the honour to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant. W. L. Marcy. Major-General Z. Taylor, Commanding, &c. General Taylor'' s Answer. Ilead-Qiiarters, Army of Occii^ation. Matamoros, August 1, 1846. Sir : I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of the confidential communication of the Secretary of War, dated July 9th, and to present the following remarks in relation to the several.points embraced in it. Agreeably to the injunction of the Secretary, this communication is addressed directly to the President of the United States. LETTER FROM GENERAL TAYLOR. 205 First. As to the intercourse with the enemy, and means of obtaining information with regard to his movements, &c., I fear that no very satisfactory results will be obtained in the way proposed. The Mexican generals and other officers have ex- hibited, since the commencement of hostilities, a determination to hold with us as little intercourse as possible. A most rigid non-intercourse has been held throughout ; and, since the 17th of June, no communication whatever has passed between the head-quarters of the two armies. I shall not fail to improve such occasions when they present themselves, in the manner pointed out by the Secretary. Since crossing the Rio Grande, it has been my constant aim to conciliate the people of the country, and f have the satisfaction of believing that much has been done towards that object, not only here, but at Reynosa, Camargo, and other towns higher up the river. The only ob- stacle I encounter in carrying out this desirable policy arises from the employment of volunteer troops. Some excesses have been committed by them upon the people and their pro- perty, and more, I fear, are to be apprehended. With every exertion, it is impossible effectually to control these troops unaccustomed as they are to the discipline of camps, and losino-, in bodies, the restraining sense of individual responsibility. With increased length of service, these evils, it is hoped, will diminish. Second. In regard to availing ourselves of internal divi- sions and discord among the Mexicans, it is hardly time yet to say how far this may be relied upon as an element of success. I have good reason to believe that the country lying between the Rio Grande and Sierra Madre is disposed to throw off the yoke of the central government, and will perhaps do so as soon as it finds a strong American force between it and the capital. I shall do all in my power to encourage this move- ment, of which I received indications from many quarters, and shall comply fully with the instructions of the Secretary on that point. T'hird. As to the military operations best calculated to secure an early and honourable peace, my report of July 2d will have 18 206 THE CONDUCT OP THE WAR. put the Department in possession of my views touching opera- tions in this quarter, and I have now little to add to that report. Whether a large force can be subsisted beyond Monterey, must be determined by actual experiment, and will depend much upon the disposition of the inhabitants towards us. If a column (say 10,000 men) can be sustained in provisions at Saltillo, it may advance thence upon San Louis Potosi ; and, I doubt not, would speedily bring proposals for peace. If, on the other hand, a column cannot be sustained beyond Monterey, it will be for the Government to determine, from considerations of state, whether a simple occupation of the frontier depart- ments, (including Chihuahua and New Mexico,) or in addition to such occupation an expedition against the capital [by way of Vera Cruz] be most expedient. I cannot give a positive opinion as to the practicability of an expedition against Vera Cruz, or the amount of force that would probably be required for it. The Department of War must be much better informed than I am on that point. From the impracticable character of the routes from Tampico, particularly that leading to Mexico, I should judge an expedition against the capital from that point to be out of the question. The simultaneous embarkation of a large body of troops at Brazos Santiago, as proposed in the Secretary's communication, would be attended with great dif- ficulty, if we may judge from the delay and danger which accompany the unloading of single transports, owing to the almost perpetual roughness of the bar, and boisterous character of the anchorage. It may also well be questioned whether a force of volunteers, without much instruction, more than those now^ here can receive in season for such an expedition, can prudently be allowed to form the bulk of an army destined for so delicate an operation as a descent upon a foreign coast, where it can have no proper base of operations or supplies. I have already had occasion to represent to the Department that the volunteer force ordered to report to me here is much great(>r than I can possibly employ, at any rate in the fust in- stance ; the influx of twelve-months' volunteers has even im- peded my forward movement, by engrossing all the resources DISSENSIONS IN MEXICO. 207 of the Quartermaster's Department to land them and transport them to healthy positions. This circumstance, in connection with the possibility of an expedition against , leads me to regret that one division of the volunteers had not been en- camped — say at Pass Christian — where it could have been in- structed until its services were required in the field. These embarrassments, however, are now mostly overcome ; the regular force is nearly all at Caraargo ; and all the arrange- ments are made to throw forward the volunteers to the same point. The President may be assured that no one laments more than I do the inevitable difficulties and delays that have attended our operations here, and that no exertion of mine has been or will be wanting to press forward the campaign with all possible vigour. But I deem it indispensable to take such amount of force, and observe such precautions, as not to leave success a matter of doubt. In answer to the inquiry relative to the route from Chihuahua to Guaymas, I have the honour to submit a memorandum de- rived from , an American gentleman residing in this place, who has lived in Chihuahua, and travelled over the routes. The distances on the mule route are probably over- rated, as it is a direct route across the mountains. The wagon road, by the city of Arispe, is the only one practicable foi artillery. I have the honour to be, very respectfully, sir, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Maj. Gen. U. S. Army, commanding. To his Excellency the Hon. James K. Polk, Presidciit of the United States, Washington. The clearness and comprehensiveness of the views set forth in this letter, show General Taylor's judgment in council to be equal to his energy in the field. While with his pen, as well as his sword, he was thus preparing the way for the prostration of Mexico, the internal dissensions of that country had reached their second climax in the year 1846. Paredes, who had sus- tained his sinking cause until the end of July, was at last ovel •• 208 FALL OF PAREDES. whelmed by the revolutionary torrent. The city of Vera Cruz pronounced in favour of Santa Anna on the 31st of that month. Three days afterwards; intelligence of the event reached the capital, which was immediately in the ferment of a kindred movement. General de Salas, and other military aspirants, issued a proclamation from the citadel of Mexico, of which they had taken possession, declaring the electoral laws of 1824 to be in force, denouncing all opposition to their purposes as traitorous, and inviting the return of political exiles, especially of " his excellency, Don Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, the well-deserving of his country, acknowledging him as general- in-chief of all the forces pledged and determined to fight, in order that the nation may recover its rights, secure its liberty, and govern itself." Paredes made a bold but futile resistance to de Salas and his com-peers, and then, with a handful of men, fled from the capital. Soon afterwards, he was a prisoner in the castle of Perote. Santa Anna, thus recalled, sailed from Cuba, with his per- sonal followers, and arrived at Vera Cruz on the IGth of August, passing through the United States' blockading squad- ron, by the express permission of the President. This may not be the place to examine the policy of such an order. It is sufficient to state the fact. Santa Anna was received with en- thusiasm by the citizens of Vera Cruz, which was shared by the Mexicans generally, and enabled him to combine opposing factions, and prepare the way for a concentrated and powerful resistance to the United States, to which none of his rivals was equal. It maybe conceded that patriotism dictated the move- ment in his favour, if the immediate effects of his presence be accepted as evidence. The provisional government of de Salas had declared the constitution of 1824 to be in force, and the election of a new congress, to meet in December, was ordered conformably to that instrument. " Frankness, honour, honesty, and entire devotion to republican principles," were derhred to be the basis of the new administration. The way being thus paved for the return of Santa Anna to the city of Mexico, he left his hacienda, where he had sojourned SANTA ANNA IN MEXICO. 209 after his arrival at Vera Cruz ; and, at high noon, on the 15th of September, made a triumphal entry into the metropolis. He was hailed by the revolutionary chieftains, and by the people, with every demonstration of respectful and affectionate wel- come ; and as he rode through the streets to the national palace, amid the waving of thousands of hands, the cheers of thousand of voices, the swell of music, the peal of bells, and the roar of artillery, no observer would have dreamed that a potent foreign enemy, already the victor on well-contested fields, and the captor of fortified towns, was at that moment marching to further conquest into the land of that exulting multitude. For Santa Anna, however, the day might well con- tent his pride. The proscribed, the forsaken, the reviled, the banished, he returned to his country the chosen chief of her chiefs, his rivals prostrated and disgraced, and himself the idol of his own friends, and the admiration of theirs. In return for the confidence reposed in liim, he promised a free government, and the fulfilment of every duty in resisting the enemies of his country. When the didirulties which beset him, in givincr even the appearance of eihciency to this promise, are con- sidered, candour must award him the praise of singular talent as a statesman, a soldier, and a popular leader. On the 1st of September, General Taylor found his arrange- ments, after numerous difficulties and delays, so far completed, that he should be ready to advance upon the road to Monterey in the course of a few days. The evidence is of record, that the tardiness of his movements was not only not attributable to himself, but was caused by the neglect of the government or its agents in complying with his repeated and earnest sugges- tions. This iact is most forcibly set forth in the following plain and manly letter to the War Department : HeaJ-Quarters, Army of Occupation Camargo, September 1, 1846. Sir : Before marching for the interior, I beg leave to place on record some remarks touching an important branch of the public service, the proper administration of which is indispen 18* K 210 JUSTIFICATION OF GEN. TAYLOR. sable to the efficiency of a campaign. I refer to the Quarter- master's Department. There is at this moment, when the army is about to take up a long line of march, a great deficiency of proper means of transport, and of many important supplies. On the •26th April, when first apprizing you of the increased force called out by me, I wrote that I trusted the War Depart- ment would "give the necessary orders to the staff depart- ment, for the supply of this large addhional force ;" and when first advised of the heavy force of twelve-months' volunteers ordered hither, I could not doubt that such masses of troops would be accompanied, or preferably preceded by ample means of transportation, and all other supplies necessary to render them efficient. But such has not been the case. Suitable steamboats for the Rio Grande were not procured without repeated efforts directed from this quarter, and many weeks elapsed before a lodgement could be made at this place, the river being per- fectly navigable. After infinite delays and embarrassments, I have succeeded in bringing forward a portion of the army to this point, and now the steamers procured in Pittsburg are just arriving. I hazard nothing in saying, that if proper foresight and energy had been displayed in sending out suitable steamers to navi- gate the Rio Grande, our army would long since have been in possession of Monterey. Again, as to land transport. At this moment our wagon train is considerably less than when we left Corpus Christi, our force being increased ^ye^/b/^^. Had we depended upon means from without, the army would not have been able to move from this place. But fortunately the means of land transport existed to some extent in the country, in the shape of pack-mules, and we have formed a train which will enable a small army to ad- vance perhaps to Monterey. I wish it distinctly understood, that our ability to move is due wholly to means created here, and which could not have lu^<^n reckoned upon with safety in Washington. I have adverted to the grand points of water and land trans- portation. Of the want of minor supplies, the army has suf- TAYLOR LEAVES CAMARGO. 211 fered more than enough. The crying deficiency of camp equipage has been partially relieved by the issue of cotton tents, of indifferent quality. Our cavalry has been paralyzed by the want of horse-shoes, horse-shoe-nails, and even com- mon blacksmith's tools, while many smaller deficiencies are daily brought to my notice. I respectfully request that the above statement, which I make in justice to myself and the service, may be laid before the general-in-chief and Secretary of War. f am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Maj. Gen. U. S. A., commanding The AJjutaiit General of the Army, Washington, D. C. In the 5th of September, the divisions of General Butlef and Col. Twiggs having taken up the line of march, General Taylor himself followed the army, leaving General Patterson in command of all the forces on the Rio Grande in and below Camargo. Although the main direction of Taylor's operations had been dictated by the Government, there yet remained, on the part of the latter, uncertainty in the details of the campaign. About the time that Taylor left Camargo, a despatch from the War Department, indicating its reliance upon his judgment, was in- tercepted by the enemy. Extracts from it are here given, how- ever, for the purpose of showing how great were the acknow- ledged difTiculties of the enterprize with which Taylor was charged. " Our attention," says the Secretary of War, "is turned to Tampico as one of the places for the attack. It may be im- portant to take that place, and hold possession of it and the surrounding country, with reference to your line of operations. Though our information is not so full and accurate as we de- sire, in relation to the interior of the country in the vicinity of Tampico, yet it is such as induces us to believe that this will be an irajjortant position to be occupied, to facilitate the future prosecution of the war. The possession of the northern pro- 212 INTERCEPTED INSTRUCTIONS. vinces of Mexico, as far south as San Luis de Potosi, is un- doubtedly an important object with reference to bringing the war to a successful termination. The difficulties you will en- counter in pushing your forces thus far, can be much better appreciated by yourself- than any other. San Luis de Potosi is stated to be from one hundred and fifty to one hundred and eighty miles from Tampico; and if there be a good road be- tween these two places — as some allege to be the case, while it is questioned by others — it will be highly advantageous to have possession of Tampico, and to penetrate the country from that point in the direction of San Luis de Potosi with a con- siderable force. This matter is under consideration, and will receive the attention it deserves. It is important, in respect to the plan of operations to be adopted for a movement on this point, that you should furnish the Government here, at the earliest period, with your opinion of the progress you will be able to make on your present line of operations. "When you shall have arrived at Monterey, you will be enabled to deter- mine as to the practicability of your further progress. It is im- portant that we should know whether you can reach San Luis de Potosi, and your opinion on this point is particularly de- sired. The Administration is, to some extent, aware of the obstacles you will have to encounter, of the difficulties of sus- taining so long a line of communication, and of the uncer- tainty as to the force which will oppose you ; but your better information on these several points will enable you to form much more accurate opinions. " Your views also as to the effect of taking possession of Tampico, of penetrating the enemy's country from that point, of the amount and kind of force to be assigned to that serv'ce, are desired. " It is not intended to weaken the force of your advancing column by any movements on the coast. It is supposed that fifteen bundled or two thousand men will be a sufficient num- ber of troops to take and hold possession of Tampico. At least half of this force ought to be of the regular army. These, THE ARMY FOR MONTEREY. 213 it is presumec], can be obtained without withdrawing any of that description of force now with you. "The amount of the volunteer force required for this pur- pose can be taken from the Rio Grande, it is presumed, with- out too much weakening that line. " As you are in a situation to obtain more full and accurate information in relation to all the matters touched on in this communication, it is desirable — indeed quite important — that the Administration should have your views upon them. It is unnecessary to assure you that they will have an important in- fluence upon its determinations." The column organized by General Taylor for the advance on Monterey consisted of six thousand six hundred and forty men. It was composed of the following corps : BUTLER'S DIVISION. Hamer's < 1st Regiment Ohio Volunteers, Col. Mitchell 540 Brigade. ( 1st Regiment Kentucky Volunteers, Col. Ormsby 540 Q,,;, . ( 1st Regiment Tennessee Volunteers, Col. Campbell.. 540 unman s 1 .,. ...-_-, .-1 . T^ . * Bri lie i Mississippi Volunteers, Col. Davis 690 ^^ ■ ( Baltimore Battalion, Col. Watson 400 2710 WORTH'S DIVISION. Regiment of Regulars, Col. P. F. Smith 500 Dragoons, and parts of 6th and other Infantry 1080 Two Companies McCulloch's and Gillespie's Texas Rangers 100 1700 TWIGGS' DIVISION. Texas Cavalry, Col. Hays 500 U. S. Dragoons, Col. May 250 Flying Artillery, Duncan and Ridgely 100 Artillery, one ten-inch Mortar, Capt. Webster 60 Parts of several Regiments, (Infantry) 1.320 2230 Total, 6640 Besides this force, General Taylor reserved two thousand one hundred men to garrison Camargo, and other forces for the points farther in his rear. The whole of this reserve was left under the command of General Patterson. 214 SICKNESS AMONG VOLUNTEERS. From the time that General Taylor took possession of Mata- moros, it was his constant concern to bring the new corps of his army under the influence of strict discipline. He found himself suddenly charged with the command of not less than ten thousand volunteers, wholly unused to military restraint, and of necessity unconscious, for the most part, of its necessity for their common welfare, and the success of the enterprize in "which they were enlisted. Brave and patriotic spirits, they were, at the same time, accustomed to the individual freedom of civil life ; and the irksomeness of absolute conformity to rules of deportment, and the commands of superiors, could not be worn off without some exhibitions of insubordination. One of the first measures adopted by Taylor to secure proper disci- pline, was to forbid traffic in ardent spirits in all the towns under his authority, The weight of his own correct example as a man, and of his character as a commander, was material in accomplishing his purposes of military and moral organization. It is due, at the same time, to the volunteers, who, at the first call of the government, left their homes and profitable occupa- tions for dangerous and ill-paid service in a distant territory, to mention that they bore with heroic patience, not only the ordinary labours of a soldier's life, but the pains of long marches, of exposure to burning suns and chilling dews, of hunger and thirst, and of sickness unto death. Hundreds and thousands of gallant young men, full of the noble impulses of their age, who, prompted by the desire to serve their country, and attracted by the hope of meriting well of their fellow-citi- zens, forsook the security and the endearments of peaceful life, to take up arms in a national cause, found themselves, after long travel and novel hardships, broken down by heart-sickness, wasted by disease, and perishing, not in the dazzling turmoil of the battle-field, but in the loathsome quietude of the hospi- tal, tended, when yielding their last breath, by no fond or wonted hand, and unconsoled in that sad hour even by the empty reflection that their names would swell the ephemeral record of war's humblest victims. On the 20th of August, General Worth's division had been THE MARCH FROM CAMARGO. 215 ordered to advance on the road to Monterey as far as Seralvo, a town distant seventy miles from Camargo, there to await further instructions of the coramander-iii-chief. The order was duly executed, the division arriving at Seralvo on the 25th. This movement was the commenc^uent of a new period in the operations of Taylor in Mexico, — a period illustrated by extraordinary successes, confirming his title to every quality of a great general. CHAPTER XII. Enemy reinforceJ at Monterey — Taylor, with Twigs;s' and Butler's Divisions, marches from Camargo — The March — Rest at Seralvo — Ajipearance of the Country— -Mexican Forres discovered — The Advance before Monterey fired upon — Encampment at Wahiul Springs — Description of Monterey — Its For- tifications — Mexican Forces in it — Am[iudia's Address — Taylor's Reconnois- sance — His Plan of Assault — Worth's Expedition — His movement on the 20th — Skirmish on the 21st — Occupation of the Saltillo Pass — Movements of Butler's Division — First Fort in the Eastern Suburbs carried — Terrible Fire of the Enemy's Batteries — Repulse of the Lancers — Two Forts on the Heights carried — Losses on the First Day — Dispositions for the Night. General Taylor, having been advised by General Worth that large reinforcements of the enemy were arriving at Monterey, determined to delay no longer his advance upon that place. The divisions of Generals Twiggs and Butler were accordingly ordered to take up the line of march, and General Taylor him- self left Camargo on the 7th of September. His route, for several days, lay through a country presenting few objects of interest. There was little vegetation except the thorny shrub- bery peculiar to that vast region of Mexico The aspect of the wilderness was varied by deep chasms or ravines, contain- ing, generally, stagnant water, equally offensive in taste and odor. After the town of Mier was passed, the prospect began to improve. Distant mountains began to show their misty out- line against the sky, and, as they were gradually aj^proached. 216 THE APPROACH TO MONTEREY. a clear, cool stream, the Arroya Mier, one of their tributes to the Rio Grande, swept across the road, — a most \velcome mes- senger to the troops oppressed with heat, and worn with travel. From this point, th^ountry wore a new aspect, still, however, wild and primitive. The creeks and rivulets, fresh from the mountains, became frequent ; and, on their banks, bloomed olive groves, with other denizens of the genial south. At intervals, far between, an humble rancho was discovered ; and, more frequently, a rustic cross, marking a' grave, or the spot where some wayfarer had been murdered. The three divisions of the army having rested at Seralvo, the first, under General Twiggs, resumed its march from that town on the 13th, and the others promptly followed. The road .now broke fairly into the mountainous region. The Sierra Alvo, a magnificent elevation of three thousand feet, arose to the right, with an ascent so sudden, that from the peaks, as seen from below, it seemed a stone might be cast into the road. On the left frowned another height, while in front the grand range wore the appearance of an immense amphitheatre. As the ridges were gained the scenery changed, presenting, appa- rently, a vast plain, covered with chapparal, in crossing which, however, it was found to be intersected w^ith deep and rocky ravines, washed by the highland torrents. The Rangers, of Worth's division, throwm forward during his encampment at Seralvo, had discovered a large body of Mexican cavalry posted in the neighbourhood of Marin, a vil- lage on the north side of the river San Juan. Subsequently, on the march, slight skirmishes took place between advanced parties, but the enemy continued to retire towards Monterey. On the seventeenth the army was concentrated at Marin, twelve miles north-east of that city. The following morning, at day- break, the whole was in motion. General Twiggs' division leading, General Worth's following, and General Butler's bringing up the rear. In this order the San Juan had been crossed, and the head of the main column was about six miles from Monterey, when the report of artillery was heard. The {To fr.ccpnge'ii-;.) SITUATION OF MONTEREY. 21 7 Texas Rangers being in advance, it was known at once that the fire was from the enemy's batteries, directed against them, and a reconnoitring party, which escorted General Taylor within full view of the town. Doubts had been entertained whether resistance would be finally offered to the occupation of it ; but these doubts now ceased, and the troops, two- thirds of them volunteers who had never met an enemy in the field, started forward with vociferous cheers, forgetting fatigue in their anxiety to prove themselves worthy of the conquest which they sought. It was not General Taylor's intention to commence the assault that day. He therefore ordered a halt, on a small stream called the Walnut Springs, three miles north of the city, while a thorough reconnoissance of its position and defences might be effected by the officers of the engineer corps. Monterey, the capital of the State of New Leon, is a city of fifteen thousand inhabitants. It is distant about one hun- dred and fifty miles from Camargo, near the base of the grand mountainous range called the Sierra Madre, which sweeps around its south-western angle. The Arroya San Juan, a small branch of the San Juan river, runs beyond the town, parallel ,to the curve of the mountain. On the north, whence the road from Camargo approaches, is an extensive and gradu- ally inclined plain, rising from the margin of the creek, inter- ru[)ted only by a dry ravine crossing it about three-fourths of a mile in front of the town ; which, at that distance, is seen em- bosomed in trees, revealing its white walls and spires through the openings of their luxuriant foliage. The plain is varied with patches of chapparal, and fields of corn and sugar-cane ; and the light of this sunny undergrowth is relieved by the umbrage of orange, lemon, citron, and olive groves, and other beautiful natives of that genial climate. The mountains, which wall up the sou.horu and western horizon, rear their rugged and mighty, heads far above the clouds of the valley, and a single gorge marks the only continuation to Saltillo, of the roads from the Rio Grande, which coalesce at Monterey. To save this important and favoured spot from the posses- ■218 DESCRIPTION OF ITS DEFENCES. sion of an enemy, was a purpose which stimufeted the ener- gies of its people and their government. To this end, the natural defences of the site were improved with skill and great diligence. In front, and to the right of the town, a very ex- tensive and strong fortress, known as the " citadel," had for some time been erected. Standing on the plain, it covers an area of about three acres, the walls of solid masonry, thick and high, with bastions commanding all approach from the north-east, the north, and north-west. On the eastern side of the city, several redouts were built near the suburbs, forbid- ding ingress'in that quarter. The range of the southernmost of these extended to the base of the heights in the rear, be- tween which and the town, as has been described, is the course of the Arroyo San Juan. Following this course to the south- west extremity of the city, two forts appear on the hills of its further side ; while on the nearer side of it, as well as of the Saltillo road, two other fortifications crown successive eleva- tions covering the pass. Of these latter, the lower one is a large and unfinished structure, designed for the Bishop's Pa- lace, and known as such. The upper one, more remote from the city, is an independent redout, erected expressly for de- fence. Entrance to the town on that quarter was fufther for- bidden by the \Yalls of the cemetery, forming a strong breast- work with embrasures. These numerous and well-constructed works were mounted with forty-two heavy cannon. In addition to these special external defences, and many street barricades then constructed, Monterey presents in its plan, and in the form of its buildings, extraordinary obstacles to ar assault. Regularly laid out, a few pieces of artillery command the whole length of the principal streets. But its chief secu- rity is the stone walls of the houses, which, rising above the flat roofs, and forming around them and the courts regular parapets, afford thorough protection to their defenders. Each dwelling is thus a separate castle, and the whole city one grand fortification, suggested by nature and consummated by art. To man the works, Amiiudia, to whom the command w^^s entrusted, had eight thousand regular troops, and several thousand militia RECONNOISSANCE BY GEN. TAYLOR. 2lb and armed citizens, with abundant supplies of small arms and amiBunition in addition to the ordnance already mentioned. While these preparations for an attack were in progress, and before his forces had been concentrated, he issued the follow- ing address, showing his contempt for the little army of the Americans, then about marching to the capture of the northern stronghold of Mexico : "Soldiers: — The enemy, numbering only 2500 regular troops, the remainder being only a band of adventurers, with- out valour or discipline, are, according to reliable information, about advancing upon Seralvo, to commit the barbarity of attacking this most important place. We count near 3000 regulars and auxiliary cavalry, and these will defeat them again and again, before they can reach this city. Soldiers, we are constructing fortifications, to make our base at a convenient time, and drive back this enemy at the point of the bayonet. '•Soldiers! three great virtues make the soldier worthy of his profession ; discipline, constancy under fatigue, and valour.. He who at this moment would desert his colours, is a coward and a traitor to his country. Our whole nation, and even foreign countries are the witnesses of your conduct. The ^question now is, whether our independence shall be preserved or forever lost ; and its solution is in your hands. " I have assured the supreme government of the triumph of our arms, confiding in your loyalty and enthusiasm ; and we will prove to the whole world that we are worthy sons of the immortal Hidalgo, Morelo, Allende, Iturbide, and so many other heroes who knew how to die combatting for the inde- pendence of our cherished country. " Soldiers ! victory or death must be our only device ! ■'""•'• "Pedro de Ampudia. "Hdad-Quarters, Monterey, Septemtjer 14, 184G." From the plain of the road by which he had approached Monterey, General Taylor, on the 19th of September, surveyed its fortifications, within range of the guns of the Citadel. He 19* 220 GENERAL WORTH'S DIVISION. then lialled the army, as we have seen, at Walnut Springs, where the camp was formed, and ordered a close reconnois- sance of the outworks on both sides of the town by the offi- cers of the engineers and topographical engineers. The result of this examination, boldly and carefully executed under the direction of Major Mansfield and Captain Williams, at once determined the plan of operations. It became evident that an attempt should be made to gain, by a detour to the west, the Saltillo road, at its junction with the roads leading from the city ; and from that point, cutting off the enemy's supplies and his retreat, to storm the heights overlooking it and the south- western angle of the city. For this difficult and important service General Taylor detached a division under General Worth, on the following day, the 20th, at noon. The division was composed of Duncan's battery (four pieces) of Flying Artillery, the Artillery Battalion, under Lieutenant Colonel Childs, and the Eighth Regiment of In- fantry, under Captain Screvin, constituting the First Brigade, under Lieutenant Colonel Staniford ; the Flying Artillery (four pieces), under Lieutenant Mackall, the Fifth Infantry, under Major Scott, the Seventh, under Captain Niles, and one company Louisiana volunteers, under Captain Blanchard, com- posing the Second Brigade, under General Persifer F. Smith; and Colonel Hay's regiment of Texas Mounted Riflemen. Captain Sanders, military engineers, and Lieutenant Meade, topographical engineers, accompanied the division. General Worth, with this command, turning off the direct road which connects Marin with Monterey, sought another to the right, called the Presquina Grande road. His progress was slow, the way having to be cut for the artillery, through fields of corn, sugar cane, and underwood ; but at sundown he had advanced six miles, and reaching the Presquina Grande road, came within range of the guns of the fort occupying the crest of the height, midway on which is situated the Bishop's Palace. A reconnoissance, under cover of the Texas Mounted Rifles, was then made along the road to its junction with the Saltillo road, and the importance of occupying the point of SKIRMISH OF worth's DIVISION. 221 intersection was evident. It was also apparent that this could not be done without opposition, as the enemy's position would thereby be turned, and his communication with Saltillo and the Presquina Grande route would be intercepted. On the night of the 20th the command bivouacked on the road. It was cold and rainy, and there were neither tents nor blankets to cover the men. But they bore the exposure cheerfully, encouraged with the expectation of achieving some daring enterprise on the morrow. At dawn on the following morning, General Worth disposed his force for the march in such order as to be prepared for an attack at any point. The Texas Cavalry, supported by the liglit companies of the First Brigade, under Captain C. F. Smith, (both extended or contracted, according to the ground over which they moved) composed the advance of the column. Duncan's light artillery and battalion heads of columns fol- lowed. Pursuing for two miles, in this order, the road wind- ing along the base of the mountain, a turn around one of its projections brought immediately in view a strong body of Mexican cavalry and infantry. The former instantly and im- petuously charged, and were received with a well-aimed and deliberate volley from the rifles of the mounted Texans. At the same instant, the infontry of the First Brigade, Duncan's guns, and a section. of Mackall's, opened upon them with equal etfect. Owing to the narrowness of the road, the Second Brigade could not be brought into action. While the enemy thus maintained the engagement with his troops on the road, a battery was throwing shells from the height above it. In fifteen minutes, however, both his infantry and cavalry gave way, leaving one hundred killed and wounded, among them a colonel of the Lancers. The routed troops fled along the SaUillo road, hotly pressed by the victors, until they entered the gorge. which unites all the roads from Monterey. Here the pursuit ceased ; the important point being occupied, which intercepted all supplies and reinforcements from that quarter to the city. As the division was there exposed to the batte- ries on the heights, General Worth moved it about half a 222 MOVEMENT OF TWIGGS' DIVISION. mile farther, and then directed his attention to the means of carrying by assault those elevated fortresses, the possession of which was essential to any closer operations against the city itself. While General Worth was about to make an assault upon the works to the right and rear of the town, General Taylor, in conformity with his own plans, as well as a suggestion from General Worth, determined on a diversion in his favour, by ordering the other divisions to make a strong demonstration, to the left and centre, on the lower part of the town. During the night of the 20th, two twenty-four-pound howitzers, and a ten- inch mortar, under Captain Webster, were placed in battery, facing the " citadel," in the ravine crossing the plain in the approach to the city. Early on the morning of the 21st, the First Division, under General Twiggs, composed of the Third and Fourth Regiments of Regular Infantry, Captain- Bragg's Flying Artillery, forming Lieut. Col. Garland's Bri- gade, and the First Regiment of Regular Infantry, and the Washington and Baltimore battalion of volunteers, forming Lieut. Col. Wilson's Brigade, were marched from the camp at Walnut Springs to the ravine where the mortar battery was planted. There the command was formed for the assault, the three regiments of regulars being ordered to take possession of some houses on the right of the enemy's works, situated on the east of the city, and the volunteers to advance upon the works directly. General Butler's Division, composed of Quitman's Brigade, the Tennessee and Mississippi Regiments, and the Ohio Regiment of Hamer's Brigade of volunteers, having formed in front of the ravine soon after Twiggs' Division moved from that position against the city, were prepared to support the latter in the assault. The affair of the day on that side, commenced by a heavy discharge of artillery from the citadel, which was ineffectually answered by the howitzer and mortar batteries ; the shot of the latter falling short of the town, while that of the citadel fell among Butler's Division in front of the ridge. The Division of General Twiggs continued to advance under tremendous MOVEMENT Of BUTLER'S DI\ISION. 223 cross fires from the chain of forts on the left of the town. The three reghnents of regulars, with inflexible* firmness, moved to their designated positions, gaining the town so as to annoy the enemy's works in that quarter on the flank and rear. Rivalling the courage of these elder troops, and filled with the enthusiasm of volunteers, the Washington and Baltimore battalion pressed onward in the teeth of batteries pouring ruinous discharges upon their ranks. Bragg's artillery, at the same moment, was worked within direct range of the enemy's heavy guns. When the battalion had approached close to one of the forts, the men were ordered to lie down for momentary respite from its guns. These, however, were soon depressed, when a por- tion of the command, led on by their officers, rushed into a narrow street, having but few houses on either side. Here they were raked by three batteries within a hundred yards, and by the twelve-pounders of the large work, which enfiladed their column during the whole period of its progress. At the intersection of the streets, high and strong barricades of solid masonry had been erected, and from these and the tops of ihe houses, thousands of smaller arms rained a deadly shower upon them. Numbers of the regulars and detachments of the volun- teers were similarly engaged at other points in the same quarter of the town. For about an hour this contest had proceeded with unabated fury, when Butler's division was ordered to sustain the advance. His men, already formed in line, had watched with eager in- terest the progress of their comrades, burning for the moment when they should be summoned to share in the strife. The Kentucky Regiment, Col. Ormsby, being left unwillingly to protect the howitzer and mortar batteries, Quitman's Brigade, (the Tennessee Regiment, Col. Campbell, and the Mississippi, Col. Davis,) and Col. Mitchell's Ohio Regiment, torming alone Hamer's Brigade, moved off, the former to the left, to support the regulars of Twiggs' Division, and the latter to support Bragg's battery, which had already lost about twenty horses, and was in danger of being captured. With emulous cheers, defying the roar of the citadel's ordnance, the two commands 224 THE FIRST WORK CARRIED. sped on to their terrible duty and their course for full a mile, exposed to its unceasing fire. The Ohio volunteers reached the suburbs, there to be greeted, as their friends had been before thern, with the raking discharges of batteries in front, and on both flanks. Breasting the iron torrent, and unable to reach an enemy behind the house-walls and barriers, they still struggled on, passing gardens and ditches, which exposed them to the full play of both artillery and musketry. At last, some of the foremost, mounting a wall, came close upon a corps of the enemy, and drove it to a battery farther in the town. At this point, opportunity was aflbrded of returning their shot with effect, — but the contest was unequal, our men being ex- posed upon the wall, and the Mexicans protected by their breastworks. At this point. General Butler was met by Major Mansfield, who had conducted a command of Twiggs' Division against one of the batteries, and who advised the general to advance no farther, as he would come within range of an irre- sistible fire from other batteries commanding -the streets. General Taylor was not far in the rear of this spot, — exposed constantly to the enemy's fire, — and learning this fact from General Butler, ordered the Ohio men to retire. Meanwhile, the Tennessee and the Mississippi volunteers had reached a position on the north-east of the city. At this point, was a strong fort, the rearof which Colonel Garland had endeavoured to gain, but was met with such a severe fire, which could not be returned, that he was compelled to retire. At the moment, however, that the Mississippians and Tennes- seeans were coming on. Captain Backus, of the 1st regular in- fantry, with parts of his own and other companies of that regiment, had mounted the roof of a tannery commanding the fort, and was pouring into it an effectual discharge of musketry. Several companies of the Fourth Infantry, advancing within close range of its guns, received a terrible fire, which instantly killed and wounded one-third of their number, and caused them to fall back. At this juncture, Quitman's volunteers, the Ten- nesseeans being well in advance, pressed forward, and pre- servins: their line under a fire which made constant breaches in SEVERE FIRE OF THE ENEMY. 225 its living wall, rushed upon the works, and carried them at the point of the bayonet. A strong, stone building in the rear was taken at the same time. The conduct of these two regiments, in this assault, was distinguished equally by the hot-blooded recklessness of youth, and the steady bravery of veterans. Whether in approaching the enemy's batteries, when the balls were hurled in torrents upon them, or when mounting the barriers to engage their defenders hand to hand, these gallant troops were alike heedless of every result save the fulfilment of the immediate task assigned them. In the fort, five pieces of artillery, a large amount of ammu- nition, and thirty prisoners, including three officers, were cap- tured. But the prize was purchased at a fearful cost of blood, and much more was yet to be paid before other possessions of the enemy could be acquired. As soon as General Taylor learned that this fort was carried, he countermanded the order for Butler's division to withdraw, and ordered that work, and other defences on the side of the town which had been already gained, to be maintained. Hamer's brigade, the Ohio volunteers, now moved farther to the left, towards another strong fort in the line of its eastern defences. It required half an hour to come within close range of this work, during which the regiment was exposed to a de- structive fire, from three different batteries concentrated upon them. It was resolved to attempt to carry the fort by storm, when General Butler was wounded, and, at the same time. Colonel Mitchell, commanding the regiment. A murderous discharge of musketry swept the ranks continually, and the attempt was abandoned, the force being withdrawn to a posi- tion of less exposure. The battery of the fort captured by Quitman's brigade was now turned upon this second work ; and, under its cover, the artillery of Bragg and Ridgely was served, supported by parts of several regiments scattered during the general assault. Sub sequently, Captain Webster's howitzer was made to bear from the captured fort upon the second fort, against which the Ohio volunteers had made their daring but unsuccessful movement. 226 GENERAL TAYLOR EXPOSED. The latter, on retiring to the skirts of the town, at a point where a portion of the Mississippi regiment had also returned, found themselves dispersed on the plain, so as to present ap- parently an object of easy attack from a body of lancers then in view. The latter, accordingly, dashed towards them, but not in time to prevent their forming an imperfect front so as to meet the charge. On came the cavalry, which is the boast of Mexico, striking with their lances, as they swept over the field, the Americans who lay wounded and helpless upon it, until within short range of the volunteers' muskets, when a volley from the line checked their career, bearing down the foremost horses and riders, and driving the rest in disorder back to their position. During this, and other independent scenes in the drama of the day, parties and individuals of all regiments were in the streets, charging on the barricades, or returning the inces- sant fire of the enemy's batteries and lighter arms whenever an object for effectual aim was presented. General Taylor, who was almost constantly within range of the flying shot, ordered as many of the First, Third, and Fourth Infantry, or the Baltimore Battalion, as could be collected, again to enter the town, and carry, if possible, the second battery, against which Captain Webster's howitzer was then directed. Of this mixed force. Lieutenant Colonel Garland took the command, and a gallant effort was made to achieve the object. Receiving a fire from every direction, it pressed on to gain the rearT)f the work, and takmg a position, maintained it for some time with the aid of Ridgely's battery. But the work proved too strong and well defended at every approach to be stormed with suc- cess, and the command was withdrawn. During this move- ment. Captain Bragg's artillery, supported by Captain Miller with a force of regulars and volunteers, dispersed a body of cavalry making a demonstration in front of the town. Hours passed, while these various and daring exertions were made to obtain possession of the chain of fortifications on the east and south-east of the city. They were defended by the Mexicans with constancy and valour, but with every advantage EFFECT OF TAYLOR's MOVEMENTS. 227 over the assailants in numbers, position, and arms. The latter were ^ subjected, in all their movements, to terrible cross and direct fires, hurling upon them a continual stream of heavy shot, grape, and musket balls. Yet there was no waver- ing, no abatement of ardour. Volunteers and regulars, the men by whom the clash of arms was then first heard, and they who had chosen arms as a profession, fought and fell side by si-de, scores on scores, and yet all who stood, still stood firmly, still strove on, undaunted by the slaughter which raged around them. The main object, had in view by General Taylor in the assault upo-n the east side of the city, had so far been entirely accomplished. A long-continued diversion had been made in favour of General Worth's movements in the opposite quarter. To them we now revert. After having, early in the morning, repulsed the enemy's lancers posted at the spur of the mountain, and advanced to a position on the Saltillo road about half a mile west of the gorge, where the several roads from the north-eastern valley unite, a further reconnoissance was made of the fortifications on the heights on each side. A brief mention has already been made of these works, but a further description is necessary to a clear understanding of the operations of General Worth's division. The Creek or Arroyo San Juan, which sweeps, with the line of the mountain base, around the southern and eastern sides of the city, has its source to the south-west, and passing through the great gorge of the range in that direction, defines the line of the road to Saltillo, which is constructed on its northern margin. From this creek, at a point about a mile southwest of the city, and facing towards it, may be seen about six hun- dred yards to the right, a height called Federacion, which was surmounted by a strong redout ; and on the same ridge, half a mile nearer the city, another height crowned by a work called "Fort Soldado." On the left of the creek, opposite these elevations, rises Mitre Mountain ; on a prominence of which, called Independencia, nearly due north of Federacion, and about half a mile distant from it in an air line, was a third 20 228 ASSAULT OiS FEDERACION HILL. fortified work. On a lower point of the same ridge, form- ing Independencia, and in a south-eastern direction, about a quarter of a mile nearer to the city, stands the Bishop's Pa- lace. These four works, two on each side of the Saltillo road, were reared on eminences sufficiently lofty and precipitous to be difficult of access, while they thoroughly commanded the deep valley between them, and the slopes on every other side. The first progress of General Worth was around the south- western base of Independencia, which brought his command between it and Federacion. It was determined that the first effort of his command should be made against the fort on the latter, the possession of all the heights being vital to the ad- vance of the whole army on Saltillo. At noon, on the 21st, he ordered four companies of the Regular Artillery Battalion, under Captain C. F. Smith, and six companies — Green's, McGowan's, Gillespie's, Chandlis', Ballowes', and McCulloch's, of the Texas Rifles, under Major Chevalier, (both commands numbering about three hundred men, and acting in co-opera- tion,) to storm the batteries first on Federacion Hill, and then to carry Fort Soldado. During the morning the enemy's guns had not been idle, but when the movement for this assault commenced, they were served with redoubled zeal. Captain Smith led his men to the foot of the hill, whence, looking up, the toil of an unopposed and unencumbered ascent might well daunt common energies. Upward however they went, breast- ing sometimes the ])lunging discharges of the enemy's batteries high above them, and sometimes screened for a moment by a projecting rock, or a cluster of underwood. Occasionally they paused to return the fire, and in a moment were again climbing the rugged and perilous steep, from whose frowning crest balls of iron and copper rained upon them. At the same time bodies of Mexican light troops sallied from the works on both adjacent hills, and forming on every favourable point, seconded their heavy guns with volleys of musketry. At this moment, the enemy menacing Smith's command with an overwhelming superiority of numbers. Captain Miles, with the Seventh Infantry, was ordered to his support. The FEDERACION AND SOLDADO CARRIED. 229 firing now became general, as the ascent of the storming party brought them within more effectual range of the forces above them. Other reinforcements of the latter being displayed around their works, General Worth directed General Smith, with the Fifth Infantry, under Major Scott, and the Louisiana Volunteers, under Captain Blanchard, to the further aid of the troops engaged. This third command pressed eagerly on to the assault ; and General Smith perceiving the practicability of storming Fort Soldado simultaneously with the attack already commenced on the other work, divided the supporting force, and directed the Fifth and Seventh, and the Louisiana Volun- teers against Soldado. Captain Smith's men continuing to mount the Federacion height, drove the enemy up and back upon the entrenchment, the contest becoming closer and closer, until, charging with the bayonet, they cleared the breastwork, and while its routed defenders fled precipitately down the op- posite side of the hill, tore down their standard, and raised the first American flag that ever waved in the mountain breezes of Mexico. Loud and heart-stirring were the cheers which hailed it, echoed from the valley by the gallant troops, then rushing up to plant a kindred banner on the neighbouring height. Immediately, the piece of ordnance (a nine-pounder) found in the captured works was directed against Fort Soldado, and the main body of Captain Smith's command then started in support of the other command. On the latter went, as they began the ascent receiving in their midst a tempest of grape and canister. With good will, however, they emulated the gallantry of their friends; Captain Hays, with about fifty Texas rifles, joining in the work. Conquering the acclivity by the aid of every stone that offered a foothold, and every bush within grasp, they approached the Mexican lines near enough to use their muskets whh effect. Loading and firing as they ascended, unchecked for an instant by the fire from above, they rose at last to within fifty yards of the wall, and then with a shout drove the enemy from it, and turned upon the confused and fleeing mass the artillery which themselves had loaded. Having served this purpose for the moment, it was then di- 230 LOSSES ON THE FIRST DAY. rected, together with the gun on Federacion Hill, agamst the Bishop's Palace. The fire was returned from the latter with round shot and shell ; the valley of the Saltillo road separating the works only six hundred yards from the Palace. In these brilliant explohs, the officers already mentioned, and every subordinate and man, behaved with admirable daring. The whole force against both fortifications did not exceed six or seven hundred men, who, reckless of opposing numbers, and of their superior and strong position, charged up to them and swept them from their lofty perch. ■The sun was descending when the second fort had been carried, and about the same time, on the same side of the creek, at the south-eastern extreme of the city, the enemy's cavalry, having been previously checked by the Ohio and a part of the Mississippi regiments, made a demonstration against the troops exposed in that quarter. Ridgely brought his light battery to bear on them, and scattered ^them until they sought shelter in the city. After this no important movement was effected in any direc- tion. The approach of night and a severe rain storm arrested the terrible labours of the day — terrible to both parties. The divisions on the east of the town had lost many officers of great merit, and many more men, who, if indomitable energy and valour were the test, should have also been chiefs, not followers. Among the notable dead were, Captain Williams of the topo- graphical engineers, who aided heroically in directing the as- sault upon the first redout ; Lieutenants Terrett and Dilworth, of the First Infantry; Lieutenant Colonel Watson, of the Bal- timore Battalion, one of the first to fall while cheering on his men, under the raking cross fires of the street works ; Brevet Major Barbour, of the Third Infantry, and Lieutenants Irwin and Ilazlett of the same regiment ; Captain Allen and Lieu- tenant Putnaiii, of the Tennessee Volunteers, which indomit- able corps left, besides these officers, nearly half its numbers dead or wounded in the streets and fields ; Lieutenant Woods, of the Second Infantry, who had distinguished himself also at Resaca de la Palma ; Lieutenant Hoskins, of the Fourth CLOSE OF THE FIRST DAY. 231 Infantry, and Lieutenant Colonel Helt, of the Ohio Volunteers, a regiment worthy of the officer, and which freely mingled its blood with his. Nearly four hundred of all the troops, Regu- lars and Volunteers, engaged east of the town, were killed or wounded. The avenues at times were choked with their bodies, where guns of the forts had centred on them. The Kentucky Regiment was not brought into the action farther than to support the field battery posted in front of the citadel. It stood ready several times to receive a threatened charge of a large body of lancers, and rendered efficient aid in main- taining the demonstration in front of the town. General Worth's loss was comparatively very small, owing to the less exposed position of his command. How they per- formed the tasks assigned them has been seen. Thirty-six hours had they been without food, one night in the rain with- out shelter or blankets, and now exposed on the coming of a second to a violent storm, and equally unprotected. The divisions of Butler and Twiggs, under the immediate command of General Taylor, were ordered back to the camp, except the Regulars of the First Division and Ridgely's battery, left to garrison the captured works, under Lieutenant Colonel Garland, and one battalion of the First Kentucky Regiment, detailed to work at the entrenchments through the night, and strengthen the positions acquired on the eastern part of the city. So wearied were all the troops with the labours of the day, that a witness relates, of those ordered back to the camp, many with difficulty reached it. Throughout the day General Taylor was constantly near or on the ground of actual conflict, sharing its dangers, and by his calm bravery giving effectual virtue to his directions. General Worth, apprehending a surprise, was obliged to keep most of his force on the watch through the night of the 21st. The few who sought rest had no shelter, and lay down under the heavy fall of rain, with their arms in their hands. The com- mands in the eastern quarter of the city enjoyed no better pro- tection or repose. Thus ended the labours of the first day before Monterey. -' -'■'^ ^•- 20* L 232 INDEPENDENCIA CARRIED. CHAPTER XIII. Indrpeudcncia carried — Sortie from the Palace — Enemy repulsed and Palace tnken — Operations on the Eastern Quarter — Progress towards the Heart of the Town — Worth's Progress on Opposite Side — Command of the Main Plaza — Flag of Truce — Suspension of the Attack — 'J'aylor's Despatch — Cor- respondence with Ampudia and the Governor — Taylor'sDetailed Report of the Siege — Extract from Worth's Report — Comments on the Action — Con- ference helween Ampudia and Taylor — Commissioners on the Capitulation appointed — Proceedings of the Commission — Terms of Capitulation — Report of Killed and Wounded. General Worth had determined that the operations of the 22d, in the rear of the city, should comnaence against the work surmounting Independencia height and the Bishop's Palace, making the first assault on the former. This duty was assigned to one company of the Third Regulars (artillery battalion), two companies of the Fourth, three companies of the Eighth, under Captain Screvin, and two hundred Riflemen, under Colonel Hays and Lieutenant Colonel Walker, the whole command under Lieutenant Colonel Childs, conducted by Captain Sanders, of the military, and Lieutenant Meade, of the topographical engi- neers. At three o'clock on the morning of the 22d this force was in motion. The rain and darkness favoured its ap- proach to the enemy's position. The ascent of the hill was commenced and conducted without molestation. As the ac- clivity was gradually overcome, the gray light of morning began to struggle through the mist which clouded its crest. Quietly and steadily the command ascended until within a hundred yards of the top, when a body of the enemy posted among the rocks and bushes came full in view. Expecting an attack they had awaited it. They fired and retreated, while assailants hastened up, reserving their fire until close upon the redout, when delivering one general and deadly volley, they dashed into it with the bayonet, while the Mexicans fled down the other side. Just then, as the coming sun streaked the white mists of the mountain peaks, the emulous flag of the Union floated above the third of the enemy's lofty strongholds. It was found that the guns of this post had been removed in the night to the Bishop's Palace, then the only remaining posi- THE bishop's palace CARRIED. 233 tion of the Mexicans on the heights in fne rear of the town. The high walls of massive masonry, defended by a howitzer, and two pieces of ordnance, besides a heavy force of musketry, forbade any attempt to carry the latter work without the aid of artillery. To procure this, Lieutenant Rowland, of Duncan's Artillery, was ordered from the m'ain camp with a twelve-pound howitzer, ana so great was his despatch, that, in two hours, with the aid of fifty men from the line under Captain Sanders selected for the purpose of pointing out the least difficult route, that enterprizing and gallant officer, (as he is justly termed in the language of the General's official report,) had ascended the broken and steep acclivity of Independencia-hill, and planted his gun in position. From it, under cover of the breastwork, an effectual fire was immediately directed against the Palace, distant about four hundred yards on the next point of the ridge. While this battery was thus brought to bear, part of the forces having possession of the heights on the opposite side of the road were ordered over. They consisted of the Fifth Infantry, Major Scott, and the Louisiana volunteers, Captain Blanchard, and reached the position about 8 o'clock. The enemy made several demonstrations of an attempt to regain the work last captured. At length, a large body of lancers swept around and up the hill with that intent. A sortie, by a strong force, was also made from the Palace. General Worth anticipated the movement. Lieutenant Colonel Childs had advanced two companies of light troops, under Captain Vinton, which skirmished with the enemy's advance. The main body was drawn up, with Hays' and Walker's Rifles, on the flanks. As the enemy rapidly advanced, the light troops retired in good order, and maintained a fire, until a general discharge from the whole line was ordered. The Mexicans were at once thrown into confusion, and fled, pursued by the whole force, under Colonel Childs, beyond the Palace, which the latter then entered, taking possession of it, and the fort ad- joining it. Down the enemy rushed towards the city, crowd- ing a street which extended to the Palace ; and, as they fled, the guns of their last mountain fastness were turned upon them. 234 THE EASTERN FORTS EVACUATED. Thus, terminated the complete investment of the works com- manding the rear of the city, and the communication with the country to the south-west. The honour of the achievement was enhanced by the fact, that it was attended with but trifling sacrifice on the part of the victors. Prudence had gone hand in hand with courage, even in the boldest enterprizes of the two eventful days. General Worth's next care was to place the captured guns in positions on the heights to reach the great plaza of the town ; and, except a necessary garrison for Independencia hill, the di- vision was concentrated at the Bishop's Palace, to be prepared the next day for an assault on the city from that quarter. The day, the 22d, which had so well employed Worth's Division, was less actively spent by the wearied troops of the other division in the eastern quarter of the town. According to the official report, the citadel and other works continued to fire at parties exposed to their range, and at the work now oc- cupied by our troops. The guard left in it the preceding night, except Captain Ridgely's company, was relieved at mid-day by General Quitman's brigade. Captain Bragg's battery was thrown under cover in front of the town, to repel any demon- stration of cavalry in that quarter. During the night of the 22d the enemy evacuated nearly all his defences in the lower part of the city. This was reported to General Taylor early in the morning of the 23d, by General Quitman, who had already meditated an assault upon those works. He immediately sent instructions to that officer, leaving it to his discretion to enter the city, covering his men by the houses and walls, and ad- vance carefully so far as he might deem it prudent. * After ordering the remainder of the troops as a reserve, under the orders of Brigadier General Twiggs, General Taylor re- paired to the abandoned works, and discovered that a portion of General Quitman's brigade had entered the town, and were successfully forcing their way towards the principal plaza. He then ordered up the second regiment of Texas mounted volun- teers, who entered the city, dismounted, and, under the imme- diate orders of General Henderson, co-operated with Genera] APPROACH TO THE 3IAIN PLAZA. 235 Quitman's brigade. Captain Bragg's battery was also ordered up, supported by the Third feafantry, and after firing for some time at the Cathedral, a portion of it was likewise thrown into the city. The American troops advanced from house to house, and from square to square, until they reached a street but one square in rear of the principal plaza, in and near which the enemy's force was mainly concentrated. This advance was conducted vigorously, but with due caution, and although de- structive to the enemy, was attended with but small loss on our part. Captain Ridgely, in the mean time, had served a captured piece in the first battery against the city, until the ad- vance of our men rendered it imprudent to fire in the direction of the Cathedral. General Taylor was satisfied that his troops could operate successfully in the city, and that the enemy had retired from the lower portion of it to make a stand behind his barricades. As General Quitman's brigade had been on duty the previous night, he determined to withdraw the troops to the evacuated works, and concert with General Worth a com- bined attack upon the town. The troops accordingly fell back deliberately, in g'ood order, and resumed their original posi- tions. General Quitman's brigade being relieved after nightfall by that of General Hamer. When General Worth heard, on the morning of the 23d, the heavy and continuous fire from the opposite side of the city, he concluded that a main attack was in progress under the direction of General Taylor, and that orders for his co- operation had miscarried, owing to the long circuit over which it was necessary to carry them. His own intention was to have prosecuted his success during that night, but he instantly gave orders to this effect. To quote the clear and concise language of Worth's despatch, two columns of attack were organized to move along the two principal streets leading from one position in direction of the great Plaza, composed of light troops slightly extended, with orders to mask the men when- ever practicable ; avoid those points swe})t by the enemy's artillery ; to press on to the first Plaza Capilla; to get hold of the end of streets beyond ; then enter the buildings, and by 236 COMMAND OF THE MAIN PLAZA. means of picks and bars, break through the longitudinal sec- tion of the walls ; work from house to house, and ascending the roofs, to place themselves upon the same breast-height with the enemy. Light artillery, by sections, and pieces under Duncan, Roland, Mackall, Martin, Hays, Irons, Clarke, and Curd, followed at suitable intervals, covered by reserves to guard the pieces, and the whole operation against the pro- bable enterprizes of cavalry upon our left. This was effectu- ally done by seizing and commanding the head of every cross street. The streets were, at different and well chosen points, barricaded by heavy masonry walls, with embrasures for one or more guns, and in every instance well supported by cross batteries. These arrangements of defence gave to the opera- tions at this moment a complicated character, demanding much care and precaution ; but the work went on steadily, simultaneously, and successfully. About the time Worth's assault commenced, the fire ceased from Taylor's force in the opposite quarter. Disengaged on the one side, the enemy was enabled to shift men and guns to Worth's quarters, as was soon manifested by accumulation of fire. At dark his com- mand had worked through the walls and squares, and reached to within one block of the great Plaza, leaving a covered way in its rear ; carried a large building which towered over the principal defences, and during the night and ensuing morning crowned the roof with two howitzers and a six-pounder. As the columns of attack were moving from the Palace hill, Major Munroe, chief of artillery, arrived with a ten-inch mortar, which was immediately advanced to the Plaza Chapel^ put in position, masked by the church wall, its bed adjusted as ra- pidly as possible, and by sunset opened upon the great square. At this period, our troops had worked to within one square of the Plaza. The exact position of their comrades on the oppo- site side was not known, and the distance of the position to be assailed from the bomb battery but conjectural: eight hun- dred yards was assumed, and fuze and charge regulated ac- cordingly. The first shell fell a little short of the point on 'vhich it was directed, and beside our troops. A slight in- CESSATION OF ARMS. 237 crense of the projecting charge gave exact results. The whole service was managed by Major Munroe most admirably; and, combined with other operations, exercised a decided iofluence upon the final results. Early on the morning of the 23d, Major Brown, artillery battalion, was despatched with a select command, and one section of Mackall's battery, under Lieu- tenant Irons, to occupy a stone mill and adjacent grounds, constituting one league in advance the narrow gorge, near Sta. Catarina. The Major took possession, repulsed the enemy's picquets, and was preparing his command to resist any attack, when he received orders to retrace his steps, enter the city, and form the main reserve "to the assaulting columns. He came up in good time and good order, and was at once under fire. It has been seen that Generals Taylor and Worth were thus advancing close to the centre of the town from opposite direc- tions. General Taylor, after withdrawing his troops from their advanced position near the Grand Plaza, as has been stated, returned to his camp, and there, in the evening, learned for the first time the extent of Worth's success in the town prior to that hour. He deemed it too late then to change his own dispositions ; and receiving a note near midnight from General Worth, stating his further progress, and the position of his mortar battery, he requested that ofl5cer to await his co-opera- tion for further movements. Meanwhile General Worth had received from the enemy a flag of truce, asking a brief suspen- sion of his fire. Thus concluded the four days' action against Monterey, in the entreaty of its defenders for a capitulation. No previous achievement in the history of American arms affords a more splendid illustration of the heroism of the American character. Before proceeding to give further details of the siege, or comments upon the result of it, the following despatches of General Taylor are presented, to complete the chain of the narrative. It is unnecessary to introduce his brief accounts of the affairs of the 21st, 22d, and 23d, written on those days respectively, as the detailed report, dated the 9th of October, and annexed, covers the whole ground. 238 COMMISSION ON CAPITULATION. HeaJ-Quarters, Army of Occupation. Camp before Monterey, September 25, 1846. Sir: -At noon on the 23d instant, while our troops were closely engaged in the lower part of the city, as reported in my last despatch, I received, by a flag, a communication from the Governor of the State of New Leon, which is herewith enclosed, (No. 1.) To this communication I deemed it my duty to return an answer declining to allow the inhabitants to leave the city. By 11 o'clock, P. M., the 2d division, which had entered the town from the direction of the Bishop's Palace, had advanced within one square of the principal Plaza, and occupied the city up to that point. The mortar had, in the mean time, been placed in battery in the cemetery, within good range of the heart of the town, and w'as served throughout the night with good effect. Early in the morning of the 24th, I received a flag from the town, bearing a communication from General Ampudia, which I enclose, (No. 2,) and to which I returned the answer, (No. 3.) I also arranged with the bearer of the flag a cessation of fire until 12 o'clock, which hour I appointed to receive the final answer of General Ampudia at General Worth's head- quarters. Before the appointed time, however, General Am- pudia had signified to General Worth his desire for a personal interview with me, for the purpose of making some definitive arrangement. An interview was accordingly appointed for one o'clock, and resulted in the naming of a commission to draw up articles of agreement regulating the withdrawal of the Mexi- can forces, and a temporary cessation of hostilities. The com- missioners named by the Mexican general-in-chief were Gene- rals Ortega and Raquena, and Manl. M. Llano, governor of New Leon. Those named on the American side were General Worth, General Henderson, Governor of Texas, and Colonel Davis, Mississippi volunteers. The commission finally settled upon the articles, of which I enclose a copy, (No. 4,) the du- plicates of which (in Spanish and English) have been duly signed. Agreeably to the provisions of the 4th article, our troops have this morning occupied the citadel ampudia's proposal to retire. 239 It will be seen that the terras granted the Mexican garrison are less rigorous than those first imposed. The gallant defence of the town, and the fact of a recent change of government in Mexico, believed to be favourable to the interests of peace, in- duced me to concur with the commission in these terms, which will, I trust, receive the approval of the government. The latter consideration also prompted the convention for a tempo- rary cessation of hostilities. Though scarcely warranted by my instructions, yet the change of affairs since those instruc- tions were issued seemed to warrant this course. I beg to be advised, as early as practicable, whether I have met the views of the government in these particulars. I regret to report that Captain Williams, topographical engi- neers, and Lieut. Terrett, 1st infantry, have died of the wounds received in the engagement of the 21st. Captain Gathir, 7th infantry, was wounded (not badly) on the 23d. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Maj. Gen. U. S. Army, commanding. The Adjutant General of the Army, Washington, D. C. Head-Quarters, Monterey. September 23, 1846, at 9 o'clock at night. General : As I have made all the defence of which I believe this city capable, I have fulfilled my obligation, and done all required by that military honour which, to a certain degree, is common to all the armies of the civilized world ; and, as a continuation of the defence would only bring upon the popula- tion distresses to which they have already been sufficiently subjected by the evils consequent upon war, and believing that the American government will appreciate these sentiments, I propose to your excellency to evacuate the city and cuaael taking with me the personnel and materiel of war which is left, and under the assurance that no prosecution shall be undertaken against the citizens who have taken part in the defence. 51 L2 240 TAYLOR'S ANSWER TO AMPUDIA. Be pleased to accept the assurance of my most distinguished consideration. Pedro de Ampudia. Senor Don Z. Taylor, General-in-chief of the American Army. Head-Quarters, Army of Occupation. Camp before Monterey, September 24, 1846, 7 o'clock, A. M. Sir : Your communication, bearing date at 9 o'clock, P. M. on the 23d, has just been received by the hands of Colonel Moreno. In answer to your proposition to evacuate the city and fort, with all the personnel and materiel of war, I have to state that my duty compels me to decline acceding to it. A complete surrender of the town and garrison, the latter as prisoners of war, is now demanded. But such surrender will be upon terms ; and the gallant defence of the place, creditable alike to the Mexican troops and nation, will prompt me to make tjiose terras as liberal as possible. The garrison will be allowed, at your option, after laying down its arms, to retire to the interior, on condition of not serving again during the war, or until regularly exchanged. I need hardly say that the rights of non- combatants will be respected. An answer to this communication is required by 12 o'clock. If you assent to an accommodation, an officer will be despatched at once, under instructions to arrange the conditions. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Major Gen. U. S. A., commanding Senor Don Pedro uk Ampcdia, General-in-chief, Monterey. GOVERNMENT OF THE STATE OF NEW LEON. Your excellency having resolved to occupy this place by force of arms, and the Mexican general-in-chief to defend it THE governor's REQUEST OF TAYLOR. 241 at any cost, as required by his honour and duty, thousands of victims, who, from their poverty and want of means, find them- selves still upon the theatre of war, and who would be use- lessly sacrificed, claim the rights which in all times and in all countries humanity holds sacred. As Governor of this State, and as the legitimate representa- tive of the people thereof, I now address your excellency ; and I hope, from your regard to humanity, and from your sense of the rules which govern civilized nations, that whatever may be the result of the present struggle, you will give orders that the resident families shall be respected, or will concede a sufficient time for them to remove from this capital. I have the honour to salute your excellency, general-in-chief of the army of occupation of the United States, and to assure you of my highest consideration. God and liberty! Monterey, September 23, 1846, 8 o'clock in the morning. Francisco de P. Morales. To the General-in-chief of the Array of Occapation of the United States. Head-Quarters, Army of Occupation. Camp near Monterey, Oct. 9, 184G. Sir : I have now the honour to submit a detailed report of the recent operations before Monterey, resulting in the capitu- lation of that city. The information received on the route from Seralvo, and particularly the continual appearance in our front of the Mexi- can cavalry, which had a slight skirmish with our advance at the village of Ramas, induced the belief, as we approached Monterey, that the enemy would defend that place. Upon reaching the neighbourhood of the city, on the morning of the 19th of September, this belief was fully confirmed. It was as- certained that he occupied the tov.-n in force ; that a large work- had been constructed commanding all the northern approaches ; and that the Bishop's Palace, and some heights in its vicinit}' near the Saltillo road, had also been fortified and occupied 242 Taylor's detailed report. with troops and artillery. It was known, from information previously received, that the eastern approaches were com- manded by several small works in the lower edge of the city. The configuration of the heights and gorges in the direction of the Saltillo road, as visible from the point attained by our advance on the morning of the 19th, led me to suspect that it was practicable to turn all the works in that direction, and thus cut the enemy's line of communication. After establishing my camp at the "Walnut Springs," three miles from Monterey, the nearest suitable position, it was, accordingly, my first care to order a close reconnoissance of the ground in question, which was executed on the evening of the 19th by the engi- neer officers, under the direction of Major Mansfield. A re- connoissance of the eastern approaches was at the same time made by Captain Williams, topographical engineer. The ex- amination made by Major Mansfield proved the entire practi- cability of throv.-ing forward a column to the Saltillo road, and thus turning the position of the enemy. Deeming this to be an operation of essential importance, orders were given to Brevet Brig. Gen. Worth, commanding the second division, to march with his command on the 20th; to turn the hill of the Bishop's Palace ; to occupy a position on the Saltillo road, and to carry the enemy's detached works in that quarter, where practicable. The first regiment oi' Texas mounted volunteers, under command of Col. Hays, was associated with the second division on this service. Capt. Sanders, engineers, and Lieut. Meade, topographical engineers, were also ordered to report to Gen. Worth for duty with his column. At 2 o'clock, P. M., on the 20th, the second division took up its march. It was soon discovered, by officers who were reconnoitring the town, and communicated to Gen. Worth, that its niovement had been perceived, and that the enemy was throwing reinforcements towards the Bishop's Palace and the height which commands it. To divert his attention as far as practicable, the first division, under Brigadier General Twiggs, and field division of volunteers, under Major General Butler, were displayed in front of the town until dark. Arrange- DETAILED REPORT CONTliNUED. 243 ments were made at the same time to place in battery during the night, at a suitable distance from the enemy's main work, the citadel, two twenty-four-pounder howitzers, and a ten-inch mortar, with a view to open a fire on the following day, when I proposed to make a diversion in favour of General Worth's movement. The 4th infantr)^ covered this battery during the night. Gen. Worth had, in the mean time, reached and occu- pied for the night a defensive position just without range of a battery above the Bishop's Palace, having made a reconnois- sance as far as the Saltillo road. Before proceeding to report the operations of the 21st and following days, I beg leave to state that I shall mention in de- tail only those which were conducted against the eastern ex- tremity of the city, or elsewhere, under my immediate direc- tion, referring you for the particulars of Gen. Worth's opera- tions, which were entirely detached, to his own full report transmitted herewith. Early on the morning of the 21st, I received a note from General Worth, written at half-past 9 o'clock the night before, suggesting what I had already intended, a strong diversion against the centre and left of the town to fiivour his enterprize against the heights in rear. The infantry and artillery of the first division, and the field division of volunteers, were or- dered under arms and took the direction of the city, leaving one company of each regiment as a camp guard. The 2d dra- goons, under Lieut. Col. May, and Col. Wood's regiment of Texas mounted volunteers, under the immediate direction of General Henderson, were directed to the right to support Gen. Worth, if necessary, and to make an impression, if practicable, upon the upper quarter of the city. Upon approaching the mortar battery, the 1st and 3d regiments of infantry and batta- lion of Baltimore and Washington volunteers, with Captain Bragg's field battery — the whole under the command of Lieut. Col. Garland — were directed towards the lower part of the town, with orders to make a strong demonstration, and carry one of the enemy's advanced works, if it could be done with- out too heavy loss. Major Mansfield, engineers, and Caplam 21 * 244 DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. Williams and Lieut. Pope, topographical engineers, accompa- nied this column. Major Mansfield heing charged with its di- rection, and the designation of points of attack. In the mean time ihe mortar, served by Capt. Ramsay, of the ordnance, and the howitzer battery under Capt. Webster, 1st artillery, had opened their fire upon the citadel, which was deliberately sustained, and answered from the work. Gen. Butler's divi- sion had now taken up a position in rear of this battery, when the discharges of artillery, mingled finally with a rapid-fire of small arms, showed that Lieut. Garland's command had become warmly engaged. I now deemed it necessary to support this attack, and accordingly ordered the 4th infantry and three regi- ments of General Butler's division to march at once by the left flank in the direction of the advanced work at the lower ex- tremity of the town, leaving one regiment (1st Kentucky) to cover the mortar and howitzer battery. By some mistake two companies of the 4th infantry did not receive this order, and consequently did not join the advance companies until some time afterwards. Lieut. Col. Garland's command had approached the town in p. direction to the right of the advanced work (No. 1.) at the north-eastern ajigle of the city, and the engineer officer, covered by skirmishers, had succeeded in entering the suburbs and gaining cover. The remainder of this command now advanced and entered the town under a heavy fire of artillery from the citadel and the works on the left, and of musketry from the houses and small works in front. A movem.ent to the riaht o was attempted with a view to gain the rear of No. 1, and carry that work, but the troops were so much exposed to a fire which they could not effectually return, and had already sustained such severe loss, particularly in officers, that it M-as deem.ed best to withdraw them to a more secure position. Captain Backus, 1st infantry, however, with a portion of his own and other com.panies, had gained the roof of a tannery, which looked directly into the gorge of No. 1, and from which he poured a most destructive fire into that work and upon the strong building in its rear. This fire happily coincided in point DETAILED REPORT CONTJNUED. 245 a of time with the advance of a portion of the volunteer division upon No. 1, and contributed largely to the fall of that strong and important work. The three regiments of the volunteer division, under the im- mediate command of Major General Butler, had in the mean time advanced in the direction of No. 1. The leading brigade, under Brigadier General Quitman, continued fts advance upon that work, preceded by three companies of the 4th infantry, while General Butler, with the first Ohio regiment, entered the tov>"n to the right. The companies of the 4th infantry had ad- vanced within short range of the work, when they were received by a fire that almost, in one moment, struck down one-third of the officers and men, and rendered it necessary to retire and effect a conjunction with the two other companies then advanc- ing. General Quitman's brigade, though suffering most se- verely, particularly in the Tennessee regiment, continued its advance, and finally carried the wo' k in handsome style, as well as the strong building in its reai . Five pieces of artillery, a considerable supply of ammunition, and thirty prisoners, in- cluding three officers, fell into their hands. Major General Butler, with the 1st Ohio regiment, after entering the edge of the town, discv)vered that nothing was to be accomplished in his front, and at this point, yielding to the suggestions of seve- ral officers, I ordered a retrograde movement ; but learning almost immediately, from one of my staff, that the battery No. 1. was in oui^ possession, the order was countermanded ; and I determined to hold the battery and defences already gained. General Butler with the 1st Ohio regiment, then entered the town at a point farther to the left, and marched in the direc- tion of the battery No. 2. While making an examination, with a view to ascertain the possibility of carrying this second work by storm, the general was wounded and soon after com- pelled to quit the field. As the strength of No. 2, and the heavy musketry fire flanking the ap;)roach, rendered it impos- sible to carry it without great loss, the 1st Ohio regiment was withdrawn from the town. Fragments of the various regimen 5 engaged were now under 246 DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. cover of tlie captured batter}-, and some buildings in its front, and on the right. The field batteries of Captains Bragg and Ridgely were also partially covered by the battery. An inces- sant hre was kept up on this position from battery No. 2, and other works on its right, and from the citadel on all our ap- proaches. General Twiggs, though quite unwell, joined me at this ])oint, and was instrumental in causing the artillery cap- tured from the enemy to be placed in battery, and served by Captain Ridgely against No. 2, until the arrival of Captain Webster's howitzer battery, which took its place. In the mean time, I directed such men as could be collected of the 1st, 3d, and 4th regiments, and Baltimore battalion, to enter the town, penetrating to the right, and carry the 2d battery if possible. This command, under Lieut. Col. Garland, advanced beyond the bridge " Purisima," when, finding it impracticable to gain the rear of the 2d battery, a portion of it sustained themselves for some time in that advanced position ; but as no permanent impression could be made at that point, and the main object of the general operation had been effected, the command, in- cluding a section of Captain Ridgely's battery, which had joined it, was withdrawn to battery No. 1. During the absence of this column, a demonstration of cavalry was reported in the direction of the citadel. Captain Bragg, who was at hand, immediately galloped with his battery to a suitable position^ from which a few discharges effectually dispersed the enemy. Captain Miller, 1st Infantry, was despatched with a mixed com- mand to support the battery on this service. The enemy's lancers had })reviously charged upon the Ohio and a part of the Mississippi regiment, near some fields at a distance from the eiige of the town, and had been repulsed with a considerable loss. A demonstration of cavalry on the opposite side of the liver was also dispersed in the course of the afternoon by Cap- tain Ridgely's battery, and the squadrons returned to the city. At the approach of evening, all the troops that had been en- gaged were ordered back to camp, except Captain Ridgely's battery, and the regular infantry of the first division, who were, detailed as a guard for the works during the night, under com- DEI' AILED REPORT CONTINUED. 247 mand of Lieut. Col. Garland. One battalion of the Is-t Ken- tucky regiment was ordered to reinforce this command. In- trenching tools were procured, and additional strength was given to the works, and protection to the men, by working parties during the night, under the direction of Lieut. Scarritt, engineers. The main object proposed in the morning had been elTected. A powerful diversion had been made to favour the operations of the 2d division, one of the enemy's advanced works had been carried, and we now had a strong foot-hold in the town. But this had not been accomplished without a heavy loss, em- bracing some of our gallant and promising officers. Captain Williams, topographical engineers, Lieuts. Terrett and Dil- worlh, Lst infantry, Lieut. Woods, 2d infantry, Capts. Morris and Field, Bvt. Major Barbour, Lieuts. Irwin and Hazlett, 3d infantry, Lieut. Hoskins, 4th infantry, Lieut. Col. Watson, Bal- timore battalion, Capt. Allen and Lieut. Putman, Tennessee regiment, and Lieut. Hett, Ohio regiment, were killed, or have since died of wounds received in this engagement, while the number and rank of the officers wounded gives additional proof of the obstinacy of the contest, and the good conduct of our troops. The number of killed and wounded incident to the operations in the lower part of the city on the 21st is 394. • Early in the morning of this day, (21st,) the advance of the 2d division had encountered the enemy in force, and after a brief but sharp corilict, repulsed him with heavy loss. Gen. Worth then succeeded in gaining a position on the Saltillo road, thus cutting the enemy's line of communication. From this position the two heights south of the Saltillo road were carried in succession, and the gun taken in one of them turned upon the Bishop's Palace. These important successes were fortunately obtained with comparatively small loss ; Captain McKavett, 8lh infantry, being the only officer killed. The 22d day of September passed without any active opera tions in the lower part of the city. The citadel and othei works continued to fire at parties exposed to their range, and at the work now occupied by our troops. The guard left in it 248 DETAIJ.ED REPORT CONTINUED. the preceding night, except Capt, Ridgely's company, was re- lieved at mid-day by Gen. Quitman's brigade, Capt. Bragg's battery was thrown under cover in front of the town to repel any demonstration of cavalry in that quarter. At dawn of day, the height above the Bishop's Palace was carri^ct, and soon after meridian, the Palace itself was taken and its guns turned upon the fugitive garrison. The object for which the 2d divi- sion was detached had thus been completely accomplished, and I felt confident that with a strong force occupying the road and heights in his rear, and a good position below the city in our possession, the enemy could not possibly maintain the town. During the night of the 22d, the enemy evacuated nearly all his defences in the lower part of the city. This was reported to me early in the morning of the 23d by Gen. Quitman, who had already meditated an assault upon those works. I imme- diately sent instructions to that officer, leaving it to his discre- tion to enter the city, covering his men by the houses and w?lls, and advance carefully as far as he might deem prudent. Ai'ler ordering the remainder of the troops as a reserve, under the orders of Brigadier General Twiggs, I repaired to the abandoned works, and discovered that a portion of Gen. Quit- man's brigade had entered the town, and were successfully forcing their way towards the principal plaza. I then ordered up the 2d regiment of Texas mounted volunteers, who entered the city, dismounted, and, under the immediate orders of Gen. Henderson, co-operated with Gen. Quitman's brigade. Capt, Bragg's battery was also ordered up, supported by the 3d in- fantry ; and after firing for some time at the cathedral, a por- tion of it was likewise thrown into the city. Our troops ad- vanced from house to house, and from square to square, until they reached a street but one square in rear of the principal plaza, in and near which the enemy's force was mainly concen- trated. This advance was conducted vigorously but with due caution, and although destructive to the enemy, was attended with but small loss on our part. Captain Ridgely, in the mean time, had served a captured piece in battery No. 1, against the nty, until the advance of our men rendered it imprudent to fire DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. 249 in the direction of the Cathedral. I was now satisfied that we could operate successfidly in the city, and that the enemy had retired from the lower portion of it to make a stand behind his barricades. As Gen. Quitman's brigade had been on duty the previous night, I determined to withdraw the troops to the evacuated works, and concert with Gen. Worth a combined attack upon the town. The troops accordingly fell back de- liberately, in good order, and resumed their original positions, General Quitman's brigade being relieved after nightfall by that of General Hamer. On my return to camp, I met an offi- cer with the intelligence that General Worth, induced by the firing in the lower part of the chy, was about making an attack at the upper extremity, which had also been evacuated by the enemy to a considerable distance. I regretted that this infor- mation had not reached me before leaving the city, but still deemed it inexpedient to change my orders, and accordingly returned to the camp. A note from Gen. Worth, written at eleven o'clock, P. M., informed me that he had advanced to within a short distance of the principal plaza, and that the mortar (which had been sent to his division in the morning) was doing good execution within efiective range of the enemy's position. Desiring to make no further attempt upon the city without complete concert as to the lines and mode of approach, I in- structed that ofHcer to suspend his advance until I could have an interview with him on the following morning at his head- quarters. Early on the morning of the 24th, I received, through Colonel Moreno, a communication from General Ampudia, proposing to evacuate the town ; which, with the answer, were forwarded with my first despatch. I arranged with Colonel Moreno a cessation of fire until twelve o'clock, at which hour I would receive the answer of the Mexican general at General Worth's head-quarters, to which I soon repaired. In the mean time, General Ampudia had signified to General Worth his desire for a personal interview with me, to which I acceded, and which finally resulted in a capitulation, placmg the town 250 DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. and the material of war, with certain exceptions, in our posses- sion. A copy of that capitulation was transmitted with my first despatch. Upon occupying the city,' it was discovered to be of great strength in itself, and to have its approaches carefully and strongly fortified. The town and works were armed with forty-two pieces of cannon, well supplied with ammunition, and manned with a force of at least 7000 troops of the line, and from 2000 to 3000 irregulars. The force under my orders before Monterey, as exhibited by the accompanying return, was 425 officers, and 6220 men. Our artillery consisted of one ten-inch mortar, two twenty-four-pounder iiowitzers, and four light field batteries of four guns each — the mortar being the only piece suitable to the operations of a siege. Our loss is twelve officers and one hundred and eight men killed ; thirty-one officers and three hundred and thirty-seven men wounded. That of the enemy is not known, but is be- lieved considerably to exceed our own. I take pleasure in bringing to the notice of the government the good conduct of the troops, both regulars and volunteers, which has been conspicuous throughout the operations. I am proud to bear testimony to their coolness and constancy in battle, and the cheerfulness with which they have submitted to exposure and privation. To the general officers commanding divisions — Major Generals Butler and Henderson, and Briga- dier Generals Twiggs and Worth — I must express my obliga- tions for the efficient aid which they have rendered in their re- spective commands. I was unfortunately deprived, early on the 21st, of the valuable services of Major General Butler, who was disabled by a wound received in the attack on the city. Major General Henderson, commanding the Texan volun- teers, has given me important aid in the organization of the command, and its subsequent operations. Brigadier General Twiggs rendered important services with his division, and as the second in command after Major General Butler was disabled, brigadier General Worth was intrusted with an important de- tachment which rendered his operations independent of my DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. 251 own. These operations were conducted with ability, and crowned with complete success. I desire also to notice Brigadier Generals Haraer and Quit- man, commanding brigades in General Butler's Division. Lieu- tenant Colonels Garland and Wilson, commanding brigades in General Twiggs' Division. Colonels Mitchell, Campbell, Davis and Wood, commandii;g the Ohio, Tennessee, Mississippi, and 2d Texas regiments, respectively, and Majors Lear, Allen, and Abercrombie, commanding the 3d, 4th, and 1st regiments of infantry ; all of whom served under my eye, and conducted their commands with coolness and gallantry against the enemy. Colonel Mitchell, Lieut. Col. i\IcClung, Mississippi -regiment, Major Lear, 3d infantry, and Major Alexander, Tennessee re- giment, were all severely wounded, as were Captain Lamotte, 1st infantry, Lieut. Graham, 4th infantry. Adjutant Armstrong, Ohio regiment, Lieutenants Scudder and Allen, Tennessee re- giment, and Lieut. Howard, Mississippi regiment, while leading their men against the enemy's position, on the 21st and 23d. After the fall of Col. Mitchell, the command of the 1st Ohio regiment devolved upon Lieut. Col. Weller; that of the 3d infantry, after the fall of Major Lear, devolved in succession upon Capt. Bainbridge and Capt. Henry, the former being also wounded. The following named officers have been favourably noticed by their commanders: Lieut. Col. Anderson, and Ad- jutant Heiman, Tennessee regiment ; Lieut. Col. McClung, Captains Cooper and Downing, Lieutenants Patterson, Cal- houn, Moore, Russell, and Cook, Mississippi regiment; also Serjeant Major Hearlan, Mississippi regiment, and Major Price, and Capt. J. Smith, unattached, but serving with it. I beg leave also to call attention to the good conduct of Captain Johnston, Ohio regiment, and Lieut. Hooker, 1st artillery, serving on the statfof Gen. Hamer, and of Lieutenant Nichols, 2d artillery, on that of General Quitman. Captains Bragg and Ridgely served with their batteries during the operations under my own observation, and in part under my immediate orders, and exhibited distinguished skill and gallantry. Captain Web- ster, 1st artillery, assisted by Lieutenants Donaldson and Bo- 22 252 DETAILED REPORT CONTINUED. wen, rendered good service ^vith the howitzer battery, which was much exposed to the eneray''s fire on tiie 21st. From the nature of the operations, the 2d dragoons were not brought into action, but were usefully empkiyed, under the direction of Lieut. Col. May, as escorts, and in keeping open our communications. The 1st Kentucky regiment was also prevenled from participating in the action of the 21st, but rendered highly important services under Col. Ormsby, in covering the mortar battery, and holding in check the enemy's cavalry during the da}'. I have noticed above, the officers whose conduct either fell under my immediate eye, or is noticed only in minor reports which are not forwarded. For further mention of individuals, I beg leave to refer to the reports of division commanders herewith respectfully transmitted. I fully concur in their re- commendations, and desire that they be considered as a part of my own report. From the officers of my personal staff, and of the engineers, topographical engineers, and ordnance, associated with me, I have derived valuable and efficient assistance during the opera- tions. Col. Whiting, assistant quartermaster general. Colonels Croghan and Belknap, inspector generals. Major Bliss, assistant adjutant general, Captain Sibley, assistant quartermaster, Cap- tain Waggaman, commissary of subsistence, Caj)tain Eaton and Lieut. Garnett, aids-de-camp, and Major Kirby and Van Buren, pay department, served near my person, and were ever prompt, in all situations, in the communication of my orders and instructions. I must express my particular obligations to Brevet Major Mansfield and Lieut. Scarritt, corps of engineers. They both rendered most important services in reconnoitring the enemy's positions, conducting troops in attack, and strengthening the works captured from the enemy. Major Mansfield, though wounded on the 21st, remained on duty during that and the following day, until confined by his wound to camp. Capt. Williams, topographical engineers, to my great regret and the loss of the service, was m.ortally wounded while fearlessly exposing himself in the attack of the 21st. worth's detailed report. 253 Lieut. Pope, of the same corps, was active and zealous through- out the operations. Major Munroe, chief of the artillery, Major Craig and Capt. Ramsay, of the ordnance, were assidu- ous in the performance of their proper duties. The former superintended their mortar service on the 22d, as particularly mentioned in the report of Gen. Worth, to which I also refer for the services of the engineer and topographical officers de- tached with the second division. Surgeon Craig, medical director, was actively employed in the important duties of his department, and the medical staff generally were unremitting in their attention to the numerous wounded — their duties with the regular regiments being ren- dered uncommonly arduous by the small number serving in the field. I respectfully enclose herewith, in addition to the reports of division commanders, a field return of the force before Mon- terey on the 21st of September — a return of killed, wounded, and missing during the operations — and two topographical sketches — one exhibiting all the movements around IMonterey — the other on a large scale illustrating more particularly the operations in the lower quarter of the city — prepared respec- tively by Lieutenants Meade and Pope, topographical engineers. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, Z. Taylor, Major Gen. U. S. A., commanding. The Adjutant General of the Army, Washington, D. C. In justice to the gallant officers and corps of General Worth's Division, the annexed extract from his report of his operations is given, in connection with that of the commander- in-chief. '< When every officer and every soldier, regular and volun- teer, has, through a series of harassing and severe conflicts, in the valley and on the mountain, in the street and on the house- top, cheerfully, bravely, and successfully executed every sei- vice, and complied with eyery exaction of valour and patriotisni, the task is as ditficult as delicate to distinguish individuals; 254 OFFICERS DISTINGUISHED IN IT. and yet it will always happen, as it has always happened, in the varied scenes of battle and siege, that fortune presents to some those opportunities which all would have seized with gladness and avidity. It is my pleasing and grateful duty to present to the consideration of the .general-in-chief, and through him to the government, the distinguished conduct of Brigadier General Smith, (colonel of rifles ;) Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Childs, artillery battalion ; Colonel Hays, Texan riflemen ; Bre- vet Lieutenant Colonel Duncan, horse artillery; and Captain C. F. Smith, 2d artillery, commanding light troops 1st brigade. "My thanks are also especially due to Lieutenant Colonel Staniford, 8th, fcommanding 1st brigade;) Major Munroe, chief of artillery, (general staff;) Brevet Major Brown and Cap- tain J, R. Vinton, artillery battalion ; Captain J. B. Scott, ar- tillery battalion, (light troops;) Major Scott, commanding, and Captain Merrill, 5th ; Captains Miles, (commanding,) Holmes, and Ross, 7th infantry, and Captain Screvin, commanding 8th infantry ; to Lieutenant Colonel Walker, (captain of rifles ;) Major Chevalier and Captain McCulloch, of the Texan, and Captain Blanchard, of the Louisiana volunteers ; to Lieutenants Mackall, (commanding battery,) Roland, Martin, Hays, Irons, Clarke, and Curd, horse artillery; Lieutenant Longstreet, com- manding light company Sth ; Lieutenant Ayres, artillery batta- lion, who was among the first in the assault upon the palace, and who secured the colours. Each of the officers named either headed special detachments, columns of attack, storming parties, or detached guns ; and all w'ere conspicuous for con- duct and courage. My attention has been particularly directed, by General Smith, to the gallant conduct of Lieutenant Gard- ner, 7th infantry, during the assault upon the city; on which occasion he threw himself in advance, and on the most exposed points, animating the men by his brave example. Particular attention has also been called to the Lieutenants Nicholls, /'brothers,) Louisiana volunteers, as having highly distinguished themselves by personal daring and efficient service. The offi- cers of brigade and regimental staflT were conspicuous in the field, or in their particular departments. Lieutenants Hanson, OFFICERS KILLED AND W O U X D E D . 255 (commanding,) Vandorn, (aid-de-camp 7th ;) Lieutenant Ro- binson, 5th, (quartermaster's department,) on the stafl^of Gene- ral Smith; Lieutenant and Adjutant Clarke, 8th infantry, staff 1st brigade ; Lieutenants Benjamin, adjutant artillery battalion ; Peck, ordnance office, artillery battalion ; G. Deas, adjutant 5th, and Page, adjutant 7th infantry, are highly commended by their respective chiefs; to the justness of which I have the pleasure to add my personal obsea'ation. In common with the entire division, piy particular thanks are tendered to Assistant Sur- geons Porter, (senior,) Byrne, Conrad, De Leon, and Roberts, (medical department,) who were ever at hand, in the close fight, promptly administering to the wounded and suffering soldier. To the officers of the staff, general and personal, more espe- cially associated with myself — honourable Colonel Balie Pey- ton, Louisiana troops, who did me the honour to serve as aid- de-camp ; Captain Sanders, military engineers ; LieutenanP Meade, topographical engineers ; Lieutenants E. Deas, Daniels, and Ripley, quartermaster's and commissary's staff, and Lieu- tenants Pemberton, 4th artillery, and Wood, 8th infantry, my aids-de-camp — I have to express the greatest obligation. Li such diversified operations, during t^ three days and nights, they were constantly in motion, performing every executive duty with zeal and intelligence, only surpassed by daring and courage in conflict. I beg to commend each to special con- sideration. *' We have to lament the gallant Captains McKavett, 8th infantry, an officer of high merit, killed on the 21st, and Gil- lespie, Texas volunteers, on the 22d. The latter eminently distinguished himself, while leading his brave company at the storming of the first heigiit, and perished in seeking similar dfitinetion on a second occasion. Captain Gallin and Lieute- nant Potter, 7lh, Lieutenant Russell, 5lh, and Wainwright, 8th infantry, and Lieutenant Reece, Texas riflemen, received hon- ourable (happily not mortal) wounds. Annexed is an accurate to[)Ographical sketch of the theatre of operations ; for which I am indebted, as in many other respects, to the intelligent zeal and gallantry of Lieutenant Meade, engineers. 22* M 256 COMMENT ON THE ACTION. " The following non-commissioned officers are reported as having highly distinguished themselves: Serjeants Hazard, 4th, and Dilworth, 3d artillery; Quartermaster Serjeant Henry, 7th infantry; Cross, company C. ; Roynds, Bradford, (colour Ser- jeant,) and Wragg, company E. ; Bailey, company D. ; and Ballard, 7th infantry." Where few, if any, were found wanting, in the protracted, arduous, and singularly dangerous duty imposed on the troops who stormed Monterey, it is not possihle, however grateful the task, to do historical justice to each individual. The reports of the commanders, already quoted, must therefore close the notice of personal merit, which shone forth on that memorable occasion — memorable not only in the annals of America, but in the records of modern warfare. A town, situated where ^nature pointed out security, protected on two sides by moun- tains, and on two otiiers by a continuous series of fortresses; every house constructed as if defiance to enemies rather than shelter to friends had been intended ; every street walled up with immovable barriers ; heavy ordnance on every com- manding elevation, and twelve thousand men in arms to defend every accessible point ; a'town thus built and thus fortified, was in three days entered and possessed by six thousand as- sailants, two-thirds of them unused not only to battle, but even to the ordinary hardships of military life. Commentary cannot magnify the lustre of such an achievement. If it is right and reasonable to applaud actions, involving of necessity the inflic- tion of misery and the sacrifice of life, the capture of Monterey is one to command unqualified admiration. When General Ampudia's desire for a temporary cessation of the assault had been assented to, General Taylor, accom- panied by several officers, met him on tiie 24th of Septemb'er, at a house designated for a conference. The Mexican com- mander there stated officially, that commissioners of the United States, appointed to treat with Mexico respecting the terms of a peace, had been received by the government of the latter country ; and further, that a change in that government having taken place, the orders under which he defended Monterey COMMISSION ON CAPITULATION. 257 were no longer virtual. Under these circumstances he pro- fessed to desire the conference. A conversation between him and General Taylor ensued, when it was discovered that the views of Ampudia were wholly inadmissible, and that no set- tlement could probably be made without a further appeal to arms. At this stage of the proceedings, it was suggested on the part of Ampudia's friends, that a mixed commission should be appointed to consider the terms of capitulation ; which being acceded to, General Taylor appointed General Worth, General J. P. Henderson, and Colonel Jefferson Davis, on his behalf; and General Ampudia appointed General J. Ma. Ortega, Gen- eral P. Raguena, and Seiior M. Ma. Llano, the governor of the city. The instructions of General Taylor to the United Slates' commissioners were embodied by them in the following articles : Copy of demand by the United States'' Commissioners. " I. As the legitimate result of the operations before this place, and the present position of the contending armies, we demand the surrender of the town, the arms and munitions of war, and all other public property within the place. < [Killed 63, wounded 127.] 9 Genehal Worth's. Artillery Fifth Infantry I Seventh Infantry 2 Eighth Infantry I Phoenix Company of Lou- ") isiana Volunteers. ^ Colonel Hays' Regiment 'i of Texas Volunteers. 3 4 14 14 11 4 47 [Killed 39, wounded 41.] . Gexeral Butler's General Commanding . . . Kentucky Regiment Ohio Rfgiment Tennessee Regiment. . . . Mississippi Regiment. . . . Colonel Wood's Texas Rangers. 4 .. 25 15 27 9 9 27 31 23 9 7 106 12 19 [Killed 56, wounded 224.] Grand total 13 72 . 3 . . 53 . . . . 5 .. 68 ... 5 125 Grand total killed Wounded 17 17 4 17 21 5 32 75 47 Killed and wounded Missing 16 .. 208 16 .. 246 158 , 392 550 11 Grand total, killed, wounded, and missing 561 OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY. 263 CHAPTER XIV. Occupation of the City by Worth's Division — Encampment of Butler's and Twiggs' Divisions — Consideration of the Terms of Capitulation — Implied Censure by Congress of the Terms — Defence of the same — Jcflferson Davis' Views regarding the Capitulation — Taylor's Letter to the Adjutant General, justifying it — Private Letter on the same Subject, and on his past Operations and future Plans — Concluding Remarks. As soon as the Mexican army had evacuated Monterey, General Taylor quartered General Worth's Division in it, and continued the two other divisions of his army at the grove of San Domingo, the only woodland in the neighbourhood of the city. The wounded were didy cared for, and all who had shared the labours and dangers of the siege enjoyed a period of comparative repose. Immediate measures, however, were adopted, to restore and improve the defences of the city, and to be prepared for future active operations if the hostilities should be renewed. Before the recital of General Taylor's subsequent movements is commenced, it is proper to recur to the terms of the capitulation. A portion of his own troops was undoubtedly at the moment disappointed, on seeing the Mexican army departing, with all the parade of music, ban- ners, and arms, when it was believed to be wholly at the mercy of the victors. Time and reflection dissipated this feeling, which had never interfered with the respect or confidence with which Taylor had previously inspired his men. But con- demnation of his policy was seriously avowed in a quarter, which affected his position before the country. When the news of the convention of Monterey was received at Wash- ington, it found little favour with the government, or with a portion of the administration party in Congress. When a re- solution of thanks to General Taylor, and the army under his command, for their gallantry in the capture of Monterey, was under consideration, a proviso was offered and finally adopted, in these words : " That nothing herein contained shall be con- strued into an approbation of the terms of the capitulation of Monterey." The friends of General Taylor contended that 23 M 2 264 TERjrS OF CAPITULATION JUSTIFIED. this proviso was in effect a resolution of censure, and on this ground many of them refused to vote for the original resolu- tion of thanks. It becomes necessary to show how entirely unmerited was this deliberate exception to his conduct. The first proper testimony on this head is that of the commissioners who agreed to the Convention. They are men, whose intelli- gence, patriotism, and courage are above suspicion, and who would neither have counselled nor sanctioned any terms short of the most honourable and expedient which our army could have enforced. Colonel Davis, one of the commissioners, ably defended the convention in a document already quoted, and the grounds of his defence were fully approved by General Worth. That document takes briefly this view of the question : " It is demonstrable, from the position and known prowess of the two armies, that we could drive the enemy from the town ; but the town was untenable whilst the main fort (called the new citadel) remained in the hands of the enemy. Being without siege artillery or entrenching tools, we could only hope to carry this fort by storm, after a heavy loss from our army; which, isolated in a hostile country, now numbered less than half the forces of the enemy. When all this had been achieved, what more would we have gained than by the capitulation ? «' General Taylor's force was too small to invest the town. It was, therefore, always in the power of the enemy to retreat, bearing his light arms. Our army, poorly provided, and with very insufficient transportation, could not have overtaken, if they had pursued the flying enemy. Hence the conclusion, that as it was not in our power to capture the main body of the Mexican army, it is unreasonable to suppose their general would have surrendered at discretion. The moral effect of retiring under the capitulation was certainly greater than if the enemy had retired without our consent. By this course we secured the large supply of ammunition he had collected in Monterey — which, had the assault been continued, must have been exploded by our shells, as it was principally stored in the < Cathedral,' which, being supposed to be filled with troops, "Was the especial aim of our pieces. The destruction which Taylor's defence of the terms. 265 this explosion would have produced must have involved the advance of both divisions of our troops; and I commend this to the contemplation of those whose arguments have been drawn from facts learned since the commissioners closed their negotiations." The correspondence of General Taylor further elucidates the respective positions of his own and the enemy's forces at the time of the capitulation. The armistice not having been ap- proved by the President, he was instructed to "give the requi- site notice, that the armistice was to cease at once, and that each party was at liberty to resume and prosecute hostilities without restriction." The reply to the letter enclosing this order is subjoined. It is addressed to the Adjutant General. " Camp near Monterey, November 8, 1846. «< Sir : In reply to so much of the communication of the Secre- tary of War, as relates to the reasons which induced the con- vention resulting in the capitulation of Monterey, I have the honour to submit the following remarks. <' The convention presents two distinct points : First, the permission granted the Mexican army to retire with their arms, &c. Secondly, the temporary cessation of hostilities for the term of eight weeks. I shall remark on these in order. " The force with which I marched on Monterey was limited by causes beyond my control to about six thousand men. With this force, as every military man must admit, who has seen the ground, it was entirely impossible to invest Monterev so closely as to prevent the escape of the garrison. Although the main communication with the interior was in our possession, yet one route was open to the Mexicans throughout the operations, and could not be closed, as were also other minor tracks and passes through the mountains. Had we, therefore, insisted on more rigorous terms than those granted, the result would have been the escape of the body of the Mexican force, with the destruc lion of its artillery and magazines, our only advantage being the capture of a few prisoners of war, at the expense of valuable lives and much damage to the city. The consideration of hu- 266 MILITARYPOINTS IN THE QUESTION. manity was present to my mind during the conference which led to the convention, and outweighed, in my judgment, the doubtful advantages to be gained by a resumption of the attack upon the town. This conclusion has been fully confirmed by an inspection of the enemy's position and means since the sur- render. It was discovered that his principal magazine, con- taining an immense amount of powder, was in the Cathedral, completely exposed to our shells from two directions. The explosion of this mass of powder, which must have ultimately' resulted from a continuance of the bombardment, would have been infinitely disastrous, involving the destruction not only of Mexican troops, but of non-combatants, and even our own people, had we pressed the attack. " In regard to the temporary cessation of hostilities, the fact that we are not at this moment, within eleven days of the termi- nation of the period fixed by the convention, prepared to move forward in force, is a sufficient explanation of the military reasons which dictated this suspension of arms. It paralyzed the enemy during a period when, from the want of necessary means, we could not possibly move. 1 desire distinctly to state, and to call the attention of the authorities to the fact, that, with all diligence in breaking mules and setting up wagons, the first wagons in addition to our original train from Corpus Christi, (and but one hundred and twenty-five in number,) reached m} head-quarters on the same day with the secretary's communi- cation of October 13th, viz : the 2d inst. At the date of the surrender of Monterey, our force had not more than ten days' rations, and even now, with all our endeavours, we have not more than twenty-five. The task of fighting and beating THE enemy is among THE LEAST DIFFICULT THAT WE EN- COUNTER — the great question of sup})lies necessarily controls all the operations in a country like this. At the date of the convention, I could not of course have foreseen that the Depart- ment would direct an important detachment from my command without consulting me, or without waiting the result of the main operation under my orders. '< I have touched tiie prominent military points involved in NATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS. 267 the convention of Monterey. There were other considerations which weighed with the commissioners in framing, and with myself in approving the articles of the convention. In the conference with General Ampudia, I was distinctly told by him that he had invited it to spare the further effusion of blood, and because General Santa Anna had declared himself favorable to peace. I knew that our government had made propositions to that of Mexico to negotiate, and I deemed that the change of government in that country since my instructions, fully war- ranted me in entertaining considerations of policy. My grand motive in moving forward with very limited supplies had been to increase the inducements of the Mexican Government to ne- gotiate for peace. Whatever may be the actual views or dis- position of the Mexican rulers or of General Santa Anna, it is not unknown to the Government that I had the very best reason for believing the statement of General Ampudia to be true. It was my opinion at the time of the convention, and it has not been changed, that the liberal treatment of the Mexican army, and the suspension of arms, would exert none but a favorable influence in our behalf. " The result of the entire operation has been to throw the Mexican army back more than three hundred miles to the city of San Luis Potosi, and to open the country to us as far as we choose to penetrate it up to the same point. " It has been my purpose in this communication not so much to defend the convention from the censure which I deeply re- gret to fmd implied in the secretary's letter, as to show that it was not adopted without cogent reasons, most of which occur of themselves to the minds of all who are acquainted with the condition of things here. To that end I beg that it may be laid before the General-in-chief and Secretary of War." The nature of the assaults made on General Taylor, in con- sequence of the capitulation so ably and conclusively defended and justified in the foregoing official letter, induced one of his friends, whom he had privately addressed on the same subject, in connection with a general review of his operations, to per- 23* 268 PRIVATE LETTER OF TAYLOR. mit the publication of a letter not intended for the public eye. That letter superadds such testimony in favour of his whole course, that being already before the world, it would be an affectation injurious to his reputation to exclude it from these pages. It is the more interesting, therefore, as an unstudied and frank exposition of his conduct and motives, and of the dithculties which he encountered in the fulfilment of the mo- mentous duties imposed upon him. Portions of the letter were suppressed in the original publication. It is here given as it first appeared. Head-Quarters, Army of Occupation or Invasion, Monterey, Mexico, Nov. 5, 1846. My Dear ******* Your very kind and acceptable letter of the 31st of August, ******** reached me only a short time since for which I beg leave to tender to you my sincere thanks. [A few confidential remarks on certain public transactions are here omitted.] After considerable apparent delay on the part of the Quarter- master's Department, in getting steamboats into the Rio Grande adapted to its navigation, I succeeded, towards the latter part of August, in throwing forward to Camargo, (a town situated on the San Juan river, three miles from its junction with the Rio Grande, on the west side, nearly five hundred miles from Brazos Island by water, and two hundred by land, and one hundred and forty from this place,) a considerable depot of provisions, ordnance, ammunition, and forage, and then, having brought together an important portion of my command, I de- termined on moving on this place. Accordingly, after collect- ing 1700 pack mules, with their attendants and conductors, in the enemy's country, (the principal means of transportation for our provisions, baggage, &c.,) I left, on the 5th of September, to join my advance, which had preceded me a few days to Se- ralvo, a small village seventy-five miles on the route, which I did on the 9th, and, after waiting there a few days for some of the corps to get up, moved on and reached here on the 19th, with 6250 men — 2700 regulars, the balance volunteers. For THE CAPITULATION JUSTIFIED. 2(39 what took place afterwards I must refer you to several reports, particularly to my detailed one of the 9th ult. I do not be- lieve the authorities at Washington are at all satisfied with my conduct in regard to the terms of capitulation entered into with the Mexican commander, which you no doubt have seen, as they have been made public through the ofBcial organ, and copied into various other newspapers. I have this moment received an answer (to my despatch announcing the surrender of Monterey, and the circumstances attending the same,) from the Secretary of War, stating that " it was regretted by the President that it was not advisable to insist on the terms I had proposed in my com.munication to the Mexican commander, in regard to giving up the city," — adding that "the circum- stances which dictated, no doubt justified the change." Al- though the terms of capitulation may be considered too liberal on our part by the President and his advisers, as well as by many others at a distance, particularly by those who do not understand the position which we occupied, (otherwise they might come to a different conclusion in regard to the matter,) yet, on due reflection, I see nothing to induce me to regret the course I pursued. The proposition on the part of General Ampudia, which had much to do in determining my course in the matter, was based on the ground that our government had proposed to his to set- tle existing difficulties by negotiation, (which I knew was the case, without knowing the result,) which was then under con- sideration by the proper authorities, and which he (General Ampudia,) had no doubt would result favourably, as the whole of his people were in favour of peace. If so, I considered the further effusion of blood not only unnecessary, but improper. Their force w^as also considerably larger than ours ; and, from the size and position of the place, we could not completely invest it ; so that the greater portion of their troops, if not the whole, had they been disposed to do so, could, any nioht, have abandoned the city at once, entered the mountain passes, and effected their retreat, do what we could ! Had we been put to the alternative of taking the place by storm, (whicb ther*? 270 Taylor's views on the war. is no doubt we should have succeeded in doing,) we should, in ail probability, have lost fifty or one hundred men in killed, besides the wounded, which I wished to avoid, as there ap- peared to be a {)rospect of peace, even if a distant one. I also wished to avoid the destruction of women and children, which must have been very great, had the storming process been resorted to. Besides, they had a very large and strong fortification, a short distance from the city, which, if carried with the bayonet, must have been taken at great sacrifice of life ; and, with our limited train of heavy or battering artillery, it would have required twenty or twenty-five days to take it by regular approaches. That they should have surrendered a place nearly as strong as Quebec, well fortified under the direction of skilful engi- neers, their works garnished with forty-two pieces of artillery, abundantly supplied with ammunition, garrisoned by 7000 re- gulars and 2000 irregular troops, in addition to some thousand citizens capable of, and no doubt actually, bearing arms, and aiding in its defence, to an opposing force of half their number, scantily supplied with provisions, and with a light train of ar- tillery, is among the unaccountable occurrences of the times. I am decidedly opposed to carrying the war beyond Saltillo in this direction, which place has been entirely abandoned by the Mexican forces, all of whom have been concentrated at San Luis Potosi ; and I shall lose no time in taking possession of the former as soon as the cessation of hostilities referred to expires, which I have notified the Mexican authorities will be the close on the 13th instant, by direction of the President of the United States. If we are (in the language of Mr. Polk and General Scott) under the necessity of " conquering a peace," and that by tak- ing the capital of the country, we must go to Vera Cruz, take that place, and then march on the city of Mexico. To do so in any other direction, I consider out of the question. But, admitting that we conquer a peace by doing so, say at the end of the next twelve months, will the amount of blood and treasure, which must be expended in doing so, be compensated HIS PLAN OF S E C U R I iN G PEACE. 271 by the same ? I think not — especially, if the country we sub- due is to be given up ; and I imagine there are but few indi- viduals in our country who think of annexing Mexico to the United States. I do not intend to carry on my operations fas previously stated) beyond Saltillo, deeming it next to impracticable to do so. It then becomes a question as to what is best to be done. It seems to me, the most judicious course to be pursued on our part, would be to take possession at once of the line we would accept by negotiation, extending from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific, and occupy the same, or keep what we already have possession of; and that, with Tampico, (which I hope to take in the course of next month, or as soon as I can get the means of transportation,) will give us all on this side of the Sierra Madre, and as soon as I occupy Saltillo, will include six or seven states or provinces, thus holding Tampico, Vic- toria, Monterey, Saltillo, Monclova, Chihuahua, (which, I pre- sume, General Wool has possession of by this time) Santa Fe, and the Californias, and say to Mexico, " drive us from tr.e country !" — throwing on her the responsibility and expense of carrying on offensive war — at the same time closely blockading all her ports on the Pacific and the Gulf. A course of this kind, if persevered in for a short time, would soon bring her to her proper senses, and compel her to sue for peace — pro- vided there is a government in the country sufficiently stable for us to treat with, which I fear will hardly be the case for many years to come. Without large reinforcements of volun- teers from the United States, say ten or fifteen thousand, (those previously sent out having already been greatly reduced by sickness and other casualties), I do not believe it would be advisable to march beyond Saltillo, which is more than two hundred miles beyond our depots on the Rio Grande, a very long line on which to keep up supplies (over a land route in a country like this) for a large force, and certain to be attended with an expense which it will be frightful to contemplate, when closely looked into. From Saltillo to San Luis Potosi, the next place of import- 272 STATEMENT OF HIS DIFFICULTIES. ance on the road to the city of Mexico, is three hundred miles, one hundred and forty badly watered, where no supplies of any kind could be procured for men or horses. I have informed the war department that 20,000 efficient men would be neces- sary to insure success if we move on that place, ("a city con- taining a population of 60,000, where the enemy could bring together and sustain, besides the citizens, an army of 50,000) a force which, I apprehend, will hardly be collected by us, with the train necessary to feed it, as well as to transport va- rious other supplies, particularly ordnance and munitions of war. In regard to the armistice, which would have expired by limitation in a few days, we lost nothing by it, as we could not move even now, had the enemy continued to occupy Saltillo ; for, strange to say, the first wagon which has reached me since the declaration of war was on the 2d instant, the same day on which I received from Washington an acknowledgment of iHy despatch announcing the taking of Monterey ; and then I re- ceived only one hundred and twenty-five, so that I have been, since May last, completely crippled, and am still so, for want of transportation. After raking and scraping the country for miles around Camargo, collecting every pack mule and other means of transportation, I could bring here only 80,000 rations, (fifteen days' supply,) with a moderate supply of ordnance, ammunition^c, to do which, all the corps had to leave behind a portion of their camp equipage necessary for their comfort, and, in some instances, among the volunteers, their personal baggage. I moved in such a way, and with such limited means, that, had I not succeeded, I should no doubt have been severely reprim.anded, if nothing worse. I did so to sustain the administration, * * * * ***** Of the two r&friments of mounted men from Tennessee and Kentucky, who left their respective states to join me, in June, the latter has just reached Camargo ; the former had not got to Matamoros at the latest dates from there. Admitting that they will be as long in returning as in getting here, (to say no- POPULAR APPROBATION OF TAYLOR. 273 thing of the time necessary to recruit their horses) and were to be discharged in time to reach their homes, they could serve in Mexico but a very short time. The foregoing remarks are not made with the view of finding fault with any one, but to point out the difficulties with which I have had to contend. Monterey, the capital of New Leon, is situated on the San Juan river, where it comes out of the mountains, the city (which contains a population of about twelve thousand) being in part surrounded by them, at the head of a large and beautiful val- ley. The houses are of stone, in the Moorish style, with flat roofs, which, with their strongly enclosed yards and gardens, in high stone walls all looped for musketry, make thern each a fortress within itself. It is the most important place in Northern Mexico, or on the east side of the Sierra Madre, commanding the only pass or road for carriages from this side, between it and the Gulf of Mexico, to the table lands of the Sierra, by or through which the city of Mexico can be reached. I much fear I shall have exhausted your patience, before you get half through this long and uninteresting letter. If so, you can only commit it to the flames, and think no more about it, as I write in great haste, besides being interrupted every five minutes ; so that you must make great allowances for blots, interlineations, and blunders, as well as want of connection in many parts of the same. Be so good as to present me most kindly to your excellent lady, and accept my sincere wishes for your continued health, prosperity, and fame. I remain, truly and sincerely, your friend, Z. Taylor. It is conceived that the foregoing correspondence thoroughly sustains General Taylor in the apparently liberal terms which he allowed Ampudia in the capitulation of Monterey. Public opinion sustained him from the first ; and, it is believed, that there are few now so bold as to except to his course. If so, it is the only instance in the many and arduous tasks which he has executed since the commencement of the Mexican war, 274 Taylor's forces at monterey. which even his enemies could seize upon as worthy of exception. Tried in every emergency, he has been found equal to the trust reposed in him. So has the nation felt, so has it spoken, when, with one indignant voice, it crushed a suggestion that he should be superseded in the field of his many extraordinary trials and triumphs. CHAPTER XV. Taylor's Force after the Capitulation of Monterey — Reflections on his Course — AJvices from Washington — Instructions regarding Supplies — Regarding an Expedition against the Coast — Further Correspondence — Taylor's Replies^ Opinions regarding his own future Operations — Regarding the Force requisite to invest Vera Cruz — Assertion of his Rights as Commander — Answer to the Secretary respecting forced Supplies — General Wool's Entry into Monclova. The correspondence of General Taylor, given in the pre- ceding pages, for the purpose of elucidating the single subject of the capitulation of Monterey, contains, also, references to other matters which have not yet been presented in a narrative form. To these it is necessary to revert, in order that the posi- tion of the army under Taylor's command, and the plans of the War Department, affecting its strength and movements, may be fully understood. The capture of Monterey found the army reduced at that place to an effective force of about five thousand five hundred men. This small number was soon further diminished by sick- ness, occasioned by the climate, the season, and hardship, to which more than two-thirds of the men were wholly unused. General Taylor's letters have shown that, had no armistice been agreed upon, he would still have been unable to make any im- portant hostile demonstration far beyond Monterey. It is true that a large body of volunteers was at different points on the Rio Grande ; but the difficulty of subsistence, on a line already extended one hundred and fifty miles, fi)rbade the immediate FAILURE OF PEACE OVERTURES. 275 advance of the army. This was a difficulty apprehended by Taylor from the first, and for which he was in no sense respon- sible. At the moment that the operations against Monterey were in progress, a change of policy, as regards the mode of procuring supplies, was recommended by the government. Advices having been received at Washington that a new effort to secure peace by negotiation had failed — the reliance on Santa Anna's pacific disjjosition having been misplaced — the Secretary of War wrote to General Taylor that this deter- mination on the part of the enemy suggested a change of policy in regard to our dealings with the people of the country occupied by our troops. On this particular subject the Secre- tary continued his instructions, under date of the 22d of Sep- tember, in these terms : '< Public opinion, it is to be .presumed, will have some influ- ence upon the decision of that congress. The progress of our arms, and the positions we may occupy when that body shall come together, cannot fail to have effect upon its action in re- gard to our proposal to negotiate. Should the campaign be successful, and our troops be in possession of important de- partments of the enemy's country, the inducement for a speedy peace will be greatly strengthened. " It is far from being certain that our military occupation of the enemy's country is not a blessing to the inhabhants in the vicinity. They are shielded from the burdens and exactions of their own authorities, protected in their persons, and fur- nished with a most profitable market for most kinds of their property. A state of things so favourable to their interests may induce them to wish the continuance of hostilities. "The instructions heretofore given have^required you to treat with great kindness the people, to respect private pro- perty, and to abstain from appropriating it to the public use without purchase at a fair price. In some respects, this is going far beyond the common requirements of civilized war- fare. An invading army has the unquestionable right to draw its supplies from the enemy without paying for them, and to require contributions for its support. It may be proper, and 24 27G INSTRUCTIONS REGARDING SUPPLIES. good policy requires that discriminations should be made in imposing these burdens. Those who are friendly disposed or contribute aid shoi^Jd be treated with liberality ; yet the enemy may be made to feel the weight of the war, and thereby be- come interested to use their best efforts to bring about a state of peace. " It is also but just that a nation which is involved in a war, to ' obtain justice or to maintain its just rights, should shift the burden of it, as far as practicable, from itself, by throwing it upon the enemy. "Upon the liberal princijiles of civilized warfare, either of three modes may be pursued in relation to obtaining su])plies from the enemy ; first to purchase them on such terms as the inhabitants of the country may choose to exact ; second, to pay a fair price without regard. to the enhanced value resulting from the presence of a foreign army; and third, to require them as contributions, without paying or engaging to pay therefor. '< The last mode is the ordinary one, and you are instructed to adopt it, if in that way you are satisfied you can get abun- dant supplies for your forces ; but should you apprehend a dif- ficulty in this respect, then you will adopt the policy of paying the ordinary price, without allowing to the owners the advan- tages of the enhancement of the price resulting from the in- creased demand. Should you apprehend a deficiency under this last mode of dealing with the inhabitants, you will be obliged to submit to their exactions, provided by this mode you can supply your wants on better terms than by drawing what you may need from the United States. . Should you attempt to supply your troops by contributions, or the appro- priation of private property, you will be careful to exempt the property of all foreigners from any and all exactions whatso- ever. The President hopes you will be able to derive from the enemy's country, without expense to the United States, the supplies you may need, or a considerable part of them ; but should you fail in this, you will procure them in the most economical manner." EXPEDITION AGAINST TAMPICO. 277 The same communication of the Secretary, from which the foregoing extracts are made, sets forth the plan of the govern- ment in the prosecution of the war. This plan was subse- quently modified, but as the instructions concerning it were partially fulfilled, they are here inserted as a necessary expla- nation of General Taylor's movements. The Secretary says: " It is proposed to take possession of the department of Tamaulipas, or some of the principal places in it, at the earliest practicable period. In this enterprize, it is believed that a co- operation of our squadron in the gulf will be important, if not necessary. It is presumed that a force of about three or four thousand men will be sufficient for this purpose — one third of wliich should be of the regular army. " We have not now sufhciently accurate knovvledge of the country to determine definitely as to the manner of conducting this enterprize. The dangerous navigation of the gulf at this season of the year, induces the hope that a column may be advanced by land from the present base of operations — the Rio Grande; and that it may have an occasional communica- tion with our ships in the gulf. Sliould this land route be adjudged impracticable, or a debarkation be preferred, two ■points of landing have been suggested, one at the Bay of Sant- ander, and the other at Tampico. If a force be landed at the Bay of Santander, or in the vicinity of Soto la Marina, it could probably reach, without much difficulty, some of the principal places in the department of Tamaulipas, and march to, and take possession of Tampico ; while the route is yet open to be settled, as a better knowledge of the country may indicate, it is proper to speak more in detail of the force to be employed on this service. " It is not proposed to withdraw any of that now witli you in your advance into the interior, nor to divert any of the rein- forcements that you may need to carry on your operations in that quarter. It is believed that a sufficient force of the regular army for this expedition — about one regiment — may be drawn from the sea-board, including such companies as may have been left on the lower Rio Grande, and can be spared for that 278 INSTRUCTIONS TO GEN. PATTERSON. purpose. If a column should advance beyond that river into the interior of Tamaulipas, a part of the troops now on that line, might, it is presumed, be safely withdrawn to augment the invading column. It is not, however, intended to weaken the force on that line any further than it can, in your opinion, be safely done. "It is also proposed to put the force for the invasion of Tamauhpas under the immediate command of Major General Patterson, to be accompanied by Brigadier Generals Pillow and Shields, unless it should interfere with your previous arrange- ment with regard to these officers. To prevent delay, General Patterson will be directed to make preparations for this move- ment, so far as it can be done without disturbing your present arrangements on the Rio Grande, and proceed immediately, and without further orders from the Department, unless you should be of opinion that the withdrawal of the force proposed for this expedition, would interfere with your operations. This direction is given to General Patterson, because the time ne- cessary to receive information from you and return an answer from the department, may be the propitious moment for ope- rating with eiTect. The movement ought to be made with the least possible delay consistently with the health of the troops. It will be left to General Patterson, under your instructions, to decide whether the movement shall be by land or sea, or ])artly Dy each. It is desired that you should give him your views in regard to the last mode of prosecuting this expedition, parti- cularly as to the amount and description of force, and the quantity and kind of ordnance, &c., &c., which may be re- quired. Preparatory arrangements will be immediately ordered here for fitting out the expedition therein proposed, by which transports, provisions, &c., will be in readiness at the Brazos Santiago. By the time this communication will be received by you, it is expected that, you will have reached Monterey, and perhaps Saltillo, and be able to present to the Department d satisfactory opinion of your ability to progress beyond that point. We shall anxiously look for information from you. Your advance to San Luis Potosi, if practicable, is rendered PROSECUTION OF THE WAR. 279 greatly more important by the movement contemplated to Tarapico, by which you will, it is believed, be enabled to effect a co-operation with the squadron, and with the column under Major General Patterson, on a line in advance of the Rio Grande. The squadron is now under orders to attack Tam- pico, with every prospect of success, and the probability is that the place will be captured in advance of General Patterson's movement." On the same day that General Taylor was thus addressed, the Secretary wrote to General Patterson that, unless General Taylor had made arrangements to employ him otherwise, it was designed that the expedition against the State of Tamau- lipas should be under his immediate command. The Secretary added, "As soon as you shall learn from General Taylor that a sufficient force for the enterprize can be spared, and receive his directions in regard to it, you will lose no time in putting them in execution. If General Taylor should not give direc- tions as to moving by land or water, the choice will then be left for your determination." On the 13th of October, the Secretary addressed General Taylor in reference to the capitulation of Monterey, in which he expressed the "President's regret that it was not deemed advisable to insist on the terms first proposed." And after fur- ther remarks he proceeds to say : "As the offer recently made by the United States to open negotiations for a peace was not acceded to by the present rulers of Mexico, but reserved to be submitted to and acted on by a congress to be assembled on the 6th of December next, it was deemed by the government here highly important, that the war in the mean time should be prosecuted with the utmost vigour, to the end that they might be made sensible of the evils of its continuance, and thereby become more inclined to bring it to a speedy close. In pursuance of this policy an expedition was proposed, in my despatch of the 22d ult., for the purpose of taking possession of the entire Department of Tamaulipas, and, under the belief that it would not interfere with your plans and operations, no doubt was entertained that 24* N QSO DESIGNS OF THE GOVERNMENT. it would receive your concurrence and support. In anticipa- tion thereof, measures have been already taken to carry it cut at the earliest practicable period. "By the arrangement you have made for a temporary sus- pension of hostilities, within certain limits of the enemy's country, if continued to the end of the time stipulated, a con- siderable part of Tamaulipas will be exempted from military operations, until within a few days of the time fixed for the meeting of the Mexican Congress, and the expedition thereby delayed, or if prosecuted by the land or naval forces, might bring into question the good faith of the United States. <'In the despatch before referred to, you will perceive that an attack by our naval force upon some places on the coast of Tamaulipas is also contemplated. Whatever may be the ad- vantage or the necessity of the co-operation of a land force, it must be witliheld until near the close of November, if the armistice is continued to the end of the stipulated period. " The government is fully persuaded that, if you had been aware of the special reasons disclosed in the despatch of the 22d ultimo, and the intentions of the government, still enter- tained, you would not have acceded to the suspension of hos- tilities for even the limited period specified in the articles of capitulation ; but as its continuance depends on the orders of your government, you are instructed to give the requisite no- tice that the armistice is to cease at once, and that each party is at liberty to resume and prosecute hostilities without restric- tion. " The city of Monterey is regarded as an important acqui- sition. While held by a competent force, the authorities of Mexico may be considered as dispossessed of the Department of New Leon. It is therefore proposed that you should make the necessary arrangements for retaining possession of it during the war. '" Not only Monterey, but the State of New Leon may, it is presumed, be regarded as a conquered country, and, as a con- sequence, the civil authorities of Mexico are in a measure superseded, or, at least, subject to your control. You will PLAN AGAINST VERA CRUZ. 281 give this subject your consideration, and permit only such civil functionaries to retain and exercise power as are well disposed towards the United States. "It is an object of much interest to the government to be put in possession of your views as to your future operations. "The season for carrying on military operations in the enemy's country lying on the. gulf has now arrived. It is deemed important that w'e should have possession of the whole of Taraaulipas before the meeting of the Mexican Congress in December. It is hoped that the expedition for that purpose, suggested in my communication of the 22d of September, can be organized and sent forward without at all interfering with the contemplated operation of the forces under your immediate command. "Among the officers presented to your consideration to be employed in this expedition was Brigadier General Shields. Attention was directed to him, by the knowledge that he had become acquainted with some of the principal inhabitants of Tamaulipas, and by that means had acquired information which would have been useful in conducting the enterprize. He has, however, since received orders to join General Wool, and probably cannot be conveniently recalled. If this can be done, and another brigadier sent to General Wool, it might be ad- vantageous to the public service to make the exchange. This is, however, left entirely to yourself. As to the employment of Major General Patterson, and Brigadier General Pillow, the wishes of the President and Department are unchanged. "It is under consideration by the government, though not yet fully determined, to land a considerable force in the vici- nity of Vera Cru^, and invest that city. Should this be un- dertaken, a larger force of regular troops will be required than that assigned to the Tamaulipas expedition. It is desired to know if, in your opinion, a detachment of two thousand of this description of force can be spared for that purpose from those under your command, without essentially interfering with your plans and operations. It is not desired or intended to weaken the force with you -xX Monterey, or to embarrass you by divert- 282 LETTER TO THE WAR DEPARTMENT. ing troops from the Rio Grande, ^vhich you may deem neces- sary as reinforcements to tiie execution of your own contem- plated operations." In answer to the instructions of the Secretary, under date of the 22d of September, General Taylor wrote on the 13th of October that, under the terms of the capitulation, he could not detach a force south of a-line from Linares to San Fer- nando. He therefore requested modified instructions. On the 15th of October, General Taylor wrote the following full, very able, and spirited letter to the War Department. It merits attention on three grounds: 1st, the views of the author con- cerning his own movements ; 2d, concerning an attack on Vera Cruz; and, 3d, concerning his rights as commander. On the second head, experience has now justified his decided opinions. Had the operations against Mexico, through Vera Cruz, been effected by an army of twenty-five thousand men, it is unnecessary to say that, although the ultimate result might not have been different, the immediate effect of the presence of such a force would probably have saved time and treasure, and certainly the sacrifice of thousands of lives. Head-Quarters, Army of Occupation. Camp near Monterey, Oct. 15, 1846. <' Sir : — In my acknowledgment, dated the 12th instant, of the instructions of the Secretary of War, of September 22d, I briefly stated that the detachment to Tampico could not be made without contravening the convention of Monterey. Other reasons and more detailed views on this point and the general question of- the campaign, I left to a subsequent c(5m- munication, which I have now the honour to submit for the in- formation of the General-in-Chief and the Secretary of War. Such a point has been reached in the conduct of the war and the progress of our arms, as to make it proper to place my impressions and convictions very fully before the government. " I wish to remark, first of all, that I have considered Bri- gadier General Wool, though formally under my orders, yet as charged by the government with a distinct operation, with PROPOSED ADVANCE ON SAN LUIS. 283 which I was not at liberty to interfere. Though greatly in doubt as to the practicability of his reaching Chihuahua with artillery, and deeming the importance of the operation at any rate to be not at all commensurate with its difficulty and ex- pense, I have accordingly refrained from controlling his move- ments in any way. His force, therefore, forms no element ;n my calculations, particularly as it now is, or soon will be, en- tirely beyond my reach. " The Mexican army under General Ampudia has left Sal- tillo, and fallen back on San Luis Potosi — the last detachment, as I understand, being under orders to march to-day. General Santa Anna reached San Luis on the 8th instant, and is en- gaged in concentrating and organizing the army at that point. Whether the withdrawal of the forces to San Luis be intended to draw us into the country, far from supplies and support, or whether it be a political movement, connected with Santa Anna's return to power, it is impossible to say; it is sufficient for my present argument -to know that a heavy force is assem- bling in our front. Saltillo, the capital of Coahuila, is virtu- ally in our possession, and can be occupied, if necessary, the moment the convention is at an end. The occupation of Sal- tillo will lengthen our line seventy-five miles, but, on the other hand, may enable us to draw at least a portion of our bread- stulfs from the country. San Luis is about three hundred miles from Saltillo, perhaps more. -• " San Luis is a city of some 60,000 inhabitants, in a country abundant in resources, and at no great distance from the heart of the Republic, whence munitions of war and reinforcements can readily be drawn. It is at the same time nearly six hun- dred miles from the Rio Grande, which must continue to be tlie base of our operation, at least until we reach San Luis. <'In view of the above facts, I hazard nothing in saying, that a column to move on San Luis from Saltillo, should, to ensure success, he at least 20,000 strong, of which 10,000 should be regular troops. After much reflection, I consider the above as the smallest number of e[fectwe troops that could be employed on this service without incurring the hazard of 284 TAYLOR'S FORCE INADEQUATE. disaster and perhaps defeat. There would be required, be- sides, to keep open our long line, protect the depots, and se- cure the country already gained, a force of 5000 men — this, without including the force necessary to send to Tampico to take or hold that place. /'The above estimate may seem large, when it is remem- bered that important results have been gained with a much smaller force. But we have hftherto operated near our own baflC, and the Mexicans at a great distance from theirs. Sal- tillo may be considered about equidistant from the Rio Grande and San Luis. Every day's march beyond it lengthens our alrt?ady long line and curtails theirs — weakens us, and gives them strength. Hence the movement should not be undertaken except with a force so large as to render success certain. " In the above calculation I have supposed the Mexicans able to concentrate at San Luis a force of 40,000 to 50,000 men. With tolerable stability in the government, I doubt not their ability to do this, and it is not safe to assume any -less number as a basis. t " The force of twelve months' volunteers has suffered greatly from disease. Many have died, and a great number have been discharged for disability. So much has their effective strength been reduced by this cause and present sickness that, in the absence of official returns, I am satisfied that five hundred men per regiment would be a large average of effectives among the volunteers. This would give, including the cavalry, a force a little short of 9000 men, or, adding 4000 regulars, (our pre- sent strength is not 3000,) a total force of 13,000. Leaving the very moderate number of -3000 to secure our rear, I should not be able to march from Saltillo, with present and expected means, at the head of more than 10,000 men — a number, which, from considerations above stated, I deem to be entirely inadequate. " And now I come to the point presented in the Secretary's letters. A simultaneous movement on San Luis and Tampico is there suggested ; but it will readily be seen that, with only half the force which I consider necessary to march on one VIEWS OF FUTURE OPERATIONS. 285 point, it is quite impossible to march on botii, and that nothing short of an erl'ective force of :25,O00 to 30,000 men would, on military principles, justify the double movement. And it is to be remarked, that the possession of Tampico is indispensable in case we advance to San Luis, for the line lience to the latter place is entirely too long to be maintained permanently, and must be abandoned for the shorter one from Tampico, the moment San Luis is taken. "I have spoken only of the number of troops deemed ne- cessary for the prosecution of the campaign beyond Saltillo. It will be understood that largely increased means and mate- rial of every kind will be equally necessary to render the army efficient, such as cavalry and artillery horses, means of trans- portation, ordnance stores, &.c. "The Department may be assured that the above views have not been given without mature reflection, and have been the result of experience and careful inquiry. It will be for the government to determine whether the war shall be prosecuted by directing an active campaign against San Luis and the capital, or whether the country already gained shall be held, and a defensive attitude assumed. In the latter case, the gen- eral line of the Sierra Madre might very well be taken; but even then, with the enemy in force in my front, it might be imprudent to detach to Tampico so large a force as 3000 or 4000 men, particularly of the description required for that ope- ration. If the co-operation of the army, therefore, be deemed essential to the success of the exj)edition against Tampico, I trust that it will be postponed for the present. " I have not been unmindful of the importance of taking Tampico, and have at least once addressed the Department on the subject. Nothing but the known exposure of the place to the ravages of the yellow fever prevented me from organizing an expedition against it last summer. I knew that, if taken, it could not with any certainty be held, and that the cause would not be removed before the last of November or the first of December. <'It may be expected that I should give my views as to the 286 PLAN AGAINST THE CAPITAL. policy of occupying a defensive line, to which I have above alluded. I am free to confess that, in view of the difficulties and expense attending a movement into the heart of the coun- try, and particularly in view of the unsettled and revolutionary character of the Mexican Government, the occupation of such a line seems to me the best course that can be adopted. The line taken might either be that on which we propose to insist as the boundary between the Republics — say the Rio Grande — or the line to which we have advanced, viz., the Sierra Madre, including Chihuahua and Santa Fe. The former line could be held with a much smaller force than the latter; but even the line of the Sierra Madre could be held with a force greatly less than would be required for an active campaign. Monterey controls the great outlet from the interior; a strong garrison at this point, with an advance at Saltillo, and small corps at Monclova, Linares, Victoria, and Tampico, would eflectually cover the line. " I have limited my remarks to the position of the army on this frontier, and the requirements of a campaign against San Luis Potosi ; the suggestions in the Secretary's letter being confined to this general theatre of operations. Should the Government determine to strike a decisive blow at Mexico, it is my opinion that the force should land near Vera Cruz or Al- varado, and, after establishing a secure depot, march thence on the capital. The amount of troops required for this service would not fall short, in my judgment, of 25,000 men, of which at least 10,000 should be regular troops. "In conclusion, I feel it my duty to make some remarks, which I would gladly have been spared the necessity of sub- mitting. I feel it due to my position, and to the service, to record ray protest against the manner in which the Department has sought to make an important detachment from my com- mand, specifically indicating not only the general officers, but, to a considerable extent, the troops that were to compose it. While I remain in command of the army against Mexico, and am therefore justly held responsible by the Government and the country for the conduct of its operations, I must claim the SUBJECT OF FORCED SUPPLIES. 287 right of organizing all detachments from it, and regulating the time and manner of their service. Above all do I consider it important that the Department of War should refrain from cor- responding directly with my subordinates, and communicating orders and instructions on points which, by all military precept and practice, pertain exclusively to the general-in-chief com- mand. Confusion and disaster alone can result from such a course. The reason alleged, viz., the loss of time in commu- nicating with General Patterson, has no application ; for the. Secretary's despatch came from that officer to my head-quarters in sixty hours, and he could not move, at any rate, without drawing largely upon this column for artillery and regular troops. <ETERMiNATroN. "By way of illustrating an important characteristic of General Taylor, to wit, determination, I will briefly relate a scene that occurred on the battle- ground of Buena Vista, during the action of the 23d. At a time when the fortunes of the day seemed extremely problematical — when many of our side even despaired of success — the General took his position on a commanding height, overlooking the two armies. This was about three or perhaps four o'clock in the afternoon. The enemy, who had succeeded in gaining an advan- tageous position, made a fierce charge upon our column, and fought with a des- peration that seemed for a time to insure success to their arms. The struggle lasted for some time. All the while. General Taylor was a silent spectator, his countenance exhibiting the most anxious solicitude, alternating between hope and despondency. His staff, perceiving his perilous situation, (for he was ex- posed to the fire of the enemy,) approached him and implored him to retire. He heeded them not. His thoughts were intent upon victory or defeat. He knew not at this moment what the result would be. He felt that that engagement was to decide his fate. He had given all his orders and selected his position. If the day went against him he was irretrievably lost; if for him, he could re- joice in common with his countrymen, at the triumphant success of our arms. "Such seemed to be his thoughts — his determination. And when he saw the enemy give way and retreat in the utmost confusion, he gave free vent to ANECDOTES OF TAYLOR. 341 his pent-up feelings. His right leg was qnickly disengaged from the pommel of the saddle, where it had remained during the whole of the fierce encounter-^ his arms, which were calmly folded over his breast, relaxed their hold — his feet fairly danced in the stirrups, and his whole body was in motion. It was a moment of the most exciting and intense interest. His face was suffused with tears. The day was won — the victory complete — his little army saved from the disgrace of a defeat, and he could not refrain from weeping for joy at what had seemed to so many, but a moment before, as an impossible result. Long may the noble and kind-hearted old hero live to enjoy the honours of his numerous and brilliant victories, and many other honours that a grateful country will ere long bestow upon him." — Lieutenant Corwin. Extract of a letter from a volunteer at Monterey: — " You may probably wishi to know how a young soldier feels when he smells powder for the first time I will tell you. At first I felt as though I should like to have be«n out of the party — I felt decidedly 'queer,' and looked from one end of the battalion to the other to see if I could see any one run. Yes, I felt like running, I must acknow- ledge, but they all stood like men, and I could nol bear the idea to be the first to run, and, therefore, kept on with the rest. The Tennesseeans were about ten yards in our advance, the Mississippians about the same distance in our rear. You will therefore see, gentlemen, that I had to ' stand up to the rack, fodder or no fodder.' "At this moment an awful fire was opened on the Tennesseeans. They fell by scores, but the balance stood like veterans. We were fired upon by a cross fire from nine and twelve pounders, and a murderous discharge of small arms from the corner of streets, doors, windows, and tops of houses. " By this time. Colonel Watson was trying to get us ahead of the Tennes- seeans, (having applied for the advance, and received from General Taylor the promise of it,) and, while in the act of giving three cheers, was shot down. He was on our right, some twenty paces ahead of us, I saw him fall, and all ap- prehension now left me. I made an involuntary effort to get to him to afford him help, but was borne on by the pressure of the mass behind, and willingly yielded to it, impelled by a thirst for revenge that would have carried me through a storm of bullets or laid me out in Monterey. We were now within fifty yards of the wall, behind which the enemy were lying in perfect security, and at this moment General Taylor rode up in gallant style, accompanied by a young officer. " Now came the thrilling scene of all. A huge Tennesseean sung out ' silence, men — here comes Old Zack — three cheers for Old Zack I' Three tremendous cheers were now given, until 'Heaven's broad nrch rang back the sound.' I trembled for his safety, for I expected to see him fall every moment." • A volunteer at Monterey thus mentions Taylor's calm bravery: " Monterey is the strongest place naturally thiU I ever saw with the eye or in print. There is an o[ien plain, three to four miles long, and four or five wide in front, except a range of hills, about forty feet hii;h, behind which the town lies. In the rea:, and on the right and left, the mountains back right up to it, and rise several hundred feet high abruptly and almost perpendicuhirly, while the only pass is through a mountain gorge directly in its centre. I was within ten feet of Gen • 342 ANECDOTES OF TAYLOR. eral Taylor, in the town, on the 21st. He was as cool as a cucumber, and ordered us to pass into the city and break open the houses. God knows how any of us got out." At the time General Taylor was conducting the Florida war against the Semi- noles, he became remarkable among the Indians for his singular disregard of danger. He never hesitated to move about unattended, and generally, when riding out on important business, he kept a mile or two ahead of his escort. No matter how many Indians were prowling about, the old General seemed uncon- scious that they would harm him, and often, when only armed parties could escape attack, General Taylor would trust himself alone under some wide- spreading tree in close proximity with the enemy, and thus circumstanced, he would eat his frugal meal, and if desirable indulge in a sound sleep. At the time the Indians were most- troublesome to our troops, General Taylor announced his determination to go from Fort King to Tampa Bay, which journey would take him through nearly one hundred miles of hostile country. The jaunt was considered by every body as a most desperate adventure. The morning for starling came, when the General's travelling companions, Mnjor Bliss and a young lieutenant, began to look wistfully around for the appearance of the escort. In due time, six dragoons, all saddled and bridled, made their appear- ance. There was a force to meet several thousand wily Seminoles, who filled up every nook and corner between Fort King and Tampa Bay ! After some hesitation, one of the General's friends suggested that the escort was not suffi- ciently strong, and that a requisition should be made for a greater force. The General examined the appearance of the six dragoons attentively for a moment, and then remarked if the number was not sufficient, two more might be added to it. Colonel Jefferson Davis, who, from the connection existing, is not very likely to be influenced by other than true and proper motives, is represented by the New Orleans papers as having used the following language concerning General Taylor: — After complimenting his fellow companions from other States, he for a moment dwelt upon the virtues of the old hero who had led them all to vic- tory, and to whom they looked up as children to a parent. Colonel Davis said that General Taylor had shown himself the distinguished soldier of the age, yet he was equally remarkable for his kindness of heart and simplicity of habits, his strong judgment and excellent sense. He alluded to the fact that General Taylor had shared the humblest soldier's fortune in the campaign; that he had in every thing identified himself with his troops. He alluded to that hour of the battle of Buena Vista, when the day seemed, if not lost, to be going against our arms, when General Taylor, amidst the thickest of the iron hail, rode upon the plateau, and calmly surveyed the scene. Vast as were the consequences of that hour, he appeared to fear no danger, expect no harm. From that moment, said Colonel Davis, the volunteers felt assured of victory. The presence of that old man inspired a courage that could not l>e overcome; and not a soldier pre- sent, said he, (pointing to the regiment before him.) but fell ihgn willing to die rather than yield an inch. It was not, continued Colonel Davis, alone on the battle-field that we learned to love General Taylor. The excitement of the car- nage over, the same soul that could remain urnnovcd when his friends were fall ing like leaves around him, who could look unblancheil upon the front of the thundering artillery, became the poor soldier's most sympathizing friend ; and tne eye, so stern in battle, was as mild as the tender-hearted matron's." ANECDOTES OF TAYLOR. 343 Taylor's humanity and good nature. A correspondent of the Montgomery (Alabama) Journal, says that General Taylor lately had occasion to visit Point Isabel, after the battle of Buena Vista, and the captain of the steamboat had reserved a suite of state-rooms for the Gen- eral's accommodation. There were several sick and wounded volunteers on the boat, en route for New Orleans, who had to take the wayfare incident to a crowded boat, and particularly so on this occasion. General Taylor saw all this, and at once ordered these men to be placed in his state-rooms, and proper atten- tion paid them. It was rather a cold, rairiy day when this occurred. The deck hands and many others on the boat did not know General Taylor. The wind blew high, and the firemen had raised a sail in front of the boilers to protect themselves from the rain, and under this sail there were some old mattrasses; here General Taylor laid down and went to sleep. At supper time great inqui- ries were made for the General, and servants sent off to look him up. But he could not be found ! At last some one going below, inquired of a fireman if he had seen any thing of such and such a man — the fireman said no, but added, " there is a .clever old fellow asleep there under the sail, in front of the fire !" It was General Taylor. Yes, sweet indeed, must have been the sleep of such a man, who has the heart to change places with the poor sick soldier, as General Taylor did on this occasion ; such humanity stands out in bold relief, and greatly mitigate the evils incident to war. The following, from the Picayune, speaks for itself : — "The parting scene between the Mississippi Regiment and General Taylor, we are told, was affect- ing in the extreme. As the men marched by him to return to their homes, overpowered with a recollection of the high deeds which had endeared them to him, and with their demonstrations of respect and affection, he attempted in vain to address them. With tears streaming down his furrowed cheeks, all he could say was, ' Go on boys — go on — I can't speak I' " "J. E. D.," the Monterey correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune, tells the following story : " Did you ever sec a collection of men that could not turn out a specimen of what is generally termed 'a character]' If you ever did, you can, to make use of a vulgarism, ' beat my time' considerably, for I never did, and what is more, never expect to. The next door to my quarters a company of Virginia volun- teers are stationed, and as they turn out to roll-call and drill I have a good op- portunity of observing them. I had noticed among the men a short, thick-set Irishman, whose head seemed to have settled down between his shoulders a trifle too far to permit him to sit as a model for a sculptor, although he will answer very well for a soldier. There was something so odd about his appearance and in his manner of performing the manual, that I was convinced he was ' a cha- racter,' and upon expressing my belief of that fact, I discovered that I was not far wrong, the following anecdote being related of him : " ' Plaze sir,' said the soldier, touching his hat to his captain, ' whin will we be paid off, sir"!' ' In a few days, Patrick,' replied the officer. < Yis, sir,' con- tinued Pat, 'and whin, sir, will we be after Santy Anny, the blackguard!' 'That's more than lean tell you, Patrick ; it's rather hard to tell when or where he will show himself,' replied the officer. < Yis, sir, thank you kindly, sir, we'll be paid off in a few days any ways, however,' said Pat, as he touched his hat again and retired. In a few days he appeared again and opened the 344 ANECDOTES OF TAYLOR. conversation with — ' If ye plaze, sir, divil the cop|)er we have been paid yet' sir.' ' I know it, Patrick,' was the reply of the officer, ' but I can't help it ; they are waiting for the paymaster to arrive.' ' Oh, it's the paymasther we're a waitin' for, is it 1 and what the divil 's the excuse he has for not bein' here, when he's wanted 1 What's the use of a paymasther if he isn't on the spot when he's wanted V said Pat, beginning to wax indignant at having to wait so long for his ' tin.' " The circumstance caused him much uneasiness; and, after cogitating the matter over and over, he was struck with a luminous idea, and announced to his comrades that he'd have his money before you could say 'thread on my coat.' One morning immediately after breakfast, off posted Pat to General Tay- lor's camp, and on approaching his tent inquired of a soldier standing by where the General's 'shanty' was. 'That 's his tent,' said the sentinel, pointing out the General's quarters. 'And is that the Gineral's tenti' said Pat, taking off! his hat and rubbing his hand over his hair, which had been cut to the degree of shortness peculiar to natives of Erin's green isle. 'And where 's the Gineral's old grey horse 1' inquired Pat. 'There,' replied the soldier, indicating the spot where the old horse stood lazily whisking the flies away with his tail. 'And is that the old horse 1' again inquired the sprig of Erin, with great awe, ' an' where, if you plaze sir, is the old gintleman, himself?' continued Pat. • There he sits under that awning,' answered the soldier. ' What,' exclaimed Pat, in almost a whisper, and in a tone amounting to reverence, 'an' is this the old gintleman V ' Yes,' said the soldier, walking away, ' that's General Taylor.' After gazing upon the' war-worn veteran' in silent admiration for a while, he at last mustered sufficient courage to approach him. ' I beg your pardon, Gineral, but you'll plaze to excuse the bit of liberty I 'm taking in presuming to call on your honour, but if ye plaze, sir, I came on a little matther of business, bein' as I thought maybe you might be aflher helpin' us out of a little bit of a scrape.' '" Well,' said the General kindly, 'what is the trouble, and what do you wish V '"If you plaze, sir, I'd like to know when the hands will be paid off", sir]' "' When the hands will be paid off]' repeated the General, a little puzzled. " ' Yis, sir, if ye plaze to have the goodness. The hands have had divil the cint of wages since they 've been in the country.' " ' Oh, I understand, you 're a volunteer, and wish to know when you '11 be paid off. Well, my good fellow, you must apply to your company officers for that information, I have nothing to do with it.' " ' Bcggin' your pardon, sir, I did ax (he boss about it, but he didn't give me no sort of satisfaction about it, and so I told the other hands I 'd fix it ; an' bein' as you're the head boss, I thought I 'd be comin' over here to see if you could- n't give us some satisfaction.' «' The ' head boss' being unable to relieve the anxiety of Pat, the latter retired to the ' other hands,' having the satisfaction of saying that although he had failed in the object of his mission, he had seen the 'head boss,' his 'shanty,' and the old gray horse,' which was ' glory enough for one day.' " THE ENO. 2, ,-f^ 1:.. 190^ Lt JL '03 ^»sr. o V A^ ^ o « o , V o"^ •^^ -^ ^^^ v"^' ■s^. ^te^> -S'^r ^^i^^^ .^^ '%. ^:^p:^ -^ -^ -^ -■ ^ ^ ^ ^'^^ '" < - <\. ■'..5,0 A ° " ° ^ A- -ov* :-^»'-. "-^^0^ :« 'i^'- Aq. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 011 623 542