Glorietta Pass Battlefield, Santa Fe County, New Mexico
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Queens Blessing
N 35° 34.052 W 105° 44.765
13S E 432391 N 3936238
Many Americans do not realize that part of the American Civil War was held in New Mexico.
Waymark Code: WMCT7X
Location: New Mexico, United States
Date Posted: 10/09/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member BruceS
Views: 6

The Pecos National Historical Park is a National Historical Park in New Mexico, about 25 miles east of Santa Fe, New Mexico. The park was created in June 1965 as the "Pecos National Monument" and in 1990 when additional lands were added to the park the name of the park was officially changed to Pecos National Historical Park. The Park includes several unrelated units including the Pecos Pueblo the remains of a Spanish mission called Mission Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles de Porciúncula de los Pecos, and the site of an AMERICAN CIVIL WAR BATTLE, called Glorieta Pass Battlefield.

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Text from the interpretive sign at site:

"Civil War Discovery Trail Sites

In March of 1862 the Civil War Battle of Glorieta was fought at this location. Often referred to as the "Gettysburg of the West", this little known yet decisive battle was one of the few fought in the West. Much of the battlefield is now located within the boundaries of Pecos National Historic Park."

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The following information was copied from a public document (the application for status as a National Historic Landmark): LINK: (visit link)

State Significance of Property, and Justify Criteria, Criteria Considerations, and Areas and Periods of Significance Noted Above.
The Glorieta Pass Battlefield is on the main route from Pecos River valley to the Santa Fe and Galisteo areas. This route was used as a major Indian trade route; the exploration route for Francisco Vásquez de Coronado expedition of 1540-1541; the fray Agustín Rodriguez-Francisco Sánchez Chamuscado expedition of 1581-1582; the Antonio de Espejo expedition of 1582-1583; the Gaspar Castaño de Sosa expedition in 1590-1591; the main Spanish colonial route from Santa Fe to Pecos and the Great Plains from 1598 to 1821; the route of the Santa FeTrail established through the area in 1821; and the route of the first railroad from St. Louis to Santa Fe, replacing the Santa Fe Trail in 1878. The Battle of Glorieta Pass, March 26-28, 1862, ended the Confederate invasion of New Mexico, the first step in a grand design for detaching the West from the Union and extending the Confederation to the Pacific.

Critical parts of the battle of Glorieta Pass happened at Cañoncito/Johnson’s Ranch and Pigeon’s Ranch, and the Pigeon’s Ranch house was used as a field hospital after the conflict. Several of the dead of the Confederate forces were buried a few hundred feet to the southeast, and other bodies may remain to be found in the area. President Davis commissioned Brigadier General Henry H. Sibley to lead the invasion of New Mexico. With a brigade of 2,500 Texans, he marched up the Rio Grande from Fort Bliss in February 1862. A Union army under Colonel Edward R. S. Canby concentrated at Fort Craig to meet the Southerners. At the battle of Valverde on February 21, Sibley defeated Canby and, while the Federals remained at Craig, drove on to Albuquerque and Santa Fe. The next objective was Fort Union, with its depot containing $300,000 in stores, the only obstacles between Santa Fe and Denver. Appreciating the danger to Colorado posed by Sibley, Governor William Gilpin had hurriedly raised a regiment of volunteers and sent them by forced marches through winter snows to reinforce the weak garrison of Fort Union. They arrived at the Fort March 11-13.

Under Colonel John B. Slough, 1,300 infantry, cavalry, and artillery set forth to meet the Confederates advancing from Santa Fe. As Sibley was in Santa Fe (reportedly drunk during the battle), Lieutenant Colonel W. R. Scurry commanded the 1,100 Texans. The two armies, both brigade size, met in Glorieta Pass, a defile in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains by which the Santa Fe Trail reached its destination. The battle began in the pass on March 26 when the Union advance guard, 418 men under Major John B. Chivington, encountered a Southern advance guard under Major C. S. Pyron near the Pigeon’s ranch house. In several hours of hard fighting, Chivington succeeded in pushing the Texans back to Johnson’s Ranch, at the western end of the pass near present-day Cañoncito. The approach of night, however, caused him to break contact and fall back to Pigeon’s ranch house; then, because of insufficient water, farther east to Kozlowski’s ranch house. On the 27th Lieutenant Colonel S. Scurry and the main Texan force reached Johnson’s Ranch, and the next day Slough joined Chivington at Kozlowski’s Ranch with the rest of the Coloradoans. On the morning of the 28th, Union forces advanced to Pigeon’s Ranch where troops stopped at the well for water. Scurry advanced his Confederate troops at the same time and at 8:30 a.m. began firing on Union men at the Pigeon’s ranch house. The two sides fought indecisively all day. Eventually Slough left the field to the Confederates, who established themselves at the Pigeon’s ranch house. Meanwhile Major Chivington worked a stratagem that won the battle for Slough. With seven companies, Chivington made his way through mountainous terrain around the Confederate flank with the objective of attacking the enemy rear. From a bluff overlooking Johnson’s Ranch, at the western entrance to the pass, he discovered the Confederate supply depot, 73 wagons and 500-600 mules and horses, guarded by a small detachment. The Federals charged, destroyed the wagons, killed the animals, and then withdrew to Kozlowski’s Ranch.

Loss of his supplies forced Scurry to turn back, leaving the field to Slough. Joined by Sibley, the army retreated down the Rio Grande, avoiding Canby, and returned to Texas. Compared to the great conflicts in the East, Glorieta Pass, in numbers engaged and losses (150 Federal, 400 Confederate), was a small skirmish. Yet the issues were large, and the battle decisive in resolving them. The Confederates very likely would have taken Fort Union and Denver had not the Colorado Volunteers stopped them at Glorieta, although their gains probably could not have been held. As one of the Texans later put it, “if it had not been for those devils from Pike’s Peak, this country would have been ours.”

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Additional links with interesting related information:

(visit link)


(visit link)

Link to brochure from National Parks Service, about Glorieta Battlefield:
(visit link)

Link to the Glorieta Preservation (non-profit) organization: (GREAT HISTORY!)
(visit link)
Type of site: Other

Address:
Pecos National Historical Park
10 miles southeast of Santa Fe on U.S. 84-85
Pecos, NM United States
87552


Phone Number: 505-757-6414

Admission Charged: $5 or less

Website: [Web Link]

Driving Directions:
Pecos National Historical Park is 25 miles east of Santa Fe, New Mexico off of Interstate 25. Visitors travelling north on I-25: take exit 299 on to HWY 50 to Pecos village and south two miles on State Road 63. Those travelling south on I-25: take exit 307 and proceed four miles north to the Park on State Road 63.


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