Battle of Ojo Caliente Canyon
Battle of Ojo Caliente Canyon | |||||||
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Part of the Jicarilla War, Apache Wars, Ute Wars, American Indian Wars | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States | Apache Ute | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Philip St. George Cooke Kit Carson | Chacon | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
200 cavalry 100 infantry 32 native scouts[1] | ~150 warriors | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
none | 5 killed 6 wounded,[2][3] |
- v
- t
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Apache Wars
- Jicarilla War
- Point of Rocks
- Wagon Mound
- Bell's Fight
- Cieneguilla
- Ojo Caliente Canyon
- Chiricahua Wars
- Cooke's Spring
- Bonneville Expedition
- Madera Canyon
- Mimbres River
- Bascom Affair
- Tubac
- Cookes Canyon
- Florida Mountains
- Gallinas Mountains
- Placito
- Pinos Altos
- 1st Dragoon Springs
- 2nd Dragoon Springs
- Apache Pass
- Big Bug
- Mowry
- Mount Gray
- Doubtful Canyon
- Fort Buchanan
- Black Hawk's War
- Pipe Spring
- Yavapai War
- Camp Grant
- Wickenburg
- Burro Canyon
- Tonto Basin
- Salt River Canyon
- Turret Peak
- Sunset Pass
- Victorio's War
- Battle of Ojo Caliente(1879)
- Las Animas Canyon
- Hembrillo Basin
- Alma
- Fort Tularosa
- Battle of Tres Castillos
- Carrizo Canyon
- Geronimo's War
- Cibecue Creek
- Fort Apache
- McMillenville
- Big Dry Wash
- Lordsburg Road
- Devil's Creek
- Little Dry Creek
- Nacori Chico
- Bear Valley
- Pinito Mountains
- Post 1887 period
- Kelvin Grade 1889
- Cherry Creek 1890
- Guadalupe Canyon 1896
- This engagement should not be confused with the 1879 Battle of Ojo Caliente between Victorio's band and the 9th Cavalry.
The Battle of Ojo Caliente Canyon, or simply the Battle of Ojo Caliente was an engagement of the Jicarilla War on April 8, 1854. Combatants were Jicarilla Apache warriors, and their Ute allies, against the United States Army. The skirmish was fought as result of the pursuit of the Jicarilla after the Battle of Cieneguilla just over a week earlier.[4][5]
See also
References
- ^ Utley, Frontiersmen in Blue, pg.144-145
- ^ Utley, Frontiersmen in Blue, pg.145
- ^ Additionally some Jicarilla women and children and some of the Indians' horses drowned while crossing the Ojo Caliente River. Later the fleeing Indians without the food lost with their camp suffered from exposure and seventeen women and children perished in the snow. FORT UNION Historic Resource Study: CHAPTER THREE: MILITARY OPERATIONS BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR, and note 56
- ^ Utley, Robert M. (1967). Frontiersmen in Blue: The United States Army and the Indian, 1848-1865. MacMillan. pp. 144–146. ISBN 978-0026212403.
- ^ "MILITARY OPERATIONS BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR". santafetrailresearch.com. Archived from the original on 2022-07-02. Retrieved 2023-08-24.
Bibliography
- Gorenfeld, Will, The Battle of Cieneguilla, Wild West magazine, Feb., 2008
- Bennett, James A., Forts & Forays: A dragoon in New Mexico, 1850–1856, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1996, p 53