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Fort
Thornburgh was first established in September 1881 by
Captain Hamilton S. Hawkins near the present site of Ouray,
Utah. In April 1882 the fort was moved under the direction
of Captain J. P. Schindel, acting in Captain Hawkins's
temporary absence. The new location of the fort at the
mouth of Ashley Creek continued until its abandonment
in 1884. This short-lived fort is more famous for the
events that brought its name and its establishment than
for its scant three years of existence.
The
history of Fort Thornburgh begins with hostilities on
the White River Ute Reservation in Colorado, in 1879.
Nathan Meeker came as agent to the Ute band following
the troubled departure of Edward H. Danforth in 1878.
Meeker believed he could transform the Ute warriors into
sedentary agriculturalists, and pay off several debts
at the same time. He provoked a confrontation in September
1879 when he ordered fifty acres of pasture land plowed.
The enraged Indian custodian of the land dragged Meeker
from his office and publicly beat him. Meeker immediately
telegraphed Washington and asked that federal troops be
dispatched to the reservation. Major Thomas T. Thornburgh
was ordered out of Fort Steele, Wyoming, to assist the
frightened agent.
Thornburgh
and nearly 200 men left Fort Steele on 21 September 1879.
The Utes attacked the troop as they entered the reservation
boundaries on 29 September 1879, killing Major Thornburgh
and several other men. The column was held under siege
until help arrived from Fort Steele six days later. Meanwhile,
the White River Agency was attacked on 30 September 1879.
Meeker and several of his assistants were killed, and
Meeker's wife and daughter were captured along with another
woman and two children. The women and children were later
released unharmed, but the outrage caused by the attack
brought into flame an already smoldering fire.
Governor
Frederick W. Pitkin used this attack to call for the removal
of all Indians from Colorado, including the Umcompahgre
Utes who had helped obtain the release of the captives.
Governor Pitkin had the support of mining and cattle interests
who had been eyeing the vast Ute holdings in western Colorado.
Removal was proposed to either Indian Territory (Oklahoma)
or to the existing Ute reservation in the Uinta Basin.
The Mormon-United States conflict over polygamy left little
clout for Utah Territory in Washington, and so the Colorado
Utes were moved into Utah. The White River band was placed
on the existing Uintah Ute Reservation and the Umcompahgre
Utes were placed on the new Ouray Reservation to the south
and east.
The
Secretary of War decided to construct a fort in the Uinta
Basin to hold the Utes on the reservation and to quiet
any potential hostilities between the Indians and whites.
Major Hawkins was ordered south out of Fort Steele at
the head of four companies of the 6th Infantry on 21 August
1881. They established Fort Thornburgh on 17 September.
The Secretary of the Interior complained to the Secretary
of War that the troops would provide a bad influence for
the Utes, and that the fort had commandeered most of the
good agricultural land on the Ouray Reservation. The fort
was moved in the spring of 1882 to the mouth of Ashley
Creek, 6.5 miles northwest of present-day Vernal, Utah.
The
Secretary of War planned an elaborate $84,000 fort consisting
of thirty-two brick or frame buildings to house Hamilton's
four companies of men. During the summer of 1882 the men
began work on eight temporary adobe buildings and laid
out the boundaries for the fort, which encompassed 21,851
acres. These structures were to serve until Congressional
appropriation could be obtained. The men also began work
on the Carter Road, built as a supply road through the
Uinta Mountains to connect Fort Thornburgh with the nearest
Union Pacific railhead--Carter, Wyoming. The main force
left Fort Thornburgh and returned to Fort Douglas on 16
October 1882, leaving a detachment of thirty men commanded
by Lieutenant Lyman W. V. Kennon to act as guard detail
and continue construction on the fort.
Three
companies returned to Thornburgh on 23 June 1883 under
the command of Major Edward G. Bush. Congress appropriated
a disappointing $1,500 toward construction in 1883, far
below the $84,000 requested by the Secretary of War. Bush
abandoned the thought of improved quarters and spent the
summer of 1883 working on Carter Road between the fort
and the government sawmill in the Uintas. The troops returned
to Fort Douglas on 3 October, leaving only a caretaker
to look after the fort. Thornburgh was officially abandoned
sometime during the winter of 1883 or spring of 1884.
Several
reasons were given for the abandonment of the fort. First,
a portion of the acreage had already been claimed by settlers,
and the government had never obtained clear title to the
land. More important was the conviction that there would
be no difficulty from the Utes during the winter months,
and that any summer trouble could be quickly quelled by
dispatching troops from Fort Douglas or Fort Bridger,
especially now that the Carter Road had been completed.
The
decision to abandon Fort Thornburgh proved unsound when
inter-band warfare broke out among the Utes during the
winter of 1885-86. The departments of the Interior and
of War both sent investigators to the Uinta Basin, and
recommended the establishment of a permanent fort. General
George Crook selected the new Fort Duchesne site in August
1886; it was three miles above the junction of the Uintah
and Duchesne rivers and midway between the Whiterocks
agency and the Ouray agency headquarters. Squatters took
over the abandoned site, and ten years later, in 1894,
were given title to the property. A portion of Fort Thornburgh
now lies within the boundary of Maeser, Utah.
David
L. Schirer
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