In July 1846, under the authority of
U.S. Army Captain James Allen and with the encouragement
of Mormon leader Brigham Young, the Mormon Battalion
was mustered in at Council Bluffs, Iowa Territory. The
battalion was the direct result of Brigham Young's correspondence
on 26 January 1846 to Jesse C. Little, presiding elder
over the New England and Middle States Mission. Young
instructed Little to meet with national leaders in Washington,
D.C., and to seek aid for the migrating Latter-day Saints,
the majority of whom were then in the Iowa Territory.
In response to Young's letter, Little journeyed to Washington,
arriving on 21 May 1846, just eight days after Congress
had declared war on Mexico.
Little met with President James K. Polk on 5 June 1846
and urged him to aid migrating Mormon pioneers by employing
them to fortify and defend the West. The president offered
to aid the pioneers by permitting them to raise a battalion
of five hundred men, who were to join Colonel Stephen
W. Kearny, Commander of the Army of the West, and fight
for the United States in the Mexican War. Little accepted
this offer.
Colonel Kearny designated Captain James Allen, later
promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, to raise five companies
of volunteer soldiers from the able-bodied men between
the ages of eighteen and forty-five in the Mormon encampments
in Iowa. On 26 June 1846 Allen arrived at the encampment
of Mt. Pisgah. He was treated with suspicion as many
believed that the raising of a battalion was a plot
to bring trouble to the migrating Saints.
Allen journeyed from Mt. Pisgah to Council Bluffs, where
on 1 July 1846 he allayed Mormon fears by giving permission
for the Saints to encamp on United States lands if the
Mormons would raise the desired battalion. Brigham Young
accepted this, recognizing that the enlistment of the
battalion was the first time the government had stretched
forth its arm to aid the Mormons.
On 16 July 1846 some 543 men enlisted in the Mormon
Battalion. From among these men Brigham Young selected
the commissioned officers; they included Jefferson Hunt,
Captain of Company A; Jesse D. Hunter, Captain of Company
B; James Brown, Captain of Company C; Nelson Higgins,
Captain of Company D; and Daniel C. Davis, Captain of
Company E. Among the most prominent non-Mormon military
officers immediately associated with the battalion march
were Lt. Col. James Allen, First Lt. Andrew Jackson
Smith, Lt. Col. Philip St. George Cooke, and Dr. George
Sanderson. Also accompanying the battalion were approximately
thirty-three women, twenty of whom served as laundresses,
and fifty-one children.
The battalion marched from Council Bluffs on 20 July
1846, arriving on 1 August 1846 at Fort Leavenworth
(Kansas), where they were outfitted for their trek to
Santa Fe. Battalion members drew their arms and accoutrements,
as well as a clothing allowance of forty-two dollars,
at the fort. Since a military uniform was not mandatory,
many of the soldiers sent their clothing allowances
to their families in the encampments in Iowa..
The march from Fort Leavenworth was delayed by the sudden
illness of Colonel Allen. Capt. Jefferson Hunt was instructed
to begin the march to Santa Fe; he soon received word
that Colonel Allen was dead. Allen's death caused confusion
regarding who should lead the battalion to Santa Fe.
Lt. A.J. Smith arrived from Fort Leavenworth claiming
the lead, and he was chosen the commanding officer by
the vote of battalion officers. The leadership transition
proved difficult for many of the enlisted men, as they
were not consulted about the decision.
Smith and his accompanying surgeon, a Dr. Sanderson,
have been described in journals as the "heaviest
burdens" of the battalion. Under Smith's dictatorial
leadership and with Sanderson's antiquated prescriptions,
the battalion marched to Santa Fe. On this trek the
soldiers suffered from excessive heat, lack of sufficient
food, improper medical treatment, and forced long-distance
marches.
The first division of the Mormon Battalion approached
Santa Fe on 9 October 1846. Their approach was heralded
by Col. Alexander Doniphan, who ordered a one-hundred-gun
salute in their honor. At Santa Fe, Smith was relieved
of his command by Lt. Col. Philip St. George Cooke.
Cooke, aware of the rugged trail between Santa Fe and
California and also aware that one sick detachment had
already been sent from the Arkansas River to Fort Pueblo
in Colorado, ordered the remaining women and children
to accompany the sick of the battalion to Pueblo for
the winter. Three detachments consisting of 273 people
eventually were sent to Pueblo for the winter of 1846-47.
The remaining soldiers, with four wives of officers,
left Santa Fe for California on 19 October 1846. They
journeyed down the Rio Grande del Norte and eventually
crossed the Continental Divide on 28 November 1846.
While moving up the San Pedro River in present-day Arizona,
their column was attacked by a herd of wild cattle.
In the ensuing fight, a number of bulls were killed
and two men were wounded. Following the "Battle
of the Bulls," the battalion continued their march
toward Tucson, where they anticipated a possible battle
with the Mexican soldiers garrisoned there. At Tucson,
the Mexican defenders temporarily abandoned their positions
and no conflict ensued.
On 21 December 1846 the battalion encamped on the Gila
River. They crossed the Colorado River into California
on 9 and 10 January 1847. By 29 January 1847 they were
camped at the Mission of San Diego, about five miles
from General Kearny's quarters. That evening Colonel
Cooke rode to Kearny's encampment and reported the battalion's
condition. On 30 January 1847 Cooke issued orders enumerating
the accomplishments of the Mormon Battalion. "History
may be searched in vain for an equal march of infantry.
Half of it has been through a wilderness where nothing
but savages and wild beasts are found, or deserts where,
for lack of water, there is no living creature."
During the remainder of their enlistment, some members
of the battalion were assigned to garrison duty at either
San Diego, San Luis Rey, or Ciudad de los Angeles. Other
soldiers were assigned to accompany General Kearny back
to Fort Leavenworth. All soldiers, whether en route
to the Salt Lake Valley via Pueblo or still in Los Angeles,
were mustered out of the United States Army on 16 July
1847. Eighty-one men chose to reenlist and serve an
additional eight months of military duty under Captain
Daniel C. Davis in Company A of the Mormon Volunteers.
The majority of the soldiers migrated to the Salt Lake
Valley and were reunited with their pioneering families.
The men of the Mormon Battalion are honored for their
willingness to fight for the United States as loyal
American citizens. Their march of some 2,000 miles from
Council Bluffs to California is one of the longest military
marches in history. Their participation in the early
development of California by building Fort Moore in
Los Angeles, building a courthouse in San Diego, and
making bricks and building houses in southern California
contributed to the growth of the West.
Following their discharge, many men helped build flour
mills and sawmills in northern California. Some of them
were among the first to discover gold at Sutter's Mill.
Men from Captain Davis's Company A were responsible
for opening the first wagon road over the southern route
from California to Utah in 1848.
Historic sites associated with the battalion include
the Mormon Battalion Memorial Visitor's Center in San
Diego, California; Fort Moore Pioneer Memorial in Los
Angeles, California; and the Mormon Battalion Monument
in Memory Grove, Salt Lake City, Utah. Monuments relating
to the battalion are also located in New Mexico, Arizona,
and Colorado, and trail markers have been placed on
segments of the battalion route.
Susan Easton Black