|
Big
Horn Mountain
Excerpts
from Bartlett's journal on June 22, 1852:
"After
passing the northern termination of "Big Horn" Mountain, we
completed our day's march and encamped at eleven o'clock in a thicket of
willows near the river....During the day we passed two abandoned wagons
in good condition, save the injury they had received from long exposure
to the sun. ...From the large quantity of iron strewed about, with
fragments of vehicles, tin kettles, and camp equipage, we were evidently
at a place where wagons had been broken up and burned. The extent
of these traces showed that it was probably the place where General
Kearney [sic] or Colonel Cooke encamped in 1847."


The mountain
that Bartlett called the "Big Horn" is the at northern end of the
Mohawk Mountains of southern Arizona. The campsite debris he
mentions was most likely left by Lt. Colonel Philip St. George Cooke's
Mormon Battalion in December, 1846 or January, 1847.
|
|