Expedition
Down the Zuni & Colorado Rivers
After
the conquest of New Mexico and California it was apparent that
transportation and communications needed to be improved between these
new territories and the rest of the United States east of the
Mississippi. Geographical knowledge of most of this area,
particularly northwestern New Mexico (now northern Arizona), was
very limited and inaccurate. Some maps of the day showed a river
system that might provide a possible navigable water corridor between
New Mexico and the Gulf of California via the Zuni, Little Colorado,
and Colorado Rivers.
In
September of 1851 Captain Lorenzo Sitgreaves, along with a small crew
of topographers, naturalists, artists, and support personnel, and an
escort of 30 infantrymen left the Zuni Pueblo in western New Mexico by
pack train with instructions to explore and map the Zuni and Colorado
Rivers and evaluate their navigability in light of a possible
impending war with the Mormons in Utah.
They traveled southwest
along the Zuni
River to its mouth and then headed northwest along the
Little Colorado, intending to follow it to the Colorado. When they
reached Grand Falls (northwest of present-day Winslow, Arizona) their
guide, Antoine Leroux, advised them that it was unwise to follow
the river any further because it flowed in a deep canyon for the rest
of its course and emptied into the great canyon of the Colorado River.
They
left the river and struck off due west
around the north side of the San Francisco Mountains, discovering the
Wupatki Indian Ruins along the way, and looped southwestward around the
south side of Bill Williams Mountain. The rest of their westward march
followed near the future alignment of Route 66 to the Colorado River
near the modern town of Bullhead City, Arizona. After a difficult
march south along the Colorado River they reached Camp Yuma on
November 30. Of course, Sitgreaves discovered that the Zuni and
Little Colorado Rivers were not at all navigable and would be useless
to transport troops and supplies. The Colorado River, however,
was found to be navigable along the entire distance that he explored.
Sitgreaves' official report, "Report of an Expedition Down the Zuni and
Colorado Rivers in 1851," was published in 1853.