Fort Larned
Fort Larned
was one of a series of Army outposts located near the Santa Fe
Trail from which troops were dispatched to escort traffic when and
where Indians threatened. Troops did not accompany travelers the
whole duration (two months) and length (800 miles) of the
end-to-end trip between the Missouri River and Santa Fe in New
Mexico Territory (U.S. National Park Service, Santa Fe Trail) but were
assigned to patrol between Fort
Union and Fort Larned roughly every two weeks. They
alternated between the Mountain
Route and the Dry Route
(Oliva).
Fine Masonry
-- Workmen who quarried the stone nearby and who mortared it
into place here knew their business, took pride in their
handicraft, and evidently spent too much time and effort on it
to please their superiors.
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Fort
Larned was located near the eastern junction of
the Dry and Mountain Routes of the Santa Fe Trail.
Today, the site has been renovated and is open to the
historically inquisitive. It houses a collection of antiques and
period-correct reproductions, including an Army bunkhouse complete
with uniforms, tack, and supplies.
There is also a rare specimen of an original
Conestoga wagon.
Rough Masonry
-- You can easily imagine that those in charge concluded there
was too much waste of material and time going on and commanded
a more pragmatic standard of construction for the remaining
buildings.
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In the spring of 1867, General
Winfield Scott Hancock
, who had been wounded during
Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg in 1863, led a large detachment of
troops from Fort Larned to sack a deserted Cheyenne and Sioux
village nearby. All the families in the village had fled at the
Army's approach, fearing a recurrence of the
Sand Creek Massacre. The presence of the Army on
the High Plains provoked a summer-long series of
battles known as Hancock's War (U.S. National Park Service, Hancock's War). Details
of the inconclusive campaign were circulated in the press by
General
George Armstrong Custer while he was on disciplinary
suspension from Hancock's outfit (Hart). Nine years later, Custer was dead, and, four
years after that, Hancock was the Democratic Presidential
Candidate.
Panorama
-- This thumbnail is number six out of ten that were stitched
together using the Hugin utility program. Please click on the
thumbnail to see a 180° panorama of the quadrangle.
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Because it was politically incorrect, not to say infeasible, to
station segregated units of black U.S. Army soldiers in states
comprising the former Confederacy
during Reconstruction, these were instead deployed in the
West where they were engaged during the
Indian Wars. These troops adopted the name
Buffalo Soldiers.
Company A of the 10th Cavalry was billeted at Fort Larned from
1867 to 1869 (U.S. National Park Service, 10th Cavalry at Fort
Larned).
Interior
-- Officers and their families lived in comparative comfort.
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Wells and Privies
-- Each duplex at the west side of the quadrangle had its own
well and privy. They seem awfully close together by today's
standards (Muruka).
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