This hike-in only park is a great hands-on opportunity to
experience 19th Century Army life in the Arizona Desert
View of Fort Bowie from the Overlook Ridge Trail
In the far eastern reaches of Arizona, nestled in the pass
between the Chiricahua and Dos Cabezas mountains, 20 miles or so from its
border with New Mexico, sits the well preserved remains of Fort Bowie, established as a National
Historic Site in 1972. Apache Pass,
and its year around water supply, hosted Fort Bowie from 1861 to 1894 and was a
key site in the decades-long battle against the Apache.
I like to hike, so was particularly thrilled to learn that
Fort Bowie is a hike-in only park, the first and possibly the only hike-in park
in the system (the Park Ranger wasn’t certain about its exclusivity). Unless you have a handicapped sticker on your
car, you simply cannot drive there. It
is a perfect place to get some exercise and learn a bit about how the U.S. Army
treated the local Apache 150 years ago.
It took a couple of hours to drive from Tucson, dropping south
off Interstate 10 at Willcox for a 28 mile drive on highway 186 to the turn off
onto Apache Pass Road for the eight mile drive to the trailhead. This last eight miles is a dirt road and it’s
in pretty good shape. There were a
couple RVs parked at the trailhead along with cars and trucks from nine
different states. This visitor diversity
is a great reminder that hanging out in Arizona in January is a great escape
from colder northern climates and that the national parks are widely
appreciated.
The trailhead hosts several covered picnic tables (and an
outhouse), so with our Montana friends Bruce and Bonnie, my girlfriend Craig
and I fueled up on cheese, crackers, carrots and chocolate for our 1.5 mile
hike through the desert grassland and mesquite to the Fort. The hike is a moderate one with some
elevation gain heading into Apache Pass and the fort site. Along the trail, the park service has done a
good job of interpreting a series of skirmishes and battles between the Army
and Apache and it tells the story of why Fort Bowie is located where it is. With year-around water near the fort, the
birding on the hike in was pretty good as well.
One of the sites along the trail is the old Butterfield
Stage Station that was active in Apache Pass from 1858 to 1861. Butterfield
had the contract to deliver mail from Memphis and St. Louis to California and
the presence of water made this a logical spot for a stage station. The Civil War ended Butterfield’s mail
delivery contract, but remnants of the station are still there for you to see. It took 24 days for the mail to get to
California which, at the time, was lightning fast compared to shipping it
around the tip of South America.
1861 was also the year of the Pass’s first battle between
local Apaches and the Army. It started with
a misunderstanding about who had abducted a young boy from a neighboring ranch
during an Indian raid. The Army was
certain that is was the Chiricahua Apaches, led by Cochise. A column of soldiers led by Lt. George Bascom
was sent to capture Cochise and secure the boy's return. But Cochise had nothing to do with the whole
affair. Bascom didn’t believe him and the resulting 16 days of fighting, known
today as the Bascom
Affair, was the first real conflict between local Apaches and the Army in
this region.
There was another battle in Apache Pass in 1862, only this
one was between Union Army volunteers from California and the Chiricahua Apache. Sent to the region to fight confederate
soldiers who had their eyes on the California gold fields, the Californians
were attacked by the Apaches. This
battle, known as the Battle of Apache
Pass, led to the army establishing Fort Bowie, named after California regiment
commander George Bowie, not Jim Bowie of big knife fame. The first fort was a series of tents and
primitive huts and that site can be visited on a short trail from the current
fort location. Construction of the
second fort, and the one you can visit today, began in 1868 and grew into one
of the most important outposts for fighting Apaches in the Southwest. Conflicts with Cochise went on for 10 years
until peace was made in 1872 and the Apache were given a reservation on their
traditional homeland.
Cochise’s Chiricahua Reservation was only in existence until
1876, when it was closed and the Chiricahua Apache were moved to another
reservation in the Gila River Valley. Only
Geronimo and his followers didn’t like that idea and this precipitated a second
round of fighting between the Apache and the U.S. Army. Conflicts with Geronimo lasted 10 years until
he was captured in 1886. As armed
conflicts with the local Apache were no longer a concern, the fort was closed
in 1894.
The trail goes by several key battle locations for both the
Bascom Affair and the Battle for Apache Pass and the Park Service does a good
job of telling the local stories. There
is also a graveyard by the trail that includes the grave of Little Robe, Geronimo’s
two-year old son. There is a guide that
tells a story for each of the 23 gravesites.
Be sure and take some time to read some of these stories, including the one
about O.O. Spence and how he won his Medal of Honor in a battle with Cochise in
October 1869.
The hike ends at the fort site. No complete buildings remain, but walls for
most of the 38 structures standing when the fort closed have been preserved and
this gives you a good sense of how the fort was laid out. Each building is well interpreted along the
pathway that winds through the fort site.
I was not expecting to see photos of the officer’s quarters, which graphically
illustrated that being an officer was WAY more comfortable than being an
enlisted man. These homes looked like
they could have been in any large city in America, not out in the middle of the
Arizona desert.
Author hanging out at the Barracks
There is a small visitor center and museum that tells the
story of what it was like to live here and you can get a stamp for your national
parks passport. And it was there that I
met Junior Ranger Mitch, a sixth grader traveling with his parents to “explore
all the national parks.” If only my
parents had been cool enough to take me on a yearlong trip across the country
to visit all the parks! Mitch’s parents
decided that national parks would make the best classroom for their son and he
was being home schooled through the national park system. His vest was covered with over 60 Junior
Ranger badges!
After our chat with Mitch and his parents and good tour
through the fort site, we headed back to the parking lot by way of the Overlook
Ridge trail above the visitor center. Don’t
miss this trail as you get great views of the fort site and the surrounding
landscape which helped me understand the strategic importance of this piece of
real estate and better appreciate why the Army chose to build a fort here.
Great photo from the ridge trail! What's that stuff on the tops of the adobe walls? I'm hoping you're not going to say cement.
ReplyDeleteit is some kind of protective covering to keep the adobe from eroding away.
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