Everything about U S Camel Corps totally explained
The
U.S. Camel Corps was a mid-nineteenth century experiment by the
United States Army in using
camels as pack animals in the
Southwest United States.
While the camels proved to be well-suited to travel through the region, their unpleasant disposition and habit of frightening horses is believed to be responsible for their failure to be adopted as a mode of transportation in the United States.
Origin
The idea of using camels for military transport in the US dated back to 1836, when second lieutenant George H. Crossman began pressuring the
United States Department of War to use camels in campaigns against
Native Americans in
Florida. It wasn't until after the
U.S.-Mexican War (1846–1848) that the idea was taken seriously.
Newly-appointed
Secretary of War Jefferson Davis found the Army to be in need of a solution to its transportation problems in the western US. The rough terrain and dry climate was seen as being too rough on the
horses and
mules used by the Army, and camels provided a possible solution.
On,
March 3,
1855, the US Congress appropriated $30,000 for the project. Major Henry C. Wayne, a promoter of the idea, was assigned to procure the camels. On
June 4,
1855, Wayne departed
New York City on board
USS Supply, under the command of then-Lieutenant
David Dixon Porter.
The ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean, and purchased camels at ports in
North Africa (sources differ as to exactly where). On
April 29,
1856,
Supply arrived at
Indianola, Texas, with thirty-three camels and five drivers.
Use in the southwest
After allowing the animals a few weeks to recuperate from their sea voyage, they were taken to
Camp Verde.
Reports from initial tests were largely positive. The camels proved to be exceedingly strong, and were able to move quickly across terrain that
horses found problematic. Their legendary ability to go without water proved valuable on an 1857 survey mission led by
Edward Fitzgerald Beale from
Fort Defiance to the
Colorado River. The survey team and their camels continued on into
California where they were stationed at the
Benicia Arsenal.
While camels were suited to the job of transport in the American Southwest, the experiment still failed. Much of this was due to the less desirable qualities of the camels. Their stubbornness and aggressiveness made them unpopular among soldiers, and they frightened horses.
End of the experiment
With the arrival of the
American Civil War, the Camel Corps was mostly forgotten. Many of the camels were sold to private owners, others escaped into the desert. These feral camels continued to be sighted through the early 1900s, with the last reported sighting in 1941 near
Douglas, Texas.
Hi Jolly (Hadji Ali), a
Syrian camel driver who took part in the experiment, lived out his life in the US. He died in 1902 and is buried in
Quartzsite, Arizona. His grave is marked by a pyramid-shaped monument topped with a small metal camel.
Some of the camels were purchased by
Frank Laumeister, a veteran of the corps, and taken to the new
Colony of British Columbia in
1862-
1863 where they were engaged in freighting on the
Douglas Road,
Old Cariboo Road and other
gold-rush era routes there. Between the region's rocky trails and roads and the mutual hostility between camels and mules, the experiment was a failure and the camels were set out to pasture, with the last sighting of a wild camel in British Columbia was in the 1930s. Their presence in local history is reflected in the name of the
Camelsfoot Range near
Lillooet, and in a local basin called "the Camoo".
Further Information
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