Gila Expedition

The Gila Expedition or Morehead War was an 1850 California militia attack on the Quechan Indians in retaliation for the Glanton Massacre near the confluence of the Gila River and Colorado River in Arizona. It was the beginning of the 1850 to 1853 Yuma War.[1]

Downriver from a ferry owned by A.L. Lincoln, the Quechan set up a ferry business to transport people, animals and goods across the Colorado River on their way to the California Gold Rush. John Joel Glanton and his scalp-hunting gang destroyed the Indian boat and beat the local Quechan chief. For a while they took over Lincoln's ferry operation, killing Mexican and American passengers for their goods and money. In revenge, the Quechan attacked, killed, and scalped Glanton and most of the gang in 1850.[2]

Later that year, the California state government recruited men for $6 a day to attack the Quechan. On April 16, 1850, 142 men commenced the expedition against the Quechan. However, the military operation went badly and the expedition members were besieged until September 16.[1]

Because of the inflated costs of goods and wages during the Gold Rush, the cost of the operation reached $113,000, nearly bankrupting the state of California as the first of its military operations against American Indians.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Secrest, William B. (2003). When the great spirit died: the destruction of the California Indians, 1850-1860. Sanger, California: Quill Driver Books. p. 52.
  2. "John Joel Glanton", Texas Handbook of History Online, accessed 2 December 2009

External links

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