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Fort Stanton Live
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for a complete history of Fort Stanton
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1855 Rio
Bonita Valley was being settled by Hispanic farmers
who called their settlements La Placitas. Apaches
were conducting periodic raids against settlements
and ranchers. A fort was planned and established
May 4, 1855. Named after Capt. Henry W. Stanton,
who was killed in a skirmish with the Apache. |
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1861 Fort was abandoned to
Confederate soldiers. Retreating troops set fire to
fort but rain extinguished the effort. Mexican,
Indian, and Anglo settlers cannibalized the fort for
supplies. |
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1862 Kit Carson and Union
troops occupied Fort Stanton or what remained of it,
while campaigning against the Mescalero Apaches.
Majority of Mescalero surrendered to Carson and
spent next three years in captivity at Fort Sumner.
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1865 Mescalero Apache fled back
to their homeland in the mountains of Sierra Blanca
and once again Ft. Stanton troops were busy. Ft.
Stanton was now manned by Buffalo Soldiers.
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1869 Lincoln County was formed
and the town known as La Placita became Lincoln to
commemorate our country's late president. |
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1878 Lincoln County War
climaxed with an intervention by troops from Ft.
Stanton under Col. Nathan A. Dudley. |
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1880's Billy the Kid
incarcerated at Ft. Stanton. Ft. Stanton soldiers
instrumental in running to ground Warm Springs and
Mescelaro Apaches under Victorio and Geronimo.
Governor Wallace spends time at Ft. Stanton to work
on his book, Ben Hur. |
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1887 "Black Jack" Pershing
begins first of two tours served at Ft. Stanton.
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1896 Ft. Stanton decommissioned
by the Army. |
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1899 Became the first hospital
dedicated to the treatment of tuberculosis for the
marine services which at that time was the Merchant
Marine, Coast Guard, and a small Navy. To qualify
for admittance, one had to have served three months
on a marine vessel flying the American flag,
consequently, many patients were seamen from foreign
countries. The hospital was under the United States
Public Health Service. |
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1900-01
Ft. Stanton expands to be more self-sufficient. |
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1941 Fort Stanton became the
country's first internment camp for Germans.
Captain Wilhelm Daehne and 410 of his fellow Germans
were quartered there until the end of the war. The
Germans were non-combatants from a cruise ship and
entered the Fort Stanton camp before the US entered
the war. |
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1953 The State of New Mexico
took over Ft. Stanton and continued to operate it as
a sanitarium for fourteen more years when
tuberculosis had all but disappeared in the United
States. |
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1966 Converted to Fort Stanton
Hospital and Training Center for the Developmentally
Disabled, Las Lunas Branch. |
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1996 State Corrections
Facility. |
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2005 It's up to us!
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1855 In the shadow of Sierra
Blanca where the mountain spirits rise live the
Mescalero Apache. Into this valley uninvited came
the Hispanic settlers. Building small villages they
called Las Placitas they built torreons, tall round
towers they could gather in to fight and hide from
the Apache. Soon Anglos also uninvited began coming
with their cattle to the good grazing and abundant
water of the Rio Bonita Valley. Behind them came the
miners looking for the yellow metal. Apache raids
became more aggressive and plans were made to build
a fort. The fort would be built on the order of the
western forts without a stockade and around a
quadrangle. Nestled in the foothills of the
Sacramentos, the Rio Bonita River provided water for
the fort and the horses accompanying it while the
area had accessible roads, abundant grazing for the
animals, wood and building timber. Forts of this
type became small communities and provided more than
just protection to the surrounding villages and
ranches. They provided markets for farm produce,
crops, and cattle. They provided medical
facilities, jails and much of the social life of the
area. Fort Stanton was established on March 19, 1855
by Col. John Garland, 8th U.S. Infantry. It was
named after Capt. Henry W. Stanton, 1st U.S.
Dragoons who lost his life near the post in a battle
against the Apache.
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1861 On August 2, 186l after
learning of the fall of Fort Fillmore and the
surrender of Major Isaac Lynde, Brevet Lieutenant
Colonel Benjamin S. Roberts ordered the abandonment
of Fort Stanton. Officers all over New Mexico were
resigning posts in order to serve with the
Confederacy. Roberts set fire to the fort and
ordered that all supplies that could not be moved
destroyed. A strong summer rainstorm put out the
fires and the Confederates marched into a fort with
a good share of its commissary and quartermaster
stores intact. They also recovered a working
battery. The Confederates brought a train from Fort
Bliss to carry off supplies. During the months of
August and September, 1861, the Confederacy
maintained Fort Stanton. In early September Apache
raids began again and after losing three out of four
men detailed to watch the roads the Confederates
abandoned the fort and returned to the Mesilla
Valley.
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1862 Following the abandonment of Fort
Stanton by the Confederacy it was again reclaimed by
the Union. Under the legendary Gen. Kit Carson,
five companies of New Mexico volunteers took
possession of the fort. Gen. Carson was well
known to New Mexicans as a mountain man, guide and
Indian Agent. While he found Ft. Stanton in a
state of near collapse with only the stone walls
still standing, he did a quick fix and again
Fort Stanton was operational to continue defense of
the surrounding ranches, towns and settlers against
the raiding Apache. Carson had orders to
exterminate all warriors and hold the women and
children captive. He did not believe in the
extremity of this order and tried a more humane approach. Eventually the Mescalero were subdued
and approximately 500 chose to surrender to Carson
at Fort Stanton.
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1865 The Mescelaro Apache fed up
with broken promises, a lack of understanding and
Indian Agents who were bent on profit instead of
care left the reservation and once again Fort
Stanton was on the alert. In October, 1865 Brevet
Lieutenant Colonel Emil Fritz, Company B, First
Cavalry, California Volunteers took over as post commandant. He served until March, 1866 when he
turned over command to Brevet Major Lawrence G.
Murphy, Company C, First New Mexico Calvary. After
mustering out in the fall of 1866 Fritz and Murphy
formed a partnership and became post sutlers.
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1869 In 1869 Lincoln County was formed with
Las Placitas becoming the county seat. It was
because of this Las Placitas changed its name to
Lincoln to honor the late President. J.J. Dolan
was mustered out of the army at Ft. Stanton and went
to work for L.G. Murphy. Rebuilding work at Fort
Stanton was suspended with only the guardhouse being
completed. September the 6th saw the first full
election in Lincoln County. William Brady a past
commander at Fort Stanton and a good friend of L. G. Murphy's was elected sheriff. In November the
Apache again began raiding running off 115 head of
cattle from the ranch of Robert Casey. Lts.
Cushing and Yeager leave the fort with 32 Buffalo
Soldiers and attack an Indian "rancheria" in the
Guadalupe Mountains recovering most of Casey's stock. In December Cushing and Yeager again lead a
force of 35 buffalo soldiers and 28 civilians
against the Apache in the Guadalupe Mountains.
Yeager is wounded.
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1878 During the infamous siege at the McSween House when the Regulators and the Dolan (old
Murphy faction) came head to head, the tide of
battle was said to have been turned with the
entrance of Col. Nathan A. Dudley, a column of
troops, a gattling gun and a mountain howitzer.
The army at Fort Stanton had orders not to interfere
in civilian matters but Dudley took it upon himself
to override the order for the safety of the women
and children in Lincoln. In effect he was the
posse commitas for Sheriff Peppin and the Dolan
faction, many of whom had served at Fort Stanton
earlier in their careers. Although Dudley said he
was there for the protection of women and children
he refused protection to Susan McSween, Elizabeth
Shields and her children since they chose to stay in
the house with Alexander McSween, Susan's husband
and the regulators. Warrants were out for the
arrest of McSween and some of the regulators, one of
which was William Bonney, alias Billy the Kid. In
effect, the regulators held warrants for the arrest
of members of the Dolan faction. Susan McSween saw
her husband killed and her home burned to the ground
while the military looked on. She would later file
charges against Col. Dudley that resulted in a court
martial hearing. Dudley was found not guilty of
any charges including arson but remained a
controversial character in Lincoln County history.
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1880's Buffalo soldiers from Fort Stanton
were again called upon to stand duty in the
continued Apache raiding. Literally running the
Apache to ground they were successful in bringing in
the remains of Victorio's band and Geronimo's.
Governor Lew Wallace visited at Fort Stanton to take
advantage of the peace of the valley while writing
his epic Ben Hur. Billy the Kid was brought to the
fort to await his hanging but using a trick he had
applied before, he escaped by climbing the chimney.
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1887
August of 1887 John J. Pershing arrived at Fort
Stanton to begin his first of two tours of duty.
Pershing was so impressed with the performance of
the Buffalo Soldiers he earned himself the nickname
of "Black Jack." While he was at Fort Stanton
he had the distinction of participating in a new
War Department program called "War Games." Pershing's troops were the
"pursurers".
Black Jack Pershing would go on to distinguish
himself as the commander of the American
Expeditionary Force in WWI.
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1896 With the ending of the Indian Wars,
Fort Stanton was no longer a major player on the frontier. By 1893 the occupancy of the fort was
down to fifteen. In August 1896 the fort was
officially decommissioned.
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1899 On April 27, 1899, Fort Stanton
entered a new phrase of operation. Taken over by
the United States Public Health Office, it became a
hospital for tubercular patients. It was a made to
order sanatorium with a constant water supply,
peaceful environment and temperate climate. Dr.
Francis Creeson, medical officer in command at Fort
Stanton in 1900, stated it thus: "This vast and
salubrious stretch of country, which is sometimes
sneeringly alluded to as "a land of sand,
sagebrush and cacti," possesses in an almost
illimitable degree those very elements which
observation and experience have proven to be of the
utmost value in the treatment of tuberculosis."
(Gomey 1969: 56-58) In April 1899 when Fort
Stanton was transferred to the Public Health
Service, it had a total of 38 buildings. These
were in various states of repair. It took
approximately six months to get the fort hospital
ready.
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1900-01 With the patient load increasing
every advantage was taken to make the fort a
self-sufficient operation. During this time an ice
and cold storage plant were installed. This was
followed by a laundry, patient wards and electric
power plant and new office buildings. The
establishment of a dairy farm, truck farm and the
addition of poultry made the fort not only
self-sustaining but allowed therapy for some of the
patients. The regimen for tubercular patients was
very specific: fresh air, good diet, and rest. A
set of rules was given to each patient and he could
only be considered for a "tent house" after he
had passed a test on the rules. "Tent houses"
were a coveted privilege over living in the wards.
Given the nature of sailors, the rules also warned
against liquor, cigarettes, and card games. A
patient could be dismissed for use of alcohol and
card playing was not permitted if a patient was
running a fever. Because of the number of patients
and the need to feed them Fort Stanton still played
a major role in the economy of Lincoln County.
Working at the hospital was considered a "plum" job. Room and board was furnished. Pay was a
dollar a day but you had commissary privileges, free
wood and electricity and two Sundays off a month.
Fort Stanton also continued to play its part in the
social life of Lincoln County. Patients held, paid
for and sometimes participated in an annual rodeo.
As the fort had a theater it provided entertainment
for patients and staff.
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1939 Captain Wilhelm Daehne the commander of
the German luxury liner, the Columbus, scuttled her
off the coast of Cuba rather than have her captured
by British warships. Captain Daehne after
investigating a number of different sites settled on
Fort Stanton as an internment site. As we were not
at war with Germany at the time the sailors were
considered "distressed seaman." In the spring of
1941 Captain Daehne and 410 German sailors occupied
a former CCC Camp across from Ft. Stanton. They
promptly began to convert it into a quality resort
for POW's. They furnished themselves with a
recreation hall complete with a basketball court,
reading room, and a music room where they listened
to the ship's orchestra. They also built a
swimming pool. When the United States went to war
with Germany a barbed wire fence was added. The
Germans established their own gardens growing corn,
beans, squash, cabbage, potatoes and other
vegetables which they stored, dried, or froze for
later use. In 1942 a small contingent of Japanese
farmers from California and interned in a separate camp. German workers were taken by truck to the
gardens each morning and occasion prisoners escaped. The Border Patrol employed expert Apache
trackers to search out these escapees. If was
accepted that the Germans had seen a number of wild
west movies, upon capture they pleaded not to be
scalped.
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1953 Marine hospital supervision was
suspended with the availability of drugs to treat tuberculosis. The hospital was transferred to the
state of New Mexico for a treatment facility. The
curiosity of this transfer came with the first patients. Many were Navajos, one of the tribes the
fort had originally been designed to subdue. The
hospital maintained a patient load of 200 to 300 for
the next ten years. This necessitated the building of a new bed wing and the establishment of
occupational and rehabilitation programs. A school
was added for child patients.
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1966 Following a tubercular patient decline,
Fort Stanton again underwent change. This time it
became a branch of the Los Lunas Hospital and
Training school for the mentally handicapped.
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1996 When Los Lunas no longer found it
feasible to operate a facility the state turned the
fort over to the State Corrections Facility. It
was used to house minimum security prisoners until
1999. At this time part of the fort was leased to
Amity, Intl. who currently operates a rehab center
on the premises.
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2005 It's up to us! In summing up the
role that Fort Stanton has played in area history,
hospital chronicler Carole Gomey states, "Fort
Stanton...has remained in constant operation despite
various changes in utilization. Unlike many other
military posts which outlived their usefulness after
hostilities with the Indians ceased, Fort Stanton
survived to provide employment and service to the
local community and the State of New Mexico. It
has retained this characteristic throughout it
unique history. Its roots have grown deep in New
Mexico and Lincoln County, and from them have sprung
a whole way of life." (Gomey 1969: 92)
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