Fort Pueblo Massacre


The Fort Pueblo massacre was a retaliatory attack that occurred on December 25, 1854 against Fort Pueblo also known as El Pueblo, a settlement on the north side of the Arkansas River, mile west of the mouth of Fountain Creek, above the mouth of the Huerfano. It followed the deaths of Chico Velasquez and others who died after having been given blankets saturated with smallpox by US authorities during the American Indian Wars. Coalition forces of over 100 Muache Utes and Jicarilla Dindes under the leadership of Chief Tierra Blanco led the attack against Fort Pueblo, killing 15 men, and capturing one woman, and two boys. Later on, the Muache killed the woman south of Pueblo at the Salt Creek. 2 women and 1 man survived the joint military operation, and the two boys who were captured, eventually returned.

Background

Benito Sandoval, brother to Teresita and Juana Maria Sandoval, was the Comandante of Fort Pueblo in December 1854. The Anglo-American builders left Fort Pueblo in 1849. Fort Pueblo was inhabited exclusively by native Mexicans from Taos, New Mexico, and their families, and 1 native American woman in 1854.
In 1854, the Arkansas River divided the American/Mexican border.
David Meriwether, the Governor of New Mexico, and Kit Carson passed out smallpox infected woolen coats to the Muache Utahs at a major meeting at Abiquiú, New Mexico on the Rio Chama in October 1854. Several Muache chiefs who had accepted the blankets caught smallpox and died, including Chico Velasquez. The Muache joined the Jicarilla Dindes in an attack on Costilla. In spite of their differing linguistics, the Jicarilla Dindes and the Muache Utes fought side-by-side because they were historical allies, and because they were closely related by intermarriage.

Attack

Tierra Blanco casually walked into Fort Pueblo on December 25, 1854, went right up to Benito Sandoval as he did many times before, and talked to him. Benito had traded vegetables and goat's milk with the Muache and Dindes before. Benito Sandoval and Tierra Blanco were friends, and Tierra needed for Benito to keep thinking that. Tierra Blanco had challenged Benito Sandoval to a friendly shooting contest. Benito agreed, and as they were shooting at their targets outside of the fort, a crowd of Muaches begin to swell up around them. After the shooting contest had commenced, Benito Sandoval invited Chief Tierra Blanco and his Muaches and Jicarillas back inside the Fort to feast. As they were drinking and feasting, Tierra Blanco gave his signal, and Blanco's soldiers began to massacre the Mexicans.
Blanco's warriors killed 15 Mexican men, including Benito Sandoval, Benito Baca, Manuel Trujeque, Miera, and Nasario. The Canadian fought so valiantly, that he was brutally killed a hundred yards away. The Muaches captured Chipeta Miera, a married Mexican woman, but they killed her soon afterward, at the Arroyo Salado, just south of Pueblo.
Benito's two sons, Felix and Juan Isidro Sandoval, were also captured by the Muache.
Only three people escaped Tierra Blanco's ambush. Andrea, a Mexican wife, and Rosa, a native American, hid in the brush in the river bottoms. Rumaldo lost his tongue after being shot through the mouth, but was able to get away.

Aftermath

William S. Messervy, the acting Governor of New Mexico, called for the genocide of the entire Jicarilla tribe, noting "the best interest of this territory and the highest dictates of humanity demanded their extinction."
Fort Pueblo was abandoned afterwards, until it became important again during the Colorado Gold Rush of 1859.
Rumaldo conversed using native American sign-language, which he was already familiar with, for the rest of his days.
Felix Sandoval was given up by the Muaches in Taos, New Mexico to the Americans in 1855 after a peace treaty was signed.
Juan Isidro Sandoval was traded to the Navajo, and then bought by a Mexican speculator. Juan was restored to his mother two years after the Fort Pueblo Massacre after she paid the Mexican speculator $300 in cash and merchandise, including a Hawkins rifle.