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Mexican Mule Packers Deliver Supplies to Oregon Militia

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

When the Rogue River Indian War erupted in 1855, the U.S. military had 350 men assigned to the vast Oregon and Washington territories.  A militia called the Second Regiment Mounted Volunteers formed and played a major role in the war.  Its success depended on the smooth delivery of supplies to the troops.
Soldiers carried two days’ supply of rations, a change of clothes and ammunition.  The rest of their food and supplies had to be transported from distribution centers on roads that were little more than trails impassible for wheeled freight wagons.
The regiment hired 119 mule packers, three dozen of them experienced Mexicans whose mules were bred for heavy loads.  The Mexicans were skilled packers who were quick to tend to sick or poorly fed animals.  They already knew the trails across the Siskiyou Mountains from the earlier gold rush days.  Pay was good at $6 a day for an average of 80 days.
One observer remarked on the colorful mule trains and said the tinkling of the leader’s bell mixed with the shouting in Spanish of the Mexican muleteers created “a not unpleasant medley of sounds.”
Source: Ganboa, Erasmo. "Mexican Mule Packers and Oregon’s Second Regiment Mounted Volunteers, 1855-1956." Oregon Historical Quarterly 92.1 (1991): 41-49. Web. 18 Aug. 2016.

Episode
3007
Date
Author
Maryann Mason