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VOICES of A few weeks ago
we documented Nathan Badeen’s service in the Today, we
profile the contributions of Hadji Ali to Story
submitted by:
Written
by: Chuck Woodbury QUARTZSITE,
The
story of Hi Jolly began in 1855 when Secretary of War Jefferson Davis was told
of an innovative plan to import camels to help build and supply a Western wagon
route from Congress
agreed and appropriated $30,000. Major
Henry Wayne was sent to the Hadji
Ali and another foreigner were hired to teach the soldiers how to pack the
animals. The Americans had a hard time pronouncing Ali's name so they nicknamed
him Hi Jolly. Beale
left on a Western expedition in June, 1857, with Hi Jolly along as chief camel
driver. Camels were loaded with 600 to 800 pounds each and traveled 25 to 30
miles a day. If the animals fared well, a series of Army posts could be set up
later along the route to relay mail and supplies across the Southwest. After
reaching "The
harder the test they (the camels) are put to, the more fully they seem to
justify all that can be said of them," Beale wrote. "They pack water
for days under a hot sun and never get a drop; they pack heavy burdens of corn
and oats for months and never get a grain; and on the bitter greasewood and
other worthless shrubs, not only subsist, but keep fat." He
concluded, "I look forward to the day when every mail route across the
continent will be conducted and worked altogether with this economical and noble
brute." But
perhaps he was too optimistic. What he didn't say was that the camels didn't
take to the West's rocky soil. And prospectors' burros and mules -- and even
Army mules -- were afraid of the odd-looking creatures and would sometimes panic
at their sight. Still,
in 1858, then-Secretary of War John Floyd told Congress, "The entire
adaptation of camels to military operations on the Plains may now be taken as
demonstrated." He
urged Congress to authorize the purchase of 1,000 more camels. Congress
didn't act, however, as it was preoccupied with trouble brewing between the
North and South. With
the first shots of the Civil War, the Camel Military Corps was as good as dead.
Most of the animals were auctioned off, although a few escaped into the desert
where most were shot by prospectors and hunters as pests. Hi
Jolly kept a few and started a freighting business between the To
his dying day, Hi Jolly believed that a few of the camels still roamed the
desert. Some people think the ghosts of some still do. From
Out West #18 ©2003
by Out West Newspaper A
book about the subject can be referenced at the following website:http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=262789178 |
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