The
drive from San Antonio
to El Paso
on IH-10 takes the better part of a day. You pass through long,
barren stretches and some of the most rugged country the state has
to offer. Travelers see this from the comfort of their cars and
don’t have to experience it other than visually if they don’t want
to. The speed limit is 80 miles per hour through the most open of
the wide open spaces. It’s possible to make what’s called “good
time.”
Today, the trip might be called boring or monotonous. But as Texas
was established and settled, the matter of traveling from San
Antonio to El
Paso was a matter of much concern among officials and entrepreneurs.
They badly needed to link these two budding blossoms of commerce
but there was a whole world – some 600 miles – of rugged country
between the two towns, a vast region made all the more treacherous
by the presence of Comanches and other tribes who liked the frontier
just the way it was.
In 1849, Maj. Gen. William Worth commissioned Robert Neighbors to
explore the region and come back with a map showing an acceptable
wagon path from San Antonio
to El Paso.
Worth was apparently a good judge of talent.
Not only had Neighbors served two years with the Army of the Republic
of Texas, he had also survived two years in a Mexican prison. In
1844 he was appointed Indian agent for Texas,
a job that sent him far beyond the boundaries of civilization and
also allowed him to develop a personal relationship with many of
the tribes he would encounter along the way; it would also help
get him killed.
Just as Worth was a good judge of character and ability, so was
Neighbors. He chose four white men to go with him, including legendary
ranger John S. “Rip” Ford and D.C. “Doc” Sullivan” who was as irreverent
as he was brave and who would provide a fair amount of comic relief
on the grueling, tedious and often dangerous route. Noted scout
and interpreter James Shaw and A.D. Neal along with four Indians
rounded the expedition.
Neighbors chose another legend-in-his-own time, Comanche chief Buffalo
Hump, to guide the expedition. The old chief, who eschewed all forms
of European clothing in favor of buffalo robes and beads, had led
raids all over the region and well into Mexico, making him more
well-acquainted with the area than anybody else. Fellow Comanches
persuaded him to leave the party, his place taken by another leader
of another Comanche band, Guadeloupe.
The star of the show, as gathered from Rip Ford’s memoirs, was Sullivan.
Guadeloupe’s account, had he left one, would not have been so light-hearted.
Like Neighbors, Sullivan had seen some hard and dangerous times.
He had been a prisoner at Mier
but was much too much even for Mexican prison officials. Given tools
to work with, he threw them away. Assigned kitchen duty, he attacked
the cooks; they fled in terror. Placed on probation with a priest,
he was sent back to the prison for being “incorrigible.” Mexico
eventually took pity on itself and released him. “He could sing
for hours and not repeat a song,” Ford noted.
As part of the Neighbors expedition, Sullivan performed stand-up
routines for the Comanches, leaving them convulsed in laughter.
The exception was Guadeloupe. Sullivan insisted on calling him “Blunk”
which infuriated the chief but greatly amused the other tribesmen.
The two nearly came to mortal blows at least once, much to the amusement
of the others.
That’s not to suggest that the trip was a frolic or that the Neighbors
and his men were anything less than serious about their mission.
Twenty-three days after they left San
Antonio, they made it to El
Paso. On the way back, taking a more northerly route, the trip
took 21 days.
Later, the Butterfield Overland Mail ran along this route. Roads
followed by highways followed by IH-10 eventually followed the same
route. Neighbors estimated the distance between Austin
and El Paso
to be 598 miles. Today’s precise technology marks the distance as
– 598 miles.
As an Indian agent, Neighbors worked hard to do what Indian agents
were hired to do – protect the Indians. When reservation Indians
in the vicinity of Fort
Belknap and Camp Cooper were threatened by angry citizens who
blamed them for raids being carried out against them, Neighbors
protected the reservation Indians with the aid of federal troops.
He managed the avert bloodshed and move the Indians to a new reservation
in 1859.
At Fort Belknap,
on his way back, a man named Edward Cornett, incensed at Neighbors
conciliatory attitude toward the reservation Indians, shot him in
the back and killed him. But the trail he blazed has lived on. He
would no doubt be amazed to find that some people today find it
a boring and uneventful journey.
© Clay Coppedge
"Letters from Central Texas"
September 7, 2013 Column
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