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 Texas : Features : Columns : "Texas Tales"

Texas History

Adobe Outposts on the Rio Grande

by Mike Cox
Mike Cox
The U.S. military has endured its share of sarcasm over the years for not always having the brightest ideas, hence the classic oxymoron of "military intelligence."

But in fairness to the various services, despite occasional setbacks, their ideas have always been good enough to win wars.

When revolution raged in Mexico and occasionally spilled over into Texas in the years just before and during World War I, the U.S. Army flooded the border with troops.

The Army, though the transition to motor vehicles had begun, still depended on soldiers on horseback, supplied by pack mules or mule-pulled wagons.

Because of the long distances involved, and the fact that cavalry could only move 30 to 40 miles a day, the military established a series of outposts up and down the border. Many of the small installations stood in the vastness of the Big Bend, where bandit raids had been a serious problem.

For nearly 20 years, soldiers stationed in those remote points made do, as a quasi-official organ called the Quartermaster Review reported in 1925, "with only tents and shacks for shelter, hauling their own water from the Rio Grande and enduring…intense heat and bitter cold."

Finally, in the spring of 1919, someone in the War Department had an idea that the troops in the field most of have applauded. The military decided to spend $8.5 million for labor and material to build modern facilities at 49 stations along the Rio Grande.

Eleven of those outposts would be along the Rio Grande south of Marfa, the military headquarters for the Big Bend, "radiating like the spokes of a wheel, with Marfa as a center, averaging some 170 miles across high mountains and over trails that were hard on pack trains."

Because of the difficulty of transporting building material over such rough terrain and over such long distances, the Army had an even better idea: Use adobe made from straw and clay from the banks of the Rio Grande.

"These adobe buildings have the characteristic of being far cooler in summer and very much warmer in winter than wooden buildings," the article said. In addition, adobe structures could not burn and tended to last a long time.

The idea must have originated in Texas, where savvy officers understood the local culture. As the article in the Review put it: "A proposal was made to the War Department to build adobe barracks of a special design, utilizing the old ideas which had been in use in Mexico since the time of the Aztec Indians and some modern ideas t meet the old defects."

The modern idea was to reinforce the foot-thick adobe with heavy wire mesh covered with hard finish plaster to protect the water-soluble brick from weather (in the odd event it ever rained in that country.)

In addition to the adobe barracks, officer's quarters, mess halls and lavoratories, all the outposts had water, sewage and electricity furnished by World War I-surplus generators.

Though the use of adobe proved effective and doubtless saved some tax dollars, the construction project proved to be too much, too late. No sooner had all the improvements been made than the turmoil in Mexico quieted and peacefulness descended on the border.

The Army abandoned most of the outposts not long after all the new construction had been completed. Even so, the installations served as periodic bivouacs during training maneuvers and routine patrols for as long as the military guarded the border with horse soldiers, an effort than continued through the beginning of World War II.
© Mike Cox
"Texas Tales" - March 1, 2006 column

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This page last modified: March 1, 2006