"Dear Sir: Your note of the 15th ultimo has just been received, Herewith you will find the message of the governor of New Mexico, indorsing the policy of putting the Navajo Indians on the reservation at Bosque Redondo. The legislature has unanimously approved this policy. Dr. Steck himself approved it before he left New Mexico, as I can prove. Every intelligent man in the country approves it. It will be the most unfortunate thing that ever happened to New Mexico and Arizona, the interfering with this policy. The Indians will go on as before. The great thoroughfare over the 35th parallel will be interrupted by them; people going to the new gold fields will be murdered; and, after another fruitless season, you will come to this policy at last. It is a pity that other motives, besides what is best for the country and the most humane for the Indians, should work to the disadvantage of the people, just now. We have made a good beginning, and if "let alone" this will be the last Navajo war. Colonel Collins, who for years has been the superintendent, indorses the policy throughout, as you see by his paper. What motive influences Dr. Steck? We had a sharp fight with the Navajoes on the 5th instant. You will see the account in the papers."
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Businesspeople from the United StatesMembers of the United States House of RepresentativesRepublican Party (United States) politiciansPeople from New MexicoHispanic Americans
Original Language: English
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Sources
Brigadier General James H. Carleton, Letter to Francisco Perea, Delegate in Congress from New Mexico (January 12 1864) as quoted in Condition of the Indian Tribes, Report of the Joint Special Committee, Appointed under Joint Resolution of March 3, 1865 of the Two Houses of Congress (1867) p.155
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Francisco_Perea
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Francisco Perea
Francisco Perea (January 9, 1830 – May 21, 1913) was a delegate for the Territory of New Mexico to the 38th United States Congress from Mary 4, 1863 to March 3, 1865, a rancher, and Union Army officer in the American Civil War. He was a paternal grandson of Don Francisco Xavier Chávez, the first Governor of the Departmento de Nuevo México, 1st Mexican Empire, and a first cousin of Francisco Perea and of Pedro Perea.
15 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Francisco Perea →
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