Thursday, July 18, 2024

Finis Ewing Kavanaugh and the Battle for Cubero

 


 
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Cubero in the 1860s, Palace of the Governors Photo Archives, NMHM/DCA, 15757
Cubero is a tiny town with a big Civil War story about a battle that was won without a single shot being fired, by a small but determined group of men against a garrison ten times its size. Located just north of I-40 between Laguna Pueblo and Grants, 45 miles west of Albuquerque, the town has less than 300 people today. It has a post office and an elementary school, but not much else.

At the time of the Civil War, Cubero was a small farming community.
Cubero and nearby San Fidel provided hay for the horses stabled at Fort Wingate. It also housed a depot that the Army kept there to keep its soldiers supplied during its intermittent campaigns against the Navajo. The depot, and the trail to Fort Wingate, were guarded by 45 soldiers who were Volunteers in the New Mexico militia.
PictureSutlers sold extra food and supplies to soldiers. Their stores were often in tents so they could move with the army.
One of Cubero’s most prominent citizens was Finis Ewing Kavanaugh (some records spell his name with a C). Born in 1833, in Lafayette, Missouri, Kavanaugh attended St. Louis Medical College before establishing a practice in Santa Fe. During the 1850s he served as physician on several of the Army’s Indian campaigns and was part of the expedition into Utah during the Mormon War.

In 1858, he became co-owner of a sutler’s store, a store that provided goods to soldiers, at Camp Floyd.  He also owned the post sutleries at Cubero and Fort Fauntleroy, which changed its name to Lyon, and finally Wingate after Colonel Thomas Turner Fauntleroy left the Union Army to assume a position as brigadier general in the Provisional Army of Virginia. Kavanaugh owned and raced fine horses and served in the territorial legislature. His wife (who may have been common-law), Refugio Aguilar stayed on Kavanaugh’s ranch near Cubero. They had at least 2, and possibly 5 children.


PictureBill Davidson
Although he had served in the U.S. Army, Kavanaugh was a Confederate sympathizer. When he learned that Confederate Brigadier General H. H. Sibley was leading his Army of New Mexico up the Rio Grande, he hatched a plot to provide the Rebels with supplies. Accompanied by three fellow conspirators, George Gardenhier, R.T. Thompson, and Richmond (sometimes called Richard, or Dick) Gillespie, Kavanaugh confronted Francisco Aragon, the captain of the post at Cubero. They convinced the captain that they were the vanguard of a mighty Army, which was bearing down on the post, and that it would be wise of the captain to surrender.

Bill Davidson, a soldier in Sibley’s Army later wrote that, immediately after the battle of Valverde, General Canby had sent a courier to Cubero warning them of the Confederate approach, but the Indians had killed the courier. Whether or not this is true, Aragon was caught completely off guard, and quickly surrendered. the Battle of Cubero was won without a single shot being fired: four Confederates had managed to overwhelm a 45 man garrison with words alone.

​Gillespie then rode to Albuquerque, where he got Captain A. S. Thurmond and Company A of the 3rd Texas Mounted Volunteers to return with him to Cubero to retrieve the captured supplies. They were able to bring between 20 and 25 wagon-loads of military supplies including 60 guns and 3,000 rounds of ammunition back to Albuquerque. Some of the Confederate soldiers who arrived at Cubero were sick and ended up staying at the abandoned post, where they lived off supplies from Kavenaugh’s store. Three of those soldiers died, probably of pneumonia, and are buried in Cubero’s cemetery. 

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Kathy Helms/Independent https://www.ftwingate.org/docs/pub/ Correspondence/Aug_10_2017_A_Piece_of_Civil_war_history_lies_in_Cubero_Cemetery.pdf
When Kavanaugh and his accomplices were indicted for treason, he headed for Texas, where he was commissioned as a Major in Baird's 4th Texas Cavalry. Kavanaugh's property was confiscated by the U.S. Army and sold for $1,657.28. I could find nothing explaining what happened to his wife and children, which it seems he abandoned when he left the territory. In Texas, he became friends with Colonel Dan Showalter.

After the war, Dr. Kavanaugh went south to Mexico, where he and Showalter opened a bar in Mazatlan.  Showalter was shot and killed in a bar fight in February 1866. Some records state that Kavanaugh died in that same fight, while others report that he died of alcoholism and tuberculosis. He was 33 years old when he was buried in the U.S. National Cemetery in Mexico City.

Jennifer Bohnhoff is the author of Rebels Along the Rio Grande, a trilogy of middle grade novels set in New Mexico during the Civil War. The Cubero incident described above happened during the time covered in The Worst Enemy, book 2 of the series. Book 3 will be published in October 2024. 
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Thursday, July 11, 2024

Chocolate Peanut Butter Granola

 

 

It's summer, and just too darn hot to cook, even first thing in the morning. 

You will have to turn your oven on to make a batch of this yummy granola, but it'll be worth it! Slice a banana or strawberries over the top and serve with milk for a sweet way to start your day. 

But this is too good to be just for breakfast. Sprinkle it over ice cream for an easy dessert. If you're really feeling creative, pack some of it into a pie plate when it is fresh from the over and the chocolate hasn't yet set up, and you'll have a super crust for an ice cream pie.

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Chocolate Peanut Butter Granola

Preheat oven to 325°
Spray a roasting pan with oil.

Place in roasting pan and mix: 
3 cups regular rolled oats
1 cup roasted peanuts, chopped very coarsely
3/4 cup chocolate chips
1/2 cup sunflower seeds
1 tsp ground cinnamon

Mix in microwave-safe bowl. Microwave 30 seconds, then stir. Repeat until peanut butter is liquid and mixture is smooth:
1/2 cup smooth peanut butter
1/2 cup light karo syrup 
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 TBS water

Pour the peanut butter mixture over the dry ingredients and mix well. Spread in an even layer. 

Bake for 24 minutes, taking out every 8 minutes to stir the edges into the middle, then spread out evenly. 

Remove from oven and let cool completely. Break up larger chunks before storing in an airtight container.


When she's not in the kitchen, Jennifer Bohnhoff's writing historical and contemporary fiction for middle school through adult readers. You can learn more about her books on her website.

Thursday, July 4, 2024

Summer in the High Desert

 

 

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Last week I drove into Edgewood, the town that is in the flats to the east of where I live. Edgewood and Albuquerque are equidistant from my house in the Sandia Mountains, and while Albuquerque may have a greater selection of stores, Edgewood has that small town, welcoming feel that is balm to my soul. It's also the town in which I finished my teaching career. I was spent four years teaching language arts and social studies at Edgewood Middle School, and coaching cross country and track. 

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This trip was so I could buy groceries for the upcoming 4th of July holiday and weekend, but it also gave me a chance to run on my old cross country course, which wandered through the high desert just west of the school. The 3.2 mile course runs through a huge stand of cholla cacti. Some of them are 6 or 7 feet high and ten feet across, so it's almost like running through a forest. The cholla were covered with brilliant pink blooms. 

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Lower to the ground, prickly pear cactus also sported their summer flowers. It's always struck me as strange that these flowers are a beautiful, translucent yellow, because the juice from a prickly pear is bright pink -- very similar to the color of cholla flowers. If you've never had prickly pear jelly, you're missing out!

A couple of times, it seemed that the air was full of the buzzing of bees. I finally slowed down and tried to figure out where the buzzing was coming from. There were bees visiting the cholla and prickly pear blossoms, but I soon discovered that most of them were underfoot. These were ground dwelling bees! 
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I hadn't ever known before that there was such a thing, but apparently there are hundreds of different kinds of bees that live in New Mexico, and many of them are ground dwellers. Click here to learn more about them. I don't know whether the ones I saw are digger bees, miner bees, or cactus bees, but it was a pleasure to see them. 

The desert might look deserted, especially on a warm summer day, but it is still alive and full of beauty. 


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