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The U.S. military used camels to explore the Southwest. |
U.S. History |
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The camels proved the most useful on survey missions, helping to explore the region's harsh climates and scout locations for roads. They even proved to be great swimmers, crossing the Colorado River more successfully than the horses and mules traveling with them. On one mission, camels even led survivors to safety after the traveling party got lost in the Mojave Desert. The experiment, while considered successful by those who actually worked with the camels, was largely abandoned during the Civil War. Over the years, many animals were turned loose, and it was not unusual to see rogue camels wandering American deserts for a time: One of the most notorious camels of the era, the Red Ghost, roamed the Arizona countryside until 1893. | |
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The Camels Corps was championed by Jefferson Davis. | ||||||||||||||
When the idea for the Camel Corps was first floated by the Army, it had a champion in the Senate who helped secure funding when he became secretary of war: Jefferson Davis, who later became president of the Confederacy. He envisioned camels not as an invaluable part of surveying teams, but rather as a tool to drive Indigenous peoples off the land to make room for Southern settlers. This intention wasn't lost on the American public, and Davis regularly denied accusations that the Camel Corps was a pro-slavery plot. Southern plantation owners started using camels in their fields, and some historians suggest the camel trade was used as a ruse to transport enslaved people across the Atlantic. | ||||||||||||||
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