A Mexican Immigrant’s Act of Honor
February 14, 2012, 3:44 pm
By JEFF BIGGERS
While Arizonas single brief Civil War skirmish at Picacho Peak between the Texas-led Confederates and Union soldiers from California, on April 15, 1862, is annually taken out of mothballs for celebration, perhaps the states most enduring story of honor during the war remains one Mexican immigrants courageous act in the face of the Confederate occupation of Tucson.
On Valentines Day in 1862, Jefferson Davis signed the territory of Arizona in truth, southern Arizona, below the 34th parallel into the rebel states as their westernmost capital. It took the Civil War to bring such long-sought territorial recognition, which came with competing claims and declarations. As the United States Congress dallied, Confederate sympathizers had first gathered in Mesilla, N. M., on March 16, 1861, and hastily claimed that the greater Arizona territory would not recognize the present Black Republican administration. A subsequent convention in Tucson elected a delegate to the Confederate Congress.
When the Confederate flag rose from the mesquite poles in Tucsons depopulated main plaza, the Johnny Rebs were joined by Mark Aldrich, a merchant from western Illinois who had been indicted for but not convicted of the murder of the Mormon founder Joseph Smith, and had also served as mayor. The remaining citizens and merchants in the occupied town, like the mining pioneer Sylvester Mowry, sided with the Confederate forces. A Republican from Rhode Island, Mowry took advantage of his entrepreneurial spirit to provide lead from his mines for their ammunition.
One Mexican immigrant stood his ground for the Union.
More:
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/14/a-mexican-immigrants-act-of-honor/?ref=opinion