Fort Grant (Arizona)

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Fort Grant (1872-1905) was founded along a route that was often used by Apache fleeing to Mexico from the San Carlos Reservation. Prior to the closure of old Fort Grant  (Fort Breckinridge), a site was chosen for the new fort by General George Crook.

The “new” site was at a higher elevation and was a more strategic location, situated at the foot of the southwestern slope of Mount Graham in what is now Graham County in southeast Arizona.

Fort Grant, c.1885.

Fort Grant, c.1885.
Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.

The fort’s purpose was stop the marauding bands of Apache  Indians in western New Mexico and southeast Arizona.    

General George CrookIn January, 1873, eleven companies of cavalry and infantry were transferred to Fort Grant, under the command of Major Brown.
 
 The troops immediately began to establish additional buildings including officers’ quarters and a commissary building, as well as constructing a wagon road up the side of Mount Graham.
 
 From the beginning, the soldiers were tasked with intercepting the Indians escaping from the San Carlos Reservation and pursuing raiding parties along the international boundary.   The troops played a prominent role in the Apache Wars of the 1880s. 

Following the Battle of Cibecue on August 30, 1881, three White Mountain scouts by the names of Dead Shot, Dandy Jim and Skitashe, were court-martialed for their part in the mutiny.

The three scouts were hanged on a specially constructed gallows on the parade ground on March 3, 1882 as scores of civilians from the surrounding countryside looked on.

The Cibecue affair touched off a general outbreak that saw  Chiricahua and Warm Springs Apache such as Naiche, Juh, and Geronimo bolt the reservation and plunged Arizona, New Mexico, and northern Mexico into years of turmoil.

The campaign against the Apaches would continue until it finally ended with  Geronimo’s surrender in August of 1886.

In 1888, Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry were stationed at Fort Grant who often participated in civil duties, such as chasing train robbers and other outlaws.

One high profile case was the infamous Wham Paymaster Robbery which occurred on May 11, 1889.

After US Army Paymaster Major Joseph W. Wham, had paid the salaries of the soldiers at Fort Grant, he along with an escort of eleven Buffalo Soldiers, were making their way to Fort Thomas, when they were ambushed 18 miles from their destination.

The soldiers soon found themselves in a lengthy gun battle with the robbers, which resulted in eight of them being wounded.

The bandits, in the meantime, made off with $28,000 in gold and silver coins.

 The troops were withdrawn from Fort Grant in 1898, and the site was empty, but for a caretaker by the name of Colonel William F. Stewart in the Artillery Corps.

However, two years later, in 1900, the post became a staging point for numerous soldiers on their way to the Philippines to fight in the Spanish-American War.

 In October, 1905, Captain Jenkins marched Troop D across the parade grounds of Fort Grant for the last time. The soldiers  were then transferred to Fort Huachuca and the post was once again abandoned except for a caretaker.

After Arizona became a state on February 14, 1912, the government turned over the site to the State of  Arizona for use as the Arizona State Industrial School for wayward boys and girls. The school quickly began to modernize the buildings for new purposes.

In 1968, the school officially became part of the  Arizona State Department of Corrections and in 1973, became an adult male prison. In 1997 the prison became a unit of an Arizona State Prison complex headquartered in Safford, Arizona.

Over the years, extensive construction programs have destroyed many of the historic buildings, but several of the original adobe officers’ quarters are still utilized today. The prison is located on Arizona State Road 266 about 36 miles southwest of Safford, Arizona.