Texans make a lot of extravagant claims. Sometimes they are true. Like the story about having camels in Texas. Jefferson Davis, Secretary of War (1853-1857) under President Franklin Pierce, convinced Congress to appropriate $30,000 to buy and import camels for military use as beasts of burden. Davis claimed that because camels carried tremendous loads, traveled long distances without water and ate any plant they were well-suited to the desert-like conditions of the West.
On May 13, 1856, citizens of the thriving seaport of Indianola on the Texas Gulf Coast turned out in droves to watch thirty-two adult camels and one calf wildly rearing, breaking halters, kicking, and crying as three Arabs and two Turk handlers made a valiant effort to control the beasts. Before the day ended the camels regained their land legs and amid the tingling of bells hanging from their saddles, they plodded docilely toward the corral constructed by the War Department.
A horseback rider rode ahead of the camels shouting to get horses and mules out of the way since the sight and smell of the strange beasts sent both horses and mules into frightened frenzies causing runaway wagons and tossed riders. The townspeople followed the parade thoroughly enjoying the commotion.
Some accounts claim that the War Department ran out of wood for the corral and resorted to stacking up the plentiful prickly pear cactus for fencing. The camels ate the prickly pear.
Major H.C. Wayne, who purchased the camels and accompanied them to Texas, reported to Secretary Davis that Indianolans voiced skepticism about camels being stronger than their mules and oxen. In sort of a PR stunt, Major Wayne directed one of the handlers to take a camel to the Quartermaster’s forage house for four bales of hay. Major Wayne mingled among the crowd listening to the derisive comments of those absolutely sure the kneeling camel could not rise under the burden of two bales weighing 613 pounds. Then, two more bales were added for an incredible 1,256 pounds. To the astonishment of the onlookers, the camel rose on command and easily walked away.
After three weeks of exercising to prepare the camels for the 200-mile trek to Camp Verde on the western frontier of Texas, the procession moved majestically across the prairie.
A Victoria woman along the route gathered some of the camel hair and knitted socks for President Franklin Pierce. He sent a thank you letter, but did not mention wearing the things.
The experiment proved so successful that another forty-one camels arrived in 1857. Camels carried supplies for a team surveying a wagon road from New Mexico to the Colorado River and on to California. They hauled supplies in the first expedition to explore and map the Big Bend on the Texas/Mexican border.
A Methodist circuit rider, John Wesley DeVilbiss wrote that he was conducting a brush arbor camp meeting south of Camp Verde when six camels walked into the meeting carrying wives and children of Camp Verde military officers’. At the end of the day, the visitors climbed aboard the docile beasts and plodded away.
When Texas seceded from the Union, Federal troops abandoned the western frontier and the camels were left to roam. The Confederates used some camels to pack cotton bales to Mexico where international ships waited to barter for guns and medical supplies. One camel carried all the baggage for an infantry company.
Although the camels fulfilled all expectations as beasts of burden, they were eventually sold and allowed to die out. They never gained acceptance because they smelled terrible, they frightened horses and mules, and their handlers, who preferred the more docile mules, hated them.
Very interesting. Just think, Texas could have been a very different place if the camel would have caught on.
Interesting post Myra…I never read about that in any of my history classes. An idea that never really caught on, but worked. Would’ve been interesting to see how things would operate or be different nowadays if they’d stuck with using camels.
I love to share something that’s new. Thanks for commenting.
Life is certainly a bowl of kibble. So many ideas, inventions, and art never get to be successful.
What a fascinating footnote in Texas’ history. I love this story, Myra, and I would have loved to have seen it happen. Thanks for letting me see it in my head.
I’m so honored that you could imagine the camel story with me. Thanks for staying connected.
I shared this post, reading it at the restaurant to our table of diners. One actually had heard the story, but it was a rarity for the rest us. The one who knew the story had spent quite a bit of time in Egypt and used camels. He understood completely why the animal didn’t catch-on.
You style of writing is so engaging. It was as though we were circled around a master storyteller, enjoying a good yarn. Thanks.for the enjoyment.
Camels would have caught on had there been deserts. Some years back while I was in Dehli, my neigbour had brought two dogs from Nepal. They were covered with long hair and were having a tough time in the New Delhi heat. Finally he had to send them back to Nepal. Thanks for sharing the story Myra.