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  2. Mormon Battalion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormon_Battalion

    The Mormon Battalion Monument Plaza at This Is the Place Heritage Park in Salt Lake City, dedicated in 2010. [38] The Mormon Battalion Museum in the lower level of the Visitor Center at This Is the Place Heritage Park. [39] Colorado. Mormon Battalion Monument at Runyon Field Sports Complex in Pueblo, Colorado. The battalion's sick detachments ...

  3. Capture of Tucson (1846) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capture_of_Tucson_(1846)

    The Mexican War overview map. The Mexican–American War began after Thornton's Defeat in 1846. This same year a battalion of Mormon men was recruited by the United States Army in western Iowa and dispatched with General Steven Watts Kearny's "Army of the West" across what they considered the "Great Western Desert".

  4. Cooke's Wagon Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooke's_Wagon_Road

    Gila Trail 9 mi (14 km) Cooke's Wagon Road or Cooke's Road was the first wagon road between the Rio Grande and the Colorado River to San Diego , through the Mexican provinces of Nuevo México , Chihuahua , Sonora and Alta California , established by Philip St. George Cooke and the Mormon Battalion , from October 19, 1846 to January 29, 1847 ...

  5. Painted Rock Petroglyph Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_Rock_Petroglyph_Site

    The annual rainfall is only about six inches and the nearest irrigational water is the Gila River. In prehistoric times the Gila flowed west out of the mountains of western New Mexico, made a big dogleg turn at the town of Gila Bend and continued west to empty into the Colorado River. The Hohokam people once lived and farmed here. Ruins of ...

  6. Southern Emigrant Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Emigrant_Trail

    This was known as the Gila Trail. One month later, Colonel Philip St. George Cooke and the Mormon Battalion with wagons Kearny could not take across the mountains of New Mexico, followed a route south along the west bank of the Rio Grande from where Kearny had left the river, to a point just north of what later became the site of Fort Thorn .

  7. Mormon Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormon_Trail

    Today, the Mormon Trail is a part of the United States National Trails System, known as the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail. The Mormon Trail extends from Nauvoo, Illinois , which was the principal settlement of the Latter Day Saints from 1839 to 1846, to Salt Lake City, Utah , which was settled by Brigham Young and his followers ...

  8. Gila River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gila_River

    The Mormon Battalion followed Kearny's troops, building a wagon trail roughly following the river from December 1846 to January 1847. [13] After the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo in 1848, the Gila River served as a part of the border between the United States and Mexico until the 1853 Gadsden Purchase extended American territory well south of the ...

  9. Latter-day Saints Militias and Military Units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latter-day_Saints_Militias...

    The Mormon Battalion was the only religious unit in United States military history to be recruited solely from one religious body and having a religious title as the unit designation. [5] The volunteers served from July 1846 to July 1847 during the Mexican–American War.