King S. Woolsey (ca. 1832 – June 30, 1879) was an American pioneer rancher, prospector and politician in 19th century Arizona. Woolsey Peak and other features of Arizona geography have been named after him, but he has also been criticized by historians for brutality in his battles with Apache Native Americans.
Biography
Woolsey, born in Alabama, moved to Arizona from California in 1860, first at Yuma, Arizona and Fort Yuma, where he sold supplies to the U.S. Army. In 1862, Woolsey and a partner bought the Agua Caliente ranch, near the Gila River in what is now western Maricopa County, Arizona. They dug irrigation ditches from the river and planted crops. Woolsey operated Arizona's first flour mill at Agua Caliente, and brought the first threshing machine into the territory.[1] Woolsey Peak in the Gila Bend Mountains – a prominent landmark near his ranch – and the Woolsey Peak Wilderness Area, were both later named to honor him.
American Civil War service
In 1863, Woolsey joined the Walker Party to explore the Hassayampa River for gold. Soon after, he homesteaded and established the Agua Fria ranch, near present-day Dewey, Arizona. Woolsey is most famous (or notorious) for his forays against the native Indians in central Arizona. During the American Civil War, after 1863, practically all troops were withdrawn from Arizona, and Indian attacks on white settlers and their property increased.
In 1864, after a series of livestock thefts, Woolsey led a group of settlers to the vicinity of present-day Miami, Arizona, where they encountered a large party of Tonto Apaches. In the ensuing Battle of Bloody Tanks, the settlers killed (and later scalped) at least 24 Indians, with the loss of one settler. It appears that the settlers opened fire first, during a parley.[2] After this fight, Woolsey was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of the Arizona territorial militia by Governor John N. Goodwin.
Later in 1864, Woolsey and several other men were working their mining claims in the Bradshaw Mountains. They were apparently confronted by a large party of Indians, probably Yavapais. Woolsey called for a parley, after first hiding a sack of pinole poisoned with strychnine nearby. As he had hoped, the Indians found the poisoned meal and ate it while he talked to their chiefs. As the poison took effect, and the others fled, his men opened fire on them. This encounter was later called the Pinole Massacre.[3]
The first Territorial Legislature voted a commendation to King Woolsey and his volunteers for, inter alia, "taking the lives of numbers of Apaches, and destroying the property and crops in their country."[4] In 1864 Woolsey was elected to the first Legislature of the Territory of Arizona, and was re-elected to several subsequent legislatures.
After the war
The creation of the Democratic Party in Arizona Territory was largely due to Woolsey's efforts. Since its creation by a Republican-dominated Congress in 1863, the Republicans had controlled Arizona politics. Woolsey called a meeting of like-minded Democrats in February 1873 in Tucson. Presiding at the meeting, he introduced a series of resolutions which led to organization of the Democratic Party in the Arizona Territory. He was the Democratic candidate for Territorial Delegate to the U.S. Congress in the 1878 election, but was defeated.
Woolsey died of a heart attack at his Agua Fria ranch in 1879. He was 47 years old. He is buried in Pioneer and Military Memorial Park in Phoenix.
King S. Woolsey, was, in all respects, a big man. He was a typical Westerner, bold, resolute and energetic. A natural leader of men, he was successful, not only in his Indian expeditions, but also in his business enterprises. His activities were known and felt in all parts of the Territory up to the time of his untimely death. Among the early pioneers of Arizona he stands out the most conspicuous figure of them all. [5]
Family
In July 1864, ten year old Lucia Martinez (1854-1935), a Yaqui girl from Sonora Mexico, who had been kidnapped by the Apaches, made her escape along the Black River Valley in Arizona. King Woolsey noted only that "a Jaqui [ sic ] squaw about ten years of age came into our camp. She had been a captive among the Apaches, and had just made her escape. She came in with us, and is now at my Agua Fria ranch."[6]
Lucia Martinez became King Woolsey's servant at his Agua Fria Ranch. The Howell Code statutes collectively made Lucia Martinez economically, racially, and sexually subservient to her master, King Woolsey.[7] At the age of thirteen, Lucia Martinez, King Woolsey's servant, bore King Woolsey's first child, a healthy daughter named Clara, on February 4, 1867, and then she bore their second daughter, Johanna (aka Chona and Concepcion), in 1869.[8] Her third child, a boy named Robert, was born in 1870 with a lame foot.[9] King Woolsey's contemporaries charged that Robert's handicap might have been reversed under proper medical care that the father neglected to provide.[10] King Woolsey did not recognize Clara, Johanna (aka Chona and Concepcion), or Robert as his legitimate biological children.
Clara had two children, Julio and Clara.[11] Clara married Julio Marron in 1885. They had eight children - Esteven Marron (1887-1923), Julio Marron Jr. (1889-Died in WW1), Clara Marron Jr. (1889-1965), Helen Marron (1901-1966), Fernando Marron (1892-1896), Jose Marron (1894-1896), Ellen Marron (1897-1900), and Luisa Marron (Romero) (1903-1983).
King Woolsey's daughter Clara bought a ranch in Phoenix, Arizona located near Broadway and 16th Street. Her daughter Luisa Marron Romero and Luisa's two children, Richard Romero and Robert Marron Romero, grew up on the ranch.
See also
References
- Kate Ruland-Thorne, 2007, Gold, Greed and Glory: the Territorial history of Prescott and the Verde Valley, 1864–1912. Baltimore, Publish America, ISBN 1-4137-9322-3.
- Thomas Edwin Farish, 1915–1918, History of Arizona, available online at http://www.library.arizona.edu/exhibits/swetc/
- ↑ "Yuma Sun, September 28, 2007". Archived from the original on October 21, 2007. Retrieved May 5, 2008.
- ↑ Kate Ruland-Thorne, op. cit., pp. 46-47
- ↑ Kate Ruland-Thorne, op. cit., pp. 48–49
- ↑ Thomas Edwin Farish, op. cit.
- ↑ Thomas Edwin Farish, op.cit.
- ↑ Jagodinsky, Katrina (2016-04-26). Legal Codes and Talking Trees. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300211689.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-300-21168-9.
- ↑ Jagodinsky, Katrina (2016-04-26). Legal Codes and Talking Trees. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300211689.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-300-21168-9.
- ↑ Jagodinsky, Katrina (2016-04-26). Legal Codes and Talking Trees. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300211689.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-300-21168-9.
- ↑ Jagodinsky, Katrina (2016-04-26). Legal Codes and Talking Trees. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300211689.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-300-21168-9.
- ↑ Jagodinsky, Katrina (2016-04-26). Legal Codes and Talking Trees. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300211689.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-300-21168-9.
- ↑ Barrios, Frank M. Mexicans in Phoenix. Arcadia Publishing, 2008, pages 10, 81.