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The troops of the First North Dakota Infantry had waited
anxiously for several weeks to receive the order that would send them
to the Mexican border for duty. Finally, on this day in 1916, they got
it.
The next day, the men were to entrain to the Mexican Border. Hostilities
had begun as early as 1911 when the Mexican dictator was overthrown. The
revolution was of some concern for the United States, and troops were
sent to the border to ensure the battles stayed in Mexico and did not
spill over into the United States. Though the United States troops were
mainly there to keep peace at the border, relations between the two countries
slowly deteriorated. President Woodrow Wilson ordered the occupation of
Vera Cruz from April to November 1914. The conflict reached a climax in
March 1916 when the famed Mexican bandit Franciso Pancho Villa
raided Columbus, New Mexico and shot up the town, killing several people.
Troops were then sent into Mexico to hunt Villas gang. As US troops
went deeper into Mexico, General Frederick Funston of the Southern Department
found he did not have enough troops to both pursue Villa and to patrol
the border. He asked for more help, and on June 18, 1916, the National
Guard was called up for duty.
Among the troops called was the First North Dakota Infantry. They reported
to the Fort Lincoln Military Base in Bismarck on June 24th and awaited
their orders to entrain for Mexico. The troops left on July 22nd, and
after a four day train ride, reached their destination of Mercedes, Texas.
When they first arrived in Mercedes, the mens spirits were high
and they were ready to do their share for their country. Yet, though the
men felt prepared for duty, their camp was not. The troops first
assignment was to clean camp, which was covered in chapparal and
mesquite and rubbish and get it ready for drills. This took them
until the end of August to finish. But, the troops were still not needed
for battle. Instead, they began a rigorous six-month training program.
While the men expected to see some military action, it seemed the only
adversaries they faced were of the natural kind: The main objection
to this country is its poisonous snakes and insects. Many tarantulas and
scorpions are killed each day in the camp, wrote one soldier. The
heat was another cause for complaint, but the main complaint was the lack
of action.
The camp in Texas slowly began to resemble that of Fort Lincoln. Duties
were dull and men yearned for some activity other than patrol. I
am ready and willing to sacrifice my all for a cause, but my blood boils
when I stop and think that I must be part and parcel to stupid dress parades,
grueling marches and military maneuvers for the pleasure and edification
of such persons as Secretary of War Baker, et al., who are toying with
the army, wrote one soldier from Company C.
Their training culminated in November when over 23,000 regular and guard
troops were sent on a ten-day maneuver. The maneuver consisted of forced
marches, reconnaissance, and trench work with day and night operations.
The troops were later reviewed by General Parker. The review was reported
to be the largest in the United States since the final review of the Union
Army in Washington at the close of the Civil War. One soldier from Company
C wrote home to his parents about it: You should have heard the
cheering and yelling when Company C went past the General. We passed him
in Company front and had a line just as straight as an arrow, not a break
or crook in the entire line. There were several regular army officers
watching the parades and they said that North Dakota had the finest looking
companies in the parade...Two Regular outfits were faded out of sight
by us. This is all straight from a regular army officer too.
While the men thought all this training and preparation was for naught,
others suspected the importance it would play in the next few years. Herman
Brocopp of Company A said it was apparent that these troops would later
be used in Europe. Many others agreed. For now, however, their service
in Texas was coming to an end. The North Dakota troops gladly left Texas
on January 23, 1917 for Fort Snelling in Minnesota and mustered out on
February 14. Years later, on April 7, 1960, a plaque was erected near
the campsite at Mercedes in memory of the First North Dakota Infantrys
service.
By Tessa Sandstrom
Sources:
Cooper, Jerry & Smith, Glenn. Citizens as Soldiers. North Dakota State
University: Fargo, 1986.
Dedication of the First North Dakota Infantry Plaque. Adjutant Generals
Office. Historical Records Division.
Members of Co. C writes about life on border, Walsh County
Record. December 13, 1916:1.
Soldiers anxious to be returned home, Walsh County Record.
November 8, 1916:1.
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