Fages, his reputation now rehabilitated, was promoted to captain and assigned command of the Second Company in early 1776. At the urging of
Teodoro de Croix, commandant general of the
Commandancy General of the Provincias Internas, Fages and his new command were deployed to Sonora, arriving at
Alamos in February 1777. The following April, the Volunteers of the Second Company were posted to the
Presidio of El Pitic (modern
Hermosillo) in response to renewed hostilities with the Seris, who quickly surrendered. At the urging of Lt. Col
Juan Bautista de Anza, the company was posted at the
Presidio of Santa Cruz de Terrenate, which had recently been moved from its previous location to one on the
San Pedro River north of modern
Tombstone, Arizona, to reinforce the beleaguered garrison against the
Apaches, arriving in the fall of 1778. Though Fages, now a Lieutenant Colonel, was able to restore order and discipline to the presidio, the garrison proved unable to mount an effective counter-offensive. In December 1780, with the Second Company now down to half strength, Fages left Terrenate for Mexico City for new recruits. In his absence, the Presidio was ordered abandoned, and the garrison moved to its previous location at
Santa Cruz, Sonora, which was believed to be more defensible and easily supplied. The company was soon once again posted at El Pitic, where they were employed in putting down another rebellion by the Seris. In September 1781, Fages led an expedition that included 40 men of the Second Company to the
Yuma Crossing to quell a rebellion by the
Quechan and their allies. Though they were able to liberate Spanish captives, secure the remains of the slain Father
Francisco Garcés and recover sacred vessels from the destroyed missions of
Mission Puerto de Purísima Concepción and
Mission San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer, Fages' command was unable to subdue the tribe. Despite two subsequent expeditions by Fages and the Second Company over the next 2 years, the crossing would remain closed to Spain. During the third expedition in the Fall of 1783, Fages was appointed
Governor of California, and the Volunteers returned without him to Pitic. In subsequent years, the Volunteers of the Second Company were posted around Sonora, assigned to duties at the presidios of Buenavista,
Fronteras, Pitic and
Tucson where they were employed fighting the Apaches and Seris, until 1785, when they were assigned to the Villa de
Chihuahua. From there, they continued active campaigning against the Apaches. == The Pacific Northwest and California==