U.S. Camel Corps
After the
Mexican-American War, Henry Wayne befriended
George H. Crosman. Wayne relayed this idea to Senator
Jefferson Davis; and when Davis became
Secretary of War on 1853, he urged
Congress to pass a bill to experiment with the camels. Wayne was chosen to lead an expedition to the Middle East to purchase $30,000 worth of camels. The group sailed to London on the
USS Supply to examine camels in zoos. They then journeyed to Italy and met
Grand Duke Leopold II to see his 250 camels that were said to be able to do the work of 1000 horses. They then purchased thirty-three camels: three in
Tunisia, nine in Egypt, and twenty-one in Turkey. When the group arrived back, they experimented with the animals in the deserts of the western United States. Forty-one more camels would arrive later to join the corps. Congress, on the request of the
Department of War, proposed a bill to buy 1,000 more camels, but the start of the
Civil War quickly ended the debate . The experiments were also ended with the start of the Civil War, and the remaining camels were either sold or released into the wild. ==Civil War service==