in northern New Mexico The Santa Fe Trail was one of many transportation routes opened by the
Indigenous people of North America as well as European trappers and traders in the second half of the 18th century. It was later used extensively by people from the United States in the 19th century after the
Louisiana Purchase. Traders and settlers crossed the southwest of North America by the route connecting Independence,
Missouri, with
Santa Fe, New Mexico. Its major market in Missouri was
St. Louis, with its port on the Mississippi River. In 1719, the French officer
Claude Charles Du Tisne was tasked by French authorities to establish a route to trade with the Spanish colony of Santa Fe in New Mexico. This first expedition, which started in
Kaskaskia, Illinois, failed, as it was stopped by Indian tribes in Kansas. Then, at the time of the
Louisiana regime, under French and then Spanish sovereignty, the French traders
Pierre Antoine and Paul Mallet made a first trip in 1739 and 1740, starting also from
Kaskaskia, Illinois, reaching Santa Fe and returning. They made other expeditions in 1741 and 1750, which faced various challenges from Indians and Spaniards. Then, the French explorer
Pierre Vial made another pioneering trip on the route in 1792, and French traders and trappers from
St. Louis gained progressively a fur trading dominance from the Spanish in Santa Fe as well as with the Indian tribes living in this vast region. Other French traders and trappers made trips on the trail from St. Louis, such as
Auguste Pierre Chouteau and
Jules de Mun in 1815, who were arrested by Spanish authorities in Santa Fe. After Louisiana was sold to the United States in 1803 (Louisiana Purchase), Americans improved and publicized the Santa Fe Trail beginning in 1822, in order to take advantage of new trade opportunities with
Mexico which had just won independence from
Spain in the
Mexican War of Independence. Manufactured goods were hauled from Missouri to Santa Fe, which was then in the northern Mexican state of
Nuevo Mexico. Settlers seeking the opportunity to hold free land used wagon trains to follow various
emigrant trails that branched off to points west. The political philosophy of
manifest destiny, the idea that the U.S. should extend from one coast to another, dominated national political discussions. The trail connected interior port cities along the Mississippi and Missouri and their wagon train outfitters to western destinations. The trail was used to carry products from the central plains to the trail head towns
St. Joseph and
Independence, Missouri. In the 1820s–1830s, it was also sporadically important in the reverse trade, used by traders to transport foods and supplies to the
fur trappers and
mountain men opening the remote Northwest, especially in the interior Northwest: Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana. A mule trail (trapper's trails) led to points north to supply the
lucrative overland fur trade in ports on the Pacific Coast.
North–South trade Santa Fe was near the northern terminus of
El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, which led overland between
Mexico City to
San Juan Pueblo, New Mexico. Cargo mule trains were run from
Fort Bernard in Wyoming to the Santa Fe Trail at
Fort Bent in
Colorado .
Importance of Santa Fe showing lands claimed by Texas after 1836 and present-day outline of New Mexico on the boundaries of 1836–1845 In 1825, the merchant Manuel Escudero of Chihuahua was commissioned by New Mexico governor
Bartolome Baca to negotiate in Washington, D.C., for opening U.S. borders to traders from Mexico. Beginning in 1826, prominent aristocratic families of New Mexicans, such as the Chávezes, Armijos, Pereas, and Oteros, entered into the commerce along the trail. By 1843, traders from New Mexico and Chihuahua had become the majority of traders involved in the traffic of goods over the Santa Fe Trail. In 1835, Mexico City had sent
Albino Pérez to govern the department of New Mexico as
Jefe Politico (political chief or governor) and as commanding military officer. In 1837, the forces of
Rio Arriba (the upper
Rio Grande, i.e., northern New Mexico) rebelled against Pérez's enforcement of the recent Mexican constitution, new revenue laws taxing Santa Fe commerce and entertainment, and the large grants of New Mexico land to wealthy Mexicans. New Mexicans appreciated the relative freedoms of a frontier, remote from Mexico City. The rebels defeated and executed governor Albino Perez, but were later ousted by the forces of
Rio Abajo (the lower Rio Grande, or southern New Mexico) led by
Manuel Armijo.
Conflict between Texas and Mexico The
Republic of Texas competed with Mexico in claiming Santa Fe, as part of the territory north and east of the Rio Grande which both nations claimed following Texas's secession from Mexico in 1836. In 1841, a small military and trading expedition departed from
Austin, Texas, for Santa Fe. They represented the Republic of Texas and its president
Mirabeau B. Lamar. Their intention was to persuade the people of Santa Fe and New Mexico to relinquish control over the territory under dispute with Mexico, and over associated Santa Fe Trail commerce. Knowing about recent political disturbances there, they hoped for a welcome by the rebellious faction in New Mexico. What was known as the
Texan Santa Fe Expedition encountered many difficulties. The party was captured by governor Armijo's Mexican army under less than honest negotiations. They were subjected to harsh and austere treatment during a tortuous forced march to Mexico City, where they were tried, convicted and imprisoned for their insurgent activities. In 1842, Colonel William A. Christy wrote
Sam Houston, president of Texas, requesting support for an overthrow scheme by Charles Warfield dependent on armed forces. He proposed deposing the governments in the Mexican provinces of New Mexico and Chihuahua and returning half of the spoils to the
Republic of Texas. Houston agreed, provided the operation be conducted under the strictest secrecy. He commissioned Warfield as a colonel, who attempted to raise volunteers in Texas, St. Louis, Missouri; and the southern Rockies for a Warfield Expedition. He recruited John McDaniel and a small band of men in the proximate vicinity of St. Louis, giving McDaniel the rank of a Texas captain. After Warfield headed toward the Rockies with a companion, McDaniel led a robbery in April 1843 (in present-day Rice County,
Kansas) of a lightly defended Santa Fe Trail trading caravan. This resulted in the murder of its leader Antonio José Chávez, the son of a former governor of New Mexico,
Francisco Xavier Chávez. Warfield was reportedly unaware of the crime. McDaniel and one accomplice were tried, convicted and executed. Other participating suspects arrested by the U.S. were convicted and imprisoned. The newspapers reported that Americans and Mexicans were outraged by the crime. Local merchants and citizens at the U.S. end of the Santa Fe Trail demanded justice and a return to the stable commerce which their economy depended on. After disarming these men, Captain
Philip St. George Cooke allowed them to return to Texas. ==Mother of the railroad==