Genealogy will lead you to interesting
eye witness stories!
Melvin Wiley
Jones married Laura Ann Frame Of
Gila Bend, AZ,
My great grand
uncle and aunt.
rhaefner@kc.rr.com
[Maricopa
County] Arizona.
Laura Tells this
story in 1938 to Mrs. George F. Kitt.
Copy in the Melvin Jones Manuscripts at Arizona
Historical society,
Tucson – Library Archives.
Note: She refers
to mother as a sister to Mrs. William Fourr.
This helped establish her mother's maiden name as “Nunn” . [William Four (1843-1935)
married Lucinda Jane Nunn 23 May 1868, Gila
Bend, AZ]
“My
father came to Gila Bend in the early 1860s and
my mother, [------- Nunn Frame]
who was a sister of Mrs Wm. Fourr,
came with her mother and father and
settled there a little later. Father’s name
was Geo. C Frame(b. 1827). He and
mother kept the station a Gila Bend from
1866-1868.
Most
of the time they were there Hi Jolly, the Greek
(sic
Syrian)
camel driver who came over with Uncle Sam’s
camels, cooked for them. He was very fond of
mother and very much afraid that something would
happen to her. If there were suspicious looking
characters camped in the camp grounds in front
of the station. As there often were, and father
was away, Hi Jolly would pace the hall all night
and guard the family quarters.
When
I was born (1868)
he
was very much excited and when they put me
in his arms when I was three days old he was
delighted.“
[How much
of this realy could have happened? Now we
research a little more}
(Ans. All of it.)
Syrian
named Hi Jolly. His real name was Hadji Ali.
One
of the most interesting military experiments of
the American West involved 77 camels and a
Syrian named Hi Jolly. His real name was
Hadji Ali, and he's remembered today at a
pyramid-shaped monument in the Quartzsite, AZ
Cemetery.
---------------------------------------------------
[Now we research
a little more}
U.S. Camel Corps
remembered in
Quartzsite, Arizona
http://www.outwestnewspaper.com/camels.html
By Chuck
Woodbury editor, Out West
QUARTZSITE,
Ariz. -- One of the most interesting military
experiments of the American West involved 77
camels and a Syrian named Hi Jolly.
His real name was Hadji Ali, and he's
remembered today at a pyramid-shaped monument in
the Quartzsite
Hi Jolly and the
U.S. Camel Corps are honored at Hi Jolly's
grave in Quartzsite.
cemetery.
The story of Hi
Jolly began in 1855 when Secretary of War
Jefferson Davis was told of an innovative
plan to import camels to help build and supply
a Western wagon route from Texas to California.
It was a dry, hot and otherwise hostile region,
not unlike the camel's natural terrain in the
Middle East.
Davis, convinced
of the idea, proposed a Camel Military Corps to
Congress. "For military purposes, and for
reconnaissances, it is believed the dromedary
would supply a want now seriously felt in our
service," he explained.
Congress agreed
and appropriated $30,000.
Major Henry
Wayne was sent to the Middle East where he
bought 33 of the animals. With much difficulty,
they were loaded onto a Navy ship (with part of
its deck modified to accommodate the large
creatures) and transported to Texas. There
Lieutenant Edward Fitzgerald Beale took over.
Forty-four more camels arrived later.
Hadji Ali and
another foreigner were hired to teach the
soldiers how to pack the animals. The Americans
had a hard time pronouncing Ali's name so they
nicknamed him Hi Jolly.
Beale left on a
Western expedition in June, 1857, with Hi Jolly
along as chief camel driver. Camels were loaded
with 600 to 800 pounds each and traveled 25 to
30 miles a day. If the animals fared well, a
series of Army posts could be set up later along
the route to relay mail and supplies across the
Southwest.
After reaching
California the expedition returned to Texas, a
success -- at least to Beale.
"The harder the
test they (the camels) are put to, the more
fully they seem to justify all that can be said
of them," Beale wrote. "They pack water for days
under a hot sun and never get a drop; they pack
heavy burdens of corn and oats for months and
never get a grain; and on the bitter greasewood
and other worthless shrubs, not only subsist,
but keep fat."
He concluded, "I
look forward to the day when every mail route
across the continent will be conducted and
worked altogether with this economical and noble
brute."
But perhaps he was too
optimistic. What he didn't say was that the
camels didn't take to the West's rocky soil. And
prospectors' burros and mules -- and even Army
mules -- were afraid of the odd-looking
creatures and would sometimes panic at their
sight.
Still, in
1858, then-Secretary of War John Floyd told
Congress, "The entire adaptation of camels to
military operations on the Plains may now be
taken as demonstrated."
He urged
Congress to authorize the purchase of 1,000 more
camels.
Congress didn't
act, however, as it was preoccupied with trouble
brewing between the North and South.
With the first
shots of the Civil War, the Camel Military Corps
was as good as dead. Most of the animals were
auctioned off, although a few escaped into the
desert where most were shot by prospectors and
hunters as pests.
Hi Jolly kept a
few and started a freighting business between
the Colorado River ports and mining camps to
the east. The business failed, however, and
Jolly released his last camel in the desert
near Gila Bend. Years later, after marrying
a Tucson woman and fathering two children, Hi
Jolly moved to Quartzsite where he mined with a
burro. He died in 1902 at age 73 and was
buried in the Quartzsite Cemetery.
To his dying
day, Hi Jolly believed that a few of the
camels still roamed the desert. Some people
think the ghosts of some still do.