montezuma Archives - Today in Naval History https://navalhistorytoday.net/tag/montezuma/ Naval History Stories Sun, 27 Aug 2023 18:07:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 214743718 “From the Halls of Montezuma…” (cont.) https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/09/14/from-the-halls-of-montezuma-cont/ https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/09/14/from-the-halls-of-montezuma-cont/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2023 09:03:00 +0000 https://navalhistorytoday.net/?p=602                                              13 SEPTEMBER 1847                        “FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA…” (cont.) Meanwhile, a diversion created by Quitman’s troops allowed a second Army division under MGEN Gideon J. Pillow to carry the lower walls of Chapultepec from the west.  And, to the south, Quitman’s Read More

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                                             13 SEPTEMBER 1847

                       “FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA…” (cont.)

Meanwhile, a diversion created by Quitman’s troops allowed a second Army division under MGEN Gideon J. Pillow to carry the lower walls of Chapultepec from the west.  And, to the south, Quitman’s follow-up forces overtook the Marine’s position, struggling through small breaches in the castle walls.  Watson’s Marines joined the rush to the castle, from whence the overwhelmed defenders now ran.

Noting the incipient rout, a Marine company commanded by CPT George H. Terret, who had no intention of stopping at the castle, broke from their position to charge after the fleeing Mexicans.  Joined in the confusion by a small Army unit under LT Ulysses S. Grant, Terret’s men rushed up the causeway leading to the San Cosme Gate.  Here Terret’s unit fell into a heated action with the defenders of a Mexican barricade just outside that gate.  Additional Army units converged on the site, and after further fierce fighting, the gate was taken.

As the fighting at San Cosme progressed, Watson’s remaining Marines regrouped at the castle.  They captured the cannon of one of the last functioning Mexican batteries then rejoined Quitman’s main force in the rush for the Belen Gate.  The defenders here fell back more easily, allowing Quitman’s men to enter the city.  Watson’s Marines secured the buildings around the gate and successfully fended-off several sharp counter attacks.

In total seven Marines were killed and 24 wounded in the fighting this day.  The following morning Quitman’s fatigued division marched into the center of Mexico City where Marine 2nd LT A.S. Nicholson was given the honor of raising the American flag.  Quitman next detailed the Marines to secure snipers and looters from the Palacio Nacional, a building the Marines mistakenly thought had originally been the site of Aztec emperor Montezuma’s throne.  Here, the high shakos and crossed white chest belts of the Marine uniform caught the eye of occupied and occupier alike.

The Marines remained in Mexico City until January 1848, and upon their return home, Marine Corps Commandant LCOL Archibald Henderson was presented with a set of colors by the citizens of Washington, DC.  Upon these were emblazoned, “From Tripoli to the Halls of Montezumas.”  Returning Marines applied this phrase to a bar tune they had sung in Mexico, giving birth to The Marine’s Hymn.  LCOL Henderson, ever willing to bolster Marine Corps honor, canvassed those returning for examples of heroism.  He was thus able to convince himself that Terret’s men at the San Cosme Gate had been the first Americans to enter Mexico City, undoubtedly fostered in part by reports of his son, 2nd LT Charles A. Henderson, an officer in Terret’s unit.  The myth persists today.

Watch for more “Today in Naval History”  21 SEP 23

CAPT James Bloom, Ret.

Bauer, K. Jack.  The Mexican War  1846-1848.  Lincoln, NB: Univ. of Nebraska Press, 1974, pp. 308-23.

Heinl, Robert Debs, Jr.  Soldiers of the Sea:  The United States Marine Corps, 1775-1962.  Baltimore, MD: Nautical & Aviation Pub., 1991, pp. 50-52.

Millett, Allan R.  Semper Fidelis:  The History of the United States Marine Corps.  New York, NY: Macmillan Pub Co., 1980, pp. 77-81.

Simmons, Edwin H.  The United States Marines, 1775-1975.  New York, NY: Viking Press, 1976, pp. 38-40.

ADDITIONAL NOTES:  Prior to 1848 the Marine Corps colors bore their official motto:

                                           “To the shores of Tripoli.”

The inscription on the new colors presented to LCOL Henderson above expanded that older motto.  (The current motto of the Marine Corps is, “Semper Fidelis”–Ever Faithful). 

Thirteen of 23 Marine officers received brevet (frocked) promotions as a result of actions around Mexico City this month.

Gideon J. Pillow went on to serve as a General Officer in the Confederate Army of the Civil War, fighting in Tennessee and Kentucky.  John Quitman did not live to see the Civil War.  He died of “National Hotel Disease” in 1858–an outbreak of severe dysentery that claimed the lives of 400 guests of the National Hotel in Washington, DC–guests who were attending President James Buchanan’s inauguration.

The capture of Mexico City ended the fighting in the Mexican War.  The Treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo on 2 February 1848 ceded the land that would eventually become the States of New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, and portions of Utah and Colorado to the United States.  Baja California, in US hands at the end of the war, was vacated by US Navy occupation forces and remains today part of Mexico.  (Texas had previously won her independence from Mexico at the Battle of San Jacinto in April 1836).  Curiously, years later, Germany would tempt Mexico into entering World War I on the side of the Central Powers by promising the return of these ceded lands.

USMC Enlisted Uniform 1847

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“From the Halls of Montezuma…” https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/09/13/from-the-halls-of-montezuma/ https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/09/13/from-the-halls-of-montezuma/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2023 09:00:00 +0000 https://navalhistorytoday.net/?p=598                                              13 SEPTEMBER 1847                             “FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA…” By this date in the 17-month-old war with Mexico, the United States had gained control of California from San Francisco to Los Cabos in southern Baja.  But complete victory in the war required Read More

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                                             13 SEPTEMBER 1847

                            “FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA…”

By this date in the 17-month-old war with Mexico, the United States had gained control of California from San Francisco to Los Cabos in southern Baja.  But complete victory in the war required nothing less than the capture of the Mexican capital, Mexico City.  Toward that end, in March 1847 GEN Winfield Scott was landed with a sizeable US Army at Veracruz on the Mexican Gulf coast.  By late August his troops had fought their way inland toward Mexico City.  With Scott’s Army was a 357-man US Marine Battalion under brevet LCOL Samuel E. Watson that was serving as part of the Army corps under MGEN John A. Quitman.

Mexico City’s 32,000 defenders had a significant ally in the physical situation of city.  Nestled amid protective wetlands, the city was accessible only by four elevated causeways, each built across impassable marshes.  Each gated causeway could be swept by fire from strategically placed permanent defensive bastions.  Mexican GEN Antonio López de Santa Anna deployed his forces to block Scott’s approach from the south, causing Scott to shift his attack to the southwest, across the causeways that led to the Belen and San Cosme gates.  This approach was guarded by Castillo de Chapultepec, a large fortress-like edifice that our Marines mistook to be Aztec Emperor Montezuma’s former castle.  In 1847 it served as Mexico’s Colegio Militar.  The impressive castle stood on a 200-foot hill, and behind its double walls waited nearly 1000 Mexican troops and cadets.

Scott’s initial attentions, however, were distracted toward El Molina del Rey, a group of out-buildings adjoining Chapultepec where intelligence reports (later proven faulty) indicated the Mexicans were melting down church bells to recast as cannon.  On September 8th, Scott sent his best division under BGEN William J. Worth against Molina, whose defenses proved more formidable than expected.  The attack succeeded however Worth’s division was badly mauled.  Quitman’s men, who had been relegated to guarding the supply train, were called to the front.

In the assault on Chapultepec itself, carried out this day, Quitman’s division drew the difficult task of storming the castle’s steep southern facade.  Quitman’s detailed his Marine Battalion to spearhead the assault in four advance parties.  The first, led by Marine CPT Levi Twiggs and a second were to approach in concert, providing cover for a third party of “pioneers” with scaling ladders and fascines.  Watson’s remaining men established a firing line short of the walls as the stormers worked.  However, while still 200 yards from the castle, these units came under heavy crossfire.  They were forced to ground, unable to advance.  Twiggs, rallying his Marines, was struck in the chest and killed.  Watson, saw the casualties and confusion that had befallen his parties, and held his position awaiting ammunition and further instructions.

Continued tomorrow…

Bauer, K. Jack.  The Mexican War  1846-1848.  Lincoln, NB: Univ. of Nebraska Press, 1974, pp. 308-23.

Heinl, Robert Debs, Jr.  Soldiers of the Sea:  The United States Marine Corps, 1775-1962.  Baltimore, MD: Nautical & Aviation Pub., 1991, pp. 50-52.

Millett, Allan R.  Semper Fidelis:  The History of the United States Marine Corps.  New York, NY: Macmillan Pub Co., 1980, pp. 77-81.

Simmons, Edwin H.  The United States Marines, 1775-1975.  New York, NY: Viking Press, 1976, pp. 38-40.

ADDITIONAL NOTES:  Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin, referred to later by Europeans as “Montezuma II,” was the ninth emperor of the Aztec Empire, reigning from 1502-03 to 1520.  Under his rule the Aztec Empire reached its greatest extent and influence.  He was emperor at the Aztec’s first contact with Spanish conquistadors, and Montezuma was killed on 29 June 1520 at the hands of Hernàn Cortés.  Montezuma’s name was still widely known in 1847.

Two US Navy destroyers honor CPT Twiggs, the WWI-era Wickes-class DD-127, and the WWII Fletcher-class DD-591.

US Marines storm Chapultepec Castle

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