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Patrick Edward Connor
Patrick Edward Connor
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Patrick Edward Connor (March 17, 1820[1] – December 17, 1891) was an Irish-American soldier who served as a Union general during the American Civil War. He is most notorious for his massacres against Native Americans during the Indian Wars in the American Old West.

Key Information

Early life and career

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Patrick Edward Connor was born in Ballyferriter, County Kerry, Ireland on St. Patrick's Day, 1820.[1] He emigrated to the United States at 12 or 16 years old and enlisted, as "Patrick Edward O'Connor", in the United States Army on November 28, 1839.[1] In addition to service in the Seminole Wars,[2] he served as a dragoon at Fort Leavenworth, Fort Atkinson, Fort Sandford, and at the second Fort Des Moines. He was honorably discharged as a private on November 28, 1844, and after two years in New York,[2] he moved to Texas.[3] On April 5, 1845, he became a naturalized citizen.[4]

Mexican–American War

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Connor joined the Texas Volunteers in May 1846 using the name "P. Edward Connor", serving as a first lieutenant in the Texas Foot Riflemen during the Mexican–American War.[2][5] On July 7, 1846, at Galveston, he was mustered into the United States Army as a first lieutenant, enlisting for 12 months. His independent company of Texas Volunteers under the command of Captain Charles A. Seefield was ordered to Port Lavaca on Matagorda Bay as a part of General John E. Wool's Army of the Center, which was slated to invade Mexico. Marching through Monclova, Parras, and Saltillo, the company, now under Connor's command as a captain, and attached to the 2nd Illinois Volunteers under the command of Colonel William H. Bissell, fought in the Battle of Buena Vista in February 1847. The company saw heavy action and Connor was wounded in the hand; two of his lieutenants and 13 men were killed.[6] Connor was honorably discharged on May 24, 1847, near Monterey, Mexico, resigning due to rheumatism. When the California Gold Rush began, he crossed Mexico from Texas and arrived in California on January 22, 1850.[7][8]

California

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Upon his arrival in California, Connor was involved in a boating accident in the Pacific Ocean while attempting to establish a new settlement near the mouth of the Trinity River. Connor and his men were unaware that the Trinity River empties into the Klamath River instead of the Pacific. Of the 10 people in the whale boat attempting to navigate the heavy surf, five drowned.[9]

On May 28, 1853, Connor was called by Harry S. Love to be his lieutenant in the company of California State Rangers with 20 other experienced Mexican–American War veterans. They hunted down and killed Mexican outlaw Joaquin Murrieta and three others of his gang and captured two others, breaking up the so-called "Five Joaquins".The rest of the Rangers and he were well-rewarded by the state before being disbanded.

Civil War

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When the American Civil War broke out, Connor was in command of the "Stockton Blues", a unit in the California Militia. He brought the strength of the unit up to regimental size and it became the 3rd Regiment California Volunteer Infantry.[10] His regiment was ordered to the Utah Territory to protect the overland routes from Indians and quell a possible Mormon uprising.

While in Utah, Connor, as senior officer, became commander of the District of Utah, Department of the Pacific, on August 6, 1862, establishing Camp Douglas at Salt Lake City in October, but became discontented with his assignment. His men and he wished to head to Virginia where the real fighting and glory was occurring. When Major General Henry W. Halleck (a personal friend of Connor's) became the general-in-chief of the Union armies, Connor pleaded that his men had enlisted to fight traitors. He offered to withhold $30,000 from the regiment's pay to ship the troops to the eastern battlefields. Halleck suggested that Connor reconnoiter the Salt Lake City area. Connor did so and established Fort Douglas in a commanding position over the city, despite the wishes of the Mormons. Brigham Young tried through his personal representative to Congress John F. Kinney to displace federal troops. However, through the efforts of Governor James Duane Doty and Colonel Connor, federal troops were sequestered at Fort Douglas by Washington and the Pacific Theatre commanding general.

In October 1863, Connor and Governor Doty signed peace treaties with the remaining hostile Indian tribes, thereby bringing to a close all Indian hostilities within the Utah Territory. Shortly after the signing of the treaties, officers and enlisted men of the California Volunteers stationed at Fort Douglas established the first daily Utah newspaper called The Union Vedette. This newspaper offered a balance of news unavailable through the Deseret News, owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Connor provided protection for non-Mormons and those wishing to leave the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during his three years of service in Utah. He also discovered valuable mineral wealth in Utah that was reported to his superiors. This led to the gradual immigration of non-Mormons into Utah that led to weakening of the power of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on everyday affairs in the territory. Connor engaged in extensive military correspondence, which was published in 1897 under The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. [Needs Citation]

Connor remained in command of the District of Utah until it was merged in March 1865 into the District of the Plains, established at his suggestion that a "Department of the Plains" be created which he would command. The new district, in the Department of the Missouri, combined the former districts of Utah (redesignated West Subdistrict), Nebraska Territory (East Subdistrict), Colorado Territory (South Subdistrict), and the Territory of Idaho (North Subdistrict). Connor was named commander of the new district.

Bear River Massacre

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In the early 1860s, population pressures in the Washington Territory near the present-day IdahoUtah border led to conflicts between immigrant settlers and Native Americans. After an attack on miners with depositions given in Salt Lake City by the survivors, Connor marched his regiment 140 mi over the frozen winter landscape to "deal" with the Indians. From Fort Ruby, Connor instructed his troops to "destroy every male Indian whom you may encounter."[11] On January 29, 1863, Connor's troops encountered a Shoshone encampment along the Bear River. Connor and his militia crossed the river and attacked the camp, then feigned a retreat only to encircle the camp and renew their attack.

Connor sent additional troops to block the Indian escape route through a ravine, and sent the rest of his soldiers on a flanking maneuver to a ridge, from where they fired down into the Indians. The soldiers also fired on Indians as they attempted to escape by swimming across the bitterly cold river. The troops killed nearly all of the Indians in the encampment, aside from about 160 women and children, who were later released and given some wheat to help feed them.

The Shoshone had been supplied by the Mormons and large quantities of wheat and articles of war were captured by Connor's command after the battle at Bear River. According to Connor, an Indian survivor later said that the large band of Indians was planning on destroying the town of Franklin in modern-day Idaho. Connor's dispatches are detailed in The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies of the Pacific Theater. Brigham Madsen's book The Northern Shosoni tells a different story.[12]

Post-war activities

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Powder River Expedition

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After the Bear River Massacre, Connor was appointed brigadier general in the Volunteer Army. From July to September 1865, he led the punitive Powder River Expedition against Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Indians who were attacking travelers along the Bozeman Trail and overland mail routes. Connor's 2,600 men were organized into three widely separated units, which traversed hundreds of miles of what would become Montana and Wyoming. As the expedition began, Connor's orders to his officers were, "You will not receive overtures of peace or submission from Indians, but will attack and kill every male Indian over 12 years of age." Connor's superiors countermanded this order.[13]

The soldiers were harassed by Indians, who avoided pitched battles. Connor established Fort Connor, later Fort Reno, and destroyed an Arapaho village at the Battle of the Tongue River. His Pawnee scouts also ambushed and killed a band of 24 Cheyenne warriors. Most of the time, however, Connor's three units were on the defensive, fending off Indian raids on their horses and supply wagons, which left many soldiers on foot, in rags, and reduced to eating raw horse meat.[14] On the whole, the expedition was considered "a dismal failure" carried out with "large, ungainly columns filled with troops anxious to get home now that the Civil War was over."[15]

Later life

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After the Civil War ended, Connor was appointed a brevet major general in the Volunteer Army and mustered out of the volunteer service in 1866. Never having been in combat against the Confederacy in the East, he continued to command troops on the frontier. He recruited Confederate veterans for service against the Indians.[citation needed]

Making his permanent residence in Salt Lake City, Connor established one the city's first newspapers. He also became involved in mining again. He founded a city in Utah and named it Stockton in honor of his California militia unit.[citation needed]

Connor died in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, in 1891 at the age of 71 and was buried there.

Reputation in Ireland

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Little was known about the Bear River Massacre or the life and reputation of Patrick Edward Connor in his native County Kerry in Ireland. However, on Monday 7 August 2023 (August Bank Holiday Monday) local radio station, Radio Kerry, broadcast a 90-minute radio documentary entitled Gloryhunter, Kerry’s Indian Killer.[16]

This documentary sets out a detailed account of the massacre and Connor's role in the dispossession and killing of first nation Americans in modern-day Utah, Idaho and Colorado. It features interviews with historians and authors, as well as representatives of the Shoshone nation. The full documentary is available to hear on Spotify.[17]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Patrick Edward Connor (March 17, 1820 – December 17, 1891) was an Irish-born United States Army officer who attained the rank of brigadier general during the American Civil War and participated in frontier campaigns against Native American tribes.
Emigrating from County Kerry, Ireland, to New York as a child, Connor enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1839 at age 19, serving initially on the Missouri-Iowa frontier where he engaged in early conflicts with Indigenous groups, and later distinguishing himself in the Mexican-American War by being wounded at the Battle of Buena Vista.
With the onset of the Civil War, he volunteered for Union service, receiving appointment as colonel of the Third California Infantry Regiment in 1861 and orders to safeguard the overland mail routes and counter secessionist activities in the Utah Territory, where he founded Camp Douglas overlooking Salt Lake City in 1862 as a base for the Military District of Utah.
Connor's most notable military action in the West occurred on January 29, 1863, when he led approximately 200 California Volunteers in an assault on a Northwestern Shoshone encampment along the Bear River in present-day Idaho, resulting in the deaths of an estimated 250 Shoshone, predominantly non-combatants, amid reports of prior raids by the group on emigrants and settlers; the engagement, termed a battle in Connor's official account but often labeled a massacre in historical analyses, marked one of the deadliest encounters between U.S. forces and Native Americans in the 19th century.
Promoted to brigadier general in 1865, he continued service in the post-war Indian Wars, including operations against tribes in the Snake River region, while also fostering economic development by publicizing mineral deposits in Utah Territory, thereby earning designation as the "Father of Utah Mining" for spurring the industry's growth after his military tenure.

Early Life and Immigration

Irish Background and Family

Patrick Edward Connor was born on March 17, 1820, in rural , , near . His parents were Edward O'Connor (born circa 1800) and Catherine Dillon, part of a Catholic family typical of the region's tenant farmers amid ongoing agrarian tensions and economic stagnation in the post-Napoleonic era. Connor received limited formal education, as was common for children of modest rural households in early 19th-century Kerry, where opportunities were constrained by and reliance on under absentee landlordism. Local disturbances, including sporadic agrarian unrest against tithes and evictions—such as those linked to groups like the in preceding decades—likely influenced the environment of his youth, fostering resilience in a context of British penal laws' lingering effects on Catholic land rights despite in 1829. The family's decision to emigrate around , when Connor was about 12, aligned with early waves of Irish migration driven by chronic underemployment, population pressures, and proto-famine crop failures, preceding the Great Famine by over a decade but reflecting systemic vulnerabilities under British policies that prioritized export agriculture over local sustenance. This move mirrored broader patterns among Kerry Catholics seeking stability abroad, with thousands departing southwestern in the 1820s–1830s for urban centers like New York.

Arrival in the United States

Patrick Edward Connor was born on March 17, 1820, in rural County Kerry, Ireland, near Killarney. At the age of twelve, around 1832, he emigrated with his parents from Ireland to the United States amid a wave of Irish departures driven by economic hardship. The family arrived in New York City, a primary port for Irish immigrants, where Connor, then known as Patrick E. O'Connor, began adapting to urban life as a poor newcomer. In New York, Connor received his formal schooling, providing a basic education amid the challenges of immigrant poverty and prevalent nativist prejudices against the Irish. The city's growing Irish communities offered some support networks, but economic opportunities were limited for young arrivals without resources, fostering resilience through early . He resided in the city through his teenage years, transitioning into adulthood in this eastern urban environment before pursuing further prospects.

Initial Military Experience

Enlistment and Frontier Duty

Patrick Edward Connor, born in 1820 in County Kerry, Ireland, immigrated to the United States in 1839 and enlisted in the U.S. Army that same year at the age of 19, initially as a private under the name Patrick Edward O'Connor. His early service coincided with the final stages of the Second Seminole War in Florida, where he participated in operations against Seminole forces amid dense swamps and guerrilla-style resistance, honing skills in irregular warfare and endurance under harsh tropical conditions. Following his Florida duty, Connor transferred to the Regiment of Mounted Riflemen (dragoons), serving on the western frontier along the Missouri-Iowa borders at posts including Fort Leavenworth, Fort Atkinson, and Fort Sanford. In this capacity, he engaged in skirmishes and patrols against Native American tribes, such as the Sauk and Fox, amid ongoing border tensions and raids, which provided practical experience in mounted tactics, frontier logistics, and survival in open plains and riverine environments. These encounters emphasized rapid response to hit-and-run attacks and the challenges of supply lines in remote territories, shaping his approach to command in dispersed, low-intensity conflicts. Connor received an honorable discharge as a private on November 28, 1844, after five years of service, motivated by aspirations for civilian enterprise beyond the limited prospects of enlisted life. He subsequently pursued commercial activities in New York before relocating westward, reflecting a pattern among frontier veterans seeking economic independence.

Mexican-American War Service

In May 1846, shortly after the outbreak of the Mexican–American War, Connor enlisted in the Texas Volunteers under the name P. Edward Connor, initially serving as a first lieutenant in a company of the Texas Foot Riflemen. His unit, part of the volunteer forces mobilized for the conflict, operated primarily along the northern frontier, supporting U.S. Army operations against Mexican forces in northern Mexico. Elected captain by his company due to demonstrated leadership, Connor commanded troops in engagements that tested volunteer discipline amid harsh conditions and irregular supply lines. Connor's company participated in the on February 22–23, 1847, a pivotal clash near where U.S. forces under repelled a larger led by . During the intense fighting, which involved close-quarters combat and duels across rugged terrain, Connor sustained wounds but continued to lead his men, contributing to the defense that halted the Mexican advance. His regiment fell under the temporary oversight of Colonel earlier in the campaign, though direct command chains shifted amid the chaos of volunteer musters. The battle's success, despite heavy casualties—over 700 U.S. losses—bolstered Connor's reputation for tenacity in combat. By war's end, Connor had attained the rank of , reflecting both by peers and battlefield performance. His unit mustered out in May 1847, prior to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo's ratification in 1848, allowing Connor to depart service with commendations for valor but without extended occupation duties in central . This early discharge from volunteer ranks, common for state-raised units after key victories, freed him for civilian ventures, underscoring the transient nature of such wartime commitments.

California Period

Gold Rush Participation

Connor departed Texas amid the California Gold Rush frenzy and crossed overland, arriving in on January 22, 1850. Motivated by prospects of rapid wealth extraction from placer deposits, he joined thousands of in prospecting the Sierra Nevada foothills, where discoveries since 1848 had drawn an estimated 300,000 migrants by 1850, overwhelming claims and infrastructure. Initial mining efforts yielded limited success amid fierce competition, claim-jumping, and logistical hardships, including supply shortages and fluctuating yields that averaged under $10 per day for most independent miners after 1849. Financial setbacks from these conditions, compounded by widespread disputes over water rights and diggings, led Connor to diversify beyond alluvial mining into mercantile and infrastructural pursuits. By the early 1850s, he shifted toward Stockton, a burgeoning hub for logistics 90 miles east of , where he established roots in road-building and construction contracts to support expanding trade routes and settlements. These ventures capitalized on the rush's demand for connectivity to remote claims, though they required capital and labor coordination amid economic volatility. The era's pervasive —marked by , claim violence, and inadequate formal governance—shaped Connor's pragmatic approach to order, evident in his involvement with ranger companies pursuing outlaws like , whose 1853 gang terrorized miners through robbery and murder until a $5,000 reward spurred their and display as deterrence. Such vigilante actions, while extralegal, reflected the causal breakdown of civil authority in a population swollen by fortune-seekers lacking institutional restraint, influencing Connor's later emphasis on disciplined enforcement.

State Militia and Civic Roles

In May 1853, Connor enlisted as a lieutenant in the California State Rangers, a mounted volunteer company of approximately twenty men commissioned by Governor John Bigler to suppress widespread banditry and lawlessness in the mining districts. Under Captain Harry S. Love, the Rangers targeted the gang led by the infamous outlaw Joaquin Murrieta, conducting patrols and skirmishes that culminated in the reported killing of Murrieta and several associates on July 25, 1853, near present-day Coachella Valley; the detachment presented Murrieta's severed head in a jar of alcohol to state officials as evidence of success. This service honed Connor's leadership in irregular frontier warfare, addressing threats from highwaymen and disputed land claims by foreign miners, amid California's volatile post-Gold Rush environment of vigilantism and inadequate federal enforcement. Following the Rangers' disbandment in August 1853, Connor relocated to Stockton, where he established himself as a businessman and surveyor, engaging in and mercantile activities that connected him with the settler community. By 1860, census records listed him as residing in Stockton, San Joaquin County, with assets reflecting modest prosperity from these ventures. His civic involvement extended to organizing local volunteer companies, including command of the Stockton Blues, a unit in the California State Militia formed to maintain order and drill against potential internal unrest or invasion fears in the divided state. Connor's militia roles reflected ongoing military enthusiasm, as he recruited and trained citizen-soldiers amid sectional tensions that presaged national conflict, fostering discipline and loyalty networks essential for rapid mobilization. These experiences in state-sanctioned paramilitary actions and community leadership positioned him as a figure of reliability among California's Unionist factions, distinct from federal service.

Civil War Mobilization

Recruitment of Volunteers

In response to the outbreak of the Civil War in April 1861, Patrick Edward Connor, a captain in the California State Militia commanding the Stockton Blues, volunteered for federal service and led recruitment efforts to expand his unit into a full . By September 1861, Connor had been commissioned and raised several companies of volunteers, primarily in Stockton, drawing from local miners, immigrants, and laborers to form the core of the 3rd California Volunteer Infantry . The regiment reached approximately 2,000 men under his command, organized formally between September 15 and December 3, 1861, at Stockton and Benicia Barracks. Connor's recruitment emphasized loyalty to the Union amid California's volatile politics, where Confederate sympathizers and potential secessionist plots threatened federal control, including efforts to seize overland mail routes. As an Irish immigrant himself, he targeted fellow Irish and other European immigrants, groups often wary of the conflict due to nativist tensions or perceived irrelevance to their interests, yet Connor's military reputation from the Mexican-American War aided in securing enlistments despite these hesitations. His pro-Union stance countered Copperhead and peace Democrat influences that advocated armistice or neutrality in the state. Early organization encountered logistical hurdles typical of frontier volunteer units, including delays in arming and uniforming recruits reliant on limited supplies rather than eastern arsenals, with initial training conducted in makeshift camps near Stockton before deployment preparations. These challenges were compounded by the need to rapidly mobilize against both internal disloyalty and external threats to western communications.

Promotion and Early Commands

Connor was commissioned as colonel of the 3rd Volunteer Infantry Regiment on December 3, 1861, following its organization at Stockton and Benicia Barracks from September to December of that year. This rapid elevation from civilian status reflected the Lincoln administration's urgent imperative to bolster Union defenses in the West, where Confederate sympathizers in and posed risks to vital supply lines, telegraph communications, and overland migration routes essential for national cohesion amid the Eastern theater's demands. Western volunteer units like Connor's were strategically indispensable, enabling the redeployment of regular troops eastward while securing the frontier against secessionist incursions or disruptions by irregular forces. In early 1862, Connor's regiment received orders to patrol and fortify key points along the Overland Mail Route, initially establishing headquarters at Fort Churchill in by August 6. From this base, detachments conducted reconnaissance and escort missions to safeguard stagecoach stations, relays, and telegraph lines extending eastward to and beyond, countering threats from hostile Native American raids that had intensified amid wartime neglect of frontier garrisons. These operations underscored the precarious vulnerability of transcontinental links, with Connor's proactive patrols—often involving sweeps through rugged Sierra Nevada passes—ensuring uninterrupted mail and intelligence flow critical to Union logistics. Connor's command emphasized rigorous training and enforcement of military order among recruits drawn largely from California's gold fields and mining camps, many of whom lacked prior service discipline. Leveraging his prewar experience as a U.S. Army regular, he implemented strict protocols for drill, hygiene, and accountability, mitigating the volatility typical of volunteer outfits and fostering a cohesion that approximated regular army standards despite the troops' heterogeneous, often rowdy composition. This approach contrasted with the uneven professionalism in some Eastern volunteer brigades, where rapid mobilization sometimes yielded laxer unit cohesion, and proved effective in maintaining operational readiness for extended frontier patrols without the support structures available to Atlantic seaboard forces.

Utah Territory Command

Establishment of Fort Douglas

In October 1862, Colonel Patrick Edward Connor led approximately 750 California and Nevada volunteers, comprising elements of the Third California Infantry and Second California Cavalry, on a march from Fort Ruby in Nevada Territory to the Salt Lake Valley. The column resumed its advance on October 2, covering rugged terrain and desert expanses that tested the troops' endurance and logistical capacity, with Connor scouting ahead to identify viable routes and a defensible site. This movement was ordered by Union authorities to secure the Overland Mail Route amid Civil War concerns over western disruptions. Connor selected a site in the Wasatch Mountains foothills, about three miles east of , for its elevated vantage overlooking Mormon settlements, enabling surveillance and rapid response to threats along emigrant trails. Camp Douglas—initially so named—was formally established on October 26, 1862, strategically positioned to deter potential Confederate sympathizers or alliances that might exploit regional isolation. The location prioritized military oversight of key valleys and passes critical to overland commerce and Union supply continuity. Construction proceeded under volunteer labor, with soldiers erecting , fortifications, and support structures amid harsh high-altitude conditions, transforming the camp into a functional by late 1862. Supply challenges arose from extended lines stretching back to bases, complicating wagon trains and forage amid sparse resources, though Connor mitigated risks by enforcing disciplined foraging and route security. These efforts underscored the post's role as a forward bastion, reliant on volunteer resilience to maintain operational readiness without reinforcements.

Tensions with Mormon Leadership

Upon assuming command of the District of Utah in October 1862, Patrick Edward Connor expressed immediate concerns regarding the loyalty of Mormon settlers amid the Civil War, interpreting their policy of armed neutrality as potential disloyalty to the Union. He viewed , the territorial governor and LDS Church president, as exercising despotic control through a theocratic system that subordinated civil authority to ecclesiastical power, prompting Connor to advocate for enhanced federal oversight to curb such influence. Connor's antagonism extended to Mormon polygamy, which he publicly denounced as a moral and social aberration incompatible with American values, reinforcing his calls for federal intervention to dismantle the church's political dominance. In correspondence with federal officials, he criticized Young's "absolute and despotic" rule, urging the promotion of non-Mormon ("Gentile") immigration to dilute theocratic isolationism and foster economic diversification through mining and settlement, thereby "civilizing" the territory under Union auspices. These frictions manifested in a sustained "war of words" with Mormon leadership, including restrictions on church militias and demands for loyalty oaths from suspected sympathizers, though Connor refrained from direct military confrontation absent overt rebellion. His dispatches to Washington highlighted the church's resistance to federal authority, attributing it to Young's orchestration of communal self-sufficiency that insulated Mormons from national integration. Connor's early exposure to reports of Mormon conflicts in Missouri and Illinois had instilled a deep-seated antipathy toward the church hierarchy, shaping his perception of it as a threat to republican governance.

Indian Wars Campaigns

Bear River Engagement

In response to Northwestern Shoshone raids in 1862 that targeted emigrants, miners, and Overland Route stations—resulting in multiple murders and disruptions along the route—Colonel Patrick Edward Connor, commanding the District of from , authorized a against the raiders' winter base. These attacks, attributed to bands under Chief Bear Hunter, had persisted amid tensions over resources in , prompting Connor to target the encampment reported as harboring the "principal actors" in recent killings. On 22, 1863, Connor departed with approximately 220-300 men, primarily from Companies K and H of the 3rd Volunteer Infantry and 2nd Cavalry, enduring a grueling 140-mile winter march through deep snow and sub-zero temperatures that caused to over 75 soldiers. Reaching the Boshoquoint encampment— a village of around 70 lodges housing roughly 400 , including non-combatants, in a dry ravine at the Bear River's confluence with Battle Creek—U.S. forces launched a dawn on January 29. The ravine, 30-40 feet wide and 6-12 feet deep with natural embankments, willow thickets, and improvised firing positions, offered defensive advantages to the , who initially repulsed a frontal advance with small arms and bows. However, Connor's troops dismounted, surrounded the site, and executed flanking maneuvers that enfiladed the position and blocked escape routes across the icy river, leveraging superior rifled muskets and numbers for a four-hour engagement ending in decisive Union control. Connor reported 224 killed, including chiefs Bear Hunter, Sagwitch, and Leightzauber, with total enemy strength estimated at 300 warriors; U.S. losses comprised 14 and dozens wounded, compounded by cold-related injuries. The victory included destruction of lodges and provisions, seizure of 175 horses, and Connor's subsequent field commendations leading to his promotion to .

Powder River Expedition

In the spring of 1865, Brigadier General Patrick Edward Connor was appointed commander of the District of the Plains and tasked with leading the Powder River Expedition to punish Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Lakota Sioux bands raiding emigrant trails, particularly the Bozeman Trail to Montana gold fields. The campaign involved approximately 2,500 troops, primarily Civil War volunteer cavalry regiments supplemented by scouts, divided into three columns for coordinated operations against hostiles in the Powder River Basin of present-day Wyoming. Connor directed the left column, consisting of about 360 cavalrymen from units including the 6th Michigan Volunteer Cavalry, 7th Iowa Cavalry, 11th Ohio Cavalry, and 2nd California Cavalry, along with 95 Pawnee scouts and 84 Omaha scouts, departing Fort Laramie on July 30, 1865. The eastern column under Colonel Nelson Cole, with 1,400 men, left Omaha on July 1, while the western column under Colonel Samuel Walker, with 600 men, departed Fort Laramie on August 5. Connor's column advanced northward, engaging in initial skirmishes to clear the route. On August 13, troops clashed with Indians at Crazy Woman's Fork of the Powder River, sustaining no reported casualties. Three days later, on August 16, they fought Cheyenne warriors along the Powder River, killing 27 and capturing 18 horses and 17 mules while losing four horses. The expedition's pivotal engagement occurred on August 29 at Tongue River near present-day Ranchester, Wyoming, where Connor's forces surprised and assaulted Chief Black Bear's Arapaho village of approximately 500 inhabitants. In the battle, U.S. troops killed 63 Arapaho warriors, suffered eight fatalities including two soldiers, and destroyed the village, capturing a large herd of horses and taking eight women and 13 children as captives, who were later released. To secure the , Connor ordered the construction of Fort Connor (later renamed Fort Reno) starting August 11 at the trail's crossing of the Powder River, east of present-day , garrisoned initially by 200 men from the 6th Michigan Cavalry. The other columns faced greater difficulties, including supply shortages and Indian attacks; Cole and Walker's forces repelled assaults on September 2–3 and 8–9 but lost around 639 horses and mules, operating on half-rations amid barren terrain. The columns rendezvoused at Fort Connor on September 20, having inflicted significant damage on one band but largely failing to engage principal Lakota forces. Logistical strains from inadequate wagon trains and harsh plains conditions hampered sustained operations, yet the expedition achieved temporary deterrence of raids and enhanced short-term protection for Bozeman Trail travelers before most volunteer troops mustered out by October 1865 amid post-Civil War demobilization. The campaign's punitive strikes and fort establishment contributed to a brief pacification of the region, though and resistance persisted.

Economic and Civic Ventures

Mining Initiatives

Following his discharge from the U.S. Army as a brevet major general in spring 1866, Patrick Edward Connor redirected his energies toward mining entrepreneurship in Utah Territory, investing his personal fortune in prospecting and development operations. He played a central role in organizing early mining districts, including efforts in the Rush Valley region near Stockton, where rich silver-lead ore veins—primarily galena deposits—were exploited and shipped to nearby smelters for processing. Connor's ventures extended to other areas such as Bingham Canyon, Alta, and Park City, where he personally staked claims and formed companies to extract and refine minerals, often amid logistical challenges like rudimentary transportation and smelting technology. Connor advocated for federal mining laws and claim policies that prioritized individual prospectors and non-Mormon settlers, enabling patented mineral lands under U.S. statutes rather than territorial communal arrangements favored by . This stance directly countered Mormon leadership's discouragement of precious-metal , which they viewed as disruptive to agrarian self-sufficiency and prone to attracting speculative outsiders. By drafting early Utah regulations and promoting assays through his networks, Connor facilitated the legal framework for district organization, overriding local resistance to open the territory's to broader exploitation. These initiatives spurred economic diversification by drawing external capital investments—estimated in the tens of thousands of dollars initially—and creating employment for hundreds of laborers, including immigrant miners who established permanent non-Mormon communities. The resultant job opportunities and ore production challenged the insular Mormon economic dominance, as influxes of "" workers and investors diluted theocratic control over land and resources, laying groundwork for Utah's eventual mining boom despite Connor's later financial setbacks from claim disputes and market fluctuations.

Journalism and Political Advocacy

Connor founded the Daily Union Vedette on November 20, 1863, at Fort Douglas as the official organ of the Union Army's District of Utah, initially serving military personnel while providing news and commentary unavailable in the Mormon Church-controlled Deseret News. The publication quickly became a platform for critiquing Brigham Young's theocratic governance and practices like polygamy, which it portrayed as a moral and political aberration incompatible with American republicanism. Editorials in the Vedette emphasized the need to dismantle Mormon ecclesiastical dominance over civil affairs, arguing that such control suppressed individual liberties and economic diversification. The newspaper advocated for increased federal intervention to safeguard non-Mormon settlers' rights, aligning Connor's efforts with broader Republican campaigns against what they termed the "twin relics of barbarism"—slavery and polygamy—by framing the latter as a form of coerced "spiritual wifery." Through Vedette dispatches and Connor's correspondence with Washington officials, he pressed for policies that would attract Gentile immigrants and miners, thereby diluting Mormon political monopoly and justifying congressional denial of Utah's repeated statehood petitions until theocracy and plural marriage were curtailed. These initiatives fostered a nascent Liberal Party presence in Utah, which echoed national sentiments by conditioning territorial advancement on alignment with Union norms of secular governance and monogamy. Connor's advocacy extended to networking with federal appointees and military superiors, urging sustained oversight to integrate Utah into national frameworks and prevent secessionist influences, though his direct influence waned after his 1866 departure for other campaigns. The Vedette's role persisted beyond his military tenure, continuing as a periodical until 1872 and amplifying calls for reform that contributed to long-term erosion of Mormon .

Final Years and Death

Post-Military Pursuits

After mustering out of volunteer service in November 1866, Connor was brevetted of in recognition of his wartime leadership. He declined a proffered colonel's commission in the regular U.S. Army, opting instead for civilian enterprise in , where his prior military tenure had fostered networks among non-Mormon settlers and federal interests. Connor maintained his residence in Salt Lake City, capitalizing on Reconstruction-era infrastructure demands to secure contracts for construction projects supporting transcontinental expansion. In 1868 and 1869, he oversaw the building of steamboats on Great Salt Lake to transport telegraph poles and railroad ties for the Central Pacific Railroad, facilitating remote logistics in the region's developing rail network. His military prestige aided in navigating competitive bidding amid federal land grants and private investments driving western development. Parallel to these efforts, Connor pursued speculative investments in Utah's burgeoning economy, diversifying beyond military affiliations to exploit opportunities in territorial growth. These activities underscored his transition to entrepreneurial roles, sustaining his influence in Salt Lake amid post-war migrations and resource booms.

Death and Immediate Aftermath

Patrick Edward Connor died on December 17, 1891, in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, at the age of 71 from natural causes associated with advanced age and chronic illness. A military funeral was conducted in his honor, reflecting recognition of his Union Army service, with interment occurring on December 21, 1891, at Fort Douglas Post Cemetery, the site he had designated years earlier by reserving a plot amid the graves of soldiers under his former command. Contemporary accounts from non-Mormon publications praised Connor as a veteran of multiple wars and a key figure in Utah's economic expansion, particularly crediting his promotion of mining ventures that drew gentile investment to the territory.

Historical Evaluations

Military Achievements and Criticisms

Connor effectively secured western supply lines during the Civil War by leading proactive expeditions against threats disrupting overland mail and telegraph routes. As colonel of the Third California Infantry, he established Camp Douglas near Salt Lake City in October 1862, positioning Union forces to protect the route from Fort Churchill, Nevada, to South Pass, Wyoming, thereby reducing Indian raids on civilian and military convoys. This relieved local Mormon militias from guard duties, allowing federal control over key infrastructure amid Confederate sympathies in the region. His merit-based promotions reflected operational successes, advancing from colonel to brigadier general in March 1863 and later to brevet major general by 1866, after commanding the District of Utah and leading the 1865 Powder River Expedition against Arapaho forces. These efforts demonstrated tactical initiative in frontier terrain, exploiting winter conditions to disrupt enemy mobility and secure routes through decisive engagements. Criticisms of Connor's command centered on his reliance on volunteer units, such as the California Infantry, which exhibited discipline lapses including unauthorized actions and resistance to orders, as seen in instances requiring threats of to enforce compliance. Detractors noted over-aggression in campaigns, where aggressive pursuit in harsh winter environments led to elevated soldier casualties from exposure and , prioritizing rapid suppression over cautious maneuvering. In the context of frontier warfare, Connor's approach was causally driven by the asymmetric threats posed by non-state actors raiding civilian settlements and supply lines; empirical reductions in disruptions along protected routes underscored the necessity of swift, forceful responses to maintain Union logistics in remote territories lacking regular army garrisons.

Bear River Controversy Perspectives

The Bear River engagement of January 29, 1863, has elicited sharply divergent interpretations, with Shoshone accounts portraying it as an unprovoked assault on a peaceful winter encampment and U.S. military records framing it as a necessary response to documented depredations by the Northwestern Shoshone band led by Chief Bear Hunter. Shoshone oral histories, preserved through survivor testimonies recorded by descendants such as Mae Parry from 13 direct witnesses including Chief Sagwitch, describe soldiers under Colonel Patrick Edward Connor surprising the village at dawn, resulting in the slaughter of non-combatants trapped in a ravine after lodges were set ablaze; these narratives emphasize the band's seasonal gathering for subsistence rather than aggression, with estimates of 250 to 400 deaths predominantly among women and children as evidence of indiscriminate violence amid broader U.S. territorial expansion. In contrast, Connor's official report and contemporaneous military analyses present the action as a defensive battle against verified Shoshone hostilities, including thefts, murders of emigrants along the Overland Mail Route, and killings of miners during the preceding winter, which Connor attributed directly to Bear Hunter's group based on intelligence reports; the engagement commenced with Shoshone warriors firing from fortified ravine positions, sustaining four hours of combat before a flanking maneuver overwhelmed them, with 224 bodies counted (likely undercounting due to wounded carried away) and chiefs Bear Hunter, Sagwitch, and Leight among the dead, comparable to other frontier suppressions of raiding parties. U.S. casualties totaled 14 killed and over 40 wounded, underscoring the initial resistance per Sergeant William L. Beach's eyewitness map and narrative, which refute claims of a defenseless camp by documenting entrenched defenses and ammunition expenditure before surrender attempts were disregarded amid ongoing fire. Empirical discrepancies in accounts highlight source tensions: Shoshone traditions report minimal prior provocation and emphasize post-engagement pleas for mercy ignored, while military dispatches cite 15 years of cumulative emigrant train attacks by the band, with the ravine's geography and winter conditions causally amplifying casualties after Shoshone forces expended their resources; these clashing narratives reflect causal realities of resource scarcity driving Shoshone raids on encroaching settlers, met by preemptive force to secure mail and pioneer routes, ultimately decimating the band's population and facilitating coerced relocations to reservations like Wind River by the late 1860s. Primary military records, as direct participant documentation, provide verifiable tactical details, whereas oral histories, transmitted across generations, prioritize communal trauma but lack contemporaneous corroboration for claims of total pacifism given evidence of the band's involvement in documented 1862 depredations.

Legacy in Utah and Ireland

Connor's initiatives in Utah Territory pioneered the territory's mining sector, earning him recognition as the "father of Utah mining" for directing soldiers and civilians to prospect mineral deposits, which uncovered silver and lead resources that spurred economic diversification beyond Mormon-dominated agriculture and reduced church economic hegemony. By 1863, his efforts had attracted non-Mormon investors and laborers, fostering towns like Stockton and integrating Utah into national markets, with mining output reaching significant volumes by the 1870s that bolstered territorial growth. The establishment of Fort Douglas in October 1862 further entrenched a federal presence in Salt Lake Valley, functioning as a strategic outpost that symbolized Union authority and facilitated non-Mormon settlement amid local theocratic governance. This dual legacy of resource extraction and institutional footholds, however, exacerbated frictions with Mormon communities, who viewed incoming Gentiles as threats to their autonomy, perpetuating political divides that shaped Utah's path to statehood. In Ireland, where Connor was born in County Kerry around 1820 and emigrated in the 1830s amid pre-famine hardships, his historical footprint remained negligible during the 19th century, with no documented widespread awareness or commemoration in contemporary Irish sources. Recent portrayals, particularly in 2023 media and documentaries, have reframed him as a Kerry native responsible for large-scale violence against Native Americans, emphasizing episodes like the Bear River engagement to critique his legacy in terms resonant with modern indigenous rights narratives. These accounts, often sourced from U.S. historical reinterpretations, contrast sharply with idealized views of Irish diaspora solidarity during famine-era displacements, yet they overlook sparse evidence of 19th-century Irish engagement with Connor's transatlantic career and prioritize emotive framing over contextual frontier economics. Empirically, Connor's contributions advanced resource-based stabilization and demographic pluralism against insular religious control, countering revisionist emphases that minimize settler-era perils from nomadic disruptions in favor of unilateral perpetrator-victim dichotomies. Such politicized narratives, prevalent in academia and media with noted ideological skews, undervalue causal factors like mineral-driven integration in mitigating territorial volatility.

References

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