This Place In Arizona Has A Dark And Evil History That Will Never Be Forgotten
The land certainly has a way of surprising us. The drive to the entrance of the Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness is a quiet one, surrounded by tiny towns, farmland, and incredibly rugged mountains. It’s a perfect picture of the romanticized ranching history that lives most comfortably in Arizona’s recent past without the tell-tale signs of the violence that took place in order for that lifestyle to thrive.
Little remains of the old Army fort that briefly stood near the present-day Central Arizona College Aravaipa campus, about 12 miles south of Winkelman. You could probably easily mistake what’s left of the ruins for average desert rubble. There also isn’t a sign of the massacre that took place a short distance away in the early morning hours of April 30, 1871. On that morning, one of the bloodiest days in Arizona history occurred within a short 30 minutes.

It didn’t last long, though. Mid-19th century Arizona was a time of frontier settlement, mining, and other commercial endeavors. That meant removing its Indigenous peoples in some rather violent ways following raids, attacks, and retaliation from both parties.

Prominent Tucson citizens, like William Oury and Sidney DeLong, organized and prepared to lead a vigilante group of about 140 men to attack the recently settled Aravaipa and Pinal Apache. A mixture of American, Mexican, and O’odtham residents slowly began leaving Tucson on April 28 to travel to Camp Grant, trying to avoid raising suspicions.

The Camp Grant massacre culminated in the horrific deaths of 144 Aravaipa and Pinal Apache, nearly all women and children. The bodies were stripped and mutilated. In some cases, it was apparent that women "were first ravished and then shot dead," according to an account in Dee Brown’s Bury My Heat At Wounded Knee. The children who survived were gathered up to be sold into slavery.

Eventually, the attack came back to haunt the vigilante group, if only briefly. In December of that year, 104 of the men were indicted and tried, but they were all eventually exonerated of all charges. It quickly came to be known around the country as one of Arizona’s worst moments in history only to be just as quickly forgotten.

If you want to read about another event in Arizona history, you may want to start with our recent article, A Terrifying, Deadly Storm Struck Arizona In 1967 And No One Saw It Coming.
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