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December 28, 2018
20052, 20053. Farish, Thomas Edwin., History of Arizona, Vol. VIII. pp. 298-301. The Report of C.B. Genung (excerpt)
Farish, Thomas Edwin.
History Of Arizona
Vol. VIII. pp. 298—301.
The Report of C.B. Genung.
-“In the fall of 1871 a man named J.M. Bryan, commonly called
“Crete” by his acquaintances, had the contract to haul government:
freight from Ehrenberg, on the Colorado River, to Ft. Whipple,
Camps Wood, Verde, Apache, and Ft. McDowell. His business called
him to different posts and he generally travelled by stage from
one post to another. When there was no stage route he generally
used a saddle horse or mule, of which he had several good ones.
Bryan had an acquaintance with whom he generally took his meals
when in Wickenburg, which was a central point for his teams. One
day Donna Tomase, as the woman was called, (she was a california
Spaniard. Her right name was Mrs. Bouns), called Bryan into her
house, and told him not to ride in the Wickenburg and Ehrenberg
stage any more. When questioned she told him that there was a
plan laid to rob the stage; that she had overheard some Mexicans
talking in a brush shack behind a saloon nearby where she lived,
and cautioned him again about going by stage. He took the advice
and did his traveling in the saddle from that on. It was not long
before the woman’s story was confirmed. The stage left Prescott
at night on account of Indians, arriving at Wickenburg before
daylight on the following morning. * * * At a point about nine
miles from Wickenburg toward Ehrenberg, the road crossed a small
sandwash which had scrub oak brush growing on either side. In
this wash, hidden by the banks and brush, lay the Mexicans. When
the stage was well into the wash, the horses were stopped and the
stage riddled with bullets. * * *
“Of course this was supposed by most people to be the work of the
Indians, quite a number of whom were at that time at Camp Date
Creek about twenty-five miles northwest of Wickenburg. The
Mexicans had worn moccasins and scalped Adams in order to mislead
the public. At the same time I was working from twenty-five to
thirty of the Date Creek Indians, gathering my crop of corn,
beans and potatoes on my ranch in Peeples Valley, twenty-seven
miles north of Wickenburg, and I had some men among them that I
knew I could trust. As soon as I heard the news I sent two
Indians across to Date Creek to learn if these Indians knew
anything about the matter. They returned the same day and assured
me their people knew nothing about the massacre, but that it
must be Tonto Apaches from the eastern country.
“In a very few days Bryan came by my place, on his way from
Wickenburg to Prescott, and told me the story. Among this band of
fifteen Mexicans was one who Mrs. Bouns was slightly acquainted
with, and whom she called Parenta; his name being the same as her
family name. She got him into her house, filled him up with wine
and he told her the whole story; how these men had all stayed at
a house out on the road a little west of the town the night
before the massacre, and went out to the place before daybreak.
The Report of C.B. Genung- Continued.
The place had been picked out some days before. This young
Mexican claimed that he was sick that night and did not accompany
the crowd that did the work, but told of Adams shooting one of
the party; that they had taken the wounded man to the Agua
Caliente springs on the Gila River to get well. The officers went
from Phoenix and got the fellow with the hole in his shoulder,
brought him to Phoenix, and he was killed in the jail by a man
who still lives in Phoenix. John Burger killed one of them in a
corral at the lower station on the Agua Fria near where the
S.F.P. & P.R. crosses that stream. The ringleader, a redheaded
native of Gibraltar, named Joaquin Barbe, with another of the
band, got on the warpath and run amuck in Phoenix, and Joe Fye
and Milt Ward, deputy sheriffs, chased them out of town and
killed both of them, and they all got what was coming to them,
but one. He got wise and left the country. Bryan was very careful
who he told the story to, and it was passed among the right men
to attend to such matters. The scalping of Adams was all right to
fool a tenderfoot, but oldtimers knew that Apaches never scalped,
although they frequently mutilated otherwise.”
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