Article clipped from Santa Fe New Mexican

ingfgeofneeWeoutofSan Antonio, anci me ravages ui erueiwar continued.“About two years after the fight, some men came in wagons from Comfort. gathered up the remains of the little band.and carried them to Comfort, where they were buried together in one grave and a large monument placed in memory over them. Mr. Isaac Cox, of this place, was living here at the time of the fight, and assisted in gathering up the remains that were carried back to Comfort. A recent article in the Houston Chronicle stated that some of the Germans having surrendered and given up their guns, were lined up against the bluff and shot. When asked about this, Mr. Cox said that he did not believe it was true, as he never heard of anything of the kind at the time of the fight, which was freely talked of here, having occurred only 25 miles away.”—National Tribune. (Washington, D. C.) Oct. 27, 1904.Colonel John R. Baylor, with about 200 men of his regiment. Second Texas Mounted Rifles, Confederate States Army, finished his “Buffalo Hunt” by reaching El Paso in the first week in July. 1861, and soon took possession of that part of New Mexico lying south of the “Joarnardo del Muerto,” as well as what is now the whole of Arizona, as far west as Fort Yuma on the Colorado River.On the 14th of December Gen. H. H.Continued on Pane Seven..
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Santa Fe New Mexican

Santa Fe, New Mexico, US

Sat, Dec 10, 1904

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Texas A.

TX, USA 13 Jan 2023

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