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The
first six reports
on this page describe a
complex combined operation of five different Marine-Guardia patrols in
the Northeastern Segovias, April 3-10,
1928. The operation targeted the vast, remote, mountainous zone
between the Ríos Jícaro and Coco, which the EDSN had controlled for most
of a year (since June 1927). In
mid-January 1928 the Marines reached El Chipote for the first time.
In March, aerial reconnaissance and combats identified the zone as a key
Sandinista stronghold. Now, in early April, the goal is to put
boots on the ground to rid the zone of "bandit forces" before the rainy
season begins. The larger strategic goal is to root out Sandinista
influence in the area.
(Photo: Marine patrol, Río Coco,
April 1928, Marine Corps Research Center)
The Chipote
operation was conceived as the western half of a big pincer movement.
The eastern half was led by Major Harold H. Utley & Captain Merritt A.
Edson in their legendary Río Coco Expedition. Edson began
ascending the Coco from its mouth at Cabo Gracias a Dios on the Atlantic
Coast in mid-February 1928, an episode treated in some detail in the published
literature (see Edson, "The Rio Coco Patrol," Marine Corps Gazette,
Aug. 1936; David C. Brooks, "Marines, Miskitos and the Hunt for Sandino:
The Rio Coco Patrol in 1928," Journal of Latin American Studies,
May 1989).
The
Marine strategy of rooting out Sandinista influence in the area never
succeeded. In fact, as later PC-Docs show, the strategy backfired,
generating enormous popular sympathy for the EDSN throughout the zone.
Shooting, burning, killing, and destroying, the patrols succeeded mainly
in inflaming popular sentiments against them.
These reports offer
a fascinating portrait of the upper Río Coco-El Chipote zone's topography, geography,
production, and settlement
patterns; popular sentiments among its inhabitants; Sandinista organizing and labor
expenditures over the preceding year, the nature of the Marine-Guardia invasion, and larger
patterns in the unfolding war, among other things:
28.04.08
Holmes, Field Reports, Guiguilí
28.04.10
Skidmore, Rios Coco & Poteca, 8-10 April
28.04.10
Kingston, Report of Operations, 4-9 April, Quilalí
28.04.10
Gray, Patrol Report, San Albino
28.04.12
Kenyon, Patrol Report, Jalapa
28.04.20
Feland / Dunlap, Consolidated Report of Recent Operations in
Chipote Region
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Digitized
version of 1934 US Army Map of Nicaragua, showing zone
between Ríos Jícaro and Coco, with El Chipote at its center,
that was the focus of this operation. |

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"Rough
sketch of Remangon Area and Area east of Quilali and
Chopote . . . By A. H. Patterson, 4/1/28."
Click on
thumbnail for
full-scale image |
28.04.08. Holmes, Field reports, guiguilÍ.
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From: CO
52nd Company, GUIGUILI.
April 6, 1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER
OCOTAL
1106 At 1045 April 5, fired on
three men fleeing into bush from house, one fleeing into
bush from house, one seen to bear firearm. Wounded
one, all escaped. Found cached in bush around
house: 1 shotgun with powder and ball, 11 fighting
machetes, several axes, leg irons for pole climbing,
saddle with Sandino colors in bands, quantity of native
clothing and blankets, two houses contiguous to caches
had quantity of beans, corn, and bananas.
1530 Man found spying our
movements, following in canoe on Cua River in direction
of Cua. 2nd Lt. Norman and squad attempted
capture. Native fled, squad fired and pursued.
Native fled through house in which were found muzzle
loading carbine, powder and ball, hat with Sandino
colors.
0215 April 6. Cleared
camp at 0600 arrived Guiguili. No bandits present.
No sign bandit activity. House of Eduardo Palma
vacant but contained at least 1200 pounds of beans.
(Dumped beans in river) Palma alleged fleeing from
bandits. Am forwarding a number of letters which
apparently contain useful information. Holmes 1300
From: CO. 52nd Company
Guiguili.
April 7, 1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER OCOTAL
1107 Cleared Guiguili for
Bentias at 0745. Received your 1106-2100 at 0945.
had believed it good plan to base here if only to
interrupt river traffic. Also found indications
that small bandit group had probably started this way
yesterday then turned in direction of Cua. Group
of houses on Bentias trail 5 miles southwest Guiguili.
All houses had lately been deserted. All had small
quantities black powder, some ball, and in one of the
group we found a pair of Marine shoes marked with
name L. J. Smith. There are no other identifying
marks in them. Patrolling Coco River North and
South Guiguili this afternoon. Combat patrols to
Cua,- Bentias - San Bartolo on 8th stop Holmes 1500.
From: CO. 52nd Company
Guiguili.
April 8, 1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER OCOTAL
1108 While enroute here from
Guiguili, at 1345, point fired on party of 3 natives,
one of whom wore khaki and carried a rifle, all mounted.
Natives fled, one quitting a gray mule, brand U.S. boot
number 245. On mule was native saddle carrying
pair of regulation (our) saddle bags in which were 7
cartridges, .50 caliber, Krag (RA 17), One 11 Field
Message Book, U.S.M.C. Condiment can contained
notes only, in number, 7 signers, including Coronado
Maradiaga. Also found muzzle loading shotgun in
same house. Have been occupying house of Eduardo
Palma for which section is named Guiguili. Found
there on 7th. additional caches of 500 pounds of beans
and smaller articles bringing total there approximately
2100 pounds. Also found full bandolier Krag
ammunition. Withheld burning house to keep as
quarters stop. Holmes 1700. Strength patrol
Capts. Holmes and Phipps, 40 enlisted one (1) Navy.
1100.
NA127/43A/33
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Summary & Notes |
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43 men,
search & destroy mission, based at Guiguilí, up & down
Río Coco, up Río Cua; working in conjunction with
Skidmore (below); lots of food & supplies destroyed
(dumping 1,700 lbs. of beans into river - think of the
labor that went into growing those beans!). |
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Plentiful evidence of EDSN organizing in & dominion over
the zone. |
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Rules of engagement: shoot to kill anyone with a firearm
or running away. |
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Eduardo
Palma's house: warehouse of sorts; lots of
supplies there; letter links him to Guadalupe Rivera at
Santa Cruz, brother of Abraham Rivera, later EDSN
general; see S-Docs. |
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Coronado
Maradiaga named in captured correspondence. |
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Marine
shoes found marked "L. J. Smith"; Pvt. Leonard J. Smith
killed in action near Quilali, 30 Dec. 1927 (see
USMC-Docs—Marine Corps Casualties). |
PC-docs Inventory in excel file •
pc-docs inventory on pc-docs home
28.04.10. Skidmore, RÍos coco & poteca, april 8-10.
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From: CO,
2nd Platoon, 52nd Company, GUIGUILI, 8 April
1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER OCOTAL
1108 "Patrol left GUIGUILI
at 0915 north on COCO RIVER to PALUSMA. Patrol
burned houses on river containing military supplies,
powder and shells. Strength of patrol 1 Sgt., 2
squads. Patrol returned 1200. Skidmore."
Holmes.
From: CO.
2nd Platoon, 52nd Company, GUIGUILI. 9 April 1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER OCOTAL
1109 "Lt.Skidmore with two squads
cleared GUIGUILI for POTECA. Found many signs of
bandits and bandit activities. One 16 gauge
shotgun with ammunition found in house after occupants
had fled. Burned five houses containing powder,
lead, cartridges and military supplies - destroyed 800
pounds dried beef - 1200 pounds beans - 5600 pounds corn
- 12 boats. Skidmore 1100" Holmes.
From: CO,
2nd Platoon, 52nd Company, GUIGUILI. 10 April
1928.
To:
AREA COMMANDER OCOTAL
1110 "Lt Skidmore with patrol two
squads left GUIGUILI at 0830 on patrol to North and East
of GUIGUILI. Found no signs of human occupation.
No trails, or means of livelihood. Nothing in this
area that will supply bandits. Skidmore."
Holmes.
NA127/43A/33
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Summary & Notes |
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Brief
messages from Lt. Skidmore to Lt. Holmes, who forwarded
them to the AC in Ocotal (more reports on this patrol
likely exist). |
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From
these snippets: an aggressive search-and-destroy
operation for enemy properties along the river: in
2 days burned at least 7 houses, destroyed tons of
stored food, 12 boats along Río Coco. |
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Photo: Marine patrol
along the Río Coco, April 1928, US National Archives
(see
photos MCRC p. 4). |
PC-docs Inventory in excel file •
pc-docs inventory on pc-docs home
28.04.10.
Kingston, Report of Operations, 4-9 April, QuilalÍ.
MARINE DETACHMENT
QUILALI, NICARAGUA
10 April, 1928.
From:
Captain Arthur Kingston, U.S.Marine Corps.
To :
The Area Commander, Northern Area,
Western Nicaragua, Ocotal, Nicaragua.
Subject:
Report of Operations 5 April, 1928 to 9 April, 1928.
Reference: Field Order
No 4, dated 30 March 1928 (with accompanying maps).
1.
In accordance with the reference, a detachment
consisting of Captain Arthur Kingston, U.S.M.C.
(Commanding), Captain LePage Cronmiller, Jr., G.N.N.,
Cadet Chester A. Davis, G.N.N., Cadet Paul Williams
(Medical Corps), G.N.N., thirty-three enlisted Marines,
one enlisted Navy, Medical Corps, and thirty-five
enlisted Guardia with a pack train of thirty animals
cleared Quilali at 0840, April 5, 1928.
2.
April 5, 1928, Column cleared Quilali at 0840, marching
to the South [North?] over a comparatively level trail and
arrived at BUFONA [Bujona] at 1310. Upon arrival at BUFONA,
a native man was seen to take to the brush to the East.
The native guides insisted that this was REMANGON but I
doubted the truth of their statement. BUFONA is
approached from the Northwest up a steep hill about two
hundred feet in height. The settlement consist of
five houses in a basin surrounded by mountains. On
the side of the Mountain (LA BUFONA) to the North are
four other houses. All houses in this area were
thoroughly searched. Four natives were found in a
house to the Northeast of BUFONA but they escaped upon
approach of the column. One house on the side of
the mountain contained approximately fifty thousand ears
of corn. All of these houses, especially those far
up the mountain-side contained large quantities of corn.
A herd of fifteen head of cattle was in a pasture in
this area. There was no water at BUFONA and as the
native guides insisted there was none to the North it
was necessary to go back about half a mile, where the
column went into camp at 1815, April 5, 1928.
Distance marched approximately twelve miles.
3.
April 6, 1928. Cleared camp at 0800.
Proceeded through BUFONA and headed to the North.
About a mile Northwest of BUFONA two aeroplanes circled
overhead. Displayed panel "VZ" (Report our
location) to find out where we were, but the planes
evidently did not understand the signal as a question.
Approximately two miles Northwest of BUFONA, in a valley
near a creek of excellent water, we found eight
comparatively new crude shacks built of poles, thatch
and palm leaves, which would accomodate about twenty
men. [ p. 2 ] There were outpost shelters on
the trail to BUFONA and on the mountain-side. At
the main encampment were four head of cattle, a large
number of chickens, ducks, about fifteen white pigeons,
shelled corn, coffee, salt, and plenty of beans.
This spot was hidden from aerial observation by thick
foliage. The native guides insisted there was no
trail to the North, that the only way out was back
through BUFONA. After a reconnaissance a trail was
found leading to the Northeast. It appeared to be
a comparatively new trail, blazed, and the small
saplings on each side freshly cut to allow the free
passage of a pack train. It went up the side of a
hill with a very steep descent on the other side.
At 1330 the column arrived at two houses near a small
banana grove. In one of these houses was found
approximately twenty feet of fuse, some lead and
primers. At 1430 the trail lead into another trail
running North and South. This trail had the
appearance of having been recently used by a large
number of men and animals. It was of black mud and
well screened by trees from aerial observation.
At 1530 two aeroplanes passed overhead but apparently
did not see us. This detachment had not been
supplied with Very Pistols so could not attract their
attention. At 1615 the column camped near a creek,
the guides still insisting they did not know our
location. Distance marched approximately fourteen
miles over a succession of high hills until encountering
the main trail which was fairly good.
4.
April 7, 1928. Cleared camp at 0800. At
0900, after ascending a steep hill and advancing toward
a house in a clearing, the point was fired on. The
fire was returned and the remainder of the column
advanced. Three natives were seen running to the
woods from a house about a mile across a deep gully to
the East of our position. A group of about ten
were heard by the men in the point to take off hurriedly
to the Northeast. We pursued immediately but lost
them in the woods. This place was REMANGON.
It consisted of one shack in a clearing in which were
several knolls. It was heavily wooded on all sides
except to the East, where there was a deep valley with
another shack and woods on the far side. Near the
first shack were several pigs and the hides of three
cows which appeared to have been killed during the past
week. In the house was a bin full of shelled corn,
plenty of beans, and pieces of burlap and iron used in
making dynamite bombs, also a cross having the name
Altamirano. On the trail leading to the Northeast
in the woods were found evidence of an encampment for
use in the day time by about twenty persons, two stones
used by the natives in preparing corn for tortillas, hot
coffee and hot parched corn. On a tree was
pencilled notice signed with the initials "MEA", to the
effect that everything was quiet in the mountains.
There was an outpost position to the South between this
encampment and house. There were no prepared
defensive positions except several trees which had been
felled some time. ago. The description of REMANGON
as given by Carleton Beals was greatly exaggerated in
reference to the log barricades. The logs were
there, but as stated, had not been hauled into any
semblance of a prepared position. The house would
accomodate about ten persons. On the far side of
the hill to the West were found shacks constructed of
poles and palm leaves accomodating fifty or sixty men.
These shacks had not been occupied in some time.
This trail, as discovered the next day, led to [
p. 3 ] MONCHONES. The trail used by this
column was not guarded to the South of the house.
The column proceed to the Northeast and about three
miles from REMANGON was found a freshly cut trail
leading to the East. We followed this trail down
the side of the mountain and came to a clearing in which
were five hills. On two of these hills were houses
from which three natives ran to the woods upon our
approach. Both of these houses were exceptionally
well constructed of cedar planed boards. The
tables, bins and boards for beds in all of them being of
smooth planed cedar. From papers found in one of
the houses it appeared to belong to Simeon Montoya Maza
and that Sandino himself had been there. In the house
was found a dynamite bomb, twenty sticks of dynamite,
two coils of fuse, thirty detonators, corn, coffee and
beans; also a "Ham" map of Nicaragua sown on muslin, of
the class used by the air service. This map had
the two squares of OCOTAL and SAN ALBINO cut off it.
Near the house were found two rifles, one a "50-7-", the
other a Guardia issue rifle No.472183, with the name of
Mendez on it. Mendez was a Sergeant in the Guardia
who was killed with Lieutenant O'Shea's patrol when
searching for Lieutenant Thomas. The other house
had in it five saddles and bridles, a freshly killed
beef, small potatoes, cooked beans, with the fire still
burning. Nearby were found ten mules and four
horses. One of the mules was branded "US", saddled
with two rolls of clothing strapped to the saddle.
In one of these rolls was a red and black banner about
eighteen inches wide and five feet long. The "US"
mule was a mare mule, about eight years old, thirteen
and a half hands high, bay in color. Its tail was
stunted and its right ear looped at top, that is doubled
back. It was branded with a Spanish "N" on the
left hind leg. After destroying the dynamite and
stores, the column proceeded to the Northwest.
About four miles further, in a native shack was found a
dynamite bomb but no natives. We continued the
advance to the end of the trail and camped at 1615.
Distance marched approximately twelve miles over several
steep mountains.
5.
April 8, 1928. Cleared camp at 0800 and marched
toward REMANGON. At 1145 two aeroplanes passed
overhead. The trail was hidden by the trees but we
attracted their attention by firing two signal parachute
rockets and displayed panels in a small open space.
The planes opened fire with their machine guns and it
was thought at first they had mistaken us for a bandit
group. The trail followed on our return to
REMANGON was a main trail and did not lead to the house
of Montoyo. The clearing at the house could be
seen in the valley to the South from one point on this
trail. At 1415 the column reached REMANGON and
proceeded to the West. To the West of REMANGON
were the shacks referred to in paragraph four above.
This trail led down the side of a steep mountain through
slippery black mud, then on down to MONCHONES, where we
arrived at 1715 and camped. Distance marched
approximately sixteen miles.
6.
April 9, 1928. The column cleared MONCHONES at
1335, marching South through the valley of the MURRA and
JICARO Rivers along a level trail. This trail has
not been used in some time. There were no houses
on it except in the immediate vicinity of QUILALI.
Arrived at QUILALI at 1605. Distance marched eight
miles.
7.
This column accomplished its mission in destroying
bandits supplies and rendered REMANGON and the retreat
of MONTOYO uninhabitable. [ p. 4 ] The
bandits in that area, if they remain there, will have to
live in the woods.
8.
The morale and spirit shown by all the men attached to
the column were excellent. They were all anxious
to go forward and each hill was passed by with the
slogan that we could still find bigger and better hills.
At REMANGON the men were well in hand and regretted that
there was no marked resistance, and entered the advance
rapidly with the one thought of clearing out the bandit
group. I cannot praise too highly the conduct and
spirit shown by all the officers and men attached to
this column. The conduct of the Guardia personnel
was excellent. They were also very anxious to
continue at all times and no task seemed too difficult.
Upon return to QUILALI the men and animals were in
excellent physical condition. I desire also to
commend the Air Service for their excellent
co-operation.
9.
It is my opinion that the bandits in the area passed
through by this column have been deprived of all their
stores and that their spirit has been broken.
10.
The papers confiscated on this trip are enclosed.
/ s / ARTHUR KINGSTON
NA127/43A/33
Ancillary Document:
Excerpts
from Carleton Beals on his time in Remango
The
Nation, Feb.-March 1928
. . . We broke camp early next morning and began our
forced pilgrimage with Colindres's soldiers and
juanas [camp women] through risky country to Remango.
We circled the reten El Retiro, where the marines
were now burning the houses—smoke curled up grimly over
the side of the mountain. Finally, on a late, cold
evening, under a brittle, gray-green sky, we climbed up
a bald mountain knob swept by a remorseless wind out of
the great valleys beyond and below. Grinning
rifles menaced us over log barricades tilted against the
skyline. Red and black hat-bands, bodies crouching
low, waiting. This reten is one of the key
outposts. It is almost inaccessible to attack and
had been held by Sandino since the beginning of
hostilities. Its corrals were filled with
animals—cows, pigs, chickens. A number of
outhouses clustered around the main barracks. And
here at El Remango we found Captain Altamirano and about
seventy-five soldiers. . . .
. . . Though the wind howled over Remango (since
the beginning of hostilities one of Sandino's key
outposts) we spent the night snugly in the long
barracks. The soldiers were as free and easy as if
the enemy were a thousand miles away instead of on the
next ridge. The barracks were made of huge driven
poles with a high thatched roof. At one end were
kitchen tables made of tree trunks split in half or
slabs of stone set on wooden posts. The walls were
lined with bunks of rawhide stretching over poles pegged
against the wall as a protection from the wind.
The Juanas or camp women had erected a little
shrine presided over by Saint Anthony and decorated with
colored tissue paper, against which burned a carbide
lamp. A baby squalled from a sisal hammock.
Soldiers, each with his rifle by his side, clustered in
groups, some telling stories—the attack on Ocotal, the
surprise assault against the Machos in Las Cruces, the
burning of the hacienda El Hule, and the violation of
women by the hated Gringos—and here was I in their
midst, a Macho Yankee Gringo, yet treated with all
consideration and the greatest deference. Other
soldiers, seated on sawed-off stumps, were reading, by
the light of ocote torches, novels, the latest
numbers of Ariel, or stray newspapers. A
man of Negroid type was making love to a Juana
with a high, red comb set with sparkling glass diamonds.
Another, in white "pyjamas" grimy with use, roasted
meat, using his ramrod as a spit. A guitar thrums
a Sandino song with a simple, Whitmanesque flavor and a
Mexican tune, "La Casita." To the sound of such
music we danced most of the night away—a crowded
confusion of babel and song, smoke and smell, flame and
color. . . .
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Summary & Notes |
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Kingston mistyped, his column heading
NE from Quilalí, not "south" as the report says; all the
place names in the report are NE of Quilalí. |
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37
Marines, 1 Navy, 35 enlisted Guardia = a 73 man patrol,
plus at least two "native guides" and animals. |
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Numerous
dispersed settlements very well hidden from patrols,
airplanes; enormous stocks of food stored (one has
estimated 50,000 ears of corn); very elaborate barracks
and housing near Remongón with "planed cedar boards";
very decentralized settlement and food storage. |
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Carleton
Beals description of log barricades at Remongón; clearly the Marines are reading Beals'
articles (published in The Nation only weeks
earlier). |
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Harassing fire by small bands. |
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Clumsy
and ineffective communication with airplanes; not
surprising in such thickly wooded & rugged territory. |
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Para 8
on column's "morale and spirit": these guys are
itching for a fight; very aggressive, gung-ho. |
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EDSN
papers found; Simeón Montoya. |
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Patrol
also finds EDSN loot from various contacts, including
part of Ham Map probably taken from the two downed
aviators back in Oct. 1927 (see
PC-Docs 27.10.12 O'Shea). |
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Para. 9:
"It is my opinion . . . that their spirit has been
broken" - a good example of Marine wishful thinking,
imputing beliefs & sentiments to the enemy that bore no relation to reality. |
PC-docs Inventory in excel file •
pc-docs inventory on pc-docs home
28.04.10. Gray, patrol
report, San Albino.
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MARINE DETACHMENT
SAN ALBINO, NICARAGUA
10 April 1928.
From:
Major John A. Gray, U.S. Marines Corps.
To:
The Area Commander, Northern Area, Ocotal.
Subject:
Patrol report.
Reference: Field Order
No. 4.
1.
In compliance with Field Order No. 4 dated 30 March
1928, I organized a combined detachment consisting of
three officers and 76 enlisted, U.S.M.C. and 1 enlisted
U.S. Navy, from the following places:
2 officers and 35 enlisted
U.S.M.C. and 1 Navy enlisted from San Albino.
1 officer and 20 enlisted
U.S.M.C. from Jicaro
21 enlisted U.S.M.C. from
Apali.
I was in command of the above
detachment with First Lieutenant Everett H. Clark,
U.S.M.C. and Second Lieutenant George H. Potter, U.S.M.C.,
additional officers. Guides and muleros
accompanied the column. The detachment was armed
with 1 Thompson Sub-machine gun and 1 Browning automatic
rifle to each squad, with a generous allowance of rifle
and hand grenades. One Browning machine gun and
one Stokes Mortar, with initial allowance of ammunition
for all weapons, were carried. A Field radio set
was carried together with rations for eighty men for ten
days. There were forty-four pack animals in the
train and all officers were mounted.
2.
This detachment cleared SAN ALBINO at 1800 April 5,
1928, proceeding along the SAN ALBINO - SAN GERONIMO -
SANTA ROSA trail. At 2300 when the head of the
column was entering the SANTA ROSA area, firing from
automatic weapons was heard in the direction of SAN
PEDRO. This firing I estimated was from the JALAPA
column, which Lieutenant Kenyon confirmed when he joined
me at MOCHONES. A short distance south of SANTA
ROSA the trail forks, the left fork leaving the ridge
and entering the MURRA valley, crossing the MURRA river,
winding along the west slope of CHIPOTE and over the
southern crest of CHIPOTE down into MOCHONES, which is
located on the Southern face of the mountains about 50
feet above the junction of the MURRA river and MOCHONES
Creek. The right fork continues south along the
ridge running generally parallel to the MURRA River
until the ridge gradually develops into a spur, which
ends on the JICARO River opposite the north slope of
SAPOTILIAL [Zapotillal] Mountain. The trail there
follows the bed of the JICARO RIVER to the junction of
this river and the MURRA. From this point it
proceeds up the MURRA River, one half mile to MOCHONES.
This latter trail is much the longer of the two trails
from SANTA ROSA to MOCHONES but is to be preferred to
the CHIPOTE Ridge trail for troops accompanied by a pack
train, for the reason that the CHIPOTE Trail is nearly
perpendicular in places. I followed the right fork
and after marching all night came out, at 0500 April 6,
on the JICARO River. The men were tired and the
pack animals exhausted (one animal died at this time),
as the trail followed had been little used and was
overgrown with brush which slowed the column to a crawl.
I rested the column until 0730 then followed the JICARO
River to MOCHONES, along the route above described,
where I arrived at 1100 April 6 and established a base.
3.
The base camp was established about 50 feet above the
creek bottom on a ledge that included the area of the
lower of the two houses. MURRA River MOCHONES
Creek insured an excellent water supply, and there was a
potrero with cane forage (a limited supply) for the pack
animals. The strategic position of the base in
consideration of the mission assigned to the San Albino
Column by Operations Order Four may readily be
appreciated if its location with relation to positions
of DIVISIONES DE AGUAS and REMANGON be examined on the
map made by Lieutenant Clark, which accompanies this
report. The column after going into camp at 1100
rested until 0330 in the morning. At 0400 on April
7, Major Gray cleared camp at MOCHONES with a patrol
consisting of Lieutenant Clark and himself and forty
enlisted, proceeding Northeast up the slope of MOCHONES
Mountain which appeared suspicious the previous day.
At 0500 when surrounding a house near the crest of this
[ p. 2 ] mountain the point was fired on twice by
a bandit who narrowly missed Lieutenant Clark. The
house was a comparatively large, well constructed affair
on the edge of a coffee plantation. Two bandits
were seen at this time who were fired on by the patrol
but escaped into the coffee grove. Two trails
cleverly ambushed led through the coffee grove which
covered the top of the mountain. Both trails were
reconnoitered by the patrol and a house roughly
fortified with log parapets, which contained about 3
tons of coffee was found. On the eastern face of
the mountain at the farther edge of the coffee grove a
house was searched in which was found a U.S. Engineer
Corps prismatic compass No. 27896, 1918, which members
of the patrol identified as having belonged to the late
Lieutenant Bruce, G.N. The coffee grove was
thoroughly combed but no bandits located. This
house overlooked a very deep wooded valley on the
opposite side of which towered BUFONA [Bujona] Mountain.
At 0730 machine gun fire and rifle firing was heard from
Captain Kingston's column reconnoitering REMANGON, which
supposition Captain Kingston later confirmed when he
joined me at MOCHONES. After a second search of
MOCHONES the patrol returned to base camp at 1100 April
7, for food and rest.
4.
The San Albino Column repeatedly attempted to secure
communication by radio with the Area Commander, Ocotal,
and other radio stations with no success. The
radio operator with the column could not get the machine
to function until the morning of April 9, though I kept
him working on the machine continuously. At 1100
April 7, planes came over MOCHONES and acknowledged the
column identification panels. This was the first
communication the column was able to secure, though
panels were exposed, every pistol fired, and the radio
(sending) operated at every opportunity. At 2100,
April 7, I took a fresh patrol consisting of myself and
Lieutenant Clark with 35 enlisted and marched Northeast
from base camp on the alleged bandit camp in the
DIVISION DE AGUAS Area. The trail crossed the
headwaters of the CREEK DE ORO and CREEK SUNGANO and was
a very difficult rough trail that wound along the
southern and southeastern slopes of CHIPOTE then across
very difficult terrain until it came out on the lofty
divide which is DIVISION DE AGUAS. The patrol
arrived in the area at 0230 April 8th. The guide
on the trip was a young native boy who had been held
prisoner by CORONADO MARADIAGA for a month at his camp
on DIVISION DE AGUAS. This guide knew the position
of the reten and main camp of Maradiaga. He
conducted the patrol to the vicinity of the reten.
Here I halted and waited until 0530 when it was light
enough to shoot. The patrol then advanced up the
trail leading up and along the divide, reconnoitered the
reten in which a fire about 12 hours old was burning and
came out at the main outpost on the south end of the
ridge. No bandits were encountered. The
house in which the main body of this group had been
quartered was in great confusion as though vacated in a
hurry, with all manner of trash and worthless debris
strewn around. Five rude shelters in the reten
appeared to have been fairly recently occupied.
The patrol returned south along the divide arriving at
base camp at 1145. Enroute to camp firing was
heard west across the valley from DIVISION DE AGUAS at
REMPAJON. This was Lieutenant Kenyon's Column
reconnoitering REMPAJON, and his column proceeded down
the CHIPOTE Ridge arriving at MONCHONES at 1400 April 8.
[ p. 3 ]
5.
At 1700 April 8 Captain Kingston's Column arrived in
camp at MONCHONES. After a conference with Captain
Kingston and Lieutenant Kenyon I decided that the
missions assigned in Par.3 (b) (c) and (d) of Operations
Order No.4 had been carried out and I attempted to
transmit this information to the Area Commander, Ocotal,
via radio. This message was sent at about 2200
April 8, and was acknowledged by JICARO. The radio
operator by this time had succeeded in getting the radio
the send and receive spasmodically, and it may be that
he was in error when he stated to me that this message
had been acknowledged. The following morning I had
the message repeated and this time Ocotal acknowledged
receipt. I requested further bandit intelligence
as neither Captain Kingston, Lieutenant Kenyon or myself
had received any information regarding the location of
any bandit groups, and our respective columns had
thoroughly covered the areas and reputed locations
assigned in orders. At 1100 April 9, orders were
received from the Area Commander, Ocotal by all columns
in camp at MONCHONES to return to home stations.
The plane delivering these orders dropped a message the
original of which is enclosed. The information
given that an unknown village lay 5 miles east of
Monchones and needed touching I considered very meager.
"Five miles east of Monchones" is a very large order to
cover in terrain of the nature of that lying east of
CHIPOTE. No bombing was heard nor could the planes
be followed after leaving the vicinity of MONCHONES
which is in a deep cleft in the hills. I
consequently did not investigate this information
particularly as I had already patrolled 9 miles east of
camp to DIVISION DE AGUAS as described above and had
destroyed all bandit habitations discovered between
these two points.
6.
At 1200 April 9, all columns broke camp. I
returned via the CHIPOTE - MURRA RIVER - SANTA ROSA
trail mentioned as the left fork trail above. No
contacts enroute. San Albino Column arrived at
home station (San Albino) at 2300 April 9, 1928.
7.
The following is a brief resume of distances marched,
time includes all halts, patrolling reconnoitering, etc.
MARCHING AND PATROLLING
SAN ALBINO to MONCHONES, 18 miles,
1800 April 5 to 1100 April 6.
MONCHONES to MONCHONES MOUNTAIN, 6
miles, 0400 April 7 to 1100 April 7.
MONCHONES TO DIVISION DE AGUAS,18
miles,2100 April 7 to 1145 April 8.
MONCHONES TO SAN ALBINO via
CHIPOTE,15 miles, 1200 April 9 to 2300 April 9.
8.
Every man and officer on this patrol gave their very
best to carry out the mission assigned. That no bandits
were killed or captured in my opinion cannot reflect any
omission or dereliction on the part of the personnel.
/ s / John A. Gray.
NA127/43A/33
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Summary & Notes |
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•
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A big
patrol - 80 Marines & Navy, 44 animals, all officers
mounted, out for 5 days (April 5-9). |
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•
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EDSN
harassing actions (brief contact at Monchones, early
a.m., April 7). |
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•
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Wonderful descriptions of the physical & social
geography; very difficult and rugged terrain. |
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•
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EDSN war
souvenirs: Lt. Bruce's compass found (killed near
Sapotillal, 1 Jan 1928 (see
USMC-Docs, Marine Corps Casualties) |
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•
|
Native
boy as Marine-GN guide, seemingly willingly; said he had
been held captive at El Chipote by Coronado Maradiaga.
Was he coerced?
|
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•
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Radio
communication - sporadic ("spasmodic"), infrequent,
frustrating. |
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•
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Defensiveness explaining why he didn't go back "5
miles east of Monchones" after just getting back from
that zone; and why no "bandits" killed or wounded. |
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•
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Convergence of columns at Monchones evening of April 8;
they all agree that they've fulfilled Field Order No. 4.
Had had enough, realized the futility of their mission
without explicitly saying so here. |
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•
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Everybody back in their barracks by April 9. |
PC-docs Inventory in excel file •
pc-docs inventory on pc-docs home
28.04.12. Kenyon, Patrol Report, Jalapa.
|
Office of the Forty-Sixth Company,
Jalapa, Nicaragua.
12 April, 1928
From:
1st Lieut. Howard Kenyon, U.S. Marine Corps.
To :
The Area Commander
Subject:
Patrol, report of.
Enclosures: (1) Letter of
Yamario Roches.
1.
In accordance with the provision of Field Order No. 4, a
column of 73 enlisted marines and hospital corpsman, two
officers, four armed guides and 14 animals left Jalapa
at 9:45 PM on 3 April, 1928 for Juali via Las Cruces and
continued completely to investigate all points mentioned
in paragraph 3 (A) including San Pedro and Division de
Aguas.
2.
The march, conduct and march discipline of the column
was excellent throughout, no animals or equipment were
lost. Only one man became incapacitated by a
sprained ankle and was left at San Albino when the
column passed Santa Rosa. I wish in particular to
mention the excellent manner in which the group of 46th
Company men under Lieut. Zuber who led on foot his group
as advance party under day and night marching on
unbelievably bad trails.
3.
The column arrived at Santa Cruz where the ex-Sandino
Commandant of Jalapa had a house and a considerable
supply of bandit corn. The column continued on to
Juali which was passed at about daybreak. No stop
was made at Juali. The march was continued all
night. There were two rains that made the mountain
roads from Santa Cruz to Juali bad. The column
kept on to Los Encinos where it arrived at about 8:00
A.M. As we entered Los Encinos a bandit group
without rifles fled. There were about twelve men
in the group waiting there to get a guide to take them
to Honduras. Sebastian was a former member of
Sandino's staff and his companion Tomas Servas with him
was a Sandino leader. They slept the night before
in the house of a German subject, Adolfo Mences.
The column rested all day and slept the night of 4
April, 1928 in Los Encinos. On the morning of 5
April, 1928 at 4:20 AM Lieut. Zuber proceeded to Murra,
via Mina Americana with the 46th Co., men. I took
the train and 20th Co. men on the Esperanza trail.
Both columns destroyed all supply houses enroute.
The two columns joined at Plantel [ p. 2 ]
and proceeded to Murra where we arrived at noon and made
camp. The town was deserted with no signs of
bandit occupancy. At 9 PM we proceeded to San
Pedro where we arrived at about 11 PM. There had
been recent occupancy at San Pedro. It is a large
well kept ranch. Good sized group had been there
possibly two weeks before. About 400 or 500
bushels of corn in a new storehouse was destroyed.
The ranch is the property of the bandit leader Colindres
[Juan Colindres, not Juan Gregorio Colindres] who
deals in coffee and buying up ore for grinding in the
former mill that was at Murra but which Colindres moved
to Tamis. We slept at San Pedro and ate the
chickens there. The following morning we left
after breakfast on the road to North Chipote on the left
bank of the Murra via Tamis. This latter road is
one that has been kept in repair by the bandits to avoid
taking the right bank road that leads through Santa
Rosa. It is very rough and large packs on animals
on this road are impossible. We crossed a very
difficult pass of the river Tamis near the junction of
the Murra and destroyed Palacio where we found a house
made with platforms around and outside for lookouts.
The occupants fled. There was no food in the house
and none in the shacks on North Chipote or Chipote
proper. We camped for the night at Las Flores
which was abandoned. On the morning of April 7 we
proceed along the ridge of the Chipote range, formerly
before bandit time known as Mount Olingo, and at 2:30 PM
came to camp at Division de Aguas where we found a large
supply of coffee which we destroyed upon leaving the
next day. On the morning of 8 April we proceeded
down the left bank of the Quebrado de Oro, also known as
Crique de Oro and incorrectly shown on the Patterson map
as Monchones Creek, through Rampujon which had been a
bandit rendezvous. There we found the place that
McDonald had found on the morning of 28 January when he
was operating with major Young's battalion. [see
PC-Docs 28.02.04]
Here we found a saddle and all equipment of an apparent
bandit leader abandoned just upon our arrival. In
the saddle bags we found six sticks of dynamite, about
fifteen caps and about 20 feet of fuse and a letter from
one Yamario Roches stating "goodbye" to his Nicaraguan
companions that he was done. I have translated the
letter hereto and attached it. There was a cane
mill still operating and 1000 yards below the valley was
an enormous native mill where sugar was still fresh in
the moulds. We reached Monchones and at noon of 9
April left for Jicaro via Santa Rosa. Chipote was
a deserted wreck. At Santa Rosa I closed up the
Jalapa column and mustered. I put a sick man I
found on the road from the San Albino column whose mule
had played out on one of my animals and sent a sick man
of my own on another horse from my column, with saddle
to San Albino in charge of the San Albino hospital
corpsman. The Jalapa column reached Jicaro at
about 2:30 AM on 10 April. At Jicaro we rested
until the morning of April 11th when Lieutenant Zuber
took the column back to Jalapa and arrived without
further incident at about 2 PM.
4.
At about 4 PM on 10 April I questioned a prisoner in
Jicaro relative to the hiding place of Carmen Torres.
He gave me what appeared to be facts. My own men
were too expended to allow them to make this expedition
and since it had to be made on foot I called for
volunteers from Jicaro. Lieutenant Thwing and
three Marines and a hospital corpsman volunteered to
follow. We left Jicaro at about 8:30 PM shortly
before daybreak we were nearing the bandit camp and the
prisoner guide trembled with fear. We found the
bandits sleeping on the ground and under leaf covered
sheds in a deep gulch. I placed the men and threw
[ p. 3 ] a grenade directly on the bunk of Torres
but it proved to be a dud and started the dog barking.
By the time we got other grenades and automatic weapons
started some of the bandits were sitting or standing and
hissing to one another for silence to learn what had
fallen into camp and started the dog. The
following blast of the following bombs and automatic
weapons created a riot. Without clothing, pistols
or shoes, Torres and those close to him took off.
Evidently two were left dying from the howls made in the
gulch shortly below. We got Torres sword, all his
clothes, the .45 taken from Mr. Johnson, two revolvers
and all the clothing and loot of the bandits, and
several saddles and about 10 machetes. Every item
was burned that we did not carry along. I left the
pistols with Lieutenant Thwing. We found what was
evidently the clothing of Mr. Johnson taken from the
body after the ambush. At San Diego I separated
from the Jicaro Marines and left them under Lieutenant
Thwing to go to Jicaro since they would pass Lieutenant
Zuber enroute. I went to Jalapa alone with two
armed guides since we were on the edge of the plains and
daylight had come.
5.
OPINION. From what I have seen
of what was once the strong bandit area I am convinced
that the general result of Field Order No. 4 was a
complete success. All known centers of bandits
groups are wrecked. Mr. Williams of Los Encinos
states that the staff bandits of Sandino admit the cause
is hopeless. It is possible that a few fleeing
groups may be living in the wilderness on the extreme
top of Bujona since I saw several columns of smoke
rising from that location as I passed the heights of
Santa Rosa on the evening of 9 April. As the area
settles for a time information of small groups in hiding
will leak out and they can be attacked by small combat
groups operating usually at night. In this manner
I believe Sandino will be killed if he remains long in
this area.
/ s / Howard N. Kenyon
Ancillary Document:
Verses by Yamario Rocha
Found by Lt. Kenyon at Rempujón, 8 April 1928
1
Goodbye, Nicaragua. Because of you I am happy.
I am going to Paris to have a good time on your money.
2
I leave you with Adolfo who is a robber and a fine
traitor and assassin besides.
3
Because of worldly ambition he did those things but he
made pieces of my black pavilion. I was born
amongst modern robbers and Tyrants.
Yamaris Rocha
El Elabistas will populate you with pain.
4
Goodbye comrades. My (Selonia) was cut by treason.
You me climb to power. You will see that when I
return I will bring revolutions and my sergeants will
finish you.
Yamaris Rocha.
(English
translation only; original
not found)
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|
Summary & Notes |
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•
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76
Marines, 4 armed native guides, 14 animals, long march
from Jalapa to Chipote area. |
.jpg) |
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•
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EDSN
"Sebastian" & "Tomas Servas"? Unknown. |
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•
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German
"Adolfo Mences"? Unknown. |
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George
(Jorge) Williams at Los Encinos mentioned. |
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•
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Juan
Colindres, EDSN at this stage, owner of San Pedro Ranch
and several gold mines; spent most of the war in exile
in Danlí, Honduras. |
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•
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Column
destroying stocks of food & shacks as they go; Murra
found deserted. |
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•
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Chipote
& environs has the feel of a place recently buzzing with
EDSN activity and now mostly abandoned. |
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•
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Para. 4
- early a.m. April 11 - surprise contact with Carmen
Torres group, which flees unclothed & unshod & leaving
everything behind. Shows Lt. Kenyon's
aggression and determination, among other things. (Photo at
right: Carmen Torres in Mexico, Feb. 1930, this
time elegantly dressed and shod; see
Photos, USNA, p.
2) |
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•
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Mr.
Johnson? Unknown. |
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•
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Para. 5
- "Opinion": mission "a complete success" - more USMC
wishful thinking; there is little basis for this glowing
assessment; Mr. Williams tells Kenyon what he wants to
hear. |
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•
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Yamario
Rocha's verse: dark humor, sense of fatalism,
amusement, tragicomic irony. Rocha remains in EDSN as late as Oct. 1931; see
S-Docs 28.08.18
(Abraham Rivera notebook),
31.10.08. |
PC-docs Inventory in excel file •
pc-docs inventory on pc-docs home
28.04.20. Feland
/ Dunlap, consolidated report of recent operations in chipote
region.
|
United States Marine Corps
Headquarters, Second Brigade
Managua, Nicaragua
20 April, 1928.
From: The
Commanding General
To:
The Major General Commandant
Via (1) Commander Special Services Squadron.
Subject: Results of
Operations lately concluded in Nueva Segovia.
1.
In the latter part of March, intelligence date, ground
and aerial reconnaissance indicated beyond doubt that
the enemy had concentrated men and supplies in the area
east of the general line Jicaro-Quilali.
2.
Following are the reports from that area:
Headquarters, Northern Area,
Ocotal, Nicaragua
18 April 1928.
From: Commander
Northern Area
To:
Brigade Commander.
Subject: Recent
Operations in Chipote Region, Consolidated Report of.
References: Area Field Order
no. 4 dated 30 March 1928.
Enclosures: (4)
1.
There are forwarded herewith for your consideration and
information, copies of reports and extracts from
fragmentary reports of the several columns which
operated in the Chipote Region on or about 3-10 April,
in accordance with the above mentioned reference.
2.
A perusal of these reports will disclose the fact that
the major part of the bandit forces had moved out of the
region just prior to the commencement of the operation,
and only small groups were left to guard the large
supply of foodstuffs stored therein.
3.
There were approximately ten minor contacts made by the
several columns engaged, with 3 known bandits dead and 7
wounded, including Carmen Torres, bandit leader and his
son. A recent report states that Torres died of
his wounds. There were no Marine casualties.
4.
In addition to the bandit casualties inflicted, large
quantities of bandit supplies and equipment were either
captured or destroyed, some of which were, roughly
estimated, as follows:
90,000 pounds of corn
10,000 "
" coffee
13,000 "
" beans
1,000
" "
sugar
800
" "
dried beef
300
" "
salt
18 horses and mules
10 saddles
1 outboard motor
3 rifles
4 shotguns
3 pistols including Mr. Johnson's .45 Colt
Automatic.
20 fighting machetes
12 boats
1 compass (Sergt Bruce's)
A large amount of ammunition, powder, dynamite,
lead, fuse,
detonators, etc.
Bull hide bags, clothing blankets and various kinds
of bandit loot.
Beds
Cattle, pigs, chickens and ducks.
5.
While the number of casualties inflicted upon the
bandits were not as numerous as was expected, the amount
of bandit military stores captured or destroyed was far
greater than anticipated. | |