Jeff Davis County, Texas

Anson Mills
Brigadier General, United States Army
1834-1924
His careet was closely associated with West
Texas. After 2 years a cadet at West Point, he was found
deficient in mathematics and resigning, went to Texas. A
pioneer resident of El Paso, he laid out the first plot of the city
and in 1850, when sentiment favored changing the name from Franklin,
propsed El Paso. As district surveyor for the State of Texas,
he surveyed much of the Trans-Pecos country, including the military
reservation of Fort Davis. At the outbreak of the Civil War,
Mills secured a commission in the 18th Infantry and ended the war a
captain with a brevet of lieutenant colonel. He fought in every
battle in which the regiment engaged from 1861 to 1865. As
captain of the 3d Cavalry, he played a notable part in theSioux War
of 1876-77 and came to Fort Davis as major of the 10th Cavalry, a
rank he held, under Colonel Grierson, from 1878 to 1890.
Promoted to colonel of the 3d Cavalry in 1892, Mills retired a
brigadier general in 1897 and served for the next 20 years as a
member of the Mexican-American boundary commission. He invented
the Mills woven military cartridge belt which became standard
equipment in the U.S. Army and in most European armies as well; the
basic pattern is stillin use. He died in 1924.
Born on a farm in Boone County, Indiana. Attended
West Point from 1855-57, but did not graduate. Engaged in land
surveys and engineering projects in Texas, where he laid out the
first plans for the city of El Paso.
He left Texas in 1861 in order to volunteer for the
Union Army. Was appointed to the 3rd US Cavalry. During the Civil War
he was never absent either on leave or from sickness, but was present
at all engagements of his regiment. Participated in the Indian Wars
and commanded US troops at the battle of Slim Buttes, Dakota,
September 9, 1876. Invented the woven cartridge belt for the Army.
Was a member of the Mexican Boundry Commission. Wrote, "My
Story," in 1918.
(By Theresa Seañez and Juan Aleman)
Surveyor. Army
officer. Inventor. Developer. Boundary Commissioner. One of El Paso's
foremost pioneers, Anson Mills is known as the "Father of El
Paso" because of his many contributions to the area.
Mills was born in Thorntown, Indiana, on August 31, 1834, the first
of nine children. His parents valued education and sent him at age
six to a long school furnished with benches made of sawmill slabs
with four legs and no back.
At sixteen, Mills
traveled by rail for five or six days to attend school at the large,
coed Charlottesville Academy in New York. His classmates called him
the "Russian Ambassador from the Woolly West" because of
his country dialect and his large, dark moustache. Accepting a
nomination to West Point, Mills found that he continued to be teased.
After two years, Mills dropped out because of low math scores.
Too embarrassed to return home, Mills traveled to the real
"Woolly West" and tutored the children of Judge R. L.
Waddell in McKinney, Texas, in 1857. A year later, he arrived in El
Paso, a small settlement then named Franklin. It was across the river
from a large, thriving town known as Paso del Norte. Even then, Mills
recognized the valley would become an important place. Soon after his
arrival, the Butterfield Overland Mail Company hired Mills to build
its stage offices in El Paso, the halfway point of the Trail. The
building, completed in September 1858 and located on two acres,
remained the most imposing structure in El Paso for forty years.
Historian W. H. Timmons says it was the largest and best-equipped
office on the Butterfield Trail.
On the recommendation of
several acquaintances from West Point then at Fort Bliss, Mills
became district surveyor. He surveyed Fort Quitman, Fort Stockton,
Fort Davis and Fort Bliss for the military. The El Paso Company, a
group of prominent citizens developing the land originally known as
Ponce's Rancho, hired Mills to survey the settlement known as
Franklin. Leon Metz notes that Mills completed a plat or map of the
town that looked much like today's downtown. Mills noticed that the
streets resembled a cow trail. Houses were built at random, and few
streets were parallel or at right angles. One reason for this is that
William Smith who had purchased Ponce's Rancho in 1854, sold property
to his friends without marking boundaries, and lots were shaped
irregularly. This made it impossible to straighten streets.
Mills named the principal streets for the stage
lines of the Butterfield Overland Mail. St. Louis and San Antonio
Streets headed eastward toward those cities; San Francisco pointed
west, and Santa Fe headed north. Overland Street led to the stage
office.
Anson Mills is responsible
for changing the name of Franklin to El Paso. In his autobiography,
"My Story," Mills says: "As this was not only the
North and South Pass of the Rio Grande throughout the Rocky
Mountains, but also the feasible route from east to west crossing
that river for hundreds of miles, I suggested that El Paso would
indicate the importance of the location." Mills received $150
plus the title to several lots for surveying the town.
For a while, Mills pitched
a tent on a lot and set up housekeeping. Later, Mills and his two
brothers, William Wallace and Emmett, built a ranch 18-miles north of
El Paso. They named it "Los Tres Hermanos." While building
his house, Mills supervised the building of other neighbors' homes.
When the Civil War broke
out, Mills and his brother William were the pnly two in El Paso who
voted against the secession of Texas from the Union. In 1861, Mills
left town to join the Union Army. He became a career soldier,
retiring as a brigadier general. He invented a woven-web ammunition
belt that would make him wealthy. After the war, he returned to El
Paso.
In 1883, Mills along with
Josiah Crosby built the Grand Central Hotel, which was "the acme
of luxury and comfort," according to the January 1, 1885, El
Paso Times. A spectacular fire destroyed it in 1892 because firemen
could not get water to the fourth floor. Leon Metz says that in
1910, Mills built the "tallest concrete monolith in the
world" on the same site of his hotel, but this time with
fireproof materials. A storefront first floor of the Mills Building
housed the White House Department Store, the Modern Cafe, the United
States Public Defender and, later, the El Paso Electric Company.
Located on the corner of Mills Avenue and Oregon Street, the Mills
Building continues to be a landmark in downtown El Paso. Among the
most important of Mills' contributions to the area include his work
on the International Boundary Commission to which he was named in
January 1894. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo had set the Rio Grande
as the border between Mexico and the U.S. but had not considered the
results of flooding which frequently moved land from one country to
the other. In 1895 Mexican farmers sued to reclaim some 630 acres of
land from the United States.
After the two countries
could not agree on a settlement, the "Chamizal" dispute was
submitted to arbitration by the International Boundary Commission.
Anson Mills, representing the U.S., rejected the decision to return
the land to Mexico, and this area would remain in limbo until 1962
when the land in question was divided, with the U.S. receiving 190
acres and Mexico, 437 acres.
Mills was successful in
1905 in negotiating a treaty for the elimination of
"bancos," horseshoe bends in the river that shifted water
channels often clouding international boundaries. Metz says that
engineers sliced through the necks of the bancos, and those loops
extending into Texas belonged to the United States and the ones
falling below the river belonged to Mexico. By 1970, 30,000 acres of
land had changed ownership, and 241 bancos had been eliminated.
Because settlements in
Colorado and New Mexico used so much water from the Rio Grande, El
Paso and Juarez farmers often ran short of water. In 1888, Mills
suggested building an international dam one mile north of where
ASARCO is located today. It would regulate the flow of the Rio
Grande, provide irrigation water for about 20,000 acres of valley
land and fix boundary problems. Mills went to Washington to win
approval for his idea, but the Secretary of Interior had licensed a
private company to build a dam in Elephant Butte 120 miles north of
El Paso. Mills tried proving that a dam there would dry up the Rio
Grande, making it too shallow for navigation, but in spite of his
efforts, his idea was rejected. However, Mills was able to negotiate
a treaty called "An Equitable Distribution of the Water of the
Rio Grande" in 1906, which guaranteed Mexico 60,000 acre-feet of
water annually from Elephant Butte Dam.
Anson Mills'
accomplishments were many, not the least of which were in the field
of politics. Mills' vote against secession symbolized his viewpoints
on important topics: he disagreed with many in town and held opinions
considered ahead of his time. Leon Metz writes that Mills considered
war the most destructive of man's evils. He supported women's
suffrage and racial equality and backed prohibition.
In 1913, the city council
honored Mills by changing the name of St. Louis Street to Mills
Avenue. In 1918, Anson Mills wrote his autobiography, "My
Story." On November 5, 1924, at the age of 90, he died at his
home. He was buried with honors at Arlington National Cemetery in
Washington, D.C. Downtown El Paso serves as a fitting tribute to this
man of vision.
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