John Navarre Macomb, Jr.
John Navarre Macomb, Junior (1811–1889) was a United States Army topographical engineer and explorer of the Colorado River. Captain Macomb led the 1859 San Juan Exploring Expedition, whose purpose was to find a military supply route from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to Utah and to map previously unexplored areas along the route. The expedition included the botanist and geologist John Strong Newberry, who made notable scientific observations along the route.[1][2] Early lifeMacomb was born on 9 April 1811 in New York City, and was the great-grandson of Philip Livingston, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Am 1832 graduate of West Point, he participated in the Black Hawk Expedition. He married a cousin, Czarina Carolina Macomb, in 1838, with whom he had two children. She died in 1846. Macomb remarried in 1850, to Ann Minerva Rodgers ("Nannie"), with whom he had six children. He was promoted to captain in the Corps of Topographical Engineers in 1851 and conducted surveys in the Great Lakes until 1856. That year, he was named chief topographical engineer of the territory of New Mexico.[2][3] Macomb ExpeditionThe Macomb Expedition of 1859 was a consequence of the Utah War, in which the U.S. Army had suffered from serious logistical difficulties. Macomb sought to find a route for military supplies from Santa Fe to central Utah, and also to map the unexplored regions along the route. Though originally political and military in nature, the expedition became "a quintessential scientific endeavor".[4] Macomb's legacy would include a stone survey monument that would bear his name and eventually become a part of some geographical intrigue and a few border disputes between New Mexico and both Colorado and Texas, eventually being replaced by the Preston Monument in 1900. The tri-point for the present states of Oklahoma, Colorado, and New Mexico is supposed to be the intersection between the 37th parallel north and the 103rd meridian west, where Macomb placed a monument in 1859. At this time, the monument was to be the southwest corner of Kansas Territory.
The earlier monument which Macomb was referring to had been placed two years earlier by Joseph Eggleston Johnston but had been determined to be several thousand feet west of its intended location. However, the outbreak of the American Civil War delayed publication of the report of the expedition until 1876, and it has tended to be overshadowed by the great survey expeditions of the post-Civil War period.[2] American Civil WarMacomb served as a staff officer during the Civil War.[3] Later lifeMacomb died in Washington, D.C., on March 16, 1889. See also
References
|