James Kirker

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James Kirker (1793–1852) was an Irish-born American pirate, soldier, mercenary, merchant, Mountain man, and scalp hunter. He is best known for his contracts with the Mexican government to kill or capture Apache Indians.

James Kirker, 1847 by Thomas Martin Easterly

Early life

Kirker was born in Killead in Co. Antrim to an Ulster Scots family, but left the British Isles for New York, USA at the age of 16 to avoid conscription in the navy. In an ironic twist, he became a "legal" American privateer to raid British ships off the American east coast in the War of 1812. He was a privateer for a year, but returned to New York in 1813 and married Catherine Donigan and had a son, James B. Kirker. In 1817, Kirker abandoned his family to go to St. Louis, Missouri with several kinsmen. In St. Louis, Kirker worked as a merchant.[1]

In 1822, Kirker joined a William Henry Ashley fur trapping expedition up the Missouri River. In 1824, he followed the Santa Fe Trail to New Mexico and spent winters during the next decade trapping and trading beaver pelts in the southern Rocky Mountains. He began working at the Santa Rita mine near Silver City, New Mexico in 1826 and escorted wagon trains of copper to Chihuahua, Mexico. In 1833, without divorcing his first wife. he married Rita Garcia and in 1835 he became a Mexican citizen. The couple had three sons and a daughter.[2] He became known in Mexico as Santiago Querque or Quirque.

Kirker is described as a "large, agile man," fearless, an excellent marksman and horseman. He was considered during his lifetime as having "great enterprise and vision."

The scalp hunter

Kirker had become familiar and friendly with the Apache during his years of work and travel. He sold arms and ammunition to them and was alleged to have accompanied Apache bands on livestock raids into Mexico. Beginning in 1831, Apache raids became a serious problem in the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora. In December 1839, Kirker was given a contract by the government of Chihuahua to fight Apaches. He was authorized to raise 200 men and would be paid for Apache prisoners.[3] The core group of his force was about 25 men, called "Sahuanos" (Shawnees) which included Anglos, Mexicans, escaped Black slaves and Shawnee, Delaware, and Creek Indians, including his second in command a Shawnee named Spybuck.[4]

Kirker's first operation in 1840 was to kill 10 Apache men and take 20 women and children prisoners from a group that had begun peace negotiations with Mexican authorities. He continued to have some successes killing and capturing Apache, but Apache raids increased in 1841 rather than decreased. Kirker was reemployed in 1846 and he and local Mexicans were responsible for a massacre of 130 peaceful Apache at Galeana, Chihuahua. Kirker claimed that he had followed the trail of stolen livestock to the Apache encampment.[5] However, the bankrupt Chihuahua government couldn't afford to continue paying Kirker and offered him instead a commission as Colonel in the Mexican army. Kirker turned down the offer. In ill repute and with the Mexican-American War inflaming public opinion against Anglo-Americans, Kirker fled Mexico. He was declared an enemy of the state with a 10,000 peso price on his head.[2]

After Mexico

Kirker was employed by Col. Alexander Doniphan's American army as a scout and participated in the U.S. invasion of northern Mexico. In 1848, he served as a scout in an American expedition against the Apache and Ute. In 1849, he guided a wagon trail of "Forty-Niners" to California. He settled with his family in Contra Costa county in California. Kirker Creek and Kirker pass are named after him. He died in 1852.[2]

It is difficult to untangle fact from folklore in the details of Kirker's life.

Footnotes

  1. Smith, Ralph A. "Kirker, James." Handbook of Texas Online, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fki.54. accessed 16 Jul 2012
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Smith, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fki.54. accessed 16 Jul 2012
  3. Griffen, William B. Utmost Good Faith: Patterns of Apache-Mexican Hostilities in Northern Chihuahua Border Warfare, 1821-1848 Albuquerque: U of NM Press, p. 58
  4. Often called "Skybuck" but Spybuck is more likely given that a well-known Shawnee family is named Spybuck. "James Kirker, the King of New Mexico" http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/HNS?scalpin/children.html, accessed 13 Jul 2012
  5. Griffen, Utmost Good Faith pp. 58-61, 119, 171-172,

References

  • Borderlander: the life of James Kirker 1793-1852 By Ralph Adam Smith, ISBN 0-8061-3041-5, 1999, University of Oklahoma Press
  • The Scalp Business on the Border 1837-1850, By Ray Brandes, 1962
  • Savage Scene by William C. McGaw, 1972

External links