
The Villasur expedition is attacked by
the Pawnee.
The
Villasur expedition of 1720 was a Spanish military
expedition intended to check the growing French presence on the Great Plains
of central North
America. Led by
Lieutenant-General Pedro de Villasur, the expedition ended
with a defeat at the hands of the
Pawnee.
In the
first part of the 18th century, French explorers and traders began
to enter the plains west of the Missouri River
. In 1714,
Étienne de Veniard,
Sieur de Bourgmont became the first European to reach the
Platte River. Spain, which had claimed
ownership of the Great Plains since the
Coronado expedition, was
wary of this expansion of French influence. In 1718, the
War of the Quadruple Alliance
broke out between France and Spain; at this time of heightened
tension, Villasur was sent by the governor of the Spanish colony of
Nuevo México to
capture French traders. By doing so, Spanish authorities could
gather intelligence about French ambitions in the region.
Villasur
left Santa
Fe
on June 16, 1720, leading an expedition that included about 40
soldiers, 60-70 Pueblo scouts, and
approximately 12 Apache guides. The
expedition also included
Jose Naranjo,
as scout, war captain for the Indian auxiliaries and explorer who
had visited the Platte River region several times in the past, a
priest, and a Spanish trader.
The expedition made its way northeast through
present-day Colorado
, Kansas
and Nebraska
. In
August, the expedition made contact with Pawnees and
Otoes along the Platte and
Loup rivers. Using a captured Pawnee slave,
Francisco Sistaca, several attempts were made to negotiate with
Indians in the area. On August 13, Sistaca disappeared.
Villasur,
nervous about the possibility of attack, camped that night just
south of the Loup/Platte confluence, near what is now Columbus
.
The following morning (
August 14) a large
Pawnee force (possibly aided by French traders) attacked the
Spanish camp. Villasur, 34 of his soldiers, and 11 Pueblo scouts
were killed after a brief battle. The remaining survivors returned
to Santa Fe on
September 6.
The expedition, which had journeyed farther to the north and east
than any other Spanish military expedition, marked the end of
Spanish influence on the central Great Plains.
Notes
The battle site was also once claimed to be near the confluence of
the
North Platte and
South Platte rivers in western
Nebraska.
References
External links