San Elizario Salt War

San Elizario Salt War
Part of the Range Wars
Date1877–1878
LocationEl Paso County, Texas, United States
Also known asSalinero Revolt
El Paso Salt War
OutcomeUprising suppressed
Deaths20–30

The San Elizario Salt War, also known as the Salinero Revolt or the El Paso Salt War, was an extended and complex range war of the mid-19th century that revolved around the ownership and control of immense salt lakes at the base of the Guadalupe Mountains in West Texas. What began in 1866 as a political and legal struggle among Anglo Texan politicians and capitalists gave rise in 1877 to an armed struggle by ethnic Mexican and Tejano inhabitants living on both sides of the Rio Grande near El Paso against a leading politician, who was supported by the Texas Rangers. The struggle reached its climax with the siege and surrender of 20 Texas Rangers to a popular army of perhaps 500 men in the town of San Elizario, Texas. The arrival of the African-American 9th Cavalry and a sheriff's posse of New Mexico mercenaries caused hundreds of Tejanos to flee to Mexico, some in permanent exile. The right of individuals to own the salt lakes, which had previously been held as a community asset, was established by force of arms.

The conflict began as a local quarrel and grew in stages to finally occupy the attention of both the Texas and federal governments. Newspaper editors throughout the nation covered the story, often with frenzied tone and in lurid detail. At the conflict's height, as many as 650 men bore arms. About 20 to 30 men were killed in the 12-year fight for salt, and perhaps double that number were wounded.[1]

Traditionally, the uprising of Mexican-Americans during the San Elizario Salt War has been described by historians as a bloody riot by a howling mob. The Texas Rangers who surrendered, especially their commander, have been described as unfit.[2] More recent scholarship has placed the war within the context of the long and often violent social struggle of Mexican-Americans to be treated as equal citizens in the United States and not as a subjugated people.[3] Most recently, the "mob" has been described as an organized political-military insurgency with the goal of re-establishing local control of their fundamental political rights and economic future.[4]

  1. ^ "The El Paso Salt War: A Review of the Historical Literature", Paul Cool, Journal of Big Bend Studies, Vol. 17, 2005, pp. 49–50.
  2. ^ Walter Prescott Webb, The Texas Rangers: A Century of Frontier Defense, University of Texas Press, 1965 (1935), pp. 351–367; C. L. Sonnichsen, The El Paso Salt War of 1877, Carl Hertzog and the Texas Western Press, 1961, pp. 27–57.
  3. ^ Oscar J. Martinez, Troublesome Border, University of Arizona Press, 1995, pp. 85–86.
  4. ^ Paul Cool, Salt Warriors: Insurgency on the Rio Grande, Texas A&M University Press, 2008, pp. 1–5, 131–134.

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