3,228 research outputs found

    'Reports from the Second Calvalry, California Volunteers and Letters' by Patrick E. Connor, December 6, 1962

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    'Reports from the Second Calvalry, California Volunteers and Letters' by Patrick E. Connor, December 6, 196

    General Patrick E. Connor

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    Photograph of General Patrick E. Connor, commander of Camp Douglas from 1862 to 1869. "For biography of Patrick Edward Connor (1820-1891), see: Brigham D. Madsen, Glory Hunter: A Biography of Patrick Edward Connor (Salt Lake City, University of Utah Press, 1990).

    Mrs. Patrick E. Connor

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    Photograph of Johanna Connor (d. 1889), who married Patrick E. Connor in 1854

    Patrick Edward Connor

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    Portrait of Colonel Patrick Edward Connor

    Connor, Patrick Edward

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    Connor, Patrick Edward. Born in Kerry, Ireland in 1820. Patrick Edward Connor was a soldier, building contractor, mining entrepreneur, and political leader. He left Killarney for New York City at the age of twelve. Patrick E. O\u27Connor enlisted in the U.S. Army at the age of eighteen. When the Civil War started, Connor volunteered for service in the Union army and was appointed Colonel of the Third California Infantry with instructions to guard and secure the overland mail route across the West. In October 1862 he moved his command to Salt Lake City, where he founded Camp Douglas and at once engaged in an acrimonious and bitter cold war with Brigham Young and the Mormon people, whom he accused of being disloyal and immoral. Connor won a brigadier general\u27s star for his destruction of 250 northwestern Shoshone at Bear River near Franklin, Idaho, on 29 January 1863. In the spring of 1865, he was named commander of the District of the Plains and placed in charge of the Powder River Expedition, whose goal was to pursue and punish the Sioux, Arapaho, and Cheyenne Indians in what is today Wyoming. The expedition was unsuccessful except for a band of Arapaho Connor defeated at Tongue River on 29 August 1865. Connor then returned to the military District of Utah where he was discharged as a Brevet Major-General in the spring of 1866. Connor is remembered as the founder of the "Liberal Party" in Utah and as the "Father of Utah Mining." Connor also established the first daily newspaper in Utah, "The Daily Union Vedette." See: Fred B. Rogers, "Soldiers of the Overland" (1938) and Brigham D. Madsen, "Glory Hunter: A Biography of Patrick Edward Connor" (1990)

    Patrick Edward Connor

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    Metal relief portrait of Patrick Connor, possibly a close-up from his grave headstone

    Patrick Edward Connor headstone

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    View of headstone for Patrick Edward Connor, the Father of Utah Mining

    Patrick Edward Connor Monument

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    Patrick Edward Connor Veteran Memorial located in Fort Douglas Military Cemetery

    Mrs. Patrick Edward Connor

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    General Patrick Edward Connor established Fort Douglas, had frequent conflicts with Mormons in Utah, and is considered the father of Utah\u27s mining industry

    Patrick Edward Connor

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    General Patrick Edward Connor established Fort Douglas, had frequent conflicts with Mormons in Utah, and is considered the father of Utah\u27s mining industry
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