Drum Barracks was the Union Army's headquarters for Southern California and New Mexico during the Civil War. It consisted of 19 buildings on 60 acres (240,000 m2) in what is now Wilmington, with another 37 acres (150,000 m2) near the waterfront. Its junior officers' quarters has been preserved as the Drum Barracks Civil War Museum.[1] Its powder magazine stands on private property three blocks away, protected by a chain-link fence.
The impending withdrawal of regular troops from California to fight in the Civil War presented Los Angeles with a threefold crisis:
The response was to build a major installation, adjacent to San Pedro Bay and 25 miles south of Los Angeles,[2] to be garrisoned by troops moved from Fort Tejon and later by recruits from Northern California and from among the loyal minority in the area.While the land was donated by Union sympathizers, the construction cost eventually reached $1 million.[1]
The Drum Barracks is named for Richard Coulter Drum, Assistant Adjutant General of the Army's Department of the Pacific in San Francisco. He supervised construction from his office, visiting the new post only once.
In 1863, Major Bennett, the post commander, wrote to the Adjutant-General in Washington asking that the name be changed to Fort Drum, comparing it to Fort Snelling, Minnesota and Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.[3] No response to the letter has been found.
At least three of the leading citizens of Los Angeles were arrested and taken to the Drum Barracks.Newspaper publisher Henry Hamilton was arrested In Los Angeles on October 17, 1862 and taken to the Drum Barracks. From there he was placed aboard a steamer to be taken to San Francisco and confinement at Fort Alcatraz. He took an oath of allegiance to the United States and was back in Los Angeles within two weeks.
The immediate cause of his arrest is not known, but one of his many editorials had said that the Northern mobilization was an abolition war, "instigated, carried on, and to be consummated, by the degradation of the white race, and the elevation of the African family over them" and that "Black Republican" rule "has degenerated into worse than an Oriental despotism."[4]
The photo shown here has inscriptions stating that Hamilton is on the left. A copy of the photo, taken decades later, has a description indicating that Hamilton is on the right.
Undersheriff A.J. King was arrested at the request of the newly appointed US Marshal, Henry D. Barrows, for saying "that he owed no allegiance to the United States Government; that Jeff Davis' was the only constitutional government we had, and that he remained here because he could do more harm to the enemies of that Government by staying here than going there" and for publicly displaying "a large lithograph gilt-framed portrait of Beauregard, the rebel general, which he flaunted before a large crowd at the hotel." He took an oath of allegiance to the United States and was released.[5] In October, 1862, a month after he had been elected to the state Assembly, former California Attorney General and later Los Angeles District Attorney E.J.C. Kewen was arrested for ‘treasonable utterance’ and sent to Fort Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay. After two weeks, he took an oath of allegiance, posted a $5,000 bond and was released.[6]The report of the arrest does not say what the utterance was, but one of his speeches was published later:
Drum Barracks troops were stationed at San Bernardino for most of the war and made intermittent encampments at El Monte.[7]
When the news of the Union victory at Gettysburg and the fall of Vicksburg was received in Los Angeles, battles between Union and Confederate factions broke out. A detachment of troops, on their way to the Owens Valley as an escort to a supply train, intervened. Continuing demonstrations by secessionists required the dispatch of 25 additional men to take up a post near Los Angeles in a position to command the town.[8]
A new wave of Indian raids began as soon as troops were withdrawn to the Eastern theater of war.[9] Troops sent east from Los Angeles to confront Confederates first "had to fight the Apaches, hereditary enemies of the Pumas and Maricopas; and the Navajos were also war-like. From Tucson into New Mexico, in fact, the column had to fight its way through hostile Indians, who lurked in every mountain pass, and guarded every water hole."[10]
Named battles and campaigns fought by Drum Barracks troops against Indians included the Battle of Sulphur Springs and the Owens Valley Indian War.
Drum Barracks troops, including the Spanish-speaking Native California Cavalry, made incursions into the Mexican state of Sonora at Hermosillo, Altar and Magdalena. One incursion led to a shooting incident with troops loyal to Emperor Maximilian and his French allies.[11]
A letter from General Grant, written late in the war, passed on a rumor that former California Senator William M. Gwin had been appointed governor of Sonora by the Imperial government in Mexico and was organizing a Confederate invasion of California. Grant authorized the Army to pursue the invading force back into Mexico and to keep troops there indefinitely. The rumor proved to be false.[12]
After the Civil War, Camp Drum remained active for several years in the Indian Wars. By 1870, it had been deactivated and fallen into disrepair. In October 1871, the Los Angeles Star reported that all remaining troops at Drum Barracks had been ordered to Fort Yuma. In 1873, the government returned the land to its original donors, Phineas Banning and Benjamin Davis Wilson, after auctioning off the buildings. Not surprisingly, there were no winning bids from buyers who would have to move the buildings or dismantle them for building materials. Banning bought five buildings for $2,917 and Wilson bought one for $200.
The museum's resident ghosts were profiled by the Los Angeles Times in 1992, including a description of a ghost who "doesn't know he's dead." The same article says that the building was saved from demolition following "a drawn-out battle more fierce than any of the soldiers stationed here had ever fought."[13] Another profile, "Ghost stories from LA's old Civil War barracks", was published in 2018.[14]
The Drum Barracks was profiled on Unsolved Mysteries in the early 1990s, in a segment narrated by Robert Stack, called 'Civil War Ghosts'. People interviewed in that segment claimed to have seen apparitions of Civil War soldiers.[15] In 2005 the Barracks was featured in an episode of Most Haunted.[16]
Drum Barracks has been designated as a California Historic Landmark, a Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Since 1987, it has been operated as a Civil War museum that is open to the public.