Santa Anna's Leg Took a Long Walk

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 7/31/2019 Santa Anna's Leg Took a Long Walk

    1/2

    ta Anna's leg took a long walk

    p://www.latinamericanstudies.org/mex-war/santa-anna-leg.htm[18/06/2012 10:24:39 p.m.]

    The News-Gazette (Champaign, Illinois) March 30, 1998

    Santa Anna's leg took a long walk

    By PAUL WOOD 1998 THE NEWS-GAZETTE

    CERRO GORDO Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna could be lucky in war, notably at theAlamo,

    but he had a problem with food.He lost his leg in the so-called French Pastry War, fought between France and Mexico in 1838.

    Then in1847, facing the United States at the Battle of Cerro Gordo in Mexico, he stopped paying attention

    to thewar long enough to linger over a roast chicken.

    His lunch was interrupted by an uninvited regiment of Illinoisans, who ate the general's chickenand carried

    off his cork leg. Santa Anna hobbled away to fight another day.It was a huge victory for the 4th Regiment Illinois Volunteers, who also discovered a hoard of

    gold usedto pay Mexican soldiers. It was an even bigger victory for Capt. Robert E. Lee, whose fame led

    eventuallyto his command of Confederate forces 15 years later in the Civil War.

    Some of the soldiers returned to Piatt County, where the town of Griswold was renamed CerroGordo in

    commemoration of the battle. The Volunteers regiment would eventually become the IllinoisNational

    Guard, and its trophy of war, Santa Anna's cork leg, now resides in the Guard's museum, CampLincoln in

    Springfield.Over the years, the Mexican government has asked for Santa Anna's leg back. Not that it would

    do thegeneral any good, though it might show a little sensitivity. Artificial legs aren't as funny as they

    were in the1850s, when veterans charged a nickel or a dime for curiosity-seekers to handle the leg in hotel

    bars.Santa Anna's prosthesis had 30 minutes of fame earlier this month when the Fox animated

    television series"King of The Hill" did a show on the topic a surprisingly accurate one.

    It tells how the general was surprised while eating chicken and credits the Illinois Volunteers.The show's

    one error had the leg traveling to Texas as a portable historical exhibit.Mark Whitlock of Camp Lincoln's Illinois State Military Museum says the leg is going nowhere,

    ever. "It'san important part of Illinois history," he said.

    Cerro Gordo's place in history is marked by an inscription on the shin of the leg:"General Santa Anna's cork leg, captured at the Battle of Cerro Gordo, Mexico, by Private A.

    Waldron,First Sergeant Sam Rhoades, Second Sergeant John M. Gill April 18, 1847, all of the Fourth

    Regiment,Illinois Volunteers of the Mexican War."

    There are still Rhoadeses and Gills in Piatt County, but no one contacted by The News-Gazettecould

    remember a family history involving the war against Mexico, chicken dinners and a cork leg.Helping to untangle the Cerro Gordian knot is Sheila Coffman, who now lives near LaPlace.

  • 7/31/2019 Santa Anna's Leg Took a Long Walk

    2/2

    ta Anna's leg took a long walk

    p://www.latinamericanstudies.org/mex-war/santa-anna-leg.htm[18/06/2012 10:24:39 p.m.]

    She's heard stories of the victory and how a central Illinois town got a Spanish name. It means"Fat

    Hill,"CQ she pointed out.The name is also fitting because of the town's elevated status as one of the high points between

    St. Louisand Danville, she said.

    She doesn't know the name of the volunteers, but she said a town father, George (Gordy) Peck,fought in

    the war."You should look for a Peck," she said. "There's Pecks by the bushels around here." If that is not

    afamous line in Cerro Gordo, it ought to be.

    One prominent Peck (by marriage) is retired fourth-grade teacher Dorma Wood.She's related to many a leader. One part of her family traces its ancestry to Charlemagne, who

    was kingof France before it was called France. She also claims Abraham Lincoln as a relative.

    "I'm a first cousin four times removed," she said.She knows the Peck history from her late husband's side. Gordy (sometimes spelled Gordie) Peck

    was aforbear of her husband and owned the stagecoach station.

    At 91, she is closer to Cerro Gordo history than most. She remembers that six men from thefuture town

    of Cerro Gordo, Ill., fought in the battle of Cerro Gordo, Mexico."One man lost his left forearm," she said.One of the returning veterans was Gordy Peck. A local history book, "The Good Life In Piatt

    County,"also lists Laban Chambers, John Post, A. Froman and Bazel Wells as Cerro Gordo veterans.

    Though their names are not inscribed on Santa Anna's shin, the battle was important enough forthem to

    want to immortalize it as the town name.The battle was payback for the Alamo.Lee and Gen. Winfield Scott were triumphant over Santa Anna, who had lost some of his speed

    andquickness along with his leg in the French Pastry War. (That brief and forgotten scuffle was started

    whenMexican soldiers plundered a French pastry chef's restaurant. True story.

    And the battle is apparently still warmly remembered in Texas, the site of the fictional town in"King of

    The Hill." A Fox spokesman said the writer of the episode had learned of Santa Anna's sorrows asa boy,

    and it stuck with him.Santa Anna, and later the Mexican government, tried repeatedly to get the leg back.