Antonio Narbona
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Antonio Narbona | |
|---|---|
| 5th Mexican Governor of New Mexico | |
| In office September 1825 – May 1827 | |
| Preceded by | Bartolomé Baca |
| Succeeded by | Manuel Armijo |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1773 |
| Died | 20 March 1830 (aged 56–57) |
| Profession | Soldier |
| Signature | |
Antonio Pascual Narbona (1773 – 20 March 1830) was a Spanish soldier from Mobile, British Florida now in Alabama, who fought Native American people in the northern part of New Spain (now the southwestern United States) around the turn of the nineteenth century. He supported the independence of Mexico from Spain in 1821. He was Governor of the territory of Santa Fe de Nuevo México (New Mexico) from September 1825 until 1827.
Antonio Narbona was a Criollo, or locally born person of Spanish ancestry, born at Mobile in British Florida, now Alabama. Spanish rule returned to Florida by the time he was about 10 with the end of the American Revolutionary War.
He arrived in Sonora in 1789 as a cadet in the Santa Cruz Company, sponsored by the commandant Brigadier Enrique Grimarest, who was his brother in law. He was promoted to ensign of the Fronteras garrison in Sonora on 27 January 1793.[1]
Lieutenant Antonio Narbona came to New Mexico from Chihuahua province in January 1805 at the head of a troop of soldiers sent to respond to a Navajo raid.[2] The Navajos had made attacks on the Spanish military post at Cebolletta, and on nearby settlements. They were trying to recover their grazing land at the foot of Mount Taylor, their sacred Turquoise Mountain.[citation needed] Narbona's force travelled north from Zuni Pueblo, passing through the Narbona Pass to attack the Canyon de Chelly.[3] The Narbona expedition killed over 115 Navajo and took 33 women and children as slaves.[citation needed] A 19th-century pictograph in the Canyon de Chelly National Monument represents the force.[4]