- Battle of San Cala
The battle of San Cala (or of Sancala or San Calá), fought in the present-day Department of
Minas , in the Province of Córdoba,Argentina , onJanuary 9 ,1842 , was a combat between Unitarian forces andFederalists , who, under the command of GeneralÁngel Pacheco , prevented the expansion of the Unitarian Coalition of the North into the provinces of the Cuyo.Prelude
After the failure of
Juan Lavalle 's campaign to invade the province ofBuenos Aires , this Unitarian general moved to the province ofSanta Fe and, from there, retreated toward the province of Córdoba. But a misunderstanding with the forces under the command of GeneralGregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid caused Lavalle to suffer a terrible defeat at the battle ofQuebracho Herrado .Not considering themselves to be sufficiently strong in Córdoba, both generals agreed to retire toward the northern Argentine provinces, which were securely in the Unitarian camp. At the same time, they sent two secondary columns to seize other provinces. One of these, under the command of Mariano Acha, was defeated in its attempt to take the province of
Santiago del Estero .The second column was placed under the command of Colonel José María Vilela. The best of Lavalle's troops composed this column, and their mission was to support the Unitarian revolutionaries who were, it was thought, ready to rise in the provinces of
San Luis andMendoza .The Surprise of San Cala
As this second column headed to the
Valley of Traslasierra , and near the Indian village of Sancala (near present-day San Carlos Minas, Córdoba), a division of Federalist cavalry sent under the command of General Ángel Pacheco in pursuit of the Unitarian column were rapidly closing in on it.Overly confident, Vilela had secured all his men in a huge corral surrounded by high stone walls, and he let them spend the night there without the vigilance of effective sentries. Pacheco arrived in the vicinity of the corral at night; as his forces were inferior in numbers to those of his enemy, he decided to trust in surprise to gain a victory: Pacheco attacked at midnight, with his cavalry in column and through the only entrance into the corral. The slaughter was terrible, and most of Vilela's soldiers perished.
Aftermath
As the battle ended, Colonel Vilela himself had to flee through the desert toward
Catamarca . He would fight in the battle ofFamaillá , the final defeat of General Lavalle's Unitarian forces, and together with Marco Avellaneda, the governor of the province ofTucumán , would be executed by Federalist firing squad atMetán .General Pacheco would go on to organize a powerful Federalist army, with which he undertook a new campaign in the Cuyo. In September of this same year of 1842, at the battle of
Rodeo del Medio , he would destroy the forces under General Lamadrid, last of the forces of the Coalition of the North, assuring the absolute dominion of the Federalist party in Argentina for another ten years.The village of San Cala itself must be mentioned. Its inhabitants, strongly affected by the bloody battle and with their cemetery full of the bodies of the men killed in that battle (to say nothing of the many human remains that were not buried), in the following years moved to a place a short distance away, the present village of San Carlos or San Carlos Minas. The village of San Cala was deserted from then on and remains so today.
Bibliography
This article is a translation of an entry in the Spanish-language Wikipedia [http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batalla_de_San_Cala] .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.