James Walker Fannin, Jr. (January 1, 1805 – March 27, 1836) was a 19th century U.S. military figure and Texas leader during the Texas Revolution of (1835–36).
Sam Houston, supported by Governor Smith, commissioned Fannin as a Colonel in the regular army on 7 December 1835. By 7 January 1836, the provisional government had appointed Fannin 'military agent' that answered only to the council and not Houston. He began recruiting forces and supplies for the forthcoming and confusing campaign against Matamoros, Mexico. However, Fannin had difficulty leading the volunteers in his charge. He tried to institute regular army discipline, but his irregular volunteers would not accept it. Many of his men felt he was aloof and several historians believe that he was an ineffective commander because of it. The majority of the men serving under Fannin had only been in Texas a short time and this frustrated Fannin who wrote acting Lt. Governor James W. Robinson "..among the rise of 400 men at, and near this post, I doubt if 25 citizens of Texas can be mustered in the ranks...".
In early February, Fannin sailed from Velasco and landed at Copano with four companies of the Georgia Battalion, moving to join a small band of Texans at Refugio. When Mexican reinforcements, under General Jose Urrea, arrived at Matamoros, thus complicating the Texan's plans to attack that city, Fannin withdrew twenty-five miles north to Goliad. He quartered his troops at Presidio La Bahia. Now Lt. Colonel of the First Artillery, Fannin began strengthening defenses at Goliad, and sent out his captains to find recruits for the army. "Enlist all you can.." ..." fill up your companies, and be ready for the field soon".
Appeals from Travis at the Alamo (via James Bonham) prompted Fannin to launch a relief march of over 300 men and four pieces of artillery on 25 February. Finally, after some delay, Fannin and his men moved out on the 28th for the ninety-odd miles to San Antonio. The entire relief mission was a failure. The troops barely had crossed the San Antonio River when wagons broke down, forcing the men to camp still within sight of Goliad. There was little or no food to take, some men were barefooted and over night, the oxen to pull the wagons wandered off.
On 12 March, Fannin sent Captain Amon Butler King and about twenty-eight men to take wagons to Refugio and help evacuate the remaining families there. King and his men confronted an advanced party of Gen. Urrea's cavalry in Refugio and withdrew to the old mission. A local boy managed to sneak out of town and alerted Fannin of the skirmish. Fannin sent Lt. Col. William Ward and about 120 men to King's aid. Ward managed to drive the small Mexican forces away and decided to stay the night to rest his men. On 14 March 1836, Ward and King were attacked by Urrea and over 200 Mexican soldiers as they were about to depart back to Fannin. The same day, Gen. Houston ordered Fannin to retreat to Victoria.
Mexican Gen. Urrea appointed Col. Jose Nicolas de la Portilla in command of the La Bahia garrison while he was away at Victoria. On 26 March 1836 a courier arrived with orders from Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna to Portilla: " I therefore order, that you should give immediate effect to the said ordinance in respect to all those foreigners who have yielded to the force of arms." Portilla answered with the reply that the prisoners would be shot the next day. On 27 March 1836 Fannin's men were marched out in three columns and shot point blank and massacred. Fannin was shot before a firing squad while seated and blindfolded.
Fannin County, Texas and Fannin County, Georgia are named in his honor. Ironically, the county seat of Fannin County, Texas is Bonham, named after the individual who sought Fannin's aid at the Alamo.
Camp Fannin, a large military training and POW Camp used during World War II and located near Tyler, TX, was named in his honor.
1804 births | 1836 deaths | Deaths by firearm | History of Texas | Non-graduate alumni of West Point | People from Georgia (U.S. state) | People from Texas
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"James Fannin".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world