| Texas Revolution | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conflict | The Texas Revolution | ||||||||||||
| Date | October 2, 1835- April 21, 1836 | ||||||||||||
| Place | Texas | ||||||||||||
| Result | Treaty of Velasco | ||||||||||||
| Combatants | |
|---|---|
| Republic of Texas | Mexico |
| Strength | |
| 2000? | 6,500 |
| Casualties | |
| aprox 700 | aprox 1500 |
The Texas Revolution was fought from October 2, 1835 to April 21, 1836 between Mexico and the Tejas portion of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas.
Animosity between the Mexican government and the American settlers in Texas began with the Siete Leyes of 1835, when Mexican President and General Antonio López de Santa Anna Pérez de Lebrón abolished the Constitution of 1824 and proclaimed a new anti-federalist constitution in its place. Unrest soon followed throughout all of Mexico and war began in Texas on October 1, 1835 with the Battle of Gonzales. Early Texian success at La Bahia and San Antonio were soon met with crushing defeat at the same locations a few months later.
The war ended at the Battle of San Jacinto (about 20 miles east of modern day Houston) where General Sam Houston led the Texas army to victory over a portion of the Mexican Army under Santa Anna, who was captured shortly after the battle. The conclusion of the war resulted in the creation of the Republic of Texas. The Republic was never recognized by the government of Mexico, and it teetered between collapse and invasion from Mexico. Texas was annexed by the United States of America in 1845, and it was not until the Mexican-American War of 1846 to 1848 that the "Texan Question" would finally be resolved.
The Panic of 1819 plunged the United States into a major depression. An American businessman and former Spanish subject named Moses Austin lost his lead manufacturing business during this time. After a trip to Tejas, he developed a plan to bring American settlers into the region, which would help Spain develop the area and help him jump-start his business career. In 1820, he applied for a Spanish grant to settle 300 families in Texas. His son, Stephen F. Austin helped his father secure loans in the U.S. to back this venture. In late 1820, Moses Austin received his grant from Spain but died in June 1821. Stephen F. Austin inherited his father’s Spanish grant and continued the colonization enterprise. Because of the economic hardships in the U.S. he had no problem finding the 300 families stipulated in the grant.
In December 1821 Austin’s settlers arrived by land and sea to settle around San Felipe. To Austin’s disappointment, the government of newly independent Mexico refused to approve the original Spanish grant. But Austin traveled to and from Mexico City for three years to settle the issue and the grants were eventually accepted by the new government. During this time Austin learned to speak Spanish and became close friends with Mexican Revolutionary José Antonio Navarro. In the coming years, they would work together to bring more settlers to Texas.
Under the rules of the grant, each new settler had to convert to Roman Catholicism, meet high standards of moral character, become a Mexican citizen, and change their names to Spanish equivalents. Each were given over 4,000 acres (16 km²) of land. The anglo settlers were called Texians and the Latin settlers were called Tejanos. The colony flourished and three years after it was started, its population had grown to 18,000. Navarro found himself to be the owner of more than 25,000 acres (101 km²) of land by 1830.
Mexico became a republic under the new Constitution of 1824, and Texas was merged with Coahuila to form the state of Coahuila y Tejas. The borders of the Texas part of this state were considerably different than those today. The lower border only extended to the Nueces River (where Corpus Christi sits today). South of that was the state of Tamaulipas. The western border of Texas ended about 200 miles west of San Antonio where the state of Chihuahua began, and a 200-mile wide strip of land extended between Tamaulipas and Chihuahua 100 miles southwest across the Rio Grande River to connect Texas to Coahuila.
Mexico formally abolished slavery for a second time under the Constitution of 1824, although it continued throughout the entire nation. Austin gained three more grants from the newly formed Mexican Republic to settle 900 additional families in 1825, 1827, and 1828 under the new empresario system of immigration, which Mexico instituted. As an empresario, Austin was given the duties of both bringing in qualified families and then governing them when they arrived. Many others were made empresarios such as Dr. Lorenzo de Zavala, Haden Edwards, and the old filibuster Ben Milam. During all of this, however, illegal immigrants from the U.S. trickled in with the legal immigrants.
Between 1829 and 1832, a series of Mexican presidents were killed in a series of coups. Santa Anna had a hand in each of these events. The Mexican Republic became heavily divided between two factions known as Conservatives, who were for a centralized, monarchial government, and Liberals, who were for a democratic, federal government. In the presidential elections of 1833 Santa Anna ran as a liberal and won. Soon after, Santa Anna retired to his hacienda, allowing his Vice-President, Valentín Gómez Farías, to run the country. The government initiated drastic liberal reforms, angering the Conservatives. Biding his time, Santa Anna suddenly renounced the government's policies, overthrew the presidency (which was really himself) declared that Mexico was not ready for democracy, became a centralist, and appointed himself dictator.
Though disturbed by Santa Anna’s turn, Austin and the settlers had backed Santa Anna in his bid for power and now wanted to capitalize on it. Austin therefore traveled to Mexico City with a petition asking for separate statehood from Coahuila, a better judicial system, and the repeal of the April 6 law that had caused the Anuhuac Disturbances, among other things. They were all approved except for separate statehood. Despondent over not getting Texas separated from Coahuila, he wrote an angry letter to a friend, which seemed to encourage rebellion. Mexican officials intercepted the letter and Austin was arrested for sedition. He would spend 18 months in prison.
By this time, the trickle of illegal immigrants entering Texas had become a flood. Santa Anna believed that the influx of immigrants to Texas was part of a plot by the U.S. to take over the region. In 1834, due to perceived troubles within the Mexican government, Santa Anna went through a process of dissolving state legislatures, disarming state militias, and abolishing the Constitution of 1824. These actions triggered outrage throughout the nation of Mexico. The country then became divided between Centralists, who backed Santa Anna’s dictatorship, and Federalists, who wanted the Constitution of 1824 re-instituted. Santa Anna then ordered all illegal immigrants out of Texas.
Before the consultation could happen, however, in accordance with Santa Anna’s nationwide call to disarm state militias, Colonel Domingo Ugartechea, who was stationed in San Antonio, ordered the Texians to return a cannon given to them by Mexico that was stationed in Gonzales. The Texians refused. Ugartechea sent Lieutenant Francisco Castañeda and 100 dragoons to retrieve it. When he arrived at the rain-swollen banks of the Guadalupe River near Gonzales, on the other side, there were just eighteen Texians to oppose him. Unable to cross, Castañeda established a camp, and the Texians buried the cannon and called for volunteers. Two Texian militias answered the call. Colonel John Henry Moore was elected head of the combined rebels/militias and they dug up the cannon and mounted it on a pair of cartwheels. A Coushatta Native American entered Castañeda’s camp and informed him that the Texians now had 140 men. All was ready for the Battle of Gonzales.
On October 1, 1835 at 7 p.m., the Texians headed out slowly and quietly to attack Castañeda’s dragoons. At 3 a.m. they reached the camp and gunfire was exchanged. There were no casualties except for a Texian who had bloodied his nose when he fell off his horse during the skirmish. The next morning negotiations were held and the Texians urged Castañeda to join them in their revolt. Despite claiming sympathy for the Texian cause, he was shocked by the invitation to mutiny and negotiations fell through. The Texians created a banner with a crude drawing of the disputed cannon and the words "Come and take it" written on it. Since they had no cannon balls, they filled it with scrap metal and fired it at the dragoons. They charged and fired their muskets and rifles, but Castañeda decided not to engage them and led the dragoons back to San Antonio. Thus the war had begun. And as at Gonzales, most of the early engagements favored the Texans because the sudden upheaval had not given Mexican garrisons time to prepare for war.
The following engagement, and victory, occurred at the Battle of Concepcion, where the bravery and Leadership of James Bowie would earn him the trust of the Texan provisional government. Next, the Texans captured Bexar, under the defence of General Cos. When General Austin gave his army of volunteers the boring task of waiting for General Cos’ army to starve, many of the volunteers simply left. Through out November of 1835, the Texian army dwindled from 800 to 600 men and the officers began to bicker about strategy and why they were fighting against the Mexicans. Several officers resigned including Jim Bowie who went to Gonzales. The siege of Bexar, which began on October 12, 1835, would demonstrate how little leadership the Texan "Army" had. Austin had been appointed Commander of all the Texan forces, but his talents were not well suited for military life.
The siege of Bexar ended on December 11 with the capture of General Cos and his starving army, despite Austin's leadership. The Mexican prisoners were paroled and sent back to Mexico after being made to promise not to fight again.
The early victories of the Texans were greatly attributed to their effective hunting rifles, which could fire at distant targets, and with more accuracy, than the smooth bore muskets of the Mexican infantry.
The remaining Texan army, poorly led, and with no collective goal, in terms of what they were fighting for, prepared to advance towards Matamoros, hoping to sack the town, and loot it of provisions and treasure. Although the Matamoros Expedition, as it came to be known, was but one of many schemes to bring the war to Mexico, nothing would ever come of it. On November 6, 1835, the Tampico Expedition under José Antonio Mexía left New Orleans, hoping to capture the town from the Centralists. The expedition failed. These independent missions drained the Texan movement of supplies and men, and would only bring about disaster upon disaster for the months to come.
The Alamo was defended by 180 to 250 men under the command of William Barret Travis and James Bowie. The Battle of the Alamo ended on March 6 after a 13 day siege in which all Texan combatants were killed. Santa Anna's casualties were about 400 troops. The defense of the Alamo proved to be of no military consequence for the Texan cause, but its martyrs were soon hailed as heroes. The most important result during this time was the 1836 Convention signing of the Texas Declaration of Independence from Mexico, on March 2.
Soon, Santa Anna divided his army and sent flying columns across Texas. The objective was to force a decisive battle over the Texan Army, now led by General Sam Houston.
All that impeded the advance of Santa Anna's Army were the swollen rivers, filled to capacity by the rain. These gave Houston a chance to rest his army and drill it into something like a professional army.
On April 20, both armies met at the San Jacinto River. Separating them were trees and brushes, which the Texans used as cover. Santa Anna, elated at finally having the rebel army in front of him, waited for reinforcements, which were led by General Cos. On that same day, a skirmish was fought between the enemies, mostly cavalry, but nothing came of it.
To the dismay of the rebels, Cos arrived sooner than expected bringing 540 more troops, swelling Santa Anna's army to over 1,200 men. Angered by the loss of opportunity, and by Houston's indeciseveness, the rebel army demanded to make an attack. On April 21, early in the morning, after burning Vince's Bridge, the Texans surged forward, catching the Mexican army by surprise. Hours before the attack, Santa Anna had ordered his men to stand down, noting that the Texans would not attack his superior force. Also, his army had been streched to the limit of endurance by the ongoing forced marches. The Battle of San Jacinto proved to be the decisive battle that Santa Anna had coveted, but with the results he had not anticipated. His force was overwhelmed by those Texians pushing into the Mexican camp. An 18-minute-long battle ensued, but soon the defenses crumbled and a massacre ensued.
Popular folk songs and legends hold that during the battle Santa Anna was busy with and was distracted by a common Texan prostitute, immortalized as The Yellow Rose of Texas.
Santa Anna's entire force of men was killed or captured by Sam Houston's heavily outnumbered army of Texans; only nine Texans died. This decisive battle resulted in Texas' independence from Mexico.
Santa Anna was captured when he could not cross the burned Vince's Bridge, and brought before Houston, who had been wounded in the ankle. Santa Anna readily agreed, under a death threat, to order the Army of Operations, now under General Vicente Filisola's command, to end the campaign. Filisola, noting the state of his tired and hungry army, marched back to Mexico, but not without protests from Urrea. Only Santa Anna had been defeated, not the Army of Operations, and Urrea felt that the campaign should continue. Filisola disagreed.
Texas became a republic after a long and bloody fight, but it was never recognized as such by Mexico. The war continued as a standoff.
Santa Anna would re-emerge as a hero during the Pastry War in 1838. He was re-elected President, and soon after, ordered an expedition led by General Adrian Woll into Texas, occupying San Antonio, but briefly. The border would be stained with blood for years to come as small clashes erupted between the two States.
The war with Texas would not truly come to an end until the Mexican-American War of 1846.
Sam Houston's victory at San Jacinto would send him to the presidency of Republic of Texas. Stephen F. Austin died in 1836, all but forgotten.
At the same time Texas declared independence, other Mexican states also decided to secede from Mexico and form their own republics. The state of Yucatán formed the Republic of Yucatán and the states of Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas joined together to form the Republic of the Rio Grande. Several other states also went into open rebellion, including San Luis Potosí, Querétaro, Durango, Guanajuato, Michoacán, Jalisco and Zacatecas. All were upset with Santa Anna abolishing the 1824 Constitution, disbanding Congress, and changing the structure of government from a federal structure to a centralized one. Texas, however, was the only territory to be successful in detaching itself from Mexico.
1835 in Mexico | 1835 | 1836 in Mexico | History of Texas | Independent Mexico | Wars of Mexico | Wars of independence
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It uses material from the
"Texas Revolution".
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