Texas’s Hidden History Revisited—Part 3: The 1827-1836 Years Under Mexican Rule (section 2)
The hidden history of Texas
Part 3: The 1827-1836 years under Mexican rule
By Bob Feldman / The Rag Blog / August 24, 2011
[This is the third installment of Bob Feldman’s new Rag Blog series on the hidden history of Texas.]
After Mexican President and General Santa Anna ordered his brother-in-law — Mexican General Martin Perfecto de Cos — to move more than 700 government troops into Texas in September 1835, the predominantly Anglo rebels opened fire on some of these Mexican Army troops in October 1835 in Gonzales, Texas.
And “by early November 1835, the rebellion had defeated Mexican forces everywhere except in San Antonio,” according to Randolph Campbell’s Gone To Texas. The following month, on Dec. 5, 1835, the armed Texas rebels also defeated Mexican General Cos’s troops in San Antonio and thus also gained control of that city.
Santa Anna, however, then gathered an army of 6,000 Mexican troops in early 1836 and ordered 3,000 of these troops to march toward San Antonio in late February 1836. In response, the Anglo rebel leaders ordered San Antonio evacuated — except for the 150 armed Anglo men under William Travis’s command (later joined by 32 or 33 additional Anglo volunteers) who stayed behind in an abandoned Franciscan mission, the Alamo, that had been converted into a fort.
For 10 days, Santa Anna’s troops besieged the Alamo and demanded that the armed Anglo rebels inside surrender unconditionally. But when Travis and his armed group refused to surrender, Mexican President Santa Anna ordered his troops to attack the Alamo on Mar. 6, 1836. As a result, 600 Mexican troops were killed by the armed Anglo men who were inside the Alamo; and all of the 182 or 183 of the armed Anglo men who were inside the Alamo were killed by the Mexican troops who stormed the Alamo.
And elsewhere in Texas—where a convention of predominantly white Anglo rebels at Washington-on-the-Brazos had declared Texas to now be an independent “Republic of Texas” (whose first president was a land speculator with the Galveston Bay & Texas Land Company named David G. Burnet) on Mar. 2, 1836—armed Anglo rebel groups apparently began to utilize the battle cry “Remember the Alamo!” in their subsequent armed clashes with Mexican federal government troops.
Coincidentally, both the commander of the white Anglo rebel troops in the Alamo, William Travis, and one of the most famous defenders of the Alamo, Jim Bowie, were apparently either involved in the slave trade or owned slaves (as did former Tennessee Governor Sam Houston, one of the leaders of the Anglo settler revolt of 1835-1836 that led to the creation of the independent Republic of Texas). As Alwyn Barr wrote in an essay, titled “Black Texans During the Civil War,” that appeared in a 2003 book Invisible Texans: Women and Minorities in Texas which Donald Willett and Stephen Curley edited:
“…Anglo-American immigration from the United States brought with them Black slaves, whose numbers had risen to about 5,000 when Texans revolted against Mexico in 1836…James Bowie and James Fannin had smuggled slaves into Texas, while Sam Houston and William B. Travis both owned bondsmen. Slaves represented at least 15 percent of the population in the new Republic of Texas.”
So, not surprisingly, the March 1836 Constitution of the new independent Republic of Texas was a pro-slavery document which legalized slavery in Texas and reversed the legal ban on the importation of slaves into Texas which the Mexican Congress had enacted in 1830. As Gone To Texas observed:
“Section 9 of the General Provisions…guaranteed that people held as slaves in Texas would remain in servitude and that future emigrants to the republic could bring slaves with them. Furthermore, no free black could live in Texas without the approval of [the Republic of Texas’s] congress, and any slave freed without the approval of congress had to leave the republic. Most of the leaders of the Texas Revolution were southerners and the new republic would protect their `Peculiar Institution’…”
After the fall of the Alamo, the armed conflict between the separatist Texas rebels and the Mexican government’s troops only lasted another six weeks. In late March 1836, a unit of 365 Texas rebels (under James Fannin’s command) was surrounded by a much larger number of Mexican Army cavalry troops (under Mexican General Jose de Urrea’s command) near Goliad, Texas. Then, in accordance with Mexico’s recently-passed “piracy” law, Santa Anna ordered all 365 Texas rebels executed on Mar. 27, 1836, following the surrender of Fannin and his unit to General Urrea’s cavalry.
But on Apr. 21, 1836, 800 armed Texas rebels, under former Tennessee Governor Sam Houston’s command, attacked 1,400 troops of Santa Anna’s Mexican Army near the San Jacinto River, killed 630 of Santa Anna’s troops and captured another 733 of his troops. And the following day–Apr. 22, 1836–Houston’s Texas separatist troops captured Mexican President Santa Anna, himself; and while he was held as a prisoner by Texas rebel troops, Santa Anna was forced to sign the Treaty of Velasco on May 14, 1836, in which he agreed to withdraw all Mexican troops to the other side of the Rio Grande. In addition, the Rio Grande was made the independent Republic of Texas’s new southern boundary—although when it was part of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Texas, the southern boundary of Texas was actually considered further north on the Nueces River.
Not surprisingly, the Treaty of Velasco that Santa Anna was forced to sign while imprisoned was subsequently repudiated by the Mexican government and by Santa Anna (after he was finally released and eventually sent back to Veracruz, Mexico on a U.S. warship, nine months later, by U.S. President Andrew Jackson); and the Mexican government refused to recognize the independence of Texas and the separatist Republic of Texas or agree that Texas’s land was no longer a part of Mexico’s territory until 1848.
Following the signing of the Treaty of Velasco in May 1836 and the withdrawal of Mexican troops, the Anglo settler-colonist leaders of the 1835-36 separatist “Texas Revolution” almost immediately tried to persuade the U.S. government to annex their newly independent “Republic of Texas.” So, not surprisingly, Northern opponents of slavery, like Benjamin Lundy and U.S. Congressional Representative John Quincy Adams, insisted that the Texas “revolution had resulted from a conspiracy to add more slave territory to the Union,” according to Gone To Texas.
[Bob Feldman is an East Coast-based writer-activist and a former member of the Columbia SDS Steering Committee of the late 1960s. Read more articles by Bob Feldman on The Rag Blog.]
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