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Battle of the Alamo
When Spain ceded Florida
to the United States after the Adams-Onis Treaty
of 1819, the United States agreed to relinquish
its claim to Texas. Unfortunately for Spain,
their vast empire was about to crumble throughout
the New World. It started with Texas.
Spain's influence in Texas
was minimal at best. After Mexico declared its
independence from Spain in 1821, Texas was a
forgotten land. The new nation of Mexico certainly
lacked the authority or finances to manage the
vast area. However, some opportunistic Americans
saw potential for profit in Texas. Stephen
A. Austin, the son of a Missouri man who
had negotiated a large-land grant with the Mexican
government in the hopes of building a local economy,
set about colonizing Texas. By 1830, Austin had
attracted 25,000 settlers and 2,000 slaves to
Texas. Their plan was to grow cotton.
As the new Mexican government
saw Austin's colony, it attempted to exert more
control over the region, claiming that the terms
of the original land-grant had been violated
(settlers refused to convert to Roman-Catholicism
- the national religion of Mexico). Furthermore,
the Mexican government refused to allow any more
slaves to immigrate to Mexico and placed taxes
on goods imported from America. As expected,
the colonists became disgruntled. The situation
worsened when the Mexican government jailed Stephen
A. Austin for urging Texas to self-govern.
In 1836, General Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna and 6,000 troops marched
to Texas to subdue the Texans. On March 23, Santa
Anna besieged the mission known as The Alamo
in San Antonio. Santa Anna's demand for surrender
was answered with a defiant cannon blast authorized
by Col. William Barret Travis. The siege lasted
for two weeks. On March 6, Santa Anna and his
army stormed the mission and killed every Texan
who resisted. Just four days earlier, On March
2, the Texans declared independence, legalized
slavery, and formed a provisional government.
They named Sam Houston commander of their army.
Because the stand at The Alamo lasted two weeks,
Sam Houston had time to prepare his army and
plans of attack. On April 21, Houston's army
of 800 Texans routed the Mexican army of 1,600
at San Jacinto, Texas. In the battle, General
Santa Anna was captured, and Texas became independent.
Nine years later, after much debate and deliberation,
Texas became the 28th state. As a result, Mexico
broke all diplomatic ties with the United States.
The Mexican War would soon follow. |