The Mission That Inspired A Mission
March 6, 2010

A Shrine In Texas

A Shrine In Texas

Flag That Flew Over Alamo

Flag That Flew Over Alamo

On This Date in History:

Back in the 18th Century, the Spanish were running around what is now Central and North America, pretty much on a mission of conquest and not so much on a mission of colonization. My take has always been that the main goal of the Spanish was to secure gold and other treasures for the crown rather than develop the territories as on-going concerns. While they were conquering, they also decided that the defeated needed to be saved and so they set out to make the natives Christians. They set up a number of missions where missionaries could “civilize” those who were under the thumb of the conquistadors.

Crockett Coonskin Cap In Hand

Crockett Coonskin Cap In Hand

One such mission was Mision San Antonio de Valero. Construction on the mission began in 1724. By 1793, the Spaniards decided to secularlize the 5 missions in the area and distributed the lands to the Indians in the region. I’m not sure why they did that but I doubt if it was guilt over taking it in the first place. A guess would be that the “natives were getting restless” and it was a way to appease them so they wouldn’t have a revolt on their hands. What once had been mission lands became their own and they continued their farming. Just after the turn of the century, the Spanish decided that the old mission would make a great fort and so there they stationed a cavalry unit. The solider’s of that unit were from Alamo de Paras, Coahuila. Perhaps they were homesick because they renamed the mission the Alamo, which means cottonwood in Spanish.

During the decade long effort to secure Mexican independence from the Spanish, the fort was held by both revolutionaries and also the Spanish as it changed hands during the fortunes of war. By 1835, things were getting unsettled again in the region of Mexico known as Tejas.

Jim Bowie

Jim Bowie

The Mexican government had encouraged settlement by immigrants. They got good deals on land and pretty much had a semblance of freedom, provided that they follow the Mexican laws. Most of the immigrants were ex-patrioted Americans. Some were fleeing the long arm of Uncle Sam’s law. Nevertheless, many of the Americans, being a rather independent lot, wanted to separate from Mexico. One item that was in the craw of some of the immigrants was that Mexican law forbade slavery and many of the Americans were slave holders. The Texicans organized volunteers to take up arms against the government and the Mexicans decided it was time to put down the unrest in their territory. The Texicans thought it was time to get more organized and on March 2, 1836 declared independence from Mexico.

Travis Wasn't That Bad of a Guy

Travis Wasn't That Bad of a Guy

Now, the unruly Texicans had gone to battle with the Mexican forces in San Antonio de Bexar in December 1835 and after house to house fighting, forced the Mexicn forces to surrender. The Texicans took up residence in the Alamo which was well fortified and supplied with munitions. Mexican President General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna thought San Antonio was a good place to go after the upstarts and on February 23, 1836 he brought thousands of troops to the Alamo. Inside the Alamo were about 150 Texicans led by William Barrett Travis. He was in charge of the small professional Texas soldier but Jim Bowie led a group of volunteers as did David Crockett and his men from Tennessee. The vastly outnumbered Texicans held out for 13 days. They refused to surrender. Travis wrote a letter that is famous in Texas folklore in which he begs for reinforcements and says that he had answered the Mexican call for surrender with a cannon shot. The Texas State Archive Commission provides more information regarding the letter of William Barret Travis at the Alamo, including an additional note and verbiage written on the envelope.

Letter From Travis

Letter From Travis

 Only 32 volunteers showed up halfway through the seige to bring the total to 189. No reinforcements came. On this date in 1836, the Alamo fell. All of the men were killed, though modern historians uncovered a letter from a Mexican soldier that claims that a few men were taken prisoner and taken back to Mexico City where they were tortured and killed. One of those men reported to have been captured was  Davy Crockett. I do not believe that this account has been totally accepted by historians though I also do not think it has been totally dismissed either. But, it does fly in the face of John Wayne’s version of the Alamo in which Crockett is one of the last defenders to die and dies taking out several men and blowing up the munitions, in true John Wayne hero manner.

Sam Houston Was Away from his Army

As with many things in history, particularly items as heroic as the Alamo, myths have become fact. Let’s explore a few with the Alamo. It was often been portrayed in film that the Alamo defenders died while “buying time” for Sam Houston to train his army. Truth is that Houston on January 28 was given a furlough to take care of some business. He went and negotiated a treaty with the Cherokee Nation and then served as a delegate to the constitutional convention until March 6. It was at that time that he was reconfirmed as commander in chief of the Texican volunteer and regular army. Travis is often portrayed as a pompous man who was disliked by many of the volunteers, particularly Jim Bowie. Travis was really a very likeable and outgoing fellow.

Alamo Seige-Travis With Sword

Alamo Seige-Travis With Sword

The story of the dislike comes from the volunteers refusing to take his orders, but that was more out of loyalty and respect for their own commanders, such as Crockett and Bowie. There were some survivors of the Alamo but they were all women, children and slaves. The weather was not part of one of the coldest winters in Texas history. That rumor came about because the Mexican Army ran through a brutal and freakish snowstorm on their march to the Alamo. A couple of cold fronts came through during the seige but they only took the temperatures into the 30′s. Two days after the seige was over the weather was described as “fine weather.” And finally, the 400 men of James Fannin at Goliad, just 100 miles away, could not have come to the rescue because they had another Mexican Army in the area that they had to deal with.

Heroic Crockett With Musket as Club

Heroic Crockett With Musket as Club

Nevertheless, the Texicans ended up getting the last laugh. In late April, with shouts of “Remember the Alamo,” the Texican Army under the command of General Sam Houston, routed the Mexican Army near present day Houston in 26 minutes. They forced Santa Anna to surrender, not only his army but also sign documents that ceded Texas to the revolutionaries. It is said that Santa Anna was distracted in his tent by the beautiful woman spy, the Yellow Rose of Texas. About 10 years later, Santa Anna was at war again over Texas with the United States over the border of Texas…seems Santa Anna believed his definition of Texas only went to the Nueces River, whereas the Americans and Texans determined that the documents that Santa Anna signed at San Jacinto took Texas to the Rio Grande. Santa Anna lost that war too and ended up losing most of the Southwestern United States in the process.

Don't Mess With Texas, Oz!

Don't Mess With Texas, Oz!

The Alamo is a shrine today in Texas and millions of people from around the world come to San Antonio each year to visit. One visitor was Ozzy Osbourne who in 1984 was arrested. At 11 am he was spotted drunk, pulling up a dress he was wearing, urinating on the Alamo. He found out the hard way what the Alamo means to Texans. He was banned from the city.

No matter what….this is a great and historic day for Texans around the world!

NAM Shows Pretty Good Instability From OK to SE Texas Late Tuesday

Weather Bottom Line:  Weekend outlook looks on track. Highs in the mid 50′s…maybe even upper 50′s on Saturday for some folks.  We’re back to the mid 50′s on Sunday as a lead shortwave comes out ahead of the main storm.  Rain activity looks to be around Sunday afternoon into Sunday night.  Now, the main show will come out and I am pretty confident that there will be some severe weather in the midwest Sunday or Monday and then Tuesday or Wednesday in the South.  I”ll tell you what though..the latest runs want to bring the main short farther North.  Consequently, it’s not out of the question for Thunderstorms Tuesday afternoon or Tuesday night around here…nor is it a totally foreign idea that the area of rough weather in the South just may expand closer to Louisville. I do however expect any watch areas to be primarily in Dixie.  We’ll have to see.

A Hallowed Day For Texas! Remember the Alamo!
March 6, 2009

A Shrine In Texas

A Shrine In Texas

 

 

 

 

Flag That Flew Over Alamo

Flag That Flew Over Alamo

On This Date in History: 

Back in the 18th Century, the Spanish were running around what is now Central and North America, pretty much on a mission of conquest and not so much on a mission of colonization.  My take has always been that the main goal of the Spanish was to secure gold and other treasures for the crown rather than develop the territories as on-going concerns.   While they were conquering, they also decided that the defeated needed to be saved and so they set out to make the natives Christians.  They set up a number of missions where missionaries could “civilize” those who were under the thumb of the conquistadors.

Crockett Coonskin Cap In Hand

Crockett Coonskin Cap In Hand

One such mission was Mision San Antonio de Valero.  Construction on the mission began in 1724.  By 1793, the Spaniards decided to secularlize the 5 missions in the area and distributed the lands to the Indians in the region.  I’m not sure why they did that but I doubt if it was guilt over taking it in the first place.  A guess would be that the “natives were getting restless” and it was a way to appease them so they wouldn’t have a revolt on their hands.  What once had been mission lands became their own and they continued their farming.  Just after the turn of the century, the Spanish decided that the old mission would make a great fort and so there they stationed a cavalry unit.  The solider’s of that unit were from Alamo de Paras, Coahuila.  Perhaps they were homesick because they renamed the mission the Alamo, which means cottonwood in Spanish. 

During the decade long effort to secure Mexican independence from the Spanish, the fort was held by both revolutionaries and also the Spanish as it changed hands during the fortunes of war.  By 1835, things were getting unsettled again in the region of Mexico known as Tejas.  The Mexican government had encouraged settlement by immigrants.  They got good deals on land and pretty much had a

Jim Bowie

Jim Bowie

semblance of freedom, provided that they follow the Mexican laws.  Most of the immigrants were ex-patrioted Americans.  Some were fleeing the long arm of Uncle Sam’s law.  Nevertheless, many of the Americans, being a rather independent lot, wanted to separate from Mexico.  One item that was in the craw of some of the immigrants was that Mexican law forbade slavery and many of the Americans were slave holders.  The Texicans organized volunteers to take up arms against the government and the Mexicans decided it was time to put down the unrest in their territory.  The Texicans thought it was time to get more organized and on March 2, 1836 declared independence from Mexico.

Travis Wasn't That Bad of a Guy

Travis Wasn't That Bad of a Guy

Now,  the unruly Texicans had gone to battle with the Mexican forces in San Antonio de Bexar in December 1835 and after house to house fighting, forced the Mexicn forces to surrender.  The Texicans took up residence in the Alamo which was well fortified and supplied with munitions.  Mexican President General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna thought San Antonio was a good place to go after the upstarts and on February 23, 1836 he brought thousands of troops to the Alamo.  Inside the Alamo were  about 150 Texicans led by William Barrett Travis.   He was in charge of the small professional Texas soldier but Jim Bowie led a group of volunteers as did David Crockett and his men from Tennessee.  The vastly outnumbered Texicans held out for 13 days.  They refused to surrender.  Travis wrote a letter that is famous in Texas folklore in which he begs for reinforcements and says that he had answered the Mexican

Letter From Travis

Letter From Travis

call for surrender with a cannon shot.  Only 32 volunteers showed up halfway through the seige to bring the total to 189.   No reinforcements came.  On this date in 1836, the Alamo fell.  All of the men were killed, though modern historians uncovered a letter from a Mexican soldier that claims that a few men were taken prisoner and taken back to Mexico City where they were tortured and killed.  One of those men was reported to be Davy Crockett.  I do not believe that this account has been totally accepted by historians though I also do not think it has been totally dismissed either.  But, it does fly in the face of John Wayne’s version of the Alamo in which Crockett is one of the last defenders to die and dies taking out several men and blowing up the munitions, in true John Wayne hero manner. 

As with many things in history, particularly items as heroic as the Alamo, myths have become fact.  Let’s explore a few with the Alamo.  It was often been portrayed in film that the Alamo defenders died while “buying time” for Sam Houston to train his army.  Truth is that Houston on January 28 was given a furlough to take care of some business. He went and negotiated a treaty

Alamo Seige-Travis With Sword

Alamo Seige-Travis With Sword

with the Cherokee Nation and then served as a delegate to the constitutional convention until March 6.  It was at that time that he was reconfirmed as commander in chief of the Texican volunteer and regular army.  Travis is often portrayed as a pompous man who was disliked by many of the volunteers, particularly Jim Bowie.  Travis was really a very likeable and outgoing fellow.  The story of the dislike comes from the volunteers refusing to take his orders, but that was more out of loyalty and respect for their own commanders, such as Crockett and Bowie.  There were some survivors of the Alamo but they were all women, children and slaves.  The weather was not part of one of the coldest winters in Texas history.  That rumor came about because the Mexican Army ran through a brutal and freakish snowstorm on their march to the Alamo.  A couple of cold fronts came through during the seige but they only took the temperatures into the  30′s.  Two days after the seige was over the weather was described as “fine weather.”  And finally, the 400 men of James Fannin at Goliad, just 100 miles away, could not have come to the rescue because they had another Mexican Army in the area that they had to deal with.

Heroic Crockett With Musket as Club

Heroic Crockett With Musket as Club

Nevertheless, the Texicans ended up getting the last laugh.   In late April, with shouts of “Remember the Alamo,” the Texican Army under the command of General Sam Houston, routed the Mexican Army near present day Houston in 26 minutes.  They forced Santa Anna to surrender, not only his army but also sign documents that ceded Texas to the revolutionaries.  It is said that Santa Anna was distracted in his tent by the beautiful woman spy, the Yellow Rose of Texas.  About 10 years later, Santa Anna was at war again over Texas with the United States over the border of Texas…seems Santa Anna believed his definition of Texas only went to the Nueces River, whereas the Americans and Texans determined that the documents that Santa Anna signed at San Jacinto took Texas to the Rio Grande.   Santa Anna lost that war too and ended up losing most of the Southwestern United States in the process.

Don't Mess With Texas, Oz!

Don't Mess With Texas, Oz!

The Alamo is a shrine today in Texas and millions of people from around the world come to San Antonio each year to visit. One visitor was Ozzy Osbourne who in 1984 was arrested.  At 11 am he was spotted drunk, pulling up a dress he was wearing, urinating on the Alamo.  He found out the hard way what the Alamo means to Texans.  He was banned from the city.

No matter what….this is a great and historic day for Texans around the world!   

Sat AM to Sun AM

Sat AM to Sun AM

Weather Bottom Line:  Forecast is generally on track.  We made it all the way to 68 on Thursday, which is 37 degrees warmer than it was on Monday and this in spite of a bunch of clouds.  Similar day on Friday as Thursday as we push toward 70, lots of clouds but perhaps a few showers.  Saturday in the mid to upper 70′s.  Chance of T’storms and rain develop late and carry over into Sunday.  SPC has the threat for severe weather to our west.  Timing of the wave of energy running along the front to our north is no good, though a few storms still could be in the area.  We cool a bit for the first part of the week.  By mid to late week, a cold front finally comes through but right now, the data does not support a huge push of cold air and the models that do suggest cold air pushing through very far to the south don’t keep it around for long…and again…its not that cold…just perhaps slightly below seasonal norms.  Rain chances will be back with the approach and passage of the front.  Here’s the severe threat discussion for Saturday and Sunday.

   DAY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK 
   NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
   1258 AM CST FRI MAR 06 2009
  
   VALID 071200Z – 081200Z
  
   …THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS ACROSS THE SOUTH CENTRAL PLAINS
   AND LOWER/MIDDLE MO VALLEY…
  
   …SYNOPSIS…
   AN INITIALLY NEUTRAL TILT UPPER TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO STEADILY
   TRANSITION EAST-NORTHEASTWARD FROM THE EASTERN GREAT BASIN/FOUR
   CORNERS REGION EARLY SATURDAY…TO THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDDLE MO
   VALLEY BY EARLY SUNDAY WHERE IT IS EXPECTED TO TAKE ON MORE OF A
   NEGATIVE TILT. AT THE SURFACE…FRONTAL BOUNDARY IS EXPECTED TO
   STALL/BECOME ESTABLISHED IN A GENERAL WEST-EAST CORRIDOR FROM KS TO
   THE MIDWEST/OHIO VALLEY. LEE-SIDE SURFACE CYCLOGENESIS WILL OCCUR
   DURING THE DAY ACROSS THE HIGH PLAINS…WITH A GRADUALLY DEEPENING
   SURFACE LOW AND SHARPENING COLD FRONT/DRYLINE EXPECTED TO DEVELOP
   EASTWARD ACROSS PORTIONS OF KS/OK/TX SATURDAY AFTERNOON/NIGHT. IN
   THE PREFRONTAL WARM SECTOR…BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTURE WILL REMAIN
   MODEST…WITH RETURN LIMITED IN THE WAKE OF LAST WEEKENDS DEEP
   FRONTAL PENETRATION INTO THE GULF OF MEXICO.
  
   …MIDDLE MO VALLEY TO IL/INDIANA SATURDAY MORNING…
   SIMILAR TO THE LATE DAY 1 SCENARIO…SCATTERED ELEVATED
   STRONG/POTENTIALLY SEVERE TSTMS WILL BE ONGOING AT THE BEGINNING OF
   THE PERIOD SATURDAY MORNING VIA A 50 KT LOW LEVEL JET AIDED WARM
   ADVECTION/ELEVATED MOISTURE TRANSPORT REGIME. AMIDST AMPLE SHEAR
   THROUGH THE CLOUD BEARING LAYER FOR UPDRAFT ROTATION…A STEEP LAPSE
   RATE ENVIRONMENT AND ELEVATED MUCAPE TO 500-1000 J/KG WILL SUPPORT A
   CONTINUED HAIL RISK DURING THE MORNING ACROSS NORTHERN MO/SOUTHERN
   IA INTO IL/INDIANA. THESE TSTMS AND ANY ASSOCIATED HAIL THREAT
   SHOULD GRADUALLY SHIFT EAST-NORTHEASTWARD DURING THE MORNING ALONG
   THE SURFACE-850 MB BAROCLINIC ZONE…WITH THE HAIL THREAT EXPECTED
   TO WANE THROUGH MID/LATE MORNING AS THE LOW LEVEL JET WEAKENS/VEERS
   WESTERLY.
  
   …KS/OK/MO SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING…
   AHEAD OF THE UPPER TROUGH CROSSING THE ROCKIES…KS/OK SHOULD REMAIN
   CAPPED MUCH OF THE DAY. HOWEVER…SUFFICIENT HEATING AND ONSET OF
   LARGE SCALE HEIGHT FALLS COULD BE SUFFICIENT FOR ISOLATED SURFACE
   BASED TSTM DEVELOPMENT AS EARLY AS MID AFTERNOON…BUT IT MUCH MORE
   LIKELY SATURDAY EVENING ACROSS CENTRAL/EASTERN KS INTO OK
   ALONG/AHEAD OF THE ADVANCING SURFACE LOW AND COLD FRONT/DRYLINE.
   WARM SECTOR SURFACE DEWPOINTS WILL LIKELY TO BE LIMITED TO THE
   LOWER/MIDDLE 50S F ACROSS THE SOUTH CENTRAL PLAINS/MO VALLEY
   SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING…AND THIS WILL BE THE PRIMARY LIMITING
   FACTOR FOR A MORE APPRECIABLE SEVERE RISK. REGARDLESS…INCREASINGLY
   STEEP MID LEVEL LAPSE RATES ATOP MODEST BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTURE
   SHOULD RESULT IN 500-800 J/KG OF MLCAPE BY LATE AFTERNOON. BENEATH
   50+ KT OF SOUTHWESTERLY MID LEVEL FLOW…STRONG SHEAR/AMPLE VEERING
   WOULD SUPPORT A RISK OF WELL-ORGANIZED TSTMS INCLUDING
   SUPERCELLS…WITH THE PRIMARY RISK OF SEVERE HAIL. IN SPITE OF A
   RATHER DYNAMIC SCENARIO WITH STRONG SHEAR…THE LIMITED MOISTURE
   SHOULD FAVOR A QUICKLY DECOUPLING BOUNDARY LAYER WITHIN AN HOUR OR
   TWO OF SUNSET…WITH A NOCTURNAL TENDENCY FOR TSTMS TO BE BASED
   ABOVE A SHALLOW STABLE LAYER.
  
   …SOUTHERN OK/NORTH TX SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING…
   AS THE SOUTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE APPROACHING UPPER TROUGH/LARGE
   SCALE HEIGHT FALLS…TSTM POTENTIAL/COVERAGE AND ANY ASSOCIATED
   SEVERE THREAT BECOMES MUCH MORE CONDITIONAL WITH SOUTHWARD EXTENT
   ACROSS SOUTHERN OK INTO PORTIONS OF NORTH CENTRAL TX. IF/WHERE TSTMS
   DEVELOP SATURDAY LATE AFTERNOON/EARLY EVENING…MODEST INSTABILITY
   AND FAVORABLE SHEAR PROFILES WOULD CONDITIONALLY SUPPORT A RISK OF
   SUPERCELLS WITH MAINLY A SEVERE HAIL RISK.
  
   …NORTHEAST KS/SOUTHEAST NEB TO IA/NORTHERN MO/IL LATE…
   AS THE UPPER TROUGH REACHES THE CENTRAL PLAINS…AN INTENSIFYING LOW
   LEVEL JET /50-55 KT/ AND ASSOCIATED WARM ADVECTION REGIME SHOULD
   AGAIN INCREASE HAIL POTENTIAL ACROSS THE MIDDLE MO VALLEY/MIDWEST
   SATURDAY NIGHT INTO EARLY SUNDAY.
  
   ..GUYER.. 03/06/2009

Rain, Storms and the Republic of Texas
March 3, 2008


Late Sunday the SPC identified an area well to our south for a moderate risk of severe weather for Monday night through early Tuesday. The map above is from Sunday evening. We are not in the slight risk. As I’ve been telling you for days, an area of low pressure will form along the front in East Texas. As it moves our way, rain chances will increase. We will probably get in the neighborhood of 1-3 inches of rain. In other words, its developing just as we’ve been saying for the better part of a week. There may be some minor flooding with this event. On down the line, we may need to keep an eye on the Ohio River as rain and snow melt early this week will cause a water rise toward the end week. Snow will be minimal and basically worthless as ground temperatures will be too warm to support much accumulation. We will have a fair amount of wind energy aloft that may come down to the surface in scattered t’storms late Monday, most likely Monday night or early Tuesday. That is why we are in the 5% range but not the slight risk. We will get so much rain that it should dampen our chances for rough weather and the best dynamics will be to our south. My guess is that the areas in the lower Mississippi Valley that had the biggest thumping from tornadoes on Feb 4 will be under the gun again. Our biggest threat will come from gusty winds and perhaps some hail. Rain amounts will be problematic in our area. Stay tuned to newschannel 32 for updates Monday on how this thing shakes out. Jay will really nail it all down for you.


On This Date in History: On this date in 1836, about 187 men were huddled in a mission at San Antonio de Bexar in the Mexican Republic. They were a band of Texicans…mainly expatriated Americans living as Mexican citizens. The Mexican government under the rule of General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna who had welcomed the new residents provided that they lived under Mexican law. Trouble was, these settlers to Texas were an independent sort and wanted to do things their way, which was often the American way. At that time, many Americans had slaves and these Texicans wanted to keep their slaves but Mexican law forbade slavery. This was one of the issues the Texicans had with the Mexican government.


Santa Anna had sent various armies into the region to restore order and make certain the settlers were well healed. But, his surrounding and siege of the Alamo put the Texans to the test.


On March 1, the leaders of the region got together and in one day wrote a declaration of independence. It was signed on this date in 1836 by many men, included Sam Houston. The former United States Senator from Tennessee and potential United States presidential candidate was put in command of the fledgling Texas Army and was made General. But he needed time to raise and train his army. So the men at the Alamo, with Texas heroes such as David Crockett, James Bowie and William Barrett Travis held out instead of retreating. Just 4 days after Texas declared its independence, the Alamo fell as the victorious Santa Anna gloated over the death of all 187 defenders.


The Texans got their revenge though because in April of that year, after weeks of retreating and running, General Sam Houston led his men to a site on Buffalo Bayou near the city that today bears his name. The Mexican Army was resting at its camp with Santa Anna said to have been in his tent with the famous spy, the Yellow Rose of Texas. Though far outnumbered, Houston’s Army defeated the Mexican Army and captured Santa Anna in just 26 minutes. Santa Anna was forced to capitulate and sign papers recognizing Texas’ Independence. Not to be a poor sport, Houston allowed Santa Anna to return to Mexico City. But, just like the Brits didn’t really accept America’s independence until the War of 1812, Santa Anna didn’t really accept the terms of Texas’ independence until he was defeated in the Mexican War of 1846 which was fought in a dispute between the US and Mexico over the boundaries of the then 28th state of the Union.


Prior to that date, Texas was an independent nation for ten years. It’s president…..Sam Houston. After becoming a state, Sam Houston served as a Senator; the only man to serve in the United States Senate from two different states. Houston then was elected governor of Texas but resigned at the outset of the Civil War after Texas seceded. Texas joined the Confederacy and lost the father of the country…just for a time. Today, Texans proudly recall the exploits of Sam Houston, who along with others Texas patriots, declared his independence on this date in 1836.


The flag above was the one flown at the Alamo. The 1824 was a reference to the United States of Mexico as recognized by a liberalized Constitution in 1824. The Texicans, or Texians, were initially in support of a larger revolutionary movement throughout Mexico that said its aim was to force the largely totalitarian government of Santa Anna to follow the Constitution.


Snow White says this sounds too much like a textbook and too much Texan-like. I say, so what…It’s Texas Independence Day!!!
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