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Road To Independence

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Road To Independence Revolution Begins p. 204 - 208 A Mexican Army Arrives in Texas It seemed to officials back in the Mexican capital and in Texas that radicals were ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Road To Independence


1
Road To Independence
  • Revolution Begins
  • p. 204 - 208

2
A Mexican Army Arrives in Texas
  • It seemed to officials back in the Mexican
    capital and in Texas that radicals were becoming
    disloyal.
  • General Cos arrived in Texas with additional
    troops.
  • Settlers were concerned about the troops and
    formed committees of safety in case of threat by
    the federal soldiers.
  • Committees of Correspondence, local groups
    sharing political and military information,
    sprang up to keep the colonists informed.

3
Gonzales The Lexington of Texas
  • The Battle of Lexington

The first shots starting the American Revolution
were fired at Lexington, Massachusetts. On April
18, 1775, British General Thomas Gage sent 700
soldiers to destroy guns and ammunition the
colonists had stored in the town of Concord, just
outside of Boston.
4
Gonzales The Lexington of Texas
  • Colonel Ugartechea, the Mexican commander at San
    Antonio, ordered the people of Gonzales to
    surrender their small brass cannon.
  • The local official refused so Ugartechea ordered
    about 100 soldiers to take the cannon by force.
  • The people of Gonzales buried the cannon until
    reinforcements arrived.

5
Gonzales The Lexington of Texas
  • They dug up the cannon, and decorated it with a
    white flag saying, Come and Take It.

6
Gonzales The Lexington of Texas
  • The Battle of Gonzales was brief and only 1
    casualty.
  • The news of the clash spread quickly throughout
    Texas.
  • General Cos regarded the actions at Gonzales as
    the outbreak of war.

7
Gonzales The Lexington of Texas
  • Choose one of the following
  • Create a flag like the one at the Battle of
    Gonzales
  • Create a cartoon illustration to represent the
    Battle of Gonzales

8
On to San Antonio
  • One week after the fighting at Gonzales, a force
    of about 120 Texans took the garrison at Goliad
    by surprise.
  • After battling for about 30 minutes, the Mexican
    troops surrendered.
  • Texans felt the defeating the Mexicans would be
    easy and planned to march to San Antonio to fight
    General Cos.
  • To find a good defensive position outside San
    Antonio, Stephen F. Austin sent a search party of
    90 men led by Jim Bowie and James Fannin.

9
On to San Antonio
  • The scouting party was attacked by 400 Mexican
    soldiers at the Mission Concepción but was able
    to hold them off with their
  • more accurate rifles.
  • This clear victory boosted the morale of the
    Texas rebel army.
  • Stephen F. Austin took command of 400 Texans,
    known as the Army of the People.
  • Austin decided to lay siege to San Antonio and
    hoped Cos would run out of supplies and be forced
    to surrender quickly.

10
POP QUIZ!
  • What did Austin hope would be the outcome of the
    siege?

11
Peace Party Prevails at the Consultation
  • While some Texans camped near San Antonio, other
    Texans met in San Felipe at a Consultation on
    November 3, 1835.
  • The meeting had been moved from
    Washington-on-the-Brazos to San Felipe because it
    had a printing press.
  • War Party delegates that favored an immediate
    declaration of independence from Mexico.
  • Peace Party agreed Texans should oppose Santa
    Anna, but objected to an immediate declaration of
    independence.

12
Peace Party Prevails at the Consultation
  • A motion calling for immediate independence was
    defeated.
  • The next day, the Consultation adopted a
    statement known as the Declaration of the People
    of Texas in General Convention Assembled.
  • Texans declared themselves to be loyal citizens
    of Mexico
  • Pledged to support the Mexican Constitution of
    1824
  • Declared that they had taken up arms only to
    defend themselves and to oppose the rule of Santa
    Anna.
  • Urged all Mexican citizens to join their struggle
    for democratic government and offered land to
    volunteers.

13
A Provisional Government Begins
  • After adopting the Declaration of the People, the
    Consultation created a provisional, or temporary,
    government.
  • It consisted of a governor, lieutenant governor,
    and a general council with one representative
    from each of the locally governed areas known as
    municipalities.
  • The powers of the governor and council were
    vaguely defined, which eventually leads to
    conflict.
  • The Consultation adopted a plan for the creation
    of a regular army of full-time, paid soldiers.

14
A Provisional Government Begins
  • Sam Houston was chosen to be the commander of the
    regular army, but was not given authority over
    the volunteer army still camped at San Antonio.
  • Stephen F. Austin, William H. Wharton, and Branch
    T. Archer were chosen as commissioners to
    represent Texas in the United States. They were
    told to obtain troops, supplies and money to
    finance the expected war and to aid in struggle
    against Santa Anna.

15
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