San Jacinto Day

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SAN JACINTO, BATTLE OF
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L. W. Kemp
The Battle of San Jacinto (1895)
Painting, The Battle of San Jacinto (1895) by Henry Arthur McArdle. Courtesy of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
Oil in canvas of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna by Carlos Paris on display in Mexico City Museum. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Replicas of the Twin Sister Cannons
Replicas of the Twin Sister Cannons. Courtesy of Ernest Mettendorf Photography. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
SAN JACINTO, BATTLE OF. The battle of San Jacinto was the concluding military event of the Texas Revolution. On March 13, 1836, the revolutionary army at Gonzales began to retreat eastward. It crossed the Colorado River on March 17 and camped near present Columbus on March 20, recruiting and reinforcements having increased its size to 1,200 men. Sam Houston's scouts reported Mexican troops west of the Colorado to number 1,325. On March 25 the Texans learned of James W. Fannin's defeat at Goliad (seeGOLIAD CAMPAIGN OF 1836), and many of the men left the army to join their families on the Runaway Scrape. Sam Houston led his troops to San Felipe de Austin by March 28 and by March 30 to the Jared E. Groceplantation on the Brazos River, where they camped and drilled for a fortnight. Ad interim President David G. Burnet ordered Houston to stop his retreat; Secretary of War Thomas J. Rusk urged him to take a more decisive course. Antonio Lpez de Santa Anna decided to take possession of the Texas coast and seaports. With that object in view he crossed the Brazos River at present Richmond on April 11 and on April 15, with some 700 men, arrived at Harrisburg. He burned Harrisburg and started in pursuit of the Texas government at New Washington or Morgan's Point, where he arrived on April 19 to find that the government had fled to Galveston. The Mexican general then set out for Anahuac by way of Lynchburg. Meanwhile, the Texans, on April 11, received the Twin Sisters and with the cannon as extra fortification crossed the Brazos River on the Yellow Stone and on April 16 reached Spring Creek in present Harris County. On April 17, to the gratification of his men, Houston took the road to Harrisburg instead of the road to Louisiana and on April 18 reached White Oak Bayou at a site within the present city limits of Houston. There he learned that Santa Anna had gone down the west side of the bayou and the San Jacinto River, crossing by a bridge over Vince's Bayou. The Mexicans would have to cross the same bridge to return.
San Jacinto Battlefield
San Jacinto Battlefield. Courtesy of Stephen L. Hardin and the University of Texas Press. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Erastus Smith
Painting, Erastus [Deaf] Smith by T. Jefferson Wright. Courtesy of the San Jacinto Museum of History. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Viewing this strategic situation on the morning of April 19, Houston told his troops that it looked as if they would soon get action and admonished them to remember the massacres at San Antonio and at Goliad. On the evening of April 19 his forces crossed Buffalo Bayou to the west side 2 miles below Harrisburg. Some 248 men, mostly sick and ineffective, were left with the baggage at the camp opposite Harrisburg. The march was continued until midnight. At dawn on April 20 the Texans resumed their trek down the bayou and at Lynch's Ferrycaptured a boat laden with supplies for Santa Anna. They then drew back about a mile on the Harrisburg road and encamped in a skirt of timber protected by a rising ground. That afternoon Sidney Sherman with a small detachment of cavalry engaged the enemy infantry, almost bringing on a general action. In the clash Olwyns J. Trask was mortally wounded, one other Texan was wounded, and several horses were killed. Mirabeau B. Lamar, a private, so distinguished himself that on the next day he was placed in command of the cavalry. Santa Anna made camp under the high ground overlooking a marsh about three-fourths of a mile from the Texas camp and threw up breastworks of trunks, baggage, packsaddles, and other equipment. Both sides prepared for the conflict. On Thursday morning, April 21, the Texans were eager to attack. About nine o'clock they learned that Martn Perfecto de Cos had crossed Vince's bridge with about 540 troops and had swelled the enemy forces to about 1,200. Houston ordered Erastus (Deaf) Smith to destroy the bridge and prevent further enemy reinforcements. The move would prevent the retreat of either the Texans or the Mexicans towards Harrisburg.
Samuel Houston
Photography, President Samuel Houston by Mathew Brady. Courtesy of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Surrender of Santa Anna
Painting, Surrender of Santa Anna by William Henry Huddle. Courtesy of the State Preservation Board. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
San Jacinto Monument
San Jacinto Monument. Image available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
Shortly before noon, Houston held a council of war with Edward Burleson, Sidney Sherman, Henry W. Millard, Alexander Somervell, Joseph L. Bennett, and Lysander Wells. Two of the officers suggested attacking the enemy in his position; the others favored waiting Santa Anna's attack. Houston withheld his own views at the council but later, after having formed his plan of battle had it approved by Rusk. Houston disposed his forces in battle order about 3:30 in the afternoon while all was quiet on the Mexican side during the afternoon siesta. The Texans' movements were screened by trees and the rising ground, and evidently Santa Anna had no lookouts posted. The battle line was formed with Edward Burleson's regiment in the center, Sherman's on the left wing, the artillery under George W. Hockleyon Burleson's right, the infantry under Henry Millard on the right of the artillery, and the cavalry under Lamar on the extreme right. The Twin Sisters were wheeled into position, and the whole line, led by Sherman's men, sprang forward on the run with the cry, "Remember the Alamo!" "Remember Goliad!" The battle lasted but eighteen minutes. According to Houston's official report, the casualties were 630 Mexicans killed and 730 taken prisoner. Against this, only nine of the 910 Texans were killed or mortally wounded and thirty were wounded less seriously. Houston's ankle was shattered by a musket ball. The Texans captured a large supply of muskets, pistols, sabers, mules, horses, provisions, clothing, tents, and $12,000 in silver. Santa Anna disappeared during the battle and search parties were sent out on the morning of the 22. The party consisted of James A. Sylvester, Washington H. Secrest, Sion R. Bostick, and a Mr. Cole discovered Santa Anna hiding in the grass. He was dirty and wet and was dressed as a common soldier. The search party did not recognize him until he was addressed as "el presidente" by other Mexican prisoners. One of the eight inscriptions on the exterior base of the San Jacinto Monument reads: "Measured by its results, San Jacinto was one of the decisive battles of the world. The freedom of Texas from Mexico won here led to annexationand to the Mexican War, resulting in the acquisition by the United States of the states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, and parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma. Almost one-third of the present area of the American nation, nearly a million square miles of territory, changed sovereignty."
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quash
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Love the TSHA app. Has provided endless hours of edutainment while stuck in court.
“Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.” (The Law, p.6) Frederic Bastiat
william
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Pecos 45
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Here is a link to a photo of my brother and I at the San Jacinto Monument in 1957.

I was five years old, he was three.
My dad took this shot.
Check it out.
“If you have a job without aggravations, you don’t have a job.”
Malcolm Forbes
Malbec
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That thing has got to go. /s
Nguyen One Soon
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Best thing about San Jacinto was the San Jacinto Inn.
SSadler
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Thanks, Pecos, for the San Jacinto monument photo. In 1957 my family (mother and 2 brothers) and I were living very near where you are standing in that photo. . Just across TX 225 In Deer Park.

I remember lots of filed trips to the monument as well as to the WWII battleship "Texas" permanently anchored nearby as display.

Good stuff..
sahen
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SSadler said:

Thanks, Pecos, for the San Jacinto monument photo. In 1957 my family (mother and 2 brothers) and I were living very near where you are standing in that photo. . Just across TX 225 In Deer Park.

I remember lots of filed trips to the monument as well as to the WWII battleship "Texas" permanently anchored nearby as display.

Good stuff..
Texas is about to be towed over to a dry dock in Alabama to have some costly repairs to her hull. They have been pumping water out of her continuously for years.

When they are done fixing her up she will not be returning to the Battlegrounds as they do not get enough visitors in that spot to pay for repairs and upkeep. There are currently several cities in the area vying for the ship to be placed there when it comes back.
Pecos 45
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Sorry to hear that. I remember climbing all over the ship when we visited as a kid.
To be a boy, on the deck, cranking one of the guns up and down was about as good as it got!!!
“If you have a job without aggravations, you don’t have a job.”
Malcolm Forbes
sahen
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Pecos 45 said:

Sorry to hear that. I remember climbing all over the ship when we visited as a kid.
To be a boy, on the deck, cranking one of the guns up and down was about as good as it got!!!
You should still be able to do that! It will just be in a different location. Well maybe not you or me, but boys of current days.
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