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Texas | Columns | All Things Historical

SANTA ANNA'S TEAPOT


by Bob Bowman
Bob Bowman

In a home at Rancho Sante Fe, California, rests one of the rarest reminders of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, the Mexican dictator whose defeat led to the rise of the Texas Republic.

Dorothy Perkins, a pleasant, smiling housewife whose family lineage reaches all the way to early 19th century East Texas, owns a teapot once owned by Santa Anna. But the story of how she obtained it is filled with nuggets of history.

Let's begin when Alfred Marion Truit, a native of North Carolina, came to Shelby County, Texas, in 1839, became a merchant at Truit's Store, struggled through the Regulator-Moderator War along the Texas-Louisiana border, and enlisted as a soldier with the outbreak of the Mexican War, serving two stints with Texas volunteers.

On his second enlistment, Captain Truit joined up with Jack Hays, a fellow Texan, and eventually became a major and second in command of Hays' regiment. In January of 1848, they were camped outside Mexico City when they were ordered by General Joseph Lane to hunt down Santa Anna.

After losing to Sam Houston's rag-tag Texas volunteers at San Jacinto in 1836, Santa Anna had made his way back to Mexico and became a dictator again in the l840s. In 1846, following a series of battles between Mexico and the U.S., American troops were ordered into Mexico.

An informant told Truit and Hays where Santa Anna was hiding, but he also warned Santa Anna that the Texans were hot on his trail.

When they arrived at the home where the one-time dictator was hiding, they found trunks of clothing, correspondence, food on the table and candles. Among his possessions were a silver teapot and tray, a snuff box, Santa Anna's jacket, and an elaborate cane he had used since losing his leg in a battle defending Mexico from France in 1838.

Hays' adjutant, Rip Ford, took the jacket and supposedly returned it to Santa Anna at a later date. Truit kept the silver service, including the teapot, a snuff box, and Santa Anna's cane. The cane was said to have been stolen, but Truit, while serving in the Texas Senate, may have given it to his friend, Sam Houston.

The teapot and several other items remained in the Truit family for years during his service in the Texas Senate and while serving as a Confederate general during the Civil War.

When Truit died in 1864 at White Cottage in Shelby County and his wife Susan passed away a year later, their daughter, Susan Morris, ended up with all of the Santa Anna possesssions, including the teapot. When she passed away in 1894, her husband Elijah remarried.

Around 1894, Elijah borrowed some money from Joaquin banker Luke Motley and offered the teapot and other property as collateral. All of the property was forfeited to Motley when Elijah couldn't repay the loan in 1916. The silver teapot, standing only four inches tall, eventually fell into the hands of Luke Motley Jr. His wife sold it to Dorothy Perkins, a descendant of Alfred M. Truit, in 2003.

Today, Santa Anna's teapot holds an honored place in the Perkins home -- a unique reminder of the smashed fortunes of the man who called himself the Napoleon of the West.

All Things Historical
July 18-24, 2004
Published with permission
Distributed by the East Texas Historical Association. Bob Bowman of Lufkin is a former president of the Association and the author of 30 books about East Texas.



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