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The
First Shot May Have Been Second
'Come and Take It' and the Battle of Velasco by
Murray Montgomery | |
Every
October, the citizens of Gonzales
celebrate "Come
and Take It" - to honor those men who, in 1835, fired the first shot for Texas
Independence.
Many Texans are aware of the historic incident that occurred
near Gonzales on October 2, 1835, when the local citizens refused the demand of
Mexican troops to hand over a small cannon. The Mexicans had loaned the weapon
to the settlers to help the locals defend themselves against frequent Indian attacks.
The confrontation between the Mexican soldiers and the Texans on that foggy October
morning, concluded after a short exchange of gunfire. Some reports said one Mexican
soldier was killed and a Texan received a bloody nose; as a battle it didn't amount
to much. As an event however, it was of tremendous importance and ignited the
war for Texas independence.
Although the battle at Gonzales
was a very important one, historically speaking, it wasn't the first time that
the Anglo settlers and Mexican soldiers went against one another on the field
of battle. In 1832, a battle was fought at a site where the Brazos River meets
the Gulf of Mexico, the port city of Velasco; and this fight too, was over a cannon.
Some historians consider the battle at Velasco as the prelude to
the Texas Revolution. But, confusingly enough, the Velasco battle was actually
fought because of events that were taking place miles away at the little settlement
of Anahuac, located on the
Trinity River.
According
to information found in The Handbook of Texas Online, the Mexican commander
at Anahuac was enforcing Mexican law in a way that angered the local Anglo-American
citizens. The commander, John (Juan) Bradburn was an American by birth but had
long been in service to the Mexican government and military.
He had been
sent to build a fort at Anahuac
and to begin enforcing a Mexican law passed on April 6, 1830, which was designed
to restrict Anglo-American settlements. The purpose of the law was to encourage
more natural-born Mexicans and Europeans to settle in Texas. Bradburn considered
the law retroactive and tried to take away land that had already been granted
to the settlers. Needless to say, this didn't go over very well with the Texans.
To make matters worse, the Virginia-born Bradburn attempted to tax the
cargo of ships anchored in the Brazos River and at Galveston Bay. The ship captains
on the Brazos refused to pay the tariffs and sailed right past the tax collector
at Fort Velasco, often times exchanging gunfire with the soldiers stationed there.
The problems at Anahuac
are too many to include here, but government politics played a key role in the
situation and Juan Bradburn was highly responsible for most of the controversy.
The future commander of the Alamo, William B. Travis, was also involved and he
was a constant thorn in the side of Bradburn. Travis continually defied Bradburn's
authority and he even went so far as to raise a local militia of Anglos. This
was the last straw as far as Bradburn was concerned; he ordered the arrest and
imprisonment of Travis.
Now back to the battle of Velasco and the previously
mentioned cannon. After Travis was locked up, a cry went out to all the settlements
for men and weapons to be sent to Anahuac.
You might say that the hotheaded Travis was directly responsible for the battle
at Velasco.
Texans, under the command of Henry Smith and John Austin,
obtained a cannon from the settlement at Brazoria and loaded it aboard ship for
the voyage back to Anahuac.
As the vessel attempted to sail past Fort Velasco, it was fired upon by the Mexican
garrison and the fight was on. No one knows for sure the exact number of men involved
in the battle, but it has been estimated that the Texans numbered from 100 to
150 men, while Mexican troops could have been anywhere from 90 to 200.
The
Mexican commander at Fort Velasco, Domingo de Ugartechea, was forced to surrender
due to the lack of ammunition and supplies. He surrendered his men under what
was called the "honors of war," and the soldiers were put onboard a ship, furnished
by the colonists, and allowed to return to Mexico.
When the Mexican authorities
realized that the Texans were on the move, in force, to attack Anahuac
they released Travis and removed Bradburn from his position as military commander.
So it was that the battles at Gonzales
and Velasco were the fuel that fired the flame for Texas independence and the
controversy over two cannons provided the spark.
©
Murray Montgomery Lone
Star Diary March 18, 2006 Column More Columns |
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