Chasity Keulemans
What Caused The Texas Revolution?
I have always been interested in history, but my education in Texas history has
been insufficient in many ways.
This became truly evident a few months ago, when my dog dug up a cannon ball in
my back yard. I did not know what
it was at first, and I wanted to find out exactly what it was, so I took it to
the Brazoria County Museum near my house to have them authenticate it.
The museum docent told me that it was a two pound cannon ball from the
Texas Revolution and sold me a book called
The History of Brazoria County.
I found out that Brazoria County is
where Texas began. All of a sudden,
Texas history became real to me, and I somehow felt attached to it.
I should, it apparently marched through my back yard.
I started reading the book and I have
been so excited by the stories and details that I never heard before.
Through a closer view at the “Texas Declaration of Independence;” I was
drawn to discuss what led up to it. These are things I am learning in my new
book. The History of Brazoria County
uses original documents such as newspaper articles, Letters, and journals from
that period to piece together a narrative history that helps answer the big
question: What caused the Texas
Revolution?
The Texas Revolution was not caused by one thing, but by many things.
One of which was the political issues facing Mexico at the time.
Mexico was a very new nation and one born of poverty because Spain had
taken the lion’s share of the country’s valuables.
There were disagreements as to how the country should be governed.
Santa Anna, the president, wanted a strong central government while
others wanted a federalist system with representatives.
The result of having a central government was that Mexico was too large
to govern effectively with the residents in those further most regions resenting
an absent, yet taxing government. . Until 1835 these groups fought one another
for control. In October, 1835 the centralists and Santa Anna won out with the
enactment of "Siete Leyes". This move did away with the federalist Constitution
of 1824, abolished all state legislatures including that of Coahuila y Tejas,
and replaced states with "departments" headed up by governors and appointed
councils selected by and serving at the pleasure of Santa Anna, who was by all
accounts tyrannical. Previous to
the revolt in Tejas, he had uprisings in south eastern Mexico and ordered for
the town to be massacred…every man, woman, and child and then had the town
burned to the ground.
The Texians felt confidant if they were to break away from Mexico, the United
State would be more than willing to bring them into the union.
Another situation of concern was Mexico’s outlook on slavery.
Mexico declared slavery illegal.
However, they knew that slavery was a form of labor that many people
relied upon in Tejas. Since only
one in four people owned at least one slave in Tejas, Mexico presented the
Texians an option of weaning themselves off of slavery and finding an
alternative labor force over a ten year period.
As you can imagine, only the very wealthy plantation owners owned many
slaves; which was only four percent of the population of Tejas at that time.
The wealthy land owners really pushed for revolution when their ten year
deadline was approaching. The wealthy land owners helped persuade other Texians
to join them in the Texas Revolution.
One such stance that was used was one of religion.
The Texians had agreed to become practicing Roman Catholics as the church
was the officially recognized religion for all of the Republic of Mexico. Even
if most Texans had made the promise in good faith fully intending to convert,
they found it difficult after arriving in Texas.
Most Texians had come from the Deep South and followed protestant
religious beliefs. Relations between
such fundamentalist Protestant groups and Roman Catholicism were strained to say
the very least. Each thought the others
were infidels. Therefore, many Anglos continued to practice their Protestant
faiths long after they settled in Texas. Even those who did convert found it
difficult to practice their adopted faith given the scarcity of Catholic
churches and priests in Texas. There are accounts of circuit priests coming to
towns to marry large groups of people who had already been married under a
different religion, or a ceremony called, “jump the broom.”
The couple would jump over a broom to declare they were married, and then
waited for a priest or minister to marry them.
Many times, the couple would already have children because many times it
would be three or more years before they saw a priest.
In the eyes of the law, their marriage
was not legal until they were married in a Catholic Church.
The military played a very active role in the Hispanic culture.
Far more active than the Texians had
been use to or were willing to accept. The military in Mexican Texas, for
instance, was used on occasion to collect both taxes and the tithe to the
church. This was foreign to the new Texians who had migrated from the United
States. Texians were not pleased
with the status quo under Santa Anna.
They wanted to be represented by one of their own, and they were being
represented by someone five hundred miles away while they were forced to pay
tariff duties and taxes.
When the settlers were originally admitted to Mexican Texas, they were permitted
to bring their black slaves from the Deep South with them. Indeed, had Mexican
Texas been closed to slavery from the beginning, far fewer Southerners would
have emigrated either because they could not bring their expensive property and
manpower source with them or because of their political/racial views. Over the
years, Mexico took repeated steps to limit or abolish slavery in Texas. Each
step prompted a vulgar reaction from Anglos followed by a Mexican retreat in
which the threatening change was repealed. Given the amount of capital many
settlers had invested in black slaves, Mexico's impulsive actions with respect
to slavery were at the very least threatening. There were those by 1836 who felt
an independent Republic of Texas in which slavery was firmly and for all time
recognized and respected was preferable to Mexico with an uncertain future for
slavery. Two and one half decades later Texans still felt so strongly about
black slavery and attached to it for both economic and social reasons that they
would secede from the United States and wage a civil war rather than see the
institution imperiled. The reaction in many sections of Mexico, including Texas,
was military resistance to the creation of what many citizens saw as an
all-powerful government in the hands of a tyrannical Santa Anna. In Texas, war
was originally waged in an attempt to restore the Constitution of 1824 and
federalism. Only later would it become a war of independence.
The Texas Revolution has several causes.
Three of the causes that are later outlined in the Texas declaration of
Independence are Religion, Governmental Differences, and Slavery.
The Mexican Government tried to force Catholicism on the Texans and
although many of them truly intended to become Catholic, they found it difficult
considering there were few churches established.
The Government was more tyrannical than what the Texians wanted or what
they were used to. The extra push
that the Texans needed to go to war was the fact that the Mexican Government
continually threatened to abolish slavery in Texas.
This influenced the men with power and money.
There were other incidents that fanned the fire of revolution in which
Santa Anna reacted harshly which pushed the Texians further and further away
from wanting to be a part of Mexico.
As large numbers of settlers were settling in Texas, they wanted to keep
their religion, their culture and did not want to be stripped of their beliefs.
To sum it up, by researching this topic, I found that the biggest reason
for the Texas Revolution was very
basic culture differences and a poor government who did not govern well.
Bibliography
Creighton, James A.. A narrative history of Brazoria County. Bicentennial ed.
Angleton, Tex.: Brazoria County Historical Commission, 1975. Print.
"Digital History." Digital History. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Apr. 2012.
<http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=312>.
"Texas Revolution." Lone Star Technologies: Ruby on Rails development in Austin,
Texas. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2012.
<http://www.lone-star.net/mall/texasinfo/txrevolution.htm>.
"Texas Revolution maps." Latin American Studies. N.p., n.d. Web. 22 Apr. 2012.
<http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/texas-maps.htm>.
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