Texas Vacation Guide System
Texas History
European explorers first arrived in the region now known as Texas in
1519, finding the region populated by various Native American tribes.
During the period from 1519 to 1848, all or parts of Texas were claimed
by six countries: Spain, France, Mexico, the Republic of Texas, the
United States of America—as well as the Confederate States of America
in 1861–65.
The first European base was established in 1682,
when René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle established a French
colony, Fort Saint Louis, near Matagorda Bay. The colony was killed off
after three years, but its presence motivated Spanish authorities to
begin activity. Several missions were established in East Texas; they
were abandoned in 1691. Twenty years later, concerned with the French
presence in neighboring Louisiana, Spanish authorities again attempted
to colonize Texas. In approximately 1779, the Robert Harvey family
settled a small ranch near present-day Huntsville, becoming the first
known U.S. citizens to emigrate to Texas. Over the next 110 years,
Spain established numerous villages, presidios, and missions in the
province. A small number of Spanish settlers arrived, in addition to
missionaries and soldiers. Spain signed agreements with colonizers from
the United States. When Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821,
Mexican Texas was part of the new nation. To encourage settlement,
Mexican authorities allowed organized immigration from the United
States, and by 1834, over 30,000 Anglos lived in Texas, compared to
only 7,800 Mexicans.
After Santa Anna's dissolution of the
Constitution of 1824, issues such as lack of access to courts, the
militarization of the region's government (e.g., response to
Saltillo-Monclova problem) and self-defense issues resulting in the
confrontation in Gonzales, public sentiment turned towards revolution.
Santa Anna's invasion of the territory after his putting down the
rebellion in Zacatecas provoked the conflict of 1836. The Texian forces
fought and won the Texas Revolution in 1835–36. Texas now became an
independent nation, the Republic of Texas. Attracted by the rich cotton
lands and ranch lands, tens of thousands of immigrants arrived from the
U.S. and from Germany as well. In 1845, Texas joined the United States,
becoming the 28th state. Texas declared its secession from the United
States in 1861 to join the Confederate States of America. Only a few
battles of the American Civil War were fought in Texas; most Texas
regiments served in the east. When the war ended the slaves were freed
and Texas was subject to Reconstruction, a process that left a residue
of bitterness among whites and a second-class status for blacks in a
Jim Crow system of segregation.
Cotton and ranching dominated
the economy, with railroad construction after 1870 a major factor in
the formation of new cities. Toward the end of the 19th century timber
became an important industry in Texas as well. In 1901 a petroleum
discovery at Spindletop Hill, near Beaumont, created the most
productive oil well the world had ever seen. The wave of oil
speculation and discovery that followed came to be known as the "Oil
Boom", permanently transforming and enriching the economy of Texas.
Agriculture and ranching gave way to a service-oriented society after
the boom years of World War II. Segregation ended in the 1960s.
Politically, Texas changed from a virtually one-party Democratic state,
to a highly contested political scene, until 2000 when it was solidly
Republican. The economy of Texas has continued to grow rapidly,
becoming the second largest state in population in 1994, and became
economically highly diversified, with a growing base in high technology.
Pre-Columbian history
Texas
lies at the juncture of two major cultural spheres of Pre-Columbian
North America, the Southwestern and the Plains areas. The area now
covered by Texas comprised three major indigenous cultures which had
reached their developmental peak prior to the arrival of European
explorers and are known from archaeology. These are
the Pueblo from the upper Rio Grande region, centered west of Texas;
the Mound Builder culture of the Mississippi Valley region, centered
east of Texas, ancestral to the Caddo nation;
the
civilizations of Mesoamerica, centered south of Texas. Influence of
Teotihuacan in northern Mexico peaked around AD 500 and declined over
the 8th to 10th centuries.
The Paleo-Indians that lived in Texas
between 9200 – 6000 BC may have links to Clovis and Folsom cultures;
these nomadic people hunted mammoths and bison latifrons using atlatls.
They extracted Alibates flint from quarries in the panhandle region.
Beginning
during the 3rd millennium BC, the population of Texas increased despite
experiencing a changing climate and the extinction of giant mammals.
Many pictograms drawn on the walls of caves or on rocks are visible in
the state, including at Hueco Tanks and Seminole Canyon.
Native
Americans in East Texas began to settle in villages shortly after 500
BC, farming and building the first burial mounds. They were influenced
by the Mound Builder civilizations that lived in the Mississippi basin.
In the Trans-Pecos area, populations were influenced by Mogollon
culture.
From the 8th century, the bow and arrow appeared in the
region, manufacture of pottery developed and Native Americans
increasingly depended on bison for survival. Obsidian objects found in
various Texan sites attest of trade with cultures in present day Mexico
and the Rocky Mountains.
No one culture was dominant in the
present-day Texas region and many different peoples inhabited the area.
Native American tribes that lived inside the boundaries of present-day
Texas include the Alabama, Apache, Atakapan, Bidai, Caddo,
Coahuiltecan, Comanche, Cherokee, Choctaw, Coushatta, Hasinai, Jumano,
Karankawa, Kickapoo, Kiowa, Tonkawa, and Wichita. The name Texas
derives from táysha?, a word in the Caddoan language of the Hasinai,
which means "friends" or "allies."
Native Americans determined
the fate of European explorers and settlers depending on whether a
tribe was friendly or warlike. Friendly tribes taught newcomers how to
grow indigenous crops, prepare foods, and hunting methods for wild
game. Warlike tribes made life unpleasant, difficult and dangerous for
explorers and settlers through their attacks and resistance to European
conquest.
A remnant of the Choctaw tribe in East Texas still
lives in the Mt. Tabor Community near Amberly, Texas. Currently, there
are three federally-recognized Native American tribes which reside in
Texas: the Alabama-Coushatta Tribes of Texas, the Kickapoo Traditional
Tribe of Texas, and the Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo of Texas.
Early European exploration
The
first European to see Texas was Alonso Álvarez de Pineda, who led an
expedition on behalf of the governor of Jamaica, Francisco de Garay, in
1519. While searching for a passage between the Gulf of Mexico and
Asia, Álvarez de Pineda created the first map of the northern Gulf
Coast. This map is the earliest recorded document of Texas history.
Between
1528 and 1535, four survivors of the Narváez expedition, including
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and Estevanico, spent six and a half years
in Texas as slaves and traders among various native groups. Cabeza de
Vaca was the first European explorer to explore the interior of Texas.
French colonization of Texas: 1684–1689
Although
Álvarez de Pineda had claimed the area that is now Texas for Spain, the
area was essentially ignored for over 160 years. Its initial settlement
by Europeans occurred by accident. In April 1682, French nobleman
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle had claimed the entire
Mississippi River Valley for France. The following year, he convinced
King Louis XIV to establish a colony near the Mississippi, essentially
splitting Spanish Florida from New Spain.
La Salle's
colonization expedition left France on July 24, 1684 and soon lost one
of its supply ships to Spanish privateers. A combination of inaccurate
maps, La Salle's previous miscalculation of the latitude of the mouth
of the Mississippi River, and overcorrecting for the Gulf currents led
the ships to be unable to find the Mississippi. Instead, they landed at
Matagorda Bay in early 1685, 400 miles (644 km) west of the
Mississippi. In February, the colonists constructed Fort Saint Louis.
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle founded the French colony in Texas.
After
the fort was constructed, one of the ships returned to France, and the
other two were soon destroyed in storms, stranding the settlers. La
Salle and his men searched overland for the Mississippi River,
traveling as far west as the Rio Grande and as far east as the Trinity
River. Disease and hardship laid waste to the colony, and by early
January 1687, fewer than 45 people remained. That month, a third
expedition launched a final attempt to find the Mississippi. The
expedition experienced much infighting, and La Salle was ambushed and
killed somewhere in East Texas.
The Spanish learned of the
French colony in late 1685. Feeling that the French colony was a threat
to Spanish mines and shipping routes, King Carlos II's Council of war
recommended the removal of "this thorn which has been thrust into the
heart of America. The greater the delay the greater the difficulty of
attainment." Having no idea where to find La Salle, the Spanish
launched ten expeditions—both land and sea—over the next three years.
The last expedition discovered a French deserter living in Southern
Texas with the Coahuiltecans.
The Frenchman guided the Spanish
to the French fort in late April 1689. The fort and the five crude
houses surrounding it were in ruins. Several months before, the
Karankawa had become angry that the French had taken their canoes
without payment and had attacked the settlement sparing only four
children.
Spanish Texas: 1690–1821
News of the destruction of
the French fort "created instant optimism and quickened religious
fervor" in Mexico City. Spain had learned a great deal about the
geography of Texas during the many expeditions in search of Fort Saint
Louis. In March 1690, Alonso De León led an expedition to establish a
mission in East Texas. Mission San Francisco de los Tejas was completed
near the Hasinai village of Nabedaches in late May, and its first mass
was conducted on June 1. On January 23, 1691, Spain appointed the first
governor of Texas, General Domingo Terán de los Ríos. On his visit to
Mission San Francisco in August, he discovered that the priests had
established a second mission nearby, but were having little luck
converting the natives to Christianity. The Indians regularly stole the
mission cattle and horses and showed little respect to the priests.
When Terán left Texas later that year, most of the missionaries chose
to return with him, leaving only 3 religious people and 9 soldiers at
the missions. The group also left behind a smallpox epidemic. The angry
Caddo threatened the remaining Spaniards, who soon abandoned the
fledgling missions and returned to Coahuila. For the next 20 years,
Spain again ignored Texas.
After a failed attempt to convince
Spanish authorities to reestablish missions in Texas, in 1711
Franciscan missionary Francisco Hidalgo approached the French governor
of Louisiana for help. The French governor sent representatives to meet
with Hidalgo. This concerned Spanish authorities, who ordered the
reoccupation of Texas as a buffer between New Spain and French
settlements in Louisiana. In 1716, four missions and a presidio were
established in East Texas. Accompanying the soldiers were the first
recorded female settlers in Spanish Texas.
The new missions were
over 400 miles (644 km) from the nearest Spanish settlement, San Juan
Bautista. Martín de Alarcón, who had been appointed governor of Texas
in late 1716, wished to establish a way station between the settlements
along the Rio Grande and the new missions in East Texas. Alarcón led a
group of 72 people, including 10 families, into Texas in April 1718,
where they settled along the San Antonio River. Within the next week,
the settlers built mission San Antonio de Valero and a presidio, and
chartered the municipality of San Antonio de Béxar, now San Antonio,
Texas.
The following year, the War of the Quadruple Alliance
pitted Spain against France, which immediately moved to take over
Spanish interests in North America. In June 1719, 7 Frenchmen from
Natchitoches took control of the mission San Miguel de los Adaes from
its sole defender, who did not know that the countries were at war. The
French soldiers explained that 100 additional soldiers were coming, and
the Spanish colonists, missionaries, and remaining soldiers fled to San
Antonio.
Texas in 1718, Guillaume de L'Isle map, approximate state area highlighted, northern boundary was indefinite.
The
new governor of Coahuila and Texas, the Marquis de San Miguel de
Aguayo, drove the French from Los Adaes without firing a shot. He then
ordered the building of a new Spanish fort Nuestra Señora del Pilar de
Los Adaes, located near present-day Robeline, Louisiana, only 12 mi (19
km) from Natchitoches. The new fort became the first capital of Texas,
and was guarded by 6 cannons and 100 soldiers. The six East Texas
missions were reopened, and an additional mission and presidio were
established at Matagorda Bay on the former site of Fort Saint Louis.
Difficulties with the Indians
In
the late 1720s, the viceroy of New Spain closed the presidio in East
Texas and reduced the size of the garrisons at the remaining presidios,
leaving only 144 soldiers in the entire province. With no soldiers to
protect them, the East Texas missions relocated to San Antonio.
Spanish missions within the boundaries of what is now the state of Texas
Although
the missionaries had been unable to convert the Hasinai tribe of East
Texas, they did become friendly with the natives. The Hasinai were
bitter enemies of the Lipan Apache, who transferred their enmity to
Spain and began raiding San Antonio and other Spanish areas. A
temporary peace was finally negotiated with the Apache in 1749, and at
the request of the Indians a mission was established along the San Saba
River northwest of San Antonio. The Apaches shunned the mission, but
the fact that Spaniards now appeared to be friends of the Apache
angered the Apache enemies, primarily the Comanche, Tonkawa, and
Hasinai tribes, who promptly destroyed the mission.
In 1762,
France finally relinquished their claim to Texas by ceding all of
Louisiana west of the Mississippi River to Spain as part of the treaty
to end the Seven Years War. Spain saw no need to continue to maintain
settlements near French outposts and ordered the closure of Los Adaes,
making San Antonio the new provincial capital. The residents of Los
Adaes were relocated in 1773. After several attempts to settle in other
parts of the province, the residents returned to East Texas without
authorization and founded Nacogdoches.
The Comanche agreed to a
peace treaty in 1785. The Comanches were willing to fight the enemies
of their new friends, and soon attacked the Karankawa. Over the next
several years the Comanches killed many of the Karankawa in the area
and drove the others into Mexico. In January 1790, the Comanche also
helped the Spanish fight a large battle against the Mescalero and Lipan
Apaches at Soledad Creek west of San Antonio. The Apaches were
resoundingly defeated and the majority of the raids stopped. By the end
of the 18th century only a small number of the remaining hunting and
gathering tribes within Texas had not been Christianized. In 1793,
mission San Antonio de Valero was secularized, and the following year
the four remaining missions at San Antonio were partially secularized.
Encroachment
In
1799, Spain gave Louisiana back to France in exchange for the promise
of a throne in central Italy. Although the agreement was signed on
October 1, 1800, it did not go into effect until 1802. The following
year, Napoleon sold Louisiana to the United States. The original
agreement between Spain and France had not explicitly specified the
borders of Louisiana, and the descriptions in the documents were
ambiguous and contradictory. The United States insisted that its
purchase also included most of West Florida and all of Texas. Thomas
Jefferson claimed that Louisiana stretched west to the Rocky Mountains
and included the entire watershed of the Mississippi and Missouri
Rivers and their tributaries, and that the southern border was the Rio
Grande. Spain maintained that Louisiana extended only as far as
Natchitoches, and that it did not include the Illinois Territory. Texas
was again considered a buffer province, this time between New Spain and
the United States. The disagreement would continue until the signing of
the 1819 Adams–Onís Treaty, at which point Spain gave Florida to the
United States in return for undisputed control of Texas.
During
much of the dispute with the United States, governship of New Spain was
in question. In 1808, Napoleon forced the Spanish king to abdicate the
throne and appointed Joseph Bonaparte as the new monarch. A shadow
government operated out of Cadiz during Joseph's reign. Revolutionaries
within Mexico and the United States unsuccessfully combined to declare
Texas and Mexico independent. Spanish troops reacted harshly, looting
the province and executing any Tejanos accused of having Republican
tendencies. By 1820 fewer than 2000 Hispanic citizens remained in
Texas. The situation did not normalize until 1821, when Agustin de
Iturbide launched a drive for Mexican Independence. Texas became a part
of the newly independent nation without a shot being fired, ending the
period of Spanish Texas.
Spanish legacy
Mission Concepcion is one of the San Antonio missions which is part of a National Historic Landmark.
Spanish
control of Texas was followed by Mexican control of Texas, and it can
be difficult to separate the Spanish and Mexican influences on the
future state. The most obvious legacy is that of the language; every
major river in modern Texas, except the Red River, has a Spanish or
Anglicized name, as do 42 of the state's 254 counties. Numerous towns
also bear Spanish names. An additional obvious legacy is that of Roman
Catholicism. At the end of Spain's reign over Texas, virtually all
inhabitants practiced the Catholic religion, and it is still practiced
in Texas by a large number of people. The Spanish missions built in San
Antonio to convert Indians to Catholicism have been restored and are a
National Historic Landmark.
The Spanish introduced European
livestock, including cattle, horses, and mules, to Texas as early as
the 1690s. These herds grazed heavily on the native grasses, allowing
mesquite, which was native to the lower Texas coast, to spread inland.
Spanish farmers also introduced tilling and irrigation to the land,
further changing the landscape.
Texas eventually adopted much of
the Anglo-American legal system, but some Spanish legal practices were
retained, including homestead exemption, community property, and
adoption.
West Texas: Comancheria
Comancheria prior to 1850.
Hämäläinen
(2008) argues that from the 1750s to the 1850s, the Comanches were the
dominant group in the Southwest, and the domain they ruled was known as
Comancheria. Hämäläinen calls it an empire. Confronted with Spanish,
Mexican, and American outposts on their periphery in New Mexico, Texas,
and Coahuila and Nueva Vizcaya in northern Mexico, they worked to
increase their own safety, prosperity and power. The Comanches used
their military power to obtain supplies and labor from the Americans,
Mexicans, and Indians through thievery, tribute, and kidnappings.
Although powered by violence, the Comanche empire was primarily an
economic construction, rooted in an extensive commercial network that
facilitated long-distance trade. Dealing with subordinate Indians, the
Comanche spread their language and culture across the region. In terms
of governance, the Comanches created a centralized political system,
based on a foraging market economy, and a hierarchical social
organization. Their empire collapsed when their villages were was
repeatedly decimated by epidemics of smallpox and cholera in the late
1840s; the population plunged from 20,000 to just a few thousand by the
1870s. The Comanches were no longer able to deal with the U.S. Army,
which took over control of the region after the Mexican American War
ended in 1848.
Mexican Texas: 1821–1836
Stephen F. Austin, the "Father of Texas."
In
1821, the Mexican War for Independence severed the control that Spain
had exercised on its North American territories, and the new country of
Mexico was formed from much of the lands that had comprised New Spain,
including Spanish Texas. The 1824 Constitution of Mexico joined Texas
with Coahuila to form the state of Coahuila y Tejas. The Congress did
allow Texas the option of forming its own state "'as soon as it feels
capable of doing so.'"
The same year, Mexico enacted the General
Colonization Law, which enabled all heads of household, regardless of
race or immigrant status, to claim land in Mexico. Mexico had neither
manpower nor funds to protect settlers from near-constant Comanche
raids and it hoped that settlers could control the raids. The
government liberalized its immigration policies, allowing for settlers
from the United States to immigrate to Texas.
The first
empresarial grant had been made under Spanish control to Moses Austin.
The grant was passed to his son Stephen F. Austin, whose settlers,
known as the Old Three Hundred, settled along the Brazos River in 1822.
The grant was later ratified by the Mexican government. Twenty-three
other empresarios brought settlers to the state, the majority from the
United States of America.
Many of the Anglo-American settlers
owned slaves. Texas was granted a one-year exemption from Mexico's 1829
edict outlawing slavery but Mexican president Anastasio Bustamante
ordered that all slaves be freed in 1830. To circumvent the law, the
colonists converted their slaves into indentured servants for life; by
1836 there were 5,000 slaves in Texas.
Bustamente outlawed the
immigration of United States citizens to Texas in 1830. Several new
presidios were established in the region to monitor immigration and
customs practices. The new laws also called for the enforcement of
customs duties, angering both native Mexican citizens (Tejanos) and
Anglos. In 1832, a group of men led a revolt against customs
enforcement in Anahauc. These Anahuac Disturbances coincided with a
revolt in Mexico against the current president. Texians sided with the
federalists against the current government and drove all Mexican
soldiers out of East Texas.
Texians took advantage of the lack
of oversight to agitate for more political freedom, resulting in the
Convention of 1832. The convention which, among other issues, demand
that U.S. citizens be allowed to immigrate, and requested independent
statehood for Texas. The following year, Texians reiterated their
demands at the Convention of 1833. After presenting their petition,
courier Stephen F. Austin was jailed for the next two years in Mexico
City on suspicion of treason. Although Mexico implemented several
measures to appease the colonists, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna's
measures to transform Mexico from a federalist to a centralist state
provided an excuse for the Texan colonists to revolt.
Texas Revolution
The
vague unrest erupted into armed conflict on October 2, 1835 at the
Battle of Gonzales, when Texians repelled a Mexican attempt to retake a
small cannon. This launched the Texas Revolution, and over the next
three months, the Texian forces successfully defeated all Mexican
troops in the region.
On March 2, 1836, Texans signed the Texas
Declaration of Independence at Washington-on-the-Brazos, effectively
creating the Republic of Texas. The revolt was justified as necessary
to protect basic rights and because Mexico had annulled the federal
pact. The colonists maintained that Mexico had invited them to move to
the country and they were determined "to enjoy 'the republican
institutions to which they were accustomed in their native land, the
United States of America.'"
Many of the Texas settlers believed
the war to be over and left the army after the initial string of
victories. The remaining troops were largely recently arrived
adventurers from the United States; according to historian Alwyn Barr,
the large number of American volunteers "contributed to the Mexican
view that Texan opposition stemmed from outside influences". The
Mexican congress responded to this perceived threat by authorizing the
execution of any foreigner found fighting in Texas; there would be no
prisoners of war.
As early as October 27, Mexican president
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna had been preparing to quell the unrest in
Texas. In early 1836 Santa Anna personally led a 6000-man force toward
Texas. At the Rio Grande, the Mexican troops separated; Santa Anna led
the bulk of the troops to San Antonio de Bexar to besiege the Alamo
Mission while General Jose de Urrea led the remaining troops up the
coast of Texas. Urrea's forces soon defeated all the Texian resistance
along the coast, culminating in the Goliad Massacre, where 300 Texian
prisoners of war were executed. After a thirteen-day siege, Santa
Anna's forces overwhelmed the nearly 200 Texians defending the Alamo.
"Remember the Alamo!" became a battle cry of the Texas Revolution.
News
of the defeats sparked the Runaway Scrape, where much of the population
of Texas and the Texas provisional government fled east, away from the
approaching Mexican army. Many settlers rejoined the army, now
commanded by General Sam Houston. After several weeks of maneuvering,
on April 21, 1836, the Texian Army attacked Santa Anna's forces near
the present-day city of Houston at the Battle of San Jacinto. Santa
Anna was captured and forced to sign the Treaties of Velasco, ending
the war.
Republic of Texas: 1836–1845
The first Congress of
the Republic of Texas convened in October 1836 at Columbia (now West
Columbia). Stephen F. Austin, known as the Father of Texas, died
December 27, 1836, after serving two months as Secretary of State for
the new Republic. In 1836, five sites served as temporary capitals of
Texas (Washington-on-the-Brazos, Harrisburg, Galveston, Velasco and
Columbia) before president Sam Houston moved the capital to Houston in
1837. In 1839, the capital was moved to the new town of Austin by the
next president Mirabeau B. Lamar.
Internal politics of the
Republic were based on the conflict between two factions. The
nationalist faction, led by Mirabeau B. Lamar, advocated the continued
independence of Texas, the expulsion of the Native Americans, and the
expansion of Texas to the Pacific Ocean. Their opponents, led by Sam
Houston, advocated the annexation of Texas to the United States and
peaceful co-existence with Native Americans.
Although Texas
governed itself, Mexico refused to recognize its independence. On March
5, 1842, a Mexican force of over 500 men, led by Rafael Vásquez,
invaded Texas for the first time since the revolution. They soon headed
back to the Rio Grande after briefly occupying San Antonio. 1,400
Mexican troops, led by the French mercenary general Adrian Woll
launched a second attack and captured San Antonio on September 11,
1842. A Texas militia retaliated at the Battle of Salado Creek. However
on September 18, this militia was defeated by Mexican soldiers and
Texas Cherokee Indians during the Dawson Massacre. The Mexican army
would later retreat from the city of San Antonio.
Mexico's
attacks on Texas intensified the conflict between the political
factions in an incident known as the Texas Archive War. To "protect"
the Texas national archives, governor Sam Houston ordered them out of
Austin. Austin residents suspicious of the governor's motives, because
of Houston's disdain of the capital, forced the archives back to Texas
at gunpoint. The Texas Congress admonished Houston for the incident,
and the incident would solidify Austin as Texas's seat of government
for the Republic and the future state.
Statehood, war, and expansion: 1845–1860
On
February 28, 1845, the U.S. Congress passed a bill that would authorize
the United States to annex the Republic of Texas and on March 1 U.S.
President John Tyler signed the bill. The legislation set the date for
annexation for December 29 of the same year. On October 13 of the same
year, a majority of voters in the Republic [of Texas] approved a
proposed constitution that specifically endorsed slavery and the slave
trade. This constitution was later accepted by the U.S. Congress,
making Texas a U.S. state on the same day annexation took effect
(therefore bypassing a territorial phase).
The Mexican
government had long warned that annexation would mean war with the
United States. When Texas joined the U.S., the Mexican government broke
diplomatic relations with the United States. The United States now
assumed the claims of Texas when it claimed all land north of the Rio
Grande. In June 1845, President James K. Polk sent General Zachary
Taylor to Texas, and by October, 3,500 Americans were on the Nueces
River, prepared to defend Texas from a Mexican invasion. On November
10, 1845, Polk ordered General Taylor and his forces south to the Rio
Grande, into disputed territory that Mexicans claimed as their own.
Mexico claimed the Nueces River — about 150 miles (240 km) north of the
Rio Grande — as its border with Texas. On April 25, 1846, a
2,000-strong Mexican cavalry detachment attacked a 63-man U.S. patrol
that had been sent into the contested territory north of the Rio Grande
and south of the Nueces River. The Mexican cavalry routed the patrol,
killing 16 U.S. soldiers in what later became known as the Thornton
Affair. Both nations declared war. In the ensuing Mexican-American War,
there were no more battles fought in Texas, but it became a major
staging point for the American invasion of northern Mexico.
One
of the primary motivations for annexation was the Texas government's
huge debts. The United States agreed to assume many of these upon
annexation. However, the former Republic never fully paid off its debt
until the Compromise of 1850. In return for $10 million, a large
portion of Texas-claimed territory, now parts of Colorado, Kansas,
Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Wyoming, was ceded to the Federal government.
Post-war
Texas grew rapidly as migrants poured into the cotton lands of the
state. German immigrants started to arrive in the early 1840s because
of economic, social and political conditions in their states. In 1842,
German nobles organized the Adelsverein, banding together to buy land
in central Texas to enable German settlement. The Revolutions of 1848
acted as another catalyst for so many immigrants that they became known
as the "Forty-Eighters." Many were educated artisans and businessmen.
Germans continued to arrive in considerable numbers until 1890.
The
first Czech immigrants started their journey to Texas on August 19,
1851 headed by Jozef Šilar. The rich farmland of Central Texas
attracted the Czech immigrants. The counties of Austin, Fayette,
Lavaca, and Washington had early Czech settlements. The Czech-American
communities are characterized by a strong sense of community and social
clubs were a dominant theme of Czech-American life in Texas. By 1865,
the Czech population numbered 700 and climbed to over 60,000
Czech-Americans by 1940.
With their investments in cotton
cultivation, Texas planters imported enslaved blacks from the earliest
years of settlement. They established cotton plantations mostly in the
eastern part of the state, where labor was done by enslaved African
Americans. The central area of the state had more subsistence farmers.
Civil War and Reconstruction: 1860–1876
As
part of the Cotton Kingdom, planters in parts of Texas depended on
slave labor. In 1860 30% of the population of state total of 604,215
were enslaved. In the statewide election on the secession ordinance,
Texans voted to secede from the Union by a vote of 46,129 to 14,697 (a
76% majority). The Secession Convention immediately organized a
government, replacing Sam Houston when he refused to take an oath of
allegiance to the Confederacy.
Texas declared its secession from
the United States on February 1, 1861, and joined the Confederate
States of America on March 2, 1861. Texas was mainly a "supply state"
for the Confederate forces until mid 1863, when the Union capture of
the Mississippi River made large movements of men, horses or cattle
impossible. Texas regiments fought in every major battle throughout the
war.
On August 1, 1862 Confederate troops killed 34 pro-Union
German Texans in the "Nueces Massacre" of civilians. The last battle of
the Civil War, the Battle of Palmito Ranch, was fought in Texas on May
12, 1865.
Historiography
During the 20th century, national
historiographical trends influenced the scholarship on the Civil War in
Texas. Beginning in the 1950s, historians focused on military campaigns
in Texas and other areas of the Southwest, a region previously
neglected. Since the 1970s, scholars have shifted their attention to
South Texas and how its relations with Mexico and Mexican Americans
affected both Confederate and Union Civil War military operations. Also
since the 1970s, the "New Social History" has stimulated research in
war-related social, economic, and political changes. This
historiographical trend is related to a growing interest in local and
regional history.
Reconstruction, Democratic control and disfranchisement
When
the news arrived in Galveston, on June 19, 1865, of the Confederate
collapse, the freed slaves rejoiced, creating the celebration of
Juneteenth. The State had suffered little during the War but trade and
finance was disrupted. Angry returning veterans seized state property
and Texas went through a period of extensive violence and disorder.
Most outrages took place in northern Texas and were committed by
outlaws who had their headquarters in the Indian Territory and
plundered and murdered without distinction of party. President Andrew
Johnson appointed Union General A. J. Hamilton as provisional governor
on June 17, 1865. Hamilton had been a prominent politician before the
war. He granted amnesty to ex-Confederates if they promised to support
the Union in the future, appointing some to office. On March 30, 1870,
although Texas did not meet all the requirements, the United States
Congress restored Texas to the Union.
Like other Southern
states, by the late 1870s white Democrats regained control, often with
a mix of intimidation and terrorism by paramilitary groups operating
for the Democratic Party. They passed a new constitution in 1876 that
segregated schools and established a poll tax to support them, but it
was not originally required for voting. In 1901 the legislature passed
a poll tax as a prerequisite for voter registration. Given the economic
difficulties of the times, the poll tax caused participation by poor
whites, African Americans and Mexican Americans to drop sharply. By the
early 20th century, the Democratic Party in Texas started using a
"white primary," which the state legislature authorized in 1923. Since
the Democratic Party dominated the state after 1900 for decades, the
"white primary" provision reduced what little minority participation
there was as the primaries were the true competitive contest. These
provisions extended deep into the 20th century.
19th century Post-Reconstruction
The
coming of the railroads in the 1880s ended the cattle drives and
allowed ranchers to sell their cattle easily, and farmers move their
cotton to market cheaply. They made Dallas and other cities the centers
of commercial activity.
The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad --the "Katy"--was the first railroad to enter Texas from the north
Much
of Texas politics of the remainder of the 19th century centered on land
use. Guided by the federal Morill Act, Texas sold public lands to gain
funds to invest in higher education. In 1876, the Agricultural and
Mechanical College of Texas opened, and seven years later the
University of Texas at Austin began conducting classes. New land use
policies drafted during the administration of Governor John Ireland
enabled individuals to accumulate land, leading to the formation of
large cattle ranches. Many ranchers ran barbed wire around public
lands, to protect their access to water and free grazing. This caused
several range wars. Governor Lawrence Sullivan Ross guided the Texas
Legislature to reform the land use policies.
The state continued
to deal with racial tensions, and Ross had to personally intervene to
resolve the Jaybird-Woodpecker War. Under Jim Hogg, the state turned
its attention toward corporations violating the state monopoly laws. In
1894, Texas filed a lawsuit against John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil
Company and its Texas subsidiary, the Waters-Pierce Oil Company of
Missouri. Hogg and his attorney general argued that the companies were
engaged in rebates, price fixing, consolidation, and other tactics
prohibited by the state's 1889 antitrust act. The investigation
resulted in a number of indictments, including one for Rockefeller.
Hogg requested that Rockefeller be extradited from New York, but the
New York governor refused, as Rockefeller had not fled from Texas.
Rockefeller was never tried, but other employees of the company were
found guilty.
Texas in prosperity, depression, and war
Galveston,
the fourth-largest city in Texas and then the major port, was destroyed
by a hurricane with 100 mph (160 km/h) winds on September 8, 1900. The
storm created a 20 ft (6.1 m) storm surge when it hit the island, 6–9
ft (1.8–2.7 m) higher than any previously recorded flood. Water covered
the entire island, killing between 6,000 and 8,000 people, destroying
3,500 homes as well as the railroad causeway and wagon bridge that
connected the island to the mainland. To help rebuild their city,
citizens implemented a reformed government featuring a five-man city
commission. Galveston was the first city to implement a city commission
government, and its plan was adopted by 500 other small cities across
the United States.
In the aftermath of the Galveston disaster,
action proceeded on building the Houston Ship Channel to create a more
protected inland port. Houston quickly grew once the Channel was
completed, and rapidly became the primary port in Texas. Railroads were
constructed in a radial pattern to link Houston with other major cities
such as Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, and Austin.
By 1900 the
Dallas population reached 38,000 as banking and insurance became major
activities in the increasingly white-collar city, which was now the
world's leading cotton center. Businessmen took control of civic
affairs; with little municipal patronage, there was only a small role
for the Democratic party to play (and no role for the predominantly
black Republican party.) A dramatic sign of progress was the towering
190-foot steel-frame skyscraper--the fourteen-story Praetorian
Building, built in 1909 to house the Praetorian insurance company.
Dallas became the regional headquarters of the Federal Reserve in 1914,
strengthening its dominance of Texas banking. The city reached 260,000
population in 1929 when the Great Depression hit Texas, causing a sharp
drop in the prices of oil, cotton and cattle, and growth came to a
standstill.
The Praetorian building in Dallas, completed 1909, was the tallest skyscraper in Texas
Anthony
F. Lucas, an experienced mining engineer drilled the first major oil
well at Spindletop, on the morning of January 10, 1901 the little hill
south of Beaumont, Texas. The East Texas Oil Field, discovered on
October 5, 1930 is located in east central part of the state, and is
the largest and most prolific oil reservoir in the contiguous United
States. Other oil fields were later discovered in West Texas and under
the Gulf of Mexico. The resulting Texas Oil Boom permanently
transformed the economy of Texas, and led to the first significant
economic expansion after the Civil War.
The creation of the New
Mexico Territory in 1850 fixed the boundary with the state of Texas at
the Rio Grande. Between then and 1912, when New Mexico became a state,
the course of the river shifted. In what became known as the Country
Club Dispute, a boundary dispute case was filed with the Supreme Court
of the United States in 1913. The court settled the matter in 1927 by
determining where the river had flowed in 1850, largely in agreement
with the claims of Texas.
The economy, which had experienced
significant recovery since the Civil War, was dealt a double blow by
the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. After the Stock Market Crash of
1929, the economy suffered significant reversals and thousands of city
workers became unemployed, many of whom depended on federal relief
programs such as FERA, WPA and CCC. Farmers and ranchers were
especially hard hit, as prices for cotton and livestock fell sharply.
Beginning in 1934 and lasting until 1939, an ecological disaster of
severe wind and drought caused an exodus from Texas and Arkansas, the
Oklahoma Panhandle region and the surrounding plains, in which over
500,000 Americans were homeless, hungry and jobless. Thousands left the
region forever to seek economic opportunities along the West Coast.
World War II
World
War II had a dramatic impact on Texas, as federal money poured in to
build military bases, munitions factories, POW detention camps and Army
hospitals; 750,000 young men left for service; the cities exploded with
new industry; the colleges took on new roles; and hundreds of thousands
of poor farmers left for much better paying war jobs, never to return
to agriculture.
Existing military bases in Texas were expanded
and numerous new training bases were built: Texas World War II Army
Airfields, Brooke Army Medical Center, Camp Mabry, Corpus Christi Army
Depot, Fort Bliss, Fort Hood, Fort Sam Houston, Ingleside Army Depot,
Red River Army Depot, especially for aviation training. The good flying
weather made the state a favorite location for Air Force training
bases. In the largest aviation training program in the world, 200,000
graduated from programs at 40 Texas airfields, including 45,000 pilots,
12,000 bombardiers, 12,000 navigators, and thousands of aerial gunners,
photographers, and mechanics. Allison (1999) in a study of Majors
Field, the Army Air Forces Basic Flying School, at Greenville during
1942–45, shows that the base—like most military bases in rural
Texas—invigorated the local economy, but also changed the cultural
climate of the conservative Christian town, especially around
unprecedented freedom regarding alcohol, dating and dancing, and race
relations.
A factory worker in 1942. Fort Worth, Texas.
The
Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant and the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant
were built as part of the WWII buildup. Hundreds of thousands of
American (and some allied) soldiers, sailors and airmen trained in the
state. All sectors of the economy boomed as the homefront prospered.
During
WWII, Texas became home to as many as 78,982 enemy prisoners, mainly
Germans; that was 15% of the total POW's in the United States. There
were fourteen prisoner of war camps in the state. The men in the camps
were used to supplement the local farm labor lost to the war. Though
contemporary War Department officials claimed that government attempts
at denazification of the prisoners were highly successful, in reality
Nazi influence upon prisons in individual camps was common for the
duration of the POW program. Walker (2006) examines Nazi activities in
Texas POW camps during 1943–45 to indicate the severity of this problem
and the failure of the military authorities to eradicate it.
A
largely rural area, East Texas became more urban as workers were
recruited for the oil, shipbuilding, and aircraft industries. East
Texans made many contributions to the war effort, both at home and in
the armed forces. High schools had patriotic programs as well, but so
many teachers and older students left for the military or for defense
jobs that budgets were cut, programs dropped and the curriculum had to
be scaled down. Hospitals reported a shortage of supplies and medical
personnel, as many doctors and most of the younger nurses joined the
services.
One of the Army's largest hospitals, Harmon General
Hospital opened in Longview in November 1942 with 157 hospital
buildings and a capacity of 2,939 beds. The facility was designed for
the treatment of soldiers with central nervous system syphilis,
psychiatric disorders, tropical illnesses, and dermatological diseases.
At the end of the war the facility became the campus of LeTourneau
University.
Baylor University, like most schools, was successful
in the multiple missions of aiding national defense, recruiting
soldiers, and keeping the institution operational while the war
continued. Texas Tech University likewise had many roles in the war;
the most famous was the War Training Service Pre-Flight program during
1943–44. It prepared Air Force pilots for full-fledged military
aviation training. The efforts of Clent Breedove and M. F. Dagley,
private contractors for the Civilian Pilot Training Program at the
university site since 1939, with Harold Humphries as chief pilot,
brought an economic boost to Lubbock, and 3,750 cadets received
classroom instruction and flying time. From February 1943 to January
1944 more than two thousand women completed training at the Women's
Army Auxiliary Corps Branch Number One, Army Administration School, at
Stephen F. Austin State Teacher's College in Nacogdoches.
Nowhere
was the impact greater than in Houston, which in 1940 was a city of
400,000 population dependent on shipping and oil. The war dramatically
expanded the city's economic base, thanks to massive federal spending.
Energetic entrepreneurs, most notably George Brown, James Elkins and
James Abercrombie, landed hundreds of millions of dollars in federal
wartime investment in technologically complex facilities. Houston oil
companies moved from being mere refiners and became sophisticated
producers of petrochemicals. Especially important were synthetic rubber
and high octane fuel, which retained their importance after the war,
The war moved the natural gas industry from a minor factor to a major
energy source; Houston became a major hub when a local firm purchased
the federally-financed Inch pipelines. Other major growth industries
included steel, munitions, and shipbuilding. Tens of thousands of new
migrants streamed in from rural areas, straining the city's housing
supply and the city's ability to provide local transit and schools. For
the first time high paying jobs went to large numbers of women, blacks
and Mexican Americans. The city's African American community,
emboldened by their newfound prosperity, became a hotbed of civil
rights agitation; the Smith v. Allwright Supreme Court decision on
voting rights was backed and funded by local blacks in this period.
Throughout
East Texas black family growth and dissolution came more rapidly than
in peacetime; blacks were more mobile as an adjustment to employment
opportunities; and there was a more rapid shift to factory labor,
higher economic returns, and a willingness of whites to tolerate the
change in black economic status so long as the traditional "Jim Crow"
social relations were maintained.
Texas modernizes: 1945–present
On
Friday, November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas, at 12:30 p.m. Central
Standard Time (18:30 UTC) Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated John F.
Kennedy, the thirty-fifth President of the United States. Oswald shot
the president from the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository.
The Texas Governor, John B. Connally, was also critically injured but
survived. The vice president, the Texan Lyndon Baines Johnson, sworn in
as President on Air Force One in Dallas at Love Field Airport.
Higher education
During
World War II the main universities gained a new national role, The
wartime financing of university research, curricular change, campus
trainee programs, and postwar veteran enrollments changed the tenor and
allowed Texas schools to gain national stature.
From 1950
through the 1960s, Texas modernized and dramatically expanded its
system of higher education. Under the leadership of Governor Connally,
the state produced a long-range plan for higher education, a more
rational distribution of resources, and a central state apparatus that
managed state institutions with greater efficiency. Because of these
changes, Texas universities received federal funds for research and
development during the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
administrations


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