Friday, September 15, 2023

HISPANIC MONTH: MIER Y TERAN "MEXICO WILL LOSE TEXAS"

"Cassandra warned the Trojans about the Greeks hiding inside the Trojan Horse and they did not believe her..."

By Juan Montoya
It is difficult to imagine a more tragic figure than Manuel de Mier y Teran in northern Mexico and Texas history.
Born in Mexico City in 1789, he excelled in mathematics and engineering, and graduated from the College of Mines in Mexico City in 1811.

In that year, one year after Fr. Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla issued his Grito de Dolores and was later executed for treason against the Spanish crown, he joined the independence movement under Hidalgo's successor José María Morelos.

In 1821 he joined Agustin de Iturbide under the Plan of Iguala whose aim was to expel the Spaniards from the Mexican colony. At the time he joined Iturbide, Mier y Teran never thought that Iturbide would declare himself an emperor. Iturbide was exiled after the constitutional forces defeated his army of followers.

He then served in the first constituent congress in 1822 as a member of the committee on colonization of unoccupied lands. According to his biographers, he attained the rank of brigadier general in 1824 and served nine months as minister of war.

In 1827, the first president of Mexico named him to lead a scientific and boundary expedition into Texas to observe the natural resources and the Indians, to discover the number and attitudes of the Americans living there, and to determine the United States-Mexico boundary between the Sabine and the Red rivers.

Mier y Teran was a member of the Comisión de Límites (Boundary Commission) when it left Mexico City on November 10, 1827, and reached San Antonio on March 1, 1828, San Felipe on April 27, and Nacogdoches on June 3. By that time he had been named Commander of the Army of the North, which encompassed Coahuila and Texas.

He traveled with commission members Rafael Chovell, a mineralogist and later military commander at Lavaca; Jean Louis Berlandier, a botanist, zoologist, and artist; and José María Sánchez y Tapía, cartographer and artist. All kept diaries that have been published in part.

Illness and muddy roads delayed the commission's return, and they remained in East Texas until January 16, 1829, when they started for Mexico City.

 In his report on the commission, Mier y Terán recommended that strong measures be taken to stop the United States from acquiring Texas. He suggested additional garrisons surrounding the settlements, closer trade ties with Mexico, and the encouragement of more Mexican and European settlers. His suggestions were incorporated into the Law of April 6, 1830, which also called for the prohibition of slavery and closed the borders of Texas to Americans.

Mier y Terán was ordered to Tampico to help repulse a Spanish invasion in August 1829. He was made second in command under Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana, and they became heroes of the nation by their successful expulsion of the Spanish force on August 20.

In November, 1829 – seven years before Texas declared independence from Mexico in 1836 – he warned the Mexican government of the plan by Texas settlers to break away from Mexico using the tactics they had used against France and Spain to dispossess them of vast territories in their American colonies.

"The Texas Department is in contact with a nation which has shown itself to be rapacious for land," he wrote. "While the world has taken little notice, the norteamericanos have grabbed all land that has been within their reach and in less than half a century have become owners of extensive colonies that belonged to Spain and France and of vast distant regions belonging to an infinity of native tribes which have since disappeared from the face of the earth."

And like Andrew Jackson, who openly proclaimed that the United States would utilize the "Texas formula" to acquire more western lands, Mier y Teran said there was no other more powerful nation like the norteamericanos which would travel silently through dark roads and make conquests of major importance throughout the world.

"They start by claiming feigned rights as in Texas which are impossible to sustain in a serious discussion, and base their ridiculous pretenses on historical acts that no one can prove...until they assert rights that are veiled under phrases of equality and freedom that result in a concession of territory by the targeted nation..."

"The sale of this department (Texas) reduces the territorial property and worth of the lands of all the rest of Mexico to half of what they are worth now. He who consents and does not oppose to the loss of Texas is a heinous traitor who should be punished with every kind of death."

In 1830, Mier y Terán was made commandant general of the Eastern Interior Provinces, a position in which he supervised both political and military affairs in Texas, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas.

His headquarters were near the new port of Matamoros, which had just opened.

Mier y Terán supported constituted authority, whether of a Federalist or Centralist regime, and continued to be concerned over the inability of incoming American settlers to assimilate into the Mexican culture.

When Santa Anna rebelled in January 1832, Mier y Terán tried to defend the Eastern Internal Provinces from Santa Ana and the Federalist rebels.

In poor health and subject to depression, he grew despondent over the problems of colonization in Texas and the continuing political problems on both the state and national levels.

On July 3, 1832, with the federalist forces gaining a significant victory near Matamoros and the increasing influx of Anglo-American settlers after abrogation of the Law of 1830, the general committed suicide by falling on his sword behind the church of San Antonio in Padilla, Tamaulipas. 

Ironically, it was the same place where Emperor Iturbide, his former general, had been shot after his return from exile.

Inundated as a result of a dam being built there, the town and church now lie under water.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

50k dolares was given to a meskin not to fight for browntown, from one of the gringo families, which by the way, still lives here. It was to include the moving of all meskins back to matamoscas, which never happened. meskins took the money and ran, a trick used by the gringos was turned on them. look it up don't believe everything you hear and read, specially if its said or written by a gringo. defacto

Anonymous said...

Mexico Lindo? Makes COB jefes look like really smart!

Anonymous said...

VIVA ZAPATA

Anonymous said...

Feds want public input on plan to reintroduce ocelots on RGV ranchlands
are they good to eat? Why not chickens, or pigs, goats are better, cabrito.

Anonymous said...

Where does Bobby White “Man” Cervantes come in to save the day

Anonymous said...

Dam Juan, the history in that time frame from both sides. Fort brown (now Brownsville), Mexican military firing artillery to our side. Bro, the Texas rangers around that time kicking ass. The Comanche and their raiding parties all over Texas. Expansion of Texas, Santa Ana trying retake Texas and held San Antonio, Texas rangers fighting Santa Ana army pushing them back. Mexicans capturing the dragoons who helping patrol before the war. Our army going into Mexico and the rangers kicking ass all the way Monterey. Mind you the Comanches were still raiding. I say all this Juan, because two articles stood out. This current one I’m posting on and the Cowen one about his lineage and that fucking house. Some how through all the shit going on. This house was still standing. Comanche plunder and raped women and took hostages dudes were just freaking killing, bodies mutated and scalped of course everything burned. But but you have to remember their was raiding parties from Mexico too and the Mexican soldiers. Theirs too much bro. How can I forget Come And Take It..

But I remembered a story,
March 31, 1919
Under Investigation
Some estimates place the number of Hispanic citizen deaths by Texas Rangers during the 1915-1918 wars with Mexico as high as 3,000. Representative Josė T. Canales of Brownsville insisted on a legislative investigation. As a result of the findings, the Texas Legislature reduced the number of Ranger companies as well as the number of men in each company. More stringent Ranger selection criteria and a citizen complaint process were also put in place.

Just like little Eddie and the Culprits, that PUB bullshit. They’ve been fucking us since the dawn. History repeats itself. Slave masters always scheme in, to gain more land and fuck the little man. Hey old HoBo suck a dick bitch.

Anonymous said...

Thank God Mexico lost Texas to Merica!

Anonymous said...

WHICH EVER WAY IT TURNED, WE STILL WOULD HAVE BEEN SCREWED. GRINGOS DID IT, MEXICAN DID TOO, AND SCREW LOS TEJANOS. FACT

Anonymous said...

Juan Nepomuceno Cortina Goseacochea (16 May 1824 – 30 October 1894) was a Mexican general, politician, caudillo, and outlaw of American West who engaged in socially-motivated border banditry against the United States from 1859 to 1861 in the "Cortina Troubles.

Biography
Juan Nepomuceno Cortina Gosecochea was born in Camargo, Tamaulipas, Mexico on 16 May 1824, and he was raised in the disputed Rio Grande Valley region on the border of Mexico and the Republic of Texas. He joined the Mexican Army in 1846 at the start of the Mexican-American War, and he fought at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma. With the end of the war and the US annexation of Texas, Cortina became an important political boss for the South Texas Democratic Party and remained a large rancher, even as his estates were taken away from him. He went on to train a private army in response to the harassment of the Hispanic Tejanos by the white "Anglos", and the tensions between his army and the Brownsville authorities escalated into open conflict on 13 July 1859, when he seized the town, holding it until 30 September 1859. He led his paramilitary mounted militia in several raids against Anglo-American settlers in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, but he was easily defeated by the Texas Rangers and the US Army and forced to flee into Mexico. President Benito Juarez appointed Cortina the commander of the Mexican Army in Tamaulipas, and, from 1862 to 1866, he was the de facto ruler of the state during the Franco-Mexican War, briefly joining the invaders before turning on them and aiding in their defeat. He later supported Porfirio Diaz's rise to power, only to be imprisoned for his continued raids on Texas. He was imprisoned at the Santiago Tlatelolco military prison until 1890, when he was moved to house arrest. Cortina died in the Mexico City suburb of Azcapotzalco

Anonymous said...

It's Bobby Whitman-Cervantes. He's the son of the guy that used to run the Whitman Army-Navy Store.

Anonymous said...

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rita