This is a timeline of the Texas Revolution, spanning the time from the earliest independence movements of the area of Texas, over the declaration of independence from Spain, up to the secession of the Republic of Texas from Mexico.
The first shot of the Texas Revolution was fired at the Battle of Gonzales on October 2, 1835. This marked the beginning of the revolution. Over the next three months, the Texian colonists drove all Mexican army troops out of the province. . General Jose Urrea marched half of the troops up the Texas coast in the Goliad campaign, while Santa Anna led the rest of the troops to San Antonio de Bexar. After a thirteen-day siege, Santa Anna's army defeated the small group of Texians at the Battle of the Alamo and continued east. Many Texians, including the government, fled their homes in the Runaway Scrape. On March 19 the Texas troops marched into an open prairie outside of Goliad during a heavy fog. When they stopped to rest their animals, Urrea and his main army surrounded them. The Texas force numbered at least 300 soldiers, and the Mexicans had 300 to 500 troops. With no choice but battle, James Fannin chose to stand and fight near Coleto Creek. Santa Anna and his troops searched for the Texian government and the Texian army led by Sam Houston. On April 21, 1836, the Texans defeated Santa Anna's army at the Battle of San Jacinto; Santa Anna was captured the following day. The Mexican army retreated back to Mexico City, ending the Texas Revolution. Texas was now an independent colony and later joined the United States.
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1823 |
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1824 |
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1825 |
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1826 |
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1827 |
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1829 |
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1830 |
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1831 |
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1832 |
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1833 |
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1834 |
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Month | Political Events | Military Events |
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May |
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June |
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July |
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August |
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September |
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October |
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November |
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December |
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Date | Political Events | Military Events |
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January 5 | James Grant and Frank Johnson are ordered by the Texas General Council to attack Matamoros. They strip the Alamo fort of most of its remaining men and supplies. The few left to support the Alamo fort select James C. Neill as their commander. | |
January 6 | Santa Anna arrives at Saltillo. | |
January 7 | James Walker Fannin is ordered by the Texas General Council to attack Matamoros. | |
January 11 | James Bowie and William Blowout arrive at Goliad to support a Matamoros expedition. | |
January 14 |
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January 19 | James Bowie and James Bonham arrive at the Alamo fort with 30 men. Houston orders Francis W. Thornton to command at Goliad. | |
January 21 |
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February 1 | Elections are held in settlements across Texas for an independence convention. | |
February 2 | James Bowie pleads to Smith for supplies. Fannin arrives with troops at Copano, Texas to aid the Matamoros Expedition. | |
February 3 | William Travis arrives at the Alamo fort with 30 men. | |
February 4 | Fannin and troops march to Refugio to link up with Grant and Johnson. | |
February 7 | Fannin at Refugio and is elected colonel of the volunteer troops who will gather around Goliad. Fannin receives information of a Mexican advance upon Texas and an awaiting ambush at Matamoros. He abandons a Matamoros expedition. | |
February 8 | David Crockett arrives in Bexar, near the Alamo with 12 men. | |
February 9 | James Grant and Frank Johnson continue on their Matamoros Expedition, gathering horses around San Patricio and South Texas. | |
February 11 | Alamo commander J.C. Neill leaves the Alamo command due to a family illness. He appoints Travis commander. | |
February 12 | James Fannin leaves Refugio with his troops and assumes command at Presidio La Bahia in Goliad. | |
February 13 |
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February 14 |
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February 16 | Santa Anna crosses the Rio Grande. | |
February 17 | Travis sends out letters pleading for men and supplies. General José de Urrea crosses the Rio Grande. | |
February 21 | Santa Anna arrives at the Medina River. | |
February 22 | Heavy rains swell the Medina and spoil a surprise attack by Sesma's cavalry. | |
February 23 |
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February 24 |
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February 25 | Fannin, commander of troops at Goliad, receives Travis' plea for aid. Fannin orders Chenoweth to abandon Copano and sends his company to hold the Cibolo in anticipation of Fannin's relief march to aid the Alamo defenders. | |
February 26 | James Fannin attempts his relief march to the Alamo compound but turns back. R.M Williamson arrives in Gonzales to help organize the Alamo relief forces gathering there . | |
February 27 | Mexican General José de Urrea attacks and defeats Frank Johnson and a small band of Texians at the Battle of San Patricio. | |
February 28 | Juan Seguín and his relief forces waiting on the Cibolo Creek encounter the Goliad advance led by Francis L. DeSauque and John M. Chenoweth while near the Cibolo. They inform Seguin that Fannin was en route to relieve the Alamo defenders and should only be about two days away. | |
February 29 | Houston arrives at Washington on the Brazos. | The Gonzales relief forces arrive on the Cibolo below Bexar. |
March 1 |
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March 2 |
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March 3 |
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March 4 |
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March 5 |
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March 6 |
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March 8 |
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March 10 |
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March 11 |
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March 12 | Battle of Refugio begins: Amon B. King and his men are attacked by General Urrea, and Texian troops commanded by Lt. Col. William Ward are dispatched for relief. | |
March 13 | Ward's troops arrive and the Mexicans are repelled, fighting continues. | |
March 14 | After several hours of fighting, Amon King, William Ward and the Texians attempt to fall back to Victoria. | |
March 15 | King's troops are captured by the Mexicans. | |
March 16 |
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March 17 | Albert C. Horton's scouts locate Col. Juan Morales nearing Goliad with the Jiménez and San Luis battalions. | |
March 18 | Albert C. Horton's cavalry and Urrea's advance forces skirmish near Fort Defiance. | |
March 19 |
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March 20 | Urrea receives reinforcements. Mexican troops now total near 1000. Fannin surrenders. | |
March 21 | Battle of Copano: General Urrea captures the port of Copano. The Mexicans held on to the port until the end of the war, using it to obtain reinforcements and send the injured and prisoners to Mexico. | |
March 23 | William Ward surrenders. | |
March 24 | General Antonio Gaona departs Bexar on an eastward path towards Nacogdoches. | |
March 27 |
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March 28 | Houston orders Wiley Martin and Mosley Baker with Juan Seguín to guard his retreat thus delaying Santa Anna's army from crossing the Brazos River. | |
March 29 – 31 |
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April 5 | General Antonio Gaona, upon new orders from Santa Anna and after an eight-day delay, abandons his occupation of Mina to proceed to San Felipe de Austin. | |
April 7 | Santa Anna's army reaches San Felipe and is pinned down by Baker's men. | |
April 8 | Santa Anna joins Ramirez y Sesma at Beason's Crossing. | |
April 12 |
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April 15 | Santa Anna and his army arrive at Harrisburg. | |
April 18 | Houston and his army arrive outside of Harrisburg. | |
April 20 |
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April 21 |
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April 22 | Santa Anna captured. | |
April 23 | News of Santa Anna's defeat and capture reaches Santa Anna's second-in-command, General Vicente Filisola. | |
April 25 | All Mexican troops in Texas (2,573 men) assemble at Elizabeth Powell's Tavern near Old Fort, including General José de Urrea's troops, where in a council of war headed by Filisola, they agree to withdraw south of the Colorado River. | |
April 28 | Retreating Mexican army crosses the Colorado River at the Atascosito Crossing near present-date Columbus, Texas. Because of heavy rains and dwindling food and supplies, the Mexicans continue to withdraw south. | |
May 10 | Mexican army reaches the Atascosita Road at Victoria. | |
May 14 | Treaties of Velasco signed by Republic of Texas officials and General Santa Anna. | |
May 17 | Mexican army arrives in Goliad. | |
May 28 | Lead elements of Mexican army arrive in San Patricio. | |
May 31 | Mexican army arrives on the west bank of the Nueces River. | |
June 4 | Mexican army at the Alamo fort formally surrenders to Juan Seguín, military chief of San Antonio. | |
June 5 –June 12 | Mexican army camps at Rancho Chiltipiquin. Extreme heat from the summer season forces the army to further move on. | |
June 15 | Filisola, leading the defeated and demoralized Mexican army, crosses the Rio Grande back into Mexico and arrives later that day at Matamoros, Tamaulipas. |
The Texas Revolution was a rebellion of colonists from the United States and Tejanos against the centralist government of Mexico in the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas. Although the uprising was part of a larger one, the Mexican Federalist War, that included other provinces opposed to the regime of President Antonio López de Santa Anna, the Mexican government believed the United States had instigated the Texas insurrection with the goal of annexation. The Mexican Congress passed the Tornel Decree, declaring that any foreigners fighting against Mexican troops "will be deemed pirates and dealt with as such, being citizens of no nation presently at war with the Republic and fighting under no recognized flag". Only the province of Texas succeeded in breaking with Mexico, establishing the Republic of Texas. It was eventually annexed by the United States.
Martín Perfecto de Cos was a Mexican Army general and politician during the mid-19th century. Born in Veracruz, the son of an attorney, he became an army cadet at the age of 20, a Lieutenant in 1821, and a Brigadier General in 1833.
The Battle of San Jacinto, fought on April 21, 1836, in present-day La Porte and Deer Park, Texas, was the final and decisive battle of the Texas Revolution. Led by General Samuel Houston, the Texan Army engaged and defeated General Antonio López de Santa Anna's Mexican army in a fight that lasted just 18 minutes. A detailed, first-hand account of the battle was written by General Houston from the headquarters of the Texan Army in San Jacinto on April 25, 1836. Numerous secondary analyses and interpretations have followed.
The Goliad massacre was an event of the Texas Revolution that occurred on March 27, 1836, following the Battle of Refugio and the Battle of Coleto; 425–445 prisoners of war from the Texian Army of the Republic of Texas were executed by the Mexican Army in the town of Goliad, Texas. The men surrendered under the belief they would be set free within a few weeks; however, this was not to be. Despite appeals for clemency by General José de Urrea, the massacre was carried out by Lt. Colonel José Nicolás de la Portilla, under orders from General and President of Mexico Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.
The Goliad Campaign was the failed 1836 Mexican offensive to retake the Texas Gulf Coast during the Texas Revolution. Mexican troops under the command of General José de Urrea ambushed Groups of Texians in the Mexican province of Texas, known as Mexican Texas, in a series of clashes in February and March.
The Battle of Coleto, also known as the Battle of Coleto Creek, the Battle of the Prairie, and the Batalla del Encinal del Perdido, was fought on March 19–20, 1836, during the Goliad campaign of the Texas Revolution. In February, General José de Urrea led a branch of the Mexican army up the Gulf Coast of Mexican Texas toward Goliad, where a large contingent of soldiers from the Texian Army was garrisoned under Colonel James W. Fannin. Simultaneously, Mexican president Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna led a larger force into the Texian interior, where on March 6 his troops won the Battle of the Alamo. After learning of the Alamo's defeat, Texian general Sam Houston ordered Fannin to retreat from Goliad and join the rest of the army in Victoria.
James Walker Fannin Jr. was an American military officer, planter, and slave trader who served in the Texian Army during the Texas Revolution. After being outnumbered and surrendering to the Mexican Army at the Battle of Coleto Creek, Fannin and his fellow prisoners of war were massacred soon afterward at Goliad, Texas, under Antonio López de Santa Anna's orders. He was memorialized in several place names, including a military training camp and a major city street in Houston.
The Battle of Refugio was fought from March 12–15, 1836, near Refugio, Texas. Mexican General José Urrea and 1,500 Centralista soldiers fought against Amon B. King and his 28 American volunteers and Lieutenant Colonel William Ward and his approximately 120 Americans. The battle, a part of the Goliad Campaign of the Texas Revolution, resulted in a Mexican victory and splintered Texan resistance.
The Battle of San Patricio was fought on February 27, 1836, between Texian rebels and the Mexican army, during the Texas Revolution. The battle occurred as a result of the outgrowth of the Texian Matamoros Expedition. The battle marked the start of the Goliad Campaign, the Mexican offensive to retake the Texas Gulf Coast. It took place in and around San Patricio.
The battle of Agua Dulce Creek was a skirmish during the Texas Revolution between Mexican troops and the colonists of the Mexican province of Texas, known as Texians. As part of the Goliad Campaign to retake the Texas Gulf Coast, Mexican troops ambushed a group of Texians on March 2, 1836. The skirmish began approximately 26 miles (42 km) south of San Patricio, in territory belonging to the Mexican state of Tamaulipas.
José Cosme de Urrea y Elías González or simply José de Urrea was a Mexican general. He fought under General Antonio López de Santa Anna during the Texas Revolution. Urrea's forces were never defeated in battle during the Texas Revolution. His most notable success was that of the Goliad Campaign, in which James Fannin's 400 soldiers were surrounded and induced to capitulate under terms, but were massacred in Urrea's absence on the orders of Santa Anna. Urrea also fought in the Mexican–American War.
The Runaway Scrape events took place mainly between September 1835 and April 1836 and were the evacuations by Texas residents fleeing the Mexican Army of Operations during the Texas Revolution, from the Battle of the Alamo through the decisive Battle of San Jacinto. The ad interim government of the new Republic of Texas and much of the civilian population fled eastward ahead of the Mexican forces. The conflict arose after Antonio López de Santa Anna abrogated the 1824 Constitution of Mexico and established martial law in Coahuila y Tejas. The Texians resisted and declared their independence. It was Sam Houston's responsibility, as the appointed commander-in-chief of the Provisional Army of Texas, to recruit and train a military force to defend the population against troops led by Santa Anna.
The siege of Béxar was an early campaign of the Texas Revolution in which a volunteer Texian army defeated Mexican forces at San Antonio de Béxar. Texians had become disillusioned with the Mexican government as President and General Antonio López de Santa Anna's tenure became increasingly dictatorial. In early October 1835, Texas settlers gathered in Gonzales to stop Mexican troops from reclaiming a small cannon. The resulting skirmish, known as the Battle of Gonzales, launched the Texas Revolution. Men continued to assemble in Gonzales and soon established the Texian Army. Despite a lack of military training, well-respected local leader General Stephen F. Austin was elected commander.
Vicente Filísola was an Italian-born Spanish and Mexican military and political figure during the 19th century. He is most well known for his role in leading the short-lived Mexican annexation of Central America between 1822 and 1823.
This is a timeline of the Republic of Texas, spanning the time from the Texas Declaration of Independence from Mexico on March 2, 1836, up to the transfer of power to the State of Texas on February 19, 1846.
The Presidio Nuestra Señora de Loreto de la Bahía, known more commonly as Presidio La Bahía, or simply La Bahía, is a fort constructed by the Spanish Army. It became the center of a community that developed as the modern-day city of Goliad, Texas, United States. The current location dates to 1747.
The Battle of Lipantitlán, also known as the Battle of Nueces Crossing, was fought along the Nueces River on November 4, 1835 between the Mexican Army and Texian insurgents, as part of the Texas Revolution. After the Texian victory at the Battle of Goliad, only two Mexican garrisons remained in Texas, Fort Lipantitlán near San Patricio and the Alamo Mission at San Antonio de Béxar. Fearing that Lipantitlán could be used as a base for the Mexican army to retake Goliad and angry that two of his men were imprisoned there, Texian commander Philip Dimmitt ordered his adjutant, Captain Ira Westover, to capture the fort.
Philip Dimmitt (1801–1841) was an officer in the Texian Army during the Texas Revolution. Born in Kentucky, Dimmitt moved to Texas in 1823 and soon operated a series of trading posts. After learning that Mexican General Martín Perfecto de Cos was en route to Texas in 1835 to quell the unrest, Dimmitt proposed that the general be kidnapped on his arrival at Copano. The plan was shelved when fighting broke out at Gonzales, but by early October, 1835, it had been resuscitated by a group of volunteers at Matamoros. Not knowing that Cos had already departed for San Antonio de Bexar, this group decided to corner Cos at Presidio La Bahia in Goliad. Dimmitt joined them en route, and participated in the battle of Goliad.
Herman Ehrenberg was a surveyor and Texian soldier who was one of the few survivors of the Goliad Massacre. During his escape, he purportedly yelled, "The Republic of Texas forever!" which popularized the catchphrase "Texas forever!"