Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - A Brief History of Texas
Episode Date: August 23, 2024Each of the fifty US states is like a separate country. Its area, population, and economy are comparable to those of other independent nations. Yet, the histories of each state, while different, all... share broad commonalities. However, one state has a history that is totally different from all the rest. Learn more about the history of Texas and how an independent republic became one of the United States on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up for ButcherBox today by going to Butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily at checkout to get $30 off your first box! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Each of the 50 U.S. states is like a separate country. Its area, population, and economy are comparable
to those of other independent nations. Yet the histories of each state, while different, all share
broad commonalities. However, one state has a history that is totally different from all the rest.
Learn more about the history of Texas and how an independent republic became one of the U.S. states
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
If you were to ask the residents of the 49 states that are not Texas, they would probably tell you that Texans are.
are a bit different. And if you ask Texans, they would probably agree that Texans are a bit different.
Texas has an identity that other states simply lack. There is a sense of pride that Texans have
in their state that's missing from, say, North Dakota or Oregon. Much of this has to do with its
history and size. If Texas were its own country, it would be the 51st largest country in the
world between Cote d'Ivoix and Nepal by population. By area, it would be 39th between Zambia and
Myanmar. By GDP, it would be the eighth largest in the world, between France and Brazil, both of
which have significantly larger populations. France is over twice the population, and Brazil has over
seven times the population. However, this episode is not about oil, or cattle ranching, or even
the Dallas Cowboys, who have falsely claimed the title of America's team. Or even the Houston
Texans, who I just sort of pity. This is about the unique history of Texas. And just to provide a
quick description for those who aren't familiar with the geography of Texas, Texas is in the southern
United States. Mexico's border with Texas is the longest of any state or country. Eastern Texas
would be considered part of the southeast United States, but the western part of the state would be
considered part of the southwest United States. Texas is so large that it's usually just considered
its own thing. Texas is so big that the city of El Paso in the west is closer to Los Angeles
than it is to the city of Texarkana, which is within the state of Texas in the east.
Likewise, the distance from the northwesternmost point of the Texas Panhandle is almost the same
distance to Brownville, Texas on the Mexican border as it is to the Canadian border.
As for history, we need to start at the very beginning, about 10,000 years ago.
And that is the point where the earliest human remains in the state can be dated back to.
A human skeleton known as the Leanderthal Lady was found in 1983 just outside of Austin.
It dates back to between 10 to 13,000 years ago.
Thousands of years ago, Texas was much more green than it was today.
There was less desert and more prairies.
Before 6,000 BC, there were a large number of megafauna in the area, including mammoths and mastodons.
Around 6,000 BC, the climate star,
started to change, and the megafauna began to go extinct. Native people in the region had to change
their diets to smaller game and fish. When I talk about the various native peoples who inhabit
Texas, you have to paint with a very broad brush given how large and varied the Texas landscape is.
That being said, starting about 2,000 years ago, Texas became a crossroads for various native cultures.
Several Native American cultures developed, including the Cato in East Texas, which is known for its
complex chiefdoms and mound building, as well as the Karankawa, the Koitechan, and the Humano peoples
in other parts of the state. The word Texas is actually derived from the Caddo people. It comes from
the word Tasha, which means friend or ally. And I should note that there was no serious Aztec
presence in Texas outside of an occasional expedition or trade mission. This was far north of the
Aztec heartland. The recorded history of Texas begins with the arrival of Europeans. The first
recorded mention of the land, which is today Texas, took place in 1519, when the Spanish explorer
Alonzo Alvarez di Paneda first mapped the Texas coastline. However, he never established any
outposts or store permanent settlements in the area. The first European settlement was not on the
coast, rather it was far inland, and over 150 years after DiPaneda's first mission on the coast
of the Gulf of Mexico. It was established by a mix of Spanish and Native Americans who fled the
Pueblo of Isletta in New Mexico after the Pueblo Revolt of 1681.
They established a settlement outside of modern-day El Paso.
And if you remember back to my episode on the subject, the Pueblo Revolt was the indigenous
uprising against the Spanish, which brought the horses to Native Americans.
Soon after, the Spanish began moving into the territory, both to expand their territory
and to counter the French who were moving towards them from Louisiana.
As they did in other Spanish territories in areas such as California, the Spanish
established a network of missions and fortified bases known as Presidios.
One of the French explorers in the region was René Robert Cavalier de la Salle.
He established Fort St. Louis in 1685 at the mouth of the Lavaca River,
which was actually a mistake because he was supposed to establish a fort at the mouth of the Mississippi River.
Texas, known as Tejas, became a part of the Spanish colony of Mexico.
And when Mexico achieved its independence in 1821, Texas, along with much of what is today
the Western United States came with it. Texas was sparsely populated, and the newly independent
Mexico wanted to consolidate its control over Texas, so they encouraged settlement with land grants.
They wanted to do this to secure Texas from the rapidly growing United States, which was next
door. Unfortunately, many of the settlers were not Spanish-speaking Mexicans, as they had hoped,
but rather were English-speaking Americans, known as Texicans. There were clashes between the
Texicans and the Mexicans. Much of the problem was due to the fact that the seat of power in Mexico
was in Mexico City, which was very far away with a large desert between it and Texas.
One of the Texicans who moved to Texas and brought 300 families with him was Stephen F. Austin.
Born in Virginia and raised in Missouri, Austin was the de facto leader of the first Anglo-Texans.
He initially sought good relations with the Mexican government, but he was also responsible for the
introduction of slavery into the region. The first Anglo-Settlers were allowed to stay in Texas
so long as they became Mexican citizens, converted to Catholicism, and obeyed Mexican laws.
On April 6, 1830, Mexico passed a law that banned further U.S. immigration to Texas and increased
tariffs, exacerbating tensions with the settlers. It also suspended the property contracts of many
settlers and stationed more Mexican troops in Texas. These conditions on the Anglo-Settles,
settlers, as well as the introduction of slavery into Mexico by the Anglos and the abolition of the
Mexican constitution by the President and General Santa Ana eventually erupted into conflict and war.
The First Battle of the Texas Revolution is often described as a skirmish at the town of Gonzales on
April 2, 1835. It erupted when Texican colonists refused to surrender a small cannon to Mexican
troops, railing under a flag that read, come and take it. Things escalated,
quickly after that. Texican forces led by Stephen F. Austin, Jim Bowie, and others laid siege to the
Mexican garrison at San Antonio. The Texicans eventually captured the town, delivering a
significant blow to Mexican control over Texas. In early 1836, things were not going well for the
Texicans. In what is undoubtedly the war's most famous battle, Mexican troops under General Antonio
Lopez de Santa Ana laid siege to the Alamo mission in San Antonio. After a third,
13-day siege, on March 6th, the Mexican forces took the mission, killing all of the Texican
defenders. The dead included James Bowie, William B. Travis, and Davy Crockett. Just three weeks later,
on March 27th, following the Battle of Coletto, approximately 330 Texican fighters surrendered
to Mexican General Jose de Eura, and were subsequently executed by Order of Santa Ana. It became
known as the Goliad Massacre, named after the town where it took place.
The heavy-handed tactics of Santa Ana at the Alamo and Goliad backfired by strengthening the resolve of the Texicans and drawing even more people to the cause.
The fortunes of the Texicans turned around really quick.
On April 21st, less than a month after the Goliad massacre, the Texicans ended the revolution with a resounding victory over General Santa Ana at the Battle of San Jacinto.
This decisive battle, led by General Sam Houston, lasted just a very general.
just 18 minutes and saw the Texican army achieve a stunning victory. Despite being outnumbered,
they killed 650 men under the command of Santa Ana at a loss of only 11. The following day,
they captured Santa Ana, effectively ending the war. With Santa Ana in their captivity, they forced
him to sign the treaties of Velasco. The treaties consisted of two documents, one public and one secret.
The public treaty mandated the withdrawal of all Mexican troops from Texan territory and the release of Texan prisoners,
while the secret treaty required Santa Ana to work towards officially recognizing the Rio Grande as the southern boundary of Texas upon his return to Mexico.
Despite these terms, the Mexican government refused to recognize Santa Ana's authority while captive and subsequently never ratified the treaties,
leading to ongoing disputes over Texas' independence and territorial rights.
The Republic of Texas, which had been declared on March 2nd, became a living entity.
Elections were held in September, and Sam Houston was elected the first president of the Republic of Texas.
However, there was a problem.
Mexico never acknowledged the treaties of Alaska and never recognized the Republic of Texas.
In fact, Mexico occupied most of the territory claimed by the Republic of Texas.
The United States did recognize the Republic of Texas, and,
1837, but there were years of conflict with Mexico. Mexico continued to view Texas as just a
rebellious province. I should note that the land the Republic of Texas claimed wasn't just the
boundaries of the current state. It also included parts of Oklahoma, New Mexico, Kansas,
Colorado, and Wyoming. After a decade of financial and military problems, Texas finally decided
to join the United States as the 28th state on December 29th,
1845. This was actually one of the more momentous cases of a state entering the Union for a bunch of
reasons. Most states were American territories before they became states. Texas was an independent
republic, complete with its own currency and military. Even more importantly, it was land that was
claimed by Mexico. Everyone knew that if Texas were to become a state, it would mean war with Mexico.
and that is why the United States Senate rejected the annexation of Texas in 1844.
And there was another problem that delayed Texan statehood, slavery.
In 1820, the Missouri compromise put limits on new slave states.
However, the compromise was in reference to land from the Louisiana purchase, and Texas wasn't a part of that.
Part of the annexation terms was that Texas could be subdivided into four more states,
provided that those states above 36 degrees 30 minutes north, the line stipulated in the Missouri compromise, be free states.
This stipulation became moot with the compromise of 1850.
California was admitted to the Union as a free state, and Texas relinquished their claim to the lands in the states that I mentioned above in exchange for $10 million.
Many Texans still claim that the provision to create four more states out of Texas is still in effect, which is partially true.
However, the only reason it's true is because it's just as true for any state.
Creating a new state from an old one requires the consent of the state legislature and Congress.
So Texas could be split into five states, but then again, so could Michigan or Idaho.
So you can see why Texas is unique among the U.S. states.
Its history with Spain and Mexico, its revolution, its independence,
and finally its controversial admission to the union makes for a history,
unlike any other U.S. state.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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including the show's producers.
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