Lions Led By Donkeys Podcast - Episode 383 - The Texas Revolution: Part 1
Episode Date: October 6, 2025SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/lionsledbydonkeys The first in our four-part series about the Texas Revolution, a story in which some of the drunkest and worst-smelling guys of t...he 19th century decided to break away from Mexico for... reasons. Sources: Edward Baptist. The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism Randolph Campbell. An Empire for Slavery: The Peculiar Institution in Texas, 1821–1865 Stephen Hardin. Texian Illad. Andrew Torget. Seeds of Empire: Cotton, Slavery, and the Transformation of the Texas Borderlands, 1800–1850
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Hello and welcome to the Lions Led by Donkeys podcast.
I'm Joe and with me's Tom and Nate.
And together we chair the Buckees Revolutionary Committee of Colleen, Texas.
It's been hardgoing in these early days of our glorious people's revolution.
We've had to break up fights between frontiersmen, gunfights between American volunteers,
and mediate a six hour-long meeting between several parties of settlers over the proper place to
park their slaves. Our shelves have been picked clean, our bathrooms destroyed by dysentery,
and now we all have mumps. We're truly in God's country. Fellas, how are you doing?
I'm very excited to spend the next couple of episodes learning about guys who spent the majority
of their lives shitting sideways. There's a lot of disease in the next four episodes. I'll tell you right now,
is part one of four on our series of the Texas Revolution. My yehaws are primed. My cousins are
married and my rights are slowly being whittled away. I'm ready to say fuck y'all. I'm ready to say
fuck all y'all because y'all is singular in this case. I'm ready to make that clear. I'm ready
to hear stories about whatever the psychedelic traditions of the indigenous residents of Texas
before colonization were because I won't think that Texas tea and that purple drank are just
eternal. They always existed there.
Got spinners on my wagon
and I'm sitting to chopped and screwed fiddle music.
Exactly. The wagon, that's why, because wagon wheels were wood back in those days.
So when you worked wood wheels, you know, it was a real thing. And it just stayed on a
tradition in Texas. I like the idea of, uh, the only music. Whenever we talk about military
bands, uh, on the Texan side of things, it's only dudes blowing on jugs and fiddle music.
And or the band, the band from Trick Daddy's shut up where he says, we're going to let the band deal with this one.
And then you just, yeah, I'm just saying, the end of the day, if you were on a wagon going to Texas and you were drinking from a canteen in the early 19th century, you were gripping and sipping.
Because you had to hold onto the wagon and you had to grip that canteen and you had to sip.
So you know what? Texas is always just going to be Texas.
We have an interesting layout here because obviously Nate and I are both American.
We've heard things about the Texas Revolution growing up in school or or some other.
supplementary thing.
But Tom, you've probably never heard
fuck all about any of this.
I have no idea
at all. The only thing I know is that
more than likely Hank Hill's dad
Cotton Hill has some problematic
opinions about the Texas Revolution.
Unfortunately,
I would say most
people who look back
on it as this glorious
thing, there's two options here.
They don't know the
truth of it. Because Texas doesn't
teach that. Like, I lived in Texas for about
a decade. I didn't go to Texas
schools, but, like, I do a lot
of Texans. They don't really teach
the true roots of the
revolution in Texan schools.
They frame it very similar
to how, like, the American Revolutionist
framed in American schools. Like, no, it's about our
rights. Oh, okay. And then you squint
you're like, what rights exactly?
Look for the small text. Yeah.
Or they are
purposefully doing so. You
often hear Texans say, like, Texas is the
only state that's still allowed to become its own country. Yeah. That is not true.
Texas, it's like, yeah, your rights to either do slavery or do like the judge shit from fucking
Blood Meridian. Yeah. That is what happens here. This is a whole country ran by judges. I mean,
that's literally the point of Cormac McCarthy's book. That's why he wrote it. Yep. That's why I
fucking wrote it. I believe Cormick McCarthy's book, Blood Meridian is post annexation, but I don't
remember. But it's set in Texas and he's from Texas. Yeah, yeah. 100%. So, so. So, like, 100%. So. So
So this is before, this is proto-judge.
Now, the Republic of Texas, everyone's favorite repository of the world's most annoying football fans, psychotic politics, and of course, the one guy who will never let you forget what state he's from owing to the fact he probably has the outline of the state tattooed somewhere on their body.
Texas, despite its uncountable flaws, has a unique place in the annals of American history.
An independent body, kind of, created from a revolution separate from the American Revolution.
kind of.
But at its core, the Texas Revolution was almost like the American Revolution's strange cousin
that would do things to their other cousins that the rest of the family doesn't like to talk
about because this is the sound.
Made up almost entirely of American slave owners,
also known as Anglo-Texans, Texians, or Texans,
who illegally immigrated into what would become known as the Mexican Empire for a brief bit
there, and then the Republic, you cannot attempt to look at the Texas Revolution without
also looking at America and one of its greatest historical sins and the part that it played
in its eventual temporary creation of the Republic of Texas, which is what we're going to be
looking at over the course the next four weeks.
Everyone likes to imagine they're the judge from a Blood Meridian, but in reality, his name
is escaping me, but they are just the protagonist of Butchers Crossing.
it's no to pull from other Cormac McCarthy
everybody thinks that they're the judge from Blood Meridian
but they're just the baby getting roasted on a spit
in multiple Cormac McCarthy books
you're just the baby tree from Blood Meridian
there's a baby tree and then there's baby roasted
on the spit to be eaten in both outer dark
and the road and I know there's more I haven't read
every book by him it's actually really fucked up
that like in school
we read the road for the leaving cert
it was like fucking kidding me
because it was like
what it was comparative English
So it was like, we read the road, we watched children of men, and then we, for the play, read
Brian Freel's translations, which is about like the death of the Irish language because of the
land ordinance surveys of the British Empire in the like late 19th century, early 20th century.
Irish school sounds way more metal than ours.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
I mean, here's what I would say.
The road is the only book that has ever actually scared me.
in my adult life. I couldn't put it down. I was in Fayetteville, North Carolina when I read it.
I read it in one go. And then, thankfully, it was air conditioning season. I made sure all my windows
and doors were locked. And I was like, damn, I should own a gun. Like, that book scared the
fuck out of me. That is an incredible book. I have a funny version of the road story as well.
Our show's wonderful producer, Ani, saw me reading Blood Meridian and asked if there's anything else
by Cormmouth McCarthy that she should read.
And the only other book that I owned by him was The Road.
I was like, yeah, you should read The Road.
And she was so bad at me afterwards.
She did like the book, but she's like, I didn't warn her about anything that was inside of it.
There are three really, really good post-apocalyptic books that I can describe in terms
and they have different approaches.
But the road is one, Station 11's another, and The Parable of the Sower is another.
All three of these have something and then that's terrifying.
But the road is like, as I've used this metaphor before,
for the road is just like drinking the concentrated
Coca-Cola syrup they put in the drink
fountain machine of like terror and horror
and just like stress
because it's like what would you do in the apocalypse?
You'd be standing guard over your child trying to
keep warm constantly because everyone would be trying to kill
and eat you. And thinking about saving
ammunition in case you have to kill
both your child and then yourself.
Yep. Yeah. To prevent them being
feel dressed and boiled and eaten.
Which happens and well not to the characters,
but. But the history of the Texas
Revolution really began with Mexican Texas.
then part of the larger Spanish
Empire. We talked about this before
on our episode of the Battle of Medina
so I really don't want to go
over it again. I will,
but not as much at length. Consider that
a supplement to this episode. I feel like this is
a missing branding of like, instead
of calling themselves like Texicans,
should have called it like Mexus.
Mexis sounds a lot like
Hexas, the villain from the 90s
like pro-environmentalism animated movie
Furngoley. Oh fuck, you're right.
What is Texas after all that a strange goop of oil climbing through the trees?
Yeah, they got locked away in a fucked up tree for like a thousand years.
Mothersmilk.
But to make a very long story short,
Spain was doing a very, very bad job running its Mexican holdings,
which by extension also meant Texas.
So bad to the point there are multiple governments all trying to minister the land,
Mexican uprising, Spanish uprisings,
Tejano uprisings,
and American freebooters all either,
fighting one another, fighting the state, and sometimes uniting together for brief amounts of time
to fight someone. But most of these struggles collapsed hilariously. Again, go listen to our
episode called The Battle of Medina. Another key part was the American interest in Texas.
As a whole, the U.S. government at the time insisted that it was supposed to be included in the Louisiana
purchase. Obviously, Spain disagreed. America eventually backed off those claims, at least officially,
but a certain brand of Americans never did. Hence all the freebooters, who were kind of indirectly,
but also sometimes directly supported by the United States government. Then following the Mexican
victory in the War of Independence in 1820s, Mexico broke free from Spain, and with it, so did Texas.
Texas, as we all know, is a massive piece of territory. But in 1821, it was barely populated at all.
The majority were groups of Native Americans, of numbers were not entirely sure of for obvious reasons, but it was tens of thousands, probably.
Now, they were considered as much of a problem to the new Mexican government as they would have been to any given American state.
The new Mexican first empire for a brief little spell there and then Republic treated Native Americans within Mexican territory virtually the same way as Americans did.
Settlers at this point in history in Texas were mostly Mexican and also previous
Spaniards as well, because the Spanish government and the new Mexican government tried
desperately to encourage Mexicans and Spaniards to settle Texas.
Some of them had.
They and their descendants would eventually be collectively known as Tejanos, which is what I'm
going to be calling them for the rest of this.
It just means people born and raised in Texas.
It literally just means Texan in Spanish.
Yeah.
But specifically not Anglo-Texan, because they call themselves Texan and sometimes Texians.
Yeah, I remember that.
And for the purpose of this, I'm calling them Texans.
Okay.
So, Tejanos are Hispanic descendants, born and raised in Texas.
Texans, Anglo-Texans, mostly from the United States.
I was going to say, like, I, you know, obviously Texas is like such a huge state.
And I have been to very few parts of the U.S., but I really,
the way I figured out how big Texas is years ago was I was reading a really good book about ZZ Top, the only good thing to ever come out of Texas. And like Billy Givens talking about, yeah, like the early years of my career was just playing in Texas. Yeah. And it's like you could make a career never leaving the stay of like just going from like place to place to place and not playing the same place for like six months to a year. It's true.
For the period that I lived in Texas, I was introduced to the wonderful genre of outlaw
country, which is the only genre of country I like.
But there's outlaw country singers who are effectively celebrities in Texas and maybe
only people in Oklahoma have ever heard of them.
It's also like Tahano music.
When you think about Selena, how much of it.
Yeah, exactly.
And because it's its own ecosystem.
And of course, nowadays, the population of the state is fucking massive.
So it can support that kind of thing.
And 90% of them are all stand-up comedians.
only in Austin
but how in the fuck
are you going to say
that the Zee Topper
the only good thing
to come out of Texas
when literally all
of like UGK
Bunby, Pimpsey
yeah true
actually sorry
Paul Wall
all Houston rap
no man
that's okay
nothing ever good
came out of Dallas
I'll fucking say
that one with my chest
but come on
this is another argument
for the Bucky's
Revolutionary Council
of Colleen
yeah
however these
settlement encouragement
ideas for both
the Spaniards
and then the Mexicans
never really worked out. This is despite the fact they gave them massive swaths of land
if you said you wanted to settle there, completely tax-free to include money to build a house
and a plantation there, stuff like that. They really did try to encourage people to move to Texas,
but it didn't take for one simple reason. Texas was a hard fucking place to scratch out in existence
that even with all the government assistance, most people did not see this worth the effort.
And by the time the Spanish Empire exited Mexico, only about 3,500 people settled the whole of Texas.
Now, that number does not count the native population.
But like settlement wise, less than a stadium's worth of people.
Yeah.
We have been to concerts with more people in the audience.
Well, I would point this out too that it's not the same period, but it's a similar vibe.
Actually, to some extent, it's close, which is another place that people are like, wow, big.
needs colonists, needs European colonists, is Australia. And similarly, if you actually read
historical documents about what it was like to be a pioneer settler in Australia, you know,
convict transported labor, it's horrible. It sucks. No one would have gone there if they weren't
forced to, you know, by the, by the English. And so similarly with this, it's like, it's genuinely,
it's like, yeah, it's just a really, it's a beautiful landscape is a hard fucking life out there.
And this is pre everything. You know what I mean? But I mean, like, that's like really in line
with just in general the entire
American Southwest, like, at this time
it was a brutal life. Oh, my God.
Like, it's obviously romanticized in the
modern American mind, but, like,
Frontier Life was fucking horrible.
That's why all these people
that do take part in Frontier
Life do take part in the Texas Revolution
or all pretty much
the personification of vile
frontiersmen, because they're the only people
that'd survive out there. Yeah. I lived
in New Mexico for three years as a kid and, like,
it's a harsh environment now.
I can only imagine what it would have been like back then.
Yeah.
And the fact that like, you know, it was there's the disease, the isolation, the extremes of the
temperature, the weather, you know, the climate pests, disease, you are encroaching on place
that already has a population who do not want you there and will kill you if they can.
Yeah.
And they often did.
And they often did.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'll stop interrupting.
But you want to read something?
There's a book by Willa Cathar called Death Comes from the Archbishop, which is basically
about like pioneer culture in New Mexico around this time.
And you're like, ah, the environment will kill you.
if anyone offers you shelter in their friendly little hut, they're a serial killer with
thousands of bodies in their yard.
So, like, yeah, that's all you need to know.
And the vast majority of this population was focused around two places, San Antonio de
Bear, which I'm just going to call San Antonio from now on, and Labihia, pretty much the only
two settlements.
Spain decided to try another tactic at one point, knowing there are a lot of Americans
who wanted Texan land, they reached out to an American man named Moses Austin.
That is not who Austin is named for in case you're right.
It is his descendant, but we'll get to there.
Now, Austin made a fortune in the lead industry
before eventually going flat broke
and was forced to go on the run to escape debtors.
During that time, he relocated to Spanish-held upper Louisiana
and with the permission of the Spanish crown,
began to buy a fuckload of slaves,
bring in Americans, start up a mining operation.
That was very profitable until, of course,
that territory suddenly became America.
And then he had to run again,
less he'd be caught up to by all the other dudes he owed money to.
He ended up in Spanish, Texas, and then San Antonio.
Austin was a guy with all, he was with those dudes that always had a hustle up their sleeve, right?
He pitched an idea to the Spanish government, pay me money, and I'll find Americans willing to settle here.
We'll all become Catholic.
We'll swear an oath to the king of Spain.
And we'll learn Spanish.
We'll just become Spaniards.
Spain, despite being very desperate, thought this was kind of nuts.
But not so insane, they wouldn't give it a chance.
So they limited the amount of immigrants that he could bring to 300 families.
No limit on the size of families, mind you.
And agreed to give them 20,000 acres of land because it's Texas and there's a lot of land to go around.
Suddenly a family has 20 to 30 uncles each.
It's all about the onks.
It all comes down to the unks.
Austin found willing settlers surprisingly fast.
But he did it the most American way possible.
This is not going to be some kind of manifest destiny frontier situation.
like we saw in the American West or would see
in the American West in the future.
Rather, Austin hired the
settlers as contracted
employees to what
amounted to be a company town
that he would run as dictator.
He also insisted that everyone
bring as many guns and slaves as they could
in order to make the settlement go as smoothly
as possible. At the time,
Spain, perfectly fine with slavery.
Mexico wouldn't be quite so
fine with it in the future, but for now
Spain's like, yeah, totally fine.
as many slaves as you could pack on your wagons.
Sorry, seor.
It's totally okay to own slaves,
but you cannot dance
after 9 p.m. or marry
your cousin, it's not okay.
But before the plan could be carried out,
Austin dropped dead and left the entire
project to his son, Stephen Austin.
Oh, I thought his son was going to be called Austin backshots.
Austin Austin.
I love the idea that there's just, yeah,
there's already a culture of just all
naming your kids after Texan things before
Texas even exists. It's just like,
People just show up and they're just like the spirit of, I don't know, fucking, you know the kind of guy that Hank Hill is based on except gross and mean and not redeeming it anyway.
It's like, that spirit has always existed in Texas.
And if you go there, you got possessed by it, you just decide to start calling your kid Reagan.
You don't know why.
This is my daughter Reagan, my son, Houston and my dog, Stephanie.
Like, I'm thinking about like the type of people who would have, I suppose, like, eeked out some sort of life in Texas at the time.
And the only...
They were rough dudes.
But see, the only thing
that I can kind of compare them to
is what we talked about
in the first Boer War series
of like those type of insane people
who's like, yes,
the wilderness is the only thing
I can live in
because the world is changing at a pace
that I just can't deal with.
I must go and like fight with God
and nature to survive.
I will say there's a lot of
connective tissue
between the first Anglo-Texans
and the Bowers.
They have a lot in fucking comment.
Austin took the mantle of the new settlement boss and led his several hundred Americans towards San Antonio.
But when they're about halfway there, Mexico became independent.
Therefore, so did Texas and their deal with the Spanish crown was now moot.
This is where Austin meets a man named Jose Antonio Navarro, a self-educated lawyer from a former Spanish noble family.
Self-educated lawyer.
That is a career path that does not exist anymore.
Technically it does in California.
where you can, like, study for the bar.
Okay.
Like, it is a weird apprenticeship that only rich people like Kim Kardashian can do.
Okay.
And not pass the bar, of course.
I love the idea that you just go into a court and you just start winging it and
freestyling it.
And some people are like, damn, he's got that fire.
He's got that dog in him.
He's good.
I doesn't know shit about case law.
And also, like, how are they going to prove you wrong if you just rock up like,
I'm a lawyer?
You can look him up on the internet?
Like, no, he's wearing a tie.
He's probably a lawyer.
Now, my word to the jury, have you not considered my client?
is based and cool and is not guilty at all.
Have I introduced you to a thing called settler colonialism?
Have you considered that the guilty party is gay?
Navarro quickly acted as a go-between for the settlers and the new Mexican government.
The Mexican government really didn't want to honor the deal made with the Spanish and instead
wanted, you know, an actual functional immigration system to be put in place rather than
like a buy-in system, like the world's first golden visa.
However, Navarro and Austin eventually went to Mexico City to plead their case, which
about it to, look, nobody else wants to live there.
Why not let us?
And for the Mexican government, there's a lot more at play here.
They saw three major threats to their new borders.
And most importantly, to the context of our series, Texas.
The first was the native population, who obviously did not give a shit who said
was in charge.
they wanted to run their own lives
and communities because that's their
fucking right. They don't belong to
Mexico. They don't belong to United States.
They don't belong to Texas. They want to
belong to their own communities like they always have.
Now, this is obviously a problem for the Mexican
government because they were completely
broke. They could not fund any kind
of military operation to suppress the natives.
So Austin, ever
the huckster just like his dad,
sold the Mexican government on the idea.
It's like, look, you give us the tracks of
land. We'll bring our own guns and we'll handle that
problem for you. The second was Mexico's economy was awful post-independence and it would take
a very long time to recover. The Mexican government figured, hey, if we plan a bunch of Americans
on the American border, they'll facilitate trade with the United States, which will in turn
help us out. The third threat was America. It was not that long ago prior to Mexican independence
that the United States officially claimed Texas. And only a short time after that did they
renounce those claims? Again, only officially.
Most people in Washington and the American media were talking about how Texas was rightfully
the United States property.
But Texas thought, well, they won't invade us if we put something of a meat buffer of
Americans between us and them.
We're kind of good at being that, aren't we?
It's just sort of like, it's like a come second nature does.
I want to be a buffer zone so bad.
Please make jokes about the meat wave, but what if you're the breaker for the meat wave?
You are the meat breaker.
You are, they're like a breakwater.
Like, yeah, exactly.
They build a sea wall out of meat to stop.
stop the tide, and it's like, yeah, take that metaphor as far as it'll go.
There's lots of Americans, and most of them are flying with getting killed.
That's why we are the way we are.
Please, Daddy, stack up my meat wall.
Yeah, once again, as a point I have made before as Americans are so comfortable with the concept of jihad, but not the name.
So, before long, these first American settlers made their home around the Colorado and Brazos Rivers.
But there is no shortage of Americans willing to take the leap, packed their shit,
I moved to Texas at the drop of a hat, I assume a very large cowboy hat.
America was reeling at a time from something called the 1819 panic.
It was America's first real financial meltdown.
It was caused mostly by a larger global impact from the Napoleonic Wars.
The panic impacted everyone, but it impacted the cotton industry in the South, especially badly.
Meaning the vast majority of people lining up across the border and become Texans were southern plantation owners.
Ah.
In Texas, they saw cheap land, virtually free land as far as the eye can see.
A government scheme that required them to pay absolutely zero taxes for a couple of years
and away out from like their crippling bank debt.
It would not follow them to Texas.
It was a sweet deal and it was too good to turn down.
I do declare it is so beautiful to get away from the heat and the humidity and the bailiffs of New Orleans.
Yeah, they did the same thing every eight.
18 year old enlistee and the military does had accidentally built their entire
existence around a pile of like Camaro is a 20% interest.
And instead of being from Texas like that guy's out, they fled to Texas.
More and more settlement licenses were given to Austin, who in turn sold them to prospective
settlers, who were given huge quantities of land, but specifically in places where the Mexican
government thought they would be most at threat from the native population.
They're like, oh, there's a huge population of Cherokee there.
Let's put Steve in the Georgians right next to them.
They'll handle each other.
Like, what is the kind of like average size of like land holdings that like people are being given?
Thousands of acres.
Fuck.
Yeah.
That's a lot of land.
It's a lot of land to surveil.
What would happen was the government wanted to do it like community at a time.
Okay.
So like a group of plantation owners mostly from the south would get together and buy a license.
That license would be tens of thousands of acres to move in and start a whole.
community. Okay. And then they would then part it out to the different plantation owners because
it, Mexican's idea is, oh, we just drop a town right next to where the Cherokees are living
and then drop a town here, then drop a town there. And then they would just be on their own
sink or swim. Most of the settlements were wild successes. And by that I mean, violent as fuck.
Though through this early process, all settlers were required by law to learn Spanish,
become Mexican citizens and convert to Catholicism.
And in the first couple waves of settlers, they did do this.
However, the Mexican government was not looking to just give away all of the land of Texas
to white dudes from Alabama.
While they were allowing a few hundred in at a time,
they were also trying to pass more laws to encourage people from the rest of Mexico
to take the same land deal but with a few more benefits on top.
But again, they didn't fucking want to.
It was a hard deal to take.
And most importantly, remember the kind of people that are moving from the United States,
plantation owners who own slaves, they have money.
It's easy for them to move in and kind of pop up a community without killing themselves to do it.
That's not to say it wasn't wildly difficult, but they had the means.
Your average Mexican citizen did not have those same means, no matter how many benefits the
governments offered them.
So American land speculators began bribing Mexican nationals to take the government deal
and then in turn, give them the land grants.
Ah.
And this still wasn't enough
because, of course,
the Mexican government picked up on this.
Like, wow, we're selling a lot of land
and then there's still no Mexicans there.
Weird how that's happening.
Just a guy standing in front of you
and you're looking at the clipboard.
And it's like,
so it says your name is Jose Hernandez.
Do de est al la plantation?
Oh, yeah.
See, sir.
It's like an inglorious passers when...
Speak the third best Spanish.
Oh, is it Brad Pitt has to like, he can speak German.
He speaks Italian. Italian, Italian, Italian, sorry.
Boniorno.
Boniorno.
Yeah, it's bad.
So, again, the Mexican government tries to limit this, meaning Americans are hitting more
red tape.
And rather than waiting or continue to bribe people, waves of American settlers simply
move in without permission.
Instead of really trying to stop this because the Mexican government really
lacked the physical ability to do so, the government just let all the government just let
Austin govern these people as a government within a government.
He was quite literally allowed to be a dictator, absolute authority on all colonial
matters, just shy of capital punishment.
He was allowed to pass his own laws and they were expected to follow those completely
independent of the Mexican constitution or judiciary.
And he tried to run these colonies in a very Puritan manner.
Like he passed laws on drinking, no swearing, no gambling.
and he wildly underestimated the kind of people
who wanted to move to the Texan frontier
because they ignored this shit immediately.
Yeah.
Mexico left him in complete control
of a settler militia to fight the local native people as well.
And this militia was called the Ranger Company.
That might sound familiar
because this is considered the precursor to the Texas Rangers
who was ran like a literal death squad,
just like the Texas Rangers were.
They effectively became the main genocetal engine
for Mexican settler colonialism within Texas through these early years.
Within a year, American settlers in Texas outnumbered the original Tejano population by like two to one.
And remember how I said the vast majority of settlers were from the South?
Well, not only did they bring cotton plantations and slaves to Texas,
but they brought their already existing racial prejudices and ideas of racial hierarchy,
which didn't really exist in the Spanish Empire in that capacity.
obviously the Spaniards had slaves
and they saw anyone outside of that
as generally fine
like they didn't really see the difference
between like Tejano's and Mexicans or Spaniards
because they were generally the same people
according to Spain
the Americans did not see things that way
one of the key part of the settlement agreements
was that the Mexican government required
any new settlers to respect the lands
and titles that already existed
from Tejanos or Mexicans
from Spaniards that were given
either during the Spanish Empire
assuming that person supported
the Mexican War of Independence
and then the Mexican Republic
and or Empire.
So in 1825,
the leader of one colony near Nagadoches,
a guy named Hayden Edwards,
decided to just ignore that
and decree that any Teano's living in this area
need to vacate their land
and make room for new American settlers.
The Mexican government point out that,
hey, you can't do that.
To which Edwards and a portion of his colonists
reacted in a very normal,
well thought out way by suddenly declaring the colony a free and independent state called the
Republic of Fredonia. It's like a kind of name that like you expect some like libertarian
micro state to have in the modern days. Like no, we're Friedonia. Or some like really, really low rent
sci-fi author. Yeah. Yeah. Hey, I'm sitting right here. I would say a third option is like city and I don't
like founded in Illinois in the 1805 that really thought it was going to be the capital and it just
winds up being just like two-part cars in a shipping container and a lot of heroin.
I mean, that's also most of the places we're going to talk about here in modern-day Texas.
But they're weirder. They're weirder in ways that without riffing too hard and derailing,
I'm just saying Texas, Texas weird, especially Texas panhandle weird.
Oh, it's a different brand of weird.
Whoa.
Edwards militia arrested a couple Mexican civil servants and the local Cherokee people agreed to
recognize the state if Edwards agreed to leave them alone and run themselves.
So they met with Edwards and the chief that made the deal quickly, like, changed their mind upon meeting him.
Like, this guy's a real fucking asshole.
So he goes back to his tribe and his tribe on the flip-flopping of this deal, getting them involved in quite possibly being more suppressed by the Mexican government and or the settlers.
Then murder their chief for getting them involved.
So, yeah, they police themselves quite effectively.
Austin was so mad at Edwards that he deployed his volition to work side by aside with the Mexican army, Tomarchin, and
end the whole thing. Ferdonia fell without a shot being fired, and Edwards flipped back across
the border to the United States. This could have been a story about a single prick getting all
uppity and getting kicked down, which is pretty much what it was. After all, Austin, despite his
many flaws, was true to his word. He helped the Mexicans stop this idiotic rebellion. And this wasn't
even the first time that Austin and his settler militia mustered forces to defend Mexico.
In 1829, the Spanish attempted to reinvade and re-conquer Mexico.
They failed, but Austin's militiamen were fighting side-by-side with the Mexicans against the Spaniards.
At this point, Austin was a true believer in his deal with the government.
There's no doubt that even as a settler-colonial slave voting dickhead, he was actually a man of his word.
At this point, however, to the Mexican government, it was only further proof that the settlers could not be trusted.
They believed that Edwards was an agent of the United States.
another freebooter sent in to start shit and steal from Mexico. And to be fair, like I said,
the U.S. government and multiple presidents, Congresspeople, you name it, had reached out to Mexico
to offer to buy Texas from them in cash like it was a used car. Not to mention, it was a very
popular belief within the United States at the time publicly through the media, through the government
statements, you name it, that Texas was rightfully American. So it really does make sense as to why
the early Mexican government would think
that Edwards was something of a
proto-CIA agent sent in to start shit up.
So in response, the Mexican government
ordered an expedition to go around to
all the colonies and just kind of
check out what's going on there for the first
time. Like, let's see what these fucking
white people are up to. They hadn't done
this yet. Hey, whiteys, y'all
chill. Like, y'all cool.
You're supposed to speak Spanish, right?
And then you just gets greeted by a wave
of the most horrific slurs ever
seated Texas up until that point.
Hello, brother.
How's das?
Yeha.
Uh-oh.
That's where...
Kiyomda's way.
Hey, way.
All I can think of is fucking...
is El Mariachi.
It's fucking goddamn.
Texas has its positives, but yeah, this part of Texas culture is just like...
Yeah.
I lived in Texas for a long time, and I'm not going to say I hated it.
Like, I...
Of course, this is a long time ago.
Texas is very different now, at least from my understanding.
I had a positive experience.
living in Texas. Question for the table. Is Texan chili the one with the beans or without the beans?
No, it has beans. It has beans. I thought Texas chili was always the one that was meat only.
Because beans is normal basically everywhere else. You can get me if I'm wrong, then I'll be wrong
for the permanent record. But I always thought Texas chili didn't have beans. All right, I stand
corrected. Texas chili traditions dictate no beans or tomatoes. So it's very similar to Pizzoli.
It's amazing stuff. I won't derail it. But yeah.
good to put on top of a hot dog, but that's the
Detroiter and me coming out. Well, I mean, I'm a
fucking, come on, man. It's all sorts of mishmashed
shit for me. I love throwing, making chili and
putting it on rice, which some places in the
southwest do that. Other places are like,
that's like, I don't know, that's like putting ketchup on a
fucking ice cream Sunday. Like, you know, so.
Well, if they're not putting on rice,
water, what do they eat it with? Just the
chili. Eat the chili like a stew.
Yeah. Yeah. Bread.
Cornbread.
Tortillas, dried, like, tortilla. Because like tortilla chips,
I mean, it really kind of comes just like dry tortilla
Cracker's shit, but, you know, there's all scraps of bread adjacent stuff in that food that
you can use to scoop things up with. It's good. I like food in Texas is slapping Texan
barbecue is good. Mexican food is solid. Yeah, exactly. And Texan X X one is done by Texanx
people can be fucking amazing. It's good. Yeah. I mean, we've argued about this on the show for
years, but Nick and I and some other co-hosts of mine have argued that Mexican food in Texas
is better than in California. Okay. And that was something that I think was the closest Nick ever came
to actually throw it down with me about?
I mean, it's, it's obviously like you can get some,
you can get some, some Taco Bell adjacent shit,
but like you can get really good stuff, but also like, I don't know, man.
Same thing with Arizona. Like, I love Sonoran food.
And like, Arizona's basically next to Sonora.
So like you get a lot of it there.
Um, you know, you get a lot of from Mexico, especially like,
like, Serenio food. Like, you get a lot of stuff from Bah, California.
I don't know, it's, it's great. It's great everywhere. It's different everywhere.
You got actually, but you got to go to the place where it basically looks like
somebody fucking cut a hole in a school and they're selling tacos out of it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I used to buy empanadas and breakfast tacos from someone's balcony.
Oh, yeah, you told me about this the other day.
And it was the best I've ever had.
I invite all of our fans from the southwestern states to just argue amongst themselves
in the comments.
I'm going to leave you with one thing really quickly.
And then I'm going to start coughing and be quiet because I'm sick.
One time when I first got back from Honduras, I lived there for six months.
I was deployed there.
I learned Spanish and I learned it pretty well because fucking I already speak French.
And there was a Puerto Rican ladies at Fort Richardson, Alaska in like one of the post
buildings.
and they had like a little coffee shop kiosk and they sold empanadas. And I asked them, I, you know,
I said to them, obviously in English in uniform, looking like me, red hair, pale as fuck,
El Blanky Tito. And I was like, could I get my, my, I know the guys in my office have never had
empanadas before. A lot of them haven't. Could I get like, I don't know, like 20 of them.
And she's like, yeah, because normally they tell them like one or two at a time.
I was like, if that's cool, like, I don't want to take all your stuff. They're like,
no, it's fine. And then the girl turns to the other one that's been. She's like, just
give them the really small ones. Like, that'll be fine. And then I was like, I basically said
in Spanish.
Like, it's not a problem.
Either way, I don't mind paying more.
She looked at me just dead.
She's like,
Que verguenza.
Like, what shame?
I was like, I said to her,
I'm like, don't worry,
no one would ever assume I speak Spanish is okay.
Unless you lived in Argentina or something.
Or quite frankly, in Central America,
there's white as fuck people you meet them there.
You know, most of them are Mennonites,
but it exists.
Previous to this, the Mexican government had passed
what could be considered slavery reform
rather than abolishing
it out right. Love reforms. Love a reform. Of all the institutions that don't need reform,
unless you consider abolishment a kind of reform. It allowed slaves to be in the colonies,
but it ordered to be shift away from American chattel slavery. By that, I mean slaves could only
be on a contractual basis for six months at a time, and by the end of it, they had to be released,
rather than a lifetime of bondage, and then that status being passed down to their children.
like the American model.
No slaves could be bought or sold within Mexico.
And while children could be slaves,
they fell under the same rule of six months only
or to their 14th birthday.
Colonies swore up and down that they were following this law.
But when that expedition went to check on some colonies,
they discovered not a single fucking one of them were following that.
They just had tons of slaves.
The settlers had imported American chattel slavery and simply lied about it.
Furthermore, the expedition found that nobody was
speaking Spanish, none of them were Catholic, and only a small fraction of the settlers were
even there legally at all. So by 1829, Mexico abolished slavery, which panicked Austin. He was worried
that once word got out, the columnist would revolt. So Austin went to the government of the
Texas territory and pleaded his case that slavery was the only thing keeping the Texan economy going.
And I should point out here, he was not wrong. The Texan territorial government and the Mexican
government had allowed the economy to be completely slavery driven and reaped massive benefits
from it for years at this point. The governor agreed and turned to explain to the Mexican
present, Anastasio Bustamante, who you might remember from our pastry war episode, that like,
hey, you got to give us something. If you take away slaves, we're fucked. So Bustamante backpedaled
banning slavery in Mexico, everywhere other than Texas, who would get a one-year reprieve to give
them a chance to figure out something else to recoup their losses and whatever.
You can almost certainly guess where this is going.
Not well.
I mean,
slavers are famous for when given a timeline to come up with a new economic model
are famous for just abandoning slavery, right?
Not simply coming up with a new way to do slavery,
like buying spice or like fake weed at the gas station.
They, oh, no, they banned the last chemical compound.
This is a new way.
one. It's perfectly legal.
That's effectively what the
slavers in Texas did. They dialed
the evil up to 11.
They forced their slaves to send a lifelong
contract of indentured servitude.
An indentured servitude was technically
legal in Mexico.
The contracts include a fake
astronomical amount of debt the slaves owed
to their slave master and listed
daily wages so small it would
never be able to be mathematically paid back
over the course of the entire lifetime.
There's also a clause that
the debt was inherited
meaning chattel slavery
through indentured servitude
Yep
Also your child
When put in chains upon birth
Because you can't pay back your debt
Cannot begin accruing money
Towards the debt
Until they're 18
That way when Mexican inspectors
Came around to see if settlers
Are following the rules
They'd be like
No sir, that's not my slave
He's legally an employee
Let me show you my books
Yeah
Just like nowadays like
No I don't need
I don't need to give them benefits
That person's an employee
they're an independent contractor.
This system will unspeakably evil
was a boon to the settlers
and the territorial government
who could point to the settlements
as the main economic drivers
for the entire territory,
which were now also following the law.
But this only pissed off
Bustamante further.
He saw immediately what they were doing
because like indentured servitude
for life in Mexico was not a thing.
Yeah.
But it was not technically illegal.
It was solidly in the
Ray. Yeah. So they consulted like a, you know, a self-taught Texan lawyer. The most evil man to ever walk of the earth. I'm just your simple Texan slavery attorney. Oh, God. The self-taught Texan slavery attorney is just like such a deeply evil concept. It's like, well, we can't own them, but we can't own their debt. Which we have also invented. That guy today just works for something called like the Freedom Research Institute.
Yeah, like...
Or McKinsey.
Yeah, and it's like, oh, how can we leverage like...
Oh, God, it's Texan-McKinsey.
It's Texan Pete Buttigieg.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's like, I...
Because growing up in Ireland, Ireland doesn't have like a credit score system.
It's one of the like handful of countries that doesn't.
And it's like when I moved to the UK and had to contend with, oh, I suddenly have a credit
score that I have to maintain, but also build...
Maintain through constant unrelenting debt.
Yeah, and it's like, you know, in Ireland,
you don't most people don't have credit cards like it's just like you just pay with what you have
and like if you have to get a mortgage you have to like have the sufficient money and sufficient
money coming in to like pay the deposit but also make the payments but it's like being in the
UK and like seeing how much debt people go into is insane like the amount of people who like
just buy anything on clara and it's like that is something that's so strange even as an
American, that's weird to me, that like everything in the UK's debt base, we're like,
obviously the US, we have mortgages, car payments, student loans, like, everybody isn't trapped
by these things. But like, you're not like financing like a roasted chicken. Like, I have a big
holiday plan for next year. And it's going to be my first time ever in Asia. But I, like, was
having a conversation with someone. And it was like talking about like, oh, you know, I'm putting
money away, you know, each month. So I can like, you know, have it all paid for.
and I go and have cash to spend and everything.
And he was just like, why don't you just pay for it on your credit card?
And I was like, one, I don't own a credit card and two, are you fucking insane?
I've never owned a credit card.
And it's like when I was young, I remember I started my first bank account when I was 17
because I had to to enlist in the army.
And they wanted to give me a credit and a debit card.
Yep.
And that was like the one thing my mom told me because we grew up very, very poor and she grew
up like bouncing from one credit card to another to try to make so we could survive.
and she's like never own a credit card and I still I'm 37 and I mean yeah I also don't live
in the United States anymore and it's that so much of a thing here either but I've never owned one
small victories I find it like absolutely baffling like him just saying is like oh why don't
you just pay for it on credit card and it's like it like someone flipped a switch in my mind or
realized like oh all the people that like I know that are like going on holidays or like doing
XYZ is like they're paying for it all on credit and accruing massive amounts of debt and just
making the monthly minimum payments,
I'm like,
which will never pay them off by design.
I would just prefer not to do that stuff
and not be in debt.
Yep, yep.
The evil Texan slavery attorney's like,
what if the whole country was ran by Klarna?
What if we turn the entire state into Klarna?
And we also use the people as currency.
Yeah, pretty much.
So Boost Monte gets pissed.
He comes up with new ways
to try to discourage settlement to Texas.
and to effectively hurt their financial base,
which is admittedly kind of like shooting yourself from the foot
to spite your other foot
when he could have just used the Mexican government
to get rid of this.
But also it's assuming as well,
like the people who are like settling there,
like you said before they had money,
but also were like taking on debt to like set up these.
So like it's just a circle of people owing money
is that like the people at the very bottom
are people who are essentially slaves who own
who owe money to the plantation owners
who then owe money to whoever set up the community
who then owes money to whoever gave them the money to move there
and all of them are running from deaths in the like the southern United States
yeah so Boostamonte slashes all the benefits
that were given to the original settlers like you have to be taxes now
you don't get like cheap land anymore trying to slow down immigration
so the Americans now stop trying to apply for land licenses
they just poured over the border illegally
bringing their not slave slaves.
Americans pouring into Mexico illegally?
Yeah, that is the basis of the Texan revolution.
You laugh, but that's also a thing that's happening now
where people are getting told to go back to America
because they're like, damn, Mexico rules and it's cheaper than America
and health care is affordable.
Mexicans are like, you don't have legal status here.
Bye.
Yeah.
My personal favorite is like Vietnam War veterans going to Vietnam.
They'll live off of their pension.
Yep.
But when Booz de Monte put tariffs in place
between specifically Texas
and the United States
he just created a whole network of smuggling
by the 1830s
tens of thousands of Americans
had illegally immigrated into Texas
and even their slaves that they
brought with them outnumbered the
original Tejano population in the state
this massive population of settlers
treated the Tejano population
like they were outsiders and second class
citizens despite the fact that they were the actual
citizens in the situation
they ignored the Mexican government officials
who try to tell them what to do, seeing them as not racially being allowed to be their superior.
And this is something that Mexican civil servants constantly complained about was like,
these people will never see us as their superiors, regardless of our position.
Like, they're all insanely racist.
Like, the letters going from the Mexican government to the territory of Texas government
are hilarious.
They're like so confused about what these people believe in.
They're all like uncouth frontiersmen.
and they're like, they're saying that I'm subordinate?
Like, this guy has it bathed in months.
Once again, what does this remind us of?
Yeah, it's just the boershit all over again.
Yeah.
It's Yee-Ha boershit instead of silent Protestant contemplation boership.
Yeah, and then eventually we would come to have to suffer through the Texan bore,
aka Elon Musk.
Yeah, that's why he moved to Texas.
You're basically just saying is that at a certain point,
white settler colonialists, if your ass gets unwashed enough,
become a boar?
Yeah.
That's like,
bore is kind of like,
it's like a superlative state
of being nasty.
Well,
if you're,
you also have to learn Dutch.
Mm-hmm.
That's the hardest part.
You're not really doing yourself
a lot of favors
with countering my argument
that it's a superlative state
of being nasty when you talk about how to learn nasty.
This is the paradox of the ass carapus
is that like you develop a fine enough crust that's thick enough.
It's protective from,
you know,
outside assault,
but it unfortunately seeps into your psyche as well and makes you
spiritually bore. I think the difference
between the two ass carapuses, right?
Is like the Boer Ascarapis is made out of
Boerverse. It's made out of
like Bill Tong. Like Bill Tong. Whereas
the Texan ass carapis
is like mesquite barbecue and shit.
It's made out of chili with no beans. Yeah, exactly.
You have to get a good look at the
ass carapis to be able to tell
what kind of settler they are. You don't want that much fiber.
You don't want that much fiber because if you do have
fiber that you might be, you might literally
burst your ass carapis from the inside.
You don't want that.
However, as a result of the Mexican government investigation into the colonies, one thing was
recommended in order to control them. Established military garrisons near many of the settlements
to police them. These garrisons would be a show of force from the government, as well as
to collect taxes and customs the settlers are purposely avoiding. Between 1828 and 1830, several
of these garrisons were built around the settlement areas and ports, with the garrison
commander of each fort being in charge of law and order in a specific region. And as you can
imagine the quality of these commanders varied wildly. Some were completely in with the settlers because
the settlers would bribe them. Others just took part in the illegal smuggling because it was very
lucrative. And then there were others like Juan Davis Bradbird of Galveston Bay Fort who was absolutely
a notorious hard ass. He was like, no, you will follow the law, which is interesting because
you may have picked up from his surname Bradburn. He was not a Tejano. He was not born and raised in
Mexico. He was from the United States. He had built a massive fortune in the slave trade before
joining the expedition that would eventually into the Battle of Medina. He was one of the few that
survived, and despite that, he joined Mexico's War of Independence against Spain, befriended the
very brief Mexican Emperor Augustine I, and was commissioned an officer in the Mexican army. He
was now commanding a Mexican fort against his fellow Americans, but he demanded they follow
the law. And he raided multiple colonies and freed slaves.
By force, whenever he found them.
He was what the settlers were supposed to be.
But Brad Bird was also hilariously corrupt.
But in ways that would kind of support his mission,
he used government resources to build a kiln in his fort to crank out bricks,
at which point he would sell them to settlers at a cut rate,
but would only sell them to settlers if they built their house near his fort.
Ah.
That way they'd be easier to control.
And of course, he pocketed all the profits of the brick sales.
Kingship. Bradburn also
clashed with local government. The local
government in Texas knew where
their bank accounts were filled from, and that
was from the settling slavers.
They knew that granting
illegal land grants and permits to
illegal settlers was good for them and good
for the economy. So Bradburn
arrested several government workers for
breaking the law on these land permits,
insisting that his authority as
a representative from the Mexican federal government
was greater than theirs in the territory
of Texas. However, each time
he did that, the federal government would release them. So it ended up being like this constant
tug of war over who was actually in charge. This continued between the two sides till 1832.
When Bradburn received a letter listing 10 settlers living in the town of Anahawk,
who were openly agitating for Texas to become an independent state. This is something that
Bradburn long suspected that was happening in colonial circles. So he wasn't surprised. Then a group
of his soldiers was accused of assaulting a woman in the same town. A lot of conflict
stories on this one. It seems to be something did happen. And then that story, you know,
kind of got the colonial game of telephone. It got worse with each retelling. Yeah. So it turned
into another form of tension between the two sides. When the Texans demanded that the soldiers
be turned over to them for justice, Bradburn refused. Because interestingly enough, as the
story goes, in the book the Texian Iliad, which is quite a good read when it comes specifically
to the military history of the revolution and not so much to political aspect of it.
According to the book, this assault happened, and a Texan watched it happen and didn't intervene.
So they lynched that guy for not intervening.
And they insisted that the soldiers be turned over for the same justice.
So, of course, Bradburn refused.
The Texans began forming a militia and openly threatening Bradburn's life.
And remember, they already don't like this guy.
Forming a militia at this point was no longer legal like it once had been.
There was one allowed militia
that was under the command of Austin
per the Mexican government
and individual settlements cannot just pop up
bands of armed white dudes
but they did anyway. So Bradburn
sent in a patrol to arrest its leader
Patrick Jack and
he was arrested but that only pissed
the Texans off more.
They in turn sent their militia to begin
taking up positions inside the town of Anahawk
and demanding the release of Jack
when Bradburn said in dragoons
to see what was going on the militiamen
captured them because he set the dragoons in with the explicit sort of like do not kick off
anything. Okay. So they got Serna by militiam and the dragoons like, well, Captain said not to
cave in these dudes head with my sword. So I guess we're captured. So of course, now the
militia is like, you give us our guy back. We'll give you back your guy. Bradbird decided to cut
this deal and release his prisoners if they release theirs. And the armed men most importantly
had to put their fucking guns down and go home. Everyone seemingly agreed to this. However, the
militia was not united. It was a militia after all. So when some militiamen left
Anahawk, some stayed. Bradburn saw this as a violation of their bargain and threatened
to open fire on them. The militiamen in turn saw that as a violation of their bargain. So
they both started shooting at each other. This is a short firefight. A couple people died on both
sides. But let's put in that for a second because to better understand what's happening next,
you do need to understand what's happening to Mexico at large here. Right before
all this kicked off, Mexico itself
erupted into one of many civil
wars. Valentin Gomez
Farias, a reformer
in the federalist sense of the way,
enacted what was known as the plan
of Vera Cruz in January
1832. This was a plan
for the federalist's military
faction to kind of
strong arm the centralist
Bustamante to allow
federalists into cabinet.
However, it spiraled wildly
out of control and just turned
into an outright war to topple-boostomante altogether.
Several garrisons of the Mexican army declared their allegiance to one side or the other.
And for the sake of our immediate story, Bradburn was a centralist, which makes sense when
you see that he was loyal to the former emperor.
So Mexico is once again destabilized.
Its military is being ripped apart by factions, and now the Texans are starting shit in their
settlements.
After this first so-called Battle of Anahawk, the Texans loudly proclaimed themselves to be
on the side of the federalists because in a federal republic, Texas would be allowed to self-rule
hypothetically, whose military efforts were commanded by General Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana,
who obviously become important here in a little while. But it's important. Remember here
at the very beginning, they're on the same side, though Santa Ana was the fan of any side that allowed
him to come up on top. This will happen like a dozen times. Santa Ana is so interesting to me
because he was president in a very fluid way so many times
that historians cannot agree on how many times Santa Ana was actually president.
It's fucking incredible.
I tried to thread the needle on this for the episode about the pastry war.
And it was like, it's so unbelievably confusing.
Yeah, like sometimes he was president, but we'll get to that as well.
Yeah.
He wanted to be president, but not actually act as president.
He wanted the title, but not to govern.
and this happened a lot.
So, an order goes out from the Texans, a call to arms to gather more militiamen, more guns,
and the several cannons that the Mexican government had given them to better fight the natives.
Bradburn, in turn, called for reinforcements from the rest of the centralist faction military.
However, the other centralist military commanders in the region point out to Bradburn, like, look,
we have enough fucking problems right now.
We need to stop Texas from blowing up and really getting involved.
And these guys really don't seem political.
mostly seem to hate you personally.
Yeah.
So resign your command and everybody will calm down just a little bit.
So Bradburn agreed, but the first officer told to replace him just refuse to take it.
He's like, I don't want nothing to do with that shit.
The second man, a colonel named Jose Dela Pedrus, took command and immediately agreed to
the deal, released all of his prisoners without charge, though he was only in command a few
days before his own garrison rose up against him and declared their loyalty to Santa Ana and
the federalist cause. Meanwhile, the coup eventually worked in Mexico. An interim president, Gomez
Pedraza, was selected to keep the seat warm until elections, which saw Farias elected president
with Santa Ana as vice president. Though I should point out here that even though that the rebellion to
replace Bustamante was over, there are several other rebellions going on throughout Mexico
at the time. Yes. But in the process of all of that happening, the Mexican army was shattered by
several rebellions. They had withdrawn completely from eastern Texas, leaving the settlers as the only
real force in the region.
And for the Texans, this was great.
They saw this as the iron fists of the centralists of Bustamante's type people, leaving them
alone.
They've been defeated.
And now this is what federalist Texas would look like as part of the Republic of Mexico.
They'd be left alone to govern themselves.
They did believe that a federalist republic of Mexico under Santa Ana and Ferris would give them
more rights, namely more representation in government, as Texas to be a state.
And the Texans soon held a political convention to outline their real grievances to the new government.
One of them in present was the legendary, my personal favorite, this entire story in the Texan set of things, Sam Houston.
Now, Sam Houston is a guy that had a very strange life before he washed up in Texas.
He was born in Virginia.
He hated work, hated school, and refused to do either one.
He ran away from home as a teenager and was adopted by the local band of Cherokees for several years.
Oh, hell yeah.
He only left his pretty much officially adopted family
to fight the war of 1812.
After that, he reentered American society.
He apprenticed to be a lawyer
and ran unopposed to be a Texas state representative.
I love the idea of you running off
and being able to convince the local band of Cherokees
to adopt the craziest of crazy white boys.
Like, this is what we lost.
This is what they took from us.
This is what Texas took from us.
Basically, we took from ourselves, basically,
by fucking doing all this shit to horrible shit to Native Americans
because they were willing
to adopt Crazy White Boy,
be like, yes, you can...
Yeah, sure.
Welcome in, buddy.
Welcome in, buddy.
The tents have walls made of animal hides and cloth,
so when you kick and punch them,
it doesn't put a hole in them like it was drywall.
His tribal name was Crazy White Boy.
Yeah.
And in 1827, he became governor of Tennessee.
He was an Andrew Jackson aligned political operative,
and he had a bright future in politics.
That was until he shot a guy in a duel,
got a divorce, and resigned his governor.
After this, he left.
from that high position to just go rejoin his Cherokee family,
where once there, he acted as effectively an advocate as the white guy in the tribe
to go talk to the U.S. and be like, you need to leave them alone.
He was a strong advocate for Native rights, at least in his period of life.
But when he was accused of like a weird vote buying scheme, an official corruption,
instead of submitting himself for an official investigation,
he simply beat the congressman who accused,
him with a cane half to death.
Hell yeah, I can get behind this.
Then he packed his shit and moved to Texas in 1832.
Like, after all of the shit's already blowing it.
When Sam Houston shows up, several people have already been shot.
There's multiple civil wars going on.
He's like, God's country.
How can I make this worse?
Houston and the others penned a Texas state constitution and formally requested the
government allowed Texas to become a federal state within Mexico and send a
delegation to Mexico City to meet with Santa Ana.
who had become president in 1833, with Farias now as his vice president this time around.
Though this period of time, Santa Ana's rule is known as the absentee president,
because, again, he wanted the title of president, but didn't want to govern.
He left everything to his vice president, who was very busy pissing off virtually every conservative in Mexico
by taxing the shit out of the Catholic Church.
He attempted to reform them, ban mandatory tithing, ban official religion.
kind of doing French Revolution shit, which was very, very unpopular.
The Texan delegation was led by an unelected but undisputed leader in the form of John Austin.
Santa Ana was not exactly the most welcoming man to him and blew Austin off.
So Austin got pissed and penned a letter asking the governor of the Texan territory to simply declare it a state on its own.
Not an independent state, but a federal state, which is not how anything works.
But the letter was intercepted.
Santa Ana saw this quite rightly his treason and had Austin.
arrested. In the meantime, the government was wildly unpopular, owing to Farias attempting to find
any way to generate income. There were conservative rebellions throughout the country against him,
and even though he was technically only vice president, he was blamed for virtually everything.
Following this, a law was passed, ordering the arrest of dozens of Mexican politicians,
accusing them of being, quote, unpatriotic. Farias again gets all the blame for this,
but historians generally agree that there was Santa Ana that ordered this. Santa Ana would often do
that where he would come up with a really
unpopular plan, spitball it to
Farias, knowing he would have to be the one that writes it
down, and then when it all blew up
his face, everybody would point at Farias
and say that he fucked up. And Santana's
like, well, he shouldn't have done that.
I mean, it's a great plan.
It worked for him. This
caused conservative elements that were not yet
an open rebellion against the government
to plan to overthrow Farias.
And then Santa Ana joined them.
He was always doing this, to be honest with you.
Yeah, he did this like a dozen times.
This is not even the only time he'd do this during the series.
So just so you can better chart this in your mind.
Santa Ana was a federalist rebel who helped overthrow the government
until conservatives rebelled against him as federalist president,
at which point he abandoned the government and joined the conservative rebellion.
The federalist collapsed very quickly.
Santa Ana wants a federalist rebel himself and now a conservative rebel
who then once again kind of became president of a now centralist government again.
Maybe he just really likes rebellions.
That's where his bag is at.
It seems to be the only thing he was truly good at was being part of the rebellion.
He dissolved virtually every department of government and replaced anyone he could with loyalists.
However, for now, the Mexican constitution would remain in place, at least for a little, while, but consider it mortally wounded at this point.
He ordered all militias in Mexico to disband, disarm, and the total expulsion of every illegal settler in Texas.
Santa Ana is just like spiritually bisexual.
What? It doesn't even make sense.
Play both sides, play all sides, never lose.
Constantly change your mind. Be really annoying.
Charge his phone.
Eat hot chip and life.
Yeah, exactly. If only they had some means of, you know,
plugging in speakers and reproducing sound back in those days,
you would not give this man the ox cord.
So at this point, remember he had jailed Austin,
who was now out of prison by 1835.
But Santa Ana actually did do a lot of things that Austin and the other Texans asked for.
Now, at this point, Texas is officially known Kohia Yateas.
So this is now split into three departments, San Antonio, Nagadoches, and Brazos.
All three of these new Texas departments would have more elected representation.
English should be allowed as an official language.
Nobody was forced to be Catholic anymore.
And so Texas isn't technically a unified body state within Mexico,
but virtually all of their demands are met, right?
But for many Texans, this is simply too little too late.
Austin, released from prison, had changed his politics from being a diehard on Mexico side guy
to simply saying there's no way forward other than independence for the Texan people.
And a lot of Texan leaders were now agreeing with him, including ones that had been elevated
to legitimate power by Santa Ana's departmental reforms.
But this caused friction in Mexico City as Santa Ana was retaining acid.
aspects of federalism, namely in the form of Texas.
Conservatives who put him back in power demanded a return to boost the Monteis
centralism, which Santa Ana simply shrugged and said, yeah, fine.
He's like, yeah, fuck it.
I'm actually not attached to any of these political ideologies, I promise.
Do I get to be president?
Is there any kind of revolution or rebellion on the horizon that it can be involved in?
You betcha.
So he does this.
This causes a federalist uprising in several parts of Mexico.
which Santa Ana and his army brutally crush.
Texas's governor, Augustin Vyska, refused to follow Santa Ana's order to dismiss the state government
and instead ordered a meeting of the territory's political leaders in San Antonio.
However, Vyika himself was arrested before he could make it there.
And Santa Ana appointed a new governor that nobody recognized.
So we have like a Texas anti-Pope situation.
This left Texas itself unsure of what to do next.
Not everyone there wanted to join the growing uprising.
against Santa Ana. However, Santana
fucked up. Vyazka was not in
favor of taking up arms. For example,
prior to his arrest, multiple militias
popped up and he told him all,
cut that shit out. Like, he was on the
side of a peaceful resolution of this, and now
he was in prison.
But now with Vyaska
gone, that left very
agitated Texans as the loudest voice
in the room. Whether they had been in favor
of or not, they were certainly not
in favor of keeping things the way they were.
There's more to this as well. Every
man gathering in San Antonio also
knew what had happened in other parts of Mexico
who had disobeyed Santa Ana.
For example, in the state of Zacatecas,
the Mexican government
effectively allowed soldiers
to have like a two day long
purge as a reward
for their conduct in the
crushing the rebellion. So like
Texans were like, that's going to fucking happen
here if we don't fight them.
So that's certainly on their minds when they gather
to talk about what to do next. And two
of the men present were one, Sagan and William
Travis. Sigein was probably the most interesting of all of them. Unlike almost any other
leader in the Texan inner circle, he was Tejano. He had worked with the Spanish administration.
And Travis was like a lot of other settler leaders, a lawyer from the southern U.S. who ran away
from debts. Eventually he decided to hold a referendum over what exactly what to do, return to Mexican
federalism, submit to Santa Ana's centralism, breakaway entirely, some secret fourth option.
And this became known as the consultation.
But this is not a general referendum, of course.
There's no popular suffrage in Texas.
It would be voted on by delegates.
And they'd have to vote for those delegates first in the various parts of Texas with the consultation scheduled to begin October 15th.
Many people in Texas are worried that Santa Ana would take this a sign of open rebellion, which is exactly what he did.
And we should pause here and point out that the U.S. was not being very quiet on this entire situation either.
both members of the government and the media
were openly calling for Texan independence
at this point. They're painting
Santa Ana as some kind of tyrant, which admittedly
he was. He was a mass
murderer at this point. And Santa Ana
was worried eventually that the US
might militarily get involved
and support the Texans, which
would then mean Mexico's dragged it to open
war with the United States, which he knew
he was not going to win. Yeah.
At least for now, in about
20 years, he would change his mind on that, but
we'll get there. So he believed that
I need to get in there and end this shit before the U.S. gets involved.
So he ordered the military commander of San Antonio,
Colonel Antonio Ugechia, to disarm the Texans.
And one thing that Ugechia did was order the Texans to hand over their heavy weapons,
namely a single cannon in the town of Gonzalez.
The cannon had previously been given to the local militias a few years before
to help them defend the town from native raids.
And Urgechia's men walked in the town, demanded the cannon,
and then got these shit kicked up.
out of them.
So he ordered a hundred dragoons advance on Gonzalez in September and take that fucking
cannon back.
The people in the town mustered a massive defensive force of 18 guys.
Now, these 18 men did do one very smart thing, which is immediately take the ferry that
Ugechay was going to need to cross into the town and keep it on their side of the river.
Because the Guadalupe River is quite large.
You can't just ford that shit, forcing the Mexican forces to be stuck on the
other side and inside the town, the men weren't, like, juicing themselves up for a fight.
This is more of a pride thing.
Ougache was there for the canon, so we'll simply not give it to them.
They disassembled it and buried it.
That is the funniest fucking option.
That's fucking rules, man.
Oh, my God.
Then writers from Gonzalez would in every direction urging local militias to come out and help them.
Several militias answered the call.
However, one militia company coming from Columbia, Texas.
couldn't come to an agreement over who was in command
and said it would be commanded by a committee
with everyone being forced to vote
on every decision. According to the book
Texian Iliad, this is mostly
the fault of men named Robert Coleman
who refused to submit his authority
to anyone else demanding the fact
that, quote, we are all captains.
So fucking spiritual boomhauer
is spiritual Dale. No, no, no, no, no.
Spiritual Dale. This is spiritual
Dale. Definitely not boomhauer.
I don't believe that any one man
should be captain.
meanwhile other militias
like they had to elect their leadership
but it was generally agreed upon
who would be their leadership anyway
the Mexicans who were trying to find
another way to get the cannon
without an open battle
sent a mediator to the town
of Gonzales
a fellow Texan name
best name alert
of the entire series right here
Dr. Lancelot Smithers
No
shut the fuck up
fuck yes
Texan Dr. Lancelot
Smithers
Smithers met with a Texan man named Captain Matthew Old Paint Caldwell
who promised if he returned the next day with the Mexican commander
they'd hash everything out and settle this like gentlemen.
Small problem here though,
this will become a trend throughout the next three episodes
is that just because one militia captain said something
like didn't mean the other militia captains were going to listen to him.
Another captain John Henry Moore called a council of war
to plan an attack on the Mexicans with more writing,
quote, it would not do to bear their own expense to ride the distance they had to meet the
enemy and return home without a fight. They prepared their weapons, dug up the cannon, put it back
together, and began to scrounge up scrap metal to fire out of it because they didn't have any
cannon balls. And on October 1st, the Texans went on the march with 150 men. On the night of
the second, the Texans crossed into the Mexican camp under the cover of darkness, but their
stealth attack was ruined by two things.
A barking dog and
some guy who saw something in the darkness
and took a shot at it.
In the confusion that followed, both sides
blindly fired at each other in the dark
while hitting nobody. The only
casualty was a Texas militiamid
who was thrown from his horse,
landed face first, and broke his nose.
So that's how the Texas revolution
begins. Not with the thundering
of a musket folly, but a very
scared, confused man breaking his face
out of rock. Oh, fuck.
Ow, oh.
They got Dale!
Painting the big number three
on the side of my horse.
Remember Dale's face?
Somebody called Boom Howard.
Both sides took cover as the morning broke
and brought with it a fog
that made it so neither side could really see the other.
The commanders tried to figure out what to do next
because it's important to point out here
that the Mexican captain was not sent there
with the idea of like assaulting the town.
Yeah.
Texans began raiding a local watermelon patch
for food because they were hungry.
And seeing this, the Mexicans ordered a mounted assault using dragoons armed with sabers and lances.
But the Texans quickly withdrew behind a nearby tree line and opened fire,
wounding a Mexican cavalryman and forcing them back.
Then out of nowhere, Dr. Lancelot Smithers reappears in the middle of everyone screaming at them to stop shooting,
so the Texans arrested him.
They eventually release him to act as another parlay between the two sides,
and the Mexican commander sits down
with the Texan commander.
The Mexican commander's orders are very simple.
I'm only here for the cannon.
Give me the cannon.
I'm fucking leaving.
I don't give a shit about your muskets.
The Texans are like,
we're not giving you the fucking cannon.
We need this to defend ourselves from natives
and also you now.
You shot at us.
And the Mexican commander's like,
well, you shot at me first.
And eventually the two sides
literally storm away from each other
because they're about to come to blows.
But the next morning,
the Texan militiamen draw up a banner,
hang it above their cannon
which you've certainly seen
that says simply
come and take it
then they fired the cannon
at the Mexican spitting
nothing but scrap metal and nails
and this was enough
to convince the Mexican captain
I have been outplayed
yeah they're shooting the cannon
at me now I gotta go
my orders were explicitly
not to set this shit off
it is very clearly set off
I'm going home
Dale's over there he's got a fork
in the forehead and that is how
the Battle of Gonzales
ended. Known in the Texian
Iliad as the Lexington
of Texas, the Yehah
heard around the world.
It was not exactly a massive
success or a victory, but
it was a victory, and the
come and take it banner lives in
infamy. Many of the Texans there
that day had been on the fence about a revolution,
but now there was no doubt.
There was no backing down from Santhian
at this point. We just fired a
bucket load of nails at his homie.
We cannot turn back.
things might have been able to be brought down
to a cooler temperature
but one of us ran after Santa Ana
with a sock full of quarters and now we
all have to come together
God damn it Tyler
get down from that fucking canon
for Santa Ana there is no
question that the Texans were now an open
revolt and soon afterward
the glorious victory of
the Battle of Gonzalez
spread far and wide
both within Texas and the
United States and soon
thousands of volunteers
were flooding both within
and over the border to offer
their services. The Texas
revolution had officially begun
and that's where we'll pick up next
time. Yay-haw!
Ye'all!
Y'all. All y'all are
fucking crazy. All y'all are off the hook.
I'm going to say. I'm going to show up to the
next recording, dressed like J.B. Monnie.
It's important to
point out here that just so you could better envision
how these militias look, we'll talk
about this a bit more later, but there's frontiersmen look at the most frontiers like you've
ever seen in buckskins and coon hats. There's dudes in like three-piece suits and top hats,
like plantation odors. There's, uh, Tejano's dressed exactly like the Mexicans to the point
that they like wear a little arm band so people can tell the difference. Um, it's wild out there,
man. I am so excited for the next three parts. I'll come for the next one, probably having to go to
the doctor and get put on promethazine so I will get to be chopped and screwed.
Nate,
sip it on that traditional Texan beverage of lean.
Yeah,
I'm going to take,
yeah,
permethasine cough syrup,
that Swiss soda that's made out of fucking milkway and a little recula throat
drop and put it together,
shake it up.
Got my purple,
actually not purple drink.
It'll be like brown drink.
Oh,
the drink,
sip it on that sewage.
The text max drank where you put
the promethazine in and then you just put
a scoop of smooth chili
over ice.
Yehaw!
Yeah, man. That's just called
Texan cough syrup. It's that real Texas
tea right there, yeah. So boys,
we're at the end of the Texas Revolution
part one. How do y'all feel?
I'm so excited for the rest.
Yeah, it's a good one. I had a lot
of fun. I don't think
Tom did sitting on the other side of my table
watching me giggle as I wrote it.
It was so funny, like,
I was like working on something
and you would just be typing away and then you'd like start giggling
and then you'd like start typing again
and then stop and start laughing.
I knew I couldn't tell you.
Yeah.
Because I had to save it.
But that is the Texas Revolution part one.
Three more parts to go.
Boys, you host other podcasts.
Plug those other podcasts.
What a hell of the way to dad.
Trash future.
Kill James Bond.
No gods,
no mares.
I am involved with them in some capacity,
some way.
And they have both free feeds and bonus feeds
if you like them.
So check those out, please.
Beneathskin, show about the history of everything told to the history of tattooing,
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That's the only way you can wrap like UGK is drinking chili mixed with lean.
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