03/02/2026
Carbon County’s Map of the Day - Map of Texas (With parts of the Adjoining States) ~ 1837
Texas Declares Independence
March 2, 1836 — Washington-on-the-Brazos
During the Texas Revolution, a convention of American settlers gathered at Washington-on-the-Brazos and formally declared Texas’ independence from Mexico. The delegates selected David G. Burnet as provisional president and confirmed Sam Houston as commander in chief of all Texan forces. They also adopted a constitution that protected the free practice of slavery, which had been prohibited under Mexican law.
At the same time in San Antonio, Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna continued his siege of the Alamo, where roughly 185 American defenders awaited the final Mexican assault.
Early Settlement and Rising Tensions
In 1820, Moses Austin, a U.S. citizen, sought permission from the Spanish government in Mexico to settle Americans in sparsely populated Texas. Land was granted, but Austin died soon afterward. His son, Stephen F. Austin, carried on the effort.
In 1821, Mexico gained independence from Spain. Stephen F. Austin negotiated a contract with the new Mexican government allowing him to lead approximately 300 families to the Brazos River region.
Under the agreement, settlers were to be Catholics, but Austin primarily brought Protestant families from the southern United States. Additional American settlers followed, and soon they outnumbered the resident Mexican population.
In 1826, tensions led to the Fredonian Rebellion. In 1830, Mexico enacted measures to curb further American immigration. In 1833, after calling on settlers to declare Texas a separate state within the Mexican federation without congressional approval, Austin was arrested and imprisoned. He was released in 1835.
Revolution Begins
In 1834, Santa Anna rose to power as dictator of Mexico and moved to suppress rebellions in Texas and elsewhere.
In October 1835, Anglo residents of Gonzales refused Santa Anna’s demand to return a cannon that had been loaned for defense against Native American attacks. Instead, they fired it at the Mexican troops sent to retrieve it. The Mexicans were routed in what is considered the first battle of the Texas Revolution.
The settlers established a provisional government, and a Texan army under Sam Houston won several minor engagements in late 1835.
The Alamo
In December 1835, Texas volunteers led by Ben Milam drove Mexican troops from San Antonio and occupied the Alamo, a former mission adapted for military use.
In January 1836, Santa Anna assembled several thousand troops south of the Rio Grande. Houston ordered the Alamo abandoned. However, Colonel James Bowie, who had arrived at the fort on January 19, realized that the captured cannons could not be removed before Santa Anna’s arrival. He remained entrenched, reasoning that delaying Santa Anna would buy Houston time to raise a larger army.
On February 2, Bowie and his men were joined by a small cavalry company under Colonel William B. Travis, bringing the total defenders to about 140. One week later, frontiersman Davy Crockett arrived with 14 Tennessee Mounted Volunteers.
On February 23, Santa Anna and roughly 3,000 Mexican troops began their siege of the Alamo. For 12 days, the former mission endured heavy bombardment. On February 24, Colonel Travis sent out his famous letter declaring:
“I shall never surrender or retreat…. Victory or Death!”
On March 1, reinforcements from Gonzales broke through enemy lines, raising the number of defenders to approximately 185.
On March 2, 1836, Texas formally declared independence.
Fall of the Alamo and Aftermath
In the early morning hours of March 6, Santa Anna ordered the assault. Travis’ artillery repelled the first and second Mexican charges, but within just over an hour the defenders were overwhelmed. Santa Anna had ordered no prisoners taken. All Texan and American defenders were killed in close combat. Only a small number of civilians — primarily women and children — survived. Several hundred Mexican soldiers died during the siege and final attack.
Six weeks later, at the Battle of Battle of San Jacinto, Sam Houston’s army surprised Santa Anna’s forces. Shouting “Remember the Alamo!” the Texans secured a decisive victory and captured Santa Anna. He was compelled to recognize Texas’ independence and withdraw his forces south of the Rio Grande.
Texas sought annexation by the United States, but both Mexico and antislavery forces in the U.S. opposed admission. For nearly a decade, Texas remained an independent republic, with Houston serving as its first elected president.
In 1845, Texas entered the Union as the 28th state, a move that soon led to the Mexican-American War.