Slavery in Texas
Randolph Campbell, in his book "An Empire for Slavery: The Peculiar Institution in Texas," said that "protecting slavery was not he primary cause of the Texas Revolution, but it certainly was a major result." (Campbell, 1989, pp. 48-49) The role slavery played in Texas, and the decision by the Anglos to rebel against the Mexican government has long been a tale that is not well-known in American history. Slavery was an institution that many who had emigrated from the United States to Texas either opposed, or were willing to restrict, but what many in Texas were not willing to accept was the high-handedness by which restrictions on slavery were imposed. Over time, many have viewed the Mexican government's interference in the economic foundations of Texan life the cause of the Texas Revolution, but what really caused the revolution was the attempt to restrict, and then outlaw, the institution of slavery.
During the 1820's, the newly independent Mexico introduced a number of laws meant to limit and prohibit slavery, much to the disagreement of the Texans. There were a series of compromise measures, including the prohibition against the importation of any new slaves and the freeing of…
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