Texas Revolution -- Battles
Battle of Gonzales
While the battle at the Alamo is by far the most famous battle in the Texas Revolution, there were other, less-well-known battles that also deserve attention. As to the beginning of the Revolution, the first shots were fired in that revolution on October 2, 1835, in the small community of Gonzales, Texas, according to History.com. Those shots were fired as Mexican soldiers were attempting to disarm the citizens in Gonzales, which lit the flames to the all-out war. The state of Texas had "technically been a part of the Spanish empire" since the 17th century, but there weren't very many Mexican-Spanish settlers in Texas in the late 1820s, and the History.com site explains that Mexico City had only a "tenuous" hold on Texas.
After Mexico achieved its independence from Spain in 1821, the government of Mexico was hoping that the many Anglo-Americans migrating into Texas might eventually become "loyal Mexican citizens and keep the territory from falling into the hands of the United States" (history.com). A large number of immigrants of European ethnicity did indeed come into Texas, and while they became Mexican citizens, the still spoke English, they still built and staffed their own schools, and they were closer to American government affiliation than they were to the government of Mexico down in Mexico City. Hence, there was a cultural schism developing (history.com).
When Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna became dictator of Mexico in 1835, he asked his military personnel to take away guns...
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