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Gone to Texas

GTT

Texan Americans

Empresario

agents who bough land grants

Numbered about 30,000 by 1835 (see Makers of America: Mexican or Texican?” pp. 268-269)

Most were law-abiding and God-fearing, but some of them had left the “States” ahead of the sheriff

“G.T.T.” (Gone to Texas) became descriptive slang

Among them were Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie

A latecomer was an ex-governor of Tennessee, Sam Houston

The pioneer individualists who came to Texas were not to easy to push around

Slavery in Texas

In 1821 Mexicans won their independence:

A new regime in Mexico City concluded 1823 agreements for granting a huge tract of land to Stephen Austin

Promising he would bring 300 American families to Texas

Immigrants were to be Roman Catholics

And settlements were to become properly Mexicanized

These two stipulations were largely ignored

Friction increased between Mexicans and Texans over issues:

1829 - Mexico freed the slaves

Americans brought slaves to Texas for cotton and sugar

1830 - Mexico seals its border against any further immigration

they slap a heavy tax burden on the importation of American goods

WASP population doubled between 1830 and 1834

Slavery, immigration, and local rights

Slavery was a particularly touchy topic

Mexico emancipated its slaves in 1830 and prohibited further importation of slaves into Texas, as well as further colonization by troublesome Americans

The Texans refused to honor these decrees

They kept their slaves in bondage, and new American settlers kept bringing more slaves into Texas

Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna

1833-35 1839-1855 (11)

Stephen Austin went to Mexico City in 1833 to negotiate these differences

Santa Anna jailed him for 8 months for inciting a revolution

The explosion came to an en in 1835 when Santa Anna:

wiped out all local rights

started to raise an army to suppress the upstart Texas

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