Paul D. Lack - Böcker
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3 produkter
3 produkter
350 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
217 kr
Kommande
Texans take great pride in having been an independent nation prior to annexation to the United States, but few understand the overwhelming challenges even to the basic demand on all government; i.e., providing protection and security. When the government proved incapable of fulfilling its most basic responsibilities, citizen-soldiers did the job themselves, saving the country until the U. S. came to the rescue. The Rangers prevailed because of captains and volunteers alike who, though having no formal training, grasped key strategic and tactical principles, allowing them to prevail against equally courageous enemies, earning their hold on the land in a primal struggle for survival. The Rangers enrolled hundreds of volunteers; in fact, in the hotly contested areas a clear majority of settlers turned out in response to calls for Ranger companies issued by leaders who would become legendary. They watered the land with their own blood and that of their enemies, a story that has never before been told comprehensively and accurately.
Searching for the Republic of the Rio Grande
Northern Mexico and Texas, 1838-1840
Inbunden, Engelska, 2022
241 kr
Skickas
In 1838, a rebellion began in northern Mexico. A loose collective sought to establish a "Republic of the Rio Grande": the rebellion lasted two years, failed, and was then forgotten by history. This regional effort to establish an independent republic achieved some fleeting victories, although they were flanked by triumphs of the Supreme Government. Initially fed by a desire to defend the federalist system against a consolidated and unsupportive central government, zealous leaders such as Antonio Zavala and Antonio Canales led the popular uprising.As the skirmishes continued, these norteamericanos resorted to increasingly desperate measures, including soliciting aid from the newfound Republic of Texas, which supplied covert support for the rebel cause in the form of manpower, funding, and supplies. When the chastened Anglo Texans finally fled back to their homeland with the tacit compliance of the government of the Republic of Mexico, the states of Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas became entirely free of the norteamericanos, who faced almost unanimous hatred in Mexico by the time of their departure. Leaders from both Mexican factions in the civil conflict then sought peace and partnership against the threatened aggrandizement of the Republic of Texas. In that regard, this inconclusive regional revolt had many precursive elements to the aggression of the United States that resulted in war against Mexico from 1845 to 1848, fulfilling the imperial dreams previously uttered by Anglo Texans during this federalist revolt of 1838–1840. Searching for the Republic of the Rio Grande reads the smoke that would soon fan into the flames of open war against the Mexican Republic.