“Peace would cost”: ibid., 135.
“I will predict”: ibid., 138.
“My honest belief”: ibid., 151.
“Know all men”: ibid., 196.
“conquer Mexico or Texas”: memo by Andrew Jackson (citing a letter from Duff Green), May 21, 1829, Jackson Papers.
“It has been communicated”: Jackson to Houston, June 21, 1829, ibid. (This letter in the Jackson Papers is a transcript, which includes the phrase “Your pledge of honor to the country . . .” Jackson presumably wroteâor at least meantâ“Your pledge of honor to the contrary.” And so it has been rendered here.)
“struck him elsewhere”: James, 164.
“It's not you . . . some privileges”: Terrell, 126.
“When he came”: ibid.
“I seek no sympathies . . . eternity's waves”:
WSH,
1:208, 224.
“Houston, take my laurels!”: James, 170.
“I was dying out”: ibid., 172.
“So soon as matters”:
WSH,
1:204.
“It is important”: ibid., 231.
“The land which . . . for moving about”: ibid., 235.
“The more conflict”: ibid., 237.
“The field is now open”: ibid., 261.
“I have seen . . . citizens of Texas”: ibid., 263â64.
“all the Tribes”: James, 185.
“It has been my first . . . of that place”:
WSH,
1:267â70.
“He said he had been fired at”: “Mr. Ham's Recollections of Col. Bowie,” in unpublished memoirs of John S. Ford, p. 110, Ford Papers; Haley, 93.
“I found them”:
WSH,
1:272.
“Can Mexico ever”: Washington Daniel Miller Papers.
“Colonel Crockett”:
Papers of Clay
, 6:1098.
“if some skulking”: Davis, 79.
“I was, without disguise”: Crockett, 205.
“Fellow citizens”: Davis, 166â67.
“His friends admit”: ibid., 170.
“To return from the capitol . . . Lions of the West”: Heale, 406.
“Two years ago”: Tocqueville, 254.
“Rely upon it”:
Correspondence of Polk
, 1:230.
“To General Jackson”: Davis, 175. Shackford, 126, suggests that this letter was ghostwritten. Perhaps, but it nonetheless captures Crockett's feelings.
“I have not left”: Shackford, 130.
“I have not got”: ibid., 118â19.
“I would rather be beaten”: ibid., 133.
“I think Crockett”:
Correspondence of Polk
, 1:414.
“obscure as I am . . . hypocritically immortalized”: Crockett, 1, 7, 10, 118, 135, 139, 163â64, 206.
10. The General Is Friendly
“They were all bound . . . begin life anew in Texas”: Holley,
Texas
, 21â22, 29â30, 37â39, 123â25, 127â31.
“She is a very superior woman”:
AP
, 2:725.
“Brazos Boat Song”: Lee, 232.
“Mrs. H. is a
divine
woman”:
AP,
2:726.
“There is a pleasure . . . we can have”: ibid., 727â29.
“I had a wretched trip”: ibid., 992.
“There were 43,000Â sick”: ibid., 1006.
“I explained at large . . . serious reflection”: ibid., 990.
“I told the vice president . . . he was reconciled”: ibid., 1008.
“I believe that Texas . . . inexpedient and ruinous”: ibid., 990â91.
“I have had a hard trip”: ibid., 997.
“And in my opinion . . . God and Texas”: ibid., 1007â8; Cantrell, 271.
“Texas matters are all right . . . at home soon”:
AP,
2:1016.
“All I can be accused of . . . in the colony”:
AP,
2:1024â25.
“Time drags on heavily . . . impatience and imprudence”: S. Austin, “Prison Journal,” 196â97.
“What a system . . . or common sense”: ibid., 209â10.
“I am in such a condition”: Callcott, 98.
“I swear to you”: ibid., 102.
“Say to Mr. Poinsett”: Wharton, 64.
“When I returned to the capital”: Santa Anna,
Eagle
, 48.
“We were perishing”: Callcott, 112.
“Our doors are now open”:
AP,
2:1051.
“I have no doubt”: ibid., 1085.
“President Santa Anna is friendly”: ibid., 1077.
Part Three: Blood on the Sand (1835â1836)
11. The Sword Is Drawn
“It awakened”:
WSH,
1:294.
“I have even been told”:
AP,
2:1077.
“As to Texas . . . so to remain”:
WSH,
1:289â90.
“General Houston was here. . . . I was a spy”: Featherstonhaugh, 2:161.
“The plans of the revolutionists”: Wooten, 1:173.
“Chingaba una mujer”: Travis, 15.
“No pudiera”: ibid., 129.
“Pagaba un peso . . . malo”: ibid., 144.
“Venereo mala”: ibid., 145. Davis, 687, suggests alternative interpretations of Travis's phrase. In light of Travis's traffic record, venereal disease seems the most likely.
“Proposals &c agreeably received”: Travis, 128.
“Spent day pleasantly”: ibid., 143.
“Started to Mill Creek”: ibid., 139.
“Reception cold”: ibid., 151.
“a simple understanding”: ibid., 151.
“I landed at this place”: McDonald, 110.
“In a very short time”: ibid., 114.
“As it is impossible”: ibid., 120â21.
“I discharged . . . I glory in it”: ibid., 122â23.
“Strong man that he was”: Smithwick, 137.
“Why, Jim . . . plenty of them”: ibid., 138.
title to more than a half million acres: Davis, 423.
“You must look upon me . . . at liberty”:
AP,
3:2â4.
out-of-pocket expenses at ten thousand dollars: ibid., 48.
“I have been much more faithful”: ibid., 6.
“If that change gives Santa Anna”: ibid., 8.
“Santa Anna leaves”: ibid., 63.
“All the rest of the country”: ibid., 48.
“I do not understand”: ibid., 68.
“I believe that the most of them”: ibid., 90.
“It is well known . . . for the worst”: ibid., 102â3.
“A grand dinner . . . such enthusiasm”: ibid., 120.
“His arrival unites all parties”: ibid., 119â20.
“My efforts to serve Texas . . . in the future”: ibid., 116â19.
“Things have come on us”: ibid., 128.
“The substance of this information . . . without effect”: ibid., 128â29.
“War is upon us. . . . War is inevitable”: ibid., 129â30.
“There must now be no half way measures”: ibid., 130.
12. Lexington on the Guadalupe
“The glowing terms . . . lazy man's paradise”: Smithwick, 17â18.
“I had a strong aversion”: ibid., 19.
“A league of land . . . shot him dead”: ibid., 37.
“Padre Muldoon was a bigoted . . . swallowing his medicine”: ibid., 66â67.
“I have seen him sit . . . any other hypothesis”: ibid., 67â68.
“gamblers' heaven . . . Declaration of Independence”: ibid., 75.
“I told him”: ibid., 84.
“an overbearing man . . . this iniquitous town”: ibid., 84â86.
“just at the time”: ibid., 99.
“Some were for independence”: ibid., 102.
“Our whole available force . . . being necessary”: ibid., 104â6.
“The Mexican commander”: Wooten, 537.
“Your Lordship's orders”:
PTR,
2:36; Hardin, 12.
“It was our Lexington”: Smithwick, 101.
“The same blood”: Hardin, 9.
“No more doubts . . . not all at one jump”:
AP,
3:160â61.
“It is not in the nature . . . control its destiny?”: Smithwick, 106.
“200 stands of muskets”:
AP,
3:181.
“
War in defense of our rights . . . down with the Usurper
!!!”:
WSH,
1:302.
“with full powers”: ibid., 303.
“The time has arrived”: ibid., 304.
“committee of vigilance and safety . . . of a Jackson”: ibid., 299â300.
“It certainly bore little resemblance”: Smithwick, 109â10.
“all spoiling for a fight”: ibid., 112.
“A large number of the citizens . . .
starved
out”:
AP,
3:202.
“Permit us to again suggest”: ibid., 206â7.
“When the fog lifted . . . by all the furies”: Smithwick, 114â15.
“The overwhelming superiority of force”:
AP,
3:217.
13. Behind Ben Milam
“He made a speech to us . . . touched the ground”: Smithwick, 111.
it lost by a vote of fifteen to thirty-three: Wooten, 190.
“My health has been very bad . . .
to require rest
”:
AP,
3:262â63.
“It is an office”: ibid., 247.
“He made the best speech”: ibid., 238.
“Of these I think”: Briscoe to Austin, c. November 21, 1835, Austin Papers.
“We are all captains”: Hardin, 8.
“While we were busy”: Dewees, 156.
“The army at present . . . or the people”:
WSH,
1:305â6.
“By express . . . the head knocked out”:
AP,
3:241.
“An immediate organization . . . defending the country”:
WSH,
1:311â13.
“Citizens of Texas”: ibid., 317â18.
“I have at various times . . . such a service”:
AP,
3:263.
“Would it not be best . . . an eligible position”:
WSH,
1:305â6.
“the insidious attempts . . . command of the next”:
PTR,
2:248.
“All day we get more”: Maverick, 44.
“Reports of the events . . . appalling blackness”: Ehrenberg, 1â35.
“Colonel Milam is a native . . . all my sufferings”:
PTR,
2:194â95.
“Ben Milam and Frank Johnson”: Taylor, 62â63.
“Remain like men”: ibid., 63.
“The hollow roar”: Ehrenberg, 71.
“Not a word . . . unable to reach it”: ibid., 71â77.
“But she laughed . . . unfortunate woman”: ibid., 81.
“The enemy's fire increased . . . another dead Mexican”: Taylor, 67.
“At daylight of the 6th”:
PTR,
3:161.
“Yet our labors”: Ehrenberg, 84.
“Boys, load your guns . . . at his heels”: ibid., 69â71.
“It appeared we were to be swept off”:
Papers of Lamar,
5:97.
“The reaction of those”: Huson, 196.
“The fact that many”: Filisola,
Memoirs
, 2:93.
“We entered the town . . . has never surrendered”: Huson, 190â93.
“We were surrounded”: ibid., 194.
“retire with their arms . . . price of the country”:
PTR,
3:156â57.
14. The Army of Operations
“Some journalists had tried”: Santa Anna, “Manifesto,” 7.
“Our country found itself”: ibid., 17.
“The foreigners who are making”:
PTR,
3:114.
“I have been unable . . . provisions and supplies?”: MartÃnez Caro, 100.
“In an immense . . . part of another”: de la Peña, 6â9.
“The great problem . . . to my genius”: Santa Anna, “Manifesto,” 12.
“I propose placing . . . spring will open”:
WSH,
1:319â20.
“It will give me . . . state of defence”: ibid., 321.
“The brave men . . . for God's sake!”: ibid., 332â33.
“In the event you can obtain . . . Copano is important”: ibid.
,
1:322â23.
“Matamoros rage . . . abandon the place”: ibid., 339â40.
“Our party now mustered . . . difficult to achieve”: Ehrenberg, 120, 124â25.
“must not be wasted . . . that very day”: ibid., 126â28. Crisp, “Sam Houston's Speechwriters,” dissects the problematic nature of the various accounts of Houston's speech. The present author agrees with Crisp's principal conclusions; for this reason the anti-Mexican and anti-Indian (Houston anti-Indian?!) remarks attributed to Houston by some authors have been omitted here.
“agents of the people . . . offensive and defensive”:
PTR,
3:123â24.
“From the papers”: ibid., 18â19.
“A change of the basis”:
AP,
3:283.
“When I left Texas”: ibid., 298â99.
“There is a Louisiana Battalion”: ibid., 301.
“We have effected”: ibid., 305.
“The universal wish”: ibid., 299.
“Resolved: That the proud dictator”:
PTR,
3:165.
“I have never been”:
AP,
3:314.
“I had no idea . . . in their independence”: ibid., 314.
“
a principle
. . . omnipotent God”: Holley (1836 ed.), 260â80.
“This reminds me”: Shackford, 202.
“You look tired . . . no use trying to”: Davis, 392.
“I am not certain . . . this will be”: Shackford, 173â74.
“wicked plan”:
Correspondence of Polk,
3:182.
“How is it”: ibid., 190â91.
“If his vocabulary . . . carry such a skin”: Davis, 405.
“I have him bad plagued”: Shackford, 204.
“The great
Hunter
”:
Correspondence of Polk,
3:261.
“We have killed”: ibid., 286.
“I am on the eve . . . before I return”:
PTR,
2:274.
“I am told”: Davis, 413.
“It is the garden spot . . . among friends”: Shackford, 214â16.
15. Victory or . . .
“We had set out . . . inside their fortifications”: de la Peña, 26â37.
“Fortress Alamo . . . are all aiming”:
PTR,
4:58â61.
“All I can say . . . to the enemy”: ibid., 237â38.
“
Relief
at this post . . . against thousands”: ibid.