This Day In Texas History - April 7

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joe817
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This Day In Texas History - April 7

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1817 - Francisco Xavier Mina and his men set sail from Galveston, with the intent of driving the forces of Spanish king Ferdinand VII from Mexico. The revolutionary Mina was in cahoots with Louis Michel Aury and Henry Perry. His expeditionary force, which comprised eight ships and 235 men, reached the mouth of the Santander River on April 11. Mina soon captured Soto la Marina, Tamaulipas, and led his troops to a series of minor victories, but was defeated and captured at Venadito on October 27. He was taken to Mexico City and executed with twenty-five companions at Fort San Gregorio on November 11. He was twenty-eight years old at the time of his death.

1825 - Green DeWitt successfully petitioned the Mexican government to settle a colony of 400 families in Texas between the Lavaca and Guadalupe Rivers.

1886 - One of the biggest gun battles in the history of the American West broke out on the day after a city election in Laredo. In 1884 two political factions in Laredo and Webb counties designated themselves as Botas and Guaraches. The Botas ("Boots"), led by Raymond Martin and José María Rodríguez, were essentially the "wealthy" class, although they drew much support from the less fortunate. The reform club, which adopted the slogan Guaraches ("Sandals") to symbolize the lower class, included Santos Benavides and, later, Darío Gonzales. In the city election of 1886, the Guaraches won only two seats on the Laredo city council. In their celebration the following day, the Botas paraded the streets of Laredo promising to bury a Guarache in effigy. After the Guaraches attacked the Bota parade, as many as 250 men became involved in the fighting at one time or another. It took two companies of the Sixteenth United States Infantry and one company of the Eighth Cavalry to restore peace. Although the official number of dead in what was called the Laredo Election Riot was placed at sixteen, unofficial reports placed the number as high as thirty, with as many as forty-five wounded.

1900 - McDonald Dam on the Colorado River in Austin washed away. Onlookers stood on the banks as pieces of the dam began falling away.

1911 - Sarah Bernhardt plays Galveston in her farewell performance.

1913 - Sam Rayburn took the oath of office as a member of the United States House of Representatives. He became majority leader in 1937 and was elected speaker of the House in 1940, a post he held in Democratically controlled legislatures until his death in 1961. Rayburn helped negotiate the Roosevelt-Garner ticket in 1932 and loyally supported the New Deal. As chairman of the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee in the 1930s he oversaw legislation that established the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Communications Commission. During World War II he helped ensure the legislative base and financial support for the war effort, and in the 1950s he worked closely with Senate majority leader Lyndon Johnson. Rayburn served in the House for more than forty-eight years.

1970 - Milton A. Lee was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously to his grandmother and guardian, Mrs. Frank B. Campion, by President Richard M. Nixon at the White House for actions he saw on April 26, 1968, near Phu Bai, South Vietnam. Lee is buried in Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery. :patriot:
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Re: This Day In Texas History - April 7

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Letters From The Past: David G. Burnet to Henry Raguet, April 7, 1836. President Burnet calls the "Runaway Scrape" premature, judges the army under Houston to be "in fine condition and high spirits," and calls on eastern Texans to join the fray. :

"Executive Department
Harrisburg 7th April 1836
To Henry Raguet Esqr.
Chrmn of Committee of Safety etc.
Nacogdoches.

Sir , I have the pleasure to inform you and, through you, the good citizens of your vicinity, that the late premature and unhappy panic, which pervaded so large a portion of our citizens, has subsided, and that a more generous and worthy feeling of confidence is gaining ground, and diffusing itself among all classes.

The fugitives are, for the most part, preparing to return and join Genl Houston in the field. Our army is in fine condition and high spirits. All that is wanting is reinforcements, to enable the Commander in Chief to commence offensive operations, and to prosecute them until the savage and treacherous enemy are extirpated from the soil and air of Texas, which they have already polluted too long.

The day of vengeance is at hand. Let the citizens of Texas do their duty manfully and as becomes the name of Americans, and these minions of despotism will soon be annihilated.

The enemy have passed the Colorado, about 1300 strong. An addition of a few hundred to our gallant army will insure their speedy destruction. Will not the Red Landers “rush to the rescue” and join in the glorious strife that shall emancipate Texas from her ruffian and dastardly enemies? I know they would not be denied the opportunity; that they will not loose [sic] it, and waste their time and strength, in shameful inactivity; while others, and Strangers too, are winning honor, fame and the future gratitude of Texas, by the overthrow and expulsion of her enemies, and the establishment of her Independence.

Rally then, citizens of the Red Lands; Assert and maintain your right to participate in the glory of saving your country, and avenging the atrocities committed on martyrs of Liberty, who perished in the Alamo, and on those who have been massacred
in cold blood. Teach those half civilized, barbarous Mexicans, by a just, though severe retribution, that we know how to temper justice, with mercy, and humanity with justice[.] That their unexampled cruelties may provoke a just retaliation, but cannot intimidate a brave and generous people.

David G. Burnet
President of the
Republic of Texas"
Diplomacy is the Art of Letting Someone Have Your Way
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