texashuntingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
ThomasD77, BWB1970, Skindog1, CowboyTX, slickster
72033 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
dogcatcher 110,792
bill oxner 91,416
SnakeWrangler 65,506
stxranchman 60,296
Gravytrain 46,950
RKHarm24 44,585
rifleman 44,461
Stub 43,844
Forum Statistics
Forums46
Topics537,698
Posts9,727,880
Members87,033
Most Online25,604
Feb 12th, 2024
Print Thread
The Hero of Cinco de Mayo #8253839 05/01/21 03:25 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 15,474
R
reeltexan Offline OP
THF Celebrity
OP Offline
THF Celebrity
R
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 15,474
(from Texas Co-op Power magazine)

I have long known that 19th-century Mexican general Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín was a Texan, but I didn’t know how deep his Texas roots went until I did some digging—pun intended. I learned that he was born in Goliad in 1829, when Texas was still part of Mexico. My research told me that his mother, María de Jesús Seguín, was from San Antonio and a cousin of Tejano hero Juan Seguín, who fought Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna in the Texas Revolution and for whom the city of Seguin is named.

Zaragoza’s father owned 11 leagues, or just under 50,000 acres, along the Red River in Northeast Texas, according to the Texas General Land Office. He bought it for 100 pesos a league in 1830. That’s mind-blowing. You couldn’t even buy a square foot of that land today for 100 pesos. All this proves Gen. Zaragoza’s Texas bona fides.

When Zaragoza was in his early 20s, he joined the revolutionary army of Benito Juárez and eventually led an army of volunteers in defeating Santa Anna. Yes, that same Santa Anna. Zaragoza’s victory effectively removed Santa Anna as dictator of Mexico. That’s another reason we should recognize Zaragoza. Like all good Texans, he despised the dictator and wanted him dead so democracy could live.

It is astonishing that Santa Anna was once again in power 20 years after his humiliating loss to Sam Houston’s army at San Jacinto. But Santa Anna had more political lives than a cat and was president of Mexico 11 times. No one ever failed so often and so badly and still managed to claw his way back into power.

In 1862 the French, under Napoleon III, wanted to make Mexico their own colony. They sent an impressive force of 8,000 crack troops to take the country by storm. Juárez directed Zaragoza to Puebla to defend Mexico from the French invasion. This was Mexico’s San Jacinto moment because Zaragoza commanded half as many men as the French and was definitely the underdog in the battle to defend Puebla.

The French army’s commander, Gen. Charles Latrille de Lorencez, held the same haughty attitude toward his Mexican opponents that Santa Anna had about the Texians in 1836. Latrille wrote that the Mexicans he faced “were of a lower race, poorly organized, poorly disciplined, of low morals,” and in a uniquely French insult of a military force, said that they “lacked good taste.”

Despite their poor taste, Zaragoza and his army achieved a stunning victory May 5, 1862, over those French troops. The French lost 500 men, while the Mexicans lost only 100 and sent the French back to the coast, licking their wounds. The French hadn’t lost a battle in 50 years, so this was a demoralizing defeat, and the contribution of the victory to Mexico’s national pride cannot be overstated. Sadly, Zaragoza died four months later of typhoid fever. He was just 33.

So we raise our glasses on Cinco de Mayo to salute native Texan Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín for his San Jacinto-like victory at Puebla and for helping to remove Santa Anna from power. Again.

* W.F. Strong is a professor at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley and first wrote this story for Texas Standard.


[Linked Image]

"Give me an Army of West Point graduates and I'll win a battle... Give me a handful of Texas Aggies and I'll win a war." - General Patton


Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8253845 05/01/21 03:31 PM
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,111
texasag93 Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,111
texas

Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8253855 05/01/21 03:40 PM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 16,796
S
S.A. hunter Online Content
THF Celebrity
Online Content
THF Celebrity
S
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 16,796
Cool story. texas

Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8253860 05/01/21 03:43 PM
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 110,792
dogcatcher Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 110,792
texas


Combat Infantryman, the ultimate hunter where the prey shoots back.
_____________"Illegitimus non carborundum est"_______________

[Linked Image]
Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8253971 05/01/21 06:04 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 14,768
jeh7mmmag Offline
gramps
Offline
gramps
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 14,768
Thanks for the full history. I had read parts of it before. texas flag


�Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in,
where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul.�
~ John Muir
Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8253975 05/01/21 06:07 PM
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 91,416
bill oxner Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 91,416

texas


Quail hunting is like walking into, and out of a beautiful painting all day long. Gene Hill


[Linked Image]




Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8254163 05/01/21 10:31 PM
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 5,618
S
Sailor Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
S
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 5,618
I wish, those invading our great state now......................
Held the same love, of Texas............ texas

Re: The Hero of Cinco de Mayo [Re: reeltexan] #8254169 05/01/21 10:40 PM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 19,236
B
Biscuit Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
B
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 19,236
🤠

Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 2004-2024 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3