knowt logo

Colonization and The Texas Rebellion

Anglo-American Colonization in Mexican Tejas

  • Mexico courted foreign immigrants to help populate the frontier province of Tejas

    • generous land grants that were much cheaper than the United States

    • attractive, especially after the Panic of 1819

  • 1821-35, 30000 immigrated from the United States

    • legally and illegally

    • mostly from the slave states

    • peaking 1830-35 (cotton boom years)

    • brought slavery and cotton with them

      • about 5000 were enslaved Black people

  • Anglo-Texans saw slavery and cotton as the key to Texas’s future, but…

    • Mexico was abolishing slavery

      • compromises/loopholes were carved out for Texas

      • tensions still rose

The Texas Rebellion and Republic

  • 1835, centralizing reforms to Mexico’s constitution led to a rebellion in Texas

    • rebels feared a stronger government would force Texas to end slavery

  • rebels appealed to the United States for support

    • President Jackson refused

    • private United States money and manpower poured in

    • Declaration of Independence, March 1836

    • unlikely rebel victory, April 1836

  • annexing Texas to the United States as another slave state was too controversial to pass in Congress

    • so, Texas stayed independent

    • Mexico refused to recognize independence

  • United States immigration continues, 1836-45:

    • anglo population in Texas rises by 400%

    • the enslaved population in Texas rises 800%

AS

Colonization and The Texas Rebellion

Anglo-American Colonization in Mexican Tejas

  • Mexico courted foreign immigrants to help populate the frontier province of Tejas

    • generous land grants that were much cheaper than the United States

    • attractive, especially after the Panic of 1819

  • 1821-35, 30000 immigrated from the United States

    • legally and illegally

    • mostly from the slave states

    • peaking 1830-35 (cotton boom years)

    • brought slavery and cotton with them

      • about 5000 were enslaved Black people

  • Anglo-Texans saw slavery and cotton as the key to Texas’s future, but…

    • Mexico was abolishing slavery

      • compromises/loopholes were carved out for Texas

      • tensions still rose

The Texas Rebellion and Republic

  • 1835, centralizing reforms to Mexico’s constitution led to a rebellion in Texas

    • rebels feared a stronger government would force Texas to end slavery

  • rebels appealed to the United States for support

    • President Jackson refused

    • private United States money and manpower poured in

    • Declaration of Independence, March 1836

    • unlikely rebel victory, April 1836

  • annexing Texas to the United States as another slave state was too controversial to pass in Congress

    • so, Texas stayed independent

    • Mexico refused to recognize independence

  • United States immigration continues, 1836-45:

    • anglo population in Texas rises by 400%

    • the enslaved population in Texas rises 800%