The would-be Presidente of Fredonia and his wife in their elder years. |
There
are historians of Texas. Then there are Texan historians. The latter bear the same relationship to
real historians as Rick Perry, Michelle
Bachmann, and Ted Cruz do to Abraham Lincoln.
When
reviewing the seizure of Nacogdoches
on December 16, 1826 by a gaggle of adventurers led by Haden and Benjamin Edwards and
the subsequent establishment of the alleged Republic of Fredonia, these Texan historians get all squishy with
admiration. Sure the Republic lasted
only 40 days before being the Edwards brothers and their cronies fled for their
lives with the approach of a small force of Mexican troops and Stephen
Austin’s Anglo colonists. But the admiring “historians” claim that
the sorry episode was the “true origin” of the eventual successful Texas Revolution. One of them claims, although “premature ... [the rebellion] sparked
the powder for later success.”
A premature ejaculation is more like it. This comic opera operation was sillier Rufus T. Firefly’s tenure as head of
another Fredonia in Duck Soup.
After Mexico
won its independence from Spain
the new nation struggled to find a way to keep control of its most northerly
and remote possession, the thinly populated Department of Béxar in the State of Coahuila y Tejas. During the
Revolution American filibusterers took
advantage of the chaos with plots to seize Texas and establish a slave holding
republic. Filibusterers were adventurers
who were so sure of their racial superiority that they believed that they could
knock off any former Spanish possession with a drunken corporal’s guard. None of the plots came near succeeding, but
the adventurers stayed to squat and settle.
And some promoted phony land schemes that attracted even more Anglo
settlers.
The
numbers of Americans in Béxar was beginning to rival native residents and
threatened the established land grants of major rancheros. The Mexican government responded by creating
the Empresario system which granted
large concession to Americans who would agree to organize colonies, respect
Mexican land claims, swear loyalty to their new nation, and regulate
unrestricted immigration.
Austin
was the first Empresario to set up his colony.
And he was determined to meet all of the conditions the Mexicans demanded. Haden Edwards was another early
Empresario. In fact, his concession
bordered Austin’s to the south. He and
his brother came from an aristocratic family from Virginia and had established a large plantation in Mississippi. He was a slave trader, land speculator and at
heart a filibusterer.
Edwards
arrived at the city of Nacogdoches in August of 1825 to take
possession of his concession. While
Austin was scrupulous with locals and Mexican officials, Edwards and his
companions began to run roughshod over the Tejanos
almost from the first moment of his arrival.
Part of his grant overlapped the jurisdiction of the Pueblo of Nacodoches which had an
established government under an alcalde, Luis Procela.
Defying
the terms of his agreement, Edwards immediately began abrogating the land
claims of established residents and ordering them to vacate their
property. Some were recent American
arrivals who were either squatting or who had bogus deeds sold them by earlier
filibusterers. But many had valid land
grants dating back to Spanish rule 70 year earlier. When Procela and his municipal clerk began
attesting to the validity of the old grants, ignored them.
By
December Edwards was joined by 50 colonists, who paid him in hard cash for land
he claimed to control. Under the
agreement with Mexico, Edwards was required to raise a militia when he got that
first 50 to defend not only his own interests, but existing residents from
occasional raids by Comanche, Waco, and
Towakoni tribes. It was the moment Edwards was waiting
for.
He
formed his militia, but was outraged when they elected local landowner and
clerk of Nachodoches, Jose Antonio
Sepulveda as captain. Edward
invalidated the election and declared himself in command. Then he demanded a new election for alcalde. A stooge of Edwards was elected in the
disputed election and locals appealed for help from Juan Antonio Saucedo, the administer of the Department of Béxar at San Antonio de Béxar. In March Saucedo overturned the election
results. Typically, Edwards defied the
order.
He
left for Louisiana, ostensibly to
recruit more colonists, but locals suspected he was recruiting an armed
force. Edwards left his younger brother
Benjamin in day to day control of his holding.
Benjamin, however, was not able to enforce his brother’s style of iron
rule. Locals began to rebel and a
vigilante group of dislocated earlier Anglo settlers began harassing Edwards’s
colonists. Benjamin appealed to the
Governor of Coahuila y Tejas for
military support.
Instead on October of 1826 the Governor, having gotten an earful from long time residents,
revoked Edwards’s grant and ordered both brothers and their chief thugs to
leave Mexico immediately. Instead Haden
rejoined his brother and picked up his business as if nothing had changed.
The
rightfully elected alcalde, Samuel
Norris, an American who had married into a prominent local family and
championed the rights of long time residents, ruled that Edwards had wrongly taken
the property of a local landowner and given it to one of his colonists. Norris had the colonist evicted and resorted
the original owner, outraging Edwards.
Another supporter was arrested for trading with the Indians without a license.
On
November 22 forty of Edwards’s men under a Col.
Palmer arrested Norris, Sepulveda, and the commander of the small
garrison. Edwards had them tried by a kangaroo
court which removed them from office, banned them for life from office, and
appointed another alcalde.
Edwards
knew that he was pushing his luck and that authorities in San Antonio would
probably move against him. He still did
not have a large enough force of colonists to assure his protection, so he
opened up negotiations with a large band of Cherokee living just north of his grant. These had arrived few years earlier fleeing
oppression in the States. They had long
desired, but never gotten, a grant from the Mexican government. When Edwards promised them “clear title” to
all the land north of his, they agreed to support him.
Evidence
suggests that the attack on Nacogdoches on December 16 was pretty much what
Edwards had planned all along. He
undoubtedly hoped to have more colonists from the states, and maybe the support
of other Empresarios. But events had
moved too quickly, he was forced to march with just 30 men. That was enough to seize the Old Stone Fort in the town and not much
else. But he was confident that any day up to 400 Cherokee warriors would join him.
That would be enough to defend the town.
Maybe even enough to march on San Antonio.
But
the warriors did not show up. Neither
did other American settlers, many of them unnerved by the alliance with the
Cherokee.
Still
Edwards pressed on and declared the Republic of Fredonia on December 21. He sent an appeal to the Cherokee to join him
and invited Stephen Austin to throw in as well.
For good measure he sent a rider to Louisiana begging for aid from the U. S. Army.
The
Army, quite naturally, ignored the appeal.
And Austin rather than join the rebellion prevailed upon the Cherokee to
abandon Edwards. Saucedo promised the
tribe that Mexico would make the land concessions they had long sought.
Lieutenant
Colonel Mateo Ahumada marched from San Antonio with 110 troops. Austin joined him with 250 of his
colonists. Together they marched on Nacogdoches
on January 22.
Meanwhile
Norris, the deposed alcalde, and 80 poorly armed and untrained volunteers
attacked the Old Stone Fort on their own.
Firing from a position of strength the 20 Fedonians inside repulsed the
attack after a 10 minute gun fight.
But
Edwards knew that an organized force was coming that could not be so easily
repulsed. On January 31 an advance party
of 70 Austin’s militia entered the town.
Edwards and his supporters fled toward the Sabine River without firing a shot.
The militia stayed in close pursuit but the Edwards brothers and most of
their company made to the safety of the U.S. shore.
On
February 11 Ahumada and Saucedo arrived
in the town with the Mexican troops. The
Republic of Fredonia was kaput.
The
Cherokee placated the suspicious Mexican authorities by executing the two
chiefs who had made the treaty with Edwards—Richard Fields and
John Dunn Hunter. The Cherokee did eventually gain some land
concession and this splinter of the tribe remains in Texas to this day.
Rather
than accelerate a genuine independence movement, the Mexican government moved
quickly to firm up its control. Anastasio Bustamante, the Commandant General of the Eastern Interior Provinces
arrived to take control. He pardoned all
participants except the Edwards brothers, their military commander Col. Palmer,
and a local merchant. The merchant was
the only one captured and was sentenced to death, but that sentence was comuted.
Because
raids by tribes on long standing residents and colonists alike had been used by
Edwards to rally support, Bustamante determined to move against the Comanche,
Waco, and other tribes in force. He
gathered up a sizable force, but all tribes decided to sign treaties before
action was launched. Although the
smaller Waco and other tribes returned to nuisance level raiding—stock thievery
mostly—after the Army was mostly withdrawn a year later, the powerful Comanche
kept their peace for many years.
Most
importantly the Mexican government imposed harsh new emigration measures
affecting even loyal Empresarios like Austin.
For a while Anglo immigration slowed to a trickle until another
generation of adventurers started migrating illegally in the 1830’s. But that is another story.
Hayden
Edwards did return to Nacogdoches after the Texas revolution. He was able to reclaim some, but far from all
of his holdings. He died there in 1849. His younger brother Benjamin died in 1837
while running for Governor of Mississippi.
Despite
his evident combination of racism, avarice, aggression, and incompetence, some
Texan historians still hold up Haden Edwards as a patriot and hero.
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