It was on this date in
1827 that Jim Bowie killed a man in a Louisiana
duel that disintegrated into a free-for-all melee. He had been a witness to the duel when
bystanders and partisans of the principals began
brawling. Bowie had already been shot
and stabbed when he used his unique, large knife to kill banker
Major Norris Wright. Bowie was shot
again and carried away with what was assumed to be fatal
wounds. Ironically, the two
principals in the duel each fired two shots without hitting the other and shook
hands with their honor vindicated.
Neither was injured in the subsequent brawl.
The Vidalia Sandbar
Fight made Bowie’s reputation as a man to feared and made versions
of his knife standard weapons on the Southwestern frontier. Although Jim was credited with the invention
of the big sheath knife it was probably conceived by his brother
Rezin, an equally quarrelsome fighter, after he was almost fatally
stabbed in an earlier knife fight.
The knife was longer and heavier than the typical double-edged
knife then most carried on the frontier. As its popularity spread and many makers produced
them the design varied somewhat.
The typical Bowie knife had
a 9 to 15 inch blade sharpened only on one side for much of its length
with a curved tip that was sharpened to a point on both sides.
The double-edged tip made the knife an effective stabbing weapon, while
the dull-edge and a brass hand guard allowed the user to slide a hand
down over the blade as needed for slashing. It was the perfect knife for
close-quarter fighting. The knife
Bowie caried to the Sand Bar Fight probably had a hand guard that could double
as brass knuckles. A portrait
painted from life in Texas showed him gripping such a weapon.
The legend of Bowie
and his knife portrayed him as a heroic frontiersman and soldier. The reality was quite different. He was a short fused heavy drinker, gambler,
land speculator, and slave trader. He had political aspirations, but his
wild, unpredictable temper left him with few true friends and allies.
James Bowie was born in Logan
County, Kentucky about 1796 but his father Reason (or Rezin),
a Revolutionary War veteran, relocated his wife and nine children
to Spanish Louisiana in 1802.
Jim was the second youngest of the brood. The
children grew up in wild bayou territory and learned to hunt, fish,
and make their way in near wilderness.
Their father had a small but prosperous plantation and made sure
his children were literate. Brothers Jim
and Rezin were especially close and also became fluent in both Spanish
and French.
In 1814 both young men
heeded General Andrew Jackson’s call to battle the British and enrolled
in the Louisiana Militia.
Although they arrived in New Orleans too late to take part in the
famous battle, they began to think of themselves as soldiers. Jim moved to Rapides Parish where he hewed
planks from logs using a saw pit and slave labor then floated
his lumber down the bayou for sale.
In 1818 the brothers entered
into a partnership with pirate Jean Lafitte to smuggle slaves after
the African slave trade had been officially banned by Congress
to earn cash to acquire land for speculation. Bowie made
three trips to Lafitte’s compound on Galveston Island where he
bought smuggled slaves and took them directly to a customhouse to inform
on his own actions. When the customs officers offered the slaves for auction,
Bowie purchased them and received back half the price he had paid.
Most Southern states gave incentives for informing on an illegal
slave trader and the informers could receive half of what the imported
slaves would earn at auction as a reward. He rebought the slaves and could
then legally transport them for resale at a greater market
value in New Orleans or areas farther up the Mississippi River. Using this scheme,
the brothers collected $65,000 to use for their land speculation
Bowie also had his eye
out for adventure. Both land and adventure could be found in neighboring
Texas which was very loosely held by the Spanish as the northern
province of New Spain. In
June 1819, he joined the Long Expedition, an effort to seize Texas
from Spanish rule. The small force encountered little resistance and,
after capturing Nacogdoches, declared Texas an independent
republic. The extent of Bowie’s participation is unclear, but he returned
to Louisiana before the invasion was repelled by Spanish troops.
The next year, 1820
Bowies father died and left him and Resin plantation holdings and slaves. the brothers worked together to develop
several large estates in Lafourche Parish and Opelousas.
In 1825, the two brothers
joined with their younger brother, Stephen, to buy Acadia Plantation
near Thibodaux. Within two years, they had established there the first
steam mill in Louisiana for grinding sugar cane. The plantation
became known as a model operation, but on February 12, 1831, they sold
it and 65 slaves for $90,000. With their profits, James and Rezin bought
a plantation in Arkansas.
In the late 1820s, Bowie
and his brother John were involved in a major Arkansas court case
over land speculation. When the United States purchased the Louisiana
Territory in 1803, it promised to honor all former land grant
claims made to French and Spanish colonists. For the next 20 years, efforts were
made to establish who owned what land. In May 1824, Congress authorized the superior
courts of each territory to hear suits from those who claimed they
had been overlooked.
In late 1827, the Arkansas
Superior Court received 126 claims from residents who claimed to have
purchased land in former Spanish grants from the Bowie brothers. Although the
Superior Court originally confirmed most of those claims, the decisions
were reversed in February 1831, after further research showed
that the land had never belonged to the Bowies and that the original
land grant documentation had been forged. The U.S. Supreme
Court upheld the reversal. When the disgruntled
purchasers considered suing the Bowies, they discovered that the
documents in the case had been removed from the courthouse. Left
without evidence, they could not pursue the lawsuit.
Ill will
from this notorious fraud was a contributing cause of the Sandbar brawl.
In 1828, after recovering
from the wounds he received in the Sandbar Fight and possibly to avoid other
enemies, Bowie moved to Coahuila y Texas, a state in the
new Mexican federation. To conform to the terms of the 1824
Mexican Constitution which banned religions other than Roman
Catholicism and gave preference to Mexican citizens in
receiving land Bowie was baptized into Catholic faith in San Antonio
on April 28, 1828, sponsored by Juan Martín de Veramendithe, alcalde
(chief administrator.) For the next 18 months, Bowie traveled through Louisiana
and Mississippi hoping to recruit settlers.
On January 1, 1830, Bowie
left live in Texas permanently. In
San Felipe, he presented a letter of introduction from Thomas
F. McKinney, one of the Old Three Hundred colonists, to Stephen
F. Austin. On February 20, Bowie swore an oath of allegiance to
Mexico and proceeded to San Antonio de Béxar. At the time, the city was
known as Bexar and had a population of 2500, mostly native Mexican descent.
Bowie’s fluency in Spanish helped him to get established in the area.
Bowie was elected
a commander of the Texas Rangers later that year, with the rank
of colonel. Although the Rangers
would not be organized officially until 1835, Austin had founded
the force by hiring 30 men to keep the peace and protect the
colonists from attacks by hostile Native tribes Bowie commanded a group
of volunteers.
Upon renouncing his
American citizenship and promising to build a textile mill in
partnership with Veramendithe, who had been promoted to vice governor of
the province, Bowie married his daughter Maria Ursula. The couple build a home in Béxar but soon
moved into her father’s official palace. Under the circumstances it was
no surprise that he was granted the right to buy up to 11 leagues
of public land. He convinced 14 or 15 other citizens to apply for
land and transfer it to him, giving him 700,000 acres for
speculation. Bowie may have been the first to induce settlers to apply for empresario
grants, which could be sold in bulk to speculators. This dodge was made illegal by
the Mexican government by 1835 but Bowie had already profited.
Shortly after his
marriage Bowie, brother Rezin, and ten other men embarked on a search
for a semi-legendary lost silver mine deep in territory controlled by
hostile Comanche, Apache, and other tribes.
Six miles from the abandoned San Saba Mine the expedition encountered
a large band of more than 120 Tawakoni and Waco, plus another 40 Caddo. Attempts to parlay with the natives
failed and they mounted an attack.
A desperate battle lasted 13 hours and the Bowie party was only
able to survive due to their firearms and ample ammunition. Garbled accounts of the fight reached
Béxar. To the town’s surprise, the surviving members of the group
returned on December 6. Rezin Bowie’s report of the expedition, written in Spanish,
was printed in several newspapers, further establishing his
reputation and bring him to national attention in the U.S. He set out
again the following month, with a larger force, but returned home empty-handed
after two-and-a-half months of searching.
Maria Ursula, her two
young children with Bowie, and both of her parents died in September 1833
during a cholera epidemic that swept through the South.
In 1832 the Mexican government
enacted restrictions on American colonists, including their land
speculation schemes and began establishing military outposts to enforce
control over the province. San Antonio
de Béxar was one of the most important.
After hearing that José
de las Piedras, the Mexican army commander in Nacogdoches, had demanded
that all residents in his area surrender their arms, Bowie cut
short a visit to Natchez to return to Texas. On August 2, 1832, he
joined a group of other Texians and marched into Nacogdoches to “present
their demands” to Piedras. Before the armed group reached the government headquarters,
they were attacked by a force of 100 Mexican cavalry. They returned
fire and the Battle of Nacogdoches began. After the cavalry retreated,
they laid siege to the garrison. After a second battle, in which
Piedras lost 33 men, the army evacuated during the night. Bowie
and 18 companions ambushed the fleeing army and, after Piedras fled,
marched the troops back to Nacogdoches. Bowie later served as a delegate
to the Convention of 1833, which formally requested that Texas
become its own state within the Mexican federation.
After the deaths of his
family Bowie began drinking heavily but when the Mexican government
passed new laws again allowing sale of land in Texas he returned to land
speculation. He was appointed a land commissioner promoting
settlement in the area purchased by John T. Mason. His appointment ended
in May 1835, when President Antonio López de Santa Anna abolished the
Coahuila y Tejas government and ordered the arrest of all Texians doing
business in Monclova. Bowie was forced to flee Monclova and return to
the Anglo areas of Texas.
The Anglos in Texas began
agitating for war against Santa Anna, and Bowie worked with William
B. Travis, the leader of the War Party, to gain support. Bowie
visited several Native villages in East Texas in an
attempt to persuade the reluctant tribes to fight against the
Mexican government. Santa Anna responded
to the rumblings by ordering large numbers of Mexican troops to Texas.
The Texas Revolution
began on October 2, 1835, with the Battle of Gonzales. Stephen F. Austin
formed an army of 500 men to march on the Mexican forces in San Antonio with
the cannon that had precipitated the fight. Texian Army On
October 22, Austin asked James W. Fannin and Bowie, now a colonel in
the volunteer militia, to scout the area around the missions of San
Francisco de la Espada and San José y San Miguel de Aguayo to find supplies
for the volunteer forces. The scouting party left with 92 men, many of them
members of the New Orleans Grays, who had just arrived in Texas. After
discovering a good defensive position near Mission Concepción,
the group requested that Austin’s army join them.
On the foggy morning of
October 28, Mexican General Domingo Ugartechea led a force of 300
infantry and cavalry and two small cannons against the Texian forces. Although the Mexican army was able to get
within 200 yards, the defensive position protected them from fire. When
the Mexicans stopped to reload their cannon, the Texians climbed a bluff
and picked off some of the soldiers. The stalemate ended shortly
after Bowie led a charge to seize one of the Mexican cannons. Ugartechea
retreated with his troops, ending the Battle of Concepción.
An hour after the battle
ended, Austin arrived with the rest of the Texian army to begin a siege of San
Antonio de Béxar, where General Martín Perfecto de Cós, the overall
commander of Mexican forces in Texas, and his troops were garrisoned.
Two days later, Bowie resigned from Austin’s army because he did not have an official
commission and disliked the “minor tasks of scouting and spying”.
On November 3, 1835,
Texas declared itself an independent state, and a provisional
government was formed, with Henry Smith of Brazoria elected provisional
governor. Austin asked to be relieved of his command of the army,
and Sam Houston was named army chief. Edward Burleson was chosen as temporary
commander of the troops in San Antonio. Bowie appeared before the council asking
for a commission. The council refused his request, probably because of
lingering animosity over his land dealings.
Houston
offered Bowie a commission as an officer on his staff, but Bowie
rejected the opportunity, explaining that he wanted to be in the midst of the
fighting. Instead, he enlisted in the army as a private under
Fannin. He distinguished himself
again in the Grass Fight on November 26 in which he led 60 mounted
men to intercept a party 187 men sent to cut grass for Cós’s
horses. At the end of the fight, the Texians had two wounded men but had captured
many horses and mules.
Ben Milam
led an assault on Béxar. The Texians suffered only a few casualties,
including Miliam, while the Mexican army lost many troops to death and desertion.
Cós surrendered and returned to Mexico, taking with him the last Mexican
troops in Texas. Believing the war was over, many of the Texian
volunteers left the army and returned to their families. In early January 1836,
Bowie went to San Felipe and asked the council to allow him to recruit a
regiment. He was turned down again, because he “was not an officer of
the government nor army.”
After Houston received
word that Santa Anna was leading a large force to San Antonio, Bowie offered to
lead volunteers to defend the Misión San Antonio de Valero known as the Alamo
from the expected attack. He arrived with 30 men on January 19 but still with
no official commission. He found a force of 104 men with a few weapons and a
few cannons, but not many supplies and little gunpowder. Houston
knew that there were not enough men to hold the fort in an
attack, and he gave Bowie authority to remove the artillery and blow
up the fortification. Bowie and the Alamo commander, James C. Neill,
decided they did not have enough oxen to move the artillery, and they
did not want to destroy the fortress. On January 26, one of Bowie’s men, James
Bonham, organized a rally that passed a resolution in favor
of holding the Alamo. Bonham signed the resolution first, Bowie second.
With close ties to the
community, Bowie learned that Santa Anna was marching on the city at the head
of an army of 4500. He dispatched a
series of letters to Governor Smith and General Houston begging for
reinforcements and supplies despite Houston’s order to retreat. A letter to Smith said:
…the salvation of Texas depends in
great measure on keeping Béxar out of the hands of the enemy. It serves as the
frontier picquet guard, and if it were in the possession of Santa Anna, there
is no stronghold from which to repel him in his march toward the Sabine…Colonel
Neill and myself have come to the solemn resolution that we will rather die in
these ditches than give it up to the enemy.
Neill, however, took
leave to tend to sick relatives and command went to William Travis, a Lt.
Colonel in Army. Bowie took offense. He was older and considered himself Travis
superior as an unofficial Colonel of volunteers. He contested leadership and a vote of the
garrison made him commander. To celebrate
Bowie went on a two day epic toot in the town releasing all prisoners
in the local jail and harassing citizens. After sobering up
he and Travis agreed on a joint command with Travis in charge of the
Army and artillery and Bowie of the volunteers and cavalry.
A few days later Davy
Crocket arrived with 30 Tennesseans and took his place in
command. These three became legendary
and iconic. The details of
Santa Anna’s 13-day siege and final assault are well known, if often
skewed by myth making. Travis
died on the walls. Crocket is
believed to have survived and been taken prisoner then executed
by firing squad under Santa Anna’s no quarter orders.
Bowie had fallen seriously
ill before the final assault and sole command had gone to Travis. He was confined to a cot in a cell. According to most accounts he defended
himself with his pistols and knife when troopers broke into his room and was bayonetted
in his bed. The bodies of all three
leaders were thrown on a pyre with the other dead and unceremoniously
burned.
The Alamo fell on
March 6, 1836. Historians are divided
on whether it was a foolish, futile sacrifice or if it bought
Sam Houston time to solidify his Army, maneuver it out of harm’s
way from Santa Anna’s army, and ultimately be able to surprise his
enemy at the Battle of San Jacinto and secure Texas independence.
Although Bowie claimed vast
wealth from his land speculations his estate was valued at
less than $100 and he owned no clear title to any land. His few possessions were sold to
settle debts.
Popular culture
in the U.S. has declared the Alamo a heroic last stand. Bowie and Crockett became bigger than life
folk heroes with many stories made up about the exploits before and
during the battle.
Bowie has often been portrayed
on the screen. The first film
version of the battle appeared in 1911 with the Gaston Melies lost film The
Immortal Alamo, but it omitted Bowie.
Walt Disney TV mini-series Davey Crocket revived
interest in the Alamo. Kenneth Tobey portrayed
Bowie. Bowie got his own TV series, The
Adventures of Jim Bowie in 1956 staring Scott Forbes. The series, criticized for the violence
of its knife fights, was set mostly in Louisiana. A 1987 miniseries The Alamo 13 Days to
Glory featured James Arness Bowie, Brian Keith as Davy
Crockett, and Alec Baldwin as Travis.
On the Big screen there
were several B movie pot boilers like 1937’s Heroes of the Alamo
with Roger Williams as Bowie and 1957’s The Lost Command with
Sterling Hayden in the role. Richard
Widmark played Bowie in John Wayne’ epic The Alamo. Jason Patrick played him in the much grittier
and more realistic 2004 The Alamo.
But none of them show
what a low life and scoundrel Bowie really was.
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