Posted on Thursday, October 2, 2025
|
by The Association of Mature American Citizens
|
1 Comments
|
On October 2, 1835, the first shots of what would become the Texas Revolution were fired in a small but dramatic clash at Gonzales, marking the moment when simmering tensions between settlers in Texas and the Mexican government erupted into open warfare.
Tensions had been mounting for years. Though Texas (or Tejas, as Mexico called it) had long been part of the Spanish and then Mexican realm, during the early 1820s the young Mexican government encouraged Anglo-American immigration to help stabilize and develop the territory. Over time, however, cultural, economic, and political divisions grew. Anglo settlers tended to speak English, maintain ties to the United States, and cling to practices (especially slavery) that Mexican authorities viewed with suspicion and hostility.
By 1835, the situation had deteriorated. The Mexican president, Antonio López de Santa Anna, had centralized power and discarded liberal constitutional limits; he was now ruling more like a dictator. To tighten control, his government ordered troops into Texas to disarm the colonists, trying to collect weapons and cannons.
In Gonzales, a small town east of San Antonio, Mexican soldiers demanded the surrender of a small cannon previously gifted to local colonists as defense against Indian raids. The local settlers refused. A hastily organized militia banded together, determined to hold onto their piece of artillery — a symbolic weapon as much as a practical one.
On that October morning, Mexican troops approached Gonzales, intent on seizing the cannon. But the Texans responded with force. Whether one “shot heard ’round Texas” preceded a more formal battle or whether it was part of a brief skirmish, the result was the same: the Mexicans withdrew, and the colonists kept the cannon.
Though small in scale, this clash was significant. It was not a pitched battle like later fights at the Alamo or San Jacinto — but it was the opening confrontation of the Texas Revolution. After Gonzales, hostilities would spread; the Texans would wage campaigns against Mexican forces through 1836 until eventually achieving independence and establishing the Republic of Texas.
The Battle of Gonzales endures as a symbol of Texan defiance and resistance — a moment when ordinary settlers, unwilling to yield their rights or arms, made a stand that would spark a larger war. In Texas lore, it is commemorated by the rallying cry “Come and Take It,” emblazoned even today on commemorative flags.
October 2, 1835, thus marks not just an isolated skirmish, but the opening salvo in a revolutionary struggle — one that would reshape the map of North American politics and give living meaning to the Texan identity for generations to come.
Read full article here