Battle of the San Gabriels explained

Conflict:Battle of the San Gabriels
Partof:The Texas–Indian wars
Date:17 May 1839
Place:The San Gabriel River, near Georgetown, Texas
Result:Texian victory
Combatant2: Mexico
Various Indians
Commander1: Lt. James Rice
Commander2: Mexico Manuel Flores
Map Type:Texas
Map Label:San Gabriels Battlefield

The Battle of the San Gabriels was an 1839 skirmish in the Texas–Indian wars.

The battle began on 17 May 1839. A company of Texas Rangers under Lt. James O. Rice had pursued the Mexican agent Manuel Flores and his party of Mexicans and Indians,[1] following their murder of four surveyors working between Seguin and San Antonio, Texas. Battle was commenced on the north San Gabriel River, after the 2 day pursuit. In the first charge, Flores was killed and his company fled, abandoning a supply train intended to equip the Indians of East Texas for a revolt against the Texians. In the captured baggage, Rice discovered letters between Flores and Vicente Córdova as well as instructions from Mexican general Valentín Canalizo, detailing the Córdova Rebellion. These letters contradicted The Bowl's previous denials of involvement with Córdova's revolt and led to the Cherokee War.

A marker was placed near the site in 1936.[2]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Mann . William L. . 1951 . James O. Rice: Hero of the Battle on the San Gabriels . The Southwestern Historical Quarterly . 55 . 1 . 30–42 . 30241882 . 0038-478X.
  2. Manuel Flores: 2.5 miles SE on SH 29, past US 183, 0.1 miles north on CR 260: Texas marker #9093 | http://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/viewform.asp?atlas_num=5491009093