We Never Retreat

We Never Retreat
Author: Edward A. Bradley
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 346
Release: 2015-02-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 1623492572

The term “filibuster” often brings to mind a senator giving a long-winded speech in opposition to a bill, but the term had a different connotation in the nineteenth century—invasion of foreign lands by private military forces. Spanish Texas was a target of such invasions. Generally given short shrift in the studies of American-based filibustering, these expeditions were led by colorful men such as Augustus William Magee, Bernardo Gutiérrez de Lara, John Robinson, and James Long. Previous accounts of their activities are brief, lack the appropriate context to fully understand filibustering, and leave gaps in the historiography. Ed Bradley now offers a thorough recounting of filibustering into Spanish Texas framed through the lens of personal and political motives: why American men participated in them and to what extent the US government was either involved in or tolerated them. “We Never Retreat” makes a major contribution by placing these expeditions within the contexts of the Mexican War of Independence and international relations between the United States and Spain.

The Western Military Frontier, 1815-1846

The Western Military Frontier, 1815-1846
Author: Henry Putney Beers
Publisher: Scholars Bookshelf
Total Pages: 227
Release: 2006-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781601050649

2006 Scholar's Bookshelf reprint of the 1935 publication. A comprehensive account of American military history on the western frontier from the end of the War of 1812 to the Mexican War, with special material on how the military frontier was advanced, the subjugation of the native Americans, the fortification of the vast area, and the gradual focusing of attention on events in Texas. Includes a valuable list of forts constructed between 1783 and 1846. Index and bibliography.