Page:Vol 5 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/198

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
178
TEXAN INDEPENDENCE.

tier under generals Houston, Green, and Barton. In September large bodies of Texans appeared in New Mexico, the chief ones in the cañada de Trujillo, and on the banks of the Pecos, A few trifling encounters took place with the Mexicans under García Conde.[1]

In the midst of his labors, President Barragan was attacked by a putrid fever, which put an end to his life on the 1st of March, 1836. His death was universally regretted, and his political crrors condoned even by the most advanced liberals in consideration of his good personal traits, and patriotic services, especially that of capturing San Juan de Ulúa.[2]

Owing to General Barragan's illness, the chamber of deputies, on the 27th of February, 1836, chose José Justo Corro, of Guadalajara, to fill the position of acting president. Corro was called to govern the nation at a time when it was beset with troubles both internal and external, and showed himself entirely unfit for so responsible a position. He was a man of excessive piety[3] and timidity, and utterly ignorant of military affairs, when the country might have to bring into use at any moment its resources and energies in a war with the United States on the Texas question.

Amid the confusion in the interior a plan of 'concordia,' as it was called, was brought forward in June,

  1. In June 1841 an expedition, generally known as the Santa Fé expedition, had started from the neighborhood of Georgetown on Brushy to occupy New Mexico and induce the people there to unite with the Texans. It had a disastrous termination, most of the men being either killed or taken prisoners and carried to Mexico, where they languished some time in prison. They were finally released, which allayed the excitement of the people of Texas who wanted to invade Mexico. Méx, Derecho Intern., 3d pt, 237; Thrall's Hist. Texas, 311-15; Baker's Tex., 93-4.
  2. Barragan before his death made a whimsical disposition of his remains; one portion was to be buried in the cathedral of Mexico; the eyes were bequeathed to the Valle del Maiz, his birthplace; the heart to Guadalajara; the entrails to other places; the tongue to San Juan Ulúa. It s understood that he died poor. The funeral was on a scale of great magnificence, the clergy manifesting their sorrow at his loss. Arrillaga, Recop., 1836, Jan. June, 274-5; Bustamante, Voz de la Patria, MS., xi. 9-20.
  3. One of the most devout lawyers in the republic. His election was a severe blow to the escoceses, and the forerunner of their loss of influence in the government. Mora, Obras Sueltas, i. p. cclxxvi.