The Mexican War: The Texas Revolution

Part Two

The Mexican War: The Texas Revolution
Thomas Wayne Riley

This is part two in my ongoing series over the Mexican War of 1846-1848.

This episode covers the period immediately after the Alamo. I talk about Goliad, Sam Houston and his retreats, and the Battle of San Jacinto which sees the Texans gain their Independence from Mexico

Selected Sources:

Jefferson Davis Mexican War Regiment by Joseph E Chance

A Perfect Gibraltar: The Battle for Monterrey, Mexico, 1846 by Chris D. Dishman

The Training Ground by Martin Dugard

So Far From God by John SD Eisenhower

Texian Iliad by Stephen Hardin

Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas by Stephen Harrigan

James K Polk and the Expansionist Impulse by Sam W Haynes

The California Campaign of the US Mexican War by Hunt Janin and Ursula Carlson

To The Halls of The Montezumas by Robert Johannsen

The Mexican war: a history of its origin, and a detailed account of the victories which terminated in the surrender of the capital; with the official despatches of the generals. To which is added, the treaty of peace, and valuable tables of the strength and losses of the United States army by Edward D. Mansfield

Mormon Battalion by Michael N Landon & Brandon J Metcalf

The Old West: The Mexican War by the Editors of Time-Life Books with text by David Nevin

The Old West: The Texans by the Editors of Time-Life Books with text by David Nevin

The Mormon Battalion by Norman Baldwin Ricketts

A Newer World by David Roberts

Blood and Thunder by Hampton Sides

Texas and the Mexican War: A Chronicle of the Winning of the Southwest, Volume 24 by Nathaniel Stephenson

Previous
Previous

The Mexican War: War is a Blessing

Next
Next

The Mexican War: Remember the Alamo