:''For the decisive tank battle fought on 27 February 1991 during the
Persian Gulf War see the
Battle of Medina Ridge''
The 'Battle of Medina' was fought approximately 20 miles south of
San Antonio, Texas on
August 18,
1813 as part of the
Mexican War of Independence against
Spanish authority in
Mexico. Spanish Royalist troops led by General
Joaquín de Arredondo defeated Republican forces (calling themselves the ''Republican Army of the North''), consisting of Tejano-
Mexican and Tejano-
American revolutionaries participating in the
Gutiérrez-Magee Expedition, under General José Álvarez de Toledo y Dubois.
Background
Colonel Don Jose Bernardo Maximiliano Gutiérrez de Lara took up the effort to free Texas from Spain. Colonel Gutiérrez visited Washington, DC and gained support for his efforts. In 1812, Colonel Augustus William Magee, who had commanded U.S. Army troops guarding the border of the “Neutral Ground” between Louisiana and Texas, resigned his commission, and formed the Republican Army of the North to aid the Gutiérrez-Magee Expedition. The army flew a solid
emerald green flag, thought to have been introduced by Colonel Magee, who was of
Protestant Irish descent.
Nacogdoches was taken on
12 August 1812, with little opposition, and on
7 November 1812 the Republican Army of the North marched into what is present day
Goliad where they took the Presidio La Bahia beginning a four month siege. While at La Bahia, Colonel Magee died on 6 February 1813. After numerous battles and heavy losses, the Spanish lifted the siege and returned to
San Antonio de Bexar.
On
25 March 1813 the Republican Army of the North left La Bahia for Bexar after receiving reinforcements. Colonel
Samuel Kemper replaced Magee, and Lieutenant Colonel Reuben Ross was elected second in command.
The battle
There were approximately 1,400 Tejanos in the Republican Army at the time, composed of
Americans,
Euro-Mexicans, and former
Spanish Royalist soldiers aided by an auxillery force of Indians and at least at least one black slave. General Toledo and his men had camped at
Gallinas Creek, about six miles north of the Royalist troops which were roughly three miles west of present-day
Espey.
The battle lasted four hours. Toledo's plan called for an ambush on the Royalist troops as they would march through a
defile on the Bexar-
Laredo road. Similarly, Arredondo had sent out a scouting party with some cavalry in the morning to try and determine the location of Toledo's troops. Quite accidentally, they happened upon the Republican ambush and retreated after a brief exchange of fire.
The Republican soldiers gave chase, apparently mistaking the cavalry which kicked up large clouds of dust for the main army; it is believed that Toledo tried in vain to stop his troops from advancing. In their pursuit, they were slowed down by the sandy terrain; the guns they were dragging with them became deeply mired. By the time they reached the Spanish lines they were tired and thirsty. However they did manage to rout some Spanish artillery units and were trying a flanking maneuver when they were repulsed by Spanish cavalry units; the situation had been less than clear for Arredondo and he was prepared to order his troops to fall back, when he seems to have been informed by a defector that the Republican troops were also attempting to disengage due to exhaustion. He then ordered an advance instead.
The Republicans fled in disorder. The Spanish continued to press killing many of the fleeing soldiers. Most of the remainder were captured and then in a portent of the future
Texas War of Independence were summarilly executed. Less than 100 out of 1,400 soldiers on the Republican side survived, while the Royalists lost only 55 men. The remains of the Republican troops were left to rot and not buried until
1822 when José Félix Trespalacios, the first governor of the state of Texas under the newly established Republic of Mexico, ordered a detachment of soldiers to gather their bones and bury them honorably under an oak tree that grew on the battlefield.
A Texas counterpart to the Mexican War of Independence, the Gutiérrez-Magee expedition of 1812-13 was an utter defeat of liberty in Texas and led directly to a massive genocide of the Tejano-American population and much of the Tejano-Mexican population. By the time General Arredondo had completed his purge, Texas had a smaller population than it did nearly 100 years previously. Indeed, so disastrous was the battle and the subsequent genocide that its battlefield has become lost, its "Green Flag" has remained largely unrecognized, and its participants have been generally unknown, unhonored, and unsung.
Indeed, among Arredondo's loyalist troops at the battle and apparently in command of the scout party and later execution squad was a young
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, future president and later dictator of
Mexico. It was toward a similar conclusion that Generalissimo Santa Anna marched northward and put to the sword the rebellious population of Southern Texas and what Tejano-American settlers he could capture. The battles of the Alamo and Goliad serve as singular reminders of what awaited the entire Texan population had the Battle of San Jacinto had the Texan army failed to defeat the Mexican Army.
It is also noteworthy, that some of Guttierrez-Magee participants were sons of American revolutionaries, some fought later with Andrew Jackson in the War of 1812, and of the few who survived some fought again during the second Texas Revolutionqv in 1835-36.
External links
★
Battle of Medina at
Handbook of Texas Online.
★
Battle of Medina