1 / 21

Chapter 11 THE TEXAS REVOLUTION (1835-1836)

Chapter 11 THE TEXAS REVOLUTION (1835-1836). Section 1: The War Begins Section 2: The Consultation of 1835 Section 3: The Siege of the Alamo Section 4: The Convention of 1836 Section 5: Independence Is Won. SECTION 1: The War Begins. OBJECTIVES.

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 11 THE TEXAS REVOLUTION (1835-1836)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 11THE TEXAS REVOLUTION(1835-1836) Section 1: The War Begins Section 2: The Consultation of 1835 Section 3: The Siege of the Alamo Section 4: The Convention of 1836 Section 5: Independence Is Won

  2. SECTION 1: The War Begins OBJECTIVES • Explain how the Battle of Gonzales significantly changed relations between Texans and the Mexican government. • Trace the events that led to the siege of San Antonio. • Describe what happened during the siege and capture of San Antonio.

  3. SECTION 1: The War Begins EFFECTS OF THE BATTLE OF GONZALES • Texas rebel victory • Started a war between Texas and the Mexican government • Increased the resolution and confidence of Texas rebels

  4. SECTION 1: The War Begins EVENTS LEADING TO THE SIEGE AT SAN ANTONIO • Battle of Gonzales – October 2, 1824 • Battle of Goliad between Cos’s army and Texas volunteer army – October 10, 1835 • Election of Texas army officers and Stephen F. Austin as general – mid October 1835 • Battle at Mission Concepcion between 400 Mexican soldiers and rebel army – October 28, 1835

  5. SECTION 1: The War Begins EVENTS LEADING TO THE SIEGE AT SAN ANTONIO (continued) • Grass Fight between the Texans and Mexicans carrying feed for their starving horses – November 26, 1835 • Report of a captured Mexican officer inspired Texans to pursue their siege – December 4, 1835 • Texas troops attack San Antonio – December 5, 1835

  6. SECTION 1: The War Begins SIEGE AND CAPTURE OF SAN ANTONIO • Ben Milam, Francis W. Johnson, and 300 volunteers gather for an attack on San Antonio • December 5, 1835 – Texas troops attack Mexican forces • December 9, 1835 – Texans push the Mexican troops out of San Antonio • December 10, 1835 – Cos surrenders and almost all Mexican troops leave Texas

  7. SECTION 2: The Consultation of 1835 OBJECTIVES • Identify the issues debated at the Consultation. • Describe the kind of government that the Consultation established and explain why problems with it arose.

  8. SECTION 2: The Consultation of 1835 ISSUES DEBATED AT THE CONSULTATION • PRO-WAR – Wanted to declare Texas independence from Mexico • PRO-PEACE – Wanted to remain loyal to Mexico; wanted to have the Constitution of 1824 restored; did not want to lost Tejano support • Both groups compromised in the DECLARATION OF NOVEMBER 7, 1835

  9. SECTION 2: The Consultation of 1835 GOVERNMENT UNDER THE CONSULTATION AND ITS PROBLEMS • Created a provisional (temporary) government • The lack of clear goals and leadership led to disagreements

  10. SECTION 3: The Siege of the Alamo OBJECTIVES • Describe the condition of the Texas forces when the Mexican troops arrived in Texas. • Explain why Texans decided to defend the Alamo and describe how they prepared. • Identify how the Battle of the Alamo began and describe what occurred during its final hours.

  11. SECTION 3: The Siege of the Alamo CONDITION OF THE TEXAS FORCES • Texas troops were scattered in small groups • Unprepared for an advance by Mexican troops

  12. SECTION 3: The Siege of the Alamo TEXANS DEFEND AND PREPARE THE ALAMO • Was strategically located along the Old San Antonio River • Was one of the first towns Santa Anna’s forces would meet • The Alamo and its artillery were too important to destroy

  13. SECTION 3: The Siege of the Alamo TEXANS DEFEND AND PREPARE THE ALAMO (continued) • Preparation consisted of building up walls and palisades from which to fight • Places 21 cannons along the Alamo walls palisades – high fences made of stakes

  14. SECTION 3: The Siege of the Alamo THE BATTLE OF THE ALAMO AND THE FINAL HOURS • William B. Travis sends one of several pleas for help • Volunteers arrive from Gonzales • Mexican soldiers are attacked and are briefly repulsed • The Mexican army overwhelms the Texans and enters the Alamo

  15. SECTION 4: The Convention of 1836 OBJECTIVES • Identify who attended the Convention of 1836 and explain what it achieved. • Describe the kind of government that the Convention established and identify the problems that the government faced.

  16. SECTION 4: The Convention of 1836 DELEGATES TO AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE CONVENTION OF 1836 • Delegates – Richard Ellis, President; George C. Childress, Sam Houston, Jose Antonio Navarro, Jose Francisco Ruiz, Lorenzo de Zavala • Accomplishments – Created Texas Declaration of Independence; set up an adinterim government; created the Constitution of 1836 ad interim – temporary

  17. SECTION 4: The Convention of 1836 STRUCTURE AND PROBLEMS OF THE NEW GOVERNMENT • Created a new government with three branches: • legislative branch – makes the laws • executive branch – carried out the laws • judicial branch – provides a court system • Contained a Bill of Rights – statement of basic rights • New government constantly on the move, which made accomplishments difficult

  18. SECTION 5: Independence Is Won OBJECTIVES • Identify the events that led to the Runaway Scrape. • Describe what led to James Fannin’s surrender at Goliad. • Explain how the Texas army defeated Mexican forces and won independence.

  19. SECTION 5: Independence Is Won EVENTS LEADING TO THE RUNAWAY SCRAPE • Sam Houston and other Texans learn of the fall of the Alamo • A larger Mexican force advanced on a smaller Texas force at Gonzales • Fear spread across Texas and civilians flee eastward • Houston orders Texas forces to retreat and burn Gonzales

  20. SECTION 5: Independence Is Won FANNIN’S SURRENDER AT GOLIAD • Heavy fog enabled Mexican troops to surround the Texans who had no cover • Texans had a very limited water supply • Texans were outnumbered by Mexican troops

  21. SECTION 5: Independence Is Won TEXANS WIN INDEPENDENCE • Mexican army makes camp in a vulnerable spot • Sam Houston calls a meeting and a decision is made for an immediate attack on the Mexican troops • The Texans stage a successful surprise attack on Mexican soldiers who were sleeping • Mexican surrender and Santa Anna is captured • Texans win their independence

More Related