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President
Houston's Cabinet
Vice-President
Mirabeau B. Lamar
An erudite Georgian who had distingushed himself at
the Battle of San Jacinto, Lamar soon became Houston's
most outspoken political opponent.
Secretary
of State
Stephen F. Austin
James P. Henderson
Robert Anderson Irion
Secretary of War
Thomas Jefferson Rusk
William S. Fisher
Barnard E. Bee
Secretary of Treasury
Henry Smith
Secretary of the Navy
Samuel R. Fisher
William M. Shepherd
Attorney General
James Collinsworth
James P. Henderson
Peter W. Grayson
John Birdsall
A.S. Thurston
Postmaster General
Gustavus A. Parker
Robert Barr
Land
Commissioner
John P. Borden
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One
of the most famous Comanche raids in Texas history
was the attack on Fort Parker in May 1836. Three members
of the Parker family were killed and five were captured.
James Parker tirelessly lobbied Sam Houston to open
hostilities to recover the captives; eventually Houston
authorized 120 men but an expedition was never sent.
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In this
letter to Thomas J. Rusk, then commander of the Nacogdoches
militia, Houston details his experiences in the town
and thoughts in the aftermath of the Córdova
rebellion. |

Anti-slavery
sentiment doomed the prospects for Texas annexation
during the Van Buren administration. This document
is the original draft of the withdrawal of the 1837
proposition for the annexation of Texas. |
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Sam Houston
Inventing Texas

This
cabin served as the president's house in the temporary
capital of Houston. The town was infamous for drunkenness,
profanity, and brawling. President Houston helped
set the tone. Texas State Library and Archives, Prints
and Photographs Collection, 1/103-507-B. |
At his inauguration in Columbia Houston
dramatically flourished, then gave up the sword he had used
at the Battle of San Jacinto. It was a symbolic gesture
by which Houston hoped to signal to the people that it was
time to turn away from war and to the business of building
a new Texas.
Moving on:
Houston's first order of business was to rid the country
of the divisive presence of Santa Anna, still being held
as a prisoner of war. In secret session, Houston convinced
the Texas Senate to allow Santa Anna to depart for the United
States to meet with President Andrew Jackson and announce
his support for Texas independence. Under cover of darkness,
the Mexican general finally left Texas on November 20, 1836.
Diplomatic
Recognition: With Santa Anna out of the
way, Houston turned his attention to the issue nearest his
heart: the annexation of Texas by the United States. Texas
was broke and weak; Houston knew the Republic could not
withstand another attack from Mexico. Houston's old mentor,
President Jackson, was an ardent expansionist and would
have liked nothing more than to annex Texas. But internationally,
no nation recognized Texas as anything but a Mexican province
in rebellion. For the United States to make a grab for Texas
would cause an international incident, not only with Mexico,
but with England and France as well. In addition, the northern
states were opposed to the addition of another slave state.
Although annexation was not yet to be, Houston and his commissioners
to the United States achieved partial success when they
gained official recognition by the United States for Texas
as an independent nation.
With annexation on hold, Houston
proceeded with the work of building an independent nation.
He sent representatives to Europe who negotiated a trade
agreement with England, an important step in building an
economy for the impoverished Republic.
Peace
with the Indians: As he had throughout his
life, Houston continued to concern himself with keeping
the peace between Indians and whites. He believed that the
two races could peacefully coexist, a view that put him
painfully out of step with the majority of white Texans.
Houston was unable to win much support for the policy of
negotiation; the Texas Senate even refused to ratify the
peace treaty he had negotiated with the Cherokees in 1836.

In this
1837 letter
from Company A, First Regiment of Artillery in Galveston,
the men detail their grievances and deny being in
mutiny. |
Furloughing
the army: During David Burnet's presidency,
the army had come close to lynching the president. As Houston
took over, both officers and men were still out of control.
Citizens complained that army officers were seizing horses
and slaughtering cattle to feed hungry troops without compensating
the owners. High-ranking officers, when not dueling one
another, were agitating for an invasion of Mexico. While
he worried about the ongoing Mexican threat, Houston decided
that the army was more trouble than it was worth to the
bankrupt Republic. He dealt with the problem decisively,
furloughing the entire army except for 600 men. The decision
was not popular. Houston was faced with mutinies at Galveston
and Velasco, and there was talk of an attempt on the president's
life.
The Bachelor Republic:
In April 1837, the government
relocated to the new town of Houston, not far from the San
Jacinto battlefield. Though Houston had to be gratified
by having the capital named for him, there is evidence that
this was not a happy time in his life. The muddy collection
of tents and log buildings was known as the "Bachelor
Republic," and Houston joined right in with the drinking,
brawling, and carousing. During this time in his life, he
was drinking very heavily and probably using opium as well.
The Córdova Rebellion:
In the summer of 1838, a crisis
erupted at Nacogdoches that epitomized the pressures on
a growing and changing Texas. Like most places in Texas,
Nacogdoches had a large population of Mexican descent, many
of whom resented the takeover of the government by Anglo
Americans. To add to the mix, the Cherokee Indians lived
nearby. A local Hispanic leader, Vicente Córdova,
formed an alliance between local malcontents, agents of
the Mexican government, and Indians, for a combined force
of about 400 men.
Houston traveled to Nacogdoches
to try to calm the situation. The rebels were put down rather
easily by Texas troops, but Houston worried that angry whites
would take reprisals against the Indians. His fears were
well-grounded.
Houston's term was almost up, and
he was forbidden by Texas law from succeeding himself. Events
now set in motion would play themselves out during the term
of the next president of Texas. For Houston's old friends
the Cherokees, disaster awaited.
On
to Mirabeau B. Lamar>> |
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