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To: Ditto

I believe the quotes below (from a article on the Texian ship Invincible) demonstrate that the US was secretly supplying the Mexican governement......

After entering the Union, Texas paid about 11,000 dollars to the US as the ship was never returned to the US (I thought it was, my bad)

Battle of Brazos Santiago and capture of Pocket

Captain Brown was immediately ordered to defend the Texas coast and seek out and engage the Mexican man-of-war Montezuma. The Invincible cruised south to the mouth of the Rio Grande, where on April 3, 1836, Invincible encountered the 20-gun Man-of-War in an area then-called Brazos Santiago (now called Boca Chica) at the mouth of Laguna Madre. After an exchange of broadsides the Montezuma ran aground on a sandbar, and her crew escaped. Invincible barraged the Mexican cruiser until she was destroyed.[2]

Later that same day, the Invincible sighted and engaged the United States merchant vessel Pocket. Pocket was displaying a signal pennant which indicated that the vessel was transporting cargo to support General Antonio López de Santa Anna’s operation against the rebellious Texans. According to the Handbook of Texas Online, “Captain Brown boarded the vessel, examined the cargo and ship’s papers, and discovered war contraband, arms, and ammunition that did not appear on the manifest. He also found a detailed map of the Texas coastline and military dispatches in Spanish.”[1] In addition, the Texans found that Pocket was carrying high ranking Mexican army officers[3] in violation of the Neutrality Act of 1818. Pocket had been en route from Matamoros to Santa Anna’s army in Texas with a contraband cargo of flour, rice, lard, biscuit, and 300 kegs of powder. Based on the accumulated evidence, Brown assigned a prize crew and escorted Pocket to Galveston. Invincible arrived on April 8, and there he learned from captured documents that Santa Anna had plans to capture all Texas ports and to station 1,000 men on Galveston Island. Thus forewarned, the Texas government quickly fortified the strategically important and most populous Texas’ island. The provisions captured aboard the Pocket ultimately were consigned to Sam Houston’s army.[4] Texas historian Jim Dan Hill, writing during the Texas Centennial in 1936 credited the Invincible with contributing mightily to Sam Houston’s victory at San Jacinto by depriving the Mexicans of reinforcements that would have been brought by Montezuma and by redirecting Pocket’s supplies to the Texans just before the battle.[5]


24 posted on 08/14/2012 2:00:55 PM PDT by BereanBrain
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To: BereanBrain
I believe the quotes below (from a article on the Texian ship Invincible) demonstrate that the US was secretly supplying the Mexican governement......

You can choose to 'believe' it if you like... some people even believe in big foot. But the evidence is quite to the contrary. Andrew Jackson was president during the Texas War of Independence. He strongly supported annexation of Texas and was of his first efforts when he took office was making an offer to buy Texas from Mexico. The Mexicans flatly rejected that offer.

Sam Houston and Andrew Jackson were close friends. Houston actually named his son Andrew Jackson Houston in honor of his friend. Would he have done that if Jackson had been aiding Santa Anna?

Here's a quote from History.com

During the course of the Mexican revolt, the United States was far from neutral. Public opinion openly favored Texan independence and the government actually sent a military force onto Texan soil, weakly explaining that the soldiers were needed to restrain local Indians from raiding American settlements across the border.

In the fall of 1836, Samuel Houston was inaugurated as president of the independent Republic of Texas. The new administration promptly sent a representative to Washington, and repealed the prohibition on slavery. Andrew Jackson believed that Texas should be admitted to the Union as a slave state, but withheld action out of fear of the political consequences. On his final day in office, Jackson extended official diplomatic recognition to independent Texas.

Now if you have some source that the US supported Mexico and not the Texans during that war, I sure love to see it ... but I guess I would love to see a Big Foot too. ;~))

I just don't 'believe' either exist.

26 posted on 08/14/2012 7:35:26 PM PDT by Ditto (Nov 2, 2010 -- Partial cleaning accomplished. More trash to remove in 2012)
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