Great River: Mexico and the United StatesA distinguished historian examines the development of the region and surveys the amalgamation of the aboriginal Indian, Spanish, Mexican, and Anglo-American civilizations. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 86
Page 519
... Point of View What had to be done was familiar enough to be thoroughly under- stood by General Cos and the citizens of the Rio Grande . It had been done often enough in the states below the ... POINT OF VIEW 519 From Mexico's Point of View.
... Point of View What had to be done was familiar enough to be thoroughly under- stood by General Cos and the citizens of the Rio Grande . It had been done often enough in the states below the ... POINT OF VIEW 519 From Mexico's Point of View.
Page 610
... Point Isabel , a little port nine miles up the coast from the Rio Grande , in a harbor formed by reaches of low land divided by a narrow entrance from the sea , called Los Brazos de Santiago - the Arms of Saint James . Here General ...
... Point Isabel , a little port nine miles up the coast from the Rio Grande , in a harbor formed by reaches of low land divided by a narrow entrance from the sea , called Los Brazos de Santiago - the Arms of Saint James . Here General ...
Page 671
... Point Isabel . Communications with the base were already pre- carious . So many Mexican troops were massing on the coast that reports came into camp telling how Point Isabel had already been attacked . Not Chapita , but his nephew , had ...
... Point Isabel . Communications with the base were already pre- carious . So many Mexican troops were massing on the coast that reports came into camp telling how Point Isabel had already been attacked . Not Chapita , but his nephew , had ...
Contents
A Colony for Mexico | 453 |
A Wild Strain | 460 |
The Twin Sisters | 469 |
Copyright | |
80 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American animals Armijo arms army arrived artillery attack bank battle brought Brownsville Camargo camp Canales canyon Captain Carranza cattle cavalry Chihuahua citizens Coahuila Colonel colony command Congress cow boy crossed desert Díaz Eagle Pass El Paso enemy fight fire forces Fort Bliss Fort Craig frontier garrison gave Governor Gulf heard horse hundred Indians infantry killed knew land later Magoffin Manuel Armijo Matamoros ment Mexican Mexico City Mier miles Monterrey mountains moved nation night officers once Pancho Villa party Paso passed plain plaza Point Isabel prairies President Presidio prisoners pueblos Republic rifle river road Saltillo San Antonio Santa Anna Santa Fe seemed sent settlers Socorro soldiers soon Spanish Stephen Austin Taos Taylor territory Texans Texas thousand tion took town traders troops turned United upriver Veracruz Villa volunteers wagons wrote