The Lone Star State declared its independence from Mexico weeks before the final battle of the Texas Revolution. Here's why ...
This week on The Bookmark,James Aalan Bernsen, author of The Lost War for Texas: Mexican Rebels, American Burrites, and the Texas Revolution of 1811. We’ll be talking about this overlooked first war ...
It was on March 2, 1836, when historians believe the original and five copies of the Texas Declaration of Independence were ...
Though the leaders of Mexico’s revolution all lived short and violent lives, a handful of those who rode with them have survived to a ripe old age in Texas. More than once San Antonio has been the ...
TEXAS CITY — Pancho Villa’s hard-riding vaqueros and the federal troops they vanquished 100 years ago during the violent Mexican Revolution are never far from Manuel Urbina’s thoughts. Urbina, a ...
An exhibit marking the 100th anniversary of the Mexican Revolution of 1910, an event that brought many families to the San Antonio area, opened this month at the Institute of Texan Cultures. An ...
The cannons and hoofbeats of the Mexican Revolution are a distant echo for most Waco families who can trace their immigration story to that bloody conflict, which began a century ago today.
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — The Texas State Museum of Asian Cultures is hosting a special evening with Edgar Zapata, a great grandson of Mexican Revolution General Emiliano Zapata. Zapata will be ...
It is said that history is written by the victors, but in terms of the Texas Revolution, the vanquished Mexican Army has a lot to say about the subject.