San Antonio City Guide

Please Please Please Help! San Antonio, Texas History Question!?

Did anything special happen in San Antonio Texas before the Alamo and all that? I have a report to do for Texas History and I can’t find anything. I know how it got it’s name and everything and I have the stuff for the Alamo and after the alamo just not before! Please help anything you can contribute will be fine! Thank you soo much!

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2 Comments on "Please Please Please Help! San Antonio, Texas History Question!?"

  1. chapcase on Wed, 30th Sep 2009 8:35 pm 

    San Antonio was a Spanish ruled possession and had a Presidio there starting about 1719 with Spanish soldiers and their family. The Spanish crown decided to establish a colony in San Antonio. In 1731 16 families from the Canary Islands arrived at San Antonio de Bexar. Actually there were only 15 families but 2 men without families were considered one family. The Spanish crown conveyed the noble title of Hidalgo on all of them. A large portion of the people of Hispanic background are descendants of those colonials.They are not descendants of immigrants to the United States. There was time when the territory was ruled by France.
    When Mexico obtained independence from Spain, Texas was part of Mexico for 15 years. Then the Texians were odds with the government of Santa Ana and decided to break away from the Republic of Mexico in 1836. The Republic of Texas was formed. The Battle of the Alamo was not an American battle as it did not involve the United States but a battle between Texians(that is what they were called) and Mexico.
    The Republic of Texas was formed. Then after 10 years Texas entered the United States as a result of a treaty between the United States and the Republic of Texas. As a result, Texas is the only state in the United States that can fly its flag at the same level as the U.S. flag when they are both flying side side.
    People who want to sound like cowboys call the city San Antone. Yankees and redneck gringos say San An tone ee o or San An tone nee o. The correct pronunciation is San An TONE yo. However, San Antonio has so many Yankees and Redneck Gringos moving there in the past several years even the TV and advertisers mispronounce the name of the town. They show disrespect for the founders of the city if they know better.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Antonio…http://www.mysanantonio.com/life/MYSA18_…
    San Antonio has several old Spanish missions which are national parks.
    San Antonio has a large German settlement and a large portion of the original English speaking population was German and there were many Czechs.http://hostville.com/hoelscher/gertex.ht…

  2. Shirley T on Wed, 30th Sep 2009 9:14 pm 

    Capturing the spirit of Texas , San Antonio is a Mecca for history buffs. From its Native American occupation, discovery by Spanish explorers, old missions, the battle of the Alamo, and the Old West , the history and attractions of this beautiful city can entertain its visitors for days.
    When the area was first explored by Spanish expeditions in 1691 and 1709, the region was already occupied by a small Indian community established in the San Pedro Springs area, call Yanaguana. The first Spanish explorers gave the San Antonio River its name because it was the feast day of St. Anthony.
    The actual founding of the city came in 1718 by Father Antonio Olivares, when he established Mission San Antonio de Valero.
    Soon, five Spanish missions, chartered by the Canary Islanders, were located along the river. The presidial captain’s house (later the Spanish Governor’s Palace) was completed on Military Plaza in 1749, and San Fernando de Béxar Church was built by 1758. In 1773 San Antonio de Béxar became the capital of Spanish Texas.
    By 1778, the settlement’s population of more than 2,000 was made up of poor Indians and settlers and was described as “miserable” by visitors.
    By 1795, all of the missions had been put to work for other purposes and the San Antonio de Valero Mission became a military barracks. Later it would become known as the Alamo. During the Texas Revolution, San Antonio was the site of several battles, including the siege of Bexar in December, 1835 and the battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836, which made it one of the most fought-over cities in North America. In the Battle of the Alamo, 189 defenders held the old mission against some 4,000 Mexican troops for 13 days. The cry “Remember the Alamo” soon became the rallying point of the Texan revolution against Mexico.
    After the evacuation of Mexican forces, Bexar County was organized by the Republic of Texas in December 1836, and San Antonio was chartered in January 1837 as its seat. A failed attempt to negotiate the release of captives held by Comanche Indians resulted in yet another battle in the streets of the San Antonio, referred to as the Council House Fight of 1840. San Antonio was seized twice in the Mexican invasions of 1842, and the population was reduced to about 800 in 1846.
    After Texas entered the Union, growth became rapid, as the city became a servicing and distribution center for the western movement of the United States. By 1850, the city had increased to nearly 3,500 and a decade later to more than 8,000.
    In 1861 local militia forced the surrender of the federal arsenal at San Antonio even before the state seceded on March 2nd. Subsequently, San Antonio served as a Confederate depot and several Confederate units were formed there.
    After the Civil War, San Antonio prospered as a cattle, distribution, mercantile, and military center serving the border region and the Southwest.
    The city was the southern hub and supplier of the cattle trail drives. An important wool market developed with the importation of merino sheep to the adjacent Hill Country. With the coming of the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway in 1877, San Antonio, formerly without a transportation system, entered a new era of economic growth.
    The population reached more than 20,000 in 1880. In 1881 a second railroad reached the city and by 1900, five different railroads encroached upon the town. By this time, San Antonio had become the largest city in the state with more than 50,000 residents.
    As the city grew and expanded, San Antonio succeeded in merging its past into the new modernization of each generation. Old Spanish walls remain beside modern glass towers, with rows of Victorian mansions a block away, a combination that lends the city a charm sought out by millions of visitors.
    Today, close to twenty million visitors a year delight in the discovery of San Antonio’s charms.
    A tour of downtown San Antonio will uncover centuries of history, including:
    La Villita, one of the original settlements was comprised of Spanish soldiers and their families.
    The Spanish Governor’s Palace, which was the seat of government when San Antonio was the capital of the Spanish Province of Texas
    The San Fernando Cathedral, whose construction was started in 1731 by Canary Islanders
    The Jose Antonio Navarro State Historical Park, home of Navarro, a central figure in the formation of Texas
    Market Square, the largest Mexican marketplace outside of Mexico
    Steves Homestead, a mansion open to the public in the King William Historic District.
    San Antonio is also famous for its Riverwalk, the Alamo, three-time NBA Champion Spurs basketball team, the Tower of the Americas, and being home to SeaWorld and Six Flags Fiesta Texas theme parks.
    The jewel of the city is the Paseo del Rio, or River Walk, which meanders through the downtown area, is lined with numerous shops, bars, and restaurants as well as the Arnes

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