In honoring the heroic legend of the Texas Revolution, generations of scholars and Texans themselves have cleansed the revolution of its messier--and perhaps more truly revolutionary--dimensions.
For the masses of Texans, Lack convincingly demonstrates, the Revolution was a time of dislocation and grief that even the eventual outcome of battle did not h.
He traces the role of bLack Texans, the panic within Texas over slave rebellion, and the problem of runaway slaves in the Revolution.
Lack provides the most satisfactory account of Texas Tories yet written and, in a particularly sensitive treatment of Tejanos, shows the dilemma Texas Mexicans faced in the conflict.
He details instead the tensions between army volunteers and the majority of Texans who refused military service.
With the statistical profile of the army he has compiled, Lack puts to rest forever the idea that the Anglo community gave an overwhelming response to the call to arms.
He concludes that the army was highly politicized, overly democratic and individualistic, and lacking in discipline and respect for property.
Lack examines, one at a time, the various groups that participated in the Texas Revolution.
Paul D.
This fresh perspective, drawn from exhaustive examination of primary documents (claims records and land documents as well as traditional manuscript collections), portrays the Texans entering their quarrel with Mexico as a fragmented people--individualistic, divided from one community to another by ethnic and racial tensions, and lacking a consensus about the meaning of Political changes in Mexico.
This groundbreaking work on the Texas Revolution offers the first systematic analysis of the event as Political and Social history.
Focusing on the pre-existing causes of the conflict of 1835-36 and the military execution of the war, they have neglected the Political turbulence, regional disharmonies, conflicts of interest, Social upheaval, and racial and ethnic strife that characterized the period.
In honoring the heroic legend of the Texas Revolution, generations of scholars and Texans themselves have cleansed the revolution of its messier--and perhaps more truly revolutionary--dimensions