Everything about Battle Of Concepcion totally explained
The
Battle of Concepción was a
19th Century Battle between the
Republic of Mexico and the rebellious Mexican state of
Texas on
October 28,
1835, during the
Texas Revolution.
Background
The Texan revolt had started in a haphazard and disorganized manner, but it was successful enough that most of what was left of the Mexican army in Texas sat in
San Antonio cut off from communications and supplies. The poorly trained and dispirited force there under General
Martin Perfecto de Cós was mostly made up of convicts. The revolt in
Zacatecas a few months before had diverted most of Mexico’s resources, so the 647 men in San Antonio were ill-equipped to fight 30,000
Texian settlers and their
Tejano allies.
On
October 11,
1835, volunteers gathered around
Gonzales, and elected
Stephen F. Austin as their commanding general. The next day, the newly christened Army of Texas, wearing a spectrum of clothing from civilian to military, marched off to San Antonio. Captain
Ben Milam met them on the way there with additional forces. On
October 15, a scouting party encountered ten
dragoons, exchanged fire with them, and chased them to San Antonio. The main force reached the outskirts of San Antonio on
October 19.
General Austin decided that the only way to take the town was by
siege. He organized a search party headed by
Jim Bowie and
James Fannin to find a suitable base of operations. Another addition to this group was a well-known scout named
Erastus Smith, also known as "Deaf Smith" because he was hearing-impaired. Smith had planned to stay out of the revolt, but as he and his son-in-law, a black freedman named Hendrik Arnold, returned to San Antonio to see their family, a Mexican sentry disallowed them entrance and struck Smith on the head with a sheathed saber. From Smith, Austin learned that the morale of Cós’ soldiers was already very low.
Bowie’s old friend
Juan Seguín arrived with news that the citizens of San Antonio supported the Texans. Austin made him a captain and ordered him to raise a company of
mounted troops. He gave the same order to
Lieutenant William B. Travis. Meanwhile, Bowie’s ninety-man search party found that the Mission Nuestra Senora de la Purísima Concepción de Acuna, or Mission Concepcion, appeared a suitable base of operations. It took them all day to decide this so they set up camp 500 yards from the mission. Bowie's delay infuriated Austin, who had ordered him to return before dark; now Austin's forces were divided. General Cós learned of the separation and led 300 dragoons, 100
infantry, and two cannons to attack Bowie’s forces.
Battle
On
October 28,
1835, General Cós approached the Texans under a dense fog. There was a brief skirmish in the fog, but the main battle didn't start until it lifted. The
gunpowder Cós’ men were using was of such poor quality that their
musket balls often fell short of their target and, in some cases, only caused bruises if they did hit. They also used Brown Bess Carbines which shot at a range of 75 yards while the Texans' gun could fire at 200 yards. The Mexicans fired
grapeshot from their cannons at the Texans, who were well hidden in a ravine below the trees and brush, but it was also ineffective. The Texans were careful and deliberate in their fire and managed to take out the cannons with
sniper fire.
The Mexicans, who were trained in formal European
battlefield tactics and equipped with British "
Brown Bess" Carbine muskets, were methodically thinned out as the Texans, many of whom were equipped with
rifles, employed snipe-and-hide tactics. This type of warfare caused Cós’ forces to fall back. The Texans charged the unattended Mexican cannons, turned them around, and fired on the Mexicans. Cós and the remainder of his army fled.
The Mexicans had lost about 76 men, killed or wounded, while the Texans had lost only one man,
Richard Andrews. Austin and the rest of the army arrived at the end of the battle. Travis and his mounted company gave chase to the fleeing Mexican soldiers as they headed back to San Antonio.
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