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Gonzales is a city in the U.S. state of Texas, with a population of 7,165 at the 2020 census. [6] It is the county seat of Gonzales County. [7] The "Come and Take It" incident, the ride of the Immortal 32 into the Alamo, and the Runaway Scrape after the fall of the Alamo, all integral events in the War for Texas Independence from Mexico, originated in Gonzales.
1840 Gonzales men join the Battle of Plum Creek against Buffalo Hump and his Comanches. 1850 Gonzales College is founded by slave-owning planters, and is the first institution in Texas to confer A.B. degrees on women. 1853 The Gonzales Inquirer begins publication. [16] 1860 County population is 8,059, including 3,168 slaves. 1861
Location of Gonzales County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Gonzales County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Gonzales County, Texas. There are three districts and nine individual properties listed on ...
Conjectural replica at the Texas State Capitol showing spiked touch-hole Monument in Gonzales, Texas. In January 1831, Green DeWitt wrote to Ramón Músquiz, the top political official of Bexar, and requested armament for defense of the colony of Gonzales. This request was granted by supplying a Spanish made six-pounder bronze cannon on the ...
Cronicas Newspaper California: San Francisco: 2006 www.cronicasnews.com Las Américas Newspaper: Virginia: Falls Church [1] La Cara: Texas: Mexia, Waco: La Conexión: North Carolina: Raleigh: 1995 El Conquistador: Illinois: Geneva: 1993 Merged with Reflejos in 2011 Al Día: Pennsylvania: Philadelphia: Al Día: Texas Dallas: El Diario de El Paso ...
Apr. 18—WILLARD — "We're small but we are mighty." Those were the words Friday of Willard Historical Society President Margo Barnett prior to the ribbon-cutting for the new museum in uptown ...
Smithwick reported that the cannon was buried near a creek not far from Gonzales. [37] A small iron cannon was exposed during a June 1936 flood near Gonzales. In 1979, this cannon was purchased by Dr. Patrick Wagner, who believed it matched Smithwick's descriptions of the cannon used in the battle.
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