Land! : Irish pioneers in Mexican and revolutionary Texas

Author(s)

    • Davis, Graham

Bibliographic Information

Land! : Irish pioneers in Mexican and revolutionary Texas

Graham Davis

(The Centennial series of the Association of Former Students, no. 92)

Texas A&M University Press, c2002

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [283]-292) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is an account of the Irish settlers who founded Refugio and San Patricio and went on to take active roles in the economic and political development of Texas. It tells this Irish-Texan story of the search for land by looking at the experiences of the original impresarios John McMullen, James McGloin, James Power, and James Hewetson, and finishes with a description of the ranching empire of Power's nephew, Thomas O'Connor. In between it scrutinizes the marriages, commercial contracts, political alliances, and language ties that ""Mexicanized"" these successful entrepreneurs. Living in the heart of the war zone, some of the Irish settlers fought for independence while others remained loyal to the Mexican government that had made them citizens and gave them land. A picture of the hardships of pioneer life and the building of communities, churches and schools. It makes a case that the Irish came to Texas not as victims but as entrepreneurs and opportunists in search of land.

Table of Contents

  • The Province of Texas in Newly Independent Mexico
  • The Context of Emigration - Prefamine Ireland
  • Irish Recruitment and the Settlements of San Patricio and Refugio
  • The Irish and the Texas Revolution, 1835-36
  • The Life of Pioneer Settlers in Texas
  • Ranching Culture and the Texas Cattle King - Thomas O'Connor of Refugio County.

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