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GONZALES COME AND TAKE IT CANNON
Texas State Historical Commision ^ | Oct 2nd 1835 | Texans

Posted on 10/02/2013 6:58:31 AM PDT by Rightly Biased

GONZALES "COME AND TAKE IT" CANNON. The Gonzales "come and take it" cannon was a Spanish-made, bronze artillery piece of six-pound caliber. The gun was the object of contention in late September and early October 1835 between a Mexican military detachment from Bexar and Anglo-Celtic colonists. The disagreement produced the battle of Gonzales, considered to be the first battle of the Texas Revolution. On January 1, 1831, Green DeWitt initiated the new year by writing Ramón Músquiz, the political chief of Bexar, asking him to make arrangements for a cannon to be furnished to the Gonzales colonists for protection against hostile Indians. On March 10, 1831, after some delay, James Tumlinson, Jr., a DeWitt colonist at Bexar, received one bronze cannon to be turned over to Green DeWitt at Gonzales. The fact that the gun was not carriage mounted until about September 28, 1835, suggests that in 1831 it was probably swivel mounted in one of the two blockhouses that had been constructed at Gonzales in 1827. Thus mounted it would have served as a visual deterrent to hostile Indians.

The cannon is lost to history until September 1835, when Col. Domingo de Ugartechea, the military commander at Bexar, sent Corporal Casimiro De León and five soldiers of the Second Flying Company of San Carlos de Parras to retrieve the cannon. The Gonzales colonists notified Ugartechea they were keeping the gun and took the soldiers prisoner. The cannon was then buried in George W. Davis's peach orchard and couriers sent to the Anglo-Celtic settlements on the Colorado River to obtain armed assistance. Ugartechea responded by sending 100 troops under Lt. Francisco de Castañeda to make a more serious request for the return of the gun. On September 29, Capt. Robert M. Coleman arrived at Gonzales with a militia company of thirty mounted Indian fighters. The gun was retrieved from its shallow grave, taken to John Sowell's blacksmith shop, and mounted on a pair of cart wheels. After organization of the Texian "Army of the People" under Gen. Stephen F. Austin, the cannon was assigned to Capt. James C. Neill's artillery company and hauled to San Antonio. After the capture of Bexar in December 1835, the cannon remained at the Alamo, where it was one of twenty-one artillery pieces commandeered by the Mexican army upon the recapture of Bexar on March 6, 1836..

The name "Come and Take It" refers to the motto adopted by the Texian rebels. On the morning of October 2, 1835, Lieutenant Castañeda requested the cannon be returned to the Mexican military-a condition on which it had been loaned to DeWitt's Colony-but the Texians pointed to the gun which stood about 200 yards to their rear, and said, "there it is-come and take it." Soon after the conflict began, at the request of the Anglo-Celtic leaders, the ladies of the settlement hastily made a flag to fly over the cannon. The flag featured a white ground with a black cannon in the center, and the motto "Come and take it!" above and below. Much has been made of an account that appears in Noah Smithwick's The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (1900), in which Smithwick identifies the cannon as an iron six-pounder. This is the only account, however, of events at Gonzales in October 1835 which identifies the Gonzales gun as being made of iron. Primary documents indicate that the gun probably was a cannon belonging to George Huff, a blacksmith and gunsmith from San Felipe. Another discovery claim concerning the Gonzales cannon came into being after a major flood in July 1936, when a small iron salute cannon was discovered downstream from Hardy's Bluff on Sandies creek. Many individuals believe the small salute gun is the Gonzales cannon because it was found at a location that appears to match the information in the Smithwick book. The gun, however, matches none of the characteristics attributed to the Gonzales cannon by reliable primary sources. The Smithwick account incorrectly identifies the Gonzales cannon, but the Sandies salute gun does not even conform to Smithwick's description of the cannon he believed to be the Gonzales gun. Although what happened to the "Come and Take It" cannon is not known, still another, and probably more likely scenario, resulted from actions of the Mexican army after the fall of the Alamo, when Antonio López de Santa Anna's troops melted down an unknown number of bronze guns. The Gonzales cannon may have been one of these..

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Jane Bradfield, Rx, Take One Cannon: The Gonzales Come and Take It Cannon of October 1835 (Shiner, Texas: Wagner, 1981). Thomas Ricks Lindley, "Alamo Artillery: Number, Type, Caliber, and Concussion," Alamo Journal, July 1992. Noah Smithwick, The Evolution of a State, or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Austin: Gammel, 1900; rpt., Austin: University of Texas Press, 1983)..


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 10/02/2013 6:58:31 AM PDT by Rightly Biased
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To: Rightly Biased

A funny thing I have noticed lately is that more people in the area in which I live are flying this flag. I’m just outside of Austin.

Hmmm—wonder if I should fly one........


2 posted on 10/02/2013 7:22:18 AM PDT by basil (2ASisters.org)
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To: basil

I put it up Every October 1 and fly it for the month...

But I live down in CATI country Seguin Gonzales area.


3 posted on 10/02/2013 7:35:03 AM PDT by Rightly Biased (Avenge me Girls AVENEGE ME!!!! ( I don't have any son's))
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To: basil

Many in north central Floida flying them as well, seeing lots more conferate flags. The confederate flags have always been around, but more lately on vehicles in some form or fashion. When moving here from Texas it struck me that folks think Texas is redneck, but north central Florida is way to the right;^) not a bad thing, just an observation.


4 posted on 10/02/2013 7:46:55 AM PDT by seeker41 (take your country back by whatever means necessary)
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To: Rightly Biased

We live in Spicewood west of Austin and proudly display the flag. Check out my website www.freetexasconstitution.wordpress.com


5 posted on 10/02/2013 7:46:57 AM PDT by grumpa
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To: Rightly Biased

Obamacare is “TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION.”

Obamacare has nothing to do with care, health or medical treatment.

Obamacare has everything to do with a mandatory insurance that everyone must buy at the point of the Federal gun.

Obamacare Medical Insurance premiums are under the control of the IRS.

These insurance premiums can be raised every year by the IRS with no involvement by Congress.

Thus, all the present and future Democrat rulers have to do is tell the IRS how much taxpayer dollars need to be forcefully extracted from the taxpayers, and the IRS will extract the money for them.

Hence, Obamacare Insurance is “ taxation without representation” that Traitor John Roberts of THE NINE SUPREMES has ruled it to be above the control of the US Congress, and it will stay until Obamacare is ABOLISHED!


6 posted on 10/02/2013 7:52:43 AM PDT by Graewoulf (Traitor John Roberts' Marxist Obama'care' Insurance violates U.S. Constitution AND Anti-Trust Law.)
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To: seeker41

I’m seeing some restlessness among the people around here, too. I think more and more are are waking up to the reality that is the USA today—and are scared and horrified by what they are seeing.

If so, it’s a good thing that they are waking up.

Now—if we can just figure out what to do about it...........and act!


7 posted on 10/02/2013 8:02:20 AM PDT by basil (2ASisters.org)
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To: basil

North central Florida makes Texas look cosmopolitan. God bless Texas, I miss her!!


8 posted on 10/02/2013 8:08:57 AM PDT by seeker41 (take your country back by whatever means necessary)
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To: basil

The “Old 18” may rise up again and stand on the river bank with thier Cannon loaded and thier Flag waving in the breeze shouting “COME AND TAKE IT” at the top of thier lungs and then give the cannon fire all to send the government opressors home with a limp...

If only.


9 posted on 10/02/2013 8:19:53 AM PDT by Rightly Biased (Avenge me Girls AVENEGE ME!!!! ( I don't have any son's))
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To: Rightly Biased

Bump from the 5 times great niece of one of the Immortal 32.


10 posted on 10/02/2013 8:48:45 AM PDT by subaru
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To: Rightly Biased

11 posted on 10/02/2013 9:26:38 AM PDT by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
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