Transcript Document
American Filibusters come to Texas
NEUTRAL
GROUND
AGREEMENT
• Americans moved west for land and adventure. Sometimes
settling into Spanish territory illegally.
• The exact western boundary between American Louisiana and
Spanish Texas was unclear and both countries agreed to a
neutral area that would stop arguments over the border.
• This “neutral ground” became a lawless area.
• Americans who went into Texas to fight in
unauthorized (not approved by the US Government)
military expeditions are called Filibusters.
Phillip Nolan
• One of the first filibusters was Phillip Nolan. The
Spanish thought he was an American spy. He went to
Texas from Louisiana to capture wild horses which
he would sell back in Louisiana.
• Nolan was actually gathering
intelligence for an American
General named James
Wilkinson. The Spanish tried to
capture Nolan and his men near
Waco but Nolan tried to fight his
way out and was killed. His men
were captured.
James Wilkinson
• Filibusters would often side with
the Mexican Revolution started
by Father Miguel Hidalgo.
Father Miguel Hidalgo
GUTIERREZ – MAGEE
EXPEDITION
• In 1813 a former U.S. Army Lieutenant Augustus
Magee resigned from the Army and became a
filibuster in Texas.
• He joined Spanish-Texan Bernardo Gutierrez de Lara
(a Mexican revolutionary) in Nacogdoches and they
declared Texas independent from Spain calling it the
Republic of the North.
• Gutierrez and Magee
raised a small army of
around 1,500 men made
up of Mexican and
American soldiers.
• In February the
“Republicans” defeated
a Spanish force at the
Battle of Rosillo Creek
and took control of San
Antonio.
• After the battle Gutierrez ordered 15 Spanish officers executed
which caused some of the Americans to leave in disgust.
• In August the expedition was defeated by Spanish forces near
Medina Creek.
• The filibuster survivors of the battle were executed.
• Although the expedition ended in failure it would inspire other
filibusters in the future.
Pirates
• Pirates and various revolutionaries slowly
began to take up arms against Spain,
sometimes for freedom and other times simply
for money.
Jean Lafitte
• Jean Lafitte was a French pirate
who set up a camp on Galveztown
(Galveston) and built a pirate
village named Campeachy on the
island in 1817.
• Lafitte used his base to attack
Spanish ships in the Gulf of
Mexico.
• He also used his base to smuggle
slaves into the United States. The
U.S. banned the slave trade in
1808. (No new slaves into the U.S.
but slavery itself was still legal)
ADAMS-ONIS TREATY
• In 1817, U.S. General Andrew
Jackson attacked Native
Americans in Florida and
eventually began to take over
much of the territory.
• The Spanish government was
angry, but in 1819, the
Adams-Onis Treaty was
agreed upon.
• The United States would gain
control of Florida and agreed
to the Sabine River as the
border of Texas.
The negotiator of the
treaty (and future
President himself) John
Quincy Adams, was the
son of the 2nd President
John Adams.
The Long
Expedition
• In 1819, Dr. James Long led
a small group into
Nacogdoches where he also
declared the area
independent of Spain.
• He was angry about the
Adams-Onis treaty as he
and other Americans
believed that Texas was part
of the Louisiana Purchase
• He was captured and sent to
Mexico City where he was
shot in a prison.
• He is considered the last of
the major filibusters into
Texas.