Juan Nepomuceno Seguín (1806 to 1890) was a Tejano soldier in the Texas Revolution, commissioned as a captain of cavalry by Stephen F. Austin, later a colonel under General Sam Houston, participated in the Siege of Béxar in 1835, served as a messenger from the Alamo in 1836, and fought alongside Sam Houston at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto on 21 April 1836.
Even so, after the revolution was won and the Republic of Texas established, Seguín's contributions were forgotten quite quickly as Anglo-American colonists – many newcomers who had contributed nothing to the cause of Texas independence – distrusted and mistreated Tejano citizens, including Seguín. He was forced to flee his home in San Antonio de Béxar due to death threats in 1842, and he would later serve under his former enemy, General Antonio López de Santa Anna, in the Mexican-American War of 1846 to 1848.
He died in Mexico in 1890 was buried in Nuevo Laredo, but his remains were moved to Texas in 1974 so that he could be part of the bicentennial celebrations of 1976, interred in the town that bears his name, Seguin. That honor came a little too late, however, and did more for the politicians of the time and Texas' public image than for Seguín. And, unfortunately, Seguín's story is only the best-known of the many Tejanos who fought for an independent Texas Republic but were denied any recognition for their efforts until over 100 years later.
Juan Seguín was born in San Antonio de Béxar, province of Tejas, New Spain, on 27 October 1806 to Juan José María Erasmo Seguín and María Josefa Becerra Seguín, who would later have another son. Seguín received no formal education but was homeschooled, as both his parents were literate and placed a high value on reading and writing.
In 1825, at age 19, Seguín married María Gertrudis Flores de Abrego, daughter of a wealthy and prominent father, and they would have ten children. Supported by his in-laws, Seguín was elected to public office as an alderman in 1828 and became mayor of San Antonio de Béxar in 1833.
Mexico had won its independence from Spain in 1821, and Seguín and his family supported the new Federalist administration and the Constitution of 1824. In 1834, President Antonio López de Santa Anna abolished the Constitution of 1824 and established the Centralist Republic of Mexico, rescinding the rights that citizens of the country's districts had become used to.
Seguín was aware that the Anglo-Americans in Tejas (Texas) were as resentful of this as the native Tejanos and that, even before Santa Anna's actions, had been defying Mexican officials in events such as the Anahuac Disturbances in April 1832 and July 1835. He would also have met James Bowie (later an active participant in the Texas Revolution) sometime after 1828, and certainly after 1831, when Bowie married María Ursula de Veramendi, daughter of the prominent Juan Martín de Veramendi, who would have traveled in Seguín's same social circles.
When the Texas Revolution began at the Battle of Gonzales (2 October 1835), Seguín was eager to join the cause, which initially was a fight to return Mexico to the Federalist form of government and restore the Constitution of 1824. Seguín had proved himself a capable commander in spring 1835 when leading a company of militia, and, after Gonzales, Stephen F. Austin, Commander of the Army of the People, commissioned him a captain. Scholar James Donovan comments:
valuable addition was twenty-eight-year-old Juan Seguín, whose father, Erasmo, was a good friend of Stephen Austin's and a former Béxar alcalde [mayor}. Erasmo Seguín was one of the town's most prominent citizens, and he had raised his children in a cultured, liberal atmosphere; both men were staunch federalists, and Juan had recently returned from skirmishing with centralist troops near Monclova…The handsome young Seguín brought with him a company of thirty-seven other mounted Tejanos.
(65)
Seguín and his men served as scouts and guides for Austin as they advanced on San Antonio de Béxar in October 1835. Mexican General Martín Perfecto de Cos had earlier moved his troops from Goliad to San Antonio and, when the Texians moved against his former position at the Battle of Goliad (10 October 1835), hoping to kidnap Cos, they found only a garrison of 50 soldiers who surrendered.
Austin knew that the decisive blow to Mexican military authority would be at San Antonio, and so he had Seguín and his men go before the Texian forces to scout positions and lead the army by the best route. Seguín participated in the Battle of Concepción (28 October 1835), led by James Bowie and James W. Fannin, and also in the Siege of Béxar (12 October to 11 December 1835). The siege ended with Cos' surrender and, as a central aspect of the terms, he led what was left of his army out of Texas and back to Mexico.
For many Texians, the victory at the Siege of Béxar meant the end of the Texas Revolution, and so they went home. Colonel James C. Neill, who had been left to hold the Alamo after Cos left, did not believe this – and neither did General Sam Houston, who had been elected to command the regular army in November 1835.
Houston sent James Bowie, with 30 men, to remove all ordnance and anything else of value from the Alamo, and then destroy it to keep it from again becoming a Mexican stronghold. Bowie and Neill both felt the Alamo should be held, not destroyed, as it would serve as a first line of defense when Santa Anna returned to try to retake Texas.
Prior to this, Seguín had been approached by Stephen F. Austin to teach his Anglo-American Texas Rangers how to "ride like a Mexican." Austin had formed the Texas Rangers as a volunteer force in 1823 to protect his colonists against Native American attacks. Scholar Stephen L. Hardin writes:
That process of cultural adaptation transformed the force and rendered the Texas Rangers unique. Presently, it was observed that a Texas Ranger could "shoot like a Tennessean, ride like a Mexican, and fight like the Devil!" yet that could not have been claimed before 1835. Anglo-Americans had to be taught how to ride like Mexicans. Comrades such as Juan Seguín and Placido Benavides proved excellent instructors.
(249)
In January 1836, Seguín and his men arrived at the Alamo in response to the calls from Bowie and Neill for reinforcements. In early February, more men responded to the call, including Lt. Colonel William Barret Travis and frontiersman and former Congressman, David Crockett of Tennessee.
On 11 February, Neill left to deal with family problems and turned over command to William Barret Travis. Travis, a regular army officer, was much younger than James Bowie, commanding the volunteers, and so a dispute arose as to who would lead the garrison. When put to a vote, Bowie won – and then celebrated his victory by getting drunk and causing mayhem in town – but, once he sobered up the next day, he agreed that he and Travis would co-command.
Neither Travis nor Bowie – nor Houston, for that matter – believed that Santa Anna would arrive in San Antonio until the spring and so, although requests had been sent out for reinforcements and supplies, and work on strengthening the walls of the Alamo had continued, they were surprised when the banners and lances of the Mexican army under General Santa Anna appeared in Béxar on 23 February 1836.
Juan Seguín (by this time, a cavalry colonel), his men, and many others then in San Antonio de Béxar took refuge in the Alamo. Seguín was present for part of the 13-day siege of the Alamo until he was sent out to ask for help, possibly on 28 February. In a letter by Seguín from 1890, he describes the circumstances:
Travis resolved to name a messenger to proceed to the town of Gonzales and ask for help, thinking that Sam Houston was then at that place. But, as to leave the fortification at such a critical moment was the same as to encounter death, Santa Anna having drawn a complete circle of iron around the Alamo, no one would consent to run the risk, making it necessary to decide the question by putting it to a vote; I was the one elected.
Colonel Travis opposed my taking this commission, stating that, as I was the only one that possessed the Spanish language and understood Mexican customs better, my presence in the Alamo might become necessary in case of having to treat with Santa Anna. But the rest could not be persuaded, and I must go.
I was permitted to take my orderly, Antonio Cruz, and we left at eight o-clock at night after having bid good-bye to all my comrades, expecting certain death. I arrived safely in the town of Gonzalez, and obtained at once a reinforcement of thirty men, who were sent to the Alamo.
(Groneman, 120 to 121)
Sources disagree on whether Seguín sent the famous 32 volunteers from Gonzales to the Alamo, and he seems to have first headed for Goliad to guide Colonel Fannin's troops to San Antonio, but there is general agreement that Houston ordered Seguín to remain in or around Gonzales until he arrived. On the morning of 6 March 1836, Santa Anna ordered a full assault on the Alamo, and it was quickly taken. All the defenders were killed in the Battle of the Alamo, and any who survived were executed afterwards, including David Crockett.
On 11 March, two Tejanos from San Antonio (Andres Barcena and Anselmo Vergara) – known by Seguín and instructed to remain there to report on the status of the Alamo – arrived in Gonzales to report on its fall. Houston, recently arrived, accused them of being spies, relaying false information, and had them arrested.
On 13 March, Susanna Dickinson, the wife of Almaron Dickinson, artillery commander at the Alamo, and Joe, the slave of William B. Travis, arrived to confirm the report that the Alamo had fallen and there were no survivors. Houston ordered Gonzales burned, and an immediate retreat, initiating what is known as the Runaway Scrape, in which colonists fled east to escape the anticipated advance of Santa Anna.
Juan Seguín and his men were posted as rearguard, defending the fleeing Anglo-Americans and Tejanos from a possible attack. When Houston reached the Colorado River, Mexican General Sesma was close behind, and Seguín's command held them back while Houston and the fleeing colonists crossed over. If Seguín had not held against Sesma, there would have been no army to have later won at the Battle of San Jacinto.
Houston fled from Santa Anna across Texas but finally established a firm field of battle near the San Jacinto River. By this time, news of the Goliad Massacre of 27 March had reached Houston, and that, coupled with the deaths at the Alamo, enraged the Texian army. Hardin writes:
All were anxious to avenge the deaths of those who had fallen at the Alamo and Goliad. Among them, Juan Seguín led a detachment of about nineteen Tejanos. Their presence in the line of battle was all the more impressive because they had been excused from combat duty. Since the execution of Fannin and his men , animosity against Mexicans – all Mexicans – had run high. Houston was fearful that, in the heat of battle, his vengeful rowdies might not pause to make distinctions…the general ordered Seguín's company to stay and guard the baggage.
Seguín angrily reminded Houston that not all his men were with him. Some had fallen at the Alamo. Besides, all his soldiers hailed from the Béxar area and, until Santa Anna and his army were driven out of Texas, they could not return home. Seguín steadfastly asserted that his men had more reason to hate the santanistas than anyone in Texas and wanted in on the kill.
"Spoken like a man!" Houston exclaimed. But he insisted on one precaution: the Tejanos must place a piece of cardboard in their hatbands to identify them. Consequently, with the distinctive cardboard insignia in place, they advanced upon the enemy with the rest of the army.
(209)
Houston won the Battle of San Jacinto in 18 minutes. The provisional government of Texas had declared independence on 2 March and, with this victory, was able to announce the birth of the Texas Republic.
After the victory at San Jacinto, Seguín was sent back to San Antonio to accept the surrender of General Juan Andrade on 4 June 1836 and then served as the city's military commander through 1837, overseeing the burial of the remains of those who died at the Alamo. According to Seguín:
The remains of those who died in the Alamo were burned by order of General Santa Anna, and the few fragments I ordered deposited in an urn. I ordered the sepulcher opened in San Antonio's cathedral next to the altar, that is, in front of the two railings but very near the steps.
(Groneman, 114)
Today, these remains are encased in a marble sarcophagus at the entry to the San Fernando Cathedral in San Antonio, but there is no way of knowing if that casket actually contains – as it claims to – the remains of Bowie, Crockett, and Travis.
After independence, Sam Houston was elected the first president of the Texas Republic, and Seguín was elected as senator in 1837. In 1839, Seguín was honored when a town 30 miles (48 km) east of San Antonio was named for him, and in 1841, he was again mayor of San Antonio.
More and more Anglo-Americans began to swarm into Texas after 1837, buying up land and, generally, mistreating and mistrusting Tejanos. In 1842, less than ten years after his heroic efforts in the cause of Texian independence, owing to his response to an assault from Mexico, Seguín was suspected of colluding with Mexican operatives to retake Texas, although he had only tried to defend the territory against the assault by General Rafael Vásquez.
In April 1842, Seguín resigned as mayor following death threats from Anglo-American settlers claiming he was a traitor who was trying to hand Texas back to Mexico. He went to Mexico to live near one of his sons and later served in the army under Santa Anna in the Mexican-American War.
Seguín returned to Texas in 1848 and built a house adjoining his father's property. He served as justice of the peace between 1852 and 1854 and, in 1858, wrote and published his memoirs. He returned to Mexico shortly afterwards, living near his son in Nuevo Laredo, and died there of natural causes on 27 August 1890.
The contributions of Tejanos to the Texas Revolution were almost completely ignored in the early years of the Texas Republic and only came to be recognized in the latter part of the 20th century. Juan Seguín's story epitomizes the many others who faithfully served the cause of Texian independence but were later relegated to second-class citizens, persecuted, had their lands stolen, and were driven from their homes by Anglo-Americans.
In 1974, as noted, Seguín's remains were taken from Nuevo Laredo and reinterred at Seguin, Texas, in preparation for the United States bicentennial celebration of 1976. A great monument was erected over his grave with a grand statue of Seguín atop. This gesture became part of an initiative that has gained momentum since: honoring the many Tejanos whose contributions to the independence of Texas were forgotten after victory was won.