Dolph Briscoe Center for American History - 10 Matching Results

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[Transcript of letter from J. W. Bunton to T. J. Chambers, July 7, 1835]
Copy of transcript for a letter from J. W. Bunton to T. J. Chambers.
[Transcript of letter from James W. C. Miller to Juan W. Smith, July 4, 1835]
Copy of transcript for a letter from James W. C. Miller to Juan W. Smith.
[Transcript of letter from James Whiteside to Col. Anthony Butler, August 2, 1832]
Copy of transcript for a letter from James Whiteside to Col. Anthony Butler, in which Whiteside discusses business matters of the colony and lets Butler know that Stephen F. Austin will be able to repay him with livestock.
[Transcript of letter from Jefferson Chambers to T. J. Chambers, July 6, 1835]
Copy of transcript for a letter from Jefferson Chambers to T. J. Chambers.
[Transcript of letter from M. A., June 26, 1833]
Copy of transcript for a letter from M. A.
[Transcript of letter from P. W. Grayson to Stephen F. Austin, October 11, 1835]
Copy of transcript for a letter from P. W. Grayson to Stephen F. Austin, informing Austin that the captains of each company are to elect a commander in chief for the volunteer military of Texas.
[Transcript of Letter from Ramón Músquiz to José María Viesca, December 21, 1828]
Copy of transcript for a letter from Ramón Músquiz to José María Viesca, on December 21, 1828, suggesting that the citizens of San Felipe de Austin take the judicial complaints of Spanish-speaking people.
[Transcript of letter from the Ayuntamiento of Gonzales to the Mexican Congress, July 28, 1834]
Copy of transcript for a letter from the Ayuntamiento of Gonzales to the Mexican Congress discussing the infringement of their rights by the Mexican military and government and requesting that Stephen F. Austin be released since neither his nor their actions constitute treason.
[Transcript of Letter, November 18, 1835]
Copy of transcript for a letter, on November 18, 1835, proclaiming that Texas will not surrender, but that they will accept the Mexican government as their own. Mexico also admits that they were harsh in their subjugation of Texas colonists, and agrees not to send more troops to Texas.
[Transcript of Resolutions of Nacogdoches, 1835]
Copy of transcript for Resolutions of Nacogdoches, in which citizens of the jurisdictions of Gonzales, Mina, Austin, Matagorda, and Columbia have recommended that a convention of Texas be called to discuss the changing political climate in Mexico and Mexico's relationship to the citizens of Texas.
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