This Day In Texas History - March 28
Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2019 9:26 am
1836 - Sam Houston and his Texas army, on retreat from the Mexican Army under Santa Anna, arrive at San Felipe de Austin. In what little time he can, he will train his army before moving farther east.
1840 - Antonio Zapata and several Texans were captured in Mexico and on this day were tried for treason in a Mexican military court. The next day, as a lesson to others, Zapata's head was severed and stuck on a pike in front of his house.
1843 - The Tehuacana Creek councils were meetings between Texas officials and Indian representatives. The first in the series began in the spring of 1843. On March 28, 1843, a number of Indian tribes including the Caddos, Delawares, Wacos, Tawakonis, Lipan Apaches, and Tonkawas went to a council on Tehuacana Creek near the Torrey Brothers trading post south of the site of present Waco. The last council ended on November 16, 1845.
1846 - Following Texas admission into the United States, General Zachary Taylor, who was sent into the Rio Grande Valley to defend Texas from Mexico, begins erection of Fort Brown, at the future location of Brownsville.
1862 - Union and Confederate troops fought the key battle of the Civil War in the Far West at Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. When the Texans of Brig. Gen. Henry Hopkins Sibley's Army of New Mexico were defeated by Union forces, Confederate ambitions in the West were checked. In June 1987 a mass grave containing more than thirty bodies, casualties of the battle of Glorieta, was discovered. Only three bodies were identified, among them that of Ebenezer Hanna, the youngest fatality of the battle. All the bodies were reburied in Santa Fe National Cemetery in 1993. Hanna's journal is now in the Texas State Library.
1864 - Civil War guerrilla leader William Quantrill was arrested by Confederate forces in Bonham, Texas. The Ohio native, wanted for murder in Utah by 1860, collected a group of renegades in the Kansas-Missouri area at the beginning of the Civil War. He fought with Confederate forces at the battle of Wilson's Creek in August 1861 but soon thereafter began irregular independent operations. Quantrill and his band attacked Union camps, patrols, and settlements. While Union authorities declared him an outlaw, Quantrill eventually held the rank of colonel in the Confederate forces. After his infamous sack of Lawrence, Kansas, and the massacre of Union prisoners at Barter Springs, Quantrill and his men fled to Texas in October of 1863. There he quarreled with his associate, William "Bloody Bill" Anderson, and his band preyed on the citizens of Fannin and Grayson counties. Quantrill was killed by Union forces at the very end of the war.
1958 - Elvis Presley arrived at Fort Hood, TX, for basic training. He was stationed there for six months.
1961 - On this date in 1961, a rally was held at Houston's Memorial Auditorium for one of 72 candidates for the US Senate seat vacated when Lyndon Johnson became Vice President. Total attendance ... none.
1969 - Former President and commander of the Allied forces in Europe during WWII, Dwight D Eisenhower died at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington. He was buried alongside his wife and first child, at a small chapel in Abilene Kansas. Eisenhower, born in 1890 in Denison, Texas, rose to prominence as commander of the Allied forces which defeated Nazi Germany in World War II. Following the war, he ran for President as a Republican. As President, he supported the 1954 Supreme Court decision "Brown vs Borad of Education of Topeka", leading to school integration. In 1957, he federalized the National Guard to enforce school integration in Little Rock Arkansas.
1971 - Barbara Jordan is elected as President pro tempore of the Texas senate. In 1967, Barbara Jordan became the first black woman ever to become a Texas state senator
1840 - Antonio Zapata and several Texans were captured in Mexico and on this day were tried for treason in a Mexican military court. The next day, as a lesson to others, Zapata's head was severed and stuck on a pike in front of his house.
1843 - The Tehuacana Creek councils were meetings between Texas officials and Indian representatives. The first in the series began in the spring of 1843. On March 28, 1843, a number of Indian tribes including the Caddos, Delawares, Wacos, Tawakonis, Lipan Apaches, and Tonkawas went to a council on Tehuacana Creek near the Torrey Brothers trading post south of the site of present Waco. The last council ended on November 16, 1845.
1846 - Following Texas admission into the United States, General Zachary Taylor, who was sent into the Rio Grande Valley to defend Texas from Mexico, begins erection of Fort Brown, at the future location of Brownsville.
1862 - Union and Confederate troops fought the key battle of the Civil War in the Far West at Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. When the Texans of Brig. Gen. Henry Hopkins Sibley's Army of New Mexico were defeated by Union forces, Confederate ambitions in the West were checked. In June 1987 a mass grave containing more than thirty bodies, casualties of the battle of Glorieta, was discovered. Only three bodies were identified, among them that of Ebenezer Hanna, the youngest fatality of the battle. All the bodies were reburied in Santa Fe National Cemetery in 1993. Hanna's journal is now in the Texas State Library.
1864 - Civil War guerrilla leader William Quantrill was arrested by Confederate forces in Bonham, Texas. The Ohio native, wanted for murder in Utah by 1860, collected a group of renegades in the Kansas-Missouri area at the beginning of the Civil War. He fought with Confederate forces at the battle of Wilson's Creek in August 1861 but soon thereafter began irregular independent operations. Quantrill and his band attacked Union camps, patrols, and settlements. While Union authorities declared him an outlaw, Quantrill eventually held the rank of colonel in the Confederate forces. After his infamous sack of Lawrence, Kansas, and the massacre of Union prisoners at Barter Springs, Quantrill and his men fled to Texas in October of 1863. There he quarreled with his associate, William "Bloody Bill" Anderson, and his band preyed on the citizens of Fannin and Grayson counties. Quantrill was killed by Union forces at the very end of the war.
1958 - Elvis Presley arrived at Fort Hood, TX, for basic training. He was stationed there for six months.
1961 - On this date in 1961, a rally was held at Houston's Memorial Auditorium for one of 72 candidates for the US Senate seat vacated when Lyndon Johnson became Vice President. Total attendance ... none.
1969 - Former President and commander of the Allied forces in Europe during WWII, Dwight D Eisenhower died at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington. He was buried alongside his wife and first child, at a small chapel in Abilene Kansas. Eisenhower, born in 1890 in Denison, Texas, rose to prominence as commander of the Allied forces which defeated Nazi Germany in World War II. Following the war, he ran for President as a Republican. As President, he supported the 1954 Supreme Court decision "Brown vs Borad of Education of Topeka", leading to school integration. In 1957, he federalized the National Guard to enforce school integration in Little Rock Arkansas.
1971 - Barbara Jordan is elected as President pro tempore of the Texas senate. In 1967, Barbara Jordan became the first black woman ever to become a Texas state senator