While the Texas rebels squabbled, Santa Anna moved decisively. In early February 1836 a massive Mexican army crossed the Rio Grande, and after a 13-day siege of the Alamo, even thought sustaining heavy causalities, the Texans were anniliated and Mexican General Urrea, moved his army towards the town of Goliad.
James W. Fannin had just more than 300 Texans to protect Goliad, a position the Texans needed to protect and maintain vital supply routes to the Gulf Coast. As General Urrea’s much larger 1,400-man army approached, Fannin forces attempted to fall back from the approaching Mexican army, but his retreat order came too late allowing the much larger Mexican force to encircle the Texans on 19 March 1836. Rather than see his force annihilated, Fannin surrendered.
Some of the Texans who surrendered believed they would be treated as prisoners of war, despite Santa Anna's early promise that all Texan rebels would be given no quarter. In obedience to Santa Anna’s orders, on 27 March 1836 General Urrea ordered his men to open fire on Fannin and his soldiers, along with about 100 other captured Texans. More than 400 men were executed that day at Goliad.
Despite the Mexican goal to crush the Texan rebels, the Alamo defeat and Goliad Massacre galvanized and motivated Texans, yelling “Remember Goliad!” and “Remember the Alamo!” One month later, General Sam Houston and his Texan forces defeated the Mexican Army and capturing General Santa in the Battle of San Jacinto, and Texas won its independence.
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