Nathan Wade was born 1810 in New Jersey. He arrived in Texas on July 4, 1835, and joined Thomas J. Rusk’s militia company in September 1835. He took part in the Grass Fight and the Siege of Béxar and was discharged from the Texas army about January 1, 1836. Wade lived for most of his life in Nacogdoches, where he was a county commissioner, a surveyor, and, in 1844, a lieutenant colonel of the Nacogdoches County Militia.
Baker, Daniel Davis D.
Daniel Davis D. Baker was born 1806 in Massachusetts. At the outbreak of the Texas Revolution he was elected a second lieutenant in Capt. T. L. F. Parrott’s artillery company. He took part in the Siege of Béxar but was discharged on November 23 before the city fell. After reenlisting on March 18, 1836, he was elected captain of artillery, but at the battle of San Jacinto he was attached to Capt. Moseley Baker’s company. After San Jacinto, Gen. Thomas Jefferson Rusk detached him to fortify and take command of the defenses at Cavallo Pass. He was discharged on July 18, 1836, and moved to Matagorda, where he was elected to represent the county in the House of Representatives of the First Congress of the Republic of Texas in October 1836. On January 3, 1837, he married Mary Ann Cayce of Matagorda. In the spring of 1838 he was involved in real estate development in Matagorda County, where he attempted to establish a town called Preston 4½ miles from the Colorado River. Davis died in Matagorda on May 2, 1843.
Alexander, Jerome B.
Jerome B. Alexander served as a private in Capt. John York’s volunteer company at the Siege of Béxar and as a private in Capt. Moseley Baker’s Company D of Col. Edward Burleson’s First Regiment, Texas Volunteers, at the battle of San Jacinto.
When Adrián Woll raided San Antonio in 1842, Alexander was elected lieutenant in the volunteer company of Capt. Nicholas M. Dawson. He was killed in action in the infamous Dawson Massacre on September 18, 1842. He was buried with his companions at Monument Hill near La Grange, Fayette County.
Logan, William M.
William M. Logan was born 1802 in Tennessee. Logan arrived in Texas in November 1831 and settled near Liberty. Shortly afterward, he became involved in a dispute with John Davis Bradburn, the military commander at Fort Anahuac. Bradburn was harboring three runaway slaves from Louisiana. Logan, acting as a slave catcher, claimed the three as runaways, but Bradburn refused to relinquish them without proof of ownership and the authority of the governor of Louisiana. However, when Logan returned with the documents, Bradburn again refused to hand the three over on the grounds that they had requested the protection of the Mexican government and had joined the Mexican army. Bradburn’s actions caused both resentment and alarm among Anglo-Texans and has frequently been cited in later years as one of the immediate causes of the Texas revolution. In 1835 Logan enlisted in Andrew Briscoe’s company of Liberty volunteers and served as lieutenant during the Siege of Béxar. In March 1836 at Liberty he was elected captain of the Third Infantry, Second Regiment, of the Texas volunteers who fought at San Jacinto. He died 1839 in Houston. A historical marker in his honor was placed on the southeast corner of the Liberty County Courthouse in Liberty.
Maverick, Samuel Augustus
Samuel Augustus Maverick was born 1803 in South Carolina. His maternal grandfather was General Robert Anderson who served in the Revolutionary War. He graduated from Yale and studied law in Virginia, and was admitted to practice at the bar of South Carolina in 1829. He traveled to Alabama and, hearing of the problems in Texas, resolved to go there. He arrived by ship at Velasco in 1835 and subsequently contracted malaria.
He surely heard of the general dissatisfaction of the Anglo-Americans in the various settlements scattered over Texas, especially the group headed by John A. Wharton of Brazoria who advocated calling a convention of elected delegates to secure “peace if it is to be secured on constitutional terms, and to prepare for war if war be inevitable.”
He learned that even Stephen F. Austin, the great “impressario,” had lost patience with existing conditions: the difficulty of transacting state business in the distant capital of Saltillo, the regulations controlling immigration, and the changeable Mexican government itself. Austin’s imprisonment in Mexico, after years of careful law enforcement and loyalty to Mexico in his colonization efforts, must have opened his eyes to the hopelessness of continuing to hold Texas as a territory or state of such a government. Finally, when the citizens of Gonzales called Austin to command their forces in the attack on General Perfecto de Cos, in command of Mexican forces in San Antonio, he consented to lead them in the siege.
Samuel had traveled to San Antonio to seek a better climate for his illness and arrived there September 8, 1835, shortly before the Siege of Béxar began.
Upon arriving in San Antonio, he stayed at the home of John W. Smith and entered into the life of the city, attending mass at the Cathedral with the soldiers, and hearing the military band. His journal mentions Comanche Indian raids — proving that life was not all idyllic in San Antonio.
General Cos, a brother-in-law of Santa Ana, arrived in San Antonio October 8 and placed a guard at Smith’s doors, making prisoners of Maverick, Smith, and Cox. Forces of Anglo-Americans under Austin, Burleson, Bowie, and others were gathering outside the town, and from time to time skirmishes took place between them and the Mexican soldiers. Through the help of a Mexican boy, Maverick exchanged messages with the various American leaders.
Maverick kept a diary that provides a vivid record of the siege (See The diary of Samuel Maverick).
He and Smith were released on December 1 and quickly made their way to the besiegers’ camp, where they urged an immediate attack. When an attack was finally made on December 5, Maverick guided Benjamin R. Milam’s division. He remained in San Antonio after the siege and in February was elected one of two delegates from the Alamo garrison to the independence convention scheduled for March 1, 1836, at Washington-on-the-Brazos. He left the embattled garrison on March 2 and arrived at the convention on March 5.
After the war ended, he met Mary Ann Adams and married her August 1836. She was 18, he was 33. He died on September 2, 1870, after a brief illness, leaving his wife and five children. He was buried in San Antonio’s City Cemetery Number 1.
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