The crushing Mexican defeat at San Jacinto paved the way for Texas's hard-won independence, but it also sowed the seeds of future conflict, culminating in the U.S. Mexican War two decades later. The annexation of Texas by the United States marked the first official expansion into the vast and untamed lands of western North America. Territory that would become the epicenter of a fierce and divisive controversy over slavery. This territorial acquisition, seemingly a triumph of Manifest Destiny, became the tinderbox that ignited the American Civil War—a conflict that would engulf the nation in a whirlwind of bloodshed and devastation, tearing it apart in one of the most brutal and defining struggles in its history.
San Jacinto. 21 April, 1836.
"Texian" Forces: 783 Men.
Mexican Forces: ~ 1,500 Soldiers
Butcher's Bill:
11 dead Texians, 30 Wounded; 630 dead Mexican Soldiers, 208 Wounded, 730 POWs.
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