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In the spring of 1813 an army of freebooters, known as the Gutiérrez-Magee expedition, successfully routed the Spanish military from Coahuila and Texas. By April the expedition had made its headquarters at San Antonio de Valero Mission with the cooperation of the San Fernando military, who perceived an end to Spanish rule. To ensure their safety and to retain their property and social standing under the new rule, a large segment of the population, including the Leal family, aligned themselves with their apparent conquerors. By August of that year Spanish general Joaquín de Arredondo mounted a large-scale response to the insurgent takeover, leading more than 2,000 troops in a defeat of the rebel army. Only a handful of the insurgents survived the siege.
Branded as traitors to the crown, many families left their homes and fled toward the Sabine River and the safety of Louisiana. Before reaching the Trinity River, a group of republicans, including the Leal, Arocha, and Delgado families, was apprehended by Elizondo's troops. Leal and the heads of the other families were bound and led on a forced march to Fort Trinidad to stand before Elizondo, who considered his captives a great prize and unworthy of mercy and so condemned the men to instant death. They were led before their weeping families, where they were shot and denied burial. Their houses, cattle, and properties were confiscated. The now-destitute female members of their families, including Leal's daughters, Consolación Leal de Garza and Juana Leal de Tarín (wife of Vizente Tarín), were imprisoned under the harshest of conditions for many weeks. By 1814 clemency was offered to many of the families, but only a small measure of their property was ever restored to them. In 1819, six years after his execution, Leal's skeletal remains were recovered from Trinidad and given a Christian burial in January in the campo santo of the San Fernando Church (now San Fernando Cathedral).
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bexar Archives, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin. Frederick Charles Chabot, With the Makers of San Antonio (Yanaguana Society Publications 4, San Antonio, 1937). Julia Kathryn Garrett, Green Flag Over Texas: A Story of the Last Years of Spain in Texas (Austin: Pemberton Press, 1939). Jack Jackson, Los Mesteños: Spanish Ranching in Texas, 1721–1821 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1986).
Citation: Randell G. Tarín, "LEAL, JOAQUIN," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fle98), accessed March 25, 2014. Uploaded on June 15, 2010. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
In the spring of 1813 an army of freebooters, known as the Gutiérrez-Magee expedition, successfully routed the Spanish military from Coahuila and Texas. By April the expedition had made its headquarters at San Antonio de Valero Mission with the cooperation of the San Fernando military, who perceived an end to Spanish rule. To ensure their safety and to retain their property and social standing under the new rule, a large segment of the population, including the Leal family, aligned themselves with their apparent conquerors. By August of that year Spanish general Joaquín de Arredondo mounted a large-scale response to the insurgent takeover, leading more than 2,000 troops in a defeat of the rebel army. Only a handful of the insurgents survived the siege.
Branded as traitors to the crown, many families left their homes and fled toward the Sabine River and the safety of Louisiana. Before reaching the Trinity River, a group of republicans, including the Leal, Arocha, and Delgado families, was apprehended by Elizondo's troops. Leal and the heads of the other families were bound and led on a forced march to Fort Trinidad to stand before Elizondo, who considered his captives a great prize and unworthy of mercy and so condemned the men to instant death. They were led before their weeping families, where they were shot and denied burial. Their houses, cattle, and properties were confiscated. The now-destitute female members of their families, including Leal's daughters, Consolación Leal de Garza and Juana Leal de Tarín (wife of Vizente Tarín), were imprisoned under the harshest of conditions for many weeks. By 1814 clemency was offered to many of the families, but only a small measure of their property was ever restored to them. In 1819, six years after his execution, Leal's skeletal remains were recovered from Trinidad and given a Christian burial in January in the campo santo of the San Fernando Church (now San Fernando Cathedral).
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bexar Archives, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin. Frederick Charles Chabot, With the Makers of San Antonio (Yanaguana Society Publications 4, San Antonio, 1937). Julia Kathryn Garrett, Green Flag Over Texas: A Story of the Last Years of Spain in Texas (Austin: Pemberton Press, 1939). Jack Jackson, Los Mesteños: Spanish Ranching in Texas, 1721–1821 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1986).
Citation: Randell G. Tarín, "LEAL, JOAQUIN," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fle98), accessed March 25, 2014. Uploaded on June 15, 2010. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
Gravesite Details
Note that date on plaque is date of burial at Campo Santo. Biographical information provided by Randell Tarin (#46974932).
Family Members
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