Monday, October 27, 2014

San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site

San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site has a monument that stands as a memorial to the men who fought for Texas' independence, sites of various "camps" during the battle, and the Battleship TEXAS.

By the fall of 1835 many Anglo-Americans and Tejanos in Texas had despaired of receiving just and equitable treatment from the regime of President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.  Santa Anna had abolished the liberal Constitution of 1824 and established a dictatorship.  Texans resisted.  In 1836 a volunteer army of Anglo-American settlers and Tejanos decisively defeated a larger Mexican army and won Texas' independence at the Battle of San Jacinto and Texas became the 28th state.  The battle is considered to be one of the decisive battles in American history.  The monument to these brave men rises 570 feet about the battleground. Built to commemorate the centennial of the battle, it is the tallest masonry structure in the world.





The Battleship TEXAS is the only surviving battleship to have fought in both world wars.  At the time she was commissioned in 1914, TEXAS was lauded as the most powerful weapon in the world.  In 1948 TEXAS was commissioned as the flagship of the Texas Navy and is permanently moored at San Jacinto which is on the Houston Ship Channel.

 






 

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Barrington Living History Farm-Labor of Thine Hands

At the "Labor of Thine Hands" event, several tradesmen were at the Barrington Living History Farm demonstrating various skills. While often viewed as self-sufficient, early Texas farmers relied on the work of others for many items.  For example, blacksmiths forged their tools, wheelwrights made their wagons, potters turned their vessels and cordwainers made their boots.  Communities, both urban and rural, were linked together by the goods and services each offered.