The best one I witnessed was in the late 1970s in Midland, Tx. The temperature was near 90 degrees. Within two hours, the temperature was 45 and falling. Later that night we had a some sleet.
The wind gusts were in the 25 - 30 mph. range.
Needless to say, blue northers are hell on those who suffer from allergies.
Hook’em
Coincidentally (or not so coincidentally) I found myself visiting the San Jacinto monument this weekend. That’s on Buffalo Bayou just outside Houston, the site of the final battle where the Texans defeated and captured Santa Anna. http://www.sanjacinto-museum.org/ There’s a 570 foot tall monolith tower similar to the Washington Monument, except with a star at the top there. Inside is a small museum of artifacts, as well as an elevator to an observation deck around 480 ft up. They have a map of the Alamo, including description of the first attack and the final attack.
The Texas revolution was actually more drawn out. It started with squirmishes earlier than 1835, where the Texans defeated the Mexican garrisons. Thus Santa Anna was leading one army (and another marched up the Texas coast) to put down the rebellion.
I have to agree with Purplehorn3 about the slavery comment. I’m not sure how big a role slavery per se played in the issue. When Texas first started to be colonized by the Anglos, they were welcomed and were happy to be joining Texas. The Mexican government was largely friendly and hands off. Then corruption within the Mexican government grew more pronounced, and they began to change policies toward the Texans, notably wanting to enforce the Catholicism and increase taxes. The Texans were mostly fighting over issues of local control and freedom from government oppression. Slavery may have been one issue some Texans favored, but it certainly wasn’t the driving component of the revolution. Cecil’s comment seems to imply it was.
I also was somewhat confused on the dates of events, but Goliad happened after the Alamo. (I had an ancestor who survived Goliad.)
Regarding the “Great American Desert”, it doesn’t really apply to Louisiana and East Texas. It was more regarding the great plains states - Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, and the Texas panhandle. A couple of references:
Several contemporary (early 1800s) citations of desert to mean more than dry sandy wasteland. Note that what they termed a desert we now call the breadbasket of America. Of course, this was before the invention of the Artesian well.
Those Texans were murdered at Goliad around three weeks after the Alamo fell.
Texans were more outraged with the massacre at Goliad than they were at the Alamo. The vast majority of the Alamo defenders were killed in battle. The Texans at Goliad were promised humane treatment, but were taken out and shot. Those who were not killed outright were dispatched with the bayonet or ran down by calvary with lances. Some did escape and told their story to Sam Houston.