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Mathew Caldwell

Matthew Caldwell, (March 8, 1798 – December 28, 1842), also spelled Mathew Caldwell was a 19th-century Texas settler, military figure, Captain of the Gonzales – Seguin Rangers and a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence. Because of his recruitment ride ahead of the Battle of Gonzales, some call him the Paul Revere of Texas.

Matthew Caldwell
Monument at the gravesite of Matthew Caldwell.
Born(1798-03-08)March 8, 1798
DiedDecember 28, 1842(1842-12-28) (aged 44)
Resting placeGonzales City Cemetery
29°30′38.7″N 97°27′0.5″W / 29.510750°N 97.450139°W / 29.510750; -97.450139
Monuments
  • 1930 State Grave Monument
  • 1936 Texas Hall of State Building facade
  • 1936 Caldwell County centennial pink granite marker
  • 1976 Caldwell County Courthouse marker
Nationality
Spouses
  • Martha A
  • Hannah Morrison
Children3

Early life and family edit

Matthew Caldwell, nicknamed "Old Paint", was born in Kentucky on March 8, 1798. He moved to Missouri with his family in 1818, where he traded, fought and learned the ways of the Indians. He, his wife, and family arrived in Texas in the Green DeWitt Colony on February 20, 1831. On June 22, 1831, he received the title to a parcel of land near the Zumwalt Settlement, southwest of current Hallettsville, Texas. Settling in Gonzales, Caldwell acquired the original James Hinds residence on Water Street and soon became a person of notoriety, involved in security and command of minutemen rangers in Gonzales and the surrounding areas.[1]

Texas Revolution edit

Actively recruiting before the battle of Gonzales in October 1835, he rode from Gonzales to Mina informing colonists of the dire need of their support in the volunteer army. Because of this, some call him the Paul Revere of Texas.[2] As a participant at the battle, he served as a scout and mediator.[3] On Nov. 3, 1835, the delegates of the citizens of Texas established the provisional Texas government by the Consultation of 1835. The Consultation authorized the recruitment of 25 Rangers, and later, was increased to three companies of 56 men each. Caldwell was appointed a subcontractor to the Texian Army by the Provisional Government of Texas, to supply and administer a volunteer army at the siege of Bexar and the Alamo.

On 1 February 1836, he and John Fisher were elected delegates from Gonzales to the Texas Independence Convention of 1836 at Washington on the Brazos, and both were signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence, on March 2.[4] The convention appointed a committee of three, of which Caldwell was a member, to assess the situation of the enemy on the frontier and the condition of the Texian army.[5] They dispatched couriers with the message of independence. Caldwell went along with them, paying close attention to the state of the new republic as they passed through numerous settlements.

On February 4, 1836, Matthew Caldwell was named, along with Byrd Lockhart and William A. Matthews, as commissioners to raise a group of volunteers for a Gonzales Ranging Company.[6] The company was mustered by March 23, 1836. The muster list of 23 rangers is shown here.

Officers Capt. Byrd Lockhart, Lt. George C. Kimble, First Sergeant William A. Irvin

Privates John Ballard, John Davis, Andrew Duvalt, Jacob Darst, Frederick C. Elm, Galba Fuqua, William Fishbaugh, John Harris, Andrew J. Kent, David B. Kent, John G. King, Daniel McCoy, Jesse McCoy, Prospect McCoy, Isaac Millsaps, William Morrison, James Nash, Marcus L. Sewell, William Summers, Robert White

After the call for reinforcements from Lt. Col. William B. Travis by way of courier Captain Albert Martin on February 25, Lt. George C. Kimble responded on the 27th with twelve of the original rangers. Twenty more men joined on their ride to the Alamo.

1836 Alamo relief force edit

The Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers company primarily consisted of family men from Gonzales and DeWitt's Colony, gathering after the call for support was issued. After receiving Travis's "To the People of Texas and All Americans in the World" appeal on February 25, the Gonzales Rangers departed the town of Gonzales on the evening of Saturday, February 27, led by commanding officer Lieutenant George C. Kimble and Captain Albert Martin, the Alamo courier delivering Travis's appeal at Gonzales. Of the twenty-three original members mustered into the Gonzales Ranger Company on the 23rd, a total of twelve are thought entered the Alamo with the final Relief Force on March 1, and all but one died there.[7] Lockhart, Sowell, John William Smith and others accompanied the thirty-two Rangers into the Alamo and later departed, at night, as other couriers left.[8]

According to one account, a group of twenty-five men left Gonzales at two in the evening on the 27th. As they passed through Green Dewitt's Colony toward the Umphries Branch community and on to the Cibolo Creek, the company gained eight more members, increasing the company to thirty-two men. The youngest member of the Alamo defenders, William Philip King, 15-years old, became a part of this group. Due to family illness, he substituted in his father's place. On the 29th, the group searched to find a way into the Alamo and through the Mexican lines. At three o'clock, in the early hours of March 1, they made a wild dash into the fort while shot at by Alamo sentries. One man was slightly wounded, and, after a few rash words, the Alamo gates flew open for the Gonzales force to enter.[9]

The list of the 32 immortals are: Isaac G. Baker, John Cain, George Washington Cottle, David P. Cummings, Jacob Darst, John Davis, Squire Daymon (Damon), William Dearduff, Charles Despallier, William Fishbaugh, John Flanders, Dolphin Ward Floyd, Galba Fuqua, John E. Garvin, John E. Gaston, James George, Thomas J. Jackson, John Benjamin Kellogg II, Andrew Kent, George C. Kimble, William Philip King, Jonathan L. Lindley, Albert Martin [3], Jesse McCoy, Thomas R. Miller, Isaac Millsaps, George Neggan, Marcus L. Sewell, William Summers, George Washington Tumlinson, Robert White, Claiborne Wright.[10]

Knowing their chance of survival was slim, the Gonzales Rangers remained in the Alamo, serving as possibly the only reinforcements to make it into the Alamo during the siege. The 1836 Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers all perished in the battle of the Alamo. For their efforts to support the besieged and outnumbered Texians, they are remembered as the "Immortal Thirty-Two".[11]

Republic years edit

In the fall of 1837, after the revolution, settlers returned to Gonzales. Nothing remained of the former town except one charred building. The Comanche re-established their claim to the area. Caldwell served as the first Law Enforcement Official or Sheriff of Gonzales (Guadalupe, Dewitt, Caldwell, Lavaca) County.[12]

City Founders

In 1838, he and his fellow rangers founded the town of Walnut Branch in sparsely-populated northwest Gonzales County.[13] The area was well-favored, and was frequently DeWitt ranger campground years before the revolution.

1838 frontier rangers

Caldwell formed a frontier ranger company of twenty-nine men. Charles Lockhart became First Lieutenant, and Robert Hall joined as his Second Lieutenant. They built a log fort to provide security for the residents, and only mustered for a real crisis. In October that year, Native Americans raided the town, and stole two young women and some children, The rangers pursued the group, but could not catch them. They allied with friendly Native Americans, and valued their support.[14]

Frontier defender

Rumors of a Mexican retaliation soon flourished, and Texas President Mirabeau B. Lamar appointed Caldwell, on January 15, 1839, as a captain, to recruit a company of Gonzales Rangers to defend the Texas frontier. Two months later, he had his company of rangers, and on March 23, 1839, Caldwell became captain of a company in the First Regiment of Infantry of Texas. On March 29, 1839, a company of eighty men commanded by General Edward Burleson defeated Vicente Córdova and his rebels during a fight near Seguin, Texas, at "Battleground Prairie". Córdova survived, but was pursued by Caldwell's Rangers, Seguin militia, and then, joined by members of the Henry Karnes company, insuring his departure from Texas.[15]

Caldwells Gonzales & Seguin Rangers 1839[16]

During this time, 1st Lt. James Campbell was stationed at the Seguin outpost with half of the Caldwell Rangers, providing protection for the new town and others stationed close to Gonzales. The officers of the Rangers were: Captain Matthew Caldwell, 1st Lt. James Campbell, 2nd Lt. Canah C. Colley, 1st Sergt. George D. Miller, 2nd Sergt. John R. King, 3rd Sergt. William N. Henry, 4th Sergt. John Archer. The privates were: M. L. Baber, Seth Baldridge, Nathan Burgett, Curtis Caldwell, William Clinton, James M. Day, Miles G. Dikes, A. S. Emmitt, James Forrester, Daniel Gray, John B. Gray, Thomas Grubbs, Frederick W. Happle, Everett H. Harris, Vaughter Henderson, David Henson, John S. Hodges, Maury Irvin, E. R. Jones, William H. Killin, Henry B. King, Henry Eustace McCulloch, T. N. Minter, G. H. Nichols, George W. Nichols, James W. Nichols, John W. Nichols, Sol. G. Nichols, Thomas R. Nichols, William S. Osbourne, James Pinchback, D. M. Poore, William Putman, David Reynolds, Abram Roberts, Alexander Roberts, James B. Roberts, Jeremiah Roberts, Russell, D. W. Russell, John H. Ezekiel Smith, French Smith, William Smith, A. J. Sowell, Asa J. L. Sowell, J. N. Sowell, John S. Stump, James A. Swift, T. W. Symonds, Nathan Wadkins, Isaac Wallace, John D. Wolfin

1840s defense and imprisonment

Native Americans continued to plague the new Republic and in March, Caldwell participated in a meeting to trade captives with the Comanches. However, participants in the meeting turned violent, and the Council House Fight erupted, where he was wounded. He recovered in time to lead a company at the battle of Plum Creek on August 12, 1840.

As captain of Company D of the scouting force in the Texan Santa Fe Expedition in 1841, he was captured with other members, and imprisoned in Mexico. After he was released by the Mexicans, he headed to San Antonio to confront the invading Mexican forces there.

On September 18, 1842, Caldwell commanded a force of 200 men from Gonzales, Seguin, San Antonio and other near settlements, confronting and defeating General Adrián Woll, at the battle of Salado Creek.[17]

Personal life and death edit

In 1826, Mathew was 28, he married Martha A, and they had three children. Martha died about 1833 in Gonzales, TX.

Their 3 children:

  • Curtis (1827)
  • Lucy Ann (1829–1906)
  • Martha Elizabeth (1831–1892)

On May 17, 1837, Mathew was 39, he married Hannah Morrison in Washington County, Texas.

Matthew Caldwell died at his home in Gonzales on December 28, 1842,[18] and was buried with honors as a military hero.

Legacy edit

Caldwell County, Texas was established in 1848 and named in his honor. In 1930, he was honored by the state of Texas with a monument at his grave at Gonzales. The 1936 Texas Hall of State Building, in Dallas, commemorates Caldwell on the exterior historical-figure frieze.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-02-05. Retrieved 2012-07-14.
  2. ^ Blackburn, Edward A (2006). Wanted: Historic County Jails of Texas. Texas A&M University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-58544-308-6.
  3. ^ Hardin (1994), pg. 9
  4. ^ Matthew Caldwell Signature, Texas Independence Document
  5. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 16.
  6. ^ DeWitt Colony Captains
  7. ^ TAMU, Gonzales Relief Force
  8. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 98.
  9. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 340.
  10. ^ Groneman (1990), p. 9-123
  11. ^ Todish (1998), p. 46.
  12. ^ Caldwell (2011), p. 111.
  13. ^ John Gesick, "SEGUIN, TX," Handbook of Texas Online [1], accessed May 22, 2011. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
  14. ^ Life of Robert Hall (1992) pg. 39
  15. ^ Moore (2006), p. 198-199.
  16. ^ Moore (2006), p. 193-199.
  17. ^ L. W. Kemp, "CALDWELL, MATTHEW," Handbook of Texas Online [2], accessed May 19, 2011. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
  18. ^ Gonzales Grave Site 2012-03-24 at the Wayback Machine

Citations edit

  • Caldwell, Cliff (2011), Texas Lawmen, 1835–1899: The Good and the Bad by Cliff Caldwell and Ron DeLord, Charleston, SC: The History Press, ISBN 978-1-60949-216-8
  • Edmondson, J.R. (2000), The Alamo Story-From History to Current Conflicts, Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press, ISBN 1-55622-678-0
  • Groneman, Bill (1990), Alamo Defenders: A Genealogy, the People and Their Words, Austin, TX: Eakin Press, ISBN 978-0-89015-757-2
  • Hardin and "Brazos", Stephen L. (1992), Life of Robert Hall, Austin, TX: State House Press, ISBN 0938349902
  • Hardin, Stephen L. (1994), Texian Iliad – A Military History of the Texas Revolution, Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0-292-73086-1, OCLC 29704011
  • Lindley, Thomas Ricks (2003), Alamo Traces: New Evidence and New Conclusions, Lanham, MD: Republic of Texas Press, ISBN 1-55622-983-6
  • Moore, Stephen L. (2006), Savage Frontier: Rangers, Riflemen, and Indian Wars in Texas, Volume II, 1838–1839, Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, ISBN 978-1-57441-206-2
  • Todish, Timothy J.; Todish, Terry; Spring, Ted (1998), Alamo Sourcebook, 1836: A Comprehensive Guide to the Battle of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution, Austin, TX: Eakin Press, ISBN 978-1-57168-152-2
  • Dahlqvist, Rasmus (2013), From Martin to Despallier: The Story of a French Colonial Family, North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace IPP, ISBN 978-1-49360-325-1

mathew, caldwell, politician, from, florida, matt, caldwell, matthew, caldwell, march, 1798, december, 1842, also, spelled, 19th, century, texas, settler, military, figure, captain, gonzales, seguin, rangers, signer, texas, declaration, independence, because, . For the politician from Florida see Matt Caldwell Matthew Caldwell March 8 1798 December 28 1842 also spelled Mathew Caldwell was a 19th century Texas settler military figure Captain of the Gonzales Seguin Rangers and a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence Because of his recruitment ride ahead of the Battle of Gonzales some call him the Paul Revere of Texas Matthew CaldwellMonument at the gravesite of Matthew Caldwell Born 1798 03 08 March 8 1798KentuckyDiedDecember 28 1842 1842 12 28 aged 44 Gonzales Republic of TexasResting placeGonzales City Cemetery29 30 38 7 N 97 27 0 5 W 29 510750 N 97 450139 W 29 510750 97 450139Monuments1930 State Grave Monument1936 Texas Hall of State Building facade1936 Caldwell County centennial pink granite marker1976 Caldwell County Courthouse markerNationalityAmericanTexianSpousesMartha AHannah MorrisonChildren3 Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Texas Revolution 3 1836 Alamo relief force 4 Republic years 5 Personal life and death 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 CitationsEarly life and family editMatthew Caldwell nicknamed Old Paint was born in Kentucky on March 8 1798 He moved to Missouri with his family in 1818 where he traded fought and learned the ways of the Indians He his wife and family arrived in Texas in the Green DeWitt Colony on February 20 1831 On June 22 1831 he received the title to a parcel of land near the Zumwalt Settlement southwest of current Hallettsville Texas Settling in Gonzales Caldwell acquired the original James Hinds residence on Water Street and soon became a person of notoriety involved in security and command of minutemen rangers in Gonzales and the surrounding areas 1 Texas Revolution editActively recruiting before the battle of Gonzales in October 1835 he rode from Gonzales to Mina informing colonists of the dire need of their support in the volunteer army Because of this some call him the Paul Revere of Texas 2 As a participant at the battle he served as a scout and mediator 3 On Nov 3 1835 the delegates of the citizens of Texas established the provisional Texas government by the Consultation of 1835 The Consultation authorized the recruitment of 25 Rangers and later was increased to three companies of 56 men each Caldwell was appointed a subcontractor to the Texian Army by the Provisional Government of Texas to supply and administer a volunteer army at the siege of Bexar and the Alamo On 1 February 1836 he and John Fisher were elected delegates from Gonzales to the Texas Independence Convention of 1836 at Washington on the Brazos and both were signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence on March 2 4 The convention appointed a committee of three of which Caldwell was a member to assess the situation of the enemy on the frontier and the condition of the Texian army 5 They dispatched couriers with the message of independence Caldwell went along with them paying close attention to the state of the new republic as they passed through numerous settlements On February 4 1836 Matthew Caldwell was named along with Byrd Lockhart and William A Matthews as commissioners to raise a group of volunteers for a Gonzales Ranging Company 6 The company was mustered by March 23 1836 The muster list of 23 rangers is shown here Officers Capt Byrd Lockhart Lt George C Kimble First Sergeant William A IrvinPrivates John Ballard John Davis Andrew Duvalt Jacob Darst Frederick C Elm Galba Fuqua William Fishbaugh John Harris Andrew J Kent David B Kent John G King Daniel McCoy Jesse McCoy Prospect McCoy Isaac Millsaps William Morrison James Nash Marcus L Sewell William Summers Robert WhiteAfter the call for reinforcements from Lt Col William B Travis by way of courier Captain Albert Martin on February 25 Lt George C Kimble responded on the 27th with twelve of the original rangers Twenty more men joined on their ride to the Alamo 1836 Alamo relief force editThe Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers company primarily consisted of family men from Gonzales and DeWitt s Colony gathering after the call for support was issued After receiving Travis s To the People of Texas and All Americans in the World appeal on February 25 the Gonzales Rangers departed the town of Gonzales on the evening of Saturday February 27 led by commanding officer Lieutenant George C Kimble and Captain Albert Martin the Alamo courier delivering Travis s appeal at Gonzales Of the twenty three original members mustered into the Gonzales Ranger Company on the 23rd a total of twelve are thought entered the Alamo with the final Relief Force on March 1 and all but one died there 7 Lockhart Sowell John William Smith and others accompanied the thirty two Rangers into the Alamo and later departed at night as other couriers left 8 According to one account a group of twenty five men left Gonzales at two in the evening on the 27th As they passed through Green Dewitt s Colony toward the Umphries Branch community and on to the Cibolo Creek the company gained eight more members increasing the company to thirty two men The youngest member of the Alamo defenders William Philip King 15 years old became a part of this group Due to family illness he substituted in his father s place On the 29th the group searched to find a way into the Alamo and through the Mexican lines At three o clock in the early hours of March 1 they made a wild dash into the fort while shot at by Alamo sentries One man was slightly wounded and after a few rash words the Alamo gates flew open for the Gonzales force to enter 9 The list of the 32 immortals are Isaac G Baker John Cain George Washington Cottle David P Cummings Jacob Darst John Davis Squire Daymon Damon William Dearduff Charles Despallier William Fishbaugh John Flanders Dolphin Ward Floyd Galba Fuqua John E Garvin John E Gaston James George Thomas J Jackson John Benjamin Kellogg II Andrew Kent George C Kimble William Philip King Jonathan L Lindley Albert Martin 3 Jesse McCoy Thomas R Miller Isaac Millsaps George Neggan Marcus L Sewell William Summers George Washington Tumlinson Robert White Claiborne Wright 10 Knowing their chance of survival was slim the Gonzales Rangers remained in the Alamo serving as possibly the only reinforcements to make it into the Alamo during the siege The 1836 Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers all perished in the battle of the Alamo For their efforts to support the besieged and outnumbered Texians they are remembered as the Immortal Thirty Two 11 Republic years editIn the fall of 1837 after the revolution settlers returned to Gonzales Nothing remained of the former town except one charred building The Comanche re established their claim to the area Caldwell served as the first Law Enforcement Official or Sheriff of Gonzales Guadalupe Dewitt Caldwell Lavaca County 12 City FoundersIn 1838 he and his fellow rangers founded the town of Walnut Branch in sparsely populated northwest Gonzales County 13 The area was well favored and was frequently DeWitt ranger campground years before the revolution 1838 frontier rangersCaldwell formed a frontier ranger company of twenty nine men Charles Lockhart became First Lieutenant and Robert Hall joined as his Second Lieutenant They built a log fort to provide security for the residents and only mustered for a real crisis In October that year Native Americans raided the town and stole two young women and some children The rangers pursued the group but could not catch them They allied with friendly Native Americans and valued their support 14 Frontier defenderRumors of a Mexican retaliation soon flourished and Texas President Mirabeau B Lamar appointed Caldwell on January 15 1839 as a captain to recruit a company of Gonzales Rangers to defend the Texas frontier Two months later he had his company of rangers and on March 23 1839 Caldwell became captain of a company in the First Regiment of Infantry of Texas On March 29 1839 a company of eighty men commanded by General Edward Burleson defeated Vicente Cordova and his rebels during a fight near Seguin Texas at Battleground Prairie Cordova survived but was pursued by Caldwell s Rangers Seguin militia and then joined by members of the Henry Karnes company insuring his departure from Texas 15 Caldwells Gonzales amp Seguin Rangers 1839 16 During this time 1st Lt James Campbell was stationed at the Seguin outpost with half of the Caldwell Rangers providing protection for the new town and others stationed close to Gonzales The officers of the Rangers were Captain Matthew Caldwell 1st Lt James Campbell 2nd Lt Canah C Colley 1st Sergt George D Miller 2nd Sergt John R King 3rd Sergt William N Henry 4th Sergt John Archer The privates were M L Baber Seth Baldridge Nathan Burgett Curtis Caldwell William Clinton James M Day Miles G Dikes A S Emmitt James Forrester Daniel Gray John B Gray Thomas Grubbs Frederick W Happle Everett H Harris Vaughter Henderson David Henson John S Hodges Maury Irvin E R Jones William H Killin Henry B King Henry Eustace McCulloch T N Minter G H Nichols George W Nichols James W Nichols John W Nichols Sol G Nichols Thomas R Nichols William S Osbourne James Pinchback D M Poore William Putman David Reynolds Abram Roberts Alexander Roberts James B Roberts Jeremiah Roberts Russell D W Russell John H Ezekiel Smith French Smith William Smith A J Sowell Asa J L Sowell J N Sowell John S Stump James A Swift T W Symonds Nathan Wadkins Isaac Wallace John D Wolfin1840s defense and imprisonmentNative Americans continued to plague the new Republic and in March Caldwell participated in a meeting to trade captives with the Comanches However participants in the meeting turned violent and the Council House Fight erupted where he was wounded He recovered in time to lead a company at the battle of Plum Creek on August 12 1840 As captain of Company D of the scouting force in the Texan Santa Fe Expedition in 1841 he was captured with other members and imprisoned in Mexico After he was released by the Mexicans he headed to San Antonio to confront the invading Mexican forces there On September 18 1842 Caldwell commanded a force of 200 men from Gonzales Seguin San Antonio and other near settlements confronting and defeating General Adrian Woll at the battle of Salado Creek 17 Personal life and death editIn 1826 Mathew was 28 he married Martha A and they had three children Martha died about 1833 in Gonzales TX Their 3 children Curtis 1827 Lucy Ann 1829 1906 Martha Elizabeth 1831 1892 On May 17 1837 Mathew was 39 he married Hannah Morrison in Washington County Texas Matthew Caldwell died at his home in Gonzales on December 28 1842 18 and was buried with honors as a military hero Legacy editCaldwell County Texas was established in 1848 and named in his honor In 1930 he was honored by the state of Texas with a monument at his grave at Gonzales The 1936 Texas Hall of State Building in Dallas commemorates Caldwell on the exterior historical figure frieze See also editTimeline of the Republic of Texas Cordova Rebellion Council House Fight Great Raid of 1840 Battle of Plum CreekReferences edit TAMU DeWitt Captains Archived from the original on 2017 02 05 Retrieved 2012 07 14 Blackburn Edward A 2006 Wanted Historic County Jails of Texas Texas A amp M University Press p 53 ISBN 978 1 58544 308 6 Hardin 1994 pg 9 Matthew Caldwell Signature Texas Independence Document Lindley 2003 p 16 DeWitt Colony Captains TAMU Gonzales Relief Force Lindley 2003 p 98 Edmondson 2000 p 340 Groneman 1990 p 9 123 Todish 1998 p 46 Caldwell 2011 p 111 John Gesick SEGUIN TX Handbook of Texas Online 1 accessed May 22 2011 Published by the Texas State Historical Association Life of Robert Hall 1992 pg 39 Moore 2006 p 198 199 Moore 2006 p 193 199 L W Kemp CALDWELL MATTHEW Handbook of Texas Online 2 accessed May 19 2011 Published by the Texas State Historical Association Gonzales Grave Site Archived 2012 03 24 at the Wayback MachineCitations editCaldwell Cliff 2011 Texas Lawmen 1835 1899 The Good and the Bad by Cliff Caldwell and Ron DeLord Charleston SC The History Press ISBN 978 1 60949 216 8 Edmondson J R 2000 The Alamo Story From History to Current Conflicts Plano TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 1 55622 678 0 Groneman Bill 1990 Alamo Defenders A Genealogy the People and Their Words Austin TX Eakin Press ISBN 978 0 89015 757 2 Hardin and Brazos Stephen L 1992 Life of Robert Hall Austin TX State House Press ISBN 0938349902 Hardin Stephen L 1994 Texian Iliad A Military History of the Texas Revolution Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 73086 1 OCLC 29704011 Lindley Thomas Ricks 2003 Alamo Traces New Evidence and New Conclusions Lanham MD Republic of Texas Press ISBN 1 55622 983 6 Moore Stephen L 2006 Savage Frontier Rangers Riflemen and Indian Wars in Texas Volume II 1838 1839 Denton TX University of North Texas Press ISBN 978 1 57441 206 2 Todish Timothy J Todish Terry Spring Ted 1998 Alamo Sourcebook 1836 A Comprehensive Guide to the Battle of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution Austin TX Eakin Press ISBN 978 1 57168 152 2 Dahlqvist Rasmus 2013 From Martin to Despallier The Story of a French Colonial Family North Charleston SC CreateSpace IPP ISBN 978 1 49360 325 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mathew Caldwell amp oldid 1211798188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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