I hope all of yall had a wonderful Christmas, here is our late Christmas present to you all, enjoy! Make sure you like and subscribe as it will help us out a lot!
Would you be coming out of Spring,North Harris County? Because l am from West of there, between Spring-Cypress and Louetta. Just west of Kuykendahl Rd.
Thank you so much for y’alls work, God bless and merry Christmas to everyone. This is a hell of a channel, love the detail you put into describing each units role in each historical battle ( when sources are available ofc lol ). It’s so unique and you can hear the passion in the script too.
As a Texan this is truly Great stuff and I’m surprised nobody has ever did this style of video for the Texas revolution but now that some has finally done it’s gonna be a great watch.
Support the independence of the Republic of Texas and the Republic of California! Americans have no right to interfere with the rights of the people of California and Texas! The US government is abusing, bullying, and oppressing the people of Texas and California 💔
@@anti-hegemony California was an independent nation for all of 25 days. Not the same thing IMO. They became a part of the US as fast as they possibly could, because they were afraid and felt they could not defend themselves. Cowardice honestly. Please don't equate or compare the two. Especially with the absolute shit-show California has become.
IN THE NAME OF GONZALES!!! COME AND TAKE IT!!!!! WAAAAHHOOOOOOO!!!! Warhawk doing the Texas Revolution!! I love it!! Love your content!! And this is a most wonderful surprise!!
Excellent video with a lot of details that you don't usually see being mentioned. I haven't seen any videos that cover the Texas Revolution using the graphics you have. I'm glad to have found this channel. When I went to Gonzales I was astounded at what I saw. The gun was so small, and the museum staff said it didn't even work when the battle took place. Then I learned the gun on display is actually a second one they had. They abandoned it on the march to San Antonio. It was recovered in 1936 and is now back home where it belongs. The actual "Gonzales Cannon" was recovered after the fall of the Alamo, and recast into a bell that hangs in the belfry of St. Mark's Episcopal in San Antonio. It roared the call to revolution, and now it rings the call to worship. Poetic, I'd say.
Recently visited the Gonzales Museum. The representative there has a different story of the authentication of their "Come and Take It" Canon than the representative at the Alamo's story. One said it was turned into a bell in a church in San Antonio and one says their museum Canon is the real deal. 😮
@@14wheels75 That gun at the museum is definitely real and was there during the fighting. Lt. Castaneda commanding the Mexicans at Gonzales confirmed there were two cannons. The 6-pdr bronze gun, the one Castaneda was after, is the one that was melted down into a church bell.
Glad to see someone doing a series on the lead in to the Texas Revolution as well as the war itself. So much content only wants to cover the Alamo and San Jacinto without helping to give a better picture of how those events came to pass.
It was Mexican territory until American illegals (Davy Crockett) crossed into Mexico and declared themselves independent. And then two two hundred years Americans said they don’t like illegals. I would suggest you read about it but I’m sure any book that makes whites look or feel bad has been banned.
@liberalman8319 other than crockets volunteers, who had no connection with the American government at all, the rest were Mexican citizens including Bowie. They fought against the tyranny and slavery that Santa Anna sought to impose. If you think crockets men were illegals, surely you must believe that Americans fighting for Ukraine are exactly the same, yes?
I've been to both Goliad, Gonzales, and the Alamo. The three sites are drastically different from each other. Goliad is much like it was in 1836. Still a functioning Catholic church, it's also an Bed and Breakfast. Plus they still do reenacting events at the sight. Including having the massacre at, or near, one of the slaughter fields. You're out in the country. It's quiet. Creepily quiet. The Gonzales cannon sits in a large memorial museum in the middle of a park. The town is less than 8,000 people. As for the Alamo, they still do reenactments on the site, but it's now surrounded by a major city. Just the chapel and first floor of the Long Barracks remain, plus a small piece of the southwest corner where the 18-pounder sat. All the other parts have been demolished and stores and a Post Office now sit on the site where hundreds of men died horribly. Fighting for what they thought to be right.
Yes hundreds of pale skins died properly for invading a territory that was not theirs. Who later became slave owners and fought on the side of the secessionist confederates.
Visited Goliad and the Fannin Battle Ground State Historic Site recently. Very disappointed at how poorly kept the location is and the poor signage on how to locate it. It is hallowed ground and deserves better.
This will be great! It is fascinating to me that the events here and elsewhere will lead to the war that foreshadows so many of the generals we've witnessed in the civil war. Personally, im also interested in seeing the performance of the Mexican army and comparing it with its forerunners during the same time period against the french.
@@WarhawkYT I think the Mexican Army did a better job in Texas than in the Mexican American War, when Mexico was mobilized they were able to repel Texans and retain the strategic initiative all the way until San Jacinto. Even after that, the Texan Raids at Mier and Santa Fe were failures while Mexico was able to retake San Antonio twice. Another thing is the naval warfare, Mexican Navy captured the Texan Schooner Independence, and the Brutus and the Invincible ran aground while fighting two mexican brigs. If Commodore David Porter was still in the Mexican Navy he probably would have crushed the Texan Navy and burned Galveston. This is understandable given that Texas was basically a filibuster affair, fighting against USA was a whole different thing.
An Interesting difference I noticed is that the big names of the mexican army during the war against France tend to be on the younger side and didnt participate in the Mexican American War. Sherman, Grant, McClellan, Meade, Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Longstreet were veterans of the Mexican American War. However, Ignacio Zaragoza (the one who defeated the French in the Cinco de Mayo Battle), Porfirio Diaz (the big hero of the war), Ramon Corona and Sostenes Rocha (one of the most skilled generals in Mexican History) were just Teenagers during the Mexican American War, Gonzalez Ortega (who bravely defended Puebla against the french) was an adult however he didnt serve in the war, an exception would be Mariano Escobedo who served as a foot soldier.
@@moic9704 I thought it interesting too. One would think that if the big names from the American civil war showed up in the Mexican American war the reverse would be true too during the french intervention. yet, folks like Zaragoza were born in what was at the time the state of coahuila y tejas. A loose connection, but one that exists all the same. I suppose the anarchy in between conflicts that occur don't allow for very much continuity.
Wow, your information is so up to date and comprehensive. I'm awed by the production quality and the apparent lack of political bias on such a touchy subject. Everything said is consistent with my understanding with lots of extra context and perspective, fleshing it out. Def subscribed. Thanks.
this is great work, i’m a descendant of the rusk, williams and the kuykendalls families of the original 300. the history of this state has a special place in my heart
A quick look at wiki says that Cos was the husband of Lucinda Lopez de Santa Anna, however in the biography of Santa Anna written by Will Fowler that sister doesnt exists, according to Fowler Santa Anna had four sisters: Francisca, Merced, Guadalupe and Mariana. Francisca and Merced were married but not with Cos, there is little data about Guadalupe and Mariana and Fowler makes no mention of a marriage with Cos as far as I remember. Fowler mentions that Santa Anna's father was close to the Cos family but I am not sure if this is the same family of General Cos. There is also a book that contains biographies of all mexican generals and colonels in 1840, Cos is recorded as "40 years old, single and of good health"
@@Pwnulolumad Yea I am subscribed to them every other video is just stupid graphics about how"The Vikings settlement in England were made" I don't give a damn about any of that, these videos are all great... Where's my damn SHARPSBURG VIDEO!!!
Thanks bro what are the chances. I should’ve had this done a lot sooner but I got a little lazy lol Edit: do you have a discord or email I can reach out with? I have a question
Excellent video, very detailed and accurate information! T O Moore is actually my GGGF and our family considers 'Come and Take it' to be his creation. Col ( TO) Moore was a Confederate officer for Texas and learned from his mistakes at Gonzales. If anyone is interested, Comanche, Texas was started by our family and their historical society has much more stories and anecdotes about this time period and the Indian affairs, Civil War and Reconstruction.
Your videos have gotten very well made. Already awesome but ya know, I’m very impressed how quickly you’ve evolved. Keep up the great work you deserve every bit of recognition you get. Amazing stuff man.
Much like the English Civil War was as much about religion as anything else, the Texas revolution was part of a much larger Mexican Civil War. I love learning more about my home, thank you for making these videos!
Texas State Highway 21 follows much of the El Camino Real. Can take it from Nacogdoches to Crockett. Mission Tejas is on that route. Near Colmesneil, on the Nechss River is the site of Fort Teran
Too few people realise that Santa Anna was popular in Texas before he declared himself President For Life and overthrew the republican government and that most of the battles were not over independence but rather the return to the Constitution of 1824.
He was only popular because he wasn't Bustamante. It's kind of like modern day Biden was only elected because enough lies were told and spread about Trump that got him elected along with other shenanigans. Today Biden is hated so much that the only way Trump doesn't win will be because of shenanigans.
And slaves, don't forget them afro slaves. It's not a just war nor an honorable one, the aggressors were the usians were just looking to expand and mexicos mistake was letting them in.
Just a small correction.. Anahuac was settled in 1736, well before the date you cited. The Fort may not have been built until 1825, but it was built in an already existing community.
My 4x great grandmother is Elizabeth Deardroff George Hoskins. Her first husband was James George. James supplied the ox and yoke to move the Gonzalez cannon during the battle of Gonzalez. Elizabeth's brother William Deardroff my 4x great uncle and James George where apart of the Immortal 32. Obviously they both died at the Alamo. Elizabeth and her children then fled during the runway scrape. She came back to settle along Plum Creek. After losing James at the Alamo she married two more times. Her third and final husband was my 4x great grandfather Thomas Hoskins. Thomas was himself a extremely intreasting character. He was an outlaw, a degenerate gambler, drunk and a Murderer. He was one of the first inmates to serve time at Huntsville state penitentiary. Thomas and his son JT my 3x great grandfather fought on the side of the Confederacy in the civil war. My family's history runs deep in Texas. My cousin Janet Hoskins Dickerson wrote a great book on our families extensive history in texas between 1830-1930 called Fast Horses.
Looks like y'all took some pretty good lessons from Epic History TV on this one, nice 😁For the next change, might one suggest a narrator with proper bass vocal range? 😄😎
@@WarhawkYT Epic History's videos narrated by Charles Nove; History Marche's by David McCallion. Both narrators have that bass vocal range which gave the pronounciations and way of narration more gravitas, which add an additional quality to their works. Just a personal opinion here.
Yeah, I know. I do almost all myself and still don’t make much off of the channel. Decent narrators I’ve found cost way more than I make. So I’ve decided to keep doing it myself.
Just saying but I totally can’t wait to see the battle of the Alamo and I can’t wait to see it because in 2019 I visited the Alamo and once I saw it and saw the list of the defenders who lost their lives I was awe stricken and when I saw the list of the defenders I realized that a lot of my fellow Irish, Scottish, English German and one of my danish brothers along with my brethren from Pennsylvania and New Jersey and I said Fois Dhut which is the Scottish Gaelic word for rest in peace and what I mean by my fellow Irish, Scottish, German, English and danish brothers is even though I am an American I consider anyone part or full Scottish, Irish, German, English and danish my fellow brothers and sisters because I had ancestors from those nations and same thing with my brethren from New Jersey and Pennsylvania but I do live in New Jersey and even though I am not to related to the Americans who perished at the Alamo and even though their living descendants are strangers to me they are still my brethren and just saying but I can’t wait to see you do the Mexican American war but can you also do a series on the Black Hawk Wars and these two wars took place in different decades and different states in the US The first war was fought between April 6th and august 27th 1832 and it took place in what is today the modern day states of Illinois and Wisconsin and the opposing sides in this war consisted of the United States part of the Winnebago , part of the Potawatomi tribes and the Menominee and Sioux tribes and the leaders on their side included future confederate president Jefferson Davis, Future brigadier general Robert C Buchanan who would serve in the civil war, Winfield Scott and Future American presidents Zachary Taylor and a volunteer who would eventually become president Abraham Lincoln facing them was the opposing side which consisted of the rest of the Winnebago and Potawatomi along with the Sauk, Fox, Meskwaki, Kickapoo and Ottawa nations and they were under the leadership of Chiefs Black Hawk of the Sauk and namesake of the first war, Neapope spiritual leader of the Sauk and Wabokiesheik army commander of the Winnebago and Sauk. The second war took place from 1865 to 1872 and this second war was fought in the modern day states of Utah, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico and the war would also be fought in an area known as Four Corners which is where the state lines of Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet each other and the opposing sides in this war was the United States but on the other side was the Ute, Southern Paiute, Navajo, Apache and Timpanogos people and these Indians were led by chiefs Antonga Black Hawk namesake of the second war who was the war chief of the Timpanogos, Cheif Kanosh of the Pahvant band of the Ute people and Manuelito of the Navajo tribe who was best known for resisting the long walk of the Navajo.
I am quite pleased you presented the political issues surrounding the beginning of our revolt against the dictator Santa Anna. Also the fact we did not revolt alone. The revolts in Zacatacas and Yucatan were put down brutally with much death. Ours only barely succeeded, with only the capture of Santa Anna himself sealing the victory.
@@WarhawkYT do not take this as a dig at you but many of the Spanish/Mexican names just the way you say them sounds like an English speaker who sounds them out. Living in South Texas and spending most of my life very much in the culture plus the wife/mother in law who are both Mexican(nationals not just Texan of Mexican decent) I get corrected on how I say or speak Spanish/Mexican names. You did a great job on the video but an example is La Bahia in Goliad TX or some of the Mexican last names. I know you do not have an accent also like many Mexicans or S. Texans but just would round the video out a bit working on pronunciations. Again not trying to be rude or put down the hard work you did to publish the video I actually liked the video overall.
I hope all of yall had a wonderful Christmas, here is our late Christmas present to you all, enjoy! Make sure you like and subscribe as it will help us out a lot!
this is the best Christmas gift ever, i know you will do texas proud
Would you be coming out of Spring,North Harris County?
Because l am from West of there, between Spring-Cypress and Louetta. Just west of Kuykendahl Rd.
Thank you so much for y’alls work, God bless and merry Christmas to everyone. This is a hell of a channel, love the detail you put into describing each units role in each historical battle ( when sources are available ofc lol ). It’s so unique and you can hear the passion in the script too.
Great video, as always, idea: every thought about doing the battles of the French foreign legion??
im actually from east houston, baytown area.
As a Texan this is truly Great stuff and I’m surprised nobody has ever did this style of video for the Texas revolution but now that some has finally done it’s gonna be a great watch.
you're welcome man!
Support the independence of the Republic of Texas and the Republic of California! Americans have no right to interfere with the rights of the people of California and Texas! The US government is abusing, bullying, and oppressing the people of Texas and California 💔
As a Texan, I absolutely love it!!!
@@anti-hegemony California was an independent nation for all of 25 days. Not the same thing IMO. They became a part of the US as fast as they possibly could, because they were afraid and felt they could not defend themselves. Cowardice honestly. Please don't equate or compare the two. Especially with the absolute shit-show California has become.
IN THE NAME OF GONZALES!!! COME AND TAKE IT!!!!! WAAAAHHOOOOOOO!!!! Warhawk doing the Texas Revolution!! I love it!! Love your content!! And this is a most wonderful surprise!!
Merry Christmas to you GC!
Excellent video with a lot of details that you don't usually see being mentioned. I haven't seen any videos that cover the Texas Revolution using the graphics you have. I'm glad to have found this channel. When I went to Gonzales I was astounded at what I saw. The gun was so small, and the museum staff said it didn't even work when the battle took place. Then I learned the gun on display is actually a second one they had. They abandoned it on the march to San Antonio. It was recovered in 1936 and is now back home where it belongs.
The actual "Gonzales Cannon" was recovered after the fall of the Alamo, and recast into a bell that hangs in the belfry of St. Mark's Episcopal in San Antonio. It roared the call to revolution, and now it rings the call to worship. Poetic, I'd say.
Thanks John, that’s why I am making them ;) I’ve seen pictures of the cannon but I definitely want to see it in real life.
I have to admit I was wrong in a previous post. I thought it was in the Bullock, but I guess that was a replica
Recently visited the Gonzales Museum. The representative there has a different story of the authentication of their "Come and Take It" Canon than the representative at the Alamo's story. One said it was turned into a bell in a church in San Antonio and one says their museum Canon is the real deal. 😮
@@14wheels75 That gun at the museum is definitely real and was there during the fighting. Lt. Castaneda commanding the Mexicans at Gonzales confirmed there were two cannons. The 6-pdr bronze gun, the one Castaneda was after, is the one that was melted down into a church bell.
Were those two cannons the famous "twin sisters"?
Glad to see someone doing a series on the lead in to the Texas Revolution as well as the war itself. So much content only wants to cover the Alamo and San Jacinto without helping to give a better picture of how those events came to pass.
You're welcome bro! Being a descendent of a Texas Independence signer and loving history, Ive always wanted to make this series. now i am!
Thank you for bringing more attention to my great state. Remember the Alamo!
It’s my home state too! I live just 20m from San Jacinto!
It was Mexican territory until American illegals (Davy Crockett) crossed into Mexico and declared themselves independent. And then two two hundred years Americans said they don’t like illegals.
I would suggest you read about it but I’m sure any book that makes whites look or feel bad has been banned.
@liberalman8319 yeah, but at least Texas isn't part of a shithole country anymore (at least not until it becomes predominantly hispanic).
And remember Goliad!
@liberalman8319 other than crockets volunteers, who had no connection with the American government at all, the rest were Mexican citizens including Bowie. They fought against the tyranny and slavery that Santa Anna sought to impose. If you think crockets men were illegals, surely you must believe that Americans fighting for Ukraine are exactly the same, yes?
I've been to both Goliad, Gonzales, and the Alamo. The three sites are drastically different from each other.
Goliad is much like it was in 1836. Still a functioning Catholic church, it's also an Bed and Breakfast. Plus they still do reenacting events at the sight. Including having the massacre at, or near, one of the slaughter fields. You're out in the country. It's quiet. Creepily quiet.
The Gonzales cannon sits in a large memorial museum in the middle of a park. The town is less than 8,000 people.
As for the Alamo, they still do reenactments on the site, but it's now surrounded by a major city. Just the chapel and first floor of the Long Barracks remain, plus a small piece of the southwest corner where the 18-pounder sat. All the other parts have been demolished and stores and a Post Office now sit on the site where hundreds of men died horribly. Fighting for what they thought to be right.
Spot on
They fought at The Alamo for what was right, no thought had to go into it.
I'm a fifth generation Texican myself.
As a fan of your channel and native Texan I thank you for tackling the Texas revolution
Yes hundreds of pale skins died properly for invading a territory that was not theirs. Who later became slave owners and fought on the side of the secessionist confederates.
Visited Goliad and the Fannin Battle Ground State Historic Site recently. Very disappointed at how poorly kept the location is and the poor signage on how to locate it. It is hallowed ground and deserves better.
The best pronunciation of Spanish words I have seen in a long time for a non native speaker well done sir💪🏻🙌
Thanks, I appreciate that. I dont think ive ever been commended for my pronunciation on here.
@@WarhawkYTdefinitely not how we pronounce Bexar though lol
@@lonestarlaw8624 the bear for Bexar pronunciation is relatively new.
Thanks! Well done. God Bless Texas!!
Our pleasure!
Why should he?
@@marthagomez7335why not?
@@LA-hx8gj what for!
@@marthagomez7335 I hope God blesses everyone 🙏, that's why.
Fantastic video 🤠. Will you be covering other battles from the Texas Revolution?
thanks, Siege of bexar will be out in a few short days ;)
I love this video it shows our valor and bravery this makes me Proud to be Texan ❤❤
This will be great! It is fascinating to me that the events here and elsewhere will lead to the war that foreshadows so many of the generals we've witnessed in the civil war. Personally, im also interested in seeing the performance of the Mexican army and comparing it with its forerunners during the same time period against the french.
or we can see how they will compare when they'll face the USA in 10 years
yessir! im looking forward to it!@@WarhawkYT
@@WarhawkYT I think the Mexican Army did a better job in Texas than in the Mexican American War, when Mexico was mobilized they were able to repel Texans and retain the strategic initiative all the way until San Jacinto. Even after that, the Texan Raids at Mier and Santa Fe were failures while Mexico was able to retake San Antonio twice.
Another thing is the naval warfare, Mexican Navy captured the Texan Schooner Independence, and the Brutus and the Invincible ran aground while fighting two mexican brigs. If Commodore David Porter was still in the Mexican Navy he probably would have crushed the Texan Navy and burned Galveston.
This is understandable given that Texas was basically a filibuster affair, fighting against USA was a whole different thing.
An Interesting difference I noticed is that the big names of the mexican army during the war against France tend to be on the younger side and didnt participate in the Mexican American War.
Sherman, Grant, McClellan, Meade, Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Longstreet were veterans of the Mexican American War.
However, Ignacio Zaragoza (the one who defeated the French in the Cinco de Mayo Battle), Porfirio Diaz (the big hero of the war), Ramon Corona and Sostenes Rocha (one of the most skilled generals in Mexican History) were just Teenagers during the Mexican American War, Gonzalez Ortega (who bravely defended Puebla against the french) was an adult however he didnt serve in the war, an exception would be Mariano Escobedo who served as a foot soldier.
@@moic9704 I thought it interesting too. One would think that if the big names from the American civil war showed up in the Mexican American war the reverse would be true too during the french intervention. yet, folks like Zaragoza were born in what was at the time the state of coahuila y tejas. A loose connection, but one that exists all the same. I suppose the anarchy in between conflicts that occur don't allow for very much continuity.
Wow, your information is so up to date and comprehensive. I'm awed by the production quality and the apparent lack of political bias on such a touchy subject. Everything said is consistent with my understanding with lots of extra context and perspective, fleshing it out. Def subscribed. Thanks.
It shouldn’t be a touchy subject. This should be like any other era in history.
this is great work, i’m a descendant of the rusk, williams and the kuykendalls families of the original 300. the history of this state has a special place in my heart
Really awesome work. Took my family to Gonzales this past summer, this video really paints the history well. Thank you.
Educational and historical, nice presentation😊
Excellent detail.
I must say your efforts into these videos you make are amazing, and I absolutely a history nerd cannot wait to watch this one👍
I can’t believe I only just now found your account, this is a gold mine.
Greetings from south Texas! Thank you for your great coverage of an important period of our history. JB
Good work. I read somewhere that the mem that Cos was Santa Anna's bro in law has no foundation.
A quick look at wiki says that Cos was the husband of Lucinda Lopez de Santa Anna, however in the biography of Santa Anna written by Will Fowler that sister doesnt exists, according to Fowler Santa Anna had four sisters: Francisca, Merced, Guadalupe and Mariana.
Francisca and Merced were married but not with Cos, there is little data about Guadalupe and Mariana and Fowler makes no mention of a marriage with Cos as far as I remember.
Fowler mentions that Santa Anna's father was close to the Cos family but I am not sure if this is the same family of General Cos.
There is also a book that contains biographies of all mexican generals and colonels in 1840, Cos is recorded as "40 years old, single and of good health"
I really like that you are explaining everything like how Epic History TV makes their videos.
Can I get an Antitem video in my life???
Btw your videos are the standard by which I judge all other military history videos by.
we will, we are just taking a break from the civil war. I appreciate that
😂😂
OP must’ve never seen kings and general channel jaja
@@Pwnulolumad Yea I am subscribed to them every other video is just stupid graphics about how"The Vikings settlement in England were made" I don't give a damn about any of that, these videos are all great...
Where's my damn SHARPSBURG VIDEO!!!
HistoryMarche, Epic History TV, Montemayor, The Operations Room, and Warhawk
Green Dewitt & Sarah Seely are my ancestor and founded the city of Gonzales thank you for representing them ❣
Dang it! I was just about to start making a video on this. Touché sir, Touché.
Thanks bro what are the chances. I should’ve had this done a lot sooner but I got a little lazy lol
Edit: do you have a discord or email I can reach out with? I have a question
Cannot not wait for the next parts to this. I have been interest in Texas Revolution scine I was a kid. keep them coming
Excellent video, very detailed and accurate information! T O Moore is actually my GGGF and our family considers 'Come and Take it' to be his creation. Col ( TO) Moore was a Confederate officer for Texas and learned from his mistakes at Gonzales. If anyone is interested, Comanche, Texas was started by our family and their historical society has much more stories and anecdotes about this time period and the Indian affairs, Civil War and Reconstruction.
I promise this will be shown in Texas Classrooms, Teachers love this type of content for their curriculum. Great Job man
Appreicate it bobby, being a texas school teacher myself, I would definitely use it haha (if i was teaching texas history)
Very well done. I appreciate your hard work
Thank you very much!
Thanks for your documentary on this battle at Gonzalez.
💯👍👊
My pleasure
so glad you keep making videos
Your videos have gotten very well made. Already awesome but ya know, I’m very impressed how quickly you’ve evolved. Keep up the great work you deserve every bit of recognition you get. Amazing stuff man.
I really appreciate you saying that, thanks!
Cool the learn the origin of “Come and take it!” Thx for the video, good stuff.
Well presented. Please keep up the good work.
Man I missed your videos. Glad you’re back! This one’s gonna be great.
Thanks man, glad to be back!
Greetings from Bastrop County, TX. Really appreciate your presentation.
Your in depth detail is second to none. Love your content.
Hawk, you are brilliant! Washington, Indian uprisings and the War of Northern Aggression. What a playlist! Outstanding! Cheers from Tennessee
You’re welcome rabbit!
War of southern treason
Much like the English Civil War was as much about religion as anything else, the Texas revolution was part of a much larger Mexican Civil War. I love learning more about my home, thank you for making these videos!
Hi. What a nicely narrated, organized, and filmed video.
Thanks for your efforts.
Have subscribed and will look forward to watching your videos.
A Texan surrender their guns? I feel like you'd have better luck taming a honey badger.
Thanks 🙏 very entertaining and informative
realy nice video, definitely one of my favourites on this channel. Also your quality now is insane
Texas State Highway 21 follows much of the El Camino Real. Can take it from Nacogdoches to Crockett. Mission Tejas is on that route. Near Colmesneil, on the Nechss River is the site of Fort Teran
I lived on Hwy 21 when I lived in Nacogdoches.
Driven west on El Camino Real many times
@@mcgregorpiperI’ve only taken 21 from Alto, driving from Tyler to Houston
A Texas video in this format? Hell yeah, partner!
hell yeah brother
Excellent video!
Thank you very much!
Love your videos! always a good watch
I appreciate that!
Excellent video
That was great and very informative . Ya got a new subscriber.
thanks ben dover, youre my favorite childhood name
William B. Travis was already showing signs of tactical brilliance before the Alamo, very impressive
When is the next video about the Texas Revolution? Great video, I've subscribed!
I appreciate it! I’m like 2/3 done with it. You can always see my progress in our discord, link is in the description!
Again very well done video, very exciting to see Warhawk branching off into more American conflicts 🦅
Thanks for the Christmas present, I enjoyed it. Are you doing a segment on the Texas revolution?
Yes I am!
Are you going to produce a video on the Battle of Sharpesburg? I have been looking forward to seeing it since September.@@WarhawkYT
We will, just kinda burnout of Civil War atm
Awesome to see more content
yep im glad to be back!
Too few people realise that Santa Anna was popular in Texas before he declared himself President For Life and overthrew the republican government and that most of the battles were not over independence but rather the return to the Constitution of 1824.
He was only popular because he wasn't Bustamante. It's kind of like modern day Biden was only elected because enough lies were told and spread about Trump that got him elected along with other shenanigans. Today Biden is hated so much that the only way Trump doesn't win will be because of shenanigans.
And slaves, don't forget them afro slaves. It's not a just war nor an honorable one, the aggressors were the usians were just looking to expand and mexicos mistake was letting them in.
Do you think you could do video on the Second Battle of Sabine Pass? One of the most interesting battles of the Civil War.
Great video, my only suggestion is to use a different font for the quotes
Please do a video on the Battle of Medina 1813. I'm from Texas where learning the state's history is mandatory but this is sorely overlooked.
I’ve been thinking about that
Right you are. It is the largest battle with the highest casualties of any battle ever fought in Texas and most people have never heard of it.
I might do a special video for Medina when I cover the Mexican war of independence
Very underrated channel
Just a small correction.. Anahuac was settled in 1736, well before the date you cited. The Fort may not have been built until 1825, but it was built in an already existing community.
Happy Holidays! Did you guys need voice actors still for upcoming civil war part for Invasion of Maryland?
Merry Christmas! We do not, thanks for the offer though!
@@WarhawkYT okay I filled out the form months ago and never heard back
Moses austin got his contract to settle texas from spain in 1820. His son inherited it in 1821.
Very impressive, I was wondering when the Antietam video is gonna come out.
You should do stuff on A.J. Sowell! He wrote a lot of first hand account from Texan pioneers. He was also a Texan ranger and Alamo defender
And thats why you don't let foreigners buy land in your country. Thats asking for trouble.
texas independence❤
My 4x great grandmother is Elizabeth Deardroff George Hoskins. Her first husband was James George. James supplied the ox and yoke to move the Gonzalez cannon during the battle of Gonzalez. Elizabeth's brother William Deardroff my 4x great uncle and James George where apart of the Immortal 32. Obviously they both died at the Alamo. Elizabeth and her children then fled during the runway scrape. She came back to settle along Plum Creek. After losing James at the Alamo she married two more times. Her third and final husband was my 4x great grandfather Thomas Hoskins. Thomas was himself a extremely intreasting character. He was an outlaw, a degenerate gambler, drunk and a Murderer. He was one of the first inmates to serve time at Huntsville state penitentiary. Thomas and his son JT my 3x great grandfather fought on the side of the Confederacy in the civil war. My family's history runs deep in Texas. My cousin Janet Hoskins Dickerson wrote a great book on our families extensive history in texas between 1830-1930 called Fast Horses.
Good stuff
Appreciate it
Audio sounding much better.
Hold on, I need to know. Does anyone know if this this the same Warhawk that played games like American Conquest: Divided Nation and Blitzkrieg 2?
I wish this channel would focus on one war at a time, instead of 3.
Nacogdoches Native here 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Ayyyy, SFA graduate here 🔥🔥🔥🔥
@@WarhawkYT same!!
I’ve been to Fort Teran near Jasper tx
Looks like y'all took some pretty good lessons from Epic History TV on this one, nice 😁For the next change, might one suggest a narrator with proper bass vocal range? 😄😎
thanks and a weird suggestion
@@WarhawkYT Epic History's videos narrated by Charles Nove; History Marche's by David McCallion. Both narrators have that bass vocal range which gave the pronounciations and way of narration more gravitas, which add an additional quality to their works. Just a personal opinion here.
Yeah, I know. I do almost all myself and still don’t make much off of the channel. Decent narrators I’ve found cost way more than I make. So I’ve decided to keep doing it myself.
Sounds fine to me. If you want to listen to men with deep baritone voices might I suggest Barry White?
Greetings from Nacogdoches! If y’all’re ever in town, check out the Fredonia Brewery!
I’ve been there! I’m an SFA Alumni!
Just saying but I totally can’t wait to see the battle of the Alamo and I can’t wait to see it because in 2019 I visited the Alamo and once I saw it and saw the list of the defenders who lost their lives I was awe stricken and when I saw the list of the defenders I realized that a lot of my fellow Irish, Scottish, English German and one of my danish brothers along with my brethren from Pennsylvania and New Jersey and I said Fois Dhut which is the Scottish Gaelic word for rest in peace and what I mean by my fellow Irish, Scottish, German, English and danish brothers is even though I am an American I consider anyone part or full Scottish, Irish, German, English and danish my fellow brothers and sisters because I had ancestors from those nations and same thing with my brethren from New Jersey and Pennsylvania but I do live in New Jersey and even though I am not to related to the Americans who perished at the Alamo and even though their living descendants are strangers to me they are still my brethren and just saying but I can’t wait to see you do the Mexican American war but can you also do a series on the Black Hawk Wars and these two wars took place in different decades and different states in the US The first war was fought between April 6th and august 27th 1832 and it took place in what is today the modern day states of Illinois and Wisconsin and the opposing sides in this war consisted of the United States part of the Winnebago
, part of the Potawatomi tribes and the Menominee and Sioux tribes and the leaders on their side included future confederate president Jefferson Davis, Future brigadier general Robert C Buchanan who would serve in the civil war, Winfield Scott and Future American presidents Zachary Taylor and a volunteer who would eventually become president Abraham Lincoln facing them was the opposing side which consisted of the rest of the Winnebago and Potawatomi along with the Sauk, Fox, Meskwaki, Kickapoo and Ottawa nations and they were under the leadership of Chiefs Black Hawk of the Sauk and namesake of the first war, Neapope spiritual leader of the Sauk and Wabokiesheik army commander of the Winnebago and Sauk. The second war took place from 1865 to 1872 and this second war was fought in the modern day states of Utah, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico and the war would also be fought in an area known as Four Corners which is where the state lines of Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet each other and the opposing sides in this war was the United States but on the other side was the Ute, Southern Paiute, Navajo, Apache and Timpanogos people and these Indians were led by chiefs Antonga Black Hawk namesake of the second war who was the war chief of the Timpanogos, Cheif Kanosh of the Pahvant band of the Ute people and Manuelito of the Navajo tribe who was best known for resisting the long walk of the Navajo.
im excited too!
Missed seeing you on my feed WH
I miss seeing you bb
Im writing an assassin's creed fan fic in the texas revolution, these really help
where did u get that topography
Maps from google
Hopefuly we get Battle of Perryville Too.!!!
The narration slipped in the second half. It became pretty slurred. What happened there?
Drugs most likely.
hows the progress on that epic history tv video collaboration my man?
Sadly, it fell through, maybe we might do something in the future but as of now, nothing
@@WarhawkYT that is really sad to hear i was expecting the video to be almost finished. Im hoping for the best:)
@@MarbleHit indeed
This would be a great war game!
There's one channel that is completely dedicated to Texas History, called Garrisons History Productions, that I highly recommend.
I might have seen their stuff before, Thanks for the tip!
I am quite pleased you presented the political issues surrounding the beginning of our revolt against the dictator Santa Anna.
Also the fact we did not revolt alone.
The revolts in Zacatacas and Yucatan were put down brutally with much death.
Ours only barely succeeded, with only the capture of Santa Anna himself sealing the victory.
Love it
Being half Northern Irish this is very interesting to me since some Texans were Scots-Irish :)
Once again, if you want to lose your country just invite in the Americans 😅
Tried and true policy 😂
This helped me on my history test
Very nice work showing the Texas Land Grab. Took Texas History in school as a kid and always wondered why nobody questioned the spin.
You should get checked for GRIDS.
Good video but you really need to work on pronunciation of some of the names and locations.
Care to elaborate on what I said wrong?
@@WarhawkYT do not take this as a dig at you but many of the Spanish/Mexican names just the way you say them sounds like an English speaker who sounds them out. Living in South Texas and spending most of my life very much in the culture plus the wife/mother in law who are both Mexican(nationals not just Texan of Mexican decent) I get corrected on how I say or speak Spanish/Mexican names. You did a great job on the video but an example is La Bahia in Goliad TX or some of the Mexican last names. I know you do not have an accent also like many Mexicans or S. Texans but just would round the video out a bit working on pronunciations. Again not trying to be rude or put down the hard work you did to publish the video I actually liked the video overall.
Thanks, I work with some spanish speakers who helped me with my pronunciations and the way I said them in the narration is what they approved.
Texas Forever
Hell ya!
Hell ya
WAR IS WAR THAT IS ALL !!!!!!
11:31 They order them to surrender their guns, but they rise up, instead.
*Shocker*
This is perfect for any 7th grader out there. Well done
Thanks bro!
COME AND TAKE IT!
Come and take these uhhh my lawyer recommend i do not this sentence
Now, if texas can only figure out how to keep the Californians out
california's and illegal aliens.
The formation of the United States of TEXAS is so Kool
I have friends in Anahuac