Recently a batch of rare Civil War maps were released by the Library of Congress, with many showing what Texas dealt with during the War Between the States.
Texas’ Gulf Coast locale meant that places like Galveston, Corpus Christi, Aransas Pass and Port Lavaca were much in demand during the war over state’s rights and slavery. A federal blockade of the Texas coastline remained in place for most of the war.
In early 1861 Texas Governor Sam Houston had argued against a war and wanted no part of it for his state. He didn’t think it would solve a thing and would only bring bloodshed. He wished for a peaceful resolution instead and turned away from calls for secession.
Even still, early Texans were headstrong and in Feb. 1861 voted to quit the Union, the seventh state to do so. Texas had only been a part of the United State for just over 15 years. Houston ended up retiring back to Huntsville after secessionists declared his office vacant. He refused to declare allegiance to the Confederacy.
He later died in the summer of 1863.
Soon a Texas militia group seized the federal military headquarters in San Antonio. Texas and Southern forces now in essence owned 10 percent of federal firepower.
By the end of 1861, some 25,000 Texas residents were in the Confederate army, with most in the horse-bound cavalry. By the end of the war, it’s believed that 70,000 Texans fought.
The Battle of Galveston in 1862 saw a small Union fleet attacked by Confederate forces near Fort Point. The Union fought back and ended up taking the city of Galveston back for the U.S., only to lose it by New Year’s Day 1863.
The largest battles of the Civil War were fought far away from the state of Texas, and many Texans died a long from home. However, the state didn’t suffer as many casualties as others farther east would.
The war was over by the summer of 1865, with federal control coming back in June of that year. Some Confederates, afraid of Union blow back, escaped to Mexico. The U.S. flag once again was flown in Austin on June 25. Soon a painful Reconstruction of the Union would begin all over the country.
In March 1870, the U.S. Congress readmitted Texas into the Union, although the state did not meet all the formal requirements needed for readmission.
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–chron.com