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The below information about Francisca Alvarez is from
The Sons of DeWitt Colony web site © 1997-2001, Wallace L. McKeehan, All
Rights Reserved.
The Angel of Goliad
Multiple survivor accounts of the Massacre at Goliad
mention with honor and reverence and credit their survival to a Mexican
lady immortalized with the term "The Angel of Goliad" in the extensive
accounts of the events surrounding the massacre by Dr. Joseph Barnard
and Dr. John Shackelford. Historical accounts refer to the "Angel of
Goliad" as a lady of Mexican birth named Francita, Francisca, Panchita,
or Pancheta/Panchita with surname Alavez, Alvarez, or Alevesco. She is
often referred to as the wife of Captain Telesforo Alavéz who was
commander of Mexican Centralista forces in the Copano and Victoria
region under Gen. José de Urrea's command until May 14 when the army
retreated south to Matamoros after defeat at San Jacinto. Mexican
archives show that Captain Alavéz in December 31, 1837 was 34 years of
age, married, and a resident of Toluca. The archives show that his
legitimate wife at that time was Maria Augustina de Pozo, also of Toluca,
whom he had abandoned in 1834. She and her brother wrote several
letters, 1836-1837, to the minister of war, asking for money for her
support. Augustina had two small children at the time. Various accounts
place Francita Alavéz with the movements of Captain Alavéz in carrying
out his assignments at Copano Bay, Goliad, Victoria and Matamoros where
she aided Texian prisoners at all locations. Numerous accounts,
including that in the current Handbook of Texas, relate that Señora
Alavéz returned to Mexico City with the Captain and was there abandoned
by him upon which she returned to Matamoros penniless where she was
aided by Texians who knew of her humanitarian efforts. From there she is
said to have disappeared from the history books.
THE ANGEL OF GOLIAD
By Harbert Davenport ca. 1950
History tells no finer story than that of the "Angel
of Goliad", the Mexican lady whose merciful heart, unyielding courage,
and almost unbelievable exertions induced Urrea's officers to evade, and
partially disobey, Santa Ana's orders to shoot all prisoners, and to
mitigate the rigors of the prisoners' lot. In the words of
Dr. Joseph H. Barnard, one of the beneficiaries of her
mercies: [Linn: Reminiscences of Fifty Years in Texas, 171-175]
"I must not here omit the mention of Senora
Alvarez, whose name ought to be perpetuated to the latest times for
her virtues, and whose action contrasted so strangely with that of
her countrymen, and deserves to be recorded in the annals of this
country and treasured in the heart of every Texan. When she arrived
at Copano with her husband, who was one of Urrea's officers, Miller
and his men had just been taken prisoners. They were tightly bound
with cords, so as to completely stop the circulation of blood in
their arms, and in this state had been left several hours when she
saw them. Her heart was touched at the sight, and she immediately
caused the cords to be removed and refreshments furnished them. She
treated them with great kindness, and when, on the morning of the
massacre she learned that the prisoners were to be shot, she so
effectually pleaded with Colonel Garay (whose humane feelings so
revolted at the order) that with great personal responsibility to
himself, and at great hazards at thus going counter to the orders of
the then all-powerful Santa Ana, resolved to save all that he could;
and a few of us, in consequence, were left to tell of that bloody
day.
"Besides those that Colonel Garay saved, she
saved others by her connivance with some of the officers, who had
gone into the fort at night and taken out some whom she had kept
concealed until after the massacre. When she saw Dr. Shackelford, a
few days after, she burst into tears and exclaimed, 'Why did I not
know that you had a son here? I would have saved him at all
hazards!' * * ' It must be remembered that when she came to Texas
she could have considered its people only as rebels and heretics,
the two classes, of all others, most odious to the mind of a pious
Mexican. And yet, after everything that had occurred to present the
Texans to her view as the worst and most abandoned of men, she
became incessantly engaged in contributing to their wants and in
saving their lives. Her name deserves to be recorded in letters of
gold among the angels who have from time to time been commissioned
by an overruling and beneficient power to relieve the sorrow and
cheer the hearts Of men; and who have, for that purpose, been given
the form of helpless women."
And John Henry Brown, who, in his youth, had known
many of the recipients of her bounty, wrote, fifty years later, [Brown:
History of Texas I - 54 ]
"of this angelic lady, whose memory should be
sacred in every Texan heart, and whose name should be perpetuated in
a Texan county before it is too late."
Though four generations of Texans have delighted to
praise her, they have been singularly incurious as to her name,
personality, and subsequent fate. She came into Texas with Urrea's army
and was swept out again with the Mexican retreat from San Jacinto. From
March through May of the year of Texan independence her virtues shone
resplendently against the grim cruelty of Santa Anna; and then, insofar
as Texas and Texans were concerned, she stepped gently out of their
hearts and lives. Not even the beneficiaries of her mercies took the
trouble to learn, or, at least they failed to record, her name.
To Reuben R. Brown, whose
life she saved at San Patricio, and who was again to share her mercies
as a "Prisoner of Matamoros," she was "a Mexican lady named Alvarez."
To Dr. Jack Shackelford,
whom she befriended in his darkest hour, and who first proclaimed her
virtues to the world, she was "Pacheta Alevesco, wife of Captain A."
To Dr. Joseph H. Barnard,
to whom we are mainly indebted for the little we know concerning her,
she was "Señora Alvarez * - * [who] arrived at the Copano with her
husband [who was one of Urrea's officers.]"
To Benjamin F. Hughes, lad
of fifteen, whom she saved on that fatal Palm Sunday at Goliad, she was
"a young lady, Madame Captain Alvarez, evidently of distinction."
Other Texans who owed her their lives knew her only
as "the wife of a Mexican officer."
John Henry Brown urged, fifty years since, that a
Texan county---be named for her, but that was not to be, since no one
knew then, and none knows now, what name she bore.
She was known to the Texans whom she saved as the
wife of Captain Telesforo Alavéz, Captain of the 6th Company of Urrea's
own cavalry regiment of Cuautla; who served as Paymaster of the forces
in Urrea's Texan campaign. But we know, too, that the wife of Captain
Telesforo Alavéz was Maria Agustina de Pozo, native and resident of
Toluca. But if the Angel's name was Agustina, why did Dr. Shackelford
call her "Pacheta Alevesco," which could only have been his rendering of
Panchita Alavéz?
But we had best allow Texans who knew her, and whose
benefactress she was, to tell their own stories.
The first published reference to our Mexican Angel of
Mercy was in Dr. Jack Shackelford's account of his experience at Goliad,
reprinted, in 1841, in Foote's Texas and Texans, Vol. II, p. 245. Doctor
Shackelford said:
"I consider it not inappropriate here to mention
one female, Pacheta Alevesco, the wife of Captain A. She was indeed
an Angel of Mercy -- a second Pocahontas. All that she could do to
administer to our comfort -- to "pour oil into our wounds' - was
done. She had likewise been to Maj. Miller and men, a ministering
angel."
The italics for her name are Doctor Shackelford's.
For a better understanding of the events of Urrea's
Texas campaign, and our Angel's part in it, it should be borne in mind
that Urrea left Matamoros February 18, 1836, with about half of the
forces at his disposal, and hurried to San Patricio by forced marches;
beating Johnson in detail at and near San Patricio, February 27, and
Grant at Agua Dulce on March 2. The Portion of his forces left at
Matamoros -- with the army's baggage and camp followers -- joined him at
San Patricio, on March 7. On the 12th, in disregard of Santa Anna's
repeated orders to shoot all prisoners taken in arms, he remitted to
Matamoros twenty-one prisoners taken with Grant and Johnson. Their story
becomes pertinent here:
Among the twenty-one thus spared was
Reuben R. Brown, a Georgian, who became, in later years, a
colonel in the Confederate Army, and a wealthy planter at Brazoria. In
an account of his early Texas adventures, first published in the Texas
Almanac for 1858 (See also Barker & Johnson, History of Texas, Vol. 1,
p. 124) Brown explained why he was not shot at that time:
"Urrea * said that I would have to be executed
according to Santa Anna's orders * * * was * * taken out to be shot,
but was spared through the intervention of a priest, and a Mexican
lady named Alvarez * * * I was then marched with other prisoners to
Matamoros."
On March 13, 1836, Urrea moved against King and Ward
at Refugio, leaving behind his baggage and camp followers at San
Patricio. He fought Ward and King on the 14th; occupied the old Mission
on the morning of the 15th; executed King and other prisoners on the
16th; joined Morales before Goliad on the 17th; fought Fannin on the
19th, and received his surrender on the 20th; occupied Victoria on the
21st; and captured Ward and his men on the Garcitas on the 22nd. On the
23rd, Major William P. Miller and his men were taken by Colonel Vara at
Copano. This was the only action of the Texas Campaign in which Captain
Telesforo Alavéz had a part, and here the "Angel" again appeared.
On March 25th, Urrea, still at Victoria, sent Ward
and his men to Goliad to join the other Fannin prisoners. A direct order
from Santa Anna for their execution was received there by Portilla, on
the 26th, and he executed it next day. Her heroic part in the Goliad
tragedy has been told by Dr. Barnard.
In a note Doctor Barnard adds:
"During the time of the massacre she stood in the
street, her hair floating, speaking wildly, and abusing the Mexican
officers, especially Portilla. She appeared almost frantic."
Among those at Goliad who were saved by her
intervention was Benjamin Franklin Hughes, Captain Horton's young
orderly, then a lad of fifteen years. [He was born in Jefferson County,
Kentucky, September 8, 1820] Hughes, in his old age, wrote an account of
his experiences which is preserved among the Philip C. Tucker Papers in
the Library of the University of Texas. With slight corrections as to
spelling and punctuation, his Goliad reminiscences read:
"The 27th of March, Sunday morning, came and with
it an order from the president, General Santa Anna, to shoot us all.
We were called out and told to hurry up and get in line to march to
a place of embarcation, and we got into line rather hopping and
skipping with joy at the thought of soon being home. We were just
about starting, when I saw quite a number of ladies standing where
we had to march by, and two, who afterward proved to be Lady General
Urrea and a young lady, Madame Captain Alvarez were evidently ladies
of distinction. These, with a little girl ten or eleven years old
were standing in a group with Colonel Holsinger, who seemed to be
officiating in the execution of the order for execution, and as we
stepped off the young lady spoke to her aunt, the general's wife,
and then the elder spoke to the Colonel, and a Sergeant or corporal
came and took me out of the ranks and stood me between the two
ladies with the little girl, and the rest marched off. In the space
of maybe five minutes they were halted and the Mexicans were so
arranged as to place our men in a cross fire, and the instant of the
halt the order was given to fire, and then I saw for the first time
why I was taken from the ranks, and I nudged up to the ladies, and
immediately after some of the Mexicans came running back and
menacing me with their muskets with bayonets, as if they had
bayoneted all who were not killed out right -which they did, and
even those who were killed were stuck through with the bayonet
rather by way of sport and such was the fate of 332 poor fellows
that a few hours before were building high air castles, all to fall
suddenly in a few hours with all their plans. Col. Holsinger seemed
to be in command, as General Urrea was, it seems, under suspension
from duty for not executing the order of General Santa Anna, but the
Colonel seemed pleased at the ladies taking me in charge.and was
very kind to me, and said he would, and I think he did, do all in
his power for me; and the madame wanted me to be one of the family
and treated me as a mother, but two or three days passed, and a few
companies started on a line of march for Matamoros, and somehow the
Colonel had orders to send me to Matamoros, and I was to be taken
from the ladies. I was told the understanding was that Madame Urrea
was to have me when I got to Matamoros and Colonel Holsinger made
the arrangements for my being well treated, and the ladies and the
little girl made me some nice little presents * and when the morning
came for me to start, I could see tears in their eyes as they kissed
me good-by."
On March 31, 1836, Urrea -- his army, marching in two
divisions -- having preceded him -- marched from Victoria with his
escort, leaving in garrison there a detachment of forth men under the
command of Captain Telesforo Alavéz (Urrea, Diario de la Campaña de
Tejas p. 24; Filisola, Memorias para la Guerra de Tejas, II, pp. 445-46)
That the "Angel" was with this garrison, we know positively from Doctor
Barnard, who says:
"She afterward showed much attention and kindness
to the surviving prisoners, frequently sending messages and supplies
of provisions to them from Victoria."
When Urrea occupied Victoria, three families of Irish
Texans, the Quinns, Shearns, and Haleys, remained in that town. R. L.
Owens, grandson of the Quinn family, has preserved their recollections
of those trying days. Though he does not mention her by name, the "Angel
of Goliad" is easily recognizable in the incidents which he relates:
"As Santa Anna's army came marching into Victoria
from the river west of town, my grandmother looked up to find seven
Americans standing in the doorway * * * She exclaimed * * 'I won't
send you away, but if you are found here we will all be * * ' shot.'
Without a word, they wheeled and started for the old road * * to
Texana ... but the Mexicans pursued and fired upon them, killing
three or four and taking the others prisoners, who were ... taken to
the market square (where the City Hall now stands) to be shot, but
the wives of several Mexican officers threw themselves between the
prisoners and the firing squad, and told the officers in charge they
would have to shoot them before they could shoot these men, who had
harmed no one ... The execution did not proceed.
"As some may be curious to know the treatment
accorded the Americans, while the Mexican army held Victoria, my
impression is that the Shearns were English subjects, and hoisted
the British flag. With my grandparents, a Mexican officer and his
family occupied part of their home, and they were very kindly
treated."
Isaac D. Hamilton of Captain Shackelford's Company
escaped, severely wounded, from the massacre, and with the help of
Cooper, Brooks, and Simpson, who had also escaped, made his way to
within two miles of Texana, where his companions left him for dead. On
the nineteenth day after the massacre, however, he revived and managed
to find his way to Dimitt's Point, where he was again made prisoner. In
an affidavit executed at Houston, January 8, 1852, he says of his
subsequent adventures. (The italics are the present writer's.)
"From this place I was hauled on a cart some
fifteen miles, when I was put upon a poor horse . . . until we
arrived at Victoria. At this place I was courtmartialed and order to
be shot, which fate I escaped by the intercession of two Mexican
Ladies."
in a subsequent affidavit, at Galveston, January 28,
1858, covering the same facts, he says:
"I was sentenced to be shot at Victoria; two
officers wives pleaded for me."
Though Barnard, Hughes and Brown call their Angel of
Mercy "Señora," or "Madam" Alvarez, while Shackelford calls Alevesco;
all the narratives agree that she was the wife of one of Urrea's
officers; Shackleford and Hughes say, of one of Urrea's Captains. The
only possible inference from the known facts is that she was the wife of
Captain Telesforo Alavéz. As paymaster of the army, Captain Alavez was
one of the few officers in position to be encumbered by a family. "Alevesco"
was Shackelford's rendering of her husband's name; as "Alvarez" was that
of Brown, Barnard, and Hughes. These Texans were not accustomed to the
Spanish idiom; and not-withstanding the difference in accent, Alvarez
and Alavéz sound much alike to an American trained ear. Alvarez is a
common Spanish name; Alave'z an uncommon one. It is in point, too, that
since Barnard, Shackelford, and Hughes all speak of conversing with her,
their "Angel", beyond all doubt, spoke English. Equally without doubt,
they all knew her as the wife of Captain Telesforo Alavéz.
The complete service record of this officer is
preserved in the Mexican Secretaria de Guerra y Marina. He was a
resident of Toluca, who enlisted as a private in the Mexican National
Army May 2,1821, and was promoted, in due course, through the several
non-commissioned and commissioned grades until July 19, 1835, when he
was commissioned as Captain in General Jose Urrea's own Regiment, the
Cavalry of Cuautla. He was stationed in the City of Mexico from May 31,
1833, until the Zacatecas Campaign in 1834, but rejoined his regiment
and fought against Zacatecas under General Urrea, by whom he was cited
for conspicuous services in the decisive battle before Zacatecas, May
11, 1834.
In the Texan Campaign, "He assisted in the action of
Puerto de Copano, in March, 1836, and performed the duties of Paymaster
of the forces." As of December 31, 1837, he was rated as thirty-four
years of age, married, and a resident of Toluca. Other documents in the
Secretaria de Guerra y Marina indicate that Maria Agustina de Pozo, also
of Toluca, was his wife.
From Urrea's Diaria and Filisola's Memorias, we know
positively that Captain Alave'z commanded the garrison at Victoria from
March 31, 1836, until that place was evacuated on May 14th. He then
accompanied General Urrea to Matamoros, arriving there May 28, 1836. (Urrea's
Diario de la Campaña de Tejas, p. 36). By indirect evidence we can
account for the presence of the "Angel of Goliad" on Urrea's return
March.
About August 1, 1836, Joseph H. Spohn, spared as an
interpreter at the Fannin massacre, said in explaining his own escape:
[Lamar Papers, No. 422, Vol. 1, p. 430]:
"A part of the retreating army ... fatigued and
worn, fell on Goliad ... Spohn, who thought a better chance to
escape would be found ... (at Matamoros) proceeded as far as San
Patricio with Captain Alavéz ... General Urrea, seeing him, asked
him if he would drive one of his coaches to Matamoros. . . . He went
to Matamoros with the General, and had for his fellow driver a young
man who had been saved from Col. Johnson's detachment."
And P. J. Mahan, in accounting many years later, for
the men taken with him at the rancho of Julian de la Garza, below San
Patricio, on the occasion of Johnson's defeat, said:
"We were surrounded by a large body of the
enemy's cavalry. . . . Wm. Williams and Dr. Bunsen were immediately
killed and Spease [John Spiess, from Aargau, Switzerland] Hufty, and
your petitioner wounded ... Spease was afterward released, and went
to the City of Mexico with Captain Alavez, a Mexican officer."
(Memorial No. 247, File Box 68, Archives of Texas, Department of
State)
Concerning the Angel herself, we have only the
evidence of Doctor Barnard: [Wooten: Scarff's, A Comprehensive History
of Texas, I, p. 628]
"After her return to Matamoros, she was unwearied
in her attention to the unfortunate Americans confined there. She went
on to the City of Mexico with her husband, who there abandoned her,
and she returned to Matamoros without any funds for her support; but
she found many warm friends among those who had heard of and witnessed
her extraordinary exertions in relieving the Texas prisoners."
Again the evidence is almost, but not quite,
conclusive. Captain Alavéz, as paymaster, was probably, though not
certainly, the only one of Urrea's officers who was permitted to go on
to the City of Mexico. And since Urrea and his forces remained at
Matamoros, he was almost certainly the only one of Urrea's officers who
could have abandoned his wife at that time. Documents discovered in
Secretaria de Guerra y Marina in 1835, as a result of a search
instigated by Miss Marjorie Rogers, of Marlin, Texas, raise an
unpleasant question as to whether the "Angel" could, in fact, have been,
as she seemed, the lawful wife of Captain Alavéz. Miss Rogers says:
I had the records in Mexico City searched by a ...
young man who speaks and reads Spanish well, and who says: . . .'The
legitimate wife of Captain Alavéz was Maria Agustina de.Pozo, a
resident of Toluca. There are several letters on file from this woman
and one from her brother. It seems that Telesforo abandoned Maria
Agustina about 1834 and three years later she started writing the
Minister of War for money. She had two small children at the time."'
Dr. C. E. Castañeda found that the church records at
Toluca (which is the capital of the state of Mexico) for the years prior
to 1870, have been destroyed by fire; but he also found a hint that the
seat of the Alavéz family was not in the City of Toluca, but in a nearby
town called Amanalaco de Becerra, where some of his descendants
now reside. The evidence at hand does not exclude the possibility that
the "Angel" was a pseudo-wife, and that "Panchita" is the only name by
which she may ever be known.
The above article is from Bits of Texas History
by J.T. Canales published in 1950. In 1949, Davenport wrote an earlier
version of the article with the same title for inclusion in Hobart
Huson's edited edition of Dr. J.H. Barnard's Journal. Canales' included
the following footnote containing the expanded section of Barnard's
journal referring to the Angel of Goliad:
"I must not here omit to mention Sehora Alvarez,
whose name ought to be perpetuated to the latest times for her
virtues, and whose action contrasted so strangely with those of her
countrymen, deserved (deserves) to be recorded in the annals of this
country (county) and treasured in the heart of every texan. When she
arrived at Copano with her husband, who was one of Urrea's officers,
Miller and his men had just been taken prisoners; they were tightly
bound with cord so as to completely check the circulation of blood in
their arms, and in this state (way) had been left several hours when
she saw them. Her heart was touched at the sight, and she immediately
caused the cords to be removed, and refreshments to be given them. She
treated them with great kindness, and when on the morning of the
massacre, she learned that the prisoners were to be shot, she so
effectually pleaded with Col. Garey (sic) (whose humane feelings
revolted at the barbarous order) that, with great personal
responsibility to himself and at great hazard at (in) thus going
counter to the orders of the then all-powerful Santa Anna, he resolved
to save all that he could; and a few of us in consequence, were left
to tell of that bloody day.
Besides those that Col. Garey (sic) saved, she
saved by convivance some of the officers-gone into the fort at night
and taken out some, whom she kept concealed until after the massacre.
When she saw Dr. Shackelford a few days (later) after, and heard that
his son was among those (that were) sacrificed, she burst into tears
and exclaimed:
"Why did I not know that you had a son here? I
would have saved him at all hazards."
She afterwards showed much attention and kindness
to the surviving prisoners, frequently sending messages and presents
of provision's to them from Victoria. After her return to Matamoros,
she was unwearied in her attention to the unfortunate Americans
confined there. She went on to the City of Mexico with her husband
(who there abandoned her.) She returned to Matamoros without any funds
for her support; but she found many warm friends among those who had
heard of and witnessed her extraordinary exertion in relieving the
Texas (Texan) prisoners. It must be remembered that when she came to
Texas she could have considered its VeoVle only as rebels and
heretics, the two classes of all others the most odious to the mind of
a Vious Mexican; that Goliad, the first town she came to, had been
destroyed by them recently, and its Mexican population dispersed to
seek (for) refuge where they might, and yet, after everything that
occurred to present the Texans to her view as the worst and most
abandoned of men, she became incessantly engaged in contributing to
relieve their wants and save their lives. Her name deserves to be
recorded in letters of gold among those angels who have from time to
time been commissioned here by an overruling and beneficent Power to
relieve the sorrows and cheer the hearts of men, and who have for that
purpose assumed the form of helpless women, that the benefits with the
boon might be enhanced by the strong and touching contrast of
aggravated evils worked by fiends in human shape, and balm poured on
the wounds they make by a feeling of pitying women."
From William H. Oberste's, Remember
Goliad (1950)
The "Angel of Goliad, " as she is known even to this
day, Senora Alavez attempted to prevent the butchery. Not much is known
of the identity of Senora Alavez so affectionately remembered in the
annals of Texas. From an old newspaper we have a clipping in which we
find a few additional details about her. Writing about the massacre at
Goliad, the unknown author tells us in his account, which he grandiosely
and incorrectly describes to be that "of the only living man who
survived it," the following story of the "Angel of Goliad":
. . . The courier from Santa Anna arrived at Goliad
on the twenty-sixth, having left San Antonio the morning of the same
day, distant, one hundred miles. Don F. N. Partilla, the commandante,
glanced at the superscription, then at the black seal bearing the
president's arms, an upright arm and dagger, with the legend "Mano y
Clavo, " and sat down on his camp stool to read the missive, uttering
something like a groan. Its purport was that he had certain prisoners
in charge, that he knew what his duty was, and must execute that duty
promptly and rejoin his commander. Partilla, threw down the dispatch
in disgust. "Duty indeed!" he muttered, leaning his head upon the
table.
A young woman entered the room, took up the letter,
and read it through from beginning to end. Partilla looked up and
discovered the intruder with the dispatch in her hand. "I see you have
been reading my dispatch ' said the commandante. "So---I have. I came
here with that very purpose," she replied. "I suppose you know what it
means" "I understand its meaning perfectly. It means the death of
every American now in Goliad." "I have watched for the courier since
daybreak, and was resolved to know the contents of his dispatch at any
peril. What are your intentions?" "To obey the president's
instructions to the letter." "Promise me that you will do as I wish.
Much can be done in a few days. I have friends near the president whom
he cannot afford to disoblige; nor can they afford to slight me.
Promise me this, and Francisco my husband's orderly, shall start for
Bexar tonight. ". . . . They call me Indian, Senora Alavesque; but
were I president I would not write that letter for all the lands your
father owns; not for all the gold that ever passed the mint of
Mexico."
The colonel leaned his bronzed Aztec face up on the
table, weeping like a child. Dona Panchita Alavesque, a lovely woman
of twenty, was the wife of a colonel of the Mexican army, a man of
great wealth and power. She had followed him to Texas, partly from
whim, but chiefly in the hope of doing good. Her visit that night to
the commander saved seventy lives.
The author of this account describes the shooting of
the Texas volunteers at Goliad, their outcries of panic, pain, and
agony, and how at last there was silence---a fearfully oppressive
silence of the hundred and more dead. This account of the massacre does
not differ much in detail from that of Shackelford. He takes up the
narrative again by relating the further activities of the Angel of
Goliad:
Meanwhile Father Maloney (Molloy), the curate of
San Patricio pushed the three American physicians and their assistants
into the vestry, and shut the door. He had hardly done so when Senora
Alavesque entered, and asked if they were still alive. The priest
answered that they were in the vestry, but that he expected Dominguez
for them any moment. "Give them this note," she said, "and if he dares
to treat it with disrespect, he shall never pass that door alive."
Soon Dominguez entered. "Show him the note, Father," said Panchita.
Dominguez read the note, which was signed "Garay," and directed that
the three physicians and their assistants should be reserved from
execution. Dominguez walked away with an air of disappointment....
Eight days after the massacre an order arrived at
Goliad to shoot the remaining prisoners, but before it could be
carried into effect it was countermanded. And this, Don Manuel Tolsa
told me, was the result of Senora Alavesque's influence at
headquarters. About the close of April following Senora Alavesque came
to our headquarters one day with Don, her husband, who looked like a
goodhearted man, but dreadful stiff and dignified. Panchita bade us
all good-bye, and said she was going home to Durango. . . . The Senora
was hardly twenty, a black-eyed high-bred beauty. God bless her. She
saved my life and the lives of my companions. . . .
According to Oberste, this account was found in an
old scrapbook of Mr. M.T. Gaffney, an early resident of Corpus Christi.
The Fate and Descendants of the Angel of
Goliad
|
"she
died on the King Ranch and is buried there in an unmarked grave ....
Old Captain King and Mrs. King knew and respected her identity."---Memoirs
Elena O'Shea, King Ranch schoolteacher
.....descendants include foremen of major divisions of the King
Ranch......first Mexican-American to play high school football in
Kingsville......brothers Bobby Cavazos, Gen. Richard O. Cavazos, and
Dr. Lauro Cavazos, former president of Texas Tech University and
Secretary of Education 1988-1990, the first Hispanic to serve in the
U.S. Cabinet....the Alvarez clan is alive and well in Kingsville, in
Corpus Christi and all over South Texas. |
In the years before his death in 1957, author Harbert
Davenport uncovered the apparent fate of the "Angel of Goliad" described
most recently in the 1993 publication by Bill and Marjorie K. Walraven,
The Magnificent Barbarians: Little Told Tales of the Texas
Revolution. In 1936, Mrs. Elena Zamora O'Shea, wrote up some of her
experiences while a school teacher on the Santa Gertrudis Division of
The King Ranch in 1902-3:
…….Among the Mexicans there were Alfonso, an old
servant to Mrs. King, and Matías Alvarez..…..After school hours every
Friday, these two old men would come to the schoolhouse and listen to
me as I read to them from Spanish newspapers, or translated stories
from the books studied by the children. We had been reading Mrs.
Pennybacker's History of Texas. They followed the stories anxiously.
When I read the story of the massacre of Goliad, Don Matías was alert,
taking in every word. When I had finished, he asked me, "Is that all
that they say about Goliad?" I told him it was. "They do not say that
anyone helped those who were hurt or that any of them were saved?" he
asked..….
Prompted
for the reason for his questions, Matías Alvarez related that his father
was Telesforo Alavez whose marriage was arranged by parents. He
separated from the wife for years, lived with his sweetheart, Francisca,
who followed him throughout his military assignments on the northern
frontier. In Matamoros, Matías and a brother Guadalupe, were born.
Matías related that after Colonel Alavez's death, he and family members
worked north of the Rio Grande on ranches and truck farms including the
Yturria Ranch which was earlier the Cortina Ranch. Matías had children
Pablo, Luis, Dolores, Gerardo, Guadalupe, Jacinto, Maria and Telesforo.
In 1884 Matías began working for the King Ranch. According to him,
Captain King, founder of the ranch, knew Colonel Alavez while he was
still living and of the humanitarian actions of Señora Alavez.
According to teacher O'Shea the whole extended family
lived on and worked on the giant ranch,
"the boys worked at different occupations. The
girls sewed for the family. Maria became the companion maid of Miss
Clara Driscoll…..During the two years I taught there, I had among my
pupils Gerardo Alvarez Jr. in whom both Mrs. King and Mrs. Robert
Kleberg took special interest. The boy finished high school and was
sent to a school of pharmacy and is now [1936] a druggist at
Kingsville. Other members of the Alvarez family live at Kingsville or
on King ranches."
Mrs. O'Shea is said to have related to others that
Matías' aging mother was with the family and that she had met Doña
Panchita when she was bedridden and in her nineties. O'Shea wrote that
"she died on the King Ranch and is buried there in
an unmarked grave .... Old Captain King and Mrs. King knew and
respected her identity."
According
to the Walraven's, Mrs. O'Shea's story was related in the Corpus Christi
Caller-Times in 1986. Gerard Alvarez III of Corpus Christi
contacted the author and related "I was born in Kingsville in 1938, I am
proud to say, the great-grandson of Matías Alvarez and fifth generation
descendant of Doña Francisca 'Panchita' Alavez . . . ."
Mr. Alvarez related that Gerardo Alvarez I, son of
Matías Alvarez, became foreman of the Santa Gertrudis Division of the
King Ranch and died February 1914 just before the birth of Gerardo II.
Gerardo II never finished pharmacy school, but instead became a
professional baseball umpire and after twenty-five years he later was a
Civil Service worker in Corpus Christi. In the 1930's Gerardo II was the
first American of Mexican descent to play high school football in
Kingsville. He died in 1985.
After
Gerardo Alvarez I's death in 1914, Lauro Cavazos became foreman of the
Santa Gertrudis section. A sister of Gerardo I, Rita Alvarez and also
daughter of Matías Alverez, married a Mr. Quintanilla. Their daughter,
Tomasa Alvarez Quintanilla, married Lauro Cavazos. Lauro and Tomasa
Alvarez Quintanilla Cavazos were parents of Bobby Cavazos, who was a
Kleberg County commissioner, a country singer and once foreman of the
Laureles Division of the King Ranch; Gen. Richard O. Cavazos; and Dr.
Lauro Cavazos, former president of Texas Tech University and Secretary
of Education 1988-1990 under Presidents Reagan and Bush, the first
Hispanic to serve in the U.S. Cabinet. Gerard Alvarez III wrote that
…"the Alvarez clan is alive and well in Kingsville, in Corpus Christi
and all over South Texas."
Independence-Index
SONS OF DEWITT COLONY TEXAS
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Rights Reserved
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