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SLAUGHTER AT GOLIAD
By Jay Stout
Naval Institute Press, 2008, $
ISBN # 987-1-59114-843-2
www.nip.org
Reviewed by Andrew Lubin
While every American and Mexican
schoolchild knows the story of the Alamo, few
“Norteamericanos” know the story of the massacre that
followed it, that of killing 250 unarmed Texan prisoners at
Goliad.
Author Jay Stout’s latest book
“Slaughter at Goliad” brings this blot on the Mexican
military into the harsh light of day. Exceptionally
well-written, he brings his experience as a Marine combat aviator into the battle
as he explains the fight in terms that every reader can
understand.
Superficially, this is a simple
story; after a one-sided battle won by the Mexican Army over
a bunch of rag-tag Texan-American volunteers, some 250
prisoners were marched to Goliad. After 200 more prisoners
were brought to the compound, where they were all massacred
on Palm Sunday, March 27, 1836. It was one of the single
largest losses of life in the history of the young United
States, and the repercussions affected Texas, America, and
Mexico virtually immediately.
Of special importance to the
battle and to the book is Stout’s examination of the
personalities and politics involved. Stout portrays James
Walker Fannin, the commander of the doomed unit, as an
ineffective leader who misjudged his adversary, Mexico’s
infamous General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. As author
Stout explains, rather than courage, it was Fannin’s
incompetence as a battlefield commander that put his men
into a position where they had to either surrender or be
killed – and it was equally Santa Anna’s ego and
short-sightedness that led him to execute Fannin and his
troops.
Fully understanding Clausewitz’s
dictum that ‘war is merely politics by another means’, Stout
goes on to explain how this massacre was integral into
galvanizing American public opinion in favor of a war
against Mexico.
Not to be forgotten is Stout’s
description of the boots-on-the-ground stories of Fannin’s
men. They came to Texas for various reasons, and with
equally various and vague backgrounds, yet were integral to
the Texan drive for independence. “Manifest destiny” started
here, with men like those under Fannin’s command, and Stout
does an excellent job documenting it.
Neither pro-nor-con Mexico or
America, Jay Stout has written an interesting and
sophisticated battle history of a long-forgotten incident
that helped Texas win their war of independence. This is
well worth reading for both the casual and educational
reader of both military and North American history. ! Ole !
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