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				<title>Newsclipping reprinting a letter reporting on executions at Tampico, Mexico, Dec. 14, 1835</title> 
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				<publisher>Rice University</publisher>
				<pubPlace>Houston, Texas</pubPlace>
				<date>2010-06-07</date>
				<idno>aa00330</idno>
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					<title>Newsclipping reprinting a letter reporting on executions at Tampico, Mexico, Dec. 14, 1835</title>
					<date when="1835">1835</date>
					<idno>Americas collection, 1811-1920, MS 518, Box 5 folder 1 item 3, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. Contact info: woodson@rice.edu</idno><note type="Provenance">The Humanities Research Center at Rice University, under the direction of Dr. Caroline Levander, purchased this material from a manuscripts dealer in 2005. The Gilder Foundation funded the development of the physical archive. Original materials are housed at the Woodson Research Center, Rice University.</note><note type="Description">4 paragraph letter reprinted in unidentified, undated newspaper</note></bibl>
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						<item>Tampico Expedition, 1835</item><item>Tampico (Tamaulipas, Mexico)--History</item><item>Texas--History--Revolution, 1835-1836</item><item>Mary Jane (Schooner)</item></list>
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<pb facs="aa00330_0001" xml:id="p0001"/>
<div1 type="letter" xml:id="div1001" n="1">
<opener><dateline>TAMPECO, <date when="1835-12-14">Dec. 14, 1835.</date></dateline></opener>
<salute>Dear Sir—</salute>
<p>This morning twenty-eight<lb/>
unfortunate victims of treachery and villiny,<lb/>
part of Mehi's expedition, were shot.<lb/>
I had you enclosed a list of them, with a<lb/>
petition presented to the Military Commandant,<lb/>
by several foreigners and Mexicans,<lb/>
drawn up and signed by the prisoners,<lb/>
but alas, it was not in his power to meet<lb/>
their solicitations.</p>
<p>The papers enclosed, were sent to me<lb/>
by the curate who attended them in their<lb/>
last moments—they requested that they<lb/>
might be printed in New Orleans.</p>
<p>The letter from Jon<unclear reason="illegible"/> H. Steward, and<lb/>
the petition to the Commandant, were<lb/>
given to me at the prison gate, on Sunday<lb/>
morning—I had them translated into Spanish<lb/>
and presented them myself to the Commandant,<lb/>
and am satisfied, that had he the<lb/>
power, he would have complied with their<lb/>
last request.</p>
<p>You have here a full view, as well as<lb/>
the Government and people of the United<lb/>
States have, of the hideous crime committed<lb/>
in the port of New Orleans, against<lb/>
the laws of God and of honor, under the<lb/>
pretence of populating Texas. A number<lb/>
of distressed and unfortunate beings are entrapped<lb/>
and put on board the schooner<lb/>
Mary Jane, Capt. Hull, under the express<lb/>
stipulation and understanding that they<lb/>
are bound for Matagorda and Galveston, in<lb/>
Texas, as the clearance of said vessel at<lb/>
the custom house in New Orleans, on the<lb/>
6th ult. It was further understood that they<lb/>
were to have lands on their arrival there,<lb/>
and a free passage, and mark the result<lb/>
such as has been the fate of these unfortunate<lb/>
men, was near to have been inflicted<lb/>
on every American in this place. Such<lb/>
enterprise may, in New Orleans be termed<lb/>
mercantile speculation—they are worthy<lb/>
of such men as enter into them—and I do<lb/>
not envy them their feelings.</p>
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