Treaties of Velasco

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The Treaties of Velasco were two treaties signed at Velasco, Texas, on 14 May 1836 between the republics of Mexico and Texas, in the aftermath of the Battle of San Jacinto (21 April 1836). The signatories were Interim President David G. Burnet for Texas and General Antonio López de Santa Anna for Mexico. Intended to provide a conclusion of hostilities between the two belligerents and offer the first steps towards the official recognition of the breakaway Republic's independence, there was a public treaty and a secret treaty. The treaty was never ratified by the Mexican government.

Contents

[edit] Public treaty

The public treaty consisted of ten articles, and was to be published immediately.

  1. Personal undertaking by Santa Anna not to take up arms, or encourage arms to be taken up, against the people of Texas in this war of independence.
  2. Cessation of hostilities, on sea and land, between Texas and Mexico.
  3. Mexican troops to evacuate the territory of Texas, relocating south of the Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte).
  4. Mexican troops to refrain from taking property without due compensation, etc., during their retreat.
  5. All property (including horses, cattle, negro slaves etc.) captured by Mexico during the war to be returned.
  6. The two armies to avoid contact, keeping a distance of five leagues (approx. 25 km).
  7. The Mexican army to retreat without tarrying.
  8. Dispatches to be sent to the commanders of the two armies, informing them of the treaty's content.
  9. Mexico to release all Texan prisoners, with Texas releasing the same number of Mexican prisoners of the same rank; all other Mexican prisoners to be retained by Texas.
  10. Santa Anna to be conveyed to Veracruz as soon as deemed proper.

[edit] Secret treaty

The secret treaty was not to be made public until the terms of the public treaty had been met in full.

  1. Personal undertaking by Santa Anna not to take up arms, or encourage arms to be taken up, against the people of Texas in this war of independence.
  2. Santa Anna to give orders for all Mexican troops to withdraw from Texas as soon as possible.
  3. Santa Anna to make arrangements in Mexico City so that a mission of Texans would be well received, all differences settled, and independence recognized.
  4. A treaty of commerce, friendship, and limits to be established between Mexico and Texas, whereunder the territory of Texas would not extend beyond the Rio Grande.
  5. Government of Texas to provide for Santa Anna's immediate embarkation for Veracruz.
  6. Both copies of the document to be kept folded and sealed until conclusion of the negotiations, when they should both be given to Santa Anna; no use to be made of it before that, unless either party fail to abide by its terms.

[edit] Nonratification by Mexico

Although Gen. Vicente Filisola began troop withdrawals on 26 May, the government of President José Justo Corro in Mexico City resolved, on 20 May, to disassociate itself from all undertakings entered into by Santa Anna while he was held captive. Mexico's position was that Santa Anna had no legal standing in the Mexican government to agree to those terms; Santa Anna's position was that he had signed the documents under coercion and as a prisoner, not as a surrendering general in accordance with the laws of warfare. In fact, he had no authority under the Mexican Constitution to make a treaty, and in any case, the treaty was never ratified by the Mexican government.

[edit] Noncompliance by Texas

Santa Anna was not given passage to Veracruz. He was kept as a prisoner of war ("clapped in irons for six months", he later claimed) in Velasco and, later, in Orizimbo, before being taken to Washington, D.C., in the United States to meet with President Andrew Jackson (ostensibly to negotiate a lasting peace between Mexico and Texas, with the USA acting as mediator). Sailing on the frigate USS Pioneer, the guest of the U.S. Navy, he did not arrive back in Veracruz until 23 February 1837.

[edit] Outcome

Since the provisions of the public treaty were not met, the terms of the secret agreement were not released until much later. Although a fait accompli since mid-1836, the independence of Texas, much less its later annexation by the U.S., was never formally recognized by Mexico until the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War that resulted from the annexation, recognized the Rio Grande (or Rio Bravo del Norte) as the U.S.-Mexican border.

[edit] External links

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