List of Texas empresarios
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An empresario was an individual who, in the early years of the settlement of Texas, had been granted the right to settle on Mexican land in exchange for recruiting and taking responsibility for new settlers. The word is taken from the Spanish language.
As part of both an effort to halt American expansion into Mexican territory and to colonize the scarcely populated northern region, the Mexican government began a colonization campaign in the early 19th century.
Prior to the 1823 revolution in Mexico, the old Imperial Law called for the appointment of empresarios, or land agents, who received a land grant from the Spanish or Mexican government in return for promoting settlement in the land grant territory. Settlers on land grants agreed to become a Spanish citizen (later Mexican citizen), swear an oath of loyalty to Spain and become a Roman Catholic—though often in name only. It is estimated that only about 10 percent of settlers actually became practicing Catholics.[1]
Among the empresarios were
- Stephen F. Austin (son of Moses Austin) who sold land to American settlers for about 12 cents an acre one fifteenth the price of comparable land in the USA, considered by many the "Father of Texas".
- David G. Burnet
- Martin de Leon
- Green DeWitt
- Haden Harrison Edwards
- John McMullen
- Sterling C. Robertson
- Lorenzo de Zavala
After the Republic of Texas won its independence from Mexico, the young nation continued its own version of the empresario program, offering grants to French diplomat Henri Castro and abolitionist Charles Fenton Mercer, among others.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Joy, Mark (2003). American Expansionism, 1783–1860: A Manifest Destiny?. London: Pearson Education, pp. 54–56. ISBN 0582369657.