Juan Davis Bradburn

Juan Davis Bradburn was a brigadier general in the Mexican Army. His actions as commandant of the garrison at Anahuac in Mexican Texas in 1831 and 1832 led to the events known as the AnahuAC Disturbances. Brad burn was one of the most maligned men in historical accounts of Texas in the 19th century.

About Juan Davis Bradburn in brief

Summary Juan Davis BradburnJuan Davis Bradburn was a brigadier general in the Mexican Army. His actions as commandant of the garrison at Anahuac in Mexican Texas in 1831 and 1832 led to the events known as the AnahuAC Disturbances. Bradburn’s first career was as a merchant and slave trader. He likely first entered Mexico in 1812 as part of the Gutiérrez–Magee Expedition fighting Spanish control of Texas. After the expedition was quashed, Bradburn moved to Louisiana, where he served in the Louisiana militia during the Battle of New Orleans. After his discharge, Brad burn spent several years fighting for Mexican independence. In 1830, he established a new military and customs post, Anahuach, in Texas. The local settlers resented Bradburn’s efforts to withhold land titles from those who had squatted in unauthorized areas. The hard feelings escalated when Bradburn, following Mexican law, refused to return runaway slaves to their owners in the United States. A large force of Texians marched on Anahuack to secure Travis’s release. The resulting confrontation forced Bradburn to be expelled from Texas. Brad burn was one of the most maligned men in historical accounts of Texas in the 19th century. He was a member of the Mexican National Guard and served as a courier for the Emperor Agustín de Iturbide. He died in 1832 in San Antonio de Béxar, Texas. He is buried in the San Antonio National Cemetery. His son, John, was also a Mexican national guard soldier.

He served in New Orleans and was elected third lieutenant in the Eighteenth Louisiana Regiment and waselected third lieutenant. His father was probably William C.Bradburn, and John likely had an elder brother, also named William. The family moved to Christian County, Kentucky, at some point after 1800, and lived in nearby Springfield, Tennessee. He trafficked in slaves and was once jailed in Natchez, Mississippi, over a disputed slave sale. He may have been born in 1787 in Virginia, and likely had a brother, William, who also lived in Christian County. He became a sergeant major in the movement led by Juan Pablo Anaya and Henry Perry. When Perry’s forces entered Texas in early 1816, Brad Burn was initially stationed in Nacogdoches to direct recruits and supplies to the main body of the expedition. In June, BradBurn joined Perry at his headquarters, a bluff along the Trinity River which became known as Tampico’s Point. In November, another filibuster arrived with more men and supplies and planned to invade Tampico and assist the revolutionary army in the interior. The plan was better-developed than Perry’s and was appointed second-in-command of the American troops, under Colonel Gilford Gilford Young. Rebel supplies dwindled when the fort was besieged by Spanish royalist troops and offered a safe passage to Fort Sombrero, an insurgent stronghold in Guanajuato province.