[15.] Rejón wrote to Santa Anna, March 7, 1847, urging him to stand firmly by his manifesto of August 16, 1846,—i.e. by the Puros, and detailing a series of Moderado intrigues intended (he said) to annoy and humiliate Santa Anna until he should inaugurate a revolution, with a view to then having him shot.
[16.] Beach was watched for several days before he left the city. He escaped by paying for his lodgings for some time to come, leaving a trunk there, taking a carriage late at night without baggage, and choosing an unusual route (N. Y. Sun, Aug. 16, 1847). A reward of $1000 was offered for him dead or alive (ibid., Aug. 24). Notices were put up denouncing as a traitor anyone possessing a copy of the New York Sun. He was accused of having tried to bring about a clerical revolution and also to induce the states of Guanajuato, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí and Jalisco to secede and declare for the United States. See also N. Y. Sun, May 27, 1847; Polk, Diary, May 11, 1847; Kenly, Md. Vol., 269. We shall hear again of Beach’s operations.
[17.] Santa Anna received news of the insurrection near Cedral.
[18.] Santa Anna may very possibly have hoped now to combine the military class, the conservatives and the clericals into a solid phalanx behind him, and he may have commended the movement against Church property for the very purpose of making the clergy feel the need of his assistance. See Tributo á la Verdad, 76.
[19.] His overthrow was not really due to the law of January 11, but resulted from his radical ideas and unpractical methods, the odium of his former administration, his consequent inability to secure the coöperation of influential men, and the general state of unrest and dissension.
[20.] Outcome of the insurrection. Apuntes, 111, 115–8, 133, 136–8. [13]Bankhead, nos. 33, 34, 1847. Méx. en 1847, 14–18. [69]S. Anna, order, Mar. 14. Anglo-Saxon, Mar. 13. [56]Beach, report, June 4, 1847. Bustamante, Campaña, 30. London Times, May 10. Britannia, May 15. México á través, iv, 577, 635–40. Ramírez, México, 184, 198–9, 205, 207, 209–12, 215–8. [82]Gov. Puebla, boletín No. 4 (S. Anna to Farías, Mar. 6; Gil to Ruano, Mar. 6). [77]Relaciones, circulars, Mar. 22; Apr. 1. Tributo á la Verdad, 76. [75]Rejón to S. Anna, Mar. 7. [84]Palacios to Gov. S. L. P., Mar. 17. Republicano, Mar. 24. 75aHacienda, circular, Mar. 29. Puga y Acal, Docs., 62–3. Escudero, Mems., 19. Bustamante, Nuevo Bernal, ii, 146–7. Dublán, Legisl., v, 262–5. Locomotor, Jan. 18. Baz, Juárez, 47. Diario, Mar. 29, 1847 (Baz). The twenty-millions law had very little effect, if any. Le Constitutionnel, June 17, 1847 (The clergy have kept none of the promises by the aid of which they obtained the repeal of the confiscation of their property).
XXII. VERA CRUZ
[1.] “New volunteers,” those called out in November. For the ten transports see chap. viii, [note 28]. Jan. 18 Conner wrote to Scott that Santa Anna had moved, about January 1, against Taylor, but that from all accounts presumably Taylor had probably retired to Monterey (Ho. 60; 30, 1, p. 893). It was therefore natural for Scott to feel satisfied that Santa Anna, learning of the expedition against Vera Cruz, would retrace his steps and reach that place in season. At Scott’s instance a spy, selected by Consul Campbell with the aid of Consul Dimond (who visited Cuba for the purpose), was to have set out from Havana in January for Mexico City and San Luis Potosí ([166]Dimond to Conner, Jan. 15); but the author found no further trace of him.
[2.] Some transports reached Antón Lizardo Feb. 27 and notified Conner that Scott was coming ([162]Conner, Feb. 27). Certain troops, leaving Tampico March 1, arrived at that rendezvous in advance of Scott ([139]W. B. Campbell to wife, Mar. 6). By sunset on March 5 about seventy sail had appeared there.
[3.] To Antón Lizardo. Macgregor, Progress, i, 677. [47]Conner, Dec. 1 1846; Feb. 17; Mar. 7, 10, 1847. [159]Collins narrative. [298]Porter, diary. [66]Remarks in margin of chart of V. Cruz harbor. Le Clercq, Voyage, 401, 418. Robertson, Remins., 214–6. Campos, Recuerdos, 31. Hitchcock, Fifty Years, 238. Grant, Mems., i, 125. Hartman, Journal, 6. Taylor, Broad Pennant, 123. Picayune, Mar. 26. Delta, Oct. 16. Meade, Letters, i, 187. [65]Scott, gen. orders 28, 33, 34, 37. [313]Saunders to Conner, Mar. 5. Oswandel, Notes, 63. Semmes, Service, 106, 109, 111. Kenly, Md. Volunteer, 266. Lawton, Artillery Officer, 65–6, 68. [146]Caswell, diary. [322]Smith, diary. Kitchen, Record, 21–2. [270]Moore, diary. [327]Sutherland, letter. Ballentine, English Soldier, i, 257, 261. [254]McClellan to sister, Feb. 23. Moore, Scott’s Campaign, 1–4. Parker, Recolls., 49, 82. Washington Union, Apr. 6. Monitor Repub., Mar. 16. [164]Scott to Conner, Feb. 22, 26. [162]Conner to wife, Aug. 10, 1846; Feb. 26, 27, 1847. Ho. 60; 30, 1, pp. 879, 892 (Conner); 896 (Hetzel); 893, 896, 899 (Scott); 568 (Jesup). Nebel and Kendall, 17. Diccionario Univ. (Antón Lizardo). Niles, Mar. 13, 1847, p. 21. [332]Tennery, diary. Sedgwick, Corresp., i, 65. [254]McClellan, diary. [165]Conner to Scott, Jan. 18; to Breese and to Aulick, Feb. 28. Hammersly, Naval Encyclop., 94. [139]W. B. Campbell to wife, Mar. 6. Smith, To Mexico, 108–10. [76]Garay, Mar. 5. [76]Cos, Feb. 19, 21. [76]Soto, Mar. 7. [76]Watchman at Ulúa, Mar. 5.