Gonzales is one of the earliest Anglo-American settlements in Texas, the first west of the
Colorado River. It was established by
Green DeWitt as the capital of his colony in August 1825. DeWitt named the community for
Rafael Gonzáles, governor of
Coahuila y Tejas. Informally, the community was known as the
DeWitt Colony. The original settlement (located where Highway 90-A crosses Kerr Creek) was abandoned in 1826 after two
Indian attacks. It was rebuilt nearby in 1827. The town remains today as it was originally surveyed. Gonzales is referred to as the "
Lexington of Texas" because it was the site of the first skirmish of the
Texas Revolution. In 1831, the
Mexican government had granted Green DeWitt's request for a small cannon for protection against Indian attacks. At the outbreak of disputes between the Anglo settlers and the Mexican authorities in 1835, a contingent of more than 100 Mexican soldiers was sent from
San Antonio to retrieve the cannon. When the soldiers arrived, only 18 men were in Gonzales, but they refused to return the cannon, and men from the surrounding area soon joined them.
Texians under the command of
John Henry Moore confronted
them. Sarah DeWitt and her daughter sewed a flag bearing the likeness of the cannon and the words "Come and Take It", which was flown when the first shots of Texian independence were fired on October 2, 1835. The Texians successfully resisted the Mexican troops in what became known as the
Battle of Gonzales. Gonzales later contributed 32 men from the
Gonzales Ranging Company to the defense of the
Alamo. It was the only city to send aid to the Alamo, and all 32 men lost their lives defending the site.
Susanna Dickinson, widow of
one of the Alamo defenders, and Joe, the slave of
William B. Travis, fled to Gonzales with news of the Alamo massacre. General
Sam Houston was there organizing the Texas forces. He anticipated the town would be the next target of General
Antonio López de Santa Anna's Mexican army. Gathering the Texians at Peach Creek east of town, under the
Sam Houston Oak, Houston ordered Gonzales burned, to deny it to the enemy. He began a retreat toward the U.S. border. The widows and orphans of Gonzales and their neighbors were forced to flee, thus precipitating the
Runaway Scrape. The town was derelict immediately after the Texas Revolution, but was eventually rebuilt on the original site in the early 1840s. By 1850, the town had a population of 300. The population rose to 1,703 by time of the 1860 census, 2,900 by the mid-1880s, and 4,297 in 1900. Part of the growth of the late 19th century can be attributed to the arrival of various immigrants, among them Jews, many of whom became
peddlers and merchants. ==Geography==