During the
1849 Texas gubernatorial election, Bell ran on a platform advocating strong frontier defense and support of Texas's territorial claim to New Mexico. To this end, he called for expending additional resources to eradicate the
Native American population and sending troops to
Santa Fe in support of Texas's claim to
Santa Fe County. This platform allowed him to defeat incumbent Governor
George T. Wood by a vote of 10,319 to 8,754. Shortly after Bell's December 1849 inauguration at age 39, the
Texas Legislature created three new counties from the southern section of Santa Fe County. The governor sent
Robert Neighbors to oversee the organization of the new counties. Neighbors found that the inhabitants of the new counties were hostile to Texas interests and that residents of
Santa Fe had written their own constitution. After Neighbors's report became public in June 1850, Governor Bell, aged 40, called a special session of the legislature to deal with these developments. The session was held in August, and Bell's plans were to send the
Texas Militia to seize control of Santa Fe from the United States government. The issue was resolved several months later in the
Compromise of 1850; Bell signed Texas's acceptance legislation on November 25, 1850. Bell won
re-election in 1851, largely thanks to his aggressive policies and his being the most
Southern of the five candidates. Highlights of his second term were payment of Texas's public debt and resolution of land-claim disputes between
empresarios and their colonists. Bell left the governorship before the end of his term to take a seat in the
United States Congress. ==Later life==