The creek was given its name in 1716 by
Spanish explorer
Domingo Ramón. It has been the site of two battles in
Texas history, including the 1813 Battle of Rosillo and the 1842 Battle of Salado Creek following the
Texas Revolution. The
Battle of Rosillo Creek (called the Battle of Salado Creek at the time) started as a siege of
Presidio La Bahía from November 7, 1812, to February 19, 1813, for the purpose of trying to recapture the fort after the
Republican Army of the North under
Bernardo Gutiérrez de Lara and
Samuel Kemper, numbered at 600 to 900 men, had taken over. The
Spanish Royal Army of Texas, under Governor
Manuel María de Salcedo and
Nuevo León Governor
Simón de Herrera, had retreated to San Antonio. In March 1813, the Spanish army, numbering 950 to 1,500, had planned an ambush on the republicans as they marched and searched for food along the creek banks. The republicans caught sight of the royal forces first and routed them within an hour, killing between 100 and 330 soldiers and capturing most of their arms and ammunition, six cannons, and 1,500 horses and mules, at the expense of only six men. After the battle, the Spanish army retreated to
San Antonio, signed a truce with Kemper on April 1, and surrendered Salcedo and Herrera. On April 3, Salcedo, Herrera, and 12
prisoners of war were executed by a vengeful Mexican soldier (Capt. Antonio Delgado), near the site of the battle. On April 6, 1813, the first
Declaration of Independence and
Constitution for Texas were drafted and Gutiérrez was named
president, establishing the first Republic of Texas. The new republic was destroyed four months later, at the fateful
Battle of Medina. A later
Battle of Salado Creek (1842) was fought between the volunteers of the
Texas Republic and the
Mexican forces of
Brig. General and
French Mexican soldier Adrián Woll. The conflict began following Brig. General
Ráfael Vásquez's incursion into San Antonio in March 1842. The volunteers prepared for battle, but believed that peace was on the horizon after the release of prisoners from the failed
Texan Santa Fe Expedition. Because of this, a potential attack was called off by President
Sam Houston. However, on September 11, 1842, Brig. Gen. Adrián Woll entered San Antonio with 1,000 regular
infantry and 500 irregular
cavalry. After this, about 200 volunteers from
Gonzales,
Seguin, and other lower
Colorado River settlements joined together under
Capt. Mathew Caldwell on the east bank of Salado Creek. They met with Capt.
John C. Hays's regiment of 14 rangers. The men took advantage of their good position on the bank and killed 60 Mexicans, losing only one of their own. Simultaneously, Capt.
Nicholas Mosby Dawson was traveling from
La Grange with his 53-man company of volunteers to meet with Caldwell. Cut off from the larger body of their men and surrounded by Mexicans, they surrendered after a brief skirmish. The Mexicans killed 36 Texians and wounded several others, in what Americans called the
Dawson Massacre. ==Recreation==