McCulloch soon found himself living in a country that had just banned all free blacks from living there. With the passing of the
Texas Constitution in 1836, all people of African and Native American descent were denied citizenship. McCulloch petitioned the
Congress of the Republic of Texas for an exemption to the law. In April, he was granted the exemption, along with the land grant that he was entitled to for his service in the Texas army. In August 1837, he married Mary Vess, a white woman. This marriage violated the Texas ban on interracial unions. The couple was never prosecuted, however. They had four sons and lived most of the remainder of their lives near Van Ormy, a town a few miles south of San Antonio. In 1840, McCulloch and his sisters were exempted from the
Ashworth Act, and they lived in Texas until their deaths. == References ==