1845 General Edward R. Canby Mexican War Manuscript Autograph Document Signed: Special Order No. 109 Auction
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1845 General Edward R. Canby Mexican War Manuscript Autograph Document Signed: Special Order No. 109
1845 General Edward R. Canby Mexican War Manuscript Autograph Document Signed: Special Order No. 109
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Mexican War
1845 Mexican War Signed "Special Order No. 109" by General Edward R Canby Manuscript Autograph Document
EDWARD R. CANBY (1817-1873). Mexican War Asst. Adjutant General, Union Major General during the Civil War; as Army Commander of the Pacific Northwest in 1873, he was Assassinated during Peace Talks with the Native American Indian Modoc Tribes.
August 24, 1845-Dated Mexican War Period, Autograph Document Signed, "Edward Canby / Asst Adj Genl", measuring 7.75" x 11.5", 1 page, Head Quarters, 10(th) Mil. Department, East Pascagoula, Miss., Choice Crisp Extremely Fine+. This Handwritten directive is written in bold deep brown ink on extremely clean on fine quality special wove period paper. Overall, in exceptional quality, titled, "Special Order No. 109". This concerned the mustering out of Dragoons and Artillery Corp members who had been enlisted and sent to New Orleans for service during the Mexican War. Here, General Canby orders that, in full:
"1... The men belonging to the Dragoon and Artillery Corps enlisted for the period 'during the War' and sent to New Orleans La by Order No. 18 Hd. Qtrs. Rio Grande District, dated August 9, 1845, will be mustered out of Service at that place by Bat. Major I.P.I O'Brien 4o Artillery now in command of the Detachment.
2... Second Lieut W.H. Scott 4o Infy will proceed to New Orleans Barrack, La upon duty connected with the troops of the sick from that place to the General Hospital at Greenwood Island. So soon as their duties are completed he will rejoin his company at this place.

3... Sergeant Maginnis of Company A 4o Infantry will be detailed for duty as Wardmaster in the General Hospital Greenwood Island and will report accordingly. By order of Major Genl. (David E.) Twiggs. (Signed) Edward Canby - Asst. Adjt. Genl.".
Canby writes and signs at the conclusion "Extract furnished Major O'Brian". Written by Canby in a crisp, tight, bold handwriting in deep brown ink. Includes an original period Albumen Photograph on a full sheet in crisp near Mint and a second page Portrait Image custom laid on a full sheet crisp near Mint, both being of Canby. (3 items).
Mexican-American War, also called Mexican War, Spanish Guerra de 1847 or Guerra de Estados Unidos a Mexico ("War of the United States Against Mexico"), war between the United States and Mexico (April 1846"February 1848) stemming from the United States' Annexation of Texas in 1845 and from a dispute over whether Texas ended at the Nueces River (Mexican claim) or the Rio Grande (U.S. claim).
The War, in which U.S. forces were consistently victorious, resulted in the United States' acquisition of more than 500,000 square miles (1,300,000 square km) of Mexican territory extending westward from the Rio Grande River to the Pacific Ocean.
Following the election of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States in 1860, the southern secessionist movement began in earnest. South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union when it passed an Ordinance of Secession on December 20, 1860. During January 1861, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana followed South Carolina's lead and each approved their own Ordinance of Secession. Throughout Texas, debate over whether or not the state should leave the Union was heated. Most Texans favored secession, but there were some notable exceptions.
When Texas was annexed to the United States in 1845, it joined the Union as a slave state. Many of the people who immigrated to Texas during the Republic years, as well as following annexation, came from the southern states. Texas, with its cotton and sugar production, had an economic system based on slavery the same as other southern states like Virginia and South Carolina. In east Texas in particular, the values and cultural system of citizens mirrored that of the Deep South. Secession sentiment was therefore very strong in this part of the state, not only on the basis of shared economic and cultural systems, but also on the basis that many of the citizens of this part of Texas were fairly recent immigrants from Southern states.
In north, west and central Texas secession sentiment was more muted. This was due in part to the threat still faced by Comanche and Apache tribes. Citizens in these parts of the state relied on federal troops for protection and they were, therefore, less inclined to support secession than citizens in the eastern part of the state. Pro-Union sentiment was also stronger among some of the European immigrant groups living in Texas, particularly the German immigrants living in the central Texas hill country region.
Most Texas elected officials and political and business leaders supported Texas secession. Sam Houston, former President of the Republic of Texas and the current governor of the state, was the sole politician willing to take a public stand opposing secession. In the weeks leading up to the state secession convention, Houston gave speeches and wrote letters trying to persuade Texans that it was in their best interests to stay a state in the Union they had struggled to be a part of. On two separate occasions President Lincoln offered federal troops to Governor Houston to forcefully stop the secession of Texas from the Union, but Houston declined the offers refusing to take up arms against his fellow Texans.
Despite Houston's best efforts, the state secession convention voted on February 1, 1861 to adopt an Ordinance of Secession by a margin of 166 to 8. This ordinance was ratified by Texas voters on February 23, 1861, which coincidentally was the anniversary of the start of the siege of the Alamo during the Texas Revolution. On March 11, 1861 Texas became one of the seven states that comprised the Confederate States of America (CSA). Governor Houston refused to swear an oath to the Confederacy or acknowledge its legitimacy and was therefore divested of his position as Governor and replaced by then Lt. Governor Edward Clark. Houston retired to Huntsville where he remained until he passed away in July of 1863.
Throughout the South, as states began seceding, citizens were concerned about what would happen with the federal troops stationed in the South. In Texas, in the days leading up to secession, there were approximately 2,700 United States troops stationed throughout the state under the command of Major General David E. Twiggs. Approximately 100 of these troops were stationed at the Alamo, whose remaining buildings were being used as a quartermaster depot by the United States Army.
In the days between the state Secession Convention and the citizen's vote on secession ordinance on February 23, 1861, Texan citizens began worrying about the federal troops stationed in Texas and what would happen when the ordinance was approved and secession official. During this time members of the Committee of Public Safety, including Benjamin McCulloch, began working with Major General Twiggs to negotiate the surrender of Union forces in Texas.
On February 16, 1861, Ben McCulloch led a group of volunteers " many of whom were associated with the Knights of the Golden Circle " through the streets of San Antonio to surround the Alamo where Maj. Gen. Twiggs was garrisoned. Twiggs peacefully surrendered all federal property in the state and agreed to evacuate all Union troops. Confederate forces occupied the Alamo throughout the Civil War, but no military battles took place at the Alamo or in San Antonio. The U.S. Army reoccupied the Alamo following the end of the war.
KEYWORDS:
American-Mexican War, Texas History, General David Twiggs, War with Mexico, Antique Photography, Modoc Indians

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1845 General Edward R. Canby Mexican War Manuscript Autograph Document Signed: Special Order No. 109

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Jun 08, 2024 12:00 PM EDT|
Winchester, VA, USA
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