
For information, call
888-672-1095
Come and Take It!
Come celebrate "Come & Take It!" with us the first weekend on October
each year.
The dates for the next Come & Take It Festival are Oct. 2, 3, 4,
2009
Click on a day to see the schedule for that date:
Friday |
Saturday |
Sunday
The 'Come and Take It'
History
The Come & Take It Festival
celebrates the firing of the first shot of the Texas revolution on Oct. 2, 1835,
which took place near Gonzales.
The town of Gonzales was established by
Empresario Green DeWitt in 1825, two and one-half miles east of the confluence
of the San Marcos and Guadalupe Rivers. It was the westernmost Anglo settlement until the close of the Texas Revolution and was named in honor of Don Rafael
Gonzales, provisional governor of Coahuila, Mexico and Texas. The town was laid
out in the shape of a cross, with seven squares. During the colonial period of
1825 to 1835, there were many problems with Comanche and Tonkawa Indians, but
Gonzales flourished. It was a thriving capital of the De Witt colony by 1833.
In 1831 the Mexican government loaned the
citizens of Gonzales a six-pound cannon as protection against the Indians. In
September of 1835, as political unrest grew, Mexican officials at San Antonio de Bexar demanded the cannon
be returned.
A corporal with five soldiers and an oxcart were
first sent by Col. Ugartechea, Bexar military commander, to Gonzales. The
corporal carried a request that the small reinforced cannon, a bronze six-pounder,
be returned to the Mexican Army. Andrew Ponton refused to relinquish it,
stalling for time, and the little cannon was buried in George W. Davis' peach
orchard, near the Guadalupe River.
Next came Lieutenant Castaneda and 150 mounted
soldiers to "take" the cannon. When the soldiers appeared on the west
bank of the Guadalupe River, there were only 18 men in Gonzales, but these 'Old
Eighteen' stood at the river in defiance, denied the Mexicans a crossing by
hiding the ferry and sent out a call for volunteers to assist them.
As the soldiers scouted the river for a place to
cross, they moved upriver a short distance, near the present-day community of
Cost and camped for the night. There, in the early-morning hours of Oct. 2,
1835, the colonists crossed the river with their cannon, surprising the troops
and waving their hastily fashioned flag, which proclaimed "Come and Take
It." Almost immediately the cannon fired, killing one of Castenada's men
and scattering the rest, forcing them to retreat to San Antonio de Bexar. Thus
was fired the shot that set off the struggle for Texas independence from Mexico.
When the smoke cleared, the Mexican troops had taken off. The Texas Revolution
had begun.
Gonzales became known as "The Lexington of
Texas", where the first shot was fired, and where the first Texas Army of
Volunteers gathered. A few months after the first shot, men and boys from the
region would gather in Gonzales, sending the only reinforcements ever received
at the Alamo.
Each October, on the first full weekend of October, the citizens of Gonzales gather to celebrate their Texas heritage
in a three-day festival called "Come & Take It."
|