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Buena Vista

 
Dictionary: Bue·na Vis·ta   (bwā'nə vĭs'tə, bwĕ'nä vēs') pronunciation

A locality in northern Mexico just south of Saltillo. In the Mexican War U.S. forces led by Zachary Taylor defeated a Mexican army commanded by Santa Anna on February 22-23, 1847.

 

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Battle of Buena Vista
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Battle fought in 1847 near Monterrey, Mexico, in the Mexican War. A U.S. force of 5,000 commanded by Gen. Zachary Taylor and assisted by Jefferson Davis invaded northern Mexico and engaged a Mexican force of 14,000 under Gen. Antonio Santa Anna. The U.S. forces repulsed the Mexican attack, and the Mexicans retreated with 1,500 casualties. Taylor's victory helped him win the 1848 U.S. presidential election.

For more information on Battle of Buena Vista, visit Britannica.com.

US Military History Companion: Battle of Buena Vista
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(1847)

Maj. Gen. Zachary Taylor's small army had been victorious in all three of its Mexican War battles by the end of 1846. After the Battle of Monterrey in September, many of his troops were assigned to Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott for a proposed attack on the Mexican coastal town of Veracruz.

Antonio López de Santa Anna commanded Mexican forces, and he knew from captured dispatches that Scott had siphoned off Taylor's best troops. In late January 1847, therefore, he led 21,000 troops northward to attack Taylor's weakened force of about 5,000. The U.S. forces positioned themselves near the Hacienda San Juan de la Buena Vista, where the road passed between mountains.

The Mexican Army, reduced to about 15,000 men by death, disease, and desertion, reached the U.S. position on 22 February. After Taylor refused Santa Anna's invitation to surrender, the Mexicans attacked. The fighting was brisk but inconclusive. It ended at sunset.

Santa Anna reopened the battle the next morning. Mexican cavalry rode around the U.S. position and toward its supply base at the hacienda. Col. Jefferson Davis formed his Mississippi volunteers and an Indiana regiment into a large V. When the Mexican horsemen rode into the mouth of this V, they were shot to pieces. Meanwhile, superbly handled U.S. artillery held off Mexican infantry advancing straight up the valley.

Nightfall again ended the fighting, but this time Santa Anna used the darkness to mask his retreat. He had lost over 3,500 men in the two‐day fight. U.S. casualties were also heavy; over 600 had fallen.

The Battle of Buena Vista was the last major battle of the war in northern Mexico. Within two weeks, General Scott landed at Veracruz, and Santa Anna hastened southward to try to protect his nation's capital city from this new threat. Had the Mexicans won at Buena Vista, Scott's attack probably would have been postponed or even canceled.

Bibliography

  • K. JackBauer, The Mexican War, 1846–1848, 1974.
  • John S. D. Eisenhower, So Far From God: The U.S. War with Mexico 1846–1848, 1989
US Military Dictionary: Battle of Buena Vista
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(February 22-23, 1847) an American victory during the Mexican War (1846-48). Mexican general Antonio López de Santa Anna, after capturing a U.S. courier, marched his dwindling army, initially 21, 000 soldiers, across 200 miles of desert to fight Maj. Gen. Zachary Taylor's force of 5, 000 mainly untested men. U.S. troops, directed by Brig. Gen. John Wool, took a stand across a road between two mountains, and, taking advantage of superior artillery and the timely arrival of reinforcements, managed to hold off the Mexicans, whose losses were estimated at 2, 000 to 3, 500. American casualties were approximately 700.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

US History Encyclopedia: Battle of Buena Vista
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Buena Vista, Battle of (22–23 February 1847). During the Mexican War General Zachary Taylor had advanced his army of about five thousand men south-westward from Monterrey in northeastern Mexico to a mountain pass south of Saltillo. Near the hacienda of Buena Vista he encountered a Mexican force three times the size of his own led by General Antonio López de Santa Anna. Although the Americans lost ground the first day, they won a brilliant victory on the second, and the Mexicans withdrew. Taylor gained a reputation that aided him in his bid for the presidency, but the further conquest of Mexico was entrusted to General Winfield Scott.

Bibliography

Eisenhower, John S. D. So Far from God: The U.S. War with Mexico, 1846–47. New York: Random House, 1989.

Lavender, David S. Climax at Buena Vista: The American Campaigns in Northeastern Mexico, 1846–47. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1966.

—L. W. Newton/A. R.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: battle of Buena Vista
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Buena Vista, battle of, military engagement in the Mexican War, fought Feb. 22-23, 1847. The battle site was just S of Saltillo, Coahuila, in Mexico. Gen. Zachary Taylor, disobeying orders from the U.S. government, had advanced here. Gen. Santa Anna, having gathered a Mexican army, made a long march north and, attacking Taylor's forces furiously, outflanked them. The fighting was hard and at the end of the second day seemed a drawn battle, but on the night of Feb. 23 the Mexican army withdrew, leaving Taylor in control of the north of Mexico.


Wikipedia: Battle of Buena Vista
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Battle of Buena Vista
Part of Mexican-American War
Battle of Buena Vista Nebel.jpg
Battle of Buena Vista by Carl Nebel.
Date February 22–23, 1847
Location Puerto de la Angostura, Coahuila
Result American victory
Belligerents
Flag of Mexico Mexico Flag of the United States United States
Commanders
Antonio López de Santa Anna Zachary Taylor
John E. Wool
Strength
16,000 Lombardini,
Pacheco & Ortega Infantry Divisions,
Juvera Cavalry Division
Army of Occupation
4,500
Casualties and losses
594 dead
1,039 wounded
1,800 missing
294 captured
267 dead
456 wounded
23 missing

The Battle of Buena Vista (23 February 1847), also known as the Battle of Angostura, saw the United States Army use artillery to repulse the much larger Mexican army in the Mexican-American War. Buena Vista, a village of the state of Coahuila, is seven miles (12 km) south of Saltillo, in northern Mexico.

Contents

Background

After the Battle of Monterrey in September 1846, most of Major General Zachary Taylor's Army of Occupation was sent to the gulf coast to become the bulk of Winfield Scott's expedition against Mexico City. Taylor felt that President James K. Polk was attempting to deprive him of any further military success which would aid in his campaign for the presidency. Taylor decided to ignore orders to stay in Monterrey; he marched deeper into Mexico and seized Saltillo. Taylor also diverted the Center Division, under John E. Wool, from its expedition in Chihuahua to join him in Saltillo. With Wool's division, the U.S. force totaled about 4,500 soldiers, most of them volunteer units fighting for the first time.

In the summer of 1846, Antonio López de Santa Anna returned from exile and quickly seized power. When Monterrey had fallen, Santa Anna raised an army in San Luis Potosí numbering almost 25,000. When a letter from General Scott to Taylor telling of the transfer of the bulk of Taylor's army to the Gulf fell into Mexican hands, Santa Anna quickly marched north to try to knock Taylor out of Mexico while U.S. forces were being withdrawn.

Taylor learned that Santa Anna was marching north and so he moved about nineteen miles south of Saltillo to Agua Nueva. Taylor sent out Major Ben McCulloch, of the Texas Rangers, to scout out the Mexican Army. McCulloch found Santa Anna 60 miles (100 km) to the south, informing Taylor on February 21. Taylor withdrew to a mountain pass at Buena Vista twelve miles north of Agua Nueva. General Wool was charged with laying out the defenses. Later that day Santa Anna arrived at Agua Nueva with 12,000 men, his force diminished because of desertion and exhaustion during the long trek from San Luis Potosí. Santa Anna perceived the U.S. withdrawal to Buena Vista as a retreat and demanded a surrender. Taylor's aide, William Wallace Smith Bliss, eloquently replied that the U.S forces declined the surrender. Taylor, worried about the safety of his supplies, rode to Saltillo that night to ensure the protection of his rear.

Battle

Zachary Taylor

On the morning of February 23, General Pedro de Ampudia attacked the U.S. left flank guarded by the 2nd Indiana from Joseph Lane's Indiana Brigade. The volunteers were supported by a battery of artillery but were steadily driven back along with a second line of Illinois volunteers. Wool sent a messenger to General Lane to hold the line at all costs. The Illinois volunteers managed to conduct a fighting withdrawal under the pressure of the Mexican attack.

General Taylor returned to the field and made his presence known to his men; he was escorted by the Mississippi Rifles under Colonel Jefferson Davis. The Mississippians hit the flank of Ampudia's attacking column and Davis was wounded in the foot. Meanwhile Wool rallied the broken regiments using the walls of the hacienda at Buena Vista as a defensive position supported by a battery under Thomas W. Sherman and two regiments of dragoons. The 3rd Indiana was brought to the support of Davis, and the two regiments formed an inverted V. The Mexicans attacked this new line. The Hoosiers and Mississippians held their fire so long that the confused attackers paused briefly and were then hit by a wave of gunfire. About 2,000 Mexicans were pinned down. A young Mexican lieutenant attempted to trick the U.S. into a cease fire by saying that Santa Anna wished to meet with the U.S. commander. Taylor and Wool saw through the ploy, but it did buy the trapped Mexicans enough time to escape.

Map of the Battle of Buena Vista

Santa Anna renewed an attack on the main U.S. position led by General Francisco Pérez with artillery support. An artillery battery under Braxton Bragg unlimbered with orders to maintain his position at all costs. Taylor rode over to Captain Bragg, and after a brief conversation in which Bragg replied he was using single shot, Taylor ordered "double-shot your guns and give them hell, Bragg". Later this order, although misquoted as "give them a little more grape, Captain Bragg", would be used as a campaign slogan which carried Taylor into the White House. Pérez's attack was repulsed as heavy rain fell over the field. During the night Santa Anna declared victory and withdrew to Agua Nueva, after receiving a letter from Mexico City declaring that Santa Anna was needed to quell a political coup.

American depiction of the fighting.

Results

The battle was the last major battle in northern Mexico. It was Taylor's greatest battle of the war and also his last; he returned to the U.S. to pursue his political career. His success at Buena Vista and his legendary command to Captain Bragg helped him win election as President of the United States in 1848. Santa Anna suffered great losses and withdrew to the south. His withdrawal was spurred on by political dissent in Mexico City. He was later forced to defend Mexico City against an army under Winfield Scott.

Buena Vista County, Iowa, in 1859, was named in honor of the battle, as was Buena Vista Township, in Michigan's Saginaw County, and the cities of Buena Vista, Virginia, Buena Vista Oregon, and Buena Vista, Alabama, in northern Monroe County.

Among notable deaths at the battle is Henry Clay, Jr., second son of American statesman Henry Clay, a vociferous opponent of the Mexican War. His death was the subject of prints by Currier & Ives, and Neale & Pate. Archibald Yell, former Governor of Arkansas, was also killed while commanding the 1st Arkansas Volunteer Cavalry.

1847 print of the battle, from an on-the-spot sketch made by Major Eaton, aide-de-camp to Taylor.

Orders of Battles

A. Mexican Army Undated Returns acs

18,530-of Liberating Army of the North Gen. Div. A. Lopez de Santa Anna

  • 39- Staff-Acting Gen. Manuel Micheltorena
  • 10- Engrs.-Gen. Ignacio de Mora y Villamil
  • 61- Medical Corps- Insp. Pedro Vander Linden
  • 584- Artillery-Gen. Antonio Corona (Total 16 Guns & 1 Howitzer)
  • Commissary and Baggage Train-P. Rangel
  • 324- Regiment of Engrs.-Col. Santiago Blanco
  • 466- Regiment of Hussars-Lt. Col. Manuel Andrade
  • Infantry: Gen.Br. Manuel M. Lombardini ( 28 Infantry Battalions )
  • Light Brigade-Gen.Br. Pedro Ampudia (1st,2d,3d & 4th Light(Ligero) Regiments)
  • 4,839- 2d Vanguard Division-Gen.Br. Francisco Pacheco (8 Bns and 4-8 lb Guns)
  • 1st Brigade-Gen. J. Garcia-Conde (2d Light, San Luis Potosi & Morelia Bns)
  • 2d Brigade-Gen. Fransco Perez (Celaya & Leon Activos Bns,1st & 2d Guanajuato Aux Bns
  • 4,300-1st Centre Division-Gen.Br. Manuel Maria Lombardini (and 4-12 lb Guns)
  • 3d Brigade-Gen. Francisco Mejia } 1st,3d,4th,5th,10th and 11th Line(Linea) Regts)
  • 5th Brigade-Gen. Rafael Vasquez? } " )
  • 3d Rear Guard Division-Acting Gen. J. Maria Ortega (8 Bns and 3 Guns)
  • 4th Brigade-Gen.Br. Luis Guzman } 1st & 2d Mexico,Queretaro,& Aguascalientes Activos Bns,
  • 6th Brigade-Gen. Andres Terres } " Guadalajara Aux Bn
  • Joined later:
  • 1,000- 7th Brigade-Gen. Anastasio Parrodi( 12th Line, Pueblo Activos Tampico Coast Grds & etc.) and 3 Guns (8 lbs.)

Cavalry: Gen. Julian Juvera ( 39 Cavalry Squadrons )

  • Horse Artillery
  • 1,418-1st Brigade-Gen.Jose V. Minon
  • 4th Cavalry,Jalisco Lancers,Cazadores,Oaxaca & Puebla Activos Regts
  • 1,094-2d Brigade-Gen. Julian Juvera
  • 5th & 9th Cavalry,Tulancingo Coraceros,Morelia Activos Regts.
  • 808-3d Brigade-Acting Gen. Anastasio Torrejon
  • 3d,7th & 8th Cavalry,Mexico Light, Guanajuato Activos Regts.
  • 390-4th Brigade-Gen. Manuel Andrade
  • Michoacan Activos, Presidiales

Detached :

  • Cavalry Brigade-Gen. Jose Urrea
  • Infantry Brigade-Gen.Br. Ciriaco Vasquez

B. United States Army

4,759 -United States Army of Occupation-Mj. Gen. Z. Taylor

  • Washington Battery-Cpt.J.M. Washington
  • 1st Illinois Volunteers Regiment-Col.J.J. Hardin (D)
  • 2d Illinois Volunteers Regiment-Col.W. Bissell (plus Texas Company)
  • 2d Kentucky Volunteer Regiment- Col. W. McKee (D)
  • Arkansas Volunteer Regiment (Mounted)-Col. Yell
  • Kentucky Regiment-Col.H. Marshall
  • Indiana Brigade-Br.Gen. J. Lane
  • 2d Indiana Volunteer Regiment-Col. Bowles
  • 3d Indiana Volunteer Regiment-Col.J.H. Lane
  • 1st Mississippi Riflemen Regiment-Col. J. Davis
  • May Squadron, 2d Dragoons-Col. C.A. May
  • Steen's Squadron, 1st Dragoons-Capt Steen

Reserves:

See also

Sources

  • Alcaraz, Ramon, et al. "apuntes para la historia de la guerra entre Mexico y los Estados Unidos" (1848)
  • Balbontin, Manuel, "La Invasion Americana 1846 a 1848..." (1890)
  • Bauer, K. Jack, "The Mexican War, 1846–1848"
  • Nevin, David; editor, "The Mexican War" (1978)
  • Roa Barcena, Jose Maria, "Recuerdos de la invasion norteamericana,1846–1848" (1947)
  • Katcher, Phillip R., "The Mexican American War 1846–1848" (1976)
  • Americas Library
  • American casualties list

Coordinates: 25°20′13.05″N 101°2′47.18″W / 25.3369583°N 101.0464389°W / 25.3369583; -101.0464389


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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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US Military Dictionary. The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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