they pooped on them
Colonel James Fannin, who was executed along with the 400 Texan soldiers after surrendering to the Mexican Army at Goliad.
"Remember the Alamo!" "Remember Goliad!"
1836.
Billy Joe Parker has written: 'James Walker Fannin, Jr' -- subject(s): Biography, Goliad Massacre, Goliad, Tex., 1836, History, Soldiers, Texas, Texas. Army
The Battle of Goliad. Aslo known as the Goliad Massacre.
The army was the Mexican army and around 500 Mexican solders invaded Refugio, San Antonio, And Goliad .
AnswerActually the battle of Goliad was won by the Mexican forces under General Urrea who, obeying the orders of Gen. Santa Anna, captured the Texian forces commanded by Col. James Fannin after fleeing the fortress. Fannin had surrendered,assuming he and his forces would be treated as prisoners of war but he and his forces were slaughtered shortly after surrendering.
Sam Houston.
hesa
Gonzales may be called a Texan victory, but at Goliad four hundred Texan soldiers surrendered and were executed by the Mexican Army. After the fall of the Alamo, General Houston had the Texan Army mobilized, and he kept it moving until he was ready to take on the Mexican Army at San Jacinto.
After the Battle of Goliad, about 400 rebel Texans surrendered to the Mexican army.
At Goliad during the Texas Revolution in 1836, approximately 350 Texian prisoners were executed by Mexican forces under General José de Urrea on March 27, an event known as the Goliad Massacre. This occurred after the Texian army had surrendered, and it was part of a broader campaign by the Mexican government to suppress the Texian rebellion. The massacre sparked outrage and became a rallying cry for Texian forces, famously encapsulated in the slogan "Remember Goliad!"