Atlas of Hispanic-American History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
MANIFEST DESTINY AND HISPANIC AMERICA 93

The Bear Flag Revolt began on June 14, 1846, when Anglo settlers in Sonoma placed
Mexican general Mariano Vallejo under arrest, declaring California an independent
republic they called the Bear Flag Republic. The settlers were supported by American
explorer John C. Frémont, who had incited tensions the previous March by raising the
American flag at Monterey. The real intent of the settlers was not independence for
California but annexation by the United States. By early July, the U.S. naval ships under
Commodore John Sloat captured Monterey and San Francisco. In August, Commodore
Robert Stockton took Los Angeles. U.S. victory was assured when land forces under
General Stephen Kearny arrived from Santa Fe to reinforce Stockton’s troops.


The Bear Flag Revolt, 1846
LEARNING

THE LINGO


Like all foreign expeditionary forces,
American troops in Mexico during the
U.S.-Mexican War faced the problem
of communicating with the people
whose land they were occupying.
Many of them learned more Spanish
in Mexico than they had heard in their
whole lives. Some of these words they
brought home with them. Veterans
came home smoking cigarritos, the lit-
tle paper-wrapped cigars that became
known as cigarettes, and giving names
like Buena Vista and Palo Alto to
towns across the United States.
While in Mexico, some Anglo sol-
diers struggled with grammars and
phrasebooks, but many did the best
they could without books. This is how
one Illinois volunteer officer described
his efforts to communicate with a
boardinghouse proprietor and her
daughter:

When at fault for a word I take
an English one & give it a
Spanish ending & pronunciation
& make a salaam or two.... If
that don’t go, I throw in a word
or two of Latin & French, &
occasionally a little German,
& conclude with “Senora” or
“Senorita.” Thus I generally
succeed in calling up a smile, & a
gentle “Si, Senor”... then they
let loose a torrent of Castillian on
me, & I stand & look knowing, &
say “Si Senorita” when I’ve no
more idea of what they are
saying than if Moses was talking
to me in his native tongue.
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