Atlas of Hispanic-American History

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fought at Gettysburg (1863) and Peters-
burg (1864–1865).
Some Hispanic Americans fought on
the Confederate side. Hispanic Americans
were concentrated in states and territories
that had formerly belonged to Spain—
states and territories that now, due to their
southern location, were predisposed to
join the Confederacy. Of these, the states
of Florida, Louisiana, and Texas all became
Confederate, while the new state of
California and New Mexico Territory
stayed in the Union. Hispanic Americans
in these regions were divided, some join-
ing the Union, some the Confederacy. In
Texas, an estimated 2,250 Tejano soldiers
fought for the Confederate army, and 950
for the Union Army.
The highest-ranking Mexican
American serving in the Confederate
army was Col. Santos Benavides, who

commanded the regiment that defended
Laredo, Texas, during the war and drove
Union forces back from Brownsville in


  1. Tejanos also served in the Con-
    federate cavalry. The 10th Texas Cavalry,
    commanded by Major Leonides M.
    Martín, a Tejano, was also notable for its
    large number of Hispanic members.


The Civil War
in the Southwest

Though remote from the Union and
Confederate capitals, the New Mexico
Territory became the focus of intense
fighting in the early part of the Civil War.
Right on the border of the Confederate
state of Texas, New Mexico was seen as a
gateway through which the Confederacy
could expand westward to Colorado and

108 ATLAS OF HISPANIC-AMERICAN HISTORY


IN HIS


FATHER’S


FOOTSTEPS


David Farragut followed in the military
tradition of his father, Jorge (or
George) Farragut. The elder Farragut
had come to North America in the
1770s from Minorca, a once-Spanish
colony that then belonged to Britain.
During the American Revolution,
Jorge Farragut joined the South
Carolina Navy as a lieutenant and
fought the British at Savannah (1779)
and in the second defense of
Charleston (1780). Jorge Farragut also
participated in the War of 1812.
Jorge Farragut was part of the small
community of Hispanic Americans
who lived in the Thirteen Colonies
prior to the Revolution. That commu-
nity also included Hispanic Jews who
settled in the Dutch colony of New
Amsterdam, the future New York, as
early as 1654.

David Farragut (Library of
Congress)

The Civil War in New Mexico

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