An online bilingual companion resource to The US-Mexican War (1846-1848) a documentary produced by KERA-TV Dallas/Fort Worth for PBS ...
www.pbs.org/kera/usmexicanwar
The DMWV is a non-profit, non-political, national lineage society chartered by the State of Texas and recognized by the U. S. government as a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization. Its purposes are historical, genealogical, educational and charitable in nature.
TREATY WITH MEXICO (February 2, 1848) TREATY OF PEACE, FRIENDSHIP, LIMITS, AND SETTLEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE UNITED MEXICAN STATES CONCLUDED AT GUADALUPE HIDALGO, FEBRUARY 2, 1848; RATIFICATION ADVISED BY SENATE, WITH AMENDMENTS, MARCH 10, 1848; RATIFIED BY PRESIDENT, MARCH 16, 1848; RATIFICATIONS EXCHANGED AT QUERETARO, MAY 30, 1848; PROCLAIMED, JULY 4, 1848. IN THE ...
www.azteca.net/aztec/guadhida.html
A brief description of the war between the United States and Mexico in the 1840's. Designed as a resource for students, researchers and history buffs.
www.historyguy.com/Mexican-American_War.html
The U.S.-Mexican War and the Peoples of the Year 2000 Overview There is a New/Old nationality at work in North America, now. It makes a difference to how we can understand the U.S.-Mexican War of the 1840s. This New/Old nationality can be traced in two directions: in a cascade of new developments in the politics of our own time, from national developments in French Canada, to the articulation of ...
Account of the disastrous Texian offensive mission to Matamoros ...
www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/goliadsanpat.htm
The San Patricios: Mexico's Fighting Irish From The San Patricios: Mexico's Fighting Irish by Mark R. Day In 1846, thousands of immigrants, mostly Irish, joined the US army and were sent with Gen. Zachary Taylor's army to invade Mexico in what some historians have called a war of Manifest Destiny. Dubious about why they were fighting a Catholic country, and fed up with mistreatment from their ...
flag.blackened.net/revolt/mexico/img/more_san_ps.html
Americana February, 1993, p 6 - Revising the Record: Inglorious Tale from the Mexican War by Howard Fast Count Leo Tolstoy wrote, in his novel War and Peace, that every account of a battle was a lie. You can safely broaden the statement to read that every account of a war is a series of lies, and to be specific, it would be difficult to find a war woven of so many lies, speaking historically, as ...
www.trussel.com/hf/inglorio.htm