GB-
Lets look at TEXAS, by GOD cause it is a little different. Texas, and I am talking East Texas. This was/ well is a land that was closely associated with Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama. It is the same type land, rolling hills, pine forrest, sandy loam soil. Farmers folks. Cotton was king, though timber has always been important.
This is an area that extends from Texarkana to Beaumont/Port Arthur/Orange. Bout the length of Louisiana. It is an area bout 200 miles wide, the west was susposed to begin at the 100th Merridian, Just East of Ft. Worth (around the town of Azel)but, in fact, this area is only about 100 miles wide during the time period being discussed. In comparison to the rest, just a small portion of the state.
This was the onliest (pardons to Festus, but still a good word) part that was settled by Anglo's at the time of the revolution in 1836 and at the time of the Civil War was still the hub of population in Texas.
Most of these boys were from the states mentioned before. The Layton's are from Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama. So are the rest of the line. The Spence's, Patilla's, Bakers, Epperson's, ect. The Close's came from from upstate New York, around a place called Bruha or Budda, around 1845. How in the hell did I get off into geneology?
This part of Texas has close ties to the old South. Now R.I.P. and I were against joining up with the Union in the first place. It was this part that joined the union and left the union.
What wuz I talking bout? OH, now I remember. Texas could not have, I do not think, stayed away from the union, after the war, any more than before the revolution (Texas Revolution). We needed the union. We was still fighting Mexico, did til bout the turn of the century.
Most of the effort in Texas, during the war, was keeping Mexico from invading and this effort was still needed after the Civil war. Commanche problem loomed well into the late 1870's.
Said all that to say this, Texas was in need of an alliance with the Union as much after the Civil War as it was after the Texas Revolution.
Now ol R.I.P. and I had figgered that we could whup Mexico without hep frum nobody, but that was a bunch of B.S.
Blessings