Details for Manuel Becerra

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5175012499

Data

Marker Number 12499
Atlas Number 5175012499
Marker Title Manuel Becerra
Index Entry Becerra, Manuel
Address 217 Loop 71
City Goliad
County Goliad
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 658019
UTM Northing 3170018
Subject Codes Spanish Texas; Mexican Texas; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas; Mexican immigrants/immigration; Native American topics
Marker Year 2001
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Presidio La Bahía State Historic Site. Marker is on W side of Calle Cinco de Mayo, just W of main entrance.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Born at Presidio La Bahía del Espíritu Santo in 1762, Manuel Becerra played a significant role in the settlement and politics of the region. Becerra and his wife, Juana María Cadena, and their two daughters, María Josefa and Gertrudis, were leading citizens of La Bahía. In 1820, Antonio María Martínez, the last Spanish governor of Texas, called for the formation of the ayuntamiento of La Bahía as required in the Spanish Constitution of 1812. The ayuntamiento, or town council, included Manuel Becerra, who was elected its first secretary. Becerra's involvement with colonization efforts came the following year, as he was selected to accompany Stephen F. Austin to the Colorado River to find a suitable site for Austin's first colony. His friendship with empresario Martín de León led to his eventual responsibility within de León's Guadalupe Colony in 1827, when de León placed Becerra in charge of the colony's political and business affairs. The same year, Becerra helped negotiate a treaty with the Coco and Karankawa tribes to enhance peace and stability in the region. In 1832, Becerra received a land grant of 8,856 acres in what is now Refugio County and later assisted colonizer James Power in the colonization of the Power Colony at Villa de Refugio. As a citizen under the flags of Spain, Mexico, the Republic of Texas and the United States, Manuel Becerra bore witness to many of the formative events in Texas history and played a significant role in colonization efforts. He died in what is now Refugio County about 1849. (2001)