Fort Lipantitlan
This page is under construction

 

Fort Lipantitlan


Texas Links

South Texas
The Villareal Family
Fort Lipantitlan


Fort Lipantitlan, pronounced (LEE-pan-teet-lan) was established by the Spanish along the south side of the Nueces River in 1734, one hundred years before the Texas  Revolution. 

Today, nothing remains of the old fort.  However, a five acre State Park has been established.  The land for the five acre park was donated by the Bluntzer family in 1936.  The land was subsequently turned over to the Texas State Parks System. 

The park can be difficult to locate.  The park is located approximately 25 miles west of Corpus Christi, along the south side of the Nueces River and approximately 1 mile west of the small town of San Patricio.  Click
HERE for some maps that locate Fort Lipantitlan.

Click
HERE to read about a visit to the Fort Lipantitlan State Park, by Charles M. Yates, member of the Texian Heritage Society

The Battle of Fort Lipantitlan - November 4, 1835
From The
Handbook of Texas Online

The battle of Lipantitlán occurred on November 4, 1835, on the east bank of the Nueces River three miles above San Patricio in San Patricio County, directly across from Fort Lipantitlán.  A Texas force of around seventy men under Adjutant Ira J. Westover engaged a Mexican force of about ninety men under Capt. Nicolás Rodríguez.  The Texans scored an important victory.  Adjutant Westover was placed in command of about thirty-five men who left Goliad on October 30 headed for Fort Lipantitlán.  In Refugio they were joined by at least fourteen settlers, and by the time the expedition reached the Nueces River it probably numbered from sixty to seventy.  Included in the force were James Kerr, John J. Linn, James Power, Augustus H. Jones, George Sutherland, and Hugh McDonald Frazer, each an elected delegate to the Consultation who had forgone the honor to take part in the expedition to battle the Mexicans at Lipantitlán.  Traveling by a route south of the regular road from San Patricio-Lipantitlán to Goliad, Westover's force reached a ranch about five miles below San Patricio, where they learned that the enemy had moved out on the road to Refugio to intercept the Texans.  With this intelligence, Westover pushed his men and crossed the Nueces on November 3 in a canoe, and after posting guards at river fords they moved to within seventy or eighty yards of the fort, planning to wait until morning to attack.  Shortly two citizens from San Patricio were intercepted on their way to the fort.  One of the men, James O'Riley, volunteered to go to the fort and see if the Mexican soldiers would surrender on condition of being set at liberty on parole.  The terms were accepted, and the Texans took over the fort, where there were two cannons (one reported to be property of John McMullen and James McGloin and taken away by Mexican soldiers) and twenty-one men, including five prisoners, four Irishmen and one Englishmen from San Patricio, and some Texans who were there by choice.

Westover's men remained at the fort until about 3 P.M. on November 4, when they began recrossing the river in a canoe.  During the crossing the main Mexican force appeared.  Six Texans kept watch on the Mexicans as about half of the Texans made the crossing and took up positions below the river bank in a skirt of trees facing the enemy.  The Texan volunteers made excellent use of their positions, and in an engagement that lasted thirty-two minutes, twenty-eight Mexicans were killed, including Lt. Marcellino García, second in command, who was mortally wounded and died two days later at San Patricio.  The Texans suffered only one casualty, when a rifle ball cut off three of the fingers on William Bracken's right hand.  Also wounded in the battle were three Irishmen-the judge, alcalde, and sheriff of San Patricio-who fought with the Mexicans.  A team had been ordered the day before from San Patricio to move the two cannons captured in the fort, but shortly after the battle a cold rain swept the field, and the Texans elected to dump the cannons in the river rather than risk the Mexicans' mounting another attack while they attempted to move the artillery.  A camp was proposed at the edge of the prairie but finally the Texans moved downstream to San Patricio, where they were treated like heroes.  Westover and his men remained in San Patricio for two days before they rounded up their captured horses and returned to Refugio.  On the way the command overtook Governor Agustín Viesca and a group of Mexican dignitaries and escorted them to Refugio.  Despite the victory, controversy followed Westover, who had been under direct orders from Dimmitt not to grant paroles and to capture or kill Sabriego and Moya.  As it was, Captain Rodríguez and a major portion of the garrison were not taken prisoner, and Sabriego and Moya were not in the fort at the time.  Shortly, the Mexicans were again occupying the fort.




Newspaper article from the archives of Alamo De Parras web site

Santa Anna's Retreating Army
Reached Lipantitlan Fort
100 Years Ago Today.

By Edna May Tubbs. 

San Antonio Express newspaper, May 31, 1936, Sunday.

The last retreating remnant of Santa Anna's defeated army swam the bank-full Nueces river and toiled up the muddy slope to the adobe walls of Fort Lipantitlan 100 years ago, May 3l, 1836.  Here they rested, secure from the "revengeful Texan," for Fort Lipantitlan guarded the lower Nueces border between Texas and Tamualipas.

Centuries before America was discovered Lipantitlan guarded the border between the Lipans and the Aztecs.  This, we deduce from the name which has come down to us, a name which was patently given the place, before the mighty temple-building Aztecs migrated southward to the high plateau of Mexico.  Lipantitlan is simply Aztec for "village of the Lipans" the difficult pronunciation has been widely corrupted to "Panticlan."

Hence Lipantitlan, today, many lay claim to one of the oldest names in continual use in the nation, a name of historic, almost legendary significance.

The Bluntzer family, who for almost three quarters of a century have owned the Lipantitlan Grant, recognized its importance long before the Centennial awakened interest in historic points in Texas, and placed a square white marker at the site, three miles from the Nueces river bridge north of the town of Bluntzer on Highway No. 9.

One that May day a hundred years ago, Filosola and his half- starved soldiers doubtless wished that they had found Lipantitlan as De Leon and Father Massanet found it in 1690, a well organized Indian village of pole and palm tepees surrounded by rudely cultivated fields of corn, squashes and hard yellow turnips.  Tradition, becked by some historic fact, says that these Spaniards attempted to establish one of the earliest mission in the southwest at Lipantitlan, but abandoned the project three years later.

In 1734, however, they did build a strong fort there.  Santa Anna's retreating army, still half-fearing more Texan reprisals than the defeat at San Jacinto, may well have wished, too, that their refuge was the same strong fortress built by the Spaniards a hundred years before, for it was then described thus:

"Fort Lipantitlan was defended on the north by a steep bluff and deep lake, on the west by a ravine, on the south and east by a palisade and moat, the water for the moat being furnished by the Lipantitlan Creek.  An ingenious log draw-bridge spanned the moat, making an almost impenetrable fortress in this isolated location."

The century old defenses of the fort had been strengthened in the fall of 1835, when Captain Rodriguez, who a goodly force of men had been dispatched to Fort Lipantitlan to command the arteries of communication between San Antonio, Goliad and Matamoros.

As episode, similar in some respects to that that caused the first shots of the Texas revolution at Gonzales, occurred at Lipantitlan. Rodriguez, with the excuse that his artillery had not arrived from Matamoros, send couriers across the Nueces, to San Patricio to request the loan of Impresario McGloin's cannon "to be used for practice purposes in training his men."

The Irish Impresario did not have entire confidence in his neighbor's good faith, so the couriers and their oxen plodded back across the Nueces with the message from McGloin that: "The cannon is my private property, purchased to protect my family and people from the Indians and any other enemy that might dare to molest them."

Rodriguez, quick to grasp the veiled threat, ordered the cannon seized and delivered to him, with Impresario McGloin bound to it.  Lieut. Marcelino Garcia intervened and asked to go to the ayuntamiento or council of San Patricio and request the councilmen to persuade McGloin to make "so harmless a loan."

So diplomatic was Lieut. Garcia that this time the oxen left San Patrico trundling McGloin's cannon.  While Rodriguez's men practiced with the Irish gun, the battle of Concepcion was fought, Dimmit and Collingsworth captured Goliad, and Texan couriers were made prisoners at Lipantitlan.

Captain Ira Westover was then dispatched with a company to capture Lipantitlan.  Reinforced by the Irish colonists they crossed the Nueces and took the fort on Nov. 3, 1836, while Rodriguez and his main force lay in wait for time at Paso Piedra some miles beyond.  The river was rising, a wet norther blew up, and Westover decided to leave his exposed position and return to San Patricio.

The Texans had loaded the captured supplies, ammunition and McGloin's cannon on a hastily made raft when Rodriguez's troops rushed upon them.  The fight in the freezing rain and mud was lively.  The loaded raft was jerked first to one bank of the river then to the other, and in the midst of the battle cannon and raft sank in mid-channel.  (Rewards have been offered in late years for the recovery of McGloin's cannon, but it apparently lies where it sank that day.)

A few of the men camped at Lipantitlan in May and June, 1836, had been among the garrison some months earlier when the fort was captured by Dr. Grant and Col. Francis W. Johnson.

Many of them had been with Urrea in the skirmish with Grant's small band on the Auga Dulce.  Thence, after a brief pause at Lipantitlan, they had crossed the Nueces into Texas.  Following San Ana's ruthless command they had captured and burned San Patricio, shot Ward and King's men at Refugio, and massacred Fannin's surrendered troops at Goliad.  A small part of them had followed their dictator-president to defeat at San Jacinto.

Their retreat through the mud of the Texas prairies, and across river swollen by heavy May rains, had been dogged by the watchful Texans under Col. Sidney Sherman, who at San Jacinto had first raised the dread battle cry, "Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad!"  Then after Sherman and his men had turned back at La Bahia, the much-feared Texan scouts, Deaf Smith, Henry Karnes and R. E. Handy, had herded in their rear.

When the pitiful and bedraggled retreating force reached San Patricio, the Irish colonists who had returned to their burned city, refused to allow them to pass down their cleared 10 mile long "main street."

These men half expected that when the promised supply of ship had landed at Copano they would be thrown back into Texas to rescue Santa Anna.  But Maj. Burton and his "horse marines" had captured the ships and supplies at Copano, and the days spent at Lipantitlan were lean and hungry days for the poor common solider who had been so little to blame for their commander's bloodthirsty course in Texas.  After they had dismantled the fort and thrown the two cannons into Lake Lipantitlan.  Filosola led the straggling companies forth on their wearisome march through the sands to Matamoros.

A half-dozen of the young and venturesome Mexicans, who did not relish the retreat, contrived to be left on the Nueces.  Three years later several of them joined the ranks of Ross and Fisher's men when those two adventurers made headquarters at Lipantitlan before descending into northern Mexico in an attempt to establish the fantastic "Republic of the Rio Grande." Two others of the deserters acted as scouts for Vasquez on his invasion of San Antonio in 1842.

One of the ex-soldiers, Antonio Moya, lived in Texas for 50 years after his desertion of the retreating troops.  For a time he worked as a vaquero for Martin Culver, later he herded sheep for Milton Dodson.  In his declining years old Moya passed his days riding slowly around the countryside telling tales of the days at Lipantitlan to whomever would listen.

The story of Lipantitlan would be incomplete without more than a mention of the Bluntzer family who treasured the history and traditions of Lipantitlan and marked the site for posterity.

Peter Bluntzer, who was later to be the colonizer of Yorktown and Myersville, first came to Texas with Count Castro, but due to the illness of his wife he remained at Victoria instead of proceeding on to Castroville.  From there three of his sons, Nicholas, Lee and Urban, followed Zachary Taylor into Mexico, and Lee fell on the battlefield at Buena Vista.

Nicholas Bluntzer was a scout for Col. Robert E. Lee on his punitive expedition against the Comanches a few years later, and was stationed with the Texan troops on the Rio Grande during the Civil War.  He was with "Rip" Ford in the last battle of the war fought at Palmito near Brownsville.

With his young wife, who had been Justina Peters, Nicholas Bluntzer first came to the Nueces county in 1860, and in 1870 he bought the Lipantitlan Grant, which was to form the beginning of a ranch which eventually fronted nine miles on the Nueces river.  The young couple built their home not far from the crumbling walls of old Fort Lipantitlan.

Nicholas Bluntzer was one of the first men to appreciate the agricultural possibilities of the section, and one of the first Southwest Texas ranchmen to put the land into cultivation.  He built a gin on his ranch-farm, and established a store, which is still operated in the town of Bluntzer by his son, William.

Tales of the reassure of Lipantitlan have long been current in the southwest, and treasure seekers have caused the owner of the property untold annoyance.  Searchers tunneled and cross-tunneled under the old Bluntzer home, which was standing vacant, until the building collapsed in the excavation, and they then burned the wreckage.  The tall chimney which remained standing has likewise been torn apart by vandals.

Not long ago a valuable bull was missed from the herd, and when after many days his weak bellowing guided the men to him, they found the animal deep in a recently dug pit near the site of the old fort.  It took the Mexican hands days to fill in the hole so that the bull could clamber out.

These are but a few of he incidents of the searches after goodness knows what at Lipantitlan, for certainly the starving remnants of Santa Anna's soldiers, who rested there one hundred years ago, left no treasure.

The Bluntzer descendants, who are today prominent south Texas bankers and business men, farmers and cattleman, lawyers and teachers, consider the treasure of Lipantitlan lies in the centuries of a historic past.