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However, he was elected governor of the same province again on January 29, 1827. It was during this second stage that Coahuila and Texas were unified, becoming one state. Arizpe governed the state until August 1 of the same year (1827). He governed Coahuila for the third time in 1841. In 1844 he held the position of senator of Mexico. [2]
The federalists, including Agustín Viesca, the governor of Coahuila y Tejas, were afraid that Santa Anna would march against Coahuila after subduing the rebels in Zacatecas, so they disbanded the state legislature on May 21, 1835, and authorized the governor to set up an office in a different part of the state. Viesca was arrested as he ...
Manuel Antonio Bustillos y Ceballos: 1754–1756 Miguel de Sesman y Escudero: 1756–1757 Ángel Martos y Navarrette: 1757–1759 Jacinto de Barríos y Jáguregui (1st time) 1759–1762 Lorenzo Cancio Sierra y Cienfuegos: 1762–1764 Diego Ortiz Parrilla: 1764–1765 Jacinto de Barríos y Jáguregui (2nd time) 1765–1768 José Costilla y ...
Governor of Coahuila y Tejas Agustín Viesca (1790–1845) was a governor of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas in 1835. He was the brother of José María Viesca , also a governor of Coahuila y Tejas during 1827-1831.
The election of governors of the states and the local legislatures shall be direct and in the manner prescribed by their respective electoral laws. State governors serve six-year terms and, like the President of Mexico, they are barred from seeking reelection. No one who has previously held a governorship may run for or serve in the post again ...
1st Governor of Coahuila and Tejas; In office 1824–1826: Preceded by: Luciano García (governor of Texas) and José Rafael Eça y Múzquiz (governor of Coahuila) Succeeded by: Víctor Blanco: Personal details; Born: 1789 San Antonio, Spanish Texas, New Spain, Spanish Empire: Died: 1857 (aged 67–68) San Antonio, Texas, United States: Profession
Juan Valdez was chosen governor of Texas [1] and Coahuila [2] twice: in 1714 and in 1716. He was mayor of the presidio of villa of Bexar (San Antonio, Texas) in 1720.During his mayoralty in Bexar, he established a mission in a place of San Jose and San Miguel de Aguayo, under orders of the viceroy of New Spain, [1] even after that Antonio de Olivares filed a petition asking that the mission ...
Ángel Navarro's daughter María Josefa Navarro married Juan Martín de Veramendi, the Governor of Coahuila y Tejas from 1832 to 1833. This couple's eldest daughter, Maria Ursula de Veramendi, was the wife of Texas revolutionary Jim Bowie. [2] According to census records, Navarro was an active participant in the slave trade. [3]