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Home
of Texas legend often overlooked
by San Antonio visitors
By
Rob McCorkle
SAN
ANTONIO -- In Texas top tourist destination, three
white limestone and adobe structures tucked amid parking
lots and modern office buildings command little attention
in bustling San Antonio, a city known for the Alamo,
River Walk, Spanish missions, and popular theme parks.
Nearby, a life-sized bronze statue of Casa Navarro State
Historic Sites namesake keeps watch on the 19th
century landmark, leaning on a cane, with the left hand
outstretched palm-up, gesturing toward the former residence
of one of Texas more remarkable but unsung heroes.
The
name JosÈ Antonio Navarro has been mostly lost
among those of such early-day Texas icons as Sam Houston,
Stephen F. Austin and Davy Crockett in the states
colorful lore. History reveals that Navarro had the
"misfortune" of dying of natural causes at
the age of 76 rather than in some renowned battle.
"If
Navarro had died in the battle of the Alamo, that would
have raised his profile," chuckled David McDonald,
who before taking over management of the state site
was mostly unfamiliar with the Tejano statesman. What
scant recognition Navarro has achieved in the passage
130 years stems from his being one of two native Tejanos
who signed the Texas Declaration of Independence.
McDonald,
who has a Spanish literature degree, left a job at Mission
San Jose in 1978 to manage Casa Navarro, which in 1960
had been saved from demolition by the San Antonio Conservation
Society. He has spent the past 23 years at what he calls
a "research goldmine" seeking clues to what
kind of man Navarro really was and his role in Texas
tumultuous birth. Hes gleaned a myriad of details
from Navarros correspondence, census reports,
tax records, and other historical documents discovered
in government archives in San Antonio, Saltillo, Mexico,
and elsewhere.
"It
became clear to me," McDonald said, "that
Navarro represents something unique to our department
[Texas Parks and Wildlife] and San Antonio. You see
an overall picture of Texas through Navarros life
and deeds. He was a comprehensive figure during the
formative period of Texas history when the destiny of
Texas was shaped."
Navarro
lived from 1795 to 1871, a period that saw a number
of governments come and go in what would become Texas.
During that time, Navarro served in the state legislature
under Mexico, the Republic of Texas, and the U.S., and
held local government positions. He was appointed by
fellow Tejanos to serve on committees that wrote the
first two Texas Constitutions, in 1836 and 1845.
But
Navarro gained his greatest accolade while working on
the 1845 Constitution. The usually mild-mannered statesman
took issue with a proposed amendment that would require
citizens to be white to vote, deriding the measure as
objectionable and obnoxious, according to McDonald.
A
decade later. Navarros legend grew when he became
the first Mexican-American to write about the history
of Texas from a Mexican perspective. Enraged by local
newspaper articles attacking his people, Navarro took
pen in hand to write eloquently about sacrifices of
Tejanos who fought to win Mexicos independence
from Spain. He was lauded as the "strongest defender
of the rights of his people in the United States."
Nonetheless,
Navarro has been falsely maligned in some quarters as
a turncoat who against the wishes of his people rode
off to Washington-on the-Brazos to sign the Texas
Declaration of Independence. Not so, McDonald asserted.
He came across an 1830 manuscript detailing a gathering
of Tejanos who met to elect two delegates to the convention.
Navarro was one of the two chosen.
Moreover,
McDonald said he has found evidence that Navarro was
a prominent civic leader of San Antonios Laredito
-- the area west of San Pedro Creek on the road to Laredo
heavily populated by Mexicans that in the mid-1800s
played a major role in helping preserve and reinforce
the cultural heritage of the Tejano people (Texans of
Mexican descent). It was there in Navarros times
that the roots of Mexican culture -- Spanish language,
special ethnic foods, music, theater, and religious
festivals -- took hold and grew. True to that Mexican
heritage, Navarro spoke only Spanish.
To
show Casa Navarros esteemed role in furthering
the Mexican culture, McDonald occasionally holds folkways
demonstrations for school groups and others beneath
a grape arbor in the courtyard of the Navarro home site
that covers a little less than an acre two blocks southeast
of Market Square. Park visitors learn how long-ago Texans
used a metate to grind corn for the masa used to make
tamales and tortillas, and how to make adobe bricks
using dirt and lime.
Over
the years, McDonald and park staff have worked to bring
Navarro and his family to life through interpretive
tours that include reproductions of historical documents,
period maps, paintings of the town of Bexar (present-day
San Antonio), and family photographs. For visual impact,
McDonald has placed about the buildings poster-sized
photocopies of a number of historical documents, including
a 1779 census of the population of Bexar. Clearly visible
is the scrawled name of Navarros father Angel.
Visitors
receive an orientation about Navarro and his role in
Texas history, and are given guided tours of two of
three original structures built for Navarro in the 1840s
and 1850s. Tours fees are $2 for adults, $1 for children
six to 12, and free for those under six.
On
display in the two-room, 1856 Navarro home are photos
of the patriarch, his wife Marguerite, and their six
children, including Angel, who went on to attend Harvard
law school. Here, too, is a map of Navarros extensive
land holdings totaling 50,000 acres of ranch land acquired
from profits from his thriving mercantile business and
a letter written by the self-educated merchant.
An
adjacent three-room structure believed by McDonald to
contain the original town home built for Navarro (circa
1840) contains more than a dozen exhibits detailing
Navarros imprisonment in Mexico, an 1832 deed
to the property, his legislative career, landholdings,
reputation as a nationalist and patriot, and more.
Casa
Navarro State Historic Site is one of more than 120
state parks in the Texas State Park System. The park,
open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday, is
at the corner of South Laredo and West Nueva streets.
For more information about Casa Navarro, call (512)
226-4801. To learn about all of the Texas state parks,
call (800) 792-1112, or log onto www.tpwd.state.tx.us.
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