Texan Edge

Closing In On San Jacinto


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Description 

By mid-April 1836, everything was beginning to converge. 

After weeks of muddy roads, hard choices, and second-guessing, Sam Houston and his army were no longer just moving—they were positioning. 

Near the banks of the San Jacinto River and Buffalo Bayou, the long retreat was quietly turning into something else. 

Preparation. 

In this episode of The Texan Edge, we step into the days just before the Battle of San Jacinto—when both armies were closing in, one growing stronger, the other growing overconfident. 

Because turning points rarely announce themselves. 

But they always reveal what you’ve been preparing for.  

Show Notes 

  • Mid-April Shift
    The Texian army slows its retreat and begins to change posture under Sam Houston. 
  • Closing the Distance
    Movement toward the San Jacinto River and Buffalo Bayou as both armies draw closer. 
  • The Weight of Memory
    The emotional fuel carried by the men—stories of the Battle of the Alamo, Goliad Massacre, and the Runaway Scrape. 
  • Santa Anna’s Miscalculation
    Antonio López de Santa Anna divides his forces, convinced he is pursuing a weakened enemy. 
  • A Different Kind of Confidence
    Houston’s men begin to understand the strategy that once looked like retreat. 
  • The “Hinge Day” Concept
    Why April 17, 1836, mattered—even if it didn’t look like history in the moment. 
  • The Texan Edge Takeaway
    You don’t rise to the moment—you rise to your level of preparation. 
  • Today’s Question
    If your “San Jacinto moment” showed up next week… would you be ready?

 

This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

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Texan EdgeBy Tweed Scott