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Texas history can feel like a roller coaster, but every drop and turn was engineered by choices. We track how a restless republic became a U.S. state that cut its own map to protect slavery, chased Santa Fe across decades, and doubled down on cotton while starving railroads, schools, and industry. The politics around the Missouri Compromise, Polk’s annexation push, and the “balance” of free and slave states weren’t background noise—they were the blueprint that shaped who counted, and who paid.
We pull apart the myths around Confederate symbols and get specific about what the flag stood for: the right to own people and turn their bodies into political power. Texas’s Civil War story isn’t just Appomattox from afar. It’s cavalry culture, German Unionists dodging conscription, Tejanos caught between armies, and the audacious New Mexico campaign that fizzled at Glorieta Pass when Union troops burned Confederate supplies and flanked their way to a strategic win. On home soil, Texas lost and retook Galveston, sent tens of thousands east, and then refused to accept the war’s end until the following year.
We land at Six Flags Over Texas, where themed lands once turned history into scenery. Confederate Land is gone now, but the question remains: what do flags above a gate conceal or reveal about the past beneath our feet? If you’re ready for a clear-eyed tour through annexation politics, slavery’s expansion, wartime audacity, and the innovations that followed, press play, then tell us which moment changed how you see Texas. Subscribe, share with a history-loving friend, and leave a review with the one fact you’ll be quoting all week.
Resources:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bM-WVdk7G23llqbQo6nE8rHHwoG6rEX1_aUaD-7fkvw/edit?usp=sharing
By Kelsey and SarahTexas history can feel like a roller coaster, but every drop and turn was engineered by choices. We track how a restless republic became a U.S. state that cut its own map to protect slavery, chased Santa Fe across decades, and doubled down on cotton while starving railroads, schools, and industry. The politics around the Missouri Compromise, Polk’s annexation push, and the “balance” of free and slave states weren’t background noise—they were the blueprint that shaped who counted, and who paid.
We pull apart the myths around Confederate symbols and get specific about what the flag stood for: the right to own people and turn their bodies into political power. Texas’s Civil War story isn’t just Appomattox from afar. It’s cavalry culture, German Unionists dodging conscription, Tejanos caught between armies, and the audacious New Mexico campaign that fizzled at Glorieta Pass when Union troops burned Confederate supplies and flanked their way to a strategic win. On home soil, Texas lost and retook Galveston, sent tens of thousands east, and then refused to accept the war’s end until the following year.
We land at Six Flags Over Texas, where themed lands once turned history into scenery. Confederate Land is gone now, but the question remains: what do flags above a gate conceal or reveal about the past beneath our feet? If you’re ready for a clear-eyed tour through annexation politics, slavery’s expansion, wartime audacity, and the innovations that followed, press play, then tell us which moment changed how you see Texas. Subscribe, share with a history-loving friend, and leave a review with the one fact you’ll be quoting all week.
Resources:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bM-WVdk7G23llqbQo6nE8rHHwoG6rEX1_aUaD-7fkvw/edit?usp=sharing