Constellation Similarity Assertions

Bowie, James, d. 1836

The son of Reason (or Rezin) and Elve Bowie, James (Jim) Bowie (1796?-1836) moved around the southern United States in his early life, finally settling on a plantation near Opelousas, Louisiana, in around 1809. During the War of 1812, James and his brother Rezin Pleasant Bowie enlisted in the Second Division, Consolidated, of the U.S. Army. After the war, the brothers bought slaves from Jean Laffite and traded them in St. Landry Parish, until raising $65,0000, which James and Rezin invested in land speculation. In the 1820s, Rezin gave his brother a larger butcher-like hunting knife, later known as a Bowie knife, to protect the hot-tempered James in fights. Around the same time, James, Rezin, and their brother Stephen founded the Arcadia sugar plantation near Thibodaux, which they sold along with other land in 1831.

In 1830, James moved to Coahuila y Texas, where he swore allegiance to Mexico and met Juan Marín de Veramendi. Bowie bought several land grants, established tracts in Stephen F. Austin’s colony, and purchased a textile mill, which allowed him to become a Mexican citizen. In April 1831, Bowie married Ursula de Veramendi, and the couple settled in Saltillo, the capital of Coahuila y Texas. When the capital changed to Monclova in 1833, the two towns raised forces to contest the decision, with Bowie supporting the new capital. In September 1833, Urusla and her parents died of cholera in Monclova.

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Bowie, James, 1805-1836

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r28bh7 (person)

No biographical history available for this identity.

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