Taylor Wins at Buena Vista: Outnumbered Americans Prevail
General Zachary Taylor's 4,600 American troops repelled an assault by roughly 15,000 Mexican soldiers under General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna at the Battle of Buena Vista on February 23, 1847. Taylor had been ordered to stay defensive, but his refusal to retreat from an exposed position forced the engagement. The fighting lasted two days across rugged terrain south of Saltillo. American artillery, particularly a battery commanded by Captain Braxton Bragg, proved decisive, shredding Mexican infantry formations with canister shot. Santa Anna withdrew overnight after suffering over 3,400 casualties. Taylor lost roughly 670 men. The victory made Taylor a national hero and propelled him directly to the White House in 1848, following the pattern of Washington, Jackson, and Harrison in converting military fame into presidential elections. Taylor died in office sixteen months later, possibly from contaminated cherries and milk consumed at a Fourth of July celebration.
February 23, 1847
179 years ago
Key Figures & Places
United States
Wikipedia
Mexico
Wikipedia
Mexican-American War
Wikipedia
General
Wikipedia
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
Wikipedia
Battle of Buena Vista
Wikipedia
Zachary Taylor
Wikipedia
Mexican–American War
Wikipedia
Battle of Buena Vista
Wikipedia
Zachary Taylor
Wikipedia
Antonio López de Santa Anna
Wikipedia
Jean-Marie de Villaret-Joyeuse
Wikipedia
Fort Desaix (Martinique)
Wikipedia
Martinique
Wikipedia
Generalissimo
Wikipedia
History of Mexico
Wikipedia
Battle of the Alamo
Wikipedia
Alamo Mission
Wikipedia
San Antonio
Wikipedia
Texas
Wikipedia
What Else Happened on February 23
Diocletian's soldiers arrived at the church in Nicomedia on February 23, 303, stripped the building, and burned every manuscript they could find. No bloodshed t…
Justinian ordered the Hagia Sophia built after rioters burned down the previous church during the Nika riots — the same riots where he nearly fled the city unti…
Khosrow II lost an empire because he refused to believe his generals. The Sasanian shah had ruled for 38 years, conquered Egypt and Syria, laid siege to Constan…
Wu Zetian ruled China for fifteen years as its only female emperor. She'd clawed her way from concubine to empress to sovereign, killing rivals, promoting schol…
Johannes Gutenberg produced the first copies of his 42-line Bible in his Mainz workshop around 1455, using a system of movable metal type, oil-based ink, and a …
Lautaro had been a Spanish stable boy. He'd fed their horses, watched their drills, learned how they fought. At Marihueñu, he used that knowledge. He let the Sp…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.