Nepumuceno Navarro
(ca. 1810 - after 1874)

by Randell Tarin


© 1996 Texas State Historical Association

Nepumuceno Navarro was a member of Juan N. Seguín's company of Tejanos who fought with him at San Jacinto.

In 1831, he was a private in the Béjar Presidio. Apparently disatisfied with military life, he deserted his post on two occasions. As a disiplinary measure, he was transferred to the Alamo de Parras Company stationed at Fort Tenoxtítlan, a remote garrison near the Brazos River. When he arrived there he found the conditions no better and in many ways worse than his previous post. This prompted a pattern of regular desertions from that location as well. The frequency of these occurances by the troops at Tenoxtílan and their small ranks usually resulted in Navarro being returned to duty with little more than a reprimand.

After the Alamo de Parras Company return to Béjar in 1832, the political turmoil that ensued prompted Navarro's permanent departure from the Mexican army. On February 15,1836 he enlisted in Juan N. Seguín's company of Tejanos. He served with Sequin at San Jacinto remaining in the army until July 5,1836.

By 1840 he married Maria de Jesús Uron and became the father of at least one child, María Teodora de Los Angles Navarro.

For his participation in the revolution, he received donation and bounty land grants and a pension. He was a member of the Texas Veteran's Association until his death in San Antonio on April 8, 1877.


Bibliography

Leal, John Ogden. Baptismals[sic] of the San Fernando Church, Book 3, 1788- 1824. trans. (San Antonio, TX: unpublished ms., c.1977).

________________, San Fernando Church Marriages, 1742-1857. trans. (San Antonio, TX: unpublished ms., c.1977).

Lozano, Ruben Rendon, Viva Tejanos, The Story of the Tejanos, the Mexican-born Patriots of the Texas Revolution. With new material added by Mary Ann Noonan Guerra.(San Antonio,TX: Alamo Press, c.1936,1985).

McLean, Malcolm D., Papers Concerning Robertson's Colony In Texas. (Arlington, TX: UTA Press, c.1977.) Volumes 4, 5 & 6.

______, Tenoxtitlán, Dream Capital of Texas, Southwestern Historical Quarterly, (Austin, TX: Texas State Historical Association, July 1966) Vol.LXX, No.1, pp.23-33.

Miller, Thomas Lloyd, Bounty and Donation Land Grants of Texas, 1835 - 1888. (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1967).

Tarín, Randell, Alamo de Parras Company, article for The New Handbook of Texas. (Austin, TX: Texas State Historical Association, 1989).

Texas State Archives, Lorenzo de Zavala State Library, Austin Texas (Hereafter cited as TSA).