Casa Blanca and Juan
Seguin |
Photograph of Juan N. Seguin's home, Casa Blanca,
near Floresville, Texas, taken ca. 1930s. |
| About two miles out of
Floresville and about thirty miles from San Antonio, there
was a small house on a small ranch. The house had a name; it was called
"Casa
Blanca". Casa Blanca was the home of Juan Seguin and his mother and father. The house
was called "Casa Blanca" because it was made out of white adobe. In Spanish
"Casa Blanca" means "White House". Stephen F. Austin once
enjoyed the hospitality of the Seguin's adobe home. Juan Seguin's mother's name was Doņa Josefa; his father's name was Don Erasmo. Juan Seguin had many brothers and sisters. He had a horse named La Reina. In Spanish "La Reina" means "The Queen". Juan Seguin was a colonel at the Alamo; then he was the mayor of San Antonio. Juan N. Seguin was famous as an Alamo fighter. He was the kind of person who wanted to help the world be a safe place for children. He was also the kind of person who wanted to teach kids that they could do any thing they want to do. Juan Seguin was one of the Texians of Mexican heritage to fight in the Alamo. He did not die in the Alamo because he was also a messenger and had been sent to ask for reinforcements. He also helped Sam Houston move people from Gonzales to Washington-on- the-Brazos during the Runaway Scrape. Seguin helped capture Santa Anna at San Jacinto. (Santa Anna was caught taking a nap under a tree!) In addition, Seguin was a Texas lawmaker. Today there is a town near San Antonio called
Seguin. Much of my information and some photos are taken out of the book,
A Revolution Remembered.
|