Ángel Navarro

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Ángel Navarro (1748–1808) was a leading early Spanish settler and patriarch of San Antonio, Texas. The Navarro family played a prominent role in the Mexican and Texas revolutions. He was born in Corsica in 1748 and settled in Spanish Texas in 1769. Navarro was the seventy-second alcalde (mayor) of San Antonio under Spanish Texas.[1]

He was the father of Texas statesman José Antonio Navarro, San Antonio alcalde José Ángel Navarro (elder), and the grandfather of Texas state legislator José Ángel Navarro III.

Ángel Navarro's daughter María Josefa Navarro married

Jim Bowie.[2]

According to census records, Navarro was an active participant in the slave trade.[3] One of Navarro's slaves was Maria Gertrudis de la Peña, an Indigenous woman who sued for her freedom in 1785 in San Fernando de Béxar (San Antonio) on the basis that she could not be enslaved because Indigenous peoples were granted some of the same rights as Spanish people in New Spain where slavery was also illegal. During her ownership by Ángel Navarro she was known as "Escalava" (slave) and accused Navarro and his family of "many ill-treatments". Upon purchasing her, Navarro promised la Peña that she would be freed within three years, but la Peña sought her freedom before that due to "the temper and style of the household." She petitioned Texas Governor Domingo Cabello y Robles and was granted freedom after the Governor ruled that Spanish law "greatly favors the freedom of Indians".[4]

References

  1. ^ "Mayors and Alcaldes". City of San Antonio. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  2. ISBN 978-1-60344-166-7. Archived from the original
    on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-02-24.
  3. ^ "Ángel Navarro: A Corsican's Journey to Béxar". Texas Historical Commission. Retrieved 2021-10-02.
  4. .

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Jose Antonio Saucedo
Alcalde of San Antonio, Texas

1807–1808
Succeeded by
Ignacio Perez