October 7, 2025
Today in Texas History
On this day in 1758, Native Americans lured a Spanish troop under Diego Ortiz Parilla into a battle near a fortified Taovaya village on the Red River, near the site of a Spanish fort. The Spaniards fought a four-hour battle against their superior opponents, who included Comanches, Yaceales and Tawakonis.
As darkness fell, Ortiz Parilla led an orderly withdrawal, though he was forced to leave a pair of cannons on the treacherous sandbank where the Spaniards had found themselves pinned down. The expedition thus failed in its objective, which was to punish those responsible for the destruction of Santa Cruz de San Sabá Mission in March 1758.
Though Ortiz Parilla's detractors exaggerated the extent of the Spanish defeat, he was replaced as commandant of San Luis de las Amarillas Presidio by Felipe de Rábago y Terán, who held the fort on the San Saba River as a face-saving measure for almost another decade.
As darkness fell, Ortiz Parilla led an orderly withdrawal, though he was forced to leave a pair of cannons on the treacherous sandbank where the Spaniards had found themselves pinned down. The expedition thus failed in its objective, which was to punish those responsible for the destruction of Santa Cruz de San Sabá Mission in March 1758.
Though Ortiz Parilla's detractors exaggerated the extent of the Spanish defeat, he was replaced as commandant of San Luis de las Amarillas Presidio by Felipe de Rábago y Terán, who held the fort on the San Saba River as a face-saving measure for almost another decade.