Gonzales. When Retreat Is Courage
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Description
Not all courage looks like a last stand.
In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott takes you back to Gonzales in March of 1836—just after the fall of the Alamo—when the future of Texas looked uncertain and fear was spreading fast. As Susanna Dickinson arrives with devastating news, Sam Houston makes a decision that doesn’t look heroic at all: retreat, evacuate, and burn the town.
It wasn’t glory. It wasn’t dramatic. But it was necessary.
This is the story of the Runaway Scrape—where courage stopped looking like standing your ground and started looking like walking away to fight another day. And it carries a powerful lesson for today: sometimes the bravest move you can make is the one that feels like retreat.
Show Notes
- Setting the Scene – Gonzales, March 1836:
Mud, fear, and uncertainty as word spreads of Santa Anna’s advancing army. - The Messenger Arrives:
Susanna Dickinson brings the devastating news—the Alamo has fallen. - The Weight of Reality:
The distant fight becomes immediate. The danger is now personal. - Sam Houston’s Critical Decision:
Retreat east. Evacuate Gonzales. Burn anything useful to the enemy. - The Birth of the Runaway Scrape:
Families fleeing, homes abandoned, uncertainty at every step. - Redefining Courage:
Courage shifts from heroic last stands to strategic survival. - The Bigger Picture:
Gonzales had to burn so San Jacinto could happen. - Modern-Day Application:
Not every situation calls for standing your ground.
Some require the strength to walk away. - Texan Trait of the Day:
Strategic Courage — Knowing when to hold on… and when to move on. - Today’s Challenge:
Ask yourself:- Is this my Alamo?
- Or is this my Gonzales?
Identify one situation in your life where letting go might actually be the strongest move.
- Closing Thought:
Sometimes retreat isn’t failure—it’s preparation for a better victory.
This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.