
Texas Legation - London, UK
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T-Team!
N 51° 30.330 W 000° 08.289
30U E 698606 N 5709924
The Texas legation (a diplomatic representative office of lower rank than an embassy) was based here from 1836 - 1845. A very nice Texas historical marker can be found here explaining the details of the Texas legation.
Waymark Code: WM17ZN4
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 04/28/2023
Views: 5
The sign reads:
The Republic of Texas (with the Lone Star and laurel on top)
Texas Legation
In this building was the legation for the ministers from the Republic of Texas to the Court of St. James, 1842 - 1845.
Erected by the Anglo-Texan Society.
About the Texas Legation in London.
"A Texas Legation was maintained by the Republic of Texas in Washington, D.C., London, and Paris (1 Place Vendôme) from 1836 through 1845.
In a bid to protect itself from almost certain invasion by forces from neighboring Mexico, the government of the republic sought to foster international ties. It did this by also opening the Texas Legations in London and Paris. Their opening is believed by some academics to be less an attempt by Texas to enter the international stage as an independent country and more a maneuver to prompt officials in the United States to worry that an independent Texas might allow British and French soldiers to mass on the southern border of the U.S.
When Texas sought to join the United States in 1845, the British Empire supported keeping it independent. The British even offered to guarantee Texas's borders with both the United States and Mexico. Texas was a tactical ally of Britain acting as a counterweight to the United States. Nonetheless an independent Texas was probably inviable for financial reasons, and when the Republic became a state in 1845 the legations were shut down."
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