Texan Edge

Houston's Tough March East

Tweed Scott Season 1 Episode 172

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0:00 | 4:17

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Description 

In the muddy weeks following the fall of the Battle of the Alamo, Sam Houston made a decision that frustrated his own men—he kept moving east, away from the fight. 

To some, it looked like retreat. Maybe even cowardice. 

But Houston understood something they didn’t—yet. 

In today’s episode of The Texan Edge, we take a walk down that rain-soaked road and uncover a different kind of courage: the kind that chooses patience over pride, preparation over impulse, and long-term victory over short-term glory. 

Because sometimes, stepping back isn’t failure. 

It’s strategy.  

Show Notes 

  • Setting the Scene
    Early April 1836—muddy roads, worn-out soldiers, and rising frustration in the Texian ranks. 
  • The Controversial Move East
    Why Sam Houston refused to engage too early—and what he saw that others missed. 
  • Perception vs. Reality
    How retreat can look like weakness from the outside, even when it’s the smartest move on the board. 
  • Building an Army in Motion
    As Houston’s forces moved east, they gained strength—more men, better discipline, improved supply. 
  • The Leadership Burden
    Making the right call when the people around you don’t yet understand it. 
  • The Texan Edge Takeaway
    Not every step backward is a loss. Sometimes it’s the exact move that sets up your win. 
  • Today’s Question
    Where in your life might you be mistaking preparation for failure?

 

This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

Why Houston Keeps Retreating

The Hidden Work Of Leadership

Stepping Back To Prepare

Question To Chew On

Closing And Sign Off

SPEAKER_00

Imagine slogging down a muddy road in early April eighteen thirty-six, your boots are soaked, your shoulders ache from a heavy musket, and every mile feels like you're walking farther and farther away from the fight that you signed up for. Hi there, I'm Tweed Scott, and this is today's episode of The Texan Edge. In the weeks after the fall of the Alamo, General Sam Houston's army did something that a lot of young, hot-blooded Texians did not like at all. They kept backing up. East, away from San Antonio, away from the Mexican army, and away from the chance for a quick, glorious battle. To some of the men in the ranks, it looked like cowardice. They grumbled around campfires, wondering if their commander was ever going to turn and fight. But Houston saw something different when he looked at the big picture. He saw an army that was green, scattered, and outgunned. He also saw short supply lines, poor training, and a force that if it fought at the wrong time and on the wrong ground, it just might be wiped out in a single afternoon. He knew that if that happened, the dream of Texas independence just might die right there on the vine with them. So instead of rushing into a showdown, Sam Houston made a choice that takes a different kind of courage. He chose patience. He chose to trade pride for time. As the army moved east, new volunteers trickled in, men who had heard about the Alamo and Goliad and decided they couldn't sit it out on the sidelines anymore. Supply slowly improved. Discipline got a little tighter, and each day that passed, that army on the muddy road became a little more of a fighting force and a little less of a desperate mob. If you had been one of those soldiers, you just might not have seen any of that. You'd have just seen more miles, more rain, and more second guessing. You might have thought, why won't this man turn around and let us fight? That's the burden of leadership. Sometimes the people you're responsible for don't understand what you're doing until much later. If ever. And here's the edge for today. There are seasons in life when it feels like you're walking away from the very thing that you want. You're backing up, regrouping, taking time to learn or rebuild, or strengthen your position. From the outside, it can look a whole lot like retreat. Inside, it just might feel like failure. But you know, sometimes the wisest move that you can make is to step back, not because you're afraid of the fight, but because you respect it. You want to be ready when your moment finally does come. Sam Houston's march east in April of 1836 didn't look heroic. If anything, it looked slow, muddy, and frustrating. But that march is what turned a shaky group of volunteers into an army that would soon change the map. Now, here's something to chew on today, and that is, is there an area in your life where you need to stop apologizing for backing up and start recognizing that what you're actually doing is preparing for something even bigger? I enjoy bringing you this, the Texan Edge, each and every weekday from deep in the heart of Texas. I'm Tweed Scott, and we'll sharpen the edge again tomorrow. We'll see you then.

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