Monterey Square is one of the 22 squares of Savannah, Georgia , United States. It is located in the southernmost row of the city's five rows of squares, on Bull Street and Wayne Street, and was laid out in 1847. It is south of Madison Square , west of Taylor Square , north of Forsyth Park and east of Chatham Square . The oldest building on the square is the Herman Kuhlman Duplex, at 22–24 West Taylor Street , which dates to 1851.
32-534: Monterey Square commemorates the Battle of Monterrey (1846), in which American forces under General Zachary Taylor captured the city of Monterrey during the Mexican–American War . (The correct spelling in reference to the square is "Monterey".) In the center of the square is an 1853 monument honoring General Casimir Pulaski . Monterey Square is the site of Mercer House , built by Hugh Mercer and later
64-629: A Northern army officer for most of his life. At various points he was the governor of Tabasco , Yucatán , and Nuevo León . He also served a short term as Secretary of National Defense under President Benito Juárez . Ampudia began his career in the Spanish army, and emigrated to Mexico following the Mexican War of Independence . In 1836, Ampudia served with the Mexican artillery at the Siege of
96-529: A defense similar to that at Monterrey, but the inhabitants of the city would have none of it. His failure to defend that city led to his removal by Santa Anna, and like his former superior, Arista, Ampudia found himself spending most of the rest of the war in administrative duties, though he was in command of portions of the Mexican artillery at the Battle of Buena Vista in 1847. Despite his controversial retreat at Monterrey, Ampudia remained popular in Mexican folklore as "the only man who could defeat Taylor." After
128-548: A single event. Similar acts of violence occurred in other surrounding occupied towns such as Marín (which was destroyed and set on fire), Apodaca as well as other towns between the Rio Grande and Monterrey. In most cases those attacks were perpetrated by the Texas Rangers. Several American volunteers condemned the attacks, and blamed the Texas Rangers for committing hate crimes on civilians allegedly for revenge of
160-567: A skilled defense of the city, Ampudia found American forces entered from the west and east. Trapped in the city plaza and bombarded by U.S. forces with howitzers, general Ampudia chose to request a flag of truce and retreat his battered army. His arrangement with Zachary Taylor allowed the Army of the North to keep its weapons but march as far south as possible and neglect offensive operations for three months. At Saltillo , Ampudia attempted to throw up
192-567: A two-month armistice and the Mexican forces being allowed to make an orderly evacuation in return for the surrender of the city. Following the Battle of Resaca de la Palma , Taylor crossed the Rio Grande on 18 May, while in early June, Mariano Arista turned over command of what remained of his army, 2,638 men, to Francisco Mejia, who led them to Monterrey. On 8 June, United States Secretary of War William L. Marcy ordered Taylor to continue command of operations in northern Mexico, suggested taking Monterrey, and defined his objective to "dispose
224-490: The Battle of Monterrey (September 21–24, 1846) during the Mexican–American War , General Pedro de Ampudia and the Mexican Army of the North was defeated by the Army of Occupation , a force of United States Regulars , Volunteers , and Texas Rangers under the command of General Zachary Taylor . The hard-fought urban combat led to heavy casualties on both sides. The battle ended with both sides negotiating
256-422: The Battle of Resaca de la Palma – a defeat for which Arista partially blamed him. During the long retreat south, Ampudia was appointed commander-in-chief of the Army of the North, in time to command Mexican forces at the Battle of Monterrey . Despite orders from Antonio López de Santa Anna that he was to retreat to Saltillo , Ampudia chose to stand at Monterrey instead and informed Santa Anna that: After
288-409: The 1st Infantry had taken the tannery and by noon, with Col. William B. Campbell 's 1st Tennessee and Mississippi Rifles, had taken Fort de La Teneria. No attacks or sorties occurred on 22 September. At 3 am on 23 September, Worth sent the Texas Rangers and the 4th and 8th Infantry, under Lt. Col. Thomas Childs , to take Fort Libertad on Independencia, which they did by daybreak. With
320-506: The Alamo and later saw heavy combat at the Battle of San Jacinto . During border skirmishes with Texas in the early 1840s, Ampudia commanded the 350-man garrison of Ciudad Mier which was attacked on December 26, 1842, by Texan militia. In a bloody two-day battle, over 600 Mexicans were killed but they eventually forced the enemy to surrender, earning the grudging respect of the Texans across
352-906: The Garcia-Conde Brigade (Gen. Jose Garcia Conde) (Aguascalientes and Querétaro Battalions, two squadrons of the 3d Line Cavalry, three guns (3-8 lbs)), a thousand men of the Azpeitia Brigade (Col. Florencio Azpeitia) (3d Line, two squadrons of the Jalisco lancers, two squadrons of the Guanajuato Cavalry Regiment, six guns (8 and 12 lbs.) and an ambulance), 1,060 men of the Simeon Ramirez Brigade (Acting Gen. Ramirez) (3d and 4th Light, three guns (1-8 lbs, 2-12 lbs) and 3 howitzers 7" (Capt. P. Gutierrez and Comdte. A. Nieto)) and an artillery unit,
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#1732775455561384-593: The Obispado (bishop's place) with the Activos of Mexico commanded by Lt. Col. Francisco de Berra and 3 guns and 1 howitzer, and atop Federacion was a redan (2 guns) and Fort Soldado. In reserve at la Plaza was the 3d Ligero under Lt. Col. Juan Castro and 1 gun – Lt. Agustín Espinosa. General Zachary Taylor decided to attack western Monterrey using William J. Worth 's Division in a giant north and west "hook" movement while simultaneously attacking with his main body from
416-550: The Querétaro Battalion, and 2 guns & 1 mountain howitzer – Lt (?) J. Espejo) El Fortín del Rincón del Diablo (Lt. Col. Calisto Bravo and 3 guns- Capt. Ignacio Joaquin del Arenal); La Purísima bridge and tete-de-pont (Activos of Aguascalientes under Col. Jose Ferro and the Querétaro under Comdte. José María Herrera 3 guns – Capt. P. Gutierez). West of the city atop Independencia stood Ft. Libertad ( 4 guns) and
448-581: The Saltillo road from Monterrey and sent Capt. Charles F. Smith with 300 infantry and Texans, plus Capt. Dixon Miles 's 7th Infantry and Persifor Smith 's 2nd Brigade to take Federacion and Fort Soldado, which they quickly did. In the meantime, Taylor launched a diversion against eastern Monterrey with Col. John Garland 's 1st and 3d Infantry plus Lt. Col. William H. Watson 's Maryland and District of Columbia Battalion, which quickly grew into an assault. By 8 am, Capt. Electus Backus's company of
480-466: The U.S. regulars new techniques for fighting in the city, techniques that they did not employ on 21 September, which led to staggering casualties. Armed with these new urban warfare skills, the U.S. Army, along with Texan, Mississippian, and Tennessee volunteers moved house to house, rooting out Mexican soldiers hiding on rooftops and inside the thick, adobe-walled houses of northern Mexico. By 2 pm, Taylor and Quitman were within two blocks east of
512-605: The armistice line by 30 September and San Luis Potosi by early November. The resulting armistice signed between Taylor and Ampudia had major effects upon the outcome of the war. Taylor was lambasted by some in the federal government, where President James K. Polk insisted that the U.S. Army had no authority to negotiate truces, only to "kill the enemy." In addition, his terms of armistice, which allowed Ampudia's forces to retreat with battle honors and all of their weapons, were seen as foolish and short-sighted by some U.S. observers. For his part, some have argued that Ampudia had begun
544-463: The atrocities committed by his men, but took no action to punish them. Army of the North 25°40′56″N 100°18′40″W / 25.6822°N 100.3111°W / 25.6822; -100.3111 Pedro de Ampudia Pedro Nolasco Martín José María de la Candelaria Francisco Javier Ampudia y Grimarest (January 30, 1805 – August 7, 1868) was born in Havana , Cuba, and served Mexico as
576-603: The border. Briefly appointed as commander-in-chief of the Mexican Army of the North in 1846, Ampudia was removed from command following the brutal public execution of a local guerrilla leader on his personal orders. As a conservador (a member of Mexico's conservative faction), Ampudia was quickly relegated to a staff position in favor of his liberal rival, General Mariano Arista . At the Battle of Palo Alto , Ampudia harshly criticized Arista for what he saw as "unacceptable tactical blunders" and continued his criticism at
608-460: The citadel. Taylor ordered the army to camp at Bosque de San Domingo while engineers under the command of Major Joseph K. Mansfield reconnoitered. Besides the citadel, Mexican strong points within the city included the "Black Fort" (Col. Jose Lopez Uraga, 3d & 4th Line and 9 guns – incl. "San Patricio" Battery); "the Tannery," La Teneria, (2d Ligero under Col. José M. Carrasco and part of
640-426: The defeat of Mexico . Many Mexican soldiers became disenchanted with the war. In a well-fortified, well-supplied position, an army of ten thousand Mexican soldiers had resisted the U.S. Army for three days, only to be forced into surrender by American urban battle tactics, heavy artillery and possibly further division in the Mexican ranks. The invading army occupied the city and remained until June 18, 1848. As soon as
672-507: The east. Worth started at 2 pm on 20 September with Col. John Coffee Hays 's Texas Mounted Riflemen Regiment screening the advance, but camped for the night three miles from the Saltillo road. By 6 am on 21 September, Worth continued his advance, repulsing a Jalisco cavalry charge by Col. Juan Nájera, killing the latter and an advance guard consisting of General Manuel Romero's brigade and Lt. Col. Mariano Moret's Guanajuato Regiment. By 8:15 am, Worth had severed
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#1732775455561704-510: The enemy to desire an end to the war." On 8 August, Taylor established the headquarters for his Army of Occupation in Camargo, Tamaulipas and then in Cerralvo on 9 September with 6,640 men. Taylor resumed the march to Monterrey on 11 September, reaching Marin on 15 September and departing on 18 September In early July, General Tomas Requena garrisoned Monterrey with 1,800 men, with
736-515: The five homes from 1 to 9 East Gordon Street in the southeastern residential block of the square. They were built between 1852 and 1853 by brothers John and Ephraim Scudder . Each building below is in one of the eight blocks around the square composed of four residential "tything" blocks and four civic ("trust") blocks, now known as the Oglethorpe Plan . They are listed with construction years where known. Battle of Monterrey In
768-562: The former Mexican campaigns in Texas. Before and after the US occupation, a large number of civilians fled the city. In response to the occupation several local guerrilla groups emerged such as those led by Antonio Canales Rosillo and José Urrea , the latter widely repudiated by the Texans because of his leadership participation in the campaigns of the Texas War ten years earlier. Taylor admitted
800-537: The help of James Duncan's battery, they soon took the Obispado and had control of western Monterrey. By then, the Mexicans had abandoned their outer defenses on the east side of Monterrey, concentrating in the Plaza Mayor, and John A. Quitman 's brigade held eastern Monterrey by 11 am. During the exchange of fire, a young Mexican woman named María Josefa Zozaya wandered into the crossfire to tend to
832-559: The home of antiques dealer and conservator Jim Williams . The house (which fills an entire block) and the square itself, were featured prominently in John Berendt 's 1994 true crime novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil . The square has been used as a setting for several motion pictures, including the 1997 film version of Berendt's novel and The Ordeal of Dr. Mudd , starring Dennis Weaver , in 1979. The Comer House , in
864-608: The largely Irish-American volunteers called San Patricios (or the Saint Patrick's Battalion ), in their first major engagement against U.S. forces. Taylor's army, with the Texas Division leading under the command of Major General and Texas Governor James Pinckney Henderson , reached the plain in front of Monterrey at 9 am on the morning of 19 September, when they were fired upon by Col. José López Uraga 's 4th Infantry guns, located at San Patricio Battery atop
896-538: The northeastern residential/tything block, is also featured in the movie. The square is home to Congregation Mickve Israel , which boasts one of the few Gothic-style synagogues in America, dating from 1878. All but one of the buildings surrounding the square are original to the square, the exception being the United Way Building at 428 Bull Street. Scudder's Row is a historic row house comprising
928-616: The occupation occurred, the U.S. Army committed several executions of civilians and several women were raped. Among the most memorable massacres is the one reported by the Houston Telegraph and Register on January 4, 1847 when Texas volunteers blamed the Mexicans for the death of several of their companions in Monterrey. Consequently, Americans began to shoot all civilians they encountered. The newspaper, citing military sources reported more than fifty civilians killed in Monterrey in
960-434: The plaza when Taylor ordered a withdrawal before nightfall. General Ampudia decided to negotiate on 24 September. Taylor negotiated a two-month armistice , along the line Rinconada Pass-Linares-San Fernando de Parras, in return for the surrender of the city. The Mexican Army was allowed to march from the city from 26 to 28 September, with their personal arms and one field battery of six guns. Ampudia had moved beyond
992-488: The remnants of Arista's army and additional forces from Mexico City arriving by the end of August such that the Mexican forces totaled 7,303 men. General Pedro de Ampudia received orders from Antonio López de Santa Anna to retreat further to the city of Saltillo , where Ampudia was to establish a defensive line, but Ampudia disagreed, sensing glory if he could stop Taylor's advance. Ampudia's forces included reinforcements from Mexico City totaling 3,140 men: 1,080 men of
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1024-493: The wounds of injured soldiers of both armies. Maria would survive the battle and go on to marry and have six children. Maria would die in 1860 at the age of 38. By 2 pm on 23 September, General Worth advanced into the city from the west, burrowing house to house, supported in the late afternoon by a mortar set up in Plaza de la Capella, and were within a block west of the plaza by 11 pm. The Texan volunteers taught
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