Nemesio de Salcedo
Nemesio de Salcedo was a Spanish colonial official who served as the Commandant-General of the Provincias Internas, which at the time included much of northern Mexico and the Southwestern United States.
Early life and family
Born into a noble family with a great military tradition, Nemesio was son of Manuel Salcedo Varela and Agustina Serralta Salcedo. Due to his family's nobility and long tradition of loyal service to the Kings of Spain, a special royal dispensation was granted enabling him, whilst still a minor, to enter as a cadet in the Regiment of Royal Spanish Guards, by May 1, 1761. Salcedo was a native of Bilbao in Spain. He was the brother of Juan Manuel de Salcedo, the last governor of Spanish Louisiana, and the uncle of Manuel María de Salcedo, governor of Spanish Texas.Early military service
In 1766, he was promoted to captain and transferred to the Regiment of Navarre. He remained with this rank for thirteen years until in 1780 he was again promoted, to sergeant-major, and soon after he was transferred to America during the new war against England begun the previous year.In 1783 he was awarded the rank of graduate lieutenant-colonel, serving with success in the expedition of Algiers, as well as in the capture of Mobila. As a half-battalion commander of his regiment, he took part in the siege and capture of Pensacola, Florida. His military successes and noble position earned him a new promotion in 1790 to colonel in the Infantry Regiment of the Crown of New Spain. In 1794 he was commissioned as mayor of San Luis de Potosí and Zacatecas, where he created two provincial cavalry regiments. As a reward he was promoted again in 1795 to Brigadier and placed in charge of the Free Company of Volunteers of Catalonia and of the General Body of Invalids of New Spain.
Commandant of the Provincias Internas
Nemesio Salcedo's excellent achievements in the administrative and military policy of the viceroyalty, the strength of his command and directives, as well as the unanimous support of all his superiors, including the viceroys themselves, earned him the royal appointment as Commandant General of the Internal Provinces, succeeding Pedro Grimarest. One of Salcedo's major concerns was to bring order to the defensive measures that had to be taken in Texas, whose problem with the Indians, especially the Comanche, was becoming endemic. Previous military officials of Texas had welcomed American immigrants from anywhere, pleased to increase the sparse and widely-dispersed population of the province. However, the traditional Spanish policy of excluding foreigners and foreign trade was reinstated in Texas under Salcedo's command. In the 1780s and 1790s, when Spanish officials had invited Americans to Louisiana and Florida, private US citizens who ventured into Texas, and deeper into the Internal Provinces, were in danger of apprehension, long imprisonment and even death. Unlike some of his subordinates, Salcedo saw no reason to allow them to trade or settle elsewhere in the Internal Provinces. The foreigners, according to him "are not and will not be anything else than crows that take our eyes out". Unlike his predecessors in Louisiana, Salcedo would not maintain an open-door policy toward foreigners. Nevertheless in spite of Salcedo's unwelcoming policies, many American interlopers were not discouraged. In 1801, even the death of the infamous American contrabandista Philip Nolan, a veteran trafficker of horses stolen from Spanish Texas, and the apprehension of his men at the hands of Spanish troops, did not discourage the influx of Americans.The position of Commandant General included military responsibilities as well as direction of finance and postal functions in the territory. With little oversight due to the remoteness of the region, he was able to use his position to amass a significant private fortune. His administration occupied a tumultuous period of the region's history, including the Louisiana Purchase, which brought the borders of the United States to the edge of Texas, and the War of Mexican Independence.