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  1. Emily D. West (c.1815–1891), also known as Emily Morgan, is a folk heroine whose legendary activities during the Texas Revolution have come to be identified with the song "The Yellow Rose of Texas". Biography. West was a free woman of color, of mixed race, or a "high yellow". She was born in New Haven, Connecticut. [1] .

  2. Learn about the legend of Emily D West, the "Yellow Rose of Texas," who allegedly seduced Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Find out the truth behind her story and her life as a free black woman in Texas.

  3. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesWest, Emily D. - TSHA

    Feb 1, 1996 · Emily D. West was a free Black woman who worked as a housekeeper for James Morgan in Texas in 1835. She was captured by Mexican troops in 1836 and may have been in Santa Anna's tent during the Battle of San Jacinto, but there is no evidence to support the myth of her influence on the outcome.

  4. Jun 8, 2015 · In the fall of 1835, a free African American woman from Connecticut named Emily D. West signed a one-year contract with Colonel James Morgan to work as a housekeeper in New Washington (later...

    • Sarah Pruitt
    • 3 min
  5. Because of her mixed heritage and light skin, Emily is often remembered as The Yellow Rose of Texas, and is immortalized in the folk song of the same name. Although she returned to New York in 1837, her legend still lives on in Texas history, although the facts and real events of the time will never be fully documented.

  6. Feb 3, 2011 · Emily, the Yellow Rose, confounds the boundaries between history, legend and myth as do few other figures in American folklore’. Her name may have been Emily D. West or Emily Morgan. She has become, in popular culture over the past 175 years, the “Yellow Rose of Texas.”

  7. Oct 13, 2007 · Emily D. West, a teenage orphaned free Negro woman in the northeastern United States, journeyed by boat to the wilderness of Texas in 1835. Colonel James Morgan, on whose plantation she worked as an indentured servant, established the little settlement of New Washington (later Morgan’s Point).

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