<P> One of the dead, Peter Sides, was an actual veteran of the American Revolution . Sides (originally Seitz) was about 62 when he marched off from his home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, with Magee and the other revolutionaries . A native of North Carolina of German ancestry, Seitz was a career soldier who fought in the first militia at Nashborough and in Logan County, Kentucky, before he and his family relocated to Baton Rouge in 1799 . Markers from the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Daughters of the Republic of Texas have been placed on the battle site in Sides' honor . </P> <P> Nearly all the names of the other 1,300 or so dead from the Republic Army of the North have been lost to history . </P> <P> Of a very interesting note is a young lieutenant by the name of Antonio López de Santa Anna fought in this bloody battle and followed his superiors' orders of taking no prisoners, heavily influencing how he would fight wars for the rest of his life, most infamously during the Texas Revolution at the Alamo and Goliad . </P> <P> The location of the Battle of Medina has not been archaeologically determined . There are three historical markers for the battle: </P>

What was a result of the spanish crackdown after the battle of medina