Couple of points worth noting:
Santos Benavides was a Colonel, and the highest ranking Hispanic in the Confederate Army. He was a certifiable badass. Just look at him. He's like Cheech meets JEB Stuart:
He was later a Texas State Senator, where he was an ally of Governor Lawrence Sullivan Ross. Even in old age, he looked like he could bench press two or three Reconstruction Republicans:
He has an elementary school in Laredo named after him, so he's not forgotten locally:
http://csbs.unitedisd.org/As for Laredo being royalist/different, bear in mind that Laredo was a thriving, successful town when most of Texas was a backwater. For this reason, when Texas declared independence from Mexico, Laredo promptly declared independence from Texas. Of course, they didn't like Mexico either (this is all about interests, because neither country (Texas or Mexico) was capable of governing Laredo, as distant as it was. However, with a then-navigable Rio Grande/Bravo, Laredo thought it could do better trying to stand alone).
This was known as the Republic of the Rio Grande, and it's why to this day, the Laredo Morning Times honors the
seven flags of Texas, including this one:
As for whether it's worth knowing, there is no history that actually happened, that is not worth knowing.
[This message has been edited by aalan94 (edited 3/24/2013 10:15p).]