X-Force has a line of Republic of Texas Army. They are a bit too well uniformed for the short period of the War of Independence. The series does supply the figures with three type of forage caps from the 1830s. There might be better for fighting Seminoles in Florida. I took one set of artillery and mixed them with X-Force's War of 1812 US Militia figures. The 1812 Militia figures look more 1830s that 1812 and I suspect they are meant for Alamo defenders as is the set of 1812 Frontiersmen.
I tried to make the two gun battery used at San Jacinto with the option of plugging the crews into defending the Alamo. The "Tin Sisters of Cincinnati" were, to the best of my knowledge, two small caliber iron guns on split trail carriages. I found that historians disagree on the material of the barrels, size of the guns, and what happened to them. Art, movies, and reenactors usually show small versions of 1860s era guns. I'll stand corrected if readers know their real appearance. Also, the side boxes could be removed but they have no back details and the platform the boxes rested on is molded onto the box instead of the carriage.
Funny that history records the names of the crew and their number. I have yet to see a model gun crew supplied with full crews. Britains metal and Speira can supply individual crew figures and it takes some knowledge of artillery drill to select the correct poses for a distinct part of the drill.
I had fun and maybe you can by making the figures individuals for this conflict rather than uniformed regulars.

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