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Battle of the Alamo

The Battle of the Alamo (February 23 – March 6, 1836) was a pivotal event and military engagement in the Texas Revolution. Following a 13-day siege, Mexican troops under President General Antonio López de Santa Anna reclaimed the Alamo Mission near San Antonio de Béxar (modern-day San Antonio, Texas, United States), killing most of the occupants. Santa Anna's refusal to take prisoners during the battle inspired many Texians and Tejanos to join the Texian Army. Motivated by a desire for revenge, as well as their written desire to preserve a border open to immigration and the importation and practice of slavery, the Texians defeated the Mexican Army at the Battle of San Jacinto, on April 21, 1836, ending the conquering of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas by the newly formed Republic of Texas.

Battle of the Alamo
Part of the Texas Revolution

The Alamo, as drawn in 1854
DateFebruary 23 – March 6, 1836
Location29°25′32″N 98°29′10″W / 29.42556°N 98.48611°W / 29.42556; -98.48611
Result Mexican victory
Belligerents
Mexican Republic Republic of Texas
Commanders and leaders
Antonio López de Santa Anna
Manuel Fernandez Castrillon
Martin Perfecto de Cos
William Travis 
James Bowie 
Davy Crockett 
William Carey 
George Kimble 
Almaron Dickinson 
Strength
~2,000-2,100[1] 185–260
Casualties and losses
400–600 killed and wounded[2][3][4] 182–257 killed[1]

Several months previously, Texians, some of whom were legal settlers, but primarily illegal immigrants from the United States, had killed or driven out all Mexican troops in Mexican Texas. About one hundred Texians were then garrisoned at the Alamo. The Texian force grew slightly with the arrival of reinforcements led by eventual Alamo co-commanders James Bowie and William B. Travis. On February 23, approximately 1,500 Mexicans marched into San Antonio de Béxar as the first step in a campaign to retake Texas. For the next 10 days, the two armies engaged in several skirmishes with minimal casualties. Aware that his garrison could not withstand an attack by such a large force, Travis wrote multiple letters pleading for more men and supplies from Texas and from the United States, but the Texians were reinforced by fewer than a hundred men, because the United States had a treaty with Mexico at the time, and supplying troops and weapons would have been an overt act of war against Mexico.

In the early morning hours of March 6, the Mexican Army advanced on the Alamo. After repelling two attacks, the Texians were unable to fend off a third attack. As Mexican soldiers scaled the walls, most of the Texian fighters withdrew into interior buildings. Those who were unable to reach these points were slain by the Mexican cavalry as they attempted to escape. Between five and seven Texians may have surrendered; if so, they were quickly executed. Several noncombatants were sent to Gonzales to spread word of the Texian defeat. The news sparked both a strong rush to join the Texian army and a panic, known as "The Runaway Scrape", in which the Texian army, most settlers, and the government of the new, self-proclaimed but officially unrecognized Republic of Texas fled eastward toward the U.S. ahead of the advancing Mexican Army.

Within Mexico, the battle has often been overshadowed by events from the Mexican–American War of 1846–1848. In 19th-century Texas, the Alamo complex gradually became known as a battle site rather than a former mission. The Texas Legislature purchased the land and buildings in the early part of the 20th century and designated the Alamo chapel as an official Texas State Shrine. The Alamo has been the subject of numerous non-fiction works beginning in 1843. Most Americans, however, are more familiar with the myths and legends spread by many of the movie and television adaptations,[5] including the 1950s Disney miniseries Davy Crockett and John Wayne's 1960 film The Alamo.

Background

In 1835, there was a drastic shift in the Mexican nation. The triumph of conservative forces in the elections unleashed a series of events that culminated on October 23, 1835, under a new constitution, after the repeal of the federalist Constitution of 1824. Las Siete Leyes (Spanish: [las ˈsjete ˈleʝes]), or Seven Laws, were a series of constitutional changes that fundamentally altered the organizational structure of Mexico, ending the first federal period and creating a unitary republic, officially the Mexican Republic (Spanish: República Mexicana).[6] Formalized under President Antonio López de Santa Anna on 15 December 1835, they were enacted in 1836. They were intended to centralize and strengthen the national government. The aim of the previous constitution was to create a political system that would emulate the success of the United States, but after a decade of political turmoil, economic stagnation, and threats and actual foreign invasion, conservatives concluded that a better path for Mexico was centralized power.

The new policies, the bans of slavery[7] and immigration chief among them, and the increased enforcement of laws and import tariffs, incited many immigrants to revolt.[8] The border region of Mexican Texas was largely populated by immigrants from the United States, some legal but most illegal. Some of these immigrants brought large numbers of slaves with them, so that by 1836, there were about 5,000 enslaved persons in a total non-native population estimated at 38,470.[9] These people were accustomed to a federalist government which made special exemptions from Mexican law just for them, and to extensive individual rights including the right to own slaves, and they were quite vocal in their displeasure at Mexico's law enforcement and shift towards centralism.[10] The centralized government ended local federal exemptions to the ban on slavery, which had been negotiated by Stephen Austin and others. Already suspicious after previous United States attempts to purchase Mexican Texas,[11] Mexican authorities blamed much of the Texian unrest on United States immigrants, most of whom had entered illegally and made little effort to adapt to the Mexican culture and who continued to hold people in slavery when slavery had been abolished in Mexico.[12]

In October, Texians engaged Mexican troops in the first official battle of the Texas Revolution.[13] Determined to quell the rebellion of immigrants, Santa Anna began assembling a large force, the Army of Operations in Texas, to restore order.[14] Most of his soldiers were raw recruits,[15] and many had been forcibly conscripted.[16]

 
The Fall of the Alamo, painted by Theodore Gentilz in 1844, depicts the Alamo complex from the south. The Low Barracks, the chapel, and the wooden palisade connecting them are in the foreground.

The Texians systematically defeated the Mexican troops already stationed in Texas. The last group of Mexican soldiers in the region—commanded by Santa Anna's brother-in-law, General Martín Perfecto de Cos—surrendered on December 9 following the siege of Béxar.[13] By this point, the Texian Army was dominated by very recent arrivals to the region, primarily illegal immigrants from the United States. Many Texas settlers, unprepared for a long campaign, had returned home.[17] Angered by what he perceived to be United States interference in Mexican affairs, Santa Anna spearheaded a resolution classifying foreign immigrants found fighting in Texas as pirates. The resolution effectively banned the taking of prisoners of war: in this period of time, captured pirates were executed immediately.[17][18] Santa Anna reiterated this message in a strongly worded letter to United States President Andrew Jackson. This letter was not widely distributed, and it is unlikely that most of the United States recruits serving in the Texian Army were aware that there would be no prisoners of war.[19]

When Mexican troops departed San Antonio de Béxar (now San Antonio, Texas, USA) Texian soldiers captured the Mexican garrison at the Alamo Mission, a former Spanish religious outpost which had been converted to a makeshift fort by the recently expelled Mexican Army.[20] Described by Santa Anna as an "irregular fortification hardly worthy of the name",[20] the Alamo had been designed to withstand an attack by native tribes, not an artillery-equipped army.[21] The complex sprawled across 3 acres (1.2 ha), providing almost 1,320 feet (400 m) of perimeter to defend.[22] An interior plaza was bordered on the east by the chapel and to the south by a one-story building known as the Low Barracks.[23] A wooden palisade stretched between these two buildings.[24] The two-story Long Barracks extended north from the chapel.[23] At the northern corner of the east wall stood a cattle pen and horse corral.[25] The walls surrounding the complex were at least 2.75 feet (0.84 m) thick and ranged from 9–12 ft (2.7–3.7 m) high.[26][Note 1]

To compensate for the lack of firing ports, Texian engineer Green B. Jameson constructed catwalks to allow defenders to fire over the walls; this method, however, left the rifleman's upper body exposed.[22] Mexican forces had left behind 19 cannons, which Jameson installed along the walls. A large 18-pounder had arrived in Texas with the New Orleans Greys. Jameson positioned this cannon in the southwest corner of the compound. He boasted to Texian Army commander Sam Houston that the Texians could "whip 10 to 1 with our artillery".[27]

Prelude to battle

The Texian garrison was woefully undermanned and underprovisioned, with fewer than 100 soldiers remaining by January 6, 1836.[28] Colonel James C. Neill, the acting Alamo commander, wrote to the provisional government: "If there has ever been a dollar here I have no knowledge of it".[28] Neill requested additional troops and supplies, stressing that the garrison was likely to be unable to withstand a siege lasting longer than four days.[28][29] The Texian government was in turmoil and unable to provide much assistance.[30][Note 2] Four different men claimed to have been given command over the entire army.[Note 3] On January 14, Neill approached one of them, Sam Houston, for assistance in gathering supplies, clothing, and ammunition.[30]

 
James Bowie arrived at the Alamo Mission on January 19 with orders to destroy the complex. He instead became the garrison's co-commander.

Houston could not spare the number of men necessary to mount a successful defense.[31] Instead, he sent Colonel James Bowie with 30 men to remove the artillery from the Alamo and destroy the complex.[30][Note 4] Bowie was unable to transport the artillery since the Alamo garrison lacked the necessary draft animals. Neill soon persuaded Bowie that the location held strategic importance.[32] In a letter to Governor Henry Smith, Bowie argued that "the salvation of Texas depends in great measure on keeping Béxar out of the hands of the enemy. It serves as the frontier picquet guard, and if it were in the possession of Santa Anna, there is no stronghold from which to repel him in his march towards the Sabine."[33][Note 5] The letter to Smith ended, "Colonel Neill and myself have come to the solemn resolution that we will rather die in these ditches than give it up to the enemy."[33] Bowie also wrote to the provisional government, asking for "men, money, rifles, and cannon powder".[33] Few reinforcements were authorized; cavalry officer William B. Travis arrived in Béxar with 30 men on February 3. Five days later, a small group of volunteers arrived, including the famous frontiersman and former U.S. Congressman David Crockett of Tennessee.[34]

 
General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna led Mexican troops into Texas in 1836.

On February 11, Neill left the Alamo, determined to recruit additional reinforcements and gather supplies.[35][36] He transferred command to Travis, the highest-ranking regular army officer in the garrison.[33] Volunteers comprised much of the garrison, and they were unwilling to accept Travis as their leader.[Note 6] The men instead elected Bowie, who had a reputation as a fierce fighter, as their commander. Bowie celebrated by getting very intoxicated and creating havoc in Béxar. To mitigate the resulting ill feelings, Bowie agreed to share command with Travis.[36][37][38]

As the Texians struggled to find men and supplies, Santa Anna continued to gather men at San Luis Potosi; by the end of 1835, his army numbered 6,019 soldiers.[39] Rather than advance along the coast, where supplies and reinforcements could be easily delivered by sea, Santa Anna ordered his army inland to Béxar, the political center of Texas and the site of Cos's defeat.[39] The army began its march north in late December.[39] Officers used the long journey to train the men. Many of the new recruits did not know how to aim their muskets, and many refused to fire from the shoulder because of the strong recoil.[40]

Progress was slow. There were not enough mules to transport all of the supplies, and many of the teamsters, all civilians, quit when their pay was delayed. The many soldaderas – women and children who followed the army – consumed much of the already scarce supplies. The soldiers were soon reduced to partial rations.[41] On February 12 they crossed the Rio Grande.[42][Note 7] Temperatures in Texas reached record lows, and by February 13 an estimated 15–16 inches (38–41 cm) of snow had fallen. Hypothermia, dysentery, and Comanche raiding parties took a heavy toll on the Mexican soldiers.[43]

On February 21, Santa Anna and his vanguard reached the banks of the Medina River, 25 miles (40 km) from Béxar.[44][45] Unaware of the Mexican Army's proximity, the majority of the Alamo garrison joined Béxar residents at a fiesta.[46][Note 8] After learning of the planned celebration, Santa Anna ordered General Joaquín Ramírez y Sesma to immediately seize the unprotected Alamo, but sudden rains halted that raid.[45]

Siege

Investment

In the early hours of February 23, residents began fleeing Béxar, fearing the Mexican army's imminent arrival. Although unconvinced by the reports, Travis stationed a soldier in the San Fernando church bell tower, the highest location in town, to watch for signs of an approaching force. Several hours later, Texian scouts reported seeing Mexican troops 1.5 miles (2.4 km) outside the town.[46] Few arrangements had been made for a potential siege. One group of Texians scrambled to herd cattle into the Alamo, while others scrounged for food in the recently abandoned houses.[47] Several members of the garrison who had been living in town brought their families with them when they reported to the Alamo. Among these were Almaron Dickinson, who brought his wife Susanna and their infant daughter Angelina; Bowie, who was accompanied by his deceased wife's cousins, Gertrudis Navarro and Juana Navarro Alsbury, and Alsbury's young son;[48] and Gregorio Esparza, whose family climbed through the window of the Alamo chapel after the Mexican army arrived.[49] Other members of the garrison failed to report for duty; most of the men working outside Béxar did not try to sneak past Mexican lines.[50]

I reply to you, according to the order of His Excellency, that the Mexican army cannot come to terms under any conditions with rebellious foreigners to whom there is no recourse left, if they wish to save their lives, than to place themselves immediately at the disposal of the Supreme Government from whom alone they may expect clemency after some considerations.

response of José Bartres to Texian requests for an honorable surrender, as quoted in the journal of Juan Almonte[51]

By late afternoon Béxar was occupied by about 1,500 Mexican soldiers.[52] When the Mexican troops raised a blood-red flag signifying no quarter, Travis responded with a blast from the Alamo's largest cannon.[53] Believing that Travis had acted hastily, Bowie sent Jameson to meet with Santa Anna.[51] Travis was angered that Bowie had acted unilaterally and sent his own representative, Captain Albert Martin.[54] Both emissaries met with Colonel Juan Almonte and José Bartres. According to Almonte, the Texians asked for an honorable surrender but were informed that any surrender must be unconditional.[51] On learning this, Bowie and Travis mutually agreed to fire the cannon again. [54][Note 9]

Skirmishes

The first night of the siege was relatively quiet.[55] Over the next few days, Mexican soldiers established artillery batteries, initially about 1,000 feet (300 m) from the south and east walls of the Alamo.[56] A third battery was positioned southeast of the fort. Each night the batteries inched closer to the Alamo walls.[57] During the first week of the siege more than 200 cannonballs landed in the Alamo plaza. At first, the Texians matched Mexican artillery fire, often reusing the Mexican cannonballs. [58][59] On February 26 Travis ordered the artillery to conserve powder and shot.[58]

Two notable events occurred on Wednesday, February 24. At some point that day, Bowie collapsed from illness,[60] leaving Travis in sole command of the garrison.[60] Late that afternoon, two Mexican scouts became the first fatalities of the siege.[61][Note 9] The following morning, 200–300 Mexican soldiers crossed the San Antonio River and took cover in abandoned shacks near the Alamo walls.[57][61][62] Several Texians ventured out to burn the huts[62] while Texians within the Alamo provided cover fire.[63][64] After a two-hour skirmish, the Mexican troops retreated to Béxar.[57][64] Six Mexican soldiers were killed and four others were wounded.[57] No Texians were injured.[65]

A blue norther blew in on February 25, dropping the temperature to 39 °F (4 °C).[58] Neither army was prepared for the cold temperatures.[66] Texian attempts to gather firewood were thwarted by Mexican troops.[58] On the evening of February 26 Colonel Juan Bringas engaged several Texians who were burning more huts.[67] According to historian J.R. Edmondson, one Texian was killed.[68] Four days later, Texians shot and killed Private First-Class Secundino Alvarez, a soldier from one of two battalions that Santa Anna had stationed on two sides of the Alamo. By March 1, the number of Mexican casualties was nine dead and four wounded, while the Texian garrison had lost only one man.

Reinforcements

I am determined to sustain myself as long as possible & die like a soldier who never forgets what is due to his own honor & that of his country. VICTORY OR DEATH.

excerpt from William B. Travis's letter "To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World".[69]

Santa Anna posted one company east of the Alamo, on the road to Gonzales.[57][70] Almonte and 800 dragoons were stationed along the road to Goliad.[71] Throughout the siege these towns had received multiple couriers, dispatched by Travis to plead for reinforcements and supplies.[53][72] The most famous of his missives, written February 24, was addressed To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World. According to historian Mary Deborah Petite, the letter is "considered by many as one of the masterpieces of American patriotism."[73] Copies of the letter were distributed across Texas,[74] and eventually reprinted throughout the United States and much of Europe.[61] At the end of the first day of the siege, Santa Anna's troops were reinforced by 600 men under General Joaquin Ramirez y Sesma, bringing the Mexican army up to more than 2,000 men.

As news of the siege spread throughout Texas, potential reinforcements gathered in Gonzales. They hoped to rendezvous with Colonel James Fannin, who was expected to arrive from Goliad with his garrison.[75] On February 26, after days of indecision, Fannin ordered 320 men, four cannons, and several supply wagons to march towards the Alamo, 90 miles (140 km) away. This group traveled less than 1.0 mile (1.6 km) before turning back. [76][77] Fannin blamed the retreat on his officers; the officers and enlisted men accused Fannin of aborting the mission.[78]

 
William B. Travis became sole Texian commander at the Alamo on February 24.

Texians gathered in Gonzales were unaware of Fannin's return to Goliad, and most continued to wait. Impatient with the delay, on February 27 Travis ordered Samuel G. Bastian to go to Gonzales "to hurry up reinforcements".[79] According to historian Thomas Ricks Lindley, Bastian encountered the Gonzales Ranging Company led by Lieutenant George C. Kimble and Travis' courier to Gonzales, Albert Martin, who had tired of waiting for Fannin. A Mexican patrol attacked, driving off four of the men including Bastian.[Note 10][80] In the darkness, the Texians fired on the remaining 32 men, whom they assumed were Mexican soldiers. One man was wounded, and his English curses convinced the occupiers to open the gates.[Note 11][81]

On March 3, the Texians watched from the walls as approximately 1,000 Mexicans marched into Béxar. The Mexican army celebrated loudly throughout the afternoon, both in honor of their reinforcements and at the news that troops under General José de Urrea had soundly defeated Texian Colonel Frank W. Johnson at the Battle of San Patricio on February 27.[82] Most of the Texians in the Alamo believed that Sesma had been leading the Mexican forces during the siege, and they mistakenly attributed the celebration to the arrival of Santa Anna. The reinforcements brought the number of Mexican soldiers in Béxar to almost 3,100.[83]

The arrival of the Mexican reinforcements prompted Travis to send three men, including Davy Crockett, to find Fannin's force, which he still believed to be en route.[84] The scouts discovered a large group of Texians camped 20 miles (32 km) from the Alamo.[85] Lindley's research indicates that up to 50 of these men had come from Goliad after Fannin's aborted rescue mission. The others had left Gonzales several days earlier.[86] Just before daylight on March 4, part of the Texian force broke through Mexican lines and entered the Alamo. Mexican soldiers drove a second group across the prairie.[85][Note 12]

Assault preparations

On March 4, the day after his reinforcements arrived, Santa Anna proposed an assault on the Alamo. Many of his senior officers recommended that they wait for two 12-pounder cannons anticipated to arrive on March 7.[87] That evening, a local woman, likely Bowie's cousin-in-law Juana Navarro Alsbury, approached Santa Anna to negotiate a surrender for the Alamo occupiers.[88] According to many historians, this visit probably increased Santa Anna's impatience; as historian Timothy Todish noted, "there would have been little glory in a bloodless victory".[89] The following morning, Santa Anna announced to his staff that the assault would take place early on March 6. Santa Anna arranged for troops from Béxar to be excused from the front lines so that they would not be forced to fight their own families.[89]

Legend holds that at some point on March 5, Travis gathered his men and explained that an attack was imminent, and that they were greatly outnumbered by the Mexican Army. He supposedly drew a line in the ground and asked those willing to die for the Texian cause to cross and stand alongside him; only one man (Moses Rose) was said to have declined.[90] Most scholars disregard this tale as there is no primary source evidence to support it (the story only surfaced decades after the battle in a third-hand account).[91] Travis apparently did, at some point prior to the final assault, assemble the men for a conference to inform them of the dire situation and giving them the chance to either escape or stay and die for the cause. Susanna Dickinson recalled Travis announcing that any men who wished to escape should let it be known and step out of ranks. [92]

The last Texian verified to have left the Alamo was James Allen, a courier who carried personal messages from Travis and several of the other men on March 5.[93]

Final assault

Exterior fighting

Initial Mexican troop deployment[94][95]
Commander Troops Equipment
Cos 350 10 ladders
2 crowbars
2 axes
Duque/Castrillón 400 10 ladders
Romero 400 6 ladders
Morales 125 2 ladders
Sesma 500 cavalry
Santa Anna 400 reserves

At 10 p.m. on March 5, the Mexican artillery ceased their bombardment. As Santa Anna had anticipated, the exhausted Texians soon fell into the first uninterrupted sleep many of them had since the siege began.[96] Just after midnight, more than 2,000 Mexican soldiers began preparing for the final assault.[97] Fewer than 1,800 were divided into four columns, commanded by Cos, Colonel Francisco Duque, Colonel José María Romero and Colonel Juan Morales.[94][95] Veterans were positioned on the outside of the columns to better control the new recruits and conscripts in the middle.[98] As a precaution, 500 Mexican cavalry were positioned around the Alamo to prevent the escape of either Texian or Mexican soldiers. Santa Anna remained in camp with the 400 reserves.[95][99] Despite the bitter cold, the soldiers were ordered not to wear overcoats which could impede their movements.[95] Clouds concealed the moon and thus the movements of the soldiers.[100]

At 5:30 a.m. troops silently advanced. Cos and his men approached the northwest corner of the Alamo,[98] while Duque led his men from the northwest towards a repaired breach in the Alamo's north wall.[101] The column commanded by Romero marched towards the east wall, and Morales's column aimed for the low parapet by the chapel.[101]

The three Texian sentinels stationed outside the walls were killed in their sleep,[102][103] allowing Mexican soldiers to approach undetected within musket range of the walls.[102] At this point, the silence was broken by shouts of "¡Viva Santa Anna!" and music from the buglers.[97] The noise woke the Texians.[103] Most of the noncombatants gathered in the church sacristy for safety.[104] Travis rushed to his post yelling, "Come on boys, the Mexicans are upon us and we'll give them hell!"[102] and, as he passed a group of Tejanos, "¡No rendirse, muchachos!" ("Don't surrender, boys").[96]

 
This plan of the Alamo was created by José Juan Sánchez Navarro in 1836. Places marked R and V denote Mexican cannon; position S indicates Cos's forces.

In the initial moments of the assault, Mexican troops were at a disadvantage. Their column formation allowed only the front rows of soldiers to fire safely.[105] Unaware of the dangers, the untrained recruits in the ranks "blindly fir[ed] their guns", injuring or killing the troops in front of them.[106] The tight concentration of troops also offered an excellent target for the Texian artillery.[105] Lacking canister shot, Texians filled their cannon with any metal they could find, including door hinges, nails, and chopped-up horseshoes, essentially turning the cannon into giant shotguns.[102] According to the diary of José Enrique de la Peña, "a single cannon volley did away with half the company of chasseurs from Toluca".[107] Duque fell from his horse after sustaining a wound in his thigh and was almost trampled by his own men. General Manuel Castrillón quickly assumed command of Duque's column.[25]

Although some in the front of the Mexican ranks wavered, soldiers in the rear pushed them on.[105] As the troops massed against the walls, Texians were forced to lean over the walls to shoot, leaving them exposed to Mexican fire. Travis became one of the first occupiers to die, shot while firing his shotgun into the soldiers below him, though one source says that he drew his sword and stabbed a Mexican officer who had stormed the wall before succumbing to his injury.[105] Few of the Mexican ladders reached the walls.[108] The few soldiers who were able to climb the ladders were quickly killed or beaten back. As the Texians discharged their previously loaded rifles, they found it increasingly difficult to reload while attempting to keep Mexican soldiers from scaling the walls.[25]

Mexican soldiers withdrew and regrouped, but their second attack was repulsed. Fifteen minutes into the battle, they attacked a third time.[25][105] During the third strike, Romero's column, aiming for the east wall, was exposed to cannon fire and shifted to the north, mingling with the second column.[25] Cos' column, under fire from Texians on the west wall, also veered north.[109] When Santa Anna saw that the bulk of his army was massed against the north wall, he feared a rout; "panicked", he sent the reserves into the same area.[110] The Mexican soldiers closest to the north wall realized that the makeshift wall contained many gaps and toeholds. One of the first to scale the 12-foot (3.7 m) wall was General Juan Amador; at his challenge, his men began swarming up the wall. Amador opened the postern in the north wall, allowing Mexican soldiers to pour into the complex.[108] Others climbed through gun ports in the west wall, which had few occupiers.[111] As the Texian occupiers abandoned the north wall and the northern end of the west wall,[108][111] Texian gunners at the south end of the mission turned their cannon towards the north and fired into the advancing Mexican soldiers. This left the south end of the mission unprotected; within minutes Mexican soldiers had climbed the walls and killed the gunners, gaining control of the Alamo's 18-pounder cannon.[100] By this time Romero's men had taken the east wall of the compound and were pouring in through the cattle pen.[111]

Interior fighting

Great God, Sue, the Mexicans are inside our walls! If they spare you, save my child

Last words of Texian defender Almaron Dickinson to his wife Susanna as he prepared to defend the chapel.[109]

As previously planned, most of the Texians fell back to the barracks and the chapel. Holes had been carved in the walls to allow the Texians to fire.[109] Unable to reach the barracks, Texians stationed along the west wall headed west for the San Antonio River. When the cavalry charged, the Texians took cover and began firing from a ditch. Sesma was forced to send reinforcements, and the Texians were eventually killed. Sesma reported that this skirmish involved 50 Texians, but Edmondson believes that number was inflated.[112]

The occupiers in the cattle pen retreated into the horse corral. After discharging their weapons, the small band of Texians scrambled over the low wall, circled behind the church and raced on foot for the east prairie, which appeared empty.[109][111][113] As the Mexican cavalry advanced on the group, Almaron Dickinson and his artillery crew turned a cannon around and fired into the cavalry, probably inflicting casualties. Nevertheless, all of the escaping Texians were killed.[113]

 
The Fall of the Alamo (1903) by Robert Jenkins Onderdonk, depicts Davy Crockett wielding his rifle as a club against Mexican troops who have breached the walls of the mission.

The last Texian group to remain in the open were Crockett and his men, defending the low wall in front of the church. Unable to reload, they used their rifles as clubs and fought with knives. After a volley of fire and a wave of Mexican bayonets, the few remaining Texians in this group fell back towards the church.[112] The Mexican army now controlled all of the outer walls and the interior of the Alamo compound except for the church and rooms along the east and west walls.[114] Mexican soldiers turned their attention to a Texian flag waving from the roof of one building. Four Mexicans were killed before the flag of Mexico was raised in that location.[Note 13][115]

For the next hour, the Mexican army worked to secure complete control of the Alamo.[116] Many of the remaining occupiers were ensconced in the fortified barracks rooms.[117] In the confusion, the Texians had neglected to spike their cannon before retreating. Mexican soldiers turned the cannon towards the barracks.[108] As each door was blown off, Mexican soldiers would fire a volley of muskets into the dark room, then charge in for hand-to-hand combat.[117]

 
A knife purportedly carried by Davy Crockett during the Battle of the Alamo

Too sick to participate in the battle, Bowie likely died in bed. Eyewitnesses to the battle gave conflicting accounts of his death. Some witnesses maintained that they saw several Mexican soldiers enter Bowie's room, bayonet him, and carry him alive from the room.[118] Others claimed that Bowie shot himself or was killed by soldiers while too weak to lift his head.[119] According to historian Wallace Chariton, the "most popular, and probably the most accurate"[120] version is that Bowie died on his cot, "back braced against the wall, and using his pistols and his famous knife."[119]

The last of the Texians to die were the 11 men manning the two 12-pounder cannons in the chapel.[115][121] A shot from the 18-pounder cannon destroyed the barricades at the front of the church, and Mexican soldiers entered the building after firing an initial musket volley. Dickinson's crew fired their cannon from the apse into the Mexican soldiers at the door. With no time to reload, the Texians, including Dickinson, Gregorio Esparza and James Bonham, grabbed rifles and fired before being bayoneted to death.[122] Texian Robert Evans, the master of ordnance, had been tasked with keeping the gunpowder from falling into Mexican hands. Wounded, he crawled towards the powder magazine but was killed by a musket ball with his torch only inches from the powder.[122] Had he succeeded, the blast would have destroyed the church and killed the women and children hiding in the sacristy.[123]

As soldiers approached the sacristy, one of the young sons of occupier Anthony Wolf stood to pull a blanket over his shoulders.[122] In the dark, Mexican soldiers mistook him for an adult and killed him.[Note 14][124] Possibly the last Texian to die in battle was Jacob Walker,[125] who, wounded, ran to a corner and was bayoneted in front of Susanna Dickinson.[126] Another Texian, Brigido Guerrero, also sought refuge in the sacristy.[122] Guerrero, who had deserted from the Mexican Army in December 1835, was spared after convincing the soldiers he was a Texian prisoner.[124][127]

By 6:30 a.m. the battle for the Alamo was over.[126] Mexican soldiers inspected each corpse, bayoneting any body that moved.[124] Even with all of the Texians dead, Mexican soldiers continued to shoot, some killing each other in the confusion. Mexican generals were unable to stop the bloodlust and appealed to Santa Anna for help. Although the general showed himself, the violence continued and the buglers were finally ordered to sound a retreat. For 15 minutes after that, soldiers continued to fire into dead bodies.[128]

Aftermath

Casualties

 
Detailed news of the battle sometimes took weeks to reach publication in the East, such as these April 9 columns in a Georgia newspaper.
 
A sarcophagus in the San Fernando Cathedral that is purported to hold the ashes of the Alamo occupiers. Historians believe it is more likely that the ashes were buried near the Alamo.

According to many accounts of the battle, between five and seven Texians surrendered.[Note 15][129][130] Incensed that his orders had been ignored, Santa Anna demanded the immediate execution of the survivors.[131] Weeks after the battle, stories circulated that Crockett was among those who surrendered.[130] Ben, a former United States slave who cooked for one of Santa Anna's officers, maintained that Crockett's body was found surrounded by "no less than sixteen Mexican corpses".[132] Historians disagree on which version of Crockett's death is accurate.[Note 16][133]

Santa Anna reportedly told Captain Fernando Urizza that the battle "was but a small affair".[134] Another officer then remarked that "with another such victory as this, we'll go to the devil".[Note 17][2] In his initial report Santa Anna claimed that 600 Texians had been killed, with only 70 Mexican soldiers killed and 300 wounded.[135] His secretary, Ramón Martínez Caro, reported 400 killed.[136] Other estimates of the number of Mexican soldiers killed ranged from 60 to 200, with an additional 250–300 wounded.[2] Some people, historians, and survivors such as Susanna Dickinson have estimated that over 1,000-1,600 Mexican soldiers were killed and wounded, but it is most likely that total casualties were less than 600. Texian Dr. J. H. Barnard who tended the Mexican soldiers reported 300-400 dead and 200-300 wounded.[137] Most Alamo historians place the number of Mexican casualties at 400–600.[2][3][4] This would represent about one quarter of the over 2,000 Mexican soldiers involved in the final assault, which Todish remarks is "a tremendous casualty rate by any standards".[2] Most eyewitnesses counted between 182 and 257 Texians killed.[138] Some historians believe that at least one Texian, Henry Warnell, successfully escaped from the battle. Warnell died several months later of wounds incurred either during the final battle or during his escape as a courier.[139][140]

Mexican soldiers were buried in the local cemetery, Campo Santo.[Note 18][135] Shortly after the battle, Colonel José Juan Sanchez Navarro proposed that a monument should be erected to the fallen Mexican soldiers. Cos rejected the idea.[141]

The Texian bodies were stacked and burned.[Note 19][135] The only exception was the body of Gregorio Esparza. His brother Francisco, an officer in Santa Anna's army, received permission to give Gregorio a proper burial.[135] The ashes were left where they fell until February 1837, when Juan Seguín returned to Béxar to examine the remains. A simple coffin inscribed with the names Travis, Crockett, and Bowie was filled with ashes from the funeral pyres.[142] According to a March 28, 1837, article in the Telegraph and Texas Register,[143] Seguín buried the coffin under a peach tree grove. The spot was not marked and cannot now be identified.[144] Seguín later claimed that he had placed the coffin in front of the altar at the San Fernando Cathedral. In July 1936 a coffin was discovered buried in that location, but according to historian Wallace Chariton, it is unlikely to actually contain the remains of the Alamo defenders. Fragments of uniforms were found in the coffin and the Texian soldiers who fought at the Alamo were known not to wear uniforms.[143]

Texian survivors

 
Susanna Dickinson survived the Battle of the Alamo. Santa Anna sent her to spread word of the Texian defeat to the Texas colonists.

In an attempt to convince other slaves in Texas to support the Mexican government over the Texian rebellion, Santa Anna spared Travis' slave, Joe.[145] The day after the battle, he interviewed each noncombatant individually. Impressed with Susanna Dickinson, Santa Anna offered to adopt her infant daughter Angelina and have the child educated in Mexico City. Dickinson refused the offer, which was not extended to Juana Navarro Alsbury although her son was of similar age.[2] Each woman was given a blanket and two silver pesos.[146] Alsbury and the other Tejano women were allowed to return to their homes in Béxar; Dickinson, her daughter and Joe were sent to Gonzales, escorted by Ben. They were encouraged to relate the events of the battle, and to inform the remainder of the Texian forces that Santa Anna's army was unbeatable.[2]

Impact on revolution

During the siege, newly elected delegates from across Texas met at the Convention of 1836. On March 2, the delegates declared independence, forming the Republic of Texas. Four days later, the delegates at the convention received a dispatch Travis had written March 3 warning of his dire situation. Unaware that the Alamo had fallen, Robert Potter called for the convention to adjourn and march immediately to relieve the Alamo. Sam Houston convinced the delegates to remain in Washington-on-the-Brazos to develop a constitution. After being appointed sole commander of all Texian troops, Houston journeyed to Gonzales to take command of the 400 volunteers who were still waiting for Fannin to lead them to the Alamo.[147]

Within hours of Houston's arrival on March 11, Andres Barcenas and Anselmo Bergaras arrived with news that the Alamo had fallen and all Texians were slain.[148] Hoping to halt a panic, Houston arrested the men as enemy spies. They were released hours later when Susanna Dickinson and Joe reached Gonzales and confirmed the report.[149] Realizing that the Mexican army would soon advance towards the Texian settlements, Houston advised all civilians in the area to evacuate and ordered his new army to retreat.[150] This sparked a mass exodus, known as the Runaway Scrape, and most Texians, including members of the new government, fled east.[151]

Despite their losses at the Alamo, the Mexican army in Texas still outnumbered the Texian army by almost six to one.[152] Santa Anna assumed that knowledge of the disparity in troop numbers and the fate of the Texian soldiers at the Alamo would quell the resistance,[153] and that Texian soldiers would quickly leave the territory.[154] News of the Alamo's fall had the opposite effect, and men flocked to join Houston's army.[153] The New York Post editorialized that "had [Santa Anna] treated the vanquished with moderation and generosity, it would have been difficult if not impossible to awaken that general sympathy for the people of Texas which now impels so many adventurous and ardent spirits to throng to the aid of their brethren".[155]

On the afternoon of April 21 the Texian army attacked Santa Anna's camp near Lynchburg Ferry. The Mexican army was taken by surprise, and the Battle of San Jacinto was essentially over after 18 minutes. During the fighting, many of the Texian soldiers repeatedly cried "Remember the Alamo!" as they slaughtered fleeing Mexican troops.[156] Santa Anna was captured the following day, and reportedly told Houston: "That man may consider himself born to no common destiny who has conquered the Napoleon of the West. And now it remains for him to be generous to the vanquished." Houston replied, "You should have remembered that at the Alamo". Santa Anna's life was spared, and he was forced to order his troops out of Texas, ending Mexican control of the province and bestowing some legitimacy on the new republic.[157]

Legacy

 
The restored Spanish colonial chapel of the Alamo as it appears today.
 
Cenotaph memorial of the Alamo defenders
 
Closeup of the Alamo defenders
 
Closeup of the Alamo defenders

Following the battle, Santa Anna was alternately viewed as a national hero or a pariah. Mexican perceptions of the battle often mirrored the prevailing viewpoint.[158] Santa Anna had been disgraced following his capture at the Battle of San Jacinto, and many Mexican accounts of the battle were written by men who had been, or had become, his outspoken critics. Petite and many other historians believe that some of the stories, such as the execution of Crockett, may have been invented to further discredit Santa Anna.[133] In Mexican history, the Texas campaign, including the Battle of the Alamo, was soon overshadowed by the Mexican–American War of 1846–1848.[158]

In San Antonio de Béxar, the largely Tejano population viewed the Alamo complex as more than just a battle site; it represented decades of assistance—as a mission, a hospital, or a military post.[159] As the English-speaking population increased, the complex became best known for the battle. Focus has centered primarily on the Texian occupiers, with little emphasis given to the role of the Tejano soldiers who served in the Texian army or the actions of the Mexican army.[160] In the early 20th century the Texas Legislature purchased the property and appointed the Daughters of the Republic of Texas as permanent caretakers[161] of what is now an official state shrine.[162] In front of the church, in the center of Alamo Plaza, stands a cenotaph, designed by Pompeo Coppini, which commemorates the Texians and Tejanos who died during the battle.[163] According to Bill Groneman's Battlefields of Texas, the Alamo has become "the most popular tourist site in Texas".[162]

The first English-language histories of the battle were written and published by Texas Ranger and amateur historian John Henry Brown.[164] The next major treatment of the battle was Reuben Potter's The Fall of the Alamo, published in The Magazine of American History in 1878. Potter based his work on interviews with many of the Mexican survivors of the battle.[164][165] The first full-length, non-fiction book covering the battle, John Myers Myers' The Alamo, was published in 1948.[166] In the decades since, the battle has featured prominently in many non-fiction works.

According to Todish et al., "there can be little doubt that most Americans have probably formed many of their opinions on what occurred at the Alamo not from books, but from the various movies made about the battle."[167] The first film version of the battle appeared in 1911, when Gaston Méliès directed The Immortal Alamo.[5] The battle became more widely known after it was featured in the 1950s Disney miniseries Davy Crockett, which was largely based on myth.[5] Within several years, John Wayne directed and starred in one of the best-known, but questionably accurate, film versions, 1960's The Alamo.[168][Note 20] Another film also called The Alamo was released in 2004. CNN described it as possibly "the most character-driven of all the movies made on the subject". It is also considered more faithful to the actual events than other movies.[169]

Several songwriters have been inspired by the Battle of the Alamo. Tennessee Ernie Ford's "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" spent 16 weeks on the country music charts, peaking at No. 4 in 1955.[170] Marty Robbins recorded a version of the song "The Ballad of the Alamo" in 1960 which spent 13 weeks on the pop charts, peaking at No. 34.[171] Jane Bowers' song "Remember the Alamo" has been recorded by artists including Johnny Cash,[172] Willie Nelson,[173] and Donovan.[174] British hard rock band Babe Ruth's 1972 song "The Mexican" pictures the conflict through the eyes of a Mexican soldier. Singer-songwriter Phil Collins collected hundreds of items related to the battle, narrated a light and sound show about the Alamo, and has spoken at related events.[175] In 2014 Collins donated his entire collection to the Alamo via the State of Texas.[176][177]

The U.S. Postal Service issued two postage stamps in commemoration of Texas Statehood[178] and the Battle of Alamo.[179] The "Remember the Alamo" battle cry, as well as the Alamo Mission itself appear on the current version of the reverse side of the seal of Texas.

The battle also featured in episode 13 of The Time Tunnel, "The Alamo", first aired in 1966, and episode 5 of season one of the TV series Timeless, aired 2016.

As of 2023, the Alamo Trust (which operates the site) seeks to expand the property to build an Alamo museum.[180] To do so, it would have to use eminent domain to seize a property containing an Alamo-themed bar called Moses Rose's Hideout (named after an Alamo deserter) that has operated for 12 years (circ. 2023).[180] The Alamo Trust claims that if the bar owner continues to refuse to sell his property, it will put the $400 million property at stake.[181] Conversely, the bar owner says that he wishes to participate in the economic success of adding an Alamo museum and that there is a certain unjust irony of seizing his property to expand the Alamo.[180]

 
First stamp to commemorate battle was issued in 1936, the 100th anniversary of the battle, depicting Sam Houston and Stephen Austin.
 
Second stamp, issued in 1956, depicts the facade of the Alamo mission.
 
The reverse of the current seal of Texas.


See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The plaza covered an area 75 feet (23 m) long and 62 feet (19 m) wide. The Low Barracks was 114 feet (35 m) long, and the Long Barracks was 186 feet (57 m) long and 18 feet (5.5 m) wide. (Myers (1948), pp. 180–181.)
  2. ^ A week after Neill sent his letter, the Texian provisional legislature impeached the governor, who in turn disbanded the legislature. The interim constitution had given neither party the authority to take these actions, and no one in Texas was entirely sure who was in charge. (Todish et al. (1998), pp. 30–31.)
  3. ^ Sam Houston, James Fannin, Frank W. Johnson, and Dr. James Grant. (Todish et al. (1998), p. 30.)
  4. ^ Houston's orders to Bowie were vague, and historians disagree on their intent. One interpretation is that Bowie's orders were to destroy only the barricades that the Mexican Army had erected around San Antonio de Béxar, and that he should then wait in the Alamo until Governor Henry Smith decided whether the mission should be demolished and the artillery removed. Smith never gave orders on this issue. (Edmondson (2000), p. 252.)
  5. ^ The Sabine River marked the eastern border of Mexican Texas.
  6. ^ Volunteers in the Texian Army asserted the right to choose their own leaders, and most of them were unwilling to serve under officers of the regular army.
  7. ^ Although the Rio Grande now marks the border between Texas and Mexico, in this era the Nueces River, several hundred miles north, was considered the southern boundary of Mexican Texas.
  8. ^ The fiesta was in celebration of the birthday of George Washington, the first president of the United States.
  9. ^ a b Although Santa Anna later reported that Texian cannon fire on February 23 killed two Mexican soldiers and wounded eight others, no other Mexican officer reported fatalities from that day. (Todish et al. (1998), p. 40., Edmondson (2000), p. 304.)
  10. ^ Colonel Juan Almonte's journal did not mention any skirmishes that evening. In 1837, Santa Anna's secretary Roman Martinez Caro did report "two small reinforcements from Gonzales that succeeded in breaking through our lines and entering the fort. The first consisted of four men who gained the fort one night, and the second was a party of twenty-five." (Lindley (2003), p. 131.)
  11. ^ These Texian reinforcements were later dubbed the Immortal 32.
  12. ^ Almonte's journal reported that there was an engagement that night, but that the Mexican troops had repulsed the assault. (Lindley (2003), p. 143.)
  13. ^ Lieutenant José Maria Torres is credited with successfully raising the Mexican flag; he was mortally wounded in the process. (Todish et al. (1998), p. 54.)
  14. ^ According to Edmondson, Wolf then ran into the room, grabbed his remaining son, and leaped with the child from the cannon ramp at the rear of the church; both were killed by musket shots before hitting the ground. (Edmondson (2000), p. 372.)
  15. ^ Edmondson speculates that these men might have been sick or wounded and were therefore unable to fight. (Edmondson (2000), p. 373)
  16. ^ According to Petite, "Every account of the Crockett surrender-execution story comes from an avowed antagonist (either on political or military grounds) of Santa Anna's. It is believed that many stories, such as the surrender and execution of Crockett, were created and spread in order to discredit Santa Anna and add to his role as villain." (Petite (1999), p. 124.)
  17. ^ The identity of this officer is disputed. Edmondson claims that this remark was made by Colonel Juan Almonte and overheard by Almonte's cook, Ben. (Edmondson (2000), p. 374.) Todish attributes the remark to Lieutenant Colonel José Juan Sanchez-Navarro. (Todish et al. (1998), p. 55.)
  18. ^ According to Francisco Ruiz, possibly the alcalde of Béxar, the graveyard was near full and that he instead threw some of the corpses in the river. (Edmondson (2000), p. 374.) Sam Houston reported on March 13 that all Mexicans were buried. (Lindley (2003), p. 277.)
  19. ^ Cremating bodies was anathema at the time, as most Christians believed that a body could not be resurrected unless it were whole. (Petite (1999), p. 139.)
  20. ^ Historians J. Frank Dobie and Lon Tinkle requested that they not be listed as historical advisers in the credits of The Alamo because of its disjunction from recognized history. (Todish et al. (1998), p. 188.)

Citations

  1. ^ a b Hardin (2010).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Todish et al. (1998), p. 55.
  3. ^ a b Hardin (1994), p. 155.
  4. ^ a b Nofi (1992), p. 136.
  5. ^ a b c Nofi (1992), p. 213.
  6. ^ Felipe Tena Ramírez, Leyes fundamentales de México, 1808–1971. pp. 202–248.
  7. ^ McCullar, Emily (October 29, 2020). "How Leaders of the Texas Revolution Fought to Preserve Slavery". texasmonthly.com. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  8. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 6.
  9. ^ "The Transformation of the Texas Economy". University of Texas at Austin. January 11, 2016.
  10. ^ Henson (1982), p. 96.
  11. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 78.
  12. ^ Barr (1990), p. 4.
  13. ^ a b Barr (1990), p. 56.
  14. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 98.
  15. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 99.
  16. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 20.
  17. ^ a b Barr (1990), p. 63.
  18. ^ Scott (2000), p. 71.
  19. ^ Scott (2000), pp. 74–75.
  20. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 129.
  21. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 128.
  22. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 131.
  23. ^ a b Myers (1948), p. 181.
  24. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 10.
  25. ^ a b c d e Edmondson (2000), p. 364.
  26. ^ Myers (1948), p. 180.
  27. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 111.
  28. ^ a b c Todish et al. (1998), p. 29.
  29. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 30.
  30. ^ a b c Todish et al. (1998), p. 31.
  31. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 252.
  32. ^ Hopewell (1994), p. 114.
  33. ^ a b c d Hopewell (1994), p. 115.
  34. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 117.
  35. ^ Chariton (1992), p. 98.
  36. ^ a b Todish et al. (1998), p. 32.
  37. ^ Hopewell (1994), p. 116.
  38. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 120.
  39. ^ a b c Hardin (1994), p. 102.
  40. ^ Lord (1961), p. 67.
  41. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 103.
  42. ^ Lord (1961), p. 73.
  43. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 105.
  44. ^ Lord (1961), p. 89.
  45. ^ a b Todish et al. (1998), p. 36.
  46. ^ a b Nofi (1992), p. 76.
  47. ^ Edmondson (2000), pp. 299–301.
  48. ^ Lord (1961), p. 95.
  49. ^ Lord (1961), p. 105.
  50. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 89.
  51. ^ a b c Todish et al. (1998), pp. 40–41.
  52. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 40.
  53. ^ a b Nofi (1992), p. 78.
  54. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 308.
  55. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 310.
  56. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 81.
  57. ^ a b c d e Todish et al. (1998), p. 43.
  58. ^ a b c d Hardin (1994), p. 132.
  59. ^ Petite (1999), p. 34.
  60. ^ a b Nofi (1992), p. 80.
  61. ^ a b c Todish et al. (1998), p. 42.
  62. ^ a b Tinkle (1985), p. 118.
  63. ^ Lord (1961), p. 109.
  64. ^ a b Tinkle (1985), p. 119.
  65. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 120.
  66. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 83.
  67. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 44.
  68. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 325.
  69. ^ Lord (1961), p. 14
  70. ^ Lord (1961), p. 107.
  71. ^ Scott (2000), p. 102.
  72. ^ Myers (1948), p. 200.
  73. ^ Petite (1999), p. 88.
  74. ^ Petite (1999), p. 90.
  75. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 162.
  76. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 324.
  77. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 95.
  78. ^ Scott (2000), pp. 100–101.
  79. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 130.
  80. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 131.
  81. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 340.
  82. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 47.
  83. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 349.
  84. ^ Lindley (2003), p. 140.
  85. ^ a b Lindley (2003), p. 142.
  86. ^ Lindley (2003), pp. 137–38.
  87. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 48.
  88. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 355.
  89. ^ a b Todish et al. (1998), p. 49.
  90. ^ Hopewell (1994), p. 126.
  91. ^ Chariton (1992), p. 195.
  92. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 124.
  93. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 360.
  94. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 356.
  95. ^ a b c d Edmondson (2000), p. 357.
  96. ^ a b Todish et al. (1998), p. 51.
  97. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 362.
  98. ^ a b Hardin (1994), p. 138.
  99. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 50.
  100. ^ a b Lord (1961), p. 160.
  101. ^ a b Hardin (1994), pp. 138–139.
  102. ^ a b c d Hardin (1994), p. 139.
  103. ^ a b Tinkle (1985), p. 196.
  104. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 363.
  105. ^ a b c d e Todish et al. (1998), p. 52.
  106. ^ Petite (1999), p. 113.
  107. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 146.
  108. ^ a b c d Hardin (1994), p. 147.
  109. ^ a b c d Todish et al. (1998), p. 53.
  110. ^ Petite (1999), p. 112.
  111. ^ a b c d Edmondson (2000), p. 366.
  112. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 368.
  113. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 367.
  114. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 369.
  115. ^ a b Todish et al. (1998), p. 54.
  116. ^ Petite (1999), p. 114.
  117. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 370.
  118. ^ Groneman (1996), p. 214.
  119. ^ a b Hopewell (1994), p. 127.
  120. ^ Chariton (1992), p. 74.
  121. ^ Petite (1999), p. 115.
  122. ^ a b c d Edmondson (2000), p. 371.
  123. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 216.
  124. ^ a b c Edmondson (2000), p. 372.
  125. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 218.
  126. ^ a b Lord (1961), p. 166.
  127. ^ Groneman (1990), pp. 55–56.
  128. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 220.
  129. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 373.
  130. ^ a b Petite (1999), p. 123.
  131. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 148.
  132. ^ Tinkle (1985), p. 214.
  133. ^ a b Petite (1999), p. 124.
  134. ^ Lord (1961), p. 167.
  135. ^ a b c d Edmondson (2000), p. 374.
  136. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 156.
  137. ^ Chariton, Wallace (May 1, 1992). Exploring Alamo Legends. Taylor Trade Publishing. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-4617-0881-0.
  138. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 133.
  139. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 407.
  140. ^ Groneman (1990), p. 119.
  141. ^ Petite (1999), p. 134.
  142. ^ Petite (1999), p. 131.
  143. ^ a b Chariton (1990), p. 78.
  144. ^ Petite (1999), p. 132.
  145. ^ Petite (1999), p. 128.
  146. ^ Petite (1999), p. 127.
  147. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 375.
  148. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 138.
  149. ^ Edmondson (2000), p. 376.
  150. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 67.
  151. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 68.
  152. ^ Lord (1961), p. 190.
  153. ^ a b Edmondson (2000), p. 378.
  154. ^ Hardin (1994), p. 158.
  155. ^ Lord (1961), p. 169.
  156. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 69.
  157. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 70.
  158. ^ a b Schoelwer & Gläser (1985), p. 98.
  159. ^ Schoelwer & Gläser (1985), p. 18.
  160. ^ Schoelwer & Gläser (1985), pp. 52, 56.
  161. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 199.
  162. ^ a b Groneman (1998), p. 52.
  163. ^ Groneman (1998), p. 56.
  164. ^ a b Lindley (2003), p. 106.
  165. ^ Nofi (1992), p. 211.
  166. ^ Cox (1998).
  167. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 187.
  168. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 188.
  169. ^ Culpepper (2004).
  170. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 194.
  171. ^ Todish et al. (1998), p. 196.
  172. ^ Edwards (2009), p. 148.
  173. ^ Thompson (2001), p. 246.
  174. ^ Chemerka & Wiener (2009), p. 157.
  175. ^ Michels (2010).
  176. ^ Cobler (2015).
  177. ^ N/A (2014).
  178. ^ "Texas Centennial Issue". Smithsonian National Postal Museum.
  179. ^ "9-cent The Alamo". Smithsonian National Postal Museum.
  180. ^ a b c "The Alamo Is Trying To Eminent Domain This Man's Bar to Make Way for Museum Honoring Alamo Defenders". January 25, 2023.
  181. ^ "Fights over the Alamo persist as George P. Bush seeks higher office". November 2, 2021.

General and cited references

  • Barr, Alwyn (1990). Texans in Revolt: the Battle for San Antonio, 1835. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-77042-3. OCLC 20354408.
  • Barr, Alwyn (1996). Black Texans: A history of African Americans in Texas, 1528–1995 (2nd ed.). Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-2878-8.
  • Chariton, Wallace O. (1990). Exploring the Alamo Legends. Dallas, TX: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-255-9.
  • Chemerka, William H.; Wiener, Allen J. (2009). Music of the Alamo. Bright Sky Press. ISBN 978-1-933979-31-1.
  • Cobler, Nicole (March 11, 2015). "Phil Collins' star rises over the Alamo". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  • Cox, Mike (March 6, 1998). "Last of the Alamo big books rests with 'A Time to Stand'". The Austin-American Statesman.
  • Culpepper, Andy (April 8, 2004). "A different take on 'The Alamo'". CNN. Retrieved May 22, 2008.
  • Edmondson, J.R. (2000). The Alamo Story-From History to Current Conflicts. Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-678-6.
  • Edwards, Leigh H. (2009). Johnny Cash and the paradox of American identity. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35292-7.
  • Groneman, Bill (1990). Alamo Defenders, A Genealogy: The People and Their Words. Austin, TX: Eakin Press. ISBN 978-0-89015-757-2.
  • Groneman, Bill (1996). Eyewitness to the Alamo. Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-502-4.
  • Groneman, Bill (1998). Battlefields of Texas. Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-571-0.
  • Hardin, Stephen L. (1994). Texian Iliad. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-73086-1.
  • Hardin, Stephen L. (June 9, 2010). "Battle of The Alamo". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
  • Henson, Margaret Swett (1982). Juan Davis Bradburn: A Reappraisal of the Mexican Commander of Anahuac. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-135-3.
  • Hopewell, Clifford (1994). James Bowie Texas Fighting Man: A Biography. Austin, TX: Eakin Press. ISBN 978-0-89015-881-4.
  • Lindley, Thomas Ricks (2003). Alamo Traces: New Evidence and New Conclusions. Lanham, MD: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-983-1.
  • Lord, Walter (1961). A Time to Stand. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-7902-5.
  • Michels, Patrick (May 11, 2010). . Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on April 29, 2015. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
  • Myers, John Myers (1948). The Alamo. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-5779-5.
  • Nofi, Albert A. (1992). The Alamo and the Texas War of Independence, September 30, 1835 to April 21, 1836: Heroes, Myths, and History. Conshohocken, PA: Combined Books, Inc. ISBN 978-0-938289-10-4.
  • Petite, Mary Deborah (1999). 1836 Facts about the Alamo and the Texas War for Independence. Mason City, IA: Savas Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-882810-35-2.
  • Schoelwer, Susan Prendergast; Gläser, Tom W. (1985). Alamo Images: Changing Perceptions of a Texas Experience. Dallas, TX: The DeGlolyer Library and Southern Methodist University Press. ISBN 978-0-87074-213-2.
  • Scott, Robert (2000). After the Alamo. Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-691-5.
  • Tinkle, Lon (1985) [1958]. 13 Days to Glory: The Siege of the Alamo (Reprint: McGraw-Hill ed.). College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-238-1.
  • Thompson, Frank (2001). The Alamo: A Cultural History. Dallas, TX: Taylor Trade. ISBN 9781461734352.
  • Todish, Timothy J.; Todish, Terry; Spring, Ted (1998). Alamo Sourcebook, 1836: A Comprehensive Guide to the Battle of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution. Austin, TX: Eakin Press. ISBN 978-1-57168-152-2.
  • N/A (July 21, 2014). . The Official Alamo Website. Archived from the original on September 28, 2014. Retrieved September 22, 2014.

Further reading

External links

  • Official website for the Alamo
  • Documentary excerpt on YouTube

battle, alamo, remember, alamo, redirects, here, song, remember, alamo, song, alamo, alamo, redirect, here, site, this, battle, alamo, mission, other, uses, alamo, disambiguation, february, march, 1836, pivotal, event, military, engagement, texas, revolution, . Remember the Alamo redirects here For the song see Remember the Alamo song Alamo and The Alamo redirect here For the site of this battle see Alamo Mission For other uses see Alamo disambiguation The Battle of the Alamo February 23 March 6 1836 was a pivotal event and military engagement in the Texas Revolution Following a 13 day siege Mexican troops under President General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna reclaimed the Alamo Mission near San Antonio de Bexar modern day San Antonio Texas United States killing most of the occupants Santa Anna s refusal to take prisoners during the battle inspired many Texians and Tejanos to join the Texian Army Motivated by a desire for revenge as well as their written desire to preserve a border open to immigration and the importation and practice of slavery the Texians defeated the Mexican Army at the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21 1836 ending the conquering of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas by the newly formed Republic of Texas Battle of the AlamoPart of the Texas RevolutionThe Alamo as drawn in 1854DateFebruary 23 March 6 1836LocationAlamo Mission San Antonio Mexican Texas29 25 32 N 98 29 10 W 29 42556 N 98 48611 W 29 42556 98 48611ResultMexican victoryBelligerentsMexican RepublicRepublic of TexasCommanders and leadersAntonio Lopez de Santa Anna Manuel Fernandez Castrillon Martin Perfecto de CosWilliam Travis James Bowie Davy Crockett William Carey George Kimble Almaron Dickinson Strength 2 000 2 100 1 185 260Casualties and losses400 600 killed and wounded 2 3 4 182 257 killed 1 Several months previously Texians some of whom were legal settlers but primarily illegal immigrants from the United States had killed or driven out all Mexican troops in Mexican Texas About one hundred Texians were then garrisoned at the Alamo The Texian force grew slightly with the arrival of reinforcements led by eventual Alamo co commanders James Bowie and William B Travis On February 23 approximately 1 500 Mexicans marched into San Antonio de Bexar as the first step in a campaign to retake Texas For the next 10 days the two armies engaged in several skirmishes with minimal casualties Aware that his garrison could not withstand an attack by such a large force Travis wrote multiple letters pleading for more men and supplies from Texas and from the United States but the Texians were reinforced by fewer than a hundred men because the United States had a treaty with Mexico at the time and supplying troops and weapons would have been an overt act of war against Mexico In the early morning hours of March 6 the Mexican Army advanced on the Alamo After repelling two attacks the Texians were unable to fend off a third attack As Mexican soldiers scaled the walls most of the Texian fighters withdrew into interior buildings Those who were unable to reach these points were slain by the Mexican cavalry as they attempted to escape Between five and seven Texians may have surrendered if so they were quickly executed Several noncombatants were sent to Gonzales to spread word of the Texian defeat The news sparked both a strong rush to join the Texian army and a panic known as The Runaway Scrape in which the Texian army most settlers and the government of the new self proclaimed but officially unrecognized Republic of Texas fled eastward toward the U S ahead of the advancing Mexican Army Within Mexico the battle has often been overshadowed by events from the Mexican American War of 1846 1848 In 19th century Texas the Alamo complex gradually became known as a battle site rather than a former mission The Texas Legislature purchased the land and buildings in the early part of the 20th century and designated the Alamo chapel as an official Texas State Shrine The Alamo has been the subject of numerous non fiction works beginning in 1843 Most Americans however are more familiar with the myths and legends spread by many of the movie and television adaptations 5 including the 1950s Disney miniseries Davy Crockett and John Wayne s 1960 film The Alamo Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude to battle 3 Siege 3 1 Investment 3 2 Skirmishes 3 3 Reinforcements 3 4 Assault preparations 4 Final assault 4 1 Exterior fighting 4 2 Interior fighting 5 Aftermath 5 1 Casualties 5 2 Texian survivors 5 3 Impact on revolution 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 Citations 10 General and cited references 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackgroundFurther information Mexican Texas and Texas Revolution In 1835 there was a drastic shift in the Mexican nation The triumph of conservative forces in the elections unleashed a series of events that culminated on October 23 1835 under a new constitution after the repeal of the federalist Constitution of 1824 Las Siete Leyes Spanish las ˈsjete ˈleʝes or Seven Laws were a series of constitutional changes that fundamentally altered the organizational structure of Mexico ending the first federal period and creating a unitary republic officially the Mexican Republic Spanish Republica Mexicana 6 Formalized under President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna on 15 December 1835 they were enacted in 1836 They were intended to centralize and strengthen the national government The aim of the previous constitution was to create a political system that would emulate the success of the United States but after a decade of political turmoil economic stagnation and threats and actual foreign invasion conservatives concluded that a better path for Mexico was centralized power The new policies the bans of slavery 7 and immigration chief among them and the increased enforcement of laws and import tariffs incited many immigrants to revolt 8 The border region of Mexican Texas was largely populated by immigrants from the United States some legal but most illegal Some of these immigrants brought large numbers of slaves with them so that by 1836 there were about 5 000 enslaved persons in a total non native population estimated at 38 470 9 These people were accustomed to a federalist government which made special exemptions from Mexican law just for them and to extensive individual rights including the right to own slaves and they were quite vocal in their displeasure at Mexico s law enforcement and shift towards centralism 10 The centralized government ended local federal exemptions to the ban on slavery which had been negotiated by Stephen Austin and others Already suspicious after previous United States attempts to purchase Mexican Texas 11 Mexican authorities blamed much of the Texian unrest on United States immigrants most of whom had entered illegally and made little effort to adapt to the Mexican culture and who continued to hold people in slavery when slavery had been abolished in Mexico 12 In October Texians engaged Mexican troops in the first official battle of the Texas Revolution 13 Determined to quell the rebellion of immigrants Santa Anna began assembling a large force the Army of Operations in Texas to restore order 14 Most of his soldiers were raw recruits 15 and many had been forcibly conscripted 16 nbsp The Fall of the Alamo painted by Theodore Gentilz in 1844 depicts the Alamo complex from the south The Low Barracks the chapel and the wooden palisade connecting them are in the foreground The Texians systematically defeated the Mexican troops already stationed in Texas The last group of Mexican soldiers in the region commanded by Santa Anna s brother in law General Martin Perfecto de Cos surrendered on December 9 following the siege of Bexar 13 By this point the Texian Army was dominated by very recent arrivals to the region primarily illegal immigrants from the United States Many Texas settlers unprepared for a long campaign had returned home 17 Angered by what he perceived to be United States interference in Mexican affairs Santa Anna spearheaded a resolution classifying foreign immigrants found fighting in Texas as pirates The resolution effectively banned the taking of prisoners of war in this period of time captured pirates were executed immediately 17 18 Santa Anna reiterated this message in a strongly worded letter to United States President Andrew Jackson This letter was not widely distributed and it is unlikely that most of the United States recruits serving in the Texian Army were aware that there would be no prisoners of war 19 When Mexican troops departed San Antonio de Bexar now San Antonio Texas USA Texian soldiers captured the Mexican garrison at the Alamo Mission a former Spanish religious outpost which had been converted to a makeshift fort by the recently expelled Mexican Army 20 Described by Santa Anna as an irregular fortification hardly worthy of the name 20 the Alamo had been designed to withstand an attack by native tribes not an artillery equipped army 21 The complex sprawled across 3 acres 1 2 ha providing almost 1 320 feet 400 m of perimeter to defend 22 An interior plaza was bordered on the east by the chapel and to the south by a one story building known as the Low Barracks 23 A wooden palisade stretched between these two buildings 24 The two story Long Barracks extended north from the chapel 23 At the northern corner of the east wall stood a cattle pen and horse corral 25 The walls surrounding the complex were at least 2 75 feet 0 84 m thick and ranged from 9 12 ft 2 7 3 7 m high 26 Note 1 To compensate for the lack of firing ports Texian engineer Green B Jameson constructed catwalks to allow defenders to fire over the walls this method however left the rifleman s upper body exposed 22 Mexican forces had left behind 19 cannons which Jameson installed along the walls A large 18 pounder had arrived in Texas with the New Orleans Greys Jameson positioned this cannon in the southwest corner of the compound He boasted to Texian Army commander Sam Houston that the Texians could whip 10 to 1 with our artillery 27 Prelude to battleThe Texian garrison was woefully undermanned and underprovisioned with fewer than 100 soldiers remaining by January 6 1836 28 Colonel James C Neill the acting Alamo commander wrote to the provisional government If there has ever been a dollar here I have no knowledge of it 28 Neill requested additional troops and supplies stressing that the garrison was likely to be unable to withstand a siege lasting longer than four days 28 29 The Texian government was in turmoil and unable to provide much assistance 30 Note 2 Four different men claimed to have been given command over the entire army Note 3 On January 14 Neill approached one of them Sam Houston for assistance in gathering supplies clothing and ammunition 30 nbsp James Bowie arrived at the Alamo Mission on January 19 with orders to destroy the complex He instead became the garrison s co commander Houston could not spare the number of men necessary to mount a successful defense 31 Instead he sent Colonel James Bowie with 30 men to remove the artillery from the Alamo and destroy the complex 30 Note 4 Bowie was unable to transport the artillery since the Alamo garrison lacked the necessary draft animals Neill soon persuaded Bowie that the location held strategic importance 32 In a letter to Governor Henry Smith Bowie argued that the salvation of Texas depends in great measure on keeping Bexar out of the hands of the enemy It serves as the frontier picquet guard and if it were in the possession of Santa Anna there is no stronghold from which to repel him in his march towards the Sabine 33 Note 5 The letter to Smith ended Colonel Neill and myself have come to the solemn resolution that we will rather die in these ditches than give it up to the enemy 33 Bowie also wrote to the provisional government asking for men money rifles and cannon powder 33 Few reinforcements were authorized cavalry officer William B Travis arrived in Bexar with 30 men on February 3 Five days later a small group of volunteers arrived including the famous frontiersman and former U S Congressman David Crockett of Tennessee 34 nbsp General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna led Mexican troops into Texas in 1836 On February 11 Neill left the Alamo determined to recruit additional reinforcements and gather supplies 35 36 He transferred command to Travis the highest ranking regular army officer in the garrison 33 Volunteers comprised much of the garrison and they were unwilling to accept Travis as their leader Note 6 The men instead elected Bowie who had a reputation as a fierce fighter as their commander Bowie celebrated by getting very intoxicated and creating havoc in Bexar To mitigate the resulting ill feelings Bowie agreed to share command with Travis 36 37 38 As the Texians struggled to find men and supplies Santa Anna continued to gather men at San Luis Potosi by the end of 1835 his army numbered 6 019 soldiers 39 Rather than advance along the coast where supplies and reinforcements could be easily delivered by sea Santa Anna ordered his army inland to Bexar the political center of Texas and the site of Cos s defeat 39 The army began its march north in late December 39 Officers used the long journey to train the men Many of the new recruits did not know how to aim their muskets and many refused to fire from the shoulder because of the strong recoil 40 Progress was slow There were not enough mules to transport all of the supplies and many of the teamsters all civilians quit when their pay was delayed The many soldaderas women and children who followed the army consumed much of the already scarce supplies The soldiers were soon reduced to partial rations 41 On February 12 they crossed the Rio Grande 42 Note 7 Temperatures in Texas reached record lows and by February 13 an estimated 15 16 inches 38 41 cm of snow had fallen Hypothermia dysentery and Comanche raiding parties took a heavy toll on the Mexican soldiers 43 On February 21 Santa Anna and his vanguard reached the banks of the Medina River 25 miles 40 km from Bexar 44 45 Unaware of the Mexican Army s proximity the majority of the Alamo garrison joined Bexar residents at a fiesta 46 Note 8 After learning of the planned celebration Santa Anna ordered General Joaquin Ramirez y Sesma to immediately seize the unprotected Alamo but sudden rains halted that raid 45 SiegeMain articles Siege of the Alamo and List of Alamo defenders Investment In the early hours of February 23 residents began fleeing Bexar fearing the Mexican army s imminent arrival Although unconvinced by the reports Travis stationed a soldier in the San Fernando church bell tower the highest location in town to watch for signs of an approaching force Several hours later Texian scouts reported seeing Mexican troops 1 5 miles 2 4 km outside the town 46 Few arrangements had been made for a potential siege One group of Texians scrambled to herd cattle into the Alamo while others scrounged for food in the recently abandoned houses 47 Several members of the garrison who had been living in town brought their families with them when they reported to the Alamo Among these were Almaron Dickinson who brought his wife Susanna and their infant daughter Angelina Bowie who was accompanied by his deceased wife s cousins Gertrudis Navarro and Juana Navarro Alsbury and Alsbury s young son 48 and Gregorio Esparza whose family climbed through the window of the Alamo chapel after the Mexican army arrived 49 Other members of the garrison failed to report for duty most of the men working outside Bexar did not try to sneak past Mexican lines 50 I reply to you according to the order of His Excellency that the Mexican army cannot come to terms under any conditions with rebellious foreigners to whom there is no recourse left if they wish to save their lives than to place themselves immediately at the disposal of the Supreme Government from whom alone they may expect clemency after some considerations response of Jose Bartres to Texian requests for an honorable surrender as quoted in the journal of Juan Almonte 51 By late afternoon Bexar was occupied by about 1 500 Mexican soldiers 52 When the Mexican troops raised a blood red flag signifying no quarter Travis responded with a blast from the Alamo s largest cannon 53 Believing that Travis had acted hastily Bowie sent Jameson to meet with Santa Anna 51 Travis was angered that Bowie had acted unilaterally and sent his own representative Captain Albert Martin 54 Both emissaries met with Colonel Juan Almonte and Jose Bartres According to Almonte the Texians asked for an honorable surrender but were informed that any surrender must be unconditional 51 On learning this Bowie and Travis mutually agreed to fire the cannon again 54 Note 9 Skirmishes The first night of the siege was relatively quiet 55 Over the next few days Mexican soldiers established artillery batteries initially about 1 000 feet 300 m from the south and east walls of the Alamo 56 A third battery was positioned southeast of the fort Each night the batteries inched closer to the Alamo walls 57 During the first week of the siege more than 200 cannonballs landed in the Alamo plaza At first the Texians matched Mexican artillery fire often reusing the Mexican cannonballs 58 59 On February 26 Travis ordered the artillery to conserve powder and shot 58 Two notable events occurred on Wednesday February 24 At some point that day Bowie collapsed from illness 60 leaving Travis in sole command of the garrison 60 Late that afternoon two Mexican scouts became the first fatalities of the siege 61 Note 9 The following morning 200 300 Mexican soldiers crossed the San Antonio River and took cover in abandoned shacks near the Alamo walls 57 61 62 Several Texians ventured out to burn the huts 62 while Texians within the Alamo provided cover fire 63 64 After a two hour skirmish the Mexican troops retreated to Bexar 57 64 Six Mexican soldiers were killed and four others were wounded 57 No Texians were injured 65 A blue norther blew in on February 25 dropping the temperature to 39 F 4 C 58 Neither army was prepared for the cold temperatures 66 Texian attempts to gather firewood were thwarted by Mexican troops 58 On the evening of February 26 Colonel Juan Bringas engaged several Texians who were burning more huts 67 According to historian J R Edmondson one Texian was killed 68 Four days later Texians shot and killed Private First Class Secundino Alvarez a soldier from one of two battalions that Santa Anna had stationed on two sides of the Alamo By March 1 the number of Mexican casualties was nine dead and four wounded while the Texian garrison had lost only one man Reinforcements I am determined to sustain myself as long as possible amp die like a soldier who never forgets what is due to his own honor amp that of his country VICTORY OR DEATH excerpt from William B Travis s letter To the People of Texas amp All Americans in the World 69 Santa Anna posted one company east of the Alamo on the road to Gonzales 57 70 Almonte and 800 dragoons were stationed along the road to Goliad 71 Throughout the siege these towns had received multiple couriers dispatched by Travis to plead for reinforcements and supplies 53 72 The most famous of his missives written February 24 was addressed To the People of Texas amp All Americans in the World According to historian Mary Deborah Petite the letter is considered by many as one of the masterpieces of American patriotism 73 Copies of the letter were distributed across Texas 74 and eventually reprinted throughout the United States and much of Europe 61 At the end of the first day of the siege Santa Anna s troops were reinforced by 600 men under General Joaquin Ramirez y Sesma bringing the Mexican army up to more than 2 000 men As news of the siege spread throughout Texas potential reinforcements gathered in Gonzales They hoped to rendezvous with Colonel James Fannin who was expected to arrive from Goliad with his garrison 75 On February 26 after days of indecision Fannin ordered 320 men four cannons and several supply wagons to march towards the Alamo 90 miles 140 km away This group traveled less than 1 0 mile 1 6 km before turning back 76 77 Fannin blamed the retreat on his officers the officers and enlisted men accused Fannin of aborting the mission 78 nbsp William B Travis became sole Texian commander at the Alamo on February 24 Texians gathered in Gonzales were unaware of Fannin s return to Goliad and most continued to wait Impatient with the delay on February 27 Travis ordered Samuel G Bastian to go to Gonzales to hurry up reinforcements 79 According to historian Thomas Ricks Lindley Bastian encountered the Gonzales Ranging Company led by Lieutenant George C Kimble and Travis courier to Gonzales Albert Martin who had tired of waiting for Fannin A Mexican patrol attacked driving off four of the men including Bastian Note 10 80 In the darkness the Texians fired on the remaining 32 men whom they assumed were Mexican soldiers One man was wounded and his English curses convinced the occupiers to open the gates Note 11 81 On March 3 the Texians watched from the walls as approximately 1 000 Mexicans marched into Bexar The Mexican army celebrated loudly throughout the afternoon both in honor of their reinforcements and at the news that troops under General Jose de Urrea had soundly defeated Texian Colonel Frank W Johnson at the Battle of San Patricio on February 27 82 Most of the Texians in the Alamo believed that Sesma had been leading the Mexican forces during the siege and they mistakenly attributed the celebration to the arrival of Santa Anna The reinforcements brought the number of Mexican soldiers in Bexar to almost 3 100 83 The arrival of the Mexican reinforcements prompted Travis to send three men including Davy Crockett to find Fannin s force which he still believed to be en route 84 The scouts discovered a large group of Texians camped 20 miles 32 km from the Alamo 85 Lindley s research indicates that up to 50 of these men had come from Goliad after Fannin s aborted rescue mission The others had left Gonzales several days earlier 86 Just before daylight on March 4 part of the Texian force broke through Mexican lines and entered the Alamo Mexican soldiers drove a second group across the prairie 85 Note 12 Assault preparations On March 4 the day after his reinforcements arrived Santa Anna proposed an assault on the Alamo Many of his senior officers recommended that they wait for two 12 pounder cannons anticipated to arrive on March 7 87 That evening a local woman likely Bowie s cousin in law Juana Navarro Alsbury approached Santa Anna to negotiate a surrender for the Alamo occupiers 88 According to many historians this visit probably increased Santa Anna s impatience as historian Timothy Todish noted there would have been little glory in a bloodless victory 89 The following morning Santa Anna announced to his staff that the assault would take place early on March 6 Santa Anna arranged for troops from Bexar to be excused from the front lines so that they would not be forced to fight their own families 89 Legend holds that at some point on March 5 Travis gathered his men and explained that an attack was imminent and that they were greatly outnumbered by the Mexican Army He supposedly drew a line in the ground and asked those willing to die for the Texian cause to cross and stand alongside him only one man Moses Rose was said to have declined 90 Most scholars disregard this tale as there is no primary source evidence to support it the story only surfaced decades after the battle in a third hand account 91 Travis apparently did at some point prior to the final assault assemble the men for a conference to inform them of the dire situation and giving them the chance to either escape or stay and die for the cause Susanna Dickinson recalled Travis announcing that any men who wished to escape should let it be known and step out of ranks 92 The last Texian verified to have left the Alamo was James Allen a courier who carried personal messages from Travis and several of the other men on March 5 93 Final assaultExterior fighting Initial Mexican troop deployment 94 95 Commander Troops EquipmentCos 350 10 ladders2 crowbars2 axesDuque Castrillon 400 10 laddersRomero 400 6 laddersMorales 125 2 laddersSesma 500 cavalrySanta Anna 400 reservesAt 10 p m on March 5 the Mexican artillery ceased their bombardment As Santa Anna had anticipated the exhausted Texians soon fell into the first uninterrupted sleep many of them had since the siege began 96 Just after midnight more than 2 000 Mexican soldiers began preparing for the final assault 97 Fewer than 1 800 were divided into four columns commanded by Cos Colonel Francisco Duque Colonel Jose Maria Romero and Colonel Juan Morales 94 95 Veterans were positioned on the outside of the columns to better control the new recruits and conscripts in the middle 98 As a precaution 500 Mexican cavalry were positioned around the Alamo to prevent the escape of either Texian or Mexican soldiers Santa Anna remained in camp with the 400 reserves 95 99 Despite the bitter cold the soldiers were ordered not to wear overcoats which could impede their movements 95 Clouds concealed the moon and thus the movements of the soldiers 100 At 5 30 a m troops silently advanced Cos and his men approached the northwest corner of the Alamo 98 while Duque led his men from the northwest towards a repaired breach in the Alamo s north wall 101 The column commanded by Romero marched towards the east wall and Morales s column aimed for the low parapet by the chapel 101 The three Texian sentinels stationed outside the walls were killed in their sleep 102 103 allowing Mexican soldiers to approach undetected within musket range of the walls 102 At this point the silence was broken by shouts of Viva Santa Anna and music from the buglers 97 The noise woke the Texians 103 Most of the noncombatants gathered in the church sacristy for safety 104 Travis rushed to his post yelling Come on boys the Mexicans are upon us and we ll give them hell 102 and as he passed a group of Tejanos No rendirse muchachos Don t surrender boys 96 nbsp This plan of the Alamo was created by Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro in 1836 Places marked R and V denote Mexican cannon position S indicates Cos s forces In the initial moments of the assault Mexican troops were at a disadvantage Their column formation allowed only the front rows of soldiers to fire safely 105 Unaware of the dangers the untrained recruits in the ranks blindly fir ed their guns injuring or killing the troops in front of them 106 The tight concentration of troops also offered an excellent target for the Texian artillery 105 Lacking canister shot Texians filled their cannon with any metal they could find including door hinges nails and chopped up horseshoes essentially turning the cannon into giant shotguns 102 According to the diary of Jose Enrique de la Pena a single cannon volley did away with half the company of chasseurs from Toluca 107 Duque fell from his horse after sustaining a wound in his thigh and was almost trampled by his own men General Manuel Castrillon quickly assumed command of Duque s column 25 Although some in the front of the Mexican ranks wavered soldiers in the rear pushed them on 105 As the troops massed against the walls Texians were forced to lean over the walls to shoot leaving them exposed to Mexican fire Travis became one of the first occupiers to die shot while firing his shotgun into the soldiers below him though one source says that he drew his sword and stabbed a Mexican officer who had stormed the wall before succumbing to his injury 105 Few of the Mexican ladders reached the walls 108 The few soldiers who were able to climb the ladders were quickly killed or beaten back As the Texians discharged their previously loaded rifles they found it increasingly difficult to reload while attempting to keep Mexican soldiers from scaling the walls 25 Mexican soldiers withdrew and regrouped but their second attack was repulsed Fifteen minutes into the battle they attacked a third time 25 105 During the third strike Romero s column aiming for the east wall was exposed to cannon fire and shifted to the north mingling with the second column 25 Cos column under fire from Texians on the west wall also veered north 109 When Santa Anna saw that the bulk of his army was massed against the north wall he feared a rout panicked he sent the reserves into the same area 110 The Mexican soldiers closest to the north wall realized that the makeshift wall contained many gaps and toeholds One of the first to scale the 12 foot 3 7 m wall was General Juan Amador at his challenge his men began swarming up the wall Amador opened the postern in the north wall allowing Mexican soldiers to pour into the complex 108 Others climbed through gun ports in the west wall which had few occupiers 111 As the Texian occupiers abandoned the north wall and the northern end of the west wall 108 111 Texian gunners at the south end of the mission turned their cannon towards the north and fired into the advancing Mexican soldiers This left the south end of the mission unprotected within minutes Mexican soldiers had climbed the walls and killed the gunners gaining control of the Alamo s 18 pounder cannon 100 By this time Romero s men had taken the east wall of the compound and were pouring in through the cattle pen 111 Interior fighting Great God Sue the Mexicans are inside our walls If they spare you save my child Last words of Texian defender Almaron Dickinson to his wife Susanna as he prepared to defend the chapel 109 As previously planned most of the Texians fell back to the barracks and the chapel Holes had been carved in the walls to allow the Texians to fire 109 Unable to reach the barracks Texians stationed along the west wall headed west for the San Antonio River When the cavalry charged the Texians took cover and began firing from a ditch Sesma was forced to send reinforcements and the Texians were eventually killed Sesma reported that this skirmish involved 50 Texians but Edmondson believes that number was inflated 112 The occupiers in the cattle pen retreated into the horse corral After discharging their weapons the small band of Texians scrambled over the low wall circled behind the church and raced on foot for the east prairie which appeared empty 109 111 113 As the Mexican cavalry advanced on the group Almaron Dickinson and his artillery crew turned a cannon around and fired into the cavalry probably inflicting casualties Nevertheless all of the escaping Texians were killed 113 nbsp The Fall of the Alamo 1903 by Robert Jenkins Onderdonk depicts Davy Crockett wielding his rifle as a club against Mexican troops who have breached the walls of the mission The last Texian group to remain in the open were Crockett and his men defending the low wall in front of the church Unable to reload they used their rifles as clubs and fought with knives After a volley of fire and a wave of Mexican bayonets the few remaining Texians in this group fell back towards the church 112 The Mexican army now controlled all of the outer walls and the interior of the Alamo compound except for the church and rooms along the east and west walls 114 Mexican soldiers turned their attention to a Texian flag waving from the roof of one building Four Mexicans were killed before the flag of Mexico was raised in that location Note 13 115 For the next hour the Mexican army worked to secure complete control of the Alamo 116 Many of the remaining occupiers were ensconced in the fortified barracks rooms 117 In the confusion the Texians had neglected to spike their cannon before retreating Mexican soldiers turned the cannon towards the barracks 108 As each door was blown off Mexican soldiers would fire a volley of muskets into the dark room then charge in for hand to hand combat 117 nbsp A knife purportedly carried by Davy Crockett during the Battle of the AlamoToo sick to participate in the battle Bowie likely died in bed Eyewitnesses to the battle gave conflicting accounts of his death Some witnesses maintained that they saw several Mexican soldiers enter Bowie s room bayonet him and carry him alive from the room 118 Others claimed that Bowie shot himself or was killed by soldiers while too weak to lift his head 119 According to historian Wallace Chariton the most popular and probably the most accurate 120 version is that Bowie died on his cot back braced against the wall and using his pistols and his famous knife 119 The last of the Texians to die were the 11 men manning the two 12 pounder cannons in the chapel 115 121 A shot from the 18 pounder cannon destroyed the barricades at the front of the church and Mexican soldiers entered the building after firing an initial musket volley Dickinson s crew fired their cannon from the apse into the Mexican soldiers at the door With no time to reload the Texians including Dickinson Gregorio Esparza and James Bonham grabbed rifles and fired before being bayoneted to death 122 Texian Robert Evans the master of ordnance had been tasked with keeping the gunpowder from falling into Mexican hands Wounded he crawled towards the powder magazine but was killed by a musket ball with his torch only inches from the powder 122 Had he succeeded the blast would have destroyed the church and killed the women and children hiding in the sacristy 123 As soldiers approached the sacristy one of the young sons of occupier Anthony Wolf stood to pull a blanket over his shoulders 122 In the dark Mexican soldiers mistook him for an adult and killed him Note 14 124 Possibly the last Texian to die in battle was Jacob Walker 125 who wounded ran to a corner and was bayoneted in front of Susanna Dickinson 126 Another Texian Brigido Guerrero also sought refuge in the sacristy 122 Guerrero who had deserted from the Mexican Army in December 1835 was spared after convincing the soldiers he was a Texian prisoner 124 127 By 6 30 a m the battle for the Alamo was over 126 Mexican soldiers inspected each corpse bayoneting any body that moved 124 Even with all of the Texians dead Mexican soldiers continued to shoot some killing each other in the confusion Mexican generals were unable to stop the bloodlust and appealed to Santa Anna for help Although the general showed himself the violence continued and the buglers were finally ordered to sound a retreat For 15 minutes after that soldiers continued to fire into dead bodies 128 AftermathCasualties nbsp Detailed news of the battle sometimes took weeks to reach publication in the East such as these April 9 columns in a Georgia newspaper nbsp A sarcophagus in the San Fernando Cathedral that is purported to hold the ashes of the Alamo occupiers Historians believe it is more likely that the ashes were buried near the Alamo According to many accounts of the battle between five and seven Texians surrendered Note 15 129 130 Incensed that his orders had been ignored Santa Anna demanded the immediate execution of the survivors 131 Weeks after the battle stories circulated that Crockett was among those who surrendered 130 Ben a former United States slave who cooked for one of Santa Anna s officers maintained that Crockett s body was found surrounded by no less than sixteen Mexican corpses 132 Historians disagree on which version of Crockett s death is accurate Note 16 133 Santa Anna reportedly told Captain Fernando Urizza that the battle was but a small affair 134 Another officer then remarked that with another such victory as this we ll go to the devil Note 17 2 In his initial report Santa Anna claimed that 600 Texians had been killed with only 70 Mexican soldiers killed and 300 wounded 135 His secretary Ramon Martinez Caro reported 400 killed 136 Other estimates of the number of Mexican soldiers killed ranged from 60 to 200 with an additional 250 300 wounded 2 Some people historians and survivors such as Susanna Dickinson have estimated that over 1 000 1 600 Mexican soldiers were killed and wounded but it is most likely that total casualties were less than 600 Texian Dr J H Barnard who tended the Mexican soldiers reported 300 400 dead and 200 300 wounded 137 Most Alamo historians place the number of Mexican casualties at 400 600 2 3 4 This would represent about one quarter of the over 2 000 Mexican soldiers involved in the final assault which Todish remarks is a tremendous casualty rate by any standards 2 Most eyewitnesses counted between 182 and 257 Texians killed 138 Some historians believe that at least one Texian Henry Warnell successfully escaped from the battle Warnell died several months later of wounds incurred either during the final battle or during his escape as a courier 139 140 Mexican soldiers were buried in the local cemetery Campo Santo Note 18 135 Shortly after the battle Colonel Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro proposed that a monument should be erected to the fallen Mexican soldiers Cos rejected the idea 141 The Texian bodies were stacked and burned Note 19 135 The only exception was the body of Gregorio Esparza His brother Francisco an officer in Santa Anna s army received permission to give Gregorio a proper burial 135 The ashes were left where they fell until February 1837 when Juan Seguin returned to Bexar to examine the remains A simple coffin inscribed with the names Travis Crockett and Bowie was filled with ashes from the funeral pyres 142 According to a March 28 1837 article in the Telegraph and Texas Register 143 Seguin buried the coffin under a peach tree grove The spot was not marked and cannot now be identified 144 Seguin later claimed that he had placed the coffin in front of the altar at the San Fernando Cathedral In July 1936 a coffin was discovered buried in that location but according to historian Wallace Chariton it is unlikely to actually contain the remains of the Alamo defenders Fragments of uniforms were found in the coffin and the Texian soldiers who fought at the Alamo were known not to wear uniforms 143 Texian survivors Main article List of Texian survivors of the Battle of the Alamo nbsp Susanna Dickinson survived the Battle of the Alamo Santa Anna sent her to spread word of the Texian defeat to the Texas colonists In an attempt to convince other slaves in Texas to support the Mexican government over the Texian rebellion Santa Anna spared Travis slave Joe 145 The day after the battle he interviewed each noncombatant individually Impressed with Susanna Dickinson Santa Anna offered to adopt her infant daughter Angelina and have the child educated in Mexico City Dickinson refused the offer which was not extended to Juana Navarro Alsbury although her son was of similar age 2 Each woman was given a blanket and two silver pesos 146 Alsbury and the other Tejano women were allowed to return to their homes in Bexar Dickinson her daughter and Joe were sent to Gonzales escorted by Ben They were encouraged to relate the events of the battle and to inform the remainder of the Texian forces that Santa Anna s army was unbeatable 2 Impact on revolution During the siege newly elected delegates from across Texas met at the Convention of 1836 On March 2 the delegates declared independence forming the Republic of Texas Four days later the delegates at the convention received a dispatch Travis had written March 3 warning of his dire situation Unaware that the Alamo had fallen Robert Potter called for the convention to adjourn and march immediately to relieve the Alamo Sam Houston convinced the delegates to remain in Washington on the Brazos to develop a constitution After being appointed sole commander of all Texian troops Houston journeyed to Gonzales to take command of the 400 volunteers who were still waiting for Fannin to lead them to the Alamo 147 Within hours of Houston s arrival on March 11 Andres Barcenas and Anselmo Bergaras arrived with news that the Alamo had fallen and all Texians were slain 148 Hoping to halt a panic Houston arrested the men as enemy spies They were released hours later when Susanna Dickinson and Joe reached Gonzales and confirmed the report 149 Realizing that the Mexican army would soon advance towards the Texian settlements Houston advised all civilians in the area to evacuate and ordered his new army to retreat 150 This sparked a mass exodus known as the Runaway Scrape and most Texians including members of the new government fled east 151 Despite their losses at the Alamo the Mexican army in Texas still outnumbered the Texian army by almost six to one 152 Santa Anna assumed that knowledge of the disparity in troop numbers and the fate of the Texian soldiers at the Alamo would quell the resistance 153 and that Texian soldiers would quickly leave the territory 154 News of the Alamo s fall had the opposite effect and men flocked to join Houston s army 153 The New York Post editorialized that had Santa Anna treated the vanquished with moderation and generosity it would have been difficult if not impossible to awaken that general sympathy for the people of Texas which now impels so many adventurous and ardent spirits to throng to the aid of their brethren 155 On the afternoon of April 21 the Texian army attacked Santa Anna s camp near Lynchburg Ferry The Mexican army was taken by surprise and the Battle of San Jacinto was essentially over after 18 minutes During the fighting many of the Texian soldiers repeatedly cried Remember the Alamo as they slaughtered fleeing Mexican troops 156 Santa Anna was captured the following day and reportedly told Houston That man may consider himself born to no common destiny who has conquered the Napoleon of the West And now it remains for him to be generous to the vanquished Houston replied You should have remembered that at the Alamo Santa Anna s life was spared and he was forced to order his troops out of Texas ending Mexican control of the province and bestowing some legitimacy on the new republic 157 LegacyMain article Legacy of the Battle of the Alamo nbsp The restored Spanish colonial chapel of the Alamo as it appears today nbsp Cenotaph memorial of the Alamo defenders nbsp Closeup of the Alamo defenders nbsp Closeup of the Alamo defendersFollowing the battle Santa Anna was alternately viewed as a national hero or a pariah Mexican perceptions of the battle often mirrored the prevailing viewpoint 158 Santa Anna had been disgraced following his capture at the Battle of San Jacinto and many Mexican accounts of the battle were written by men who had been or had become his outspoken critics Petite and many other historians believe that some of the stories such as the execution of Crockett may have been invented to further discredit Santa Anna 133 In Mexican history the Texas campaign including the Battle of the Alamo was soon overshadowed by the Mexican American War of 1846 1848 158 In San Antonio de Bexar the largely Tejano population viewed the Alamo complex as more than just a battle site it represented decades of assistance as a mission a hospital or a military post 159 As the English speaking population increased the complex became best known for the battle Focus has centered primarily on the Texian occupiers with little emphasis given to the role of the Tejano soldiers who served in the Texian army or the actions of the Mexican army 160 In the early 20th century the Texas Legislature purchased the property and appointed the Daughters of the Republic of Texas as permanent caretakers 161 of what is now an official state shrine 162 In front of the church in the center of Alamo Plaza stands a cenotaph designed by Pompeo Coppini which commemorates the Texians and Tejanos who died during the battle 163 According to Bill Groneman s Battlefields of Texas the Alamo has become the most popular tourist site in Texas 162 The first English language histories of the battle were written and published by Texas Ranger and amateur historian John Henry Brown 164 The next major treatment of the battle was Reuben Potter s The Fall of the Alamo published in The Magazine of American History in 1878 Potter based his work on interviews with many of the Mexican survivors of the battle 164 165 The first full length non fiction book covering the battle John Myers Myers The Alamo was published in 1948 166 In the decades since the battle has featured prominently in many non fiction works According to Todish et al there can be little doubt that most Americans have probably formed many of their opinions on what occurred at the Alamo not from books but from the various movies made about the battle 167 The first film version of the battle appeared in 1911 when Gaston Melies directed The Immortal Alamo 5 The battle became more widely known after it was featured in the 1950s Disney miniseries Davy Crockett which was largely based on myth 5 Within several years John Wayne directed and starred in one of the best known but questionably accurate film versions 1960 s The Alamo 168 Note 20 Another film also called The Alamo was released in 2004 CNN described it as possibly the most character driven of all the movies made on the subject It is also considered more faithful to the actual events than other movies 169 Several songwriters have been inspired by the Battle of the Alamo Tennessee Ernie Ford s The Ballad of Davy Crockett spent 16 weeks on the country music charts peaking at No 4 in 1955 170 Marty Robbins recorded a version of the song The Ballad of the Alamo in 1960 which spent 13 weeks on the pop charts peaking at No 34 171 Jane Bowers song Remember the Alamo has been recorded by artists including Johnny Cash 172 Willie Nelson 173 and Donovan 174 British hard rock band Babe Ruth s 1972 song The Mexican pictures the conflict through the eyes of a Mexican soldier Singer songwriter Phil Collins collected hundreds of items related to the battle narrated a light and sound show about the Alamo and has spoken at related events 175 In 2014 Collins donated his entire collection to the Alamo via the State of Texas 176 177 The U S Postal Service issued two postage stamps in commemoration of Texas Statehood 178 and the Battle of Alamo 179 The Remember the Alamo battle cry as well as the Alamo Mission itself appear on the current version of the reverse side of the seal of Texas The battle also featured in episode 13 of The Time Tunnel The Alamo first aired in 1966 and episode 5 of season one of the TV series Timeless aired 2016 As of 2023 the Alamo Trust which operates the site seeks to expand the property to build an Alamo museum 180 To do so it would have to use eminent domain to seize a property containing an Alamo themed bar called Moses Rose s Hideout named after an Alamo deserter that has operated for 12 years circ 2023 180 The Alamo Trust claims that if the bar owner continues to refuse to sell his property it will put the 400 million property at stake 181 Conversely the bar owner says that he wishes to participate in the economic success of adding an Alamo museum and that there is a certain unjust irony of seizing his property to expand the Alamo 180 nbsp First stamp to commemorate battle was issued in 1936 the 100th anniversary of the battle depicting Sam Houston and Stephen Austin nbsp Second stamp issued in 1956 depicts the facade of the Alamo mission nbsp The reverse of the current seal of Texas See also nbsp Texas portalLast stand List of Alamo defenders List of last stands List of Texas Revolution battles List of Texan survivors of the Battle of the AlamoExplanatory notes The plaza covered an area 75 feet 23 m long and 62 feet 19 m wide The Low Barracks was 114 feet 35 m long and the Long Barracks was 186 feet 57 m long and 18 feet 5 5 m wide Myers 1948 pp 180 181 A week after Neill sent his letter the Texian provisional legislature impeached the governor who in turn disbanded the legislature The interim constitution had given neither party the authority to take these actions and no one in Texas was entirely sure who was in charge Todish et al 1998 pp 30 31 Sam Houston James Fannin Frank W Johnson and Dr James Grant Todish et al 1998 p 30 Houston s orders to Bowie were vague and historians disagree on their intent One interpretation is that Bowie s orders were to destroy only the barricades that the Mexican Army had erected around San Antonio de Bexar and that he should then wait in the Alamo until Governor Henry Smith decided whether the mission should be demolished and the artillery removed Smith never gave orders on this issue Edmondson 2000 p 252 The Sabine River marked the eastern border of Mexican Texas Volunteers in the Texian Army asserted the right to choose their own leaders and most of them were unwilling to serve under officers of the regular army Although the Rio Grande now marks the border between Texas and Mexico in this era the Nueces River several hundred miles north was considered the southern boundary of Mexican Texas The fiesta was in celebration of the birthday of George Washington the first president of the United States a b Although Santa Anna later reported that Texian cannon fire on February 23 killed two Mexican soldiers and wounded eight others no other Mexican officer reported fatalities from that day Todish et al 1998 p 40 Edmondson 2000 p 304 Colonel Juan Almonte s journal did not mention any skirmishes that evening In 1837 Santa Anna s secretary Roman Martinez Caro did report two small reinforcements from Gonzales that succeeded in breaking through our lines and entering the fort The first consisted of four men who gained the fort one night and the second was a party of twenty five Lindley 2003 p 131 These Texian reinforcements were later dubbed the Immortal 32 Almonte s journal reported that there was an engagement that night but that the Mexican troops had repulsed the assault Lindley 2003 p 143 Lieutenant Jose Maria Torres is credited with successfully raising the Mexican flag he was mortally wounded in the process Todish et al 1998 p 54 According to Edmondson Wolf then ran into the room grabbed his remaining son and leaped with the child from the cannon ramp at the rear of the church both were killed by musket shots before hitting the ground Edmondson 2000 p 372 Edmondson speculates that these men might have been sick or wounded and were therefore unable to fight Edmondson 2000 p 373 According to Petite Every account of the Crockett surrender execution story comes from an avowed antagonist either on political or military grounds of Santa Anna s It is believed that many stories such as the surrender and execution of Crockett were created and spread in order to discredit Santa Anna and add to his role as villain Petite 1999 p 124 The identity of this officer is disputed Edmondson claims that this remark was made by Colonel Juan Almonte and overheard by Almonte s cook Ben Edmondson 2000 p 374 Todish attributes the remark to Lieutenant Colonel Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro Todish et al 1998 p 55 According to Francisco Ruiz possibly the alcalde of Bexar the graveyard was near full and that he instead threw some of the corpses in the river Edmondson 2000 p 374 Sam Houston reported on March 13 that all Mexicans were buried Lindley 2003 p 277 Cremating bodies was anathema at the time as most Christians believed that a body could not be resurrected unless it were whole Petite 1999 p 139 Historians J Frank Dobie and Lon Tinkle requested that they not be listed as historical advisers in the credits of The Alamo because of its disjunction from recognized history Todish et al 1998 p 188 Citations a b Hardin 2010 a b c d e f g Todish et al 1998 p 55 a b Hardin 1994 p 155 a b Nofi 1992 p 136 a b c Nofi 1992 p 213 Felipe Tena Ramirez Leyes fundamentales de Mexico 1808 1971 pp 202 248 McCullar Emily October 29 2020 How Leaders of the Texas Revolution Fought to Preserve Slavery texasmonthly com Retrieved October 22 2022 Todish et al 1998 p 6 The Transformation of the Texas Economy University of Texas at Austin January 11 2016 Henson 1982 p 96 Edmondson 2000 p 78 Barr 1990 p 4 a b Barr 1990 p 56 Hardin 1994 p 98 Hardin 1994 p 99 Todish et al 1998 p 20 a b Barr 1990 p 63 Scott 2000 p 71 Scott 2000 pp 74 75 a b Edmondson 2000 p 129 Edmondson 2000 p 128 a b Edmondson 2000 p 131 a b Myers 1948 p 181 Todish et al 1998 p 10 a b c d e Edmondson 2000 p 364 Myers 1948 p 180 Hardin 1994 p 111 a b c Todish et al 1998 p 29 Todish et al 1998 p 30 a b c Todish et al 1998 p 31 Edmondson 2000 p 252 Hopewell 1994 p 114 a b c d Hopewell 1994 p 115 Hardin 1994 p 117 Chariton 1992 p 98 a b Todish et al 1998 p 32 Hopewell 1994 p 116 Hardin 1994 p 120 a b c Hardin 1994 p 102 Lord 1961 p 67 Hardin 1994 p 103 Lord 1961 p 73 Hardin 1994 p 105 Lord 1961 p 89 a b Todish et al 1998 p 36 a b Nofi 1992 p 76 Edmondson 2000 pp 299 301 Lord 1961 p 95 Lord 1961 p 105 Lindley 2003 p 89 a b c Todish et al 1998 pp 40 41 Todish et al 1998 p 40 a b Nofi 1992 p 78 a b Edmondson 2000 p 308 Edmondson 2000 p 310 Nofi 1992 p 81 a b c d e Todish et al 1998 p 43 a b c d Hardin 1994 p 132 Petite 1999 p 34 a b Nofi 1992 p 80 a b c Todish et al 1998 p 42 a b Tinkle 1985 p 118 Lord 1961 p 109 a b Tinkle 1985 p 119 Tinkle 1985 p 120 Nofi 1992 p 83 Todish et al 1998 p 44 Edmondson 2000 p 325 Lord 1961 p 14 Lord 1961 p 107 Scott 2000 p 102 Myers 1948 p 200 Petite 1999 p 88 Petite 1999 p 90 Tinkle 1985 p 162 Edmondson 2000 p 324 Nofi 1992 p 95 Scott 2000 pp 100 101 Lindley 2003 p 130 Lindley 2003 p 131 Edmondson 2000 p 340 Todish et al 1998 p 47 Edmondson 2000 p 349 Lindley 2003 p 140 a b Lindley 2003 p 142 Lindley 2003 pp 137 38 Todish et al 1998 p 48 Edmondson 2000 p 355 a b Todish et al 1998 p 49 Hopewell 1994 p 126 Chariton 1992 p 195 Hardin 1994 p 124 Edmondson 2000 p 360 a b Edmondson 2000 p 356 a b c d Edmondson 2000 p 357 a b Todish et al 1998 p 51 a b Edmondson 2000 p 362 a b Hardin 1994 p 138 Todish et al 1998 p 50 a b Lord 1961 p 160 a b Hardin 1994 pp 138 139 a b c d Hardin 1994 p 139 a b Tinkle 1985 p 196 Edmondson 2000 p 363 a b c d e Todish et al 1998 p 52 Petite 1999 p 113 Hardin 1994 p 146 a b c d Hardin 1994 p 147 a b c d Todish et al 1998 p 53 Petite 1999 p 112 a b c d Edmondson 2000 p 366 a b Edmondson 2000 p 368 a b Edmondson 2000 p 367 Edmondson 2000 p 369 a b Todish et al 1998 p 54 Petite 1999 p 114 a b Edmondson 2000 p 370 Groneman 1996 p 214 a b Hopewell 1994 p 127 Chariton 1992 p 74 Petite 1999 p 115 a b c d Edmondson 2000 p 371 Tinkle 1985 p 216 a b c Edmondson 2000 p 372 Tinkle 1985 p 218 a b Lord 1961 p 166 Groneman 1990 pp 55 56 Tinkle 1985 p 220 Edmondson 2000 p 373 a b Petite 1999 p 123 Hardin 1994 p 148 Tinkle 1985 p 214 a b Petite 1999 p 124 Lord 1961 p 167 a b c d Edmondson 2000 p 374 Hardin 1994 p 156 Chariton Wallace May 1 1992 Exploring Alamo Legends Taylor Trade Publishing p 224 ISBN 978 1 4617 0881 0 Nofi 1992 p 133 Edmondson 2000 p 407 Groneman 1990 p 119 Petite 1999 p 134 Petite 1999 p 131 a b Chariton 1990 p 78 Petite 1999 p 132 Petite 1999 p 128 Petite 1999 p 127 Edmondson 2000 p 375 Nofi 1992 p 138 Edmondson 2000 p 376 Todish et al 1998 p 67 Todish et al 1998 p 68 Lord 1961 p 190 a b Edmondson 2000 p 378 Hardin 1994 p 158 Lord 1961 p 169 Todish et al 1998 p 69 Todish et al 1998 p 70 a b Schoelwer amp Glaser 1985 p 98 Schoelwer amp Glaser 1985 p 18 Schoelwer amp Glaser 1985 pp 52 56 Todish et al 1998 p 199 a b Groneman 1998 p 52 Groneman 1998 p 56 a b Lindley 2003 p 106 Nofi 1992 p 211 Cox 1998 Todish et al 1998 p 187 Todish et al 1998 p 188 Culpepper 2004 Todish et al 1998 p 194 Todish et al 1998 p 196 Edwards 2009 p 148 Thompson 2001 p 246 Chemerka amp Wiener 2009 p 157 Michels 2010 Cobler 2015 N A 2014 Texas Centennial Issue Smithsonian National Postal Museum 9 cent The Alamo Smithsonian National Postal Museum a b c The Alamo Is Trying To Eminent Domain This Man s Bar to Make Way for Museum Honoring Alamo Defenders January 25 2023 Fights over the Alamo persist as George P Bush seeks higher office November 2 2021 General and cited referencesBarr Alwyn 1990 Texans in Revolt the Battle for San Antonio 1835 Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 77042 3 OCLC 20354408 Barr Alwyn 1996 Black Texans A history of African Americans in Texas 1528 1995 2nd ed Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 2878 8 Chariton Wallace O 1990 Exploring the Alamo Legends Dallas TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 255 9 Chemerka William H Wiener Allen J 2009 Music of the Alamo Bright Sky Press ISBN 978 1 933979 31 1 Cobler Nicole March 11 2015 Phil Collins star rises over the Alamo San Antonio Express News Retrieved March 26 2018 Cox Mike March 6 1998 Last of the Alamo big books rests with A Time to Stand The Austin American Statesman Culpepper Andy April 8 2004 A different take on The Alamo CNN Retrieved May 22 2008 Edmondson J R 2000 The Alamo Story From History to Current Conflicts Plano TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 678 6 Edwards Leigh H 2009 Johnny Cash and the paradox of American identity Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35292 7 Groneman Bill 1990 Alamo Defenders A Genealogy The People and Their Words Austin TX Eakin Press ISBN 978 0 89015 757 2 Groneman Bill 1996 Eyewitness to the Alamo Plano TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 502 4 Groneman Bill 1998 Battlefields of Texas Plano TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 571 0 Hardin Stephen L 1994 Texian Iliad Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 73086 1 Hardin Stephen L June 9 2010 Battle of The Alamo Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved December 11 2014 Henson Margaret Swett 1982 Juan Davis Bradburn A Reappraisal of the Mexican Commander of Anahuac College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 135 3 Hopewell Clifford 1994 James Bowie Texas Fighting Man A Biography Austin TX Eakin Press ISBN 978 0 89015 881 4 Lindley Thomas Ricks 2003 Alamo Traces New Evidence and New Conclusions Lanham MD Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 983 1 Lord Walter 1961 A Time to Stand Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 7902 5 Michels Patrick May 11 2010 Remembering the Alamo with Phil Collins Dallas Observer Archived from the original on April 29 2015 Retrieved December 22 2017 Myers John Myers 1948 The Alamo Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 5779 5 Nofi Albert A 1992 The Alamo and the Texas War of Independence September 30 1835 to April 21 1836 Heroes Myths and History Conshohocken PA Combined Books Inc ISBN 978 0 938289 10 4 Petite Mary Deborah 1999 1836 Facts about the Alamo and the Texas War for Independence Mason City IA Savas Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 882810 35 2 Schoelwer Susan Prendergast Glaser Tom W 1985 Alamo Images Changing Perceptions of a Texas Experience Dallas TX The DeGlolyer Library and Southern Methodist University Press ISBN 978 0 87074 213 2 Scott Robert 2000 After the Alamo Plano TX Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 691 5 Tinkle Lon 1985 1958 13 Days to Glory The Siege of the Alamo Reprint McGraw Hill ed College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 238 1 Thompson Frank 2001 The Alamo A Cultural History Dallas TX Taylor Trade ISBN 9781461734352 Todish Timothy J Todish Terry Spring Ted 1998 Alamo Sourcebook 1836 A Comprehensive Guide to the Battle of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution Austin TX Eakin Press ISBN 978 1 57168 152 2 N A July 21 2014 Phil Collins Press Conference The Official Alamo Website Archived from the original on September 28 2014 Retrieved September 22 2014 Further readingBurrough Bryan Tomlinson Chris Stanford Jason 2021 Forget the Alamo The Rise and Fall of an American Myth Penguin Press ISBN 9781984880093 Crisp James E 2005 Sleuthing the Alamo Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 16349 0 Davis William C 1998 Three Roads to the Alamo The Lives and Fortunes of David Crockett James Bowie and William Barret Travis HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 060 17334 0 Dole Gerard 2011 Texas 1836 Musical Echoes from the Alamo paperback Paris Terre de Brume ISBN 978 2 843 62474 2 Donovan James 2012 The Blood of Heroes The 13 Day Struggle for the Alamo and the Sacrifice That Forged a Nation Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 05374 7 Fehrenbach T R June 1967 Campbell John W ed Remember the Alamo Analog ISBN 978 0 586 02256 6 Science fiction story about a time traveller who goes back to the Alamo at the time of the battle and gets trapped in the past Hardin Stephen L 2001 The Alamo 1836 Santa Anna s Texas Campaign Osprey Campaign Series 89 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 841 76090 2 Manchaca Martha 2001 Recovering History Constructing Race The Indian Black and White Roots of Mexican Americans The Joe R and Teresa Lozano Long Series in Latin American and Latino Art and Culture Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 75253 5 Green Michael R April 1988 To the People of Texas amp All Americans in the World The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 91 4 483 508 JSTOR 30240052 Winders Richard Bruce April 2017 This Is a Cruel Truth But I Cannot Omit It The Origin and Effect of Mexico s No Quarter Policy in the Texas Revolution Southwestern Historical Quarterly 120 4 412 439 doi 10 1353 swh 2017 0000 ISSN 1558 9560 S2CID 151940992 External linksOfficial website for the Alamo Documentary excerpt on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Alamo amp oldid 1207264430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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