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Davy Crockett

David Crockett (August 17, 1786 – March 6, 1836) was an American folk hero, frontiersman, soldier, and politician. He is often referred to in popular culture as the "King of the Wild Frontier". He represented Tennessee in the U.S. House of Representatives and served in the Texas Revolution.

Davy Crockett
Davy Crockett portrait by Chester Harding (1834)
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Tennessee
In office
March 4, 1827 – March 4, 1831
Preceded byAdam Rankin Alexander
Succeeded byWilliam Fitzgerald
Constituency9th district
In office
March 4, 1833 – March 4, 1835
Preceded byDistrict created
Succeeded byAdam Huntsman
Constituency12th district
Member of the
Tennessee General Assembly
In office
1821–1825
Personal details
Born
David Crockett

(1786-08-17)August 17, 1786
Limestone, Greene County, Tennessee (at that time, part of North Carolina), U.S.
DiedMarch 6, 1836(1836-03-06) (aged 49)
Alamo Mission, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Political party
Spouses
  • Polly Finley
    (m. 1806; died 1815)
  • (m. 1815)
OccupationPioneer, soldier, politician
Signature

Crockett grew up in East Tennessee, where he gained a reputation for hunting and storytelling. He was made a colonel in the militia of Lawrence County, Tennessee and was elected to the Tennessee state legislature in 1821. In 1827, he was elected to the U.S. Congress where he vehemently opposed many of the policies of President Andrew Jackson, especially the Indian Removal Act. Crockett's opposition to Jackson's policies led to his defeat in the 1831 elections. He was re-elected in 1833, then narrowly lost in 1835, prompting his angry departure to Texas (then the Mexican state of Tejas) shortly thereafter. In early 1836, he took part in the Texas Revolution and died at the Battle of the Alamo. It is unclear whether he died in battle or was executed after being captured by the Mexican Army.[2][3][4]

Crockett became famous during his lifetime for larger-than-life exploits popularized by stage plays and almanacs. After his death, he continued to be credited with acts of mythical proportion. These led in the 20th century to television and film portrayals, and he became one of the best-known American folk heroes.[5][6]

Family and early life

The Crocketts were of mostly French-Huguenot ancestry, although the family had settled in Ulster in the north of Ireland before migrating to the Americas.[7] The earliest known paternal ancestor was Gabriel Gustave de Crocketagne, whose son Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne was given a commission in the Household Troops under King Louis XIV of France. Antoine married Louise de Saix and emigrated to the Kingdom of Ireland with her, changing the family name to Crockett.[8] Their son Joseph Louis[8] was born and raised in Ireland, possibly being born, according to local tradition, near either Castlederg or Donemana, both villages in the northwest of County Tyrone in the west of Ulster; Joseph Louis Crockett later married Sarah Stewart, who was also from west Ulster, she being an Ulster-Scot from just outside the village of Manorcunningham in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal.[9][10] Joseph and Sarah emigrated to New York, where their son William David was born in 1709. He married Elizabeth Boulay. William and Elizabeth's son David was born in Pennsylvania and married Elizabeth Hedge. They were the parents of William, David Jr., Robert, Alexander, James, Joseph, and John,[a] the father of David Crockett who died at the Alamo.

John was born c. 1753 in Frederick County, Virginia.[11] The family moved to Tryon County, North Carolina c. 1768. In 1776, the family moved to northeast Tennessee, in the area of modern Hawkins County.[13] John was one of the Overmountain Men who fought in the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolutionary War.[14] He was away as a militia volunteer in 1777 when David and Elizabeth were killed at their home near modern Rogersville by Creeks and Chickamauga Cherokees led by war chief Dragging Canoe.[15][16] John's brother Joseph was wounded in the skirmish. His brother James was taken prisoner and held for seventeen years.[17]

 
Commemorative stone.
 
Replica cabin at Crockett's birth site in the David Crockett Birthplace State Park.

John married Rebecca Hawkins in 1780.[18] Their son David was born August 17, 1786,[19] and they named him after John's father.[b] David was born in modern Greene County, Tennessee (then part of North Carolina), close to the Nolichucky River and near the community of Limestone.[c] John continually struggled to make ends meet, and the Crocketts moved to a tract of land on Lick Creek in 1792.[25] John sold that tract of land in 1794 and moved the family to Cove Creek, where he built a gristmill with partner Thomas Galbraith.[26] A flood destroyed the gristmill and the Crockett homestead. The Crocketts then moved to Mossy Creek in Jefferson County, Tennessee, but John forfeited his property in bankruptcy in 1795.[27] The family next moved on to property owned by a Quaker named John Canady.[d] At Morristown in the Southwest Territory, John built a tavern on a stage coach route.[e]

When David was 12 years old, his father indentured him to Jacob Siler to help with the Crockett family indebtedness. He helped tend Siler's cattle as a cowboy on a 400-mile (640 km) trip to near Natural Bridge in Virginia. He was well treated and paid for his services but, after several weeks in Virginia, he decided to return home to Tennessee.[32] The next year, John enrolled his sons in school, but David played hookey after an altercation with a fellow student. Upon learning of this, John attempted to whip him but was outrun by his son. David then joined a cattle drive to Front Royal, Virginia, for Jesse Cheek.[33] Upon completion of that trip, he joined teamster Adam Myers on a trip to Gerrardstown, West Virginia.[34] In between trips with Myers, he worked for farmer John Gray.[35] After leaving Myers, he journeyed to Christiansburg, Virginia, where he apprenticed for the next four years with hatter Elijah Griffith.[36]

 
Contract of marriage for David Crockett and Margaret Elder, October 21, 1805

In 1802, David journeyed by foot back to his father's tavern in Tennessee.[37] His father was in debt to Abraham Wilson for $36 (equivalent to $736 in 2022), so David was hired out to Wilson to pay off the debt.[38] Later, he worked off a $40 debt to John Canady.[39] Once the debts were paid, John Crockett told his son that he was free to leave. David returned to Canady's employment, where he stayed for four years.[40]

Marriages and children

Crockett fell in love with John Canady's niece Amy Summer, who was engaged to Canady's son Robert.[41] While serving as part of the wedding party, Crockett met Margaret Elder. He persuaded her to marry him, and a marriage contract was drawn up on October 21, 1805. However,[42] Margaret had also become engaged to another young man at the same time, whom she married instead of Crockett.[43]

He met Polly Finley and her mother Jean at a harvest festival.[44] Although friendly towards him in the beginning, Jean Finley eventually felt Crockett was not the man for her daughter.[45] Crockett declared his intentions to marry Polly, regardless of whether the ceremony was allowed to take place in her parents' home or had to be performed elsewhere. He arranged for a justice of the peace and took out a marriage license on August 12, 1806. On August 16, he rode to Polly's house with family and friends, determined to ride off with Polly to be married elsewhere. Polly's father pleaded with Crockett to have the wedding in the Finley home. Crockett agreed only after Jean apologized for her past treatment of him.[46]

 
Crockett's second wife, Elizabeth

The newlyweds settled on land near Polly's parents, and their first child, John Wesley Crockett, who became a United States Congressman,[47] was born July 10, 1807.[48] Their second child, William Finley Crockett, was born November 25, 1808.[48] In October 1811, the family relocated to Lincoln County.[49] Their third child Margaret Finley (Polly) Crockett was born on November 25, 1812.[50] The Crocketts then moved to Franklin County in 1813. He named the new home on Beans Creek "Kentuck". [51] His wife died in March 1815,[52] and Crockett asked his brother John and his sister-in-law to move in with him to help care for the children.[53] That same year, he married the widow Elizabeth Patton, who had a daughter, Margaret Ann, and a son, George.[54] David and Elizabeth's son, Robert Patton, was born September 16, 1816.[55] Daughter Rebecca Elvira was born December 25, 1818.[56] Daughter Matilda was born August 2, 1821.[57]

David Crockett family tree

David Crockett family tree
  • Gabriel Gustave de Crocketagne m. Mademoiselle de Saix of France[58]
    • Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne (changed name to Crockett) (1643–1735) m. Louise de Saix (1648)[59]
      • Joseph Louis Crockett born in Ireland (1676–1749) m. Sarah Gilbert Stewart (1680–1776)[60]
        • William David Crockett (1709–1770) m. Elizabeth Boulay (1710)
          • David "the Elder" Crockett (1729–1777) m. Elizabeth Hedge (1730–1777)
            • William Crockett (1748–1846)[61]
            • David Crockett Jr.[62]
            • Robert Crockett[63]
            • Alexander Crockett[64]
            • James Crockett[65]
            • Joseph Crockett[66]
            • John Crockett (1753–1834) m. Rebecca Hawkins (1756–1832)[67]
              • Margaret Catharine Crockett (c. 1778–1792)
              • Nathan Crockett (1778–1839)
              • William Crockett (1780–1840)
              • Aaron Crockett (1782–1835)
              • James Patterson Crockett (1784–1834)
              • David Crockett (1786–1836)
                • m. Polly Finley (1788–1815)[68]
                  • John Wesley Crockett (1807–1852)[69] m. Martha Hamilton
                  • William Finley Crockett (1809–1846)[70] m. Clorinda Boyett
                  • Margaret Finley (Polly) Crockett (1812–1860)[71] m. Wiley Flowers
                • m. Elizabeth Patton (1788–1860)[72]
                  • Robert Patton Crockett (1816–1889)[73]
                    • m. Matilda Porter
                    • m. Louisa A. Wohlford
                    • m. Lydia America Corley
                  • Rebecca Elvira Crockett (1818–1879)[74]
                    • m. George Kimbrough
                    • m. James Halford
                  • Matilda Crockett (1821–1890)[75]
                    • m. Thomas P. Tyson
                    • m. James Wilson
                    • m. Redden Fields
              • John Crockett (1787–1841)
              • Elizabeth Crockett (1788–1805)
              • Rebecca Crockett (1796–1819)

Tennessee militia service

 
US postage stamp, issued 1967

Andrew Jackson was appointed major general of the Tennessee militia in 1802.[76] The Fort Mims massacre occurred near Mobile, Mississippi Territory, on August 30, 1813, and became a rallying cry for the Creek War.[77] On September 20, Crockett left his family and enlisted as a scout for a term of 90 days with Francis Jones's Company of Mounted Rifleman,[78] part of the Second Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Riflemen.[79] They served under Colonel John Coffee in the war, marching south into present-day Alabama and taking an active part in the fighting.[80] Crockett often hunted wild game for the soldiers, and felt better suited to that role than killing Creek warriors.[81] He served until December 24, 1813.[82]

The War of 1812 was being waged concurrently with the Creek War. After the Treaty of Fort Jackson in August 1814, Andrew Jackson, then with the U.S. Army, wanted the British forces ousted from Spanish Florida[83] and asked for support from the Tennessee militia. Crockett re-enlisted as third sergeant for a six-month term with the Tennessee Mounted Gunmen under Captain John Cowan on September 28, 1814.[84] Crockett's unit saw little of the main action because they were days behind the rest of the troops and were focused mostly on foraging for food. Crockett returned home in December.[85] He was still on a military reserve status until March 1815, so he hired a young man to fulfill the remainder of his service.[86]

Public career

 
Davy Crockett by William Henry Huddle, 1889

In 1817, Crockett moved the family to new acreage in Lawrence County, where he first entered public office as a commissioner helping to configure the new county's boundaries.[87] On November 25, the state legislature appointed him county justice of the peace.[88] On March 27, 1818, he was elected lieutenant colonel of the Fifty-seventh Regiment of Tennessee Militia, defeating candidate Daniel Matthews for the position.[89] By 1819, Crockett was operating multiple businesses in the area and felt his public responsibilities were beginning to consume so much of his time and energy that he had little left for either family or business. He resigned from the office of justice of the peace and from his position with the regiment.[90]

Tennessee General Assembly

In 1821, he resigned as commissioner and successfully ran for a seat in the Tennessee General Assembly,[91] representing Lawrence and Hickman counties.[92] It was this election where Crockett honed his anecdotal oratory skills.[93] He was appointed to the Committee of Propositions and Grievances on September 17, 1821, and served through the first session that ended November 17, as well as the special session called by the governor in the summer of 1822, ending on August 24.[94][95] He favored legislation to ease the tax burden on the poor.[96] Crockett spent his entire legislative career fighting for the rights of impoverished settlers who he felt dangled on the precipice of losing title to their land due to the state's complicated system of grants.[96][97] He supported 1821 gubernatorial candidate William Carroll, over Andrew Jackson's endorsed candidate Edward Ward.[98]

Less than two weeks after Crockett's 1821 election to the General Assembly, a flood of the Tennessee River destroyed Crockett's businesses.[99] In November, Elizabeth's father Robert Patton deeded 800 acres (320 ha) of his Carroll County property to Crockett.[100] Crockett sold off most of the acreage to help settle his debts, and moved his family to the remaining acreage on the Obion River, which remained in Carroll County until 1825 when the boundaries were reconfigured and put it in Gibson County.[101] In 1823, he ran against Andrew Jackson's nephew-in-law William Edward Butler[102] and won a seat in the General Assembly representing the counties of Carroll, Humphreys, Perry, Henderson and Madison.[103] He served in the first session, which ran from September through the end of November 1823, and in the second session that ran September through the end of November 1824, championing the rights of the impoverished farmers.[104] During Andrew Jackson's election to the United States Senate in 1823, Crockett backed his opponent John Williams.[105]

United States House of Representatives

On October 25, 1824, Crockett notified his constituents of his intention to run in the 1825 election for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. He lost that election to incumbent Adam Rankin Alexander.[106] A chance meeting in 1826 gained him the encouragement of Memphis mayor Marcus Brutus Winchester[107] to try again to win a seat in Congress.[108] The Jackson Gazette published a letter from Crockett on September 15, 1826, announcing his intention of again challenging Rankin, and stating his opposition to the policies of President John Quincy Adams and Secretary of State Henry Clay and to Rankin's position on the cotton tariff.[109] Militia veteran William Arnold also entered the race, and Crockett easily defeated both political opponents for the 1827–29 term.[110][111] He arrived in Washington, D.C. and took up residence at Mrs. Ball's Boarding House, where a number of other legislators lived when Congress was in session.[112] Jackson was elected as president in 1828. Crockett continued his legislative focus on settlers getting a fair deal for land titles, offering H.R. 27 amendment to a bill sponsored by James K. Polk.[113]

I believed it was a wicked, unjust measure.... I voted against this Indian bill, and my conscience yet tells me that I gave a good honest vote, and one that I believe will not make me ashamed in the day of judgement.

—David Crockett, A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett[114]

Crockett was re-elected for the 1829–31 session,[115] once again defeating Adam Rankin Alexander.[116] He introduced H.R. 185 amendment to the land bill on January 29, 1830, but it was defeated on May 3.[113] On February 25, 1830, he introduced a resolution to abolish the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York[117] because he felt that it was public money going to benefit the sons of wealthy men.[118] He spoke out against Congress giving $100,000 to the widow of Stephen Decatur, citing that Congress was not empowered to do that.[119] He opposed Jackson's 1830 Indian Removal Act and was the only member of the Tennessee delegation to vote against it.[120] Cherokee chief John Ross sent him a letter on January 13, 1831, expressing his thanks for Crockett's vote.[121] His vote was not popular with his own district, and he was defeated in the 1831 election by William Fitzgerald.[122]

Crockett ran against Fitzgerald again in the 1833 election and was returned to Congress, serving until 1835.[123][95] On January 2, 1834, he introduced the land title resolution H.R. 126, but it never made it as far as being debated on the House floor.[113] He was defeated for re-election in the August 1835 election by Adam Huntsman.[124] During his last term in Congress, he collaborated with Kentucky Congressman Thomas Chilton to write his autobiography, which was published by E. L. Carey and A. Hart in 1834 as A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett, Written by Himself,[125] and he went east to promote the book. In 1836, newspapers published the now-famous quotation attributed to Crockett upon his return to his home state:

I told the people of my district that I would serve them as faithfully as I had done; but if not, they might go to hell, and I would go to Texas.[126]

Although Crockett owned some slaves, his record in Congress did not indicate either avid support for or opposition to the institution of slavery in the United States.[127][128]

Texas Revolution

 
Portrait of Davy Crockett by John Gadsby Chapman

By December 1834, Crockett was writing to friends about moving to Texas if Jackson's chosen successor Martin Van Buren was elected president. The next year, he discussed with his friend Benjamin McCulloch raising a company of volunteers to take to Texas in the expectation that a revolution was imminent.[129] His departure to Texas was delayed by a court appearance in the last week of October as co-executor of his deceased father-in-law's estate; he finally left his home near Rutherford in West Tennessee with three other men on November 1, 1835, to explore Texas.[130] His youngest child Matilda later wrote that she distinctly remembered the last time that she saw her father:

He was dressed in his hunting suit, wearing a coonskin cap, and carried a fine rifle presented to him by friends in Philadelphia. ... He seemed very confident the morning he went away that he would soon have us all to join him in Texas.[131]

Crockett traveled with 30 well-armed men to Jackson, Tennessee, where he gave a speech from the steps of the Madison County courthouse, and they arrived in Little Rock, Arkansas, on November 12, 1835. The local newspapers reported that hundreds of people swarmed into town to get a look at Crockett, and a group of leading citizens put on a dinner in his honor that night at the Jeffries Hotel. Crockett spoke "mainly to the subject of Texan independence", as well as Washington politics.[132]

Crockett arrived in Nacogdoches, Texas, in early January 1836. On January 14, he and 65 other men signed an oath before Judge John Forbes to the Provisional Government of Texas for six months: "I have taken the oath of government and have enrolled my name as a volunteer and will set out for the Rio Grande in a few days with the volunteers from the United States." Each man was promised about 4,600 acres (1,900 ha) of land as payment. On February 6, he and five other men rode into San Antonio de Bexar and camped just outside the town.

 
The Fall of the Alamo by Robert Jenkins Onderdonk depicts Davy Crockett swinging his rifle at Mexican troops who have breached the south gate of the mission.

Crockett arrived at the Alamo Mission in San Antonio on February 8.[133] A Mexican army arrived on February 23 led by General Antonio López de Santa Anna, surprising the men garrisoned in the Alamo, and the Mexican soldiers immediately initiated a siege.[134][135] Santa Anna ordered his artillery to keep up a near-constant bombardment. The guns were moved closer to the Alamo each day, increasing their effectiveness. On February 25, 200–300 Mexican soldiers crossed the San Antonio River and took cover in abandoned shacks approximately 90 to 100 yards (82 to 91 m) from the Alamo walls.[136][137] The soldiers intended to use the huts as cover to establish another artillery position, although many Texians assumed that they actually were launching an assault on the fort.[138] Several men volunteered to burn the huts.[139] To provide cover, the Alamo cannons fired grapeshot at the Mexican soldiers, and Crockett and his men fired rifles, while other defenders reloaded extra weapons for them to use in maintaining a steady fire. The battle was over within 90 minutes,[138] and the Mexican soldiers retreated.[140] There were limited stores of powder and shot inside the Alamo, and Alamo commander William Barret Travis ordered the artillery to stop returning fire on February 26 so as to conserve precious ammunition. Crockett and his men were encouraged to keep shooting, as they were unusually effective.[141]

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

As the siege progressed, Travis sent many messages asking for reinforcements. Several messengers were sent to James Fannin who commanded the group of Texian soldiers at Presidio La Bahia in Goliad, Texas. Fannin decided that it was too risky to reinforce the Alamo, although historian Thomas Ricks Lindley concludes that up to 50 of Fannin's men left his command to go to Bexar.[142] These men would have reached Cibolo Creek on the afternoon of March 3, 35 miles (56 km) from the Alamo, where they joined another group of men who also planned to join the garrison.[143]

There was a skirmish between Mexican and Texian troops that same night outside the Alamo.[144] Historian Walter Lord speculates that the Texians were creating a diversion to allow their courier John Smith to evade Mexican pickets.[144] However, Alamo survivor Susannah Dickinson said in 1876 that Travis sent out three men shortly after dark on March 3, probably a response to the arrival of Mexican reinforcements. The three men—including Crockett—were sent to find Fannin.[145] Lindley states that Crockett and one of the other men found the force of Texians waiting along Cibolo Creek just before midnight; they had advanced to within 20 miles (32 km) of the Alamo. Just before daylight on March 4, part of the Texian force managed to break through the Mexican lines and enter the Alamo. A second group was driven across the prairie by Mexican cavalry.[146]

The siege ended on March 6 when the Mexican army attacked just before dawn while the defenders were sleeping. The daily artillery bombardment had been suspended, perhaps a ploy to encourage the natural human reaction to a cessation of constant strain. But the garrison awakened and the final fight began. Most of the noncombatants gathered in the church sacristy for safety. According to Dickinson, Crockett paused briefly in the chapel to say a prayer before running to his post.[147] The Mexican soldiers climbed up the north outer walls of the Alamo complex, and most of the Texians fell back to the barracks and the chapel, as previously planned.[148] Crockett and his men, however, were too far from the barracks to take shelter[149] and were the last remaining group to be in the open. They defended the low wall in front of the church, using their rifles as clubs and relying on knives, as the action was too furious to allow reloading. After a volley and a charge with bayonets, Mexican soldiers pushed the few remaining defenders back toward the church.[150]

 
A coffin in the San Fernando Cathedral purports to hold the ashes of the Alamo defenders. However, historians believe it more probable that the ashes were buried near the Alamo.

The Battle of the Alamo lasted almost 90 minutes,[151] and all of the defenders were killed. Santa Anna ordered his men to take their bodies to a nearby stand of trees, where they were stacked together and wood piled on top.[152] That evening, they lit a fire and burned their bodies to ashes.[153] The ashes were left undisturbed until February 1837, when Juan Seguin and his cavalry returned to Bexar to examine the remains. A local carpenter created a simple coffin, and ashes from the funeral pyres were placed inside. The names of Travis, Crockett, and Bowie were inscribed on the lid.[154] The coffin is thought to have been buried in a peach tree grove, but the spot was not marked and can no longer be identified.[155]

Death

 
The David Crockett Spring in Crockett, Houston County, Texas

David Crockett died at the Alamo on the morning of March 6, 1836, at the age of 49. Accounts from survivors of the battle differ on the manner of Crockett's death, with stories ranging from Crockett putting up a heroic last stand to the account that he surrendered along with several other men and was executed. To further confusion, historians have been able to back up opposing theories with "voluminous evidence".[156]

Controversy

The popular mythology of Crockett's death in American culture is one of a heroic last stand, a tale that is backed up by some historical evidence. For example, a former African-American slave named Ben, who had acted as cook for one of Santa Anna's officers, maintained that Crockett's body was found in the barracks surrounded by "no less than sixteen Mexican corpses", with Crockett's knife buried in one of them.[157] There is, however, historical evidence countering the popular myth, with stories of a Crockett surrender and execution circulating as far back as just a few weeks after the battle.[158]

The counter myth picked up historical steam, when, in 1955, Jesús Sánchez Garza discovered the memoirs of José Enrique de la Peña, a Mexican officer present at the Battle of the Alamo, and self-published it as La Rebelión de Texas – Manuscrito Inédito de 1836 por un Oficial de Santa Anna. Texas A&M University Press published the English translation in 1975 With Santa Anna in Texas: A Personal Narrative of the Revolution. The English publication caused a scandal within the United States, as it asserted that Crockett did not die in battle.[159] The translator of the English publication, Carmen Perry, the former librarian of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, was harassed with anonymous letters and intimidating phone calls by Crockett loyalists who considered the mere suggestion that Crockett had not died fighting blasphemous.[160]

Some have questioned the validity of the text. The author and retired firefighter, William Groneman III, posited that the journals were made up of several different types of paper from several different paper manufacturers, all cut down to fit.[161] Long-time John Wayne enthusiast Joseph Musso [162] also questioned the validity of de la Peña's diary, basing his suspicions on the timing of the diary's release, and the fact that historical interest in the topic rose around the same time as the Walt Disney mini-series Davy Crockett was released in 1955. Some questions were answered when, in 2001, archivist David Gracy published a detailed analysis of the manuscript, including lab results. He found, among other things, that the paper and ink were of a type used by the Mexican army in the 1830s, and the handwriting matched that on other documents in the Mexican military archives that were written or signed by de la Peña.[163][164]

 
David Crockett clipper ship card

As for those who have questioned de la Peña's ability to identify any of the Alamo defenders by name, historians believe that de la Peña likely witnessed or was told about executions of the Alamo survivors. And while some claim neither he nor his comrades would have known who those men were,[165] others conclude that the "enormous weight of evidence" is in favor of the surrender-execution hypothesis.[160] To further controversy, equal evidence is available for the "heroic last stand" story, with several survivors and first-hand witnesses to the battle claiming Crockett fought to the death.[156]

Legacy

One of Crockett's sayings, many of which were published in almanacs between 1835 and 1856 (along with those of Daniel Boone and Kit Carson), was: "Always be sure you are right, then go ahead."[166]

While serving in the United States House of Representatives, Crockett became a Freemason. He entrusted his masonic apron to a friend in Tennessee before leaving for Texas, and it was inherited by the friend's descendant in Kentucky.[167]

In 1967, the U.S. Postal Service issued a 5-cent stamp commemorating Davy Crockett.[168][169]

Namesakes

 
Col. Crockett statue, Lawrenceburg Public Square

Tennessee

Texas

 
Alamo Cenotaph

Miscellaneous

  • M28 Davy Crockett Weapon System: a small Nuclear weapons system, the smallest developed by the U.S. which could be fired from a light vehicle, or from a tripod mounted launcher.[180]
  • Crockett Park, north of downtown San Antonio

Monuments

In popular culture

Television

 
Fess Parker as Davy Crockett in Disneyland

Walt Disney adapted Crockett's stories into a television miniseries titled Davy Crockett, which aired in 1954 and 1955 on Walt Disney's Disneyland. The series popularized the image of Crockett, portrayed by Fess Parker, wearing a coonskin cap, and originated the song "The Ballad of Davy Crockett". The first three parts of the series were edited into a feature-length movie for theaters.

Crockett's stories were used by the French animation Studios Animage for a 1994 animated series titled Davy Crockett.[186]

A 2009 episode of MythBusters tested whether Crockett could split a bullet in half on the blade of an ax 40 yards (37 m) away, and concluded that it would indeed be possible to do so.[187]

Film

In films, Crockett has been played by:

Theatre

Prose fiction

Crockett appears in at least two short alternate history works: "Chickasaw Slave" by Judith Moffett in Mike Resnick's anthology Alternate Presidents (1992), where Crockett is the seventh President of the United States, and "Empire" by William Sanders in Harry Turtledove's anthology Alternate Generals II (2002) where Crockett fights for Emperor Napoleon I of Louisiana in a conflict analogous to the War of 1812.[204] Crockett is also a character in Gore Vidal's novel Burr as a congressman from Tennessee.

Comics

Columbia Features syndicated a comic strip, Davy Crockett, Frontiersman, from June 20, 1955, until 1959. Stories were by France Herron[205] and the artwork was ghosted in early 1956 by Jack Kirby.[206]

See also

Notes

Explanatory footnotes

  1. ^ Historians believe that there were more children of William David and Elizabeth, but that not all the records have yet been found.[11][12]
  2. ^ The number of David's siblings is not fully known. Nine children of John and Rebecca have been verified by historians and Crockett descendants: Nathan, William, Aaron, James, David, John, Elizabeth, Rebecca, and Margaret Catharine.[20][20][8][21]
  3. ^ At the time of David Crockett's birth, the surrounding area was part of an autonomous territory known as the State of Franklin. John Crockett was active in local politics and an advocate of the independent State of Franklin.[22][23] A replica of his birthplace cabin stands near the site, situated in the Davy Crockett Birthplace State Park[24]
  4. ^ John Canady's name was erroneously spelled as Kennedy in Crockett's autobiography, and in some books where the author used Crockett as the source.[28][29][30]
  5. ^ Crockett Tavern Museum standing on the site.[27][31]

Citations

  1. ^ Price, Angel. "Davy Crockett- Bear Hunting in Tennessee".
  2. ^ De La Pena, Jose Enrique (1975). With Santa Anna in Texas A Personal Narrative of the Revolution. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-001-1.
  3. ^ Weber, David J. (January 1990). Myth and the History of the Hispanic Southwest. University of New Mexico Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-8263-1194-8.
  4. ^ Kilgore, Dan (January 19, 2010). How Did Davy Die? And Why Do We Care So Much?: Commemorative Edition (Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest) (Commemorative ed.). Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-60344-194-0.
  5. ^ Abramson, Haskell & Lofaro 2006, pp. 300–301.
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  126. ^ *Crockett quote from the Niles Weekly Register newspaper November 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, April 9, 1836
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  167. ^ "... made for him by Mrs. A.C. Massie of Washington, D.C., during his tenure in Congress. Before leaving for Texas, he entrusted the apron to the sheriff of Weakley County, Tennessee, and it was inherited and preserved by the sheriff's nephew, E.M. Taylor of Paducah, Kentucky. The lodge at Weakley County, near the Crockett home, burned during the Civil War destroying all the lodge records. From The Texas Mason By Pete Normand, PM Texas Lodge of Research"; Crockett, Davy. . Masonic Research. Grand Lodge of Texas. Archived from the original on May 12, 2012. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
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General and cited references

  • Abramson, Rudy; Haskell, Jean; Lofaro, Michael (2006). Encyclopedia of Appalachia. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1-57233-456-4.
  • Bense, Judith A. (1999). Archaeology of Colonial Pensacola (Florida Museum of Natural History: Ripley P. Bullen Series). Gainesville: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-1661-0.
  • Boylston, James R.; Wiener, Allen J. (2009). David Crockett in Congress: The Rise and Fall of the Poor Man's Friend. Houston, TX: Bright Sky Press. ISBN 978-1-933979-51-9.
  • Cobia, Manley F. Jr. (2003). Journey into the Land of Trials: The Story of Davy Crockett's Expedition to the Alamo. Franklin, TN: Hillsboro Press. ISBN 978-1-57736-268-5.
  • Cozad, W. Lee (2002). Those Magnificent Mountain Movies: The Golden Years 1911–1939. Lake Arrowhead, CA: Rim of the World Historic Society. ISBN 978-0-9723372-1-2.
  • Crockett, David (1834). A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett. Baltimore, MD: E. L. Carey and A. Hart. OCLC 1306778.
  • Derr, Mark (1983). The Frontiersman : The Real Life and the Many Legends of Davy Crockett. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-688-13798-4.
  • DRT (2001). Daughters of Republic of Texas – Vol II. Paducah, KY: Turner Publishing. ISBN 978-1-56311-641-4.
  • Edmondson, J.R. (2000). The Alamo Story-From History to Current Conflicts. Plano: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-585-24106-7.
  • Fulgham, Richard Lee (2000). Appalachian Genesis: The Clinch River Valley from Prehistoric Times to the End of the Frontier Era. Johnson City, TN: Overmountain Press. ISBN 978-1-57072-088-8.
  • Groneman, Bill (1999). Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett. Plano: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-585-26267-3.
  • Groneman, William (2005). David Crockett: Hero of the Common Man. New York: Forge Books. ISBN 978-0-7653-1067-5.
  • Hardin, Stephen L.. (1994). Texian Iliad. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-73086-1.
  • Hasday, Judy L. (2010). Davy Crockett (Legends of the Wild West). New York: Chelsea House Publications. ISBN 978-1-60413-592-3.
  • Jones, Randell (2006). In the Footsteps of Davy Crockett. Winston-Salem, NC: John F. Blair. ISBN 978-0-89587-324-8.
  • Langman, Larry (1992). A guide to silent westerns. New York: Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-27858-7.
  • Langman, Larry; Ebner, David (2001). Hollywood's Image of the South: A Century of Southern Films. New York: Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-31886-3.
  • Lindley, Thomas Ricks (2003). Alamo Traces: New Evidence and New Conclusions. Lanham, MD: Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-55622-983-1.
  • Little, Carol Morris (1996). A Comprehensive Guide to Outdoor Sculpture in Texas. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-76036-3.
  • Lord, Walter (1961). A Time to Stand. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-7902-5.
  • Marill, Alvin H. (2011). Television Westerns: Six Decades of Sagebrush Sheriffs, Scalawags, and Sidewinders. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-8133-4.
  • Michno, Gregory; Michno, Gregory F.; Michno, Susan (2008). Circle the Wagons!: Attacks on Wagon Trains in History and Hollywood Films. Jefferson. NC: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-3997-3.
  • Monush, Barry; Willis, John (2005). Screen World: 2004 Film Annual. New York: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books. ISBN 978-1-55783-638-0.
  • Niemi, Robert (2006). History in the Media: Film And Television. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-952-2.
  • 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 978-0-585-19807-1.
  • Petite, Mary Deborah (1999). 1836 Facts about the Alamo and the Texas War for Independence. Mechanicsburg, PA: Savas Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-882810-35-2.
  • Remini, Robert V.; Clark, Wesley K. (2008). Andrew Jackson (Great Generals). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-60015-7.
  • Roberts, Randy; Olson, James S (2001). A Line in the Sand: The Alamo in Blood and Memory. New York: The Free Press. ISBN 978-0-684-83544-0.
  • Tinkle, Lon (1985). 13 Days to Glory: The Siege of the Alamo. College Station: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-238-1.. Reprint. Originally published: New York: McGraw-Hill, 1958
  • 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.
  • Wallis, Michael (2011). David Crockett: The Lion of the West. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-06758-3.
  • Whitburn, Joel (2000). Top Pop Singles 1955–1999. Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research, Inc. ISBN 978-0-89820-142-0.
  • Williamson, Jerry Wayne (1995). Hillbillyland: What the Movies Did to the Mountains and What the Mountains Did to the Movies. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4503-5.
  • Winders, Richard Bruce (2001). Davy Crockett: The Legend of the Wild Frontier. New York: Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8239-5747-7.

Further reading

Numerous books have been written about David Crockett, including the first one that bears his name as its author.

External links

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davy, crockett, other, uses, disambiguation, david, crockett, august, 1786, march, 1836, american, folk, hero, frontiersman, soldier, politician, often, referred, popular, culture, king, wild, frontier, represented, tennessee, house, representatives, served, t. For other uses see Davy Crockett disambiguation David Crockett August 17 1786 March 6 1836 was an American folk hero frontiersman soldier and politician He is often referred to in popular culture as the King of the Wild Frontier He represented Tennessee in the U S House of Representatives and served in the Texas Revolution Davy CrockettDavy Crockett portrait by Chester Harding 1834 Member of theU S House of Representativesfrom TennesseeIn office March 4 1827 March 4 1831Preceded byAdam Rankin AlexanderSucceeded byWilliam FitzgeraldConstituency9th districtIn office March 4 1833 March 4 1835Preceded byDistrict createdSucceeded byAdam HuntsmanConstituency12th districtMember of theTennessee General AssemblyIn office 1821 1825Personal detailsBornDavid Crockett 1786 08 17 August 17 1786Limestone Greene County Tennessee at that time part of North Carolina U S DiedMarch 6 1836 1836 03 06 aged 49 Alamo Mission San Antonio Texas U S Political partyNational Republican Anti Jacksonian Whig after 1833 1 SpousesPolly Finley m 1806 died 1815 wbr Elizabeth Patton Crockett m 1815 wbr OccupationPioneer soldier politicianSignatureCrockett grew up in East Tennessee where he gained a reputation for hunting and storytelling He was made a colonel in the militia of Lawrence County Tennessee and was elected to the Tennessee state legislature in 1821 In 1827 he was elected to the U S Congress where he vehemently opposed many of the policies of President Andrew Jackson especially the Indian Removal Act Crockett s opposition to Jackson s policies led to his defeat in the 1831 elections He was re elected in 1833 then narrowly lost in 1835 prompting his angry departure to Texas then the Mexican state of Tejas shortly thereafter In early 1836 he took part in the Texas Revolution and died at the Battle of the Alamo It is unclear whether he died in battle or was executed after being captured by the Mexican Army 2 3 4 Crockett became famous during his lifetime for larger than life exploits popularized by stage plays and almanacs After his death he continued to be credited with acts of mythical proportion These led in the 20th century to television and film portrayals and he became one of the best known American folk heroes 5 6 Contents 1 Family and early life 1 1 Marriages and children 1 2 David Crockett family tree 2 Tennessee militia service 3 Public career 3 1 Tennessee General Assembly 3 2 United States House of Representatives 4 Texas Revolution 5 Death 5 1 Controversy 6 Legacy 6 1 Namesakes 6 2 Monuments 7 In popular culture 7 1 Television 7 2 Film 7 3 Theatre 7 4 Prose fiction 7 5 Comics 8 See also 9 Notes 9 1 Explanatory footnotes 9 2 Citations 10 General and cited references 11 Further reading 12 External linksFamily and early lifeThe Crocketts were of mostly French Huguenot ancestry although the family had settled in Ulster in the north of Ireland before migrating to the Americas 7 The earliest known paternal ancestor was Gabriel Gustave de Crocketagne whose son Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne was given a commission in the Household Troops under King Louis XIV of France Antoine married Louise de Saix and emigrated to the Kingdom of Ireland with her changing the family name to Crockett 8 Their son Joseph Louis 8 was born and raised in Ireland possibly being born according to local tradition near either Castlederg or Donemana both villages in the northwest of County Tyrone in the west of Ulster Joseph Louis Crockett later married Sarah Stewart who was also from west Ulster she being an Ulster Scot from just outside the village of Manorcunningham in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal 9 10 Joseph and Sarah emigrated to New York where their son William David was born in 1709 He married Elizabeth Boulay William and Elizabeth s son David was born in Pennsylvania and married Elizabeth Hedge They were the parents of William David Jr Robert Alexander James Joseph and John a the father of David Crockett who died at the Alamo John was born c 1753 in Frederick County Virginia 11 The family moved to Tryon County North Carolina c 1768 In 1776 the family moved to northeast Tennessee in the area of modern Hawkins County 13 John was one of the Overmountain Men who fought in the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolutionary War 14 He was away as a militia volunteer in 1777 when David and Elizabeth were killed at their home near modern Rogersville by Creeks and Chickamauga Cherokees led by war chief Dragging Canoe 15 16 John s brother Joseph was wounded in the skirmish His brother James was taken prisoner and held for seventeen years 17 nbsp Commemorative stone nbsp Replica cabin at Crockett s birth site in the David Crockett Birthplace State Park John married Rebecca Hawkins in 1780 18 Their son David was born August 17 1786 19 and they named him after John s father b David was born in modern Greene County Tennessee then part of North Carolina close to the Nolichucky River and near the community of Limestone c John continually struggled to make ends meet and the Crocketts moved to a tract of land on Lick Creek in 1792 25 John sold that tract of land in 1794 and moved the family to Cove Creek where he built a gristmill with partner Thomas Galbraith 26 A flood destroyed the gristmill and the Crockett homestead The Crocketts then moved to Mossy Creek in Jefferson County Tennessee but John forfeited his property in bankruptcy in 1795 27 The family next moved on to property owned by a Quaker named John Canady d At Morristown in the Southwest Territory John built a tavern on a stage coach route e When David was 12 years old his father indentured him to Jacob Siler to help with the Crockett family indebtedness He helped tend Siler s cattle as a cowboy on a 400 mile 640 km trip to near Natural Bridge in Virginia He was well treated and paid for his services but after several weeks in Virginia he decided to return home to Tennessee 32 The next year John enrolled his sons in school but David played hookey after an altercation with a fellow student Upon learning of this John attempted to whip him but was outrun by his son David then joined a cattle drive to Front Royal Virginia for Jesse Cheek 33 Upon completion of that trip he joined teamster Adam Myers on a trip to Gerrardstown West Virginia 34 In between trips with Myers he worked for farmer John Gray 35 After leaving Myers he journeyed to Christiansburg Virginia where he apprenticed for the next four years with hatter Elijah Griffith 36 nbsp Contract of marriage for David Crockett and Margaret Elder October 21 1805In 1802 David journeyed by foot back to his father s tavern in Tennessee 37 His father was in debt to Abraham Wilson for 36 equivalent to 736 in 2022 so David was hired out to Wilson to pay off the debt 38 Later he worked off a 40 debt to John Canady 39 Once the debts were paid John Crockett told his son that he was free to leave David returned to Canady s employment where he stayed for four years 40 Marriages and children Crockett fell in love with John Canady s niece Amy Summer who was engaged to Canady s son Robert 41 While serving as part of the wedding party Crockett met Margaret Elder He persuaded her to marry him and a marriage contract was drawn up on October 21 1805 However 42 Margaret had also become engaged to another young man at the same time whom she married instead of Crockett 43 He met Polly Finley and her mother Jean at a harvest festival 44 Although friendly towards him in the beginning Jean Finley eventually felt Crockett was not the man for her daughter 45 Crockett declared his intentions to marry Polly regardless of whether the ceremony was allowed to take place in her parents home or had to be performed elsewhere He arranged for a justice of the peace and took out a marriage license on August 12 1806 On August 16 he rode to Polly s house with family and friends determined to ride off with Polly to be married elsewhere Polly s father pleaded with Crockett to have the wedding in the Finley home Crockett agreed only after Jean apologized for her past treatment of him 46 nbsp Crockett s second wife ElizabethThe newlyweds settled on land near Polly s parents and their first child John Wesley Crockett who became a United States Congressman 47 was born July 10 1807 48 Their second child William Finley Crockett was born November 25 1808 48 In October 1811 the family relocated to Lincoln County 49 Their third child Margaret Finley Polly Crockett was born on November 25 1812 50 The Crocketts then moved to Franklin County in 1813 He named the new home on Beans Creek Kentuck 51 His wife died in March 1815 52 and Crockett asked his brother John and his sister in law to move in with him to help care for the children 53 That same year he married the widow Elizabeth Patton who had a daughter Margaret Ann and a son George 54 David and Elizabeth s son Robert Patton was born September 16 1816 55 Daughter Rebecca Elvira was born December 25 1818 56 Daughter Matilda was born August 2 1821 57 David Crockett family tree David Crockett family treeGabriel Gustave de Crocketagne m Mademoiselle de Saix of France 58 Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne changed name to Crockett 1643 1735 m Louise de Saix 1648 59 Joseph Louis Crockett born in Ireland 1676 1749 m Sarah Gilbert Stewart 1680 1776 60 William David Crockett 1709 1770 m Elizabeth Boulay 1710 David the Elder Crockett 1729 1777 m Elizabeth Hedge 1730 1777 William Crockett 1748 1846 61 David Crockett Jr 62 Robert Crockett 63 Alexander Crockett 64 James Crockett 65 Joseph Crockett 66 John Crockett 1753 1834 m Rebecca Hawkins 1756 1832 67 Margaret Catharine Crockett c 1778 1792 Nathan Crockett 1778 1839 William Crockett 1780 1840 Aaron Crockett 1782 1835 James Patterson Crockett 1784 1834 David Crockett 1786 1836 m Polly Finley 1788 1815 68 John Wesley Crockett 1807 1852 69 m Martha Hamilton William Finley Crockett 1809 1846 70 m Clorinda Boyett Margaret Finley Polly Crockett 1812 1860 71 m Wiley Flowers m Elizabeth Patton 1788 1860 72 Robert Patton Crockett 1816 1889 73 m Matilda Porter m Louisa A Wohlford m Lydia America Corley Rebecca Elvira Crockett 1818 1879 74 m George Kimbrough m James Halford Matilda Crockett 1821 1890 75 m Thomas P Tyson m James Wilson m Redden Fields John Crockett 1787 1841 Elizabeth Crockett 1788 1805 Rebecca Crockett 1796 1819 Tennessee militia service nbsp US postage stamp issued 1967Andrew Jackson was appointed major general of the Tennessee militia in 1802 76 The Fort Mims massacre occurred near Mobile Mississippi Territory on August 30 1813 and became a rallying cry for the Creek War 77 On September 20 Crockett left his family and enlisted as a scout for a term of 90 days with Francis Jones s Company of Mounted Rifleman 78 part of the Second Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Riflemen 79 They served under Colonel John Coffee in the war marching south into present day Alabama and taking an active part in the fighting 80 Crockett often hunted wild game for the soldiers and felt better suited to that role than killing Creek warriors 81 He served until December 24 1813 82 The War of 1812 was being waged concurrently with the Creek War After the Treaty of Fort Jackson in August 1814 Andrew Jackson then with the U S Army wanted the British forces ousted from Spanish Florida 83 and asked for support from the Tennessee militia Crockett re enlisted as third sergeant for a six month term with the Tennessee Mounted Gunmen under Captain John Cowan on September 28 1814 84 Crockett s unit saw little of the main action because they were days behind the rest of the troops and were focused mostly on foraging for food Crockett returned home in December 85 He was still on a military reserve status until March 1815 so he hired a young man to fulfill the remainder of his service 86 Public career nbsp Davy Crockett by William Henry Huddle 1889In 1817 Crockett moved the family to new acreage in Lawrence County where he first entered public office as a commissioner helping to configure the new county s boundaries 87 On November 25 the state legislature appointed him county justice of the peace 88 On March 27 1818 he was elected lieutenant colonel of the Fifty seventh Regiment of Tennessee Militia defeating candidate Daniel Matthews for the position 89 By 1819 Crockett was operating multiple businesses in the area and felt his public responsibilities were beginning to consume so much of his time and energy that he had little left for either family or business He resigned from the office of justice of the peace and from his position with the regiment 90 Tennessee General Assembly In 1821 he resigned as commissioner and successfully ran for a seat in the Tennessee General Assembly 91 representing Lawrence and Hickman counties 92 It was this election where Crockett honed his anecdotal oratory skills 93 He was appointed to the Committee of Propositions and Grievances on September 17 1821 and served through the first session that ended November 17 as well as the special session called by the governor in the summer of 1822 ending on August 24 94 95 He favored legislation to ease the tax burden on the poor 96 Crockett spent his entire legislative career fighting for the rights of impoverished settlers who he felt dangled on the precipice of losing title to their land due to the state s complicated system of grants 96 97 He supported 1821 gubernatorial candidate William Carroll over Andrew Jackson s endorsed candidate Edward Ward 98 Less than two weeks after Crockett s 1821 election to the General Assembly a flood of the Tennessee River destroyed Crockett s businesses 99 In November Elizabeth s father Robert Patton deeded 800 acres 320 ha of his Carroll County property to Crockett 100 Crockett sold off most of the acreage to help settle his debts and moved his family to the remaining acreage on the Obion River which remained in Carroll County until 1825 when the boundaries were reconfigured and put it in Gibson County 101 In 1823 he ran against Andrew Jackson s nephew in law William Edward Butler 102 and won a seat in the General Assembly representing the counties of Carroll Humphreys Perry Henderson and Madison 103 He served in the first session which ran from September through the end of November 1823 and in the second session that ran September through the end of November 1824 championing the rights of the impoverished farmers 104 During Andrew Jackson s election to the United States Senate in 1823 Crockett backed his opponent John Williams 105 United States House of Representatives On October 25 1824 Crockett notified his constituents of his intention to run in the 1825 election for a seat in the U S House of Representatives He lost that election to incumbent Adam Rankin Alexander 106 A chance meeting in 1826 gained him the encouragement of Memphis mayor Marcus Brutus Winchester 107 to try again to win a seat in Congress 108 The Jackson Gazette published a letter from Crockett on September 15 1826 announcing his intention of again challenging Rankin and stating his opposition to the policies of President John Quincy Adams and Secretary of State Henry Clay and to Rankin s position on the cotton tariff 109 Militia veteran William Arnold also entered the race and Crockett easily defeated both political opponents for the 1827 29 term 110 111 He arrived in Washington D C and took up residence at Mrs Ball s Boarding House where a number of other legislators lived when Congress was in session 112 Jackson was elected as president in 1828 Crockett continued his legislative focus on settlers getting a fair deal for land titles offering H R 27 amendment to a bill sponsored by James K Polk 113 I believed it was a wicked unjust measure I voted against this Indian bill and my conscience yet tells me that I gave a good honest vote and one that I believe will not make me ashamed in the day of judgement David Crockett A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett 114 Crockett was re elected for the 1829 31 session 115 once again defeating Adam Rankin Alexander 116 He introduced H R 185 amendment to the land bill on January 29 1830 but it was defeated on May 3 113 On February 25 1830 he introduced a resolution to abolish the United States Military Academy at West Point New York 117 because he felt that it was public money going to benefit the sons of wealthy men 118 He spoke out against Congress giving 100 000 to the widow of Stephen Decatur citing that Congress was not empowered to do that 119 He opposed Jackson s 1830 Indian Removal Act and was the only member of the Tennessee delegation to vote against it 120 Cherokee chief John Ross sent him a letter on January 13 1831 expressing his thanks for Crockett s vote 121 His vote was not popular with his own district and he was defeated in the 1831 election by William Fitzgerald 122 Crockett ran against Fitzgerald again in the 1833 election and was returned to Congress serving until 1835 123 95 On January 2 1834 he introduced the land title resolution H R 126 but it never made it as far as being debated on the House floor 113 He was defeated for re election in the August 1835 election by Adam Huntsman 124 During his last term in Congress he collaborated with Kentucky Congressman Thomas Chilton to write his autobiography which was published by E L Carey and A Hart in 1834 as A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett Written by Himself 125 and he went east to promote the book In 1836 newspapers published the now famous quotation attributed to Crockett upon his return to his home state I told the people of my district that I would serve them as faithfully as I had done but if not they might go to hell and I would go to Texas 126 Although Crockett owned some slaves his record in Congress did not indicate either avid support for or opposition to the institution of slavery in the United States 127 128 Texas Revolution nbsp Portrait of Davy Crockett by John Gadsby ChapmanBy December 1834 Crockett was writing to friends about moving to Texas if Jackson s chosen successor Martin Van Buren was elected president The next year he discussed with his friend Benjamin McCulloch raising a company of volunteers to take to Texas in the expectation that a revolution was imminent 129 His departure to Texas was delayed by a court appearance in the last week of October as co executor of his deceased father in law s estate he finally left his home near Rutherford in West Tennessee with three other men on November 1 1835 to explore Texas 130 His youngest child Matilda later wrote that she distinctly remembered the last time that she saw her father He was dressed in his hunting suit wearing a coonskin cap and carried a fine rifle presented to him by friends in Philadelphia He seemed very confident the morning he went away that he would soon have us all to join him in Texas 131 Crockett traveled with 30 well armed men to Jackson Tennessee where he gave a speech from the steps of the Madison County courthouse and they arrived in Little Rock Arkansas on November 12 1835 The local newspapers reported that hundreds of people swarmed into town to get a look at Crockett and a group of leading citizens put on a dinner in his honor that night at the Jeffries Hotel Crockett spoke mainly to the subject of Texan independence as well as Washington politics 132 Crockett arrived in Nacogdoches Texas in early January 1836 On January 14 he and 65 other men signed an oath before Judge John Forbes to the Provisional Government of Texas for six months I have taken the oath of government and have enrolled my name as a volunteer and will set out for the Rio Grande in a few days with the volunteers from the United States Each man was promised about 4 600 acres 1 900 ha of land as payment On February 6 he and five other men rode into San Antonio de Bexar and camped just outside the town nbsp The Fall of the Alamo by Robert Jenkins Onderdonk depicts Davy Crockett swinging his rifle at Mexican troops who have breached the south gate of the mission Crockett arrived at the Alamo Mission in San Antonio on February 8 133 A Mexican army arrived on February 23 led by General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna surprising the men garrisoned in the Alamo and the Mexican soldiers immediately initiated a siege 134 135 Santa Anna ordered his artillery to keep up a near constant bombardment The guns were moved closer to the Alamo each day increasing their effectiveness On February 25 200 300 Mexican soldiers crossed the San Antonio River and took cover in abandoned shacks approximately 90 to 100 yards 82 to 91 m from the Alamo walls 136 137 The soldiers intended to use the huts as cover to establish another artillery position although many Texians assumed that they actually were launching an assault on the fort 138 Several men volunteered to burn the huts 139 To provide cover the Alamo cannons fired grapeshot at the Mexican soldiers and Crockett and his men fired rifles while other defenders reloaded extra weapons for them to use in maintaining a steady fire The battle was over within 90 minutes 138 and the Mexican soldiers retreated 140 There were limited stores of powder and shot inside the Alamo and Alamo commander William Barret Travis ordered the artillery to stop returning fire on February 26 so as to conserve precious ammunition Crockett and his men were encouraged to keep shooting as they were unusually effective 141 nbsp A knife purportedly used by Davy Crockett during the Battle of the AlamoAs the siege progressed Travis sent many messages asking for reinforcements Several messengers were sent to James Fannin who commanded the group of Texian soldiers at Presidio La Bahia in Goliad Texas Fannin decided that it was too risky to reinforce the Alamo although historian Thomas Ricks Lindley concludes that up to 50 of Fannin s men left his command to go to Bexar 142 These men would have reached Cibolo Creek on the afternoon of March 3 35 miles 56 km from the Alamo where they joined another group of men who also planned to join the garrison 143 There was a skirmish between Mexican and Texian troops that same night outside the Alamo 144 Historian Walter Lord speculates that the Texians were creating a diversion to allow their courier John Smith to evade Mexican pickets 144 However Alamo survivor Susannah Dickinson said in 1876 that Travis sent out three men shortly after dark on March 3 probably a response to the arrival of Mexican reinforcements The three men including Crockett were sent to find Fannin 145 Lindley states that Crockett and one of the other men found the force of Texians waiting along Cibolo Creek just before midnight they had advanced to within 20 miles 32 km of the Alamo Just before daylight on March 4 part of the Texian force managed to break through the Mexican lines and enter the Alamo A second group was driven across the prairie by Mexican cavalry 146 The siege ended on March 6 when the Mexican army attacked just before dawn while the defenders were sleeping The daily artillery bombardment had been suspended perhaps a ploy to encourage the natural human reaction to a cessation of constant strain But the garrison awakened and the final fight began Most of the noncombatants gathered in the church sacristy for safety According to Dickinson Crockett paused briefly in the chapel to say a prayer before running to his post 147 The Mexican soldiers climbed up the north outer walls of the Alamo complex and most of the Texians fell back to the barracks and the chapel as previously planned 148 Crockett and his men however were too far from the barracks to take shelter 149 and were the last remaining group to be in the open They defended the low wall in front of the church using their rifles as clubs and relying on knives as the action was too furious to allow reloading After a volley and a charge with bayonets Mexican soldiers pushed the few remaining defenders back toward the church 150 nbsp A coffin in the San Fernando Cathedral purports to hold the ashes of the Alamo defenders However historians believe it more probable that the ashes were buried near the Alamo The Battle of the Alamo lasted almost 90 minutes 151 and all of the defenders were killed Santa Anna ordered his men to take their bodies to a nearby stand of trees where they were stacked together and wood piled on top 152 That evening they lit a fire and burned their bodies to ashes 153 The ashes were left undisturbed until February 1837 when Juan Seguin and his cavalry returned to Bexar to examine the remains A local carpenter created a simple coffin and ashes from the funeral pyres were placed inside The names of Travis Crockett and Bowie were inscribed on the lid 154 The coffin is thought to have been buried in a peach tree grove but the spot was not marked and can no longer be identified 155 Death nbsp The David Crockett Spring in Crockett Houston County TexasDavid Crockett died at the Alamo on the morning of March 6 1836 at the age of 49 Accounts from survivors of the battle differ on the manner of Crockett s death with stories ranging from Crockett putting up a heroic last stand to the account that he surrendered along with several other men and was executed To further confusion historians have been able to back up opposing theories with voluminous evidence 156 Controversy The popular mythology of Crockett s death in American culture is one of a heroic last stand a tale that is backed up by some historical evidence For example a former African American slave named Ben who had acted as cook for one of Santa Anna s officers maintained that Crockett s body was found in the barracks surrounded by no less than sixteen Mexican corpses with Crockett s knife buried in one of them 157 There is however historical evidence countering the popular myth with stories of a Crockett surrender and execution circulating as far back as just a few weeks after the battle 158 The counter myth picked up historical steam when in 1955 Jesus Sanchez Garza discovered the memoirs of Jose Enrique de la Pena a Mexican officer present at the Battle of the Alamo and self published it as La Rebelion de Texas Manuscrito Inedito de 1836 por un Oficial de Santa Anna Texas A amp M University Press published the English translation in 1975 With Santa Anna in Texas A Personal Narrative of the Revolution The English publication caused a scandal within the United States as it asserted that Crockett did not die in battle 159 The translator of the English publication Carmen Perry the former librarian of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas was harassed with anonymous letters and intimidating phone calls by Crockett loyalists who considered the mere suggestion that Crockett had not died fighting blasphemous 160 Some have questioned the validity of the text The author and retired firefighter William Groneman III posited that the journals were made up of several different types of paper from several different paper manufacturers all cut down to fit 161 Long time John Wayne enthusiast Joseph Musso 162 also questioned the validity of de la Pena s diary basing his suspicions on the timing of the diary s release and the fact that historical interest in the topic rose around the same time as the Walt Disney mini series Davy Crockett was released in 1955 Some questions were answered when in 2001 archivist David Gracy published a detailed analysis of the manuscript including lab results He found among other things that the paper and ink were of a type used by the Mexican army in the 1830s and the handwriting matched that on other documents in the Mexican military archives that were written or signed by de la Pena 163 164 nbsp David Crockett clipper ship cardAs for those who have questioned de la Pena s ability to identify any of the Alamo defenders by name historians believe that de la Pena likely witnessed or was told about executions of the Alamo survivors And while some claim neither he nor his comrades would have known who those men were 165 others conclude that the enormous weight of evidence is in favor of the surrender execution hypothesis 160 To further controversy equal evidence is available for the heroic last stand story with several survivors and first hand witnesses to the battle claiming Crockett fought to the death 156 LegacyOne of Crockett s sayings many of which were published in almanacs between 1835 and 1856 along with those of Daniel Boone and Kit Carson was Always be sure you are right then go ahead 166 While serving in the United States House of Representatives Crockett became a Freemason He entrusted his masonic apron to a friend in Tennessee before leaving for Texas and it was inherited by the friend s descendant in Kentucky 167 In 1967 the U S Postal Service issued a 5 cent stamp commemorating Davy Crockett 168 169 Namesakes nbsp Col Crockett statue Lawrenceburg Public SquareTennessee David Crockett Birthplace State Park Greene County David Crockett State Park Lawrence County 170 Crockett County Tennessee its county seat is Alamo 171 David Crockett High School JonesboroughTexas Crockett County 172 Crockett Houston County Texas 173 Crockett High School Austin independent school District 174 Davy Crockett Lake Fannin County 175 Davy Crockett Loop Prairies and Pineywoods Wildlife Trail East 176 Crockett Middle School Amarillo Davy Crockett National Forest Angelina County 177 Davy Crockett School Dallas independent school District 178 Crockett Elementary School Abilene independent school District Abilene Texas closed 2002 Crockett Street a major thoroughfare in Downtown San Antonio Crockett Street in Beaumont Texas ending in a pedestrian walk in the historic downtown area Fort Crockett Galveston County 179 nbsp Alamo CenotaphMiscellaneous M28 Davy Crockett Weapon System a small Nuclear weapons system the smallest developed by the U S which could be fired from a light vehicle or from a tripod mounted launcher 180 Crockett Park north of downtown San AntonioMonuments Alamo Cenotaph San Antonio sculptor Pompeo Coppini west panel of the Cenotaph features a Crockett statue and a statue of William B Travis in front of other Alamo defenders 181 David Crockett Statue Ozona Texas sculptor William M McVey 182 183 Life size statue Colonel David Crockett Public Square Lawrenceburg Tennessee W M Dean Marble Company of Columbia 184 185 In popular cultureThis article may contain irrelevant references to popular culture Please remove the content or add citations to reliable and independent sources May 2018 Television nbsp Fess Parker as Davy Crockett in DisneylandWalt Disney adapted Crockett s stories into a television miniseries titled Davy Crockett which aired in 1954 and 1955 on Walt Disney s Disneyland The series popularized the image of Crockett portrayed by Fess Parker wearing a coonskin cap and originated the song The Ballad of Davy Crockett The first three parts of the series were edited into a feature length movie for theaters Crockett s stories were used by the French animation Studios Animage for a 1994 animated series titled Davy Crockett 186 A 2009 episode of MythBusters tested whether Crockett could split a bullet in half on the blade of an ax 40 yards 37 m away and concluded that it would indeed be possible to do so 187 Film In films Crockett has been played by Charles K French Davy Crockett In Hearts United 1909 silent 188 Hobart Bosworth Davy Crockett 1910 silent 189 Dustin Farnum Davy Crockett 1916 silent 190 Cullen Landis Davy Crockett at the Fall of the Alamo 1926 silent 191 Jack Perrin The Painted Stallion 1937 192 Lane Chandler Heroes of the Alamo 1937 191 Robert Barrat Man of Conquest 1939 193 Trevor Bardette The Man from the Alamo 1953 194 Arthur Hunnicutt The Last Command 1955 191 Fess Parker Davy Crockett King of the Wild Frontier 1955 and Davy Crockett and the River Pirates 1956 both on Walt Disney s Disneyland 191 James Griffith The First Texan 1956 195 John Wayne The Alamo 1960 191 Brian Keith The Alamo 13 Days to Glory 1987 191 Merrill Connally Alamo The Price of Freedom 1988 196 Johnny Cash Davy Crockett Rainbow in the Thunder 1988 197 Tim Dunigan Davy Crockett Rainbow in the Thunder Davy Crockett A Natural Man Davy Crockett Guardian Spirit Davy Crockett Letter to Polly 1988 1989 197 David Zucker The Naked Gun 2 The Smell of Fear 1991 a very small cameo role 198 John Schneider James A Michener s Texas 1994 199 Scott Wickware Dear America A Line in the Sand 2000 200 Justin Howard The Anarchist Cookbook 2002 201 Billy Bob Thornton The Alamo 2004 191 Theatre Davy Crockett 1872 popular touring play of its time by Frank Murdoch Davy Crockett musical play unfinished January to April 1938 Kurt Weill 202 203 Prose fiction Crockett appears in at least two short alternate history works Chickasaw Slave by Judith Moffett in Mike Resnick s anthology Alternate Presidents 1992 where Crockett is the seventh President of the United States and Empire by William Sanders in Harry Turtledove s anthology Alternate Generals II 2002 where Crockett fights for Emperor Napoleon I of Louisiana in a conflict analogous to the War of 1812 204 Crockett is also a character in Gore Vidal s novel Burr as a congressman from Tennessee Comics Columbia Features syndicated a comic strip Davy Crockett Frontiersman from June 20 1955 until 1959 Stories were by France Herron 205 and the artwork was ghosted in early 1956 by Jack Kirby 206 See also nbsp Biography portal nbsp Texas portalList of Freemasons The Ballad of Davy Crockett Timeline of the Texas RevolutionNotesExplanatory footnotes Historians believe that there were more children of William David and Elizabeth but that not all the records have yet been found 11 12 The number of David s siblings is not fully known Nine children of John and Rebecca have been verified by historians and Crockett descendants Nathan William Aaron James David John Elizabeth Rebecca and Margaret Catharine 20 20 8 21 At the time of David Crockett s birth the surrounding area was part of an autonomous territory known as the State of Franklin John Crockett was active in local politics and an advocate of the independent State of Franklin 22 23 A replica of his birthplace cabin stands near the site situated in the Davy Crockett Birthplace State Park 24 John Canady s name was erroneously spelled as Kennedy in Crockett s autobiography and in some books where the author used Crockett as the source 28 29 30 Crockett Tavern Museum standing on the site 27 31 Citations Price Angel Davy Crockett Bear Hunting in Tennessee De La Pena Jose Enrique 1975 With Santa Anna in Texas A Personal Narrative of the Revolution Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 001 1 Weber David J January 1990 Myth and the History of the Hispanic Southwest University of New Mexico Press p 137 ISBN 978 0 8263 1194 8 Kilgore Dan January 19 2010 How Did Davy Die And Why Do We Care So Much Commemorative Edition Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest Commemorative ed Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 194 0 Abramson Haskell amp Lofaro 2006 pp 300 301 Lofaro Michael A December 2010 David Davy Crockett Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Retrieved January 24 2013 Winders 2001 p 9 a b c DRT 2001 p 43 A distinguished list of Ulster Scots from Londonderry who helped make America Northern Ireland World 9 September 2010 scroll down to No 7 on the list David Crockett https www northernirelandworld com news a distinguished list of ulster scots from londonderry who helped make america 2817455 Davy Crockett and his Donegal ancestors Go Visit Donegal Facebook page 6 March 2020 https m facebook com govisitdonegal posts 1878320515631813 a b Wallis 2011 p 19 Winders 2001 p 12 Wallis 2011 pp 22 24 Jones 2006 p 1796 Wallis 2011 pp 26 34 Fulgham 2000 p 102 Wallis 2011 pp 26 27 Wallis 2011 p 21 Wallis 2011 p 32 a b Wallis 2011 pp 11 12 Hasday 2010 p 7 Wallis 2011 p 33 Greene County The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Tennessee Historical Society Retrieved October 12 2013 David Crockett Birthplace State Park Tennessee State Parks Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 Wallis 2011 p 38 Wallis 2011 p 42 a b Wallis 2011 p 43 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 pp 163 164 Wallis 2011 p 61 Groneman 2005 p 34 Jones 2006 p 1797 Wallis 2011 pp 46 49 Wallis 2011 pp 49 51 Wallis 2011 p 52 Wallis 2011 p 53 Wallis 2011 pp 55 56 Wallis 2011 pp 57 58 Wallis 2011 p 60 Wallis 2011 p 62 Wallis 2011 p 63 Wallis 2011 pp 67 Davy Crockett s Marriage License Back in Rightful Place PDF The Blue Pages Vol 1 no 3 Office of the Secretary of State of Tennessee May 2010 Retrieved November 2 2013 Wallis 2011 p 70 Wallis 2011 pp 72 73 Wallis 2011 p 74 Wallis 2011 pp 76 77 John Wesley Crockett United States Congress Retrieved October 21 2013 a b Wallis 2011 p 81 Wallis 2011 p 90 Wallis 2011 p 93 Wallis 2011 p 94 Wallis 2011 p 131 Wallis 2011 p 133 Wallis 2011 p 134 Wallis 2011 p 146 Wallis 2011 p 156 Wallis 2011 p 162 DRT 2001 p 43 DRT 2001 p 43 DRT 2001 p 43 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 p 19 Wallis 2011 pp 76 77 Wallis 2011 p 81 Wallis 2011 p 81 Wallis 2011 p 93 Wallis 2011 p 93 Wallis 2011 p 146 Wallis 2011 p 156 Wallis 2011 p 162 Remini amp Clark 2008 p 24 Wallis 2011 pp 103 104 Wallis 2011 p 106 Wallis 2011 pp 107 108 Wallis 2011 p 111 Wallis 2011 p 114 Wallis 2011 p 118 Bense 1999 p 45 Wallis 2011 p 123 Wallis 2011 p 128 Wallis 2011 p 130 Wallis 2011 p 152 Wallis 2011 p 154 Wallis 2011 pp 154 156 Wallis 2011 p 158 Members of the Tennessee General Assembly 1794 2010 Tennessee State Library and Archives Archived from the original on November 8 2013 Retrieved November 7 2013 Wallis 2011 p 159 Wallis 2011 pp 159 160 Wallis 2011 p 163 a b Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 326 a b Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 16 Early North Carolina and Tennessee Land Grants Tennessee State Library and Archives Archived from the original on January 23 2014 Retrieved November 7 2013 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 15 Wallis 2011 p 165 Wallis 2011 p 169 Wallis 2011 pp 177 190 Wallis 2011 pp 183 185 Wallis 2011 p 186 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 pp 19 326 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 18 Wallis 2011 pp 188 190 Marcus Brutus Winchester Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Retrieved November 6 2013 Wallis 2011 pp 194 196 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 147 Credential of election for David Crockett 09 18 1827 File Unit Credentials of Representatives and Delegates to the 20th Congress 12 1827 3 1829 U S National Archives and Records Administration ARC Identifier 306597 September 18 1827 Archived from the original on December 7 2014 Retrieved October 12 2013 Wallis 2011 pp 199 200 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 14 a b c Boylston amp Wiener 2009 p 327 Crockett 1834 p 206 Crockett David 1786 1836 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Retrieved January 4 2013 Groneman 2005 p 95 Congressman Davy Crockett s Resolution to Abolish the Military Academy at West Point 02 25 1830 File Unit Bills and Resolutions Originating in the House of Representatives 21st Congress 1829 1831 U S National Archives and Records Administration ARC Identifier 2173241 February 25 1830 Archived from the original on December 7 2014 Retrieved October 20 2013 Groneman 2005 pp 96 97 Groneman 2005 pp 97 98 Groneman 2005 p 97 Boylston amp Wiener 2009 pp 198 199 Groneman 2005 pp 98 99 Groneman 2005 pp 106 107 99 Wallis 2011 p 275 Groneman 2005 pp 109 110 Crockett quote from the Niles Weekly Register newspaper Archived November 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine April 9 1836 Smith Richard Penn 2003 On to the Alamo Col Crockett s Exploits and Adventures in Texas Penguin p 139 ISBN 978 0 14 243764 3 Retrieved September 8 2023 Wallis 2011 pp 174 175 Cobia 2003 pp 21 22 Derr 1983 pp 225 226 Cobia 2003 p 25 Cobia 2003 pp 40 44 Hardin 1994 p 117 Edmondson 2000 p 299 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 40 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 pp 42 43 Tinkle 1985 p 118 a b Tinkle 1985 p 119 Lord 1961 p 109 Nofi 1992 p 83 Hardin 1994 p 132 Lindley 2003 p 137 Lindley 2003 p 138 a b Lindley 2003 p 143 Lindley 2003 p 140 Lindley 2003 p 142 Edmondson 2000 p 363 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 53 Lord 1961 p 162 Edmondson 2000 p 368 Petite 1999 p 114 Edmondson 2000 p 374 Petite 1999 p 139 Petite 1999 p 131 Petite 1999 p 132 a b Gilley Kenneth December 13 2019 The Mysterious Death of David Crockett Texas Monthly Archived from the original on May 16 2020 Tinkle 1985 p 214 Petite 1999 p 123 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 120 a b Paulsen Barbara February 9 2017 Say It Ain t So Davy Texas Monthly Groneman 1999 p 136 Spangenberger Phil March 18 2014 Davy Crockett s Ol Betsy Found True West History of the American Frontier True West Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved September 11 2019 Adams Cecil May 14 2004 Remembering the Alamo and the death of Davy Crockett straightdope Retrieved April 23 2015 Gracy II David B October 2001 Just As I Have Written It A Study of the Authenticity of the Manuscript of Jose Enrique de la Pena s Account of the Texas Campaign Southwestern Historical Quarterly 105 2 254 294 Michael Lind s The Death of David Crockett tamu edu Archived from the original on October 15 2008 Retrieved June 24 2008 Groneman 2005 p 201 made for him by Mrs A C Massie of Washington D C during his tenure in Congress Before leaving for Texas he entrusted the apron to the sheriff of Weakley County Tennessee and it was inherited and preserved by the sheriff s nephew E M Taylor of Paducah Kentucky The lodge at Weakley County near the Crockett home burned during the Civil War destroying all the lodge records From The Texas Mason By Pete Normand PM Texas Lodge of Research Crockett Davy Grand Lodge of Texas Masonic Research Grand Lodge of Texas Archived from the original on May 12 2012 Retrieved July 29 2012 Stamp Series United States Postal Service Archived from the original on December 13 2013 Retrieved January 31 2017 Davy Crockett stamp U S Stamp Gallery David Crockett State Park Tennessee Dept of Environment and Conservation Retrieved January 24 2013 Crockett County Tennessee Tennessee Encyclopedia Retrieved January 24 2013 Smith Julia Cauble Crockett County Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved January 24 2013 Long Christopher Bishop Elize H Crockett Texas Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved January 24 2013 Crockett High School Austin ISD Retrieved January 24 2013 Davy Crockett Lake Texas Parks and Wildlife Retrieved January 24 2013 Davy Crockett Loop Great Texas Wildlife Trails Texas Parks and Wildlife Retrieved January 24 2013 Davy Crockett National Forest United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved January 24 2013 Davy Crockett School Dallas City Hall Archived from the original on May 10 2012 Retrieved January 24 2013 Darst Maury Fort Crockett Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Retrieved January 24 2013 The Davy Crockett The Brookings Institution Archived from the original on May 26 2013 Retrieved January 24 2013 Alamo Cenotaph Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association David Crockett Statue Ozona Tx Crockett County Museum March 22 2013 Retrieved October 21 2013 Little 1996 p 348 Lawrenceburg Public Square City of Lawrenceburg Archived from the original on April 23 2013 Retrieved January 25 2013 D Crockett Statue Lawrenceburg Tn Waymarking Retrieved January 25 2013 Davy Crockett AnimeGuides in French Retrieved August 31 2018 Meisfjord Eric June 4 2020 The Untold Truth Of MythBusters Jr Grunge Retrieved September 6 2023 The Moving Picture World Volume 4 Moving Pictures Exhibitors Association 1909 pp 653 690 734 760 769 780 811 885 Langman 1992 p 108 Cozad 2002 pp 229 230 a b c d e f g Niemi 2006 pp 10 16 Michno Michno amp Michno 2008 pp 53 55 Langman amp Ebner 2001 pp 52 53 Williamson 1995 pp 278 279 Langman 1992 p 107 Curtis Gregory May 1988 The myth of the six story Alamo Texas Monthly pp 5 6 a b Marill 2011 p 22 The Naked Gun 2 The Smell of Fear at IMDb nbsp New York Media LLC April 17 1995 John Leonard s TV Notes New York p 157 Dear America A Line in the Sand at IMDb nbsp Monush amp Willis 2005 p 190 Davy Crockett musical play AllMusic Retrieved January 25 2013 Davy Crockett piano score Kurt Weill U S Copyright Records Database United States Copyright Office Retrieved October 21 2013 Sanders William Empire uchronia net Archived from the original on January 2 2019 Retrieved January 14 2022 Leiffer Paul Ware Hames n d Herron Ed Who s Who of American Comic Strip Producers Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Holtz Allan Obscurity of the Day Davy Crockett Frontiersman Stripper s Guide September 18 2018 General and cited referencesAbramson Rudy Haskell Jean Lofaro Michael 2006 Encyclopedia of Appalachia Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1 57233 456 4 Bense Judith A 1999 Archaeology of Colonial Pensacola Florida Museum of Natural History Ripley P Bullen Series Gainesville University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 1661 0 Boylston James R Wiener Allen J 2009 David Crockett in Congress The Rise and Fall of the Poor Man s Friend Houston TX Bright Sky Press ISBN 978 1 933979 51 9 Cobia Manley F Jr 2003 Journey into the Land of Trials The Story of Davy Crockett s Expedition to the Alamo Franklin TN Hillsboro Press ISBN 978 1 57736 268 5 Cozad W Lee 2002 Those Magnificent Mountain Movies The Golden Years 1911 1939 Lake Arrowhead CA Rim of the World Historic Society ISBN 978 0 9723372 1 2 Crockett David 1834 A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett Baltimore MD E L Carey and A Hart OCLC 1306778 Derr Mark 1983 The Frontiersman The Real Life and the Many Legends of Davy Crockett New York William Morrow ISBN 978 0 688 13798 4 DRT 2001 Daughters of Republic of Texas Vol II Paducah KY Turner Publishing ISBN 978 1 56311 641 4 Edmondson J R 2000 The Alamo Story From History to Current Conflicts Plano Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 585 24106 7 Fulgham Richard Lee 2000 Appalachian Genesis The Clinch River Valley from Prehistoric Times to the End of the Frontier Era Johnson City TN Overmountain Press ISBN 978 1 57072 088 8 Groneman Bill 1999 Death of a Legend The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett Plano Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 585 26267 3 Groneman William 2005 David Crockett Hero of the Common Man New York Forge Books ISBN 978 0 7653 1067 5 Hardin Stephen L 1994 Texian Iliad Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 73086 1 Hasday Judy L 2010 Davy Crockett Legends of the Wild West New York Chelsea House Publications ISBN 978 1 60413 592 3 Jones Randell 2006 In the Footsteps of Davy Crockett Winston Salem NC John F Blair ISBN 978 0 89587 324 8 Langman Larry 1992 A guide to silent westerns New York Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 27858 7 Langman Larry Ebner David 2001 Hollywood s Image of the South A Century of Southern Films New York Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 31886 3 Lindley Thomas Ricks 2003 Alamo Traces New Evidence and New Conclusions Lanham MD Republic of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 55622 983 1 Little Carol Morris 1996 A Comprehensive Guide to Outdoor Sculpture in Texas Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 76036 3 Lord Walter 1961 A Time to Stand Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 7902 5 Marill Alvin H 2011 Television Westerns Six Decades of Sagebrush Sheriffs Scalawags and Sidewinders Lanham MD Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 8133 4 Michno Gregory Michno Gregory F Michno Susan 2008 Circle the Wagons Attacks on Wagon Trains in History and Hollywood Films Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 3997 3 Monush Barry Willis John 2005 Screen World 2004 Film Annual New York Applause Theatre amp Cinema Books ISBN 978 1 55783 638 0 Niemi Robert 2006 History in the Media Film And Television Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 952 2 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 0 585 19807 1 Petite Mary Deborah 1999 1836 Facts about the Alamo and the Texas War for Independence Mechanicsburg PA Savas Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 882810 35 2 Remini Robert V Clark Wesley K 2008 Andrew Jackson Great Generals New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 60015 7 Roberts Randy Olson James S 2001 A Line in the Sand The Alamo in Blood and Memory New York The Free Press ISBN 978 0 684 83544 0 Tinkle Lon 1985 13 Days to Glory The Siege of the Alamo College Station Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 238 1 Reprint Originally published New York McGraw Hill 1958 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 Wallis Michael 2011 David Crockett The Lion of the West New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06758 3 Whitburn Joel 2000 Top Pop Singles 1955 1999 Menomonee Falls WI Record Research Inc ISBN 978 0 89820 142 0 Williamson Jerry Wayne 1995 Hillbillyland What the Movies Did to the Mountains and What the Mountains Did to the Movies Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4503 5 Winders Richard Bruce 2001 Davy Crockett The Legend of the Wild Frontier New York Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8239 5747 7 Further readingMain article Bibliography of works on Davy Crockett Numerous books have been written about David Crockett including the first one that bears his name as its author External linksDavy Crockett at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Listen to this article 8 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 23 September 2005 2005 09 23 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles United States Congress Davy Crockett id C000918 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries about Davy Crockett Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries by Davy Crockett Works by Davy Crockett at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Davy Crockett at Internet Archive nbsp Books about David Crockett public domain audiobook at LibriVox Official site of the descendants of David Crockett David Crockett from the Handbook of Texas Online First Hand Alamo Accounts David Crockett 1834 A narrative of the life of David Crockett of the state of Tennessee Carey Hart amp Co p 1 U S House of RepresentativesPreceded byAdam Rankin Alexander Member of the U S House of Representatives from Tennessee s 9th congressional district1827 1831 Succeeded byWilliam FitzgeraldPreceded byDistrict created Member of the U S House of Representatives from Tennessee s 12th congressional district1833 1835 Succeeded byAdam Huntsman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Davy Crockett amp oldid 1202294937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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