The Battle Of the Alamo

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San Antonio, Texas Thirteen fateful days in 1836. . .
Unsheathing his sword during a lull in the virtually incessant bombardment,
Colonel William Barret Travis drew a line on the ground before his battle-weary men.
In a voice
thick and trembling with emotion, he described the hopelessness of their plight and said, "those prepared to give
their lives in freedom's cause, come over to me." Without hesitation, every man, save one, crossed the
line. Colonel James Bowie, stricken
with pneumonia, asked that his cot be carried over.
For twelve days now, since February 23, when Travis answered Mexican General Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna's surrender ultimatum with a single cannon shot, the defenders had withstood
the onslaught of an army which ultimately numbered 4,000 men.
Committed to death inside the Alamo were 189 known patriots who valued freedom more
than life itself. Many, such as the 32 men and boys from Gonzales who made their way
through the Mexican lines in answer to Travis's plea for reinforcements, were colonists.
Theirs was a fight against Santa Anna's intolerable decrees. Others were volunteers such as
David Crockett and his "Tennessee Boys" who owned nothing in Texas, and owed nothing to
it. Theirs was a fight against tyranny wherever it might be. A handful were native Texans of
Spanish and Mexican descent who suffered under the same injustices as the other colonists.
Now with the ammunition and supplies all but exhausted, yet determined to make a Mexican
victory more costly than a defeat, those who rallied to the Texas cause awaited the inevitable.
It came suddenly in the chilly, pre-dawn hours of March 6. With bugles sounding the dreaded
"Deguello" (no quarter to the defenders) columns of Mexican soldiers attacked from the
north, the east, the south and the west. Twice repulsed by withering musket fire and cannon
shot, they concentrated their third attack at the battered north wall.
Travis, with a single shot through his forehead, fell across his cannon. The Mexicans swarmed
through the breach and into the plaza. At frightful cost they fought their way to the Long
Barrack and blasted its massive doors with cannon shot. I ts defenders, asking no quarter and
receiving none, were put to death with grapeshot, musket fire and bayonets.
Crockett, using his rifle as a club, fell as the attackers, now joined by reinforcements who
stormed the south wall, turned to the chapel. The Texans inside soon suffered the fate of their
comrades. Bowie, his pistols emptied, his famous knife bloodied, and his body riddled, died
on his cot.
Present in the Alamo were Captain Almeron Dickinson's wife, Susanna, and their 15-
month-old daughter, Angelina. After the battle, Santa Anna ordered Mrs.
Dickinson, her child, and other noncombatants be spared. Other known survivors were Joe, Travis' servant;
Gertrudis Navarro, 15, sister by adoption to James Bowie's wife, Ursula; Juana Navarro
Alsbury, sister of Gertrudis, and her 18-month-old son, Alijo; Gregorio Esparza's wife Ana,
and her four children: Enrique, Francisco, Manuel and Maria de Jesus; Trinidad Saucedo and
Petra Gonzales. Another survivor was Lewis "Moses" Rose, who by his own choice left the
Alamo on the fifth day of March.
Santa Anna, minimizing his losses which numbered nearly 600, said, "It was but a small
affair," and ordered the bodies of the heroes burned. Colonel Juan Almonte, noting the great
number of casualties, declared, "Another such victory and we are ruined." The
Texans' smoldering desire for freedom, kindled by the funeral pyres of the Alamo,
roared into flames three weeks later at Goliad when Santa Anna coldly ordered the massacre
of more than 300 prisoners taken at the Battle of Coleto Creek.
On April 21, forty-six days after the fall of the Alamo, less than 800 angered Texans and
American volunteers led by General Sam Houston launched a furious attack on the Mexican
army of 1,500 at San Jacinto. Shouting "Remember the Alamo! Remember
Goliad!" They completely routed the Mexican army in a matter of minutes, killing six hundred and thirty
while losing nine. Santa Anna was captured. Texas was free; a new republic was born.
An independent nation for nearly 10 years, Texas was officially annexed to the United States
on December 29, 1845. With the change in government, and the lowering of the Texas flag
on February 19, 1846, outgoing President Anson Jones declared, "The final act in the great
drama is now performed; the Republic of Texas is no more."
(The above story of the Battle of The Alamo, Thirteen Fateful Days in 1836, is taken from a
brochure that is freely distributed by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas who have
custodianship of the Alamo. Remember the Alamo.)
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