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Siege of the Alamo: The Final Battle - History of the Texas Revolution 

Texas History Trust
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If you've watched the previous five installments of this series, thanks and congrats on making it to the end! If not, there's a playlist of the series on this channel. We've covered the ground from the arrival of Santa Anna in San Antonio de Bexar through his decision to stage a final assault. This is an encapsulation of how the Battle of the Alamo played out.
All credit to James Boddie for granting me permission to use his fantastic 3D renderings of the Alamo compound to show you what it looked like in 1836. Thanks to celebrated military artist, Gary Zaboly, for the use of some of his remarkable illustrations. You both gave this series texture, faces, and a life it would have lacked without your work.
The primary reference book for the details of the siege was that of COL. Alan Huffines. It may be purchased here: www.amazon.com/Blood-Noble-Me...
For a delightfully readable military history of the Texas Revolution, we recommend Dr. Hardin's Texian Iliad: www.amazon.com/Texian-Iliad-M...

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16 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 141   
@raymondgarcia7351
@raymondgarcia7351 3 месяца назад
I was born and raised in San Antonio and every time I pass through the Alamo it's still intriguing and I used to walk through there whenever I had a chance, what I mean is the grounds. I know their sacrifice was not in vain this great state was born. But sadly what's happening these days is a shame it could mean it is finally in vain. God bless America and the Republic of Texas.
@rubensarabia5495
@rubensarabia5495 Месяц назад
No nacio se lo robaron a mexico
@ericsissenwein3601
@ericsissenwein3601 3 месяца назад
I was a re-enactor in THE PRICE OF FREEDOM. It was a great experience and was very humbling. The filming at night during the assault on the Palisades was chaotic with screams, gunfire, and confusion. I have great respect the defenders of the Alamo and the Texican settlers for their eventual victories.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
I've read about the filming and can see how that would be immersive and maybe terrifying. The San Antonio paper and one of the journalist authors of Forget the Alamo were writing last year that the film shouldn't be shown anymore for all the reasons you'd guess.
@ericsissenwein3601
@ericsissenwein3601 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust that’s insane. It’ll only take one more generation to completely lose the history of this country and freedom we’ve won and kept so far. I wasn’t able to see the finished film for years until I visited San Antonio again. I loved the film and the message. I also saw myself for a brief time fighting in the forefront of the palisade in my brown felt hat with the brim upturned on the side😊
@Rick-jf6sg
@Rick-jf6sg 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust Yeah, those tri-authors definitely had their agendas in that book.
@johnadams5489
@johnadams5489 2 месяца назад
@@Rick-jf6sg Those so called writers are nothing but Democrat-anti-americans that keep on pushing their their communist-anti-slavery agenda.
@drsackbarry
@drsackbarry 2 месяца назад
David and I lived in the corral under an arbor for nearly 5 weeks while making that movie. I have so many memories of it as I see the hats and other items I used in it spread around in one of my rooms. How Many Tears Have Fallen Tears so many have fallen Through the years for the Greatest Nation ever Tears for life liberty the pursuit of happiness For a free world Tears for the sons and daughters that never returned home Warrior soldiers all Tears wiped from the cheeks of so many wives Shed by the children with only faint memories Tears behind the mother's veil On father's handkerchief Tears at the base of the white stone That wet the flowers and flags Tears at the sound of taps played in the distance For the memories of buddies Tears at the sight and sound of dog tags boots Empty Tears when the aircraft flyover Stars shining brightly Tears as the ships sail Anchors aweigh Tears for those that patrol Guard the dark nights alone Tears at roll call With no reply to a name called How many tears have fallen Bless Them All Barry 5/30/2021
@donaldnoonan
@donaldnoonan 3 месяца назад
My wife’s uncle great great and children’s great Uncle Dolphin Floyd died at the Alamo. He was a poor dirt farmer but rose to the occasion.
@Joseph-ue5wc
@Joseph-ue5wc 3 месяца назад
Perfect
@johnadams5489
@johnadams5489 2 месяца назад
Mrs Dickinson said she saw Crockets body laying on the ground on the right side of the front of the Church along with several bodies of Mexican soldiers. She was one of the last survivors and her testimony did not support the rumor that Crockett was executed.
@rodneyringler3745
@rodneyringler3745 3 месяца назад
I am moved, as I believe All true Texican's are, by the final written words of your wonderful series of presentations... 🙏God and Texas, Y'all🙏
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Thank you so much, Rodney. I’m glad you caught that! It’s been my email sign-off for decades. Where it comes from is in the first video of this series: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-X-DrSLt5Zr4.htmlsi=WjGqQQjv5jpSOaNR
@rodneyringler3745
@rodneyringler3745 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust ... see... People DO pay attention!!! Even if they are so broke they can't afford it!😂😂😂
@sombra6153
@sombra6153 3 месяца назад
I like how this video referred to Crockett as “David,” not “Davy.” Other works I’d read suggested that Jim Bowie was the only Alamo defender who would have likely been know to Santa Ana and the aristocracy as he’d married well into a prominent San Antonio family. Crockett, while some might have heard of him, was not a folk hero in Mexico and no one would have likely recognized him. In the predawn hours, I doubt he was even recognizable. I think he likely died near the Palisades where he and his men were stationed. Anyway, another interesting take on the actual battle.
@robertwood6272
@robertwood6272 3 месяца назад
With one of the pyres located nearby, perhaps this explains the haunted nature of the Menger Hotel. Haunted or not, it's still my favorite!
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
This whole no-quarter / quarter thing is a huge topic we should all know more about. Like our coin the quarter with Washington on it and what it means.
@richardglady3009
@richardglady3009 3 месяца назад
Wonderful, informative, objective video. Thank you.
@willfields7128
@willfields7128 3 месяца назад
Love the narration, very well done.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Thank you much, WF. I figured my voice is the last thing anyone would expect when they click an Alamo battle video. That's exactly why I narrated the whole series. I appreciate you watching.
@bhartley868
@bhartley868 3 месяца назад
Very well done, excellent job...
@DeanAitken
@DeanAitken 3 месяца назад
Extremely well done. Thank you for your work.
@THE-HammerMan
@THE-HammerMan 3 месяца назад
This series was finely made and presented. Thank you.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Much appreciated, HammerMan. It was a wonderful learning experience. I know the history but creating non-talking head videos is worlds apart from editing me running my yap.
@THE-HammerMan
@THE-HammerMan 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust Your presentation was 5-star. Far from "running your yap", as some tend to do, you were concise and clearly showed the in-depth research done to put the series together. Not using computerized narration(sic) elevates the series, shows you care and is most appreciated by all- especially myself. Thank you once again for the marvelous work you've done.
@ferengiprofiteer9145
@ferengiprofiteer9145 3 месяца назад
Thank you! Got my blood pressure up. What hardnosed men!
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
They met the challenge of the times they lived in. 19th century life (and war) were harsh. This was a hard story to tell.
@larryvaughn2567
@larryvaughn2567 3 месяца назад
Long live TEXAS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@thyweebo
@thyweebo 2 дня назад
I would really like to know more about the painting depicting the breach at the North Wall. I have never seen it and it is stunning. Would love to inspect it more closely!
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 дня назад
I had a hard time finding artwork for the North Wall breach, so much of what I used to depict it was photos I took of a diorama, believe it or not. When you see a scene of myriad soldados and their ladders (at 5:26 in this video, for example), that's actually photos of the Volkswagen-sized Alamo diorama at Hall of State in Dallas. It's massive and truly something to behold. The artist even included the ill-fated cat of Alamo lore in his depiction.
@user-vr8hi6jc3o
@user-vr8hi6jc3o Месяц назад
A fairly well done assessment of the final battle. The Mexican body count from the cementary is where most history books end. She correctly mentioned how more were burned ,buried in other areas and thrown into the river. Santa Anna wanted less evidence of the real body count. This tactic continues to many amateur historians today who do not really do their research.
@robj7386
@robj7386 3 месяца назад
there used to be a Dillards store a few hundred feet from the Alamo. Years ago an Alamo tour guide told me that’s where the funeral pyres were
@Mark-vm7sc
@Mark-vm7sc 3 месяца назад
Other side of it on Commerce Street, which as the Alameda in 1836.
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
Just the best. Marty Robbins is looking down handing you his crown.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Before you give me Marty’s crown, I know I have some ‘splaining to do re: Brigido. I felt that my mention of him felt out of place. It was too brief. So I cut it. And this series might leave a “where’d they end up?” taste in people’s mouths. The survivors had interesting, sometimes troubled, lives after the Alamo. Soooo I’m going to do a separate video on the survivors that will let me allot more time to Susanna, Enrique, Joe, Brigido, Gertrudis, Juana, etc. Dig it?
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust I hardly noticed anything or anyone missing except for that company of roofers who were at the vanguard and Crocket noted their arrival. I watched it on a loop. Good stuff. Hard to notice anything missing with so much new context in here. We will pick up Brigido later. It’s not like he’s gonna complain. Hahah
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust you don’t have to be modest. This video is just as good or better than Marty Robbins’. Y’all truly excelled. Outdid yourselves.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
I do have to be modest because I’m learning this as I go. I’m always mindful of being an amateur. The history I know well but I do all of the graphics, editing, sound, etc. myself. One day my nonprofit will have a zillion dollars and I’ll pay an editor. Until then, I’ll keep volunteering to do it. When that time comes, I will put in an animation of the roofers rolling up to the Alamo and probably get canceled again 😂
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust maybe I’m partial, but I’m known to be quite objective. You’re a powerful historian.
@texashistorylessons
@texashistorylessons 3 месяца назад
Wonderful job. Keep going.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Thank you, Michael! I’ve been quite ill and used my recovery time to add some much needed skills to my video editing bag of tricks.
@texashistorylessons
@texashistorylessons 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust I’m very impressed with the skills. Hope you are better.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
My health bar is at about 70% but that beats the hell out of where I was in February. Think you'll ever make the jump to talking head video?
@texashistorylessons
@texashistorylessons 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust I don’t know if the world needs my head talking but I have been planning on making more visually engaging videos using text, maps, photos and artwork. Probably won’t be to the level of yours but better than a static image like mine have been.
@bravedaddy1243
@bravedaddy1243 2 месяца назад
One story I heard was that Travis didn’t draw a line in the sand, but went around and spoke to everyone he could, telling them what they were up against and if they thought they could make it and tried to escape, it wouldn’t change anything they had done inside the walls. Maybe true, maybe not.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
Another plausible theory, sir. It seems most likely that, one way or another, the defenders were apprised of the no-more-reinforcements situation and each had a personal choice to make.
@adammiles-qh8xw
@adammiles-qh8xw Месяц назад
Could they have gotten out and away even if they wanted to ?​@@texashistorytrust
@samharper4289
@samharper4289 3 месяца назад
Remember the Alamo!!!
@user-vr8hi6jc3o
@user-vr8hi6jc3o Месяц назад
This assessment is very similar to prof. Lon Tinkle's book written back in 1958 before all the rewriting of history became the "rage". The five men who surrendered then executed was even learned by my mom when she was in high school in the 1930s. Why modern want to be historians put their own spin on events I do not know. This piece is the first one that holds more truths than all the others. I should be the only one shown in school.
@WillBond-xy6xv
@WillBond-xy6xv 23 дня назад
Santa Anna had his band play the DEGUELLO. Deguello is a Spanish word meaning beheading or throat-slashing. The men inside knew what it meant. You tell me: have your THROAT CUT or a bullet, which would you want? Round ball is much faster and much less horrible.
@Iwong59
@Iwong59 3 месяца назад
The Alamo and San Antonio River Walk also landed on USA Today's top 100 "Most Overrated Attractions Worldwide," a category also included in last week's report, coming in at No. 81 and No. 98, respectively.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
I saw the Alamo one but not the River Walk. I wholeheartedly agree on the latter. Ironically, the Alamo was voted Best Free Attraction in the USA Today poll last year. Go figure!
@WillBond-xy6xv
@WillBond-xy6xv 2 месяца назад
I worked from January to November in San Antonio. I vi sited the Alamo several times. One of my great(x4) grandfathers was there. I have studied 20+ books and articles on it. I suggest EVERYONE read a couple of articles at least.
@icewaterslim7260
@icewaterslim7260 3 месяца назад
Pretty fair account.
@howardkoontz4735
@howardkoontz4735 Месяц назад
This is the first time I ever heard of a outer wall to bolster the Alamo wall. No books, art work or oral history that I have read tells of this wood wall. About 5 years ago I visited the Mexican History Museum which to Americans is the Halls of Montezuma. In a room called "The Alamo" is a tall glass case which held the flag of the New Orleans Grays, 2 pistols, 2 long guns and a pennant of black, red and white boarder. In the center is the Skull and Cross bones. On a wood sled is a small cannon, (2lb?) Across the room is the small box holding Santa Anna's pistols and shoulder boards. In the far end there is the origional 1824 Mexican Constitution. No where in the museum is a picture of Santa Anna. One mone long wall are depictions of all the Mexican Heros but Santa Anna is not among them.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust Месяц назад
Santa Anna is not held in high esteem anywhere but the Colombian town of Turbaco, where he had a hacienda and was considered a grand old war hero. Gaboly, Lemon and others mention the wooden outer-work at the north wall, though there’s some debate as to its exact construction. Huffines’ Blood of Noble Men is good on the physical details of the Alamo as well as the timeline of the siege.
@jessewilliams1422
@jessewilliams1422 2 месяца назад
It was Travis that fired the cannon in defiance to the parley, and it enraged Bowie who was sick and would have tried to bargain for a retreat. It probably wouldn't have made a difference to Santa Anna, as he was known to be quite ruthless.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
I covered the messenger sent by Travis and the one sent by Bowie in the first installment of the siege series here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-X-DrSLt5Zr4.html
@oldmanjoe6808
@oldmanjoe6808 2 месяца назад
Gone are Davy Crockets rifle, Jim Bowie's knife... both worth millions to a collector.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
Only one of Crockett's rifles is in a private collection (that of a Crockett descendant in Houston). One is on display at the Alamo. Neither was the rifle he had in the Alamo, which was lost to history. That may be true of Bowie's Alamo knife, as well. The authenticity of the Musso Bowie knife was/is questionable.
@oldmanjoe6808
@oldmanjoe6808 2 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust Thanks. I saw a video years ago on New York TV, a documentary by this man concerning that Bowie knife, wrote to him In Care Of the station he broadcasted from... he sent me what I asked for which was an exact to scale blueprint of the knife. I made one from that blueprint out of a hard, hard steel truck leaf spring. It took five years of my spare time and it's still not quite finished. Thanks again.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
@@oldmanjoe6808 Holy smokes! Points for dedication and attention to detail, sir. I have a Black-style coffin Bowie that someone else went to the pains to make for me. Definitely not as tough as leaf spring steel!
@richardbaranzini8805
@richardbaranzini8805 2 месяца назад
❤why was Santa Ana allowed to live on Long Island later?
@Mark-vm7sc
@Mark-vm7sc 2 месяца назад
Why do you think?
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
Woohoo! Its here!
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
This was a tortuous edit and I'm not sure how I feel about it but I'm finally freeeeeeeeee!
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust lol. the whole thing was great. I loved it. and this is the guy that doesn't care much about Alamo lore and history
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
@@rosgill6 Thank you 😊 It’s a good story at its core when it’s not wrapped in dogmatic lore. From the bottom of my heart, I hate that that rhymed!
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
@@rosgill6 I have been invited to meet with the Express News editorial board, presumably to discuss the nasty editorial they ran about me based on the Texas Monthly story. Next week. Imma roll up on San Antonio with bananas and popsicles like the gangsta we both know I am!
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
that EN reply is lost in purgatory or something. I can see it in one place but can't open the whole thing. anyway, I'm sure they can skype with you. Don't walk into the disinformative lion's den. you WILL be sacrificed to the Big History deities. ( i have a few metaphors engaged right now and I don't care to reconcile that haha). every time i glance at that newspaper at the corner store i roll my eyes. it's really that bad. also, involuntary rhyming happens to every one. you just can't let it become habit. then you are part of the problem :)
@JesusSanchez-ul2ex
@JesusSanchez-ul2ex 3 месяца назад
Hello Have a question was Texas part of the US Or
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
At this time (March 6, 1836) Texas was a Mexican state in rebellion. It had declared independence from Mexico a few days before but the men at the Alamo didn’t know that. Several Mexican states rebelled against Santa Anna turning his back on federalism. Other rebellions were crushed (Zacatecas) or ended pretty peacefully (Yucatán). Texas would become a part of the U.S. a decade after the fight in this video.
@user-ku2pi8cm1d
@user-ku2pi8cm1d 3 месяца назад
👍
@tonyrowland9216
@tonyrowland9216 3 месяца назад
why were the bodies burned?
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
The soldados weren't burned. They were buried in the Campo Santo (most of them, anyway.) The Texians were burned, as I said in the video, because Santa Anna was staying in San Antonio for a little while. Decomposing bodies all around would be unhealthy. Why burned instead of buried? Presumably because Santa Anna wanted to send a message to the Texians in the settlements.
@baylorattorney
@baylorattorney 3 месяца назад
The truth is so much more compelling and heroic than even the myths of Alamo we grew up hearing. Thank you for the best rendition of the Alamo yet. Texas History Trust is better than School House Rock!
@user-cx5ue4wf3c
@user-cx5ue4wf3c 2 месяца назад
Texas holding the line every since
@chrisbotelho7212
@chrisbotelho7212 2 месяца назад
As a kid growing up in the 50's and 60's I have always been interested in the battle at the Alamo. I was fortunate to visit there many years ago and hope to return one day. That said I've never been a fan of Jim Bowie. Not a good guy. At all, in any way. I suppose he was a man of his times, but being a thief and a swindler were his good qualities. Crockett was there for land and opportunity. I don't believe he gave a twit about Texan independence except for what he might profit from it. Doesn't make him any less brave or whatever. But when he arrived in Bexar he should have kept going.
@jackfennessy5465
@jackfennessy5465 15 дней назад
This was not the final battle.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 15 дней назад
@@jackfennessy5465 It ended the siege, did it not? What do you consider the final battle?
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
so are you in EN jail? are you allowed correspondence? are they feeding you solids? in other words, how did the "meeting" go?
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
1) Heard the phrase “Big Archaeology” on a Rogan episode and almost spat my smoothie out. 😂😂 Sooooon Big History will be on blast. I can feel it! 2) The struggle session was bumped up. My doc advised no travel until after I have a follow up CT scan. Hopefully that will be scheduled on Monday. 3) I wrote a piece about DEI at the Bullock Museum last week. Everything is ClownWorld.
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust I would say that is good except that it isn't. I hope you start getting better soon. Is the piece you wrote online so I can read it? before big history takes it down😬
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
Hopefully I’ll have some new docs on board and we’ll blaze a trail to me feeling human again. And aye, most of what I write gets posted to the website. Bullock thingy is here: www.texashistorytrust.org/texas-history-news-and-opinion/texas-museums-amp-dei
@rosgill6
@rosgill6 3 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust I shall have a read. thank you :)
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
@@rosgill6 If you’ve read it, now you know why the Smithsonian, among other august national institutions, has gone loco. Space Center Houston. DEI in space!
@rickdearing3204
@rickdearing3204 2 месяца назад
All bull
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
I'll bite. Which part of the battle did I get wrong?
@danielporras9516
@danielporras9516 3 месяца назад
GOD BLESS TEXAS and AMERICA.
@Musica78237
@Musica78237 3 месяца назад
If you "don't exactly know what happened" and you quote historians who "guess" what happened why create a false narrative of the events that occurred?
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 3 месяца назад
I guess you missed the part where I said historians guess where the columns formed based on how they moved. Please show me the “false narrative” or any narrative in my description of the mechanics of the battle.
@redsammy7789
@redsammy7789 2 месяца назад
@@texashistorytrust You will have to excuse him, in these tough economic times, he is so poor he cannot afford to PAY attention.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
@@redsammy7789 He’s like school on Saturday…no class.
@frankhernandez6883
@frankhernandez6883 2 месяца назад
*OR....Crockett's life was spared! Afterall, he was a Free Mason as was Santa Anna and most of the Mexican officers. One would ONLY have to signal the sign of distress to a fellow "brother" in order to ask for mercy, as in Sam Houston's capture of Santa Anna later.* What a turn of events THAT would've been!*
@johnadams5489
@johnadams5489 2 месяца назад
That's an old wives tale. Crockett died with the rest of the defenders. There is a marker on the ground in front of the church where Mrs Dickinson saw his body.
@frankhernandez6883
@frankhernandez6883 2 месяца назад
@@johnadams5489 I didn't say it was FACT. But it would've been a happier ending. I don't think Crockette realized what he was getting into. I think he came down here to hunt and maybe find new land. But S Anna was a Free Masion & so was Crockette and Sam Houston + others. Further, the bodies were so mutilated and probably still dark(?) I don't think she could've recognized him. the battle started at what? 5-6 am. and was over in about 1 hr???
@frankhernandez6883
@frankhernandez6883 2 месяца назад
Santa Anna listed 3 items for settlement in Texas: 1- Learn Spanish 2- Become Catholic 3- NO SLAVES ALLOWED Britian ended their slavery in 1808 - Mexico ended theirs in 1827. Texas was being plan as slave territory. Travis & Bowie had slaves as most Scot-Irish who came from the South with their slaves to settle in Texas. German-Americans who settled in Central Texas were anti-slavery and were met with violence later during the Civil War for their Pro-Union stance. The Alamo wasn't fought for FREEDOM, but sadly for SLAVERY.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
1) Santa Anna didn’t make the empresario contracts. 2) Coahuila y Texas outlawed the importation of slaves in 1827, not Mexico. Mexico left it up to the states in 1824. Tejanos in favor of colonization lobbied for an exemption for Texas and received it. Meanwhile, slavery exemptions were given to the unsettled Isthmus of Tehuantepec any time Mexico made a new slavery law. They wanted the Itsmo settled and cultivated quickly, and were happy to invite American slave owners as settlers to get that done. Interestingly, only male slaves would be permitted, as it was assumed female slaves would mix with the native race. 3) Britain ended the slave trade, not slavery, in the Empire in 1807. Slaves were still legally held in British colonies until the 1830s. 4) While the Germans later adopted a staunch anti-slavery stance in Texas, there were German slaveholders and plantations here. 5) There were almost 200 men in the Alamo. You named two. Name me a few from Pennsylvania, New York, Ireland, Scotland, and Massachusetts. Go look up the list. You’re certainly entitled to your own opinions, but not your own facts.
@t74guard78
@t74guard78 2 месяца назад
Some may not like this but I don't think the defenders of the Alamo were brave and heroic. I think they were foolish. Trying to defend such a large area with so few men against much greater numbers is dumb. The fact that the battle was over so quickly is proof of that. The Alamo would have been hard to defend with 2 or 3 times more men. Having only 150 men was a no win situation. They should have left and joined up with Sam Houston. Adding to his numbers before engaging Santa Ana. Houston ended up defeating him so the Alamo would again be in their hands. Instead they stayed and died needlessly. It's always better to retreat to fight another day. When the odds of winning the battle are more in your favor. I am sure Travis, Bowie and Crockett would have been a great help to Houston. Just seems to be a waste of a bunch of good men. So sad.
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
Surrender at (Santa Anna’s) discretion was the option; just walking away was not. Do you think Santa Anna would have allowed them to walk unscathed? There were Tejanos there who lived through the Battle of Medina and people who knew what went down in Zacatecas. (Serious question. No sneak intended.)
@Zombie-rj6nd
@Zombie-rj6nd 2 месяца назад
The Texians didn't have enough horses, Oxen, or supplies to get everyone and the cannon out of Bexar safely. If they fled on foot, Santa Anna's cavalry would have caught up to them and torn them to shreds. The only hope they had was to hold up in the Alamo until they could be reinforced. Thanks to the defenders, Houston had enough time to muster and train an army that could go up against Santa Anna. If anyone was dumb it was Santa Anna who wasted time besieging a very small force for two weeks that wasn't even much of a threat. If he kept only a portion of his army to besiege the Alamo, and kept advancing he probably would have won the war.
@stephensmith3708
@stephensmith3708 2 месяца назад
Too bad they didnt know Greek Fire, how to make it...
@texashistorytrust
@texashistorytrust 2 месяца назад
I think the pine resin would’ve been hard to come by or if Mesquite sap would have similar properties, but man…this makes for some interesting alternative history thoughts.
@TimothyReed-pu4yg
@TimothyReed-pu4yg Месяц назад
Texas smexas
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