Everything about Battle Of The Alamo totally explained
The
Battle (and siege)
of the Alamo took place at the
Alamo Mission in
San Antonio, Texas (then known as "San Antonio de Béxar") in February and March 1836. As part of the
Texas Revolution, the battle was between the
Republic of Mexico and the rebel
Texian forces, including both
Whites and
Blacks (from the United States) and
Tejanos (Mexicans in
Texas), during the Texians' fight for independence — the
Texas Revolution. The 13-day
siege started Tuesday,
February 23,
1836, and ended on Sunday,
March 6, 1836, with the capture of the mission and the death of nearly all the Texian and Tejano defenders, except for a few
slaves, women and children. Despite the win, the
13-day holdout stalled the Mexican Army, and allowed
Sam Houston to gather troops and supplies for his later success at the
Battle of San Jacinto. The Texian revolutionaries went on to win the war.
The battle took place at a turning point in the Texas Revolution, which had begun with the October
1835 Consultation, whose delegates narrowly approved a call for rights under the
Mexican Constitution of 1824. By the time of the battle, however, sympathy for declaring independence from Mexico had grown. The delegates from the Alamo to the Constitutional Convention were both instructed to vote for independence.
Background
In 1821, the
Mexican War for Independence severed
Spain's control over its North American territories. A new country,
Mexico, was formed from much of
New Spain, including
Spanish Texas. Mexico officially adopted a
constitution in 1824, Texas became part of a newly created state,
Coahuila y Tejas. The new state covered the boundaries of Spanish Texas but didn't include the area around
El Paso, which belonged to the state of
Chihuahua and the area of
Laredo, which became part of
Tamaulipas. The capitol of Texas moved from
San Antonio to
Saltillo.
Because the new Mexican government was bankrupt and had little money to devote to the military, settlers were empowered to create their own militias to provide protection from hostile Indian tribes. In the hope that an influx of settlers could control the Indian raids, the government liberalized its immigration policies for the region, and settlers from the
United States were permitted to immigrate for the first time. The first group of colonists, known as the
Old Three Hundred, arrived in 1822 to settle an
empresarial grant that had been given to
Stephen F. Austin by the Spanish. Twenty-three other empresarios also brought immigrants to Texas. Of these, only one of the empresarios settled citizens from within Mexico; the others came primarily from the United States. Many of the White American settlers owned slaves.
President
Anastasio Bustamante implemented several measures in 1830 to make immigration less desirable for Americans, including a prohibition on immigration to Texas from the United States, although Americans would still be welcome in other parts of Mexico. The ban and other measures didn't stop U.S. citizens from migrating to Texas by the thousands. By 1834, it was estimated that over 30,000 English speakers lived in Texas, compared to only 7800 of Spanish heritage.
In 1835,
President and General
Antonio López de Santa Anna abrogated the Constitution of 1824 and proclaimed a new constitution that reduced the power of many of the provincial governments and increased the power of the presidency. Since the end of hostilities with Spain ten years before, the Mexican government, and Santa Anna in particular, had been eager to reassert its control over the entire country, and control of Texas was seen as particularly important as Santa Anna rightly perceived the province to be vulnerable to the
westward expansion of the
United States.
Hostilities in Texas began with the
Battle of Gonzales on
October 2,
1835, after which the Texian rebels quickly captured Mexican positions at
La Bahía and
San Antonio.
With the surrender of General
Martín Perfecto de Cos and his garrison at San Antonio, there was no longer a Mexican military presence in Texas. Santa Anna decided to launch an offensive with the aim of putting down the
rebellion. Minister of War
José María Tornel and Major General
Vicente Filisola proposed a seaborne attack to Santa Anna, which would have been easier on the troops and had been a proven means of expeditions into Texas since 1814. Santa Anna refused on the basis that this plan would take too long and the rebels in Texas might receive aid from the United States.
Santa Anna assembled an estimated force of 6,100 soldiers and 20 cannons at
San Luis Potosí in early 1836 and moved through
Saltillo,
Coahuila, towards Texas. His army marched across the
Rio Grande through inclement weather, including snowstorms, to suppress the rebellion. San Antonio de Béxar was one of his intermediate objectives; his ultimate objective was to capture the Texas government and restore the rule of the central or "Centralista" Mexican government over a rebellious state. He had earlier suppressed widespread rebellions across Mexico including Tampico, Yucatán, and
Zacatecas. Santa Anna and his army arrived in San Antonio de Béxar on
February 23. It was a mixed force of regular
infantry and
cavalry units as well as
activo reserve infantry
battalions and prisoners from the Yucatán impressed into the army. They were equipped with the British
Baker and the outdated, short range but effective and deadly
British Tower Musket, Mark III, or "
Brown Bess"
musket. Many of his soldiers were recent conscripts with no previous combat experience. Although they were well-drilled, the Mexican army discouraged individual marksmanship. The initial forces were equipped with four 7 inch (178 mm)
howitzers, seven 4-pound (1.8 kg), four 6-pound (2.7 kg), four 8-pound (3.6 kg) and two 12-pound (5 kg) cannon.
Several of Santa Anna's officers were foreign
mercenary veterans, including Vicente Filisola of
Italy, Adrián Wolle of
France, and Antonio Gaona of
Cuba, and General Santa Anna was himself a veteran of the
War of Independence.
Prelude to battle
After
Sam Houston received word that Santa Anna was leading a large force to San Antonio,
James Bowie offered to lead volunteers to defend the Alamo from the expected attack. He arrived with 30 men on
January 19, where they found a force of 104 men with a few weapons and a few cannons but little supplies and gunpowder. Houston knew that there were not enough men to hold the fort in an attack and had given Bowie orders to remove the artillery and blow up the fortification. Bowie and the Alamo captain,
James C. Neill, decided they didn't have enough oxen to move the artillery someplace safer, and they didn't want to destroy the fortress. On
January 26, one of Bowie's men,
James Bonham, organized a rally which passed a resolution in favor of holding the Alamo. Bonham signed the resolution first, with Bowie's signature second.
Through Bowie's connections due to his marriage and his fluency in Spanish, the predominantly Mexican population of San Antonio often furnished him with information about the movements of the Mexican army. After learning that Santa Anna had 4,500 troops and was heading for the city.
On
February 3, William Travis arrived with an additional 30 troops, and several days later
Davy Crockett appeared with twelve Tennesseans. Neill went on furlough on
February 17 to visit his sick family, leaving Travis, a member of the regular army, in command. He refused to answer to Travis, who called an election for the men to choose their own commander. They chose Bowie, infuriating Travis. Bowie celebrated his appointment by getting very drunk and causing havoc in San Antonio, releasing all prisoners in the local jails and harassing citizens. Travis was disgusted, but two days later the men agreed to a joint command; Bowie would command the volunteers, and Travis would command the regular army and the volunteer cavalry.
Alamo defenders
In the United States, the siege of the Alamo was seen as a battle of American settlers against Mexicans, but many of the
Tejanos sided with the rebellion. Many viewed this struggle in similar terms with the
American Revolution of 1776. The Tejanos wanted Mexico to have a loose central government which supported
states rights as expressed in the
1824 Constitution. One Tejano combatant at the Alamo was Captain (later Colonel)
Juan Nepomuceno Seguín, who was sent out as a dispatch rider before the final assault. Other
Tejanos include
Toribio Losoya and
Gregorio Esparza, whose entire family waited out the siege inside the Alamo.
The defenders of the Alamo came from many places besides Texas.
William Barret Travis and
James Butler Bonham were both from
Saluda County, South Carolina, and Travis had spent some time in
Alabama.
Jim Bowie was born in
Kentucky but spent most of his life in
Louisiana. From
Tennessee came another small group of volunteers led by famous hunter, politician and
Indian-fighter
David "Davy" Crockett who was accompanied by
Micajah Autry, a neighbor and lawyer. The 12-man "Tennessee Mounted Volunteers" arrived at the Alamo on
February 8. The previous month David Crockett had resigned from politics having told his peers that "You may go to hell, I'll go to Texas."
Another group, the "
New Orleans Greys", came from that city to fight as
infantry in the revolution. The two
companies comprising the Greys had participated in the Siege of Béxar in December. Most of the Greys then left San Antonio de Béxar for an expedition to
Matamoros, Tamaulipas, with the promise of taking the war to Mexico, but about two dozen remained at the Alamo.
Siege
On
February 16 and
February 18, local resident Ambrosio Rodriguez warned his good friend Travis that their relatives further south claimed that Santa Anna was on the march towards Bexar. Two day's later, Seguin's scout Blas Herrera reported that the vanguard of the Mexican army had crossed the
Rio Grande. There had been many rumors of Santa Anna's imminent arrival, but Travis ignored them. For several hours that night a council of war held at the Alamo argued over whether to believe the rumors. Travis had also assumed that Santa Anna wouldn't have begun gathering troops for an invasion of Texas until after he'd learned of Cos's defeat; the Texians didn't realize that Santa Anna had begun preparations for an invasion months before.
Despite the Texian disbelief, by the evening of February 20, many of the residents of Bexar began to pack their belongings in preparation for leaving. The next day, 15 of the Tejano volunteers at the Alamo resigned. Seguin had asked Travis to release the men so that they could help evacuate their families, who were in the path Santa Anna would take to reach Bexar.
Santa Anna had crossed the Rio Grande on
February 16. The next night, his army camped on the
Nueces River, from Bexar. Texians had previously burned the bridge over the Nueces, forcing the Mexicans to build a makeshift structure of branches and dirt in the pouring rain. The delay was brief, and on
February 19 the vanguard of the army camped along the
Frio River, from Bexar. The following day, they reached
Hondo, less than away. By 1:45 pm on
February 21, Santa Anna and his vanguard had reached the banks of the
Medina River, from Bexar. Waiting there were
dragoons under Colonel Ramirez y Sesma, who had arrived the previous evening. Centralists in Bexar soon alerted Santa Anna to the party, and he ordered General Ramirez y Sesma to lead a cavalry force to take the Alamo while the garrison celebrated elsewhere. The raid had to be called off when sudden rains made the Medina unfordable. The next night, Santa Anna and his army camped at Leon Creek, west of San Antonio.
February 23
By the early morning of
February 23, many of the Bexar residents had learned that the Mexican army's arrival was imminent and began to leave. When Travis noticed the unusual traffic, he questioned residents and learned of rumors of Santa Anna's approach. He, Dr. James Sutherland, and a third man climbed to the top of the tower of the San Fernando church but in the pre-dawn light they were unable to see anything. Travis and Sutherland left the third man in the tower and returned to the Alamo. Historian Lon Tinkle speculated that the combination of the church bell ringing and the sight of the two Texian scouts led Sesma to believe that the Texians were planning an assault on the cavalry.
At this point, there were approximately 154 effective Texian soldiers in the Alamo, with another 14 in the hospital. They were able to gather enough beef and corn into the Alamo to last a month. The Alamo garrison also had a large supply of captured Mexican muskets, with over 19,000 paper cartridges, but only a limited supply of powder for the artillery. Several members of the garrison dismantled the blacksmith shop of Antonio Saez, who had previously assisted the Texians, and moved much of the material into the Alamo. It is likely that Navarro and Alsbury also brought their family's servants, Sam and Bettie. Alsbury's husband,
Horace Alsbury, was a member of the Texian army, and departed for Gonzales immediately after Juana moved into the Alamo to warn the settlers that the Mexican Army was outside of Bexar.
While the bulk of the garrison prepared for the attack, a few Texians remained in Bexar and raised a flag in the middle of Military Plaza. According to historian J.R. Edmondson, "The flag was a variation of the Mexican tricolor with two stars, representing the separated states of Texas and Coahuila, gleaming from the white center bar." The Texians lowered their flag and brought it into the Alamo. The note to Gonzales read: "The enemy in large force is in sight. We want men and provisions. Send them to us. We have 150 men and are determined to defend the Alamo to the last."
By late afternoon, Bexar was completely occupied by about 1500 Mexican troops, who quickly raised a blood-red flag signifying "No Quarter" above the San Fernando Church. Soon after, a Mexican bugler sounded the request for parley. Travis ordered the Alamo's 18-lb cannon fired. The Mexican army responded with four balls from 7-in howitzers; the balls hit the interior of the Alamo but caused no damage or injuries.
Bowie believed that Travis had acted hastily and sent Green B. Jameson to meet with Santa Anna. Angry that Bowie presented himself as Santa Anna's equal, the Mexican general refused to meet with Jameson but allowed Colonel Juan Almonte and Jose Bartres to parley. Almonte later said that Jameson asked for an honorable surrender, but Bartres replied "I reply to you, according to the order of His Excellency, that the Mexican army can't come to terms under any conditions with rebellious foreigners to whom there's no recourse left, if they wish to save their lives, than to place themselves immediately at the disposal of the Supreme Government from whom alone they may expect clemency after some considerations.” Travis was angered that Bowie had acted unilaterally and sent his own emissary to the Mexican army; he received the same response. Bowie and Travis then mutually agreed to fire the cannon again.
By the time the parleys were over, it was nightfall, and the firing ceased. That evening, the Mexicans erected an artillery battery near the Veramendi house. Santa Anna also sent General Ventura Mora's cavalry to circle to the north and east of the Alamo to prevent the arrival of Texian reinforcements. According to Edmondson, the Texians sent a small party to forage that evening. They returned with six pack mules and a prisoner, a Mexican soldier who would later be used interpret Mexican bugle calls. The Texians received one reinforcement that night, when one of Seguin's men, Gregorio Esparza, arrived with his family. Texian sentries refused to open the gate, but others helped the family climb through the window of the chapel. Several other Texian soldiers were unable to make it into the Alamo. Dimitt and Noble, who had been scouting for signs of the Mexican army, were told by a local Tejano that Bexar was surrounded, and they'd be unable to re-enter the town. Andrew Jackson Sowell and Boyd Lockhart had been out that morning looking for provisions; on hearing that the Alamo was surrounded they left for their homes in Gonzales.
Bowie had been ill, and at some point during the day he collapsed and was confined to his bed. Fearing that he was contagious, Bowie moved into a small room in the low barracks along the south wall of the mission. Travis was now in sole command of the garrison. Travis sent the letter with courier Albert Martin, who delivered it to Gonzales. where it was read by Governor Henry Smith. Smith told the colonists at San Felipe "to fly to the aid of your besieged countrymen and not permit them to be massacred by a mercenary foe. ... The call is upon ALL who are able to bear army, to rally without one moment's delay, or in fifteen days the heart of Texas will be the seat of war." The letter was eventually reprinted throughout the United States and much of Europe. Santa Anna also ordered that his military band serenade the Texians throughout the night. Mexican soldiers took advantage of the darkness and the distractions of the countrymen to erect two more artillery batteries around the Alamo. Gaona and the First Brigade were still several day's march away, while an additional 400–500 men and most of the Mexican artillery were struggling through mud south of Bexar.
February 25
The Mexican bombardment continued through the morning of
February 25. At approximately 10 a.m., about 200–300 Mexican soldiers, primarily
cazadores from the Matamoros Battalion, crossed the San Antonio river and took cover in abandoned shacks approximately to from the Alamo walls. The Mexican soldiers were intending to use the huts as cover to erect another artillery battery, although many Texians assumed that they actually launching an assault on the fort. Travis called for volunteers to burn the huts, despite the fact that it was broad daylight and they'd be within musket range of the Mexican soldiers. To provide cover, Dickinson and his men fired their 8-lb cannons, filled with grapeshot and canister, at the Mexican soldiers in the huts. Crockett and his men fired rifles, while other Texians reloaded extra weapons for them. Within two hours, the battle was over. although Rose was almost captured by a Mexican officer., after two of their soldiers were killed and four wounded, while several Texians had been mildly scratched by flying rock.
That afternoon, Mexican soldiers were posted east of the Alamo, on the road to Gonzales.
Santa Anna sent a messenger to tell Gaona to hurry to Bexar with his three best companies. At the time, the First Brigade was at San Ambrosio, a day's march north of the Rio Grande. According to the diary of
Jose Enrique de la Pena, on this day carelessness led the Aldama Battalion's powder supply to catch fire, causing "considerable alarm". Travis also wrote another letter requesting help. The Texian officers voted that Seguin should carry the message. Travis was adamant that Seguin remain behind, as his knowledge of the language, the countryside, and Mexican customs was invaluable. and told Travis that Seguin's knowledge of Spanish would also help him to avoid capture by Mexican patrols. Seguin, riding Bowie's horse, which was the fastest in the mission, and his aide Antonio Cruz left about 9 pm. but were able to escape using their knowledge of Spanish and the local terrain. Despite their efforts, several huts remained standing, and overnight the Mexican army was able to erect a battery only from the Alamo. An additional battery was erected at a location known as old Powderhouse, to the southeast of the Alamo. The Mexican army now had artillery stationed on three sides of the Alamo.
February 26–27
Residents of Bexar were able to come into or near the Alamo in the first few days of the siege. Seguin's meals had even been delivered by a local, Estaban Pacheco. During the first week of the siege, over 200 Mexican cannon shots landed in the Alamo plaza. The Texians often picked up the cannonballs and reused them. Although the Texians had matched Mexican artillery fire, on
February 26, Travis ordered the artillery to stop firing to conserve powder and shot. Crockett and his men were encouraged to keep shooting, as they rarely missed and thus didn't waste shot. Through the early days of the siege, the Texians didn't bother to take cover, as the Mexicans were too far out of their range to cause harm with their muskets; any Mexican soldier who ventured within of the Alamo, however, risked death or injury. A
blue norther blew in that evening and dropped the temperature to 39 degrees F. Santa Anna sent COlonel Juan Bringas to engage the Texians, and according to Edmondson, one Texian was killed.
Unbeknownst to the Texians, Colonel
James Fannin had finally decided to ride to their relief. On the morning of February 26, he set out with 320 men, 4 cannon, and several supply wagons for the march from Goliad to the Alamo. The group then took six hours to cross the waist-deep water of the San Antonio River. By the time they reached the other side it was dark, and the men camped along the river. The cold front reached Goliad that evening, and the poorly-dressed soldiers were "quickly chilled and miserable" in the driving rain. On awakening, Fannin realized that all of the Texian oxen had wandered off, and that his men had neglected to pack food for the journey. It took most of the day for the men to round up the oxen; after two days of travel, Fannin's men hadn't even ventured from their fort. In a letter to Acting Governor James Robinson, Fannin said that his officers approached him to ask that the rescue trip be cancelled, as they'd received word that General Urrea's army was marching towards Goliad.
Several residents had seen Fannin march from Goliad and sent messengers to Bexar to inform Santa Anna that Fannin and 300 men were headed for the Alamo. Santa Anna ordered Colonel Juan Almonte and 800 dragoons to incercept the Texian relief force. Unaware of Fannin's aborted relief mission, Travis sent
James Bonham to Goliad to persuade him. Bonham was asked to tie a white handkerchief around his hat when he returned so that the Texians would know to open the gates for him.
Much of the Mexican army's provisions were in the rear of the convoy with Gaona and Filisola. Santa Anna had hoped to restock his army's supplies in Bexar, but were unable to find much. He finally asked a local citizen, Manuel Menchaca, to help them find food; Menchaca led the army to the Seguin and Florez ranches and liberated all of their corn, beef, and hogs. Santa Anna sent more couriers to Gaona and Filisola to urge them to hury; Filisola was still at the Rio Grande.
During the day, the Mexican army tried to block the irrigation ditch leading into the Alamo. Texian Green Jameson tasked the men in the Alamo with finishing a well at the south end of the plaza. Although the men hit water, they weakened an earth and timber parapet by the low barracks; the mound collapsed, leaving no way to fire safely over that wall. The same day, Texians spotted a Mexican general surrounded by aides and dragoons and fired, but didn't hit any of them. The Texians didn't realize it was Santa Anna.
Travis's messengers were having small successes. Albert Martin had reached Gonzales, the most westerly community of Texians, on February 25, the day after Sutherland and Smith had arrived with Travis's first message. As couriers delivered the messages to other settlements, reinforcements assembled in Gonzales, waiting for Fannin to arrive with more troops so they could travel together. After learning that Fannin wasn't coming and that there would likely be no other reinforcements, a group of 25 men set out from Gonzales at 2 pm on Saturday, February 27. They were led by Martin and George Kimbell, Almaron Dickinson's business partner. As the group passed the ranch of volunteer John G. King on their way out of town his fifteen-year-old son, Wiliam, rushed out and asked to take his father's place, as John King was needed to support the family's nine children. The men agreed, and William exchanged places with his father. On the march to Bexar, eight additional men joined the group. The men carried with them the first flag ever made for use in a Texian battle; the
Come and take it flag from the
Battle of Gonzales. As they approached the Alamo in the wee hours of
March 1, a rider appeared in front of them and asked, in English, if they wished to go into the fort. When they said yes, he turned and told them to follow him. When one of the men became suspicious, the rider bolted away. The volunteers were afraid they'd been discovered and galloped towards the Alamo. In the darkness, the Texians thought this was a party of Mexican soldiers and fired, wounding one of the volunteers. They finally managed to convince the defenders to open the gates.
Other Texian militias were preparing to march to the Alamo. In Victoria, Colonel Wharton was preparing to cross the
Guadalupe River, while in San Felipe, Captain Mosely Baker ordered the local militia to prepare to march on February 29. Seguin recruited an additional 25 Tejanos, and Dr. Sutherland and Horace Alsbury, husband of Juana Navarro Alsbury, recruited 12 more men and set out on 28 February for Cibolo in the hopes of meeting Fannin. Meanwhile, Bonham had spoken with Fannin, who again declined to relieve the Alamo. Bonham then went to Gonzales, only to find that most of the men who weren't at the Alamo had gone to the constitutional convention. He did meet nineteen-year-old Ben Highsmith, who had left the Alamo as a courier before Santa Anna's arrival. Highsmith had tried to return to the Alamo but had been chased for by Mexican cavalry; he told Bonham that no one could get through the Mexican lines. Despite the warning, on
March 2 Bonham crossed the Guadalupe en route to the Alamo.
Final assault
Exterior fighting
Just after midnight on
March 6, the Mexican army began preparing for the final assault. The men were divided into four
columns. Cos commanded the first column of 350 men, which comprised 6
line infantry companies and 1
light infantry company from the Aldama Battalion, as well as 3 line infantry companies from the San Luis Battalion. These men were assigned 10 ladders, 2 crowbars, and 2 axes. The second column, consisting of 400 men under Colonel Francisco Duque, comprised 6 line infantry and 1 cazador company of the Toluca Battalion with the remaining 3 line infantry companies from the San Luis Battalion, who would have a combined 10 ladders. A third column, under Colonel Jose Marie Romero, contained 400 men from 12 line infantry companies, carrying 6 ladders. Colonel Juan Morales commanded the final column of 125 soldiers from light infantry and cazador companies, carrying 2 ladders. Four hundred reserves, including five
grenadier companies, remained in camp under the authority of Santa Anna, while the Mexican cavalry were positioned around the Alamo to prevent escape of either Texans or Mexican soldiers. Each rifleman was assigned four rounds of ammunition and two flints, while grenadiers and scouts were given six rounds of ammunition each.
At 5:30 a.m., Santa Anna gave the order for the soldiers to begin the assault. They silently moved forward, with veterans positioned on the outside of the columns to better control the new recruits in the middle. Cos and his men approached the northwest corner of the Alamo, while Duque led his men from the northwest to the breach in the north wall of the Alamo. The column commanded by Romero marched towards the east wall, and Morales's column aimed for the low parapet by the chapel. In front of each column ranged several lines of light infantry, poised to "pick off any defenders who showed their heads". Within the Alamo, only Captain John Baugh had remained awake. The bugle anthems were soon repeated by bands from the other units. As Travis ran to his post, he shouted, "Come on boys, the Mexicans are upon us and we'll give them hell!" Perhaps not realizing this, the untrained recruits in the ranks "blindly fir[ed] their guns", and injured or killed the troops in front of them. The tight concentration of troops also offered an excellent target for the Texian artillery. Mexican Colonel Duque fell from his horse after suffering a wound in his thigh and was almost trampled by his own men. General Manuel Castrillon quickly assumed command of Duque's column.
Although some in the front of the Mexican ranks wavered, soldiers in the rear pushed them on. Some Texians leaned over the walls to fire into the massed troops. This left them exposed to Mexican fire. Travis was one of the first defenders to dies; struck in the head with a musket ball as he discharged both barrels of his shotgun into the soldiers below, Travis fell down the artillery ramp. Most of the Mexican ladders didn't make it to the walls, as their bearers either died or escaped; those that arrived were poorly made. When Santa Anna saw that the bulk of his army was massed against the north wall, he thought the army was being routed; "panicked", he sent the reserves into the same area. The Mexican soldiers closest to the north wall realized that a ladder wasn't necessary, as the makeshift wall contained may gaps and toeholds. One of the first to scale the wall was General Juan Amador; at his challenge, his men began swarming up the all. Amador located the
postern in the north wall and opened it, allowing Mexican soldiers to pour into the complex. The west wall had few defenders, and men in Cos's column began climbing through gun ports or boosting each other over the walls. As the Texian defenders abandoned the north wall and the northern end of the west wall, By this time, Romero's men had taken the east wall of the compound and were pouring in through the cattle pen. Unable to reach the barracks, another group of Texians, stationed along the west wall, charged west for the San Antonio River. When the cavalry charged, the Texians took cover and began firing froma ditch. Sesma was forced to send reinforcement, and the Texians were eventually killed. Sesma reported that this skirmish involved 50 Texians, but Edmondson believes that number was inflated.
Crockett and his men were also too far from the barracks to be able to take shelter,. and were the last remaining group within the mission to be in the open. The men defended the low wall in front of the church, using their rifles as clubs and relying on knives. After a volley of fire from Mexican soldiers and a wave of Mexican soldiers with
bayonets, the few remaining Texians in this group fell back toward the church. Lieutenant Jose Maria Torres of the Zapadores Battalion spied a Texian flag waving from the roof of one building and joined Lieutenant Damasio Martinez in climbing the building to replace the flag. Three other Mexican soldiers had died trying to do the same thing, and Martinez was shot as he climbed. Torres managed to raise the
flag of Mexico before being mortally wounded.
Although the initial battle had lasted just over 20 minutes, it took another hour for the Mexican army to have complete control over the Alamo. The remaining defenders were ensconced in the barracks rooms. Each room had only one door which led into the courtyard and which had been "buttressed by semicircular parapets of dirt secured with cowhides". When Mexican soldiers threatened them, a Texian defender charged into the room to defend them; he was quickly killed, as was a young Tejano who took refuge in the room. Too sick to participate in the battle, Bowie remained in his sickbed in one of the rooms. Eyewitnesses to the battle gave conflicting accounts of Bowie's death. Some witnesses maintained that they saw several Mexican soldiers enter Bowie's room, bayonet him, and carry him, alive, from the room. Other witnesses claimed that Bowie shot himself or was killed by soldiers while too weak to lift his head. According to historian Wallace Chariton, the "most popular, and probably the most accurate" version is that Bowie died on his cot, "back braced against the wall, and using his pistols and his famous knife." The entrance to the church had been barricaded with sandbags, which the Texians were able to fire over. A shot from the 18-lb cannon destroyed the barricades, and Mexican soldiers entered the building after firing an initial musket volley. Dickinson's crew fired their cannon from the
apse into the Mexican soldiers at the door. With no time to reload, the Texians, including Dickinson, Gregoria Esparza, and Bonham, grabbed rifles and fired before being bayoneted to death. Texian Robert Evans was master of ordnance and had been tasked with keeping the gunpowder from falling into Mexican hands. Wounded, he crawled towards the powder magazine but was killed by a musket ball with his torch only inches from the powder. If he'd succeeded, the blast would have destroyed the church, killing the women and children hiding in the sacristy as well.
As soldiers approached the sacristy, one of the sons of defender
Anthony Wolf stood to pull a blanket over his shoulders. who attempted to hide behind
Susannah Dickinson and the other women; four Mexican soldiers killed him in front of them. Another Texian, Brigido Guerrero, also sought refuge in the sacristy.
By 6:30 a.m. the battle for the Alamo was over.
Aftermath
When the firing ended, Santa Anna joined his men inside the Alamo. According to many accounts of the battle, between five and seven Texians surrendered during the battle, possibly to General Castrillon. Edmondson speculates that these men might have been sick or wounded and were therefore unable to fight. Weeks after the battle, stories began to circulate that Crockett was among those who surrendered and were executed. Historians disagree on which story is accurate. According to Petite, "every account of the Crockett surrender-execution story comes from an avowed antagonist (either on political or military grounds) of Santa Anna's. It is believed that many stories, such as the surrender and execution of Crockett, were created and spread in order to discredit Santa Anna and add to his role as villain."
After the scene inside the Alamo had calmed, Santa Anna ordered that the face of every corpse be wiped clean so that they could positively identify which soldiers were Mexican and which were Texian. According to Francisco Ruiz, possibly the
alcade of Bexar, he was ordered by Santa Anna to identify the bodies of Travis, Bowie, and Crockett. Lindley believes that Ruiz wasn't in Bexar at the time. Joe was also asked to point out Travis's body. With the identifications complete, Santa Anna ordered that the Texian bodies be stacked and burned. The only exception was the body of Gregorio Esparza; his brother Francisco Esparza served in Santa Anna's army and received permission from Cos to give Gregorio a proper burial. His secretary, Ramon Martinez Caro, later remarked that he hadn't wished to make a false report but had done so under Santa Anna's orders. Other eyewitnesses claimed that between 182–257 Texians were killed. Francisco Ruiz counted 182 Texian bodies burned on the funeral pyre. A number of bodies were found in the fields north of the Alamo, likely those of men who had tried to escape but were killed by the cavalry. Some historians believe that at least one Texian, Henry Warnell, successfully escaped from the battle. Warnell died several months later of wounds incurred either during the final battle or during his escape as a courier.
Estimates of the number of Mexican soldiers who died ranged from 60–2000, with an additional 250–300 wounded. This would represent about one-third of the Mexican soldiers involved in the final assault, which Todish remarks is "a tremendous casualty rate by any standards". Lieutenant Colonel José Juan Sanchez Navarro, however, remarked that "with another such victory as this, we'll go to the devil". Santa Anna ordered Ruiz to supervise the burial of the Mexican soldiers in the local cemetary, Campo Santo. Ruiz claimed that the graveyard was near full and that he instead threw some of the corpses in the river.
Santa Anna
spared several others. Travis's slave, Joe and Sam, Bowie's
freedman, were both spared because they were or had been slaves. Santa Anna hoped that by freeing these men, other slaves in Texas would support the Mexican government over the Texian rebellion. The surviving noncombatants were interviewed individually by Santa Anna on
March 7. Impressed with Susanna Dickinson, Santa Anna offered to adopt her infant daughter Angelina and have the child educated in Mexico City. Susanna Dickinson refused the offer, which wasn't extended to Juana Navarro Alsbury for her son who was of similar age. Each woman was given a blanket and two silver
pesos. The Tejano women were allowed to return to their homes in Bexar; Dickinson, her daughter, and Joe were sent to Gonzales, escorted by Ben. in the hopes that Joe and Dickinson would deliver a warning to the remainder of the Texian forces that his army was unbeatable. Later that day, Andres Barcenas and Anselmo Bergaras arrived in Gonzales from Bexar to report that the Alamo had fallen with all men slain. Houston arrested the men as enemy spies in the hopes of halting a panic, and then sent scouts
Deaf Smith and Henry Karnes to find out the truth. They travelled fewer than west before finding Susannah Dickinson and Joe. On hearing their news, Houston advised all civilians in the area to evacuate and ordered the army to retreat. This sparked
a mass exodus of Texans from the Anglo settlements, including the government, which also fled east.
Despite their losses at the Alamo, the Mexican army in Texas outnumbered the Texian army by almost 6 to 1. Santa Anna assumed that all Texian resistance would crumble, However, the news of the Alamo's fall had the opposite affect, and men flocked to Houston's army. The
New York Post editorialized that "had [SantaAnna] treated the vanquished with moderation and generosity, it would have been difficult if not impossible to awaken that general sympathy for the people of Texas which now impels so many adventurous and ardent spirits to throng to the aid of their brethern". Despite a strong wish among the Texian army to avenge their loss at the Alamo, for several weeks Houston led his army on a retreat into
East Texas. On the afternoon of
April 21, the Texian army attacked Santa Anna's camp near
Lynchburg Ferry. The Mexican army was taken by surprise, and the
Battle of San Jacinto was essentially over after 18 minutes. During the fighting, many of the Texian soldiers repeatedy cried "Remember the Alamo!" Houston replied, "You should have remembered that at the Alamo". Today, the remnants of the Alamo are near the San Antonio town center. The church building remains standing and serves as an official state shrine to the Texian defenders. In front of the church, in the center of Alamo Plaza, stands a
cenotaph, designed by
Pompeo Coppini and erected in 1939, which commemorates the Texians who died during the battle. According to Bill Groneman's
Battlefields of Texas, the Alamo has become "the most popular tourist site in Texas".
Popular culture
Many of the Mexican officers who participated in the battle left memoirs, although some were not written until decades after the battle. Among those who provided written accounts of the battle were
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna,
Vicente Filisola,
José Enrique de la Peña,
Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro,
Juan N. Almonte, and
Francisco Becerra. Texians
Juan Seguin and John Sutherland also left memoirs, although some historians believe Sutherland wasn't at the Alamo and wrote his memoirs from heresay. The first report of the names of the Texian victims of the battle came in the
March 24,
1836 issue of the
Telegraph and Texas Register. The 115 names on the list came from John Smith and Gerald Navan, who had left as couriers. In 1843, former
Texas Ranger and amateur historian
John Henry Brown wrote and published the first history of the battle, a pamphlet called
The Fall of the Alamo. He followed this in 1853 with a second pamphlet called
Facts of the Alamo, Last Days of Crockett and Other Sketches of Texas. No copies of the pamphlets have survived. The next major treatment of the battle was Reuben Potter's
The Fall of the Alamo, published in
The Magazine of American History in 1878. Potter based his work on interviews with many of the survivors of the Battle of the Alamo. Several historians, including Thomas Ricks Lindley, Thomas Lloyd Miller, and Richard G. Santos, believe her list included men who hadn't died at the Alamo. Despite the errors in some of her work, Williams collect a large amount of information and her work serves as a starting point for many historians. The first full-length, non-fiction book covering the battle wasn't published until 1948, when John Myers Myers's
The Alamo was released.
According to Todish
et al, "there can be little doubt that most Americans have probably formed many of their opinions on what occurred at the Alamo not from books, but from the various movies made about the battle." The first film version of the battle appeared in 1911, when
Gaston Melies directed
The Immortal Alamo, which has since been lost. Through the next four decades several other movies were released, variously focusing on Davy Crocket, Almeron Dickinson, and Louis Rose. The Alamo achieved prominence on television in 1955 with
Walt Disney's Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier, which was largely based on myth. In the early 1950s,
John Wayne began developing a film based on the Battle of the Alamo. When he left his contract with
Republic Pictures he was forced to leave behind a partial script. Republic Pictures had the script finished and developed into the 1955 movie
The Last Command. Although the film had its historical innacuracies, it was the most detailed of the films on the Texas Revolution. Wayne continued to develop an Alamo movie, resulting in the 1960 film
The Alamo, starring Wayne as Davy Crockett. Although screenwriter
James Edward Grant claimed to have done extensive historical research, according to Todish "there isn't a single scene in
The Alamo which corresponds to an historically verifiable incident", and historians
J. Frank Dobie and
Lon Tinkle demanded that their names be removed from the credits as historical advisors. Filmed in IMAX format using historical reenactors instead of professional actors,
Alamo ... The Price of Freedom is shown only in San Antonio, with several views per day at a theater near the Alamo. In 2004 another film, also called
The Alamo, was released. Described by
CNN as possibly "the most character-driven of all the movies made on the subject", the movie starred
Billy Bob Thornton as Crockett,
Dennis Quaid as Sam Houston, and
Jason Patric as Bowie.
A number of songwriters have also been inspired by the Battle of the Alamo.
Tennessee Ernie Ford's "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" spent 16 weeks on the country music charts, peaking at number 4 in 1955.
Marty Robbins recorded a version of the song "The Ballad of the Alamo" in 1960 which spent 13 weeks on the pop charts, peaking at number 34.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Battle Of The Alamo'.
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