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A Time to Stand: The Epic of the Alamo

Page 19

by Walter Lord


  Santa Anna’s arrival only strengthened the men’s resolve. Writing Jesse Grimes on March 3, Travis stated, “If independence is not declared, I shall lay down my arms and so will the men under my command. But under the flag of independence we are ready to peril our lives a hundred times a day… .”

  Such a man was not likely to be flying any kind of Mexican flag three days later. Judging from Colonel Almonte’s diary, only one Texan banner was taken on March 6; and judging from the Mexican archives, this was the azure emblem of the New Orleans Greys. Full details on its capture were uncovered in 1934 by Dr. Luis Castrillo Ledon, Director of the Mexican National Museum of Archaeology, and there’s no reason to doubt his findings. So the Greys’ flag was the one Santa Anna sent home, complete with its boast of New Orleans help. As he pointed out, it clearly showed the designs of “abettors, who came from the ports of the United States of the North.”

  The flag remains in Mexico City today, still with Santa Anna’s faded victory message attached to it. Kept at Chapultepec, it is not on exhibit but buried in the files … crumbling to pieces in brown wrapping paper. Thanks to the courtesy of the Mexican government, it was recently brought out once again, and enough of it pieced together to identify it beyond any doubt.

  The Men Who Fell at the Alamo

  AS THE YEARS PASS, new light is constantly thrown on the Alamo defenders. Descendants write in, correcting ages, home towns and spelling of names. A yellowed land grant shows that some new man should be added to the list; a long-forgotten file shows that some other “hero” wasn’t there at all.

  It is now clear, for instance, that Sherod Dover was never in the Alamo. His murder in December, 1835—and the hanging of his killer—is fully described in the land application filed by his heirs. (General Land Office, Court of Claims Application 211, File C to D.)

  It appears that several other names should be removed from the list. José María Guerrero, known as “Brigido,” survived by claiming he was a prisoner of the Texans. Toribio Domingo Losoya was in Seguin’s company at the storming of Bexar, but not in the Alamo. He was honorably discharged October 25, 1836. (General Land Office, Court of Claims Voucher 271, File H-L; Bounty Warrant 196.)

  John G. King of Gonzales was probably another absentee. There were both a father and son of that name in Gonzales, but the father lived until 1856 and the son was married in 1848, according to the family Bible. Finally, John Gaston and John Davis of Gonzales are probably the same person. Gaston’s widowed mother married G. W. Davis, and the boy was often known by his stepfather’s name. The point is stressed in the application for land ultimately awarded Davis’ heirs. (General Land Office, Bounty Warrant No. 886.)

  At the same time, M. B. Clark should be added to the list. The land application filed by his heirs was one of six supported by Louis Rose’s testimony and accepted by the Nacogdoches County Land Office. (Application 203, granted February 6, 1838.)

  This process of addition and subtraction will go on. Meanwhile, it seems time to take stock. Here, then, is a revised list of the men who fell at the Alamo, together with their birthplaces and homes before coming to Texas (in that order). In the case of some early colonists, origin is unknown, and home in Texas is given instead.

  Juan Abamillo—San Antonio

  R. Allen

  Miles DeForest Andross—San Patricio, Texas

  Micajah Autry—North Carolina, Tennessee

  Juan A. Badillo—San Antonio

  Peter James Bailey—Kentucky, Arkansas

  Isaac G. Baker—Gonzales, Texas

  William Charles M. Baker—Missouri, Mississippi

  John J. Ballentine—Bastrop, Texas

  Richard W. Ballentine—Alabama

  John J. Baugh—Virginia

  Joseph Bayliss—Tennessee

  John Blair—Tennessee

  Samuel B. Blair—Tennessee

  William Blazeby—England, New York

  James Butler Bonham—South Carolina, Alabama

  Daniel Bourne—England

  James Bowie—Tennessee, Louisiana

  Jesse B. Bowman—Red River, Texas

  George Brown—England

  James Brown—Pennsylvania

  Robert Brown

  James Buchanan—Alabama

  Samuel E. Burns—Ireland, Louisiana

  George D. Butler—Missouri

  Robert Campbell—Tennessee

  John Cane—Pennsylvania

  William R. Carey—Maryland

  Charles Henry Clark—Missouri

  M. B. Clark—Nacogdoches, Texas

  Daniel William Cloud—Kentucky, Arkansas

  Robert E. Cochran—New Jersey

  George Washington Cottle—Missouri

  Henry Courtman—Germany

  Lemuel Crawford—South Carolina

  David Crockett—Tennessee

  Robert Crossman—Massachusetts, Louisiana

  David P. Cummings—Pennsylvania

  Robert Cunningham—New York, Indiana

  Jacob C. Darst—Kentucky, Missouri

  Freeman H. K. Day—Gonzales, Texas

  Jerry C. Day—Missouri

  Squire Daymon—Tennessee

  William Dearduff—Tennessee

  Stephen Denison—Ireland, Kentucky

  Charles Despallier—Louisiana

  Almeron Dickinson—Pennsylvania, Tennessee

  John H. Dillard—Tennessee

  James R. Dimpkins—England

  Lewis Duel—New York

  Andrew Duvalt—Ireland

  Carlos Espalier—San Antonio

  Gregorio Esparza—San Antonio

  Robert Evans—Ireland, New York

  Samuel B. Evans—Kentucky

  James L. Ewing—Tennessee

  William Fishbaugh—Gonzales, Texas

  John Flanders—Massachusetts

  Dolphin Ward Floyd—North Carolina

  John Hubbard Forsyth—New York

  Antonio Fuentes—San Antonio

  Galba Fuqua—Gonzales, Texas

  William H. Furtleroy—Kentucky, Arkansas

  William Garnett—Virginia

  James W. Garrand—Louisiana

  James Girard Garrett—Tennessee

  John E. Garvin—Gonzales, Texas

  John E. Gaston—Kentucky

  James George—Gonzales, Texas

  John Camp Goodrich—Tennessee

  Albert Calvin Grimes—Georgia

  James C. Gwynne—England, Mississippi

  James Hannum—Refugio, Texas

  John Harris—Kentucky

  Andrew Jackson Harrison

  William B. Harrison—Ohio

  Joseph M. Hawkins—Ireland, Louisiana

  John M. Hays—Tennessee

  Charles M. Heiskell—Tennessee

  Thomas Hendricks

  Patrick Henry Herndon—Virginia

  William D. Hersee—New York

  Tapley Holland—Grimes County, Texas

  Samuel Holloway—Pennsylvania

  William D. Howell—Massachusetts

  William Daniel Jackson—Ireland, Kentucky

  Thomas Jackson—Kentucky

  Green B. Jameson—Kentucky

  Gordon C. Jennings—Missouri

  Lewis Johnson—Wales

  William Johnson—Pennsylvania

  John Jones—New York

  Johnnie Kellog—Gonzales, Texas

  James Kenny—Virginia

  Andrew Kent—Kentucky

  Joseph Kerr—Louisiana

  George C. Kimball—New York

  William P. King—Gonzales, Texas

  William Irvine Lewis—Pennsylvania

  William J. Lightfoot—Virginia

  Jonathan L. Lindley—Illinois

  William Linn—Massachusetts

  George Washington Main—Virginia

  William T. Malone—Georgia

  William Marshall—Tennessee, Arkansas

  Albert Martin—Tennessee

  Edward McCafferty—San Patricio, Texas

  Jesse McCoy
—Gonzales, Texas

  William McDowell—Pennsylvania

  James McGee—Ireland

  John McGregor—Scotland

  Robert McKinney—Ireland

  Eliel Melton—South Carolina

  Thomas R. Miller—Virginia

  William Mills—Tennessee, Arkansas

  Isaac Millsaps—Mississippi

  Edward F. Mitchusson—Kentucky

  Edwin T. Mitchell—Georgia

  Napoleon B. Mitchell

  Robert B. Moore—Virginia

  Willis Moore—Mississippi, Arkansas

  Robert Musselman—Ohio

  Andres Nava—San Antonio

  George Neggan—South Carolina

  Andrew M. Nelson—Tennessee

  Edward Nelson—South Carolina

  George Nelson—South Carolina

  James Northcross—Virginia

  James Nowlin—Ireland

  George Pagan—Mississippi

  Christopher Parker—Mississippi

  William Parks—San Patricio, Texas

  Richardson Perry

  Amos Pollard—Massachusetts, New York

  John Purdy Reynolds—Pennsylvania

  Thomas H. Roberts

  James Robertson—Tennessee

  Isaac Robinson—Scotland

  James M. Rose—Virginia, Tennessee

  Jackson J. Rusk—Ireland

  Joseph Rutherford—Kentucky

  Isaac Ryan—Louisiana

  Mial Scurlock—Louisiana

  Marcus L. Sewell—England

  Manson Shied—Georgia

  Cleland Kinloch Simmons—South Carolina

  Andrew H. Smith—Tennessee

  Charles S. Smith—Maryland

  Joshua G. Smith—North Carolina, Tennessee

  William H. Smith—Nacogdoches, Texas

  Richard Starr—England

  James E. Stewart—England

  Richard L. Stockton—Virginia

  Spain Summerlin—Tennessee, Arkansas

  William E. Summers—Tennessee

  William D. Sutherland—Alabama

  Edward Taylor—Liberty, Texas

  George Taylor—Liberty, Texas

  James Taylor—Liberty, Texas

  William Taylor—Tennessee

  B. Archer M. Thomas—Kentucky

  Henry Thomas—Germany

  Jesse G. Thompson—Arkansas

  John W. Thomson—North Carolina, Tennessee

  John M. Thurston—Pennsylvania, Kentucky

  Burke Trammel—Ireland, Tennessee

  William Barret Travis—South Carolina, Alabama

  George W. Tumlinson—Missouri

  Asa Walker—Tennessee

  Jacob Walker—Nacogdoches, Texas

  William B. Ward—Ireland

  Henry Warnell—Arkansas

  Joseph G. Washington—Tennessee

  Thomas Waters—England

  William Wells—Georgia

  Isaac White—Kentucky

  Robert White—Gonzales, Texas

  Hiram J. Williamson—Pennsylvania

  David L. Wilson—Scotland

  John Wilson—Pennsylvania

  Antony Wolfe—England

  Claiborne Wright—North Carolina

  Charles Zanco—Denmark

  Sources

  THE ALAMO HAS INTRIGUED writers for more than 125 years, but the contradictions and gaps in the story remain as exasperating as ever. In the end, the only solution was to go back to the original sources and start all over again. …

  Accounts by Participants

  Almonte, Colonel Juan Nepomuceno. Private Journal, recovered after San Jacinto. First carried in New York Herald in June, 1836, reprinted in Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. XLVIII, pp. 10-32. Description purportedly by Almonte of executions after the battle is contained in letter dated Galveston Island, July 19, 1836, from George Dolson to Detroit Democratic Free Press and reprinted in Journal of Southern History, August, 1960, pp. 373-374.

  Alsbury, Mrs. Horace A. John S. Ford Papers, pp. 122-124, Texas University Archives. Although Mrs. Dickinson denied Mrs. Alsbury remained till the end, Enrique Esparza and Travis’ slave Joe both remembered her there; her story was also accepted by such contemporaries as Mrs. Sam Maverick, John Sutherland and Dr. J. H. Barnard.

  Becerra, Sergeant Francisco. John S. Ford Papers, pp. 16-23, Texas University Archives. Probably the least reliable of all the Mexican accounts.

  “Ben,” Colonel Almonte’s orderly. Newell, C, History of the Revolution in Texas (1838), pp. 88-89.

  Caro, Ramón Martinez. Account as translated by Castañeda, C. E., The Mexican Side of the Texan Revolution (1928), pp. 101-104. This and all other Mexican accounts are highly flavored, yet essential to the story.

  Dickinson, Susannah. Mrs. Dickinson gave five different interviews describing her experiences: Morphis, J. M., History of Texas (1874), pp. 174-177; “Testimony of Mrs. Hannig touching the Alamo Massacre, September 23, 1876,” Adjutant General’s Letters Concerning the Alamo, 1815-18, Texas State Archives; interview given in 1878 to unknown Ohio newspaper, reprinted San Antonio Express, February 24, 1929; interview, San Antonio Express, April 28, 1881; talk with the Rev. Walter Raleigh Richardson in 1881, included in Green, R. M., Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick (1921) pp. 135-136. Also valuable are Mrs. Dickinson’s depositions supporting following land claims, all on file at General Land Office: David Cummings, Court of Claims Vouchers 4271, File A-C; James M. Rose, Court of Claims Application 22, File M-R, also Petition 201; Henry Warnell, Court of Claims Vouchers 400, 1579, File S to Z. But the account by Mrs. Dickinson in A. J. Sowell’s Rangers and Pioneers of Texas was lifted from Morphis; and the highly dramatized piece in Rufus C. Burleson’s Life and Writings is too much at variance with her, other accounts to carry any weight.

  Esparza, Enrique. Interview with Charles Meritt Barnes, San Antonio Express, May 12 and 19, 1907.

  Filisola, General Vicente. Memorias Para la Historia de la Guerra de Tejas, published by R. Rafael (1849), Part II, pp. 347-390; also a somewhat different account, bearing same title and date but published by Ignacio Cumplido, pp. 3-17; Representación Dirigida al Supremo Gobierno, as translated by Castañeda {supra), pp. 163-203.

  “Joe,” Travis’ Negro slave. Joe was examined by the Texas cabinet on March 20, 1836, and his story was written up by a number of those present. Most detailed account was a letter by William F. Gray to the Fredericksburg Arena, reprinted in the Frankfort, Kentucky, Commonwealth, May 25, 1836. (A much-condensed version is included in Gray’s From Virginia to Texas, pp. 136-138.) Other accounts of Joe’s examination, each giving a different slant, appear in the Columbia, Tennessee, Observer, April 14, 1836; National Intelligencer, April 30, 1836; New Orleans Commercial Bulletin, April 11, 1836.

  Loranca, Sergeant Manuel. Interview in San Antonio Express, June 23, 1878.

  Menchaca, Antonio. Memoirs, Yanaguana Society Publications II, 1937.

  Nuñez, Sergeant Felix. Interview in Fort Worth Gazette, July 12, 1889.

  Peña, José Enrique de la. Account originally published in Matamoros, September 1836, but suppressed by authorities. Republished as follows: Sanchez Garza, J., La Rebelion de Texas Manuscrito Inédito de 1836 por un oficial de Santa Anna (1955).

  Rodriguez, J. M. Memoirs of Early Texas (1913), pp. 7-10.

  Ruiz, Francisco. Texas Almanac, 1860, pp. 80-81, as reprinted in Frederick C. Chabot’s The Alamo, Mission, Fortress, Shrine.

  Sánchez Navarro, Captain José Juan. Account contained in Carlos Sanchez Navarro’s La Guerra de Tejos (1938), pp. 127-151. A second account, in the form of a handwritten daily journal, can be found in two ledger books kept by the Captain, entitled Ayudentia de Inspección de Nuevo Leon y Tamaulipas, University of Texas Archives. Volume II of these ledgers also contains a plan of the storming of the fort; this plan is reproduced in the University of Texas Library Journal, Summer 1951, pp. 71-74. Finally, the account usually attributed to “An Unknown Mexican Soldier” in El Mosquito Mexicano, April 5, 18
36, also appears to have been written by Sanchez Navarro. It seems much too similar to the foregoing to come from a different hand.

  Santa Anna, General Antonio López de. Reports addressed to Minister of War and Marine, dated February 27 and March 6, 1836; Letter addressed to the Senate and House of Representatives of Texas, October 12, 1836; Manifesto (1837), as translated by Castañeda, pp. 5-89; Mi Historia Militar y Politica, Memorias lnéditas (1874), as translated by Willye Ward Watkins, M.A. Thesis, University of Texas (1922), pp. 91-92.

  Seguin, Juan N. Personal Memoirs of Juan Seguin (1858); Testimony given in land claim filed for Andres Nava, General Land Office, Court of Claims Application 416, File M-R; letter to W. W. Fontaine, June 7, 1890, contained in W. W. Fontaine Papers, University of Texas Archives.

  Soldana, Captain Rafael. Account in DeShields, James T., Tall Men with Long Rifles (1935), pp. 162-164.

  Sutherland, John. Narrative edited by Annie B. Sutherland, The Fall of the Alamo (1936). This is the most authoritative, least embellished of several versions of the same account. For others, see DeShields, pp. 134-150; the same author’s feature article in the Dallas News, February 5 and 12, 1911; and John S. Ford’s Memoirs, University of Texas Archives.

  Urizza, Capt. Fernando. Experiences described in Labadie, N.D., “Urizza’s Account of the Alamo Massacre,” Texas Almanac, 1859, pp. 61-62.

  Unknown Mexican Officer. Detailed account of the execution of six Texans at the battle’s end, as related to correspondent of the New York Courier and Enquirer. Letter dated Galveston Bay, June 9, 1836, and reprinted by Frankfort, Kentucky, Commonwealth, July 27, 1836. The narrator sounds suspiciously like Ramón Caro, but certain identification impossible.

  Purposely omitted from the above is “Col. Crockett’s Exploits and Adventures in Texas, Written by Himself.” James Shackford’s biography of Crockett offers far too convincing evidence that this account is spurious. Also missing are all accounts by Madam Candelaria. None of the other participants remember her in the fort; her stories violently contradict one another; and too many of her details clash with the known facts.

  Contemporary Letters

  Next to accounts by participants, contemporary letters form the most important source material on the Alamo. Taken in order, they give perhaps the best picture of all. Here, then, is a chronological list of those most important to the story, covering the period December, 1835-March, 1836. Occasionally this list may duplicate other parts of the bibliography, but as a useful tool for anyone interested in the Alamo, it seems worth the risk:

 

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