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The story of the Alamo
is a tale taught to every young Texan: the account of fewer than
200 brave volunteers who faced nearly 10 times as many Mexican
troops in a battle whose outcome was already determined. To further
the cause of Texas independence, they gave their lives but won
a place in the history of the Lone Star State. The battle of the
Alamo was preceded by battles in Gonzales, Goliad, and in San
Antonio itself. Mexican troops led by General Cos had taken refuge
in the Alamo and surrendered in early December. The surrender
had angered Santa Anna. He vowed to get rid of the Anglos and
also to punish the Tejanos, the Mexicans living in Texas who had
taken part in the battle. After the surrender
by General Cos, the Texas army floundered without a leader for
several months, and its numbers dwindled. Simultaneously, Santa
Anna was rallying his troops for the long journey from Mexico
City to San Antonio. Texas troops still
occupied the Alamo, joined by volunteers such as Davy Crockett
from Tennessee. The troops felt they had time to be joined by
reinforcements before Santa Anna would arrive, but they were wrong.
Santa Anna's advance troops first arrived in San Antonio on February
23. The revolutionaries scrambled inside the protective walls
of the mission, bringing in a sufficient amount of cattle and
supplies that commander William Travis felt could sustain them
until help arrived. The battle began with bombardments from Mexican cannons, but the real surge took place at about 5:30 the morning of March 6. Perhaps as many as 1,800 Mexican soldiers stormed the mission, fighting first with guns and finally hand to hand as they progressed up the walls. By 7 a.m., the battle
was over. All the Texas revolutionaries died or were executed,
but Santa Anna's troops permitted several women and a slave of
William Travis's to live. The most famous survivors were Suzanna
Dickinson and her daughter Angelina, the family of an Alamo officer.
They were left to spread the word of the Alamo defeat. And spread
the word they did. "Remember the Alamo" was the battle
cry in the months to come, when finally the Texans defeated Santa
Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto. Texas finally became an independent
republic. Visitors who are in San Antonio on March 6 every year can watch an early morning reenactment of the fateful battle. continued from San Antonio Mini-Site
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