Tx history-ch-11.3

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Chapter 11: The Texas Revolution Section 3: The Siege of the Alamo

Transcript of Tx history-ch-11.3

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Chapter 11: The Texas RevolutionSection 3: The Siege of the Alamo

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Thinking Question

Would you fight a battle in which you

knew you would most likely lose? Why or why not?

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The Mexican Army Advances• Santa Anna decides

to personally lead the attacks on Texas

• Feb 1836: Santa Anna reaches the Rio Grande with 6000 forces and heads towards San Antonio

General Antonio López de Santa Anna

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The Mexican Army Advances

•Texans unprepared for Mexican advance

•Col. James Neill had just over 100 troops in San Antonio

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The Mexican Army Advances

•Jim Bowie—sent by Houston to the Alamo to evaluate the situation there in Jan 1836

James “Jim” Bowie

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The Mexican Army Advances

• Sam Houston recommends the Alamo be destroyed

• Gov. Smith disagrees noting improvements made to its defenses

Statue of Sam Houston

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The Mexican Army Advances

• The Alamo was located along the Old San Antonio Road—one of the two

major routes through Texas—it would be one of the first locations Mexicans

reached

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The Mexican Army Advances

•Bowie arrives at the Alamo

•Writes a letter saying the fortification is too valuable to abandon:

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“The salvation of Texas depends on keeping Bexar (San Antonio) out of the hands of the enemy…we will rather die in these ditches than give them up to the enemy.”

—Jim Bowie

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The Mexican Army Advances

• Gov. Smith orders Col. William B. Travis to gather reinforcements and go to San Antonio

• Travis gathered 30 volunteers

William B. Travis

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William B. Travis

• Born 1809 in South Carolina

• 1817 family moved to Alabama

• Assistant Teacher

• Lawyer

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William B. Travis

• 1828: Married a former student

• Started a newspaper

• Adjutant in state militia

Restored Law Office of William B. Travis

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William B. Travis

• 1831: Abandoned wife, son, and unborn daughter

• Entered Texas and started a law practice at Anahuac

• Active in War Party politics

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The Mexican Army Advances

James Bonham & the Mobile Grays from

Alabama

Davy Crocket led a dozen volunteers from Tennessee

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Davy Crockett

• Born 1786 in TN

• Killed a bear at age 3

• Often played hooky

• Ran away from home to avoid a beating from his father

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Davy Crockett

• 1806: Married Polly Finley

• 1813: Joined the TN militia

• 1815: wife dies and remarries

• 1817: elected Justice of the Peace

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Davy Crockett

•1821: elected to the TN legislature

•1827 & 1829: elected to U.S. Congress

•1831: defeated for re-election

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Davy Crockett• 1833: elected

once again to the U.S. Congress

• 1835: lost bid for reelection by 252 votes

• “You may all go to hell and I will go to Texas!”

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The Mexican Army Advances

• Col. Neill leaves the Alamo to care for sick family, puts Travis in command

• Bowie and Travis argue over control and agree to share command

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The Siege Begins

• Built up defenses:

– Walls built to 12 feet high and 2 feet thick

– Palisades—high fences made of stakes behind which soldiers could fight

– 21 cannons placed around the Alamo

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The Siege Begins

• Alamo originally a mission, not a fort

• 3 acres

• 1000 soldiers to properly defend

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The Siege Begins

• Hopes for reinforcements

• Feb 23, 1836: Mexican troops spotted heading towards San Antonio

• Gather supplies and get behind walls

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The Siege Begins

• Santa Anna demands surrender

• Texans reply with a a cannon shot

• Santa Anna raises red flag

Flag that flew over the Alamo

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The Siege Begins

• Feb 24: Mexican troops begin to fire

• Travis writes letter

• Day 4: Travis orders troops to stop firing Excerpt from Travis letter

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Fall of the Alamo

•March 1: 32 volunteers arrive from Gonzales

•189 troops inside the Alamo

•Santa Anna had at least 1800 forces

•March 5: Line in the sand

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Fall of the Alamo

• March 6: Texans awakened suddenly:

– shouts from Mexicans

– Santa Anna’s army played “El Degüello”

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Fall of the Alamo

• 5:00 am: four columns of Mexican soldiers attack

• Halted by Texas artillery

• Mexican soldiers regroup and overwhelmed the Texans

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Fall of the Alamo

•Mexican soldiers enter the Alamo by the hundreds

•Mexicans capture a cannon

•Hand-to-hand combat follows until almost all defenders killed

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Fall of the Alamo

•At least 182 Texans killed

•At least 8 Tejanos killed at the Alamo while fighting for Texas

•Approximately 600 Mexican casualties

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Alamo Cenotaph

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Fall of the Alamo

• Survivors:

– Susanna Dickinson

– Ana Salazar Esparza

– Slave and a few other noncombatants

Susanna Dickinson

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Fall of the Alamo

•Santa Anna believed that after taking the Alamo he had achieved a total victory against Texas.

•“Remember the Alamo!”