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MarkChurms.com for
Davy Crockett
and
Battle of the Alamo
Military Art Prints
Davy Crockett, Battle of the
Alamo Military
Art Prints Available! BATTLE OF THE ALAMO
- Davy Crockett - 6am on March 5th 1836 A.D.
-
American West History Giclee Art Prints By
Mark Churms Texans defend the Alamo against Santa Anna's
Mexican Army
Davy Crockett fights alongside his small
band of irregulars from Tennessee at the
barricades of the Alamo. Their long rifles
repel the initial assault of General Santa
Anna's Mexican infantry soldiers against
the besieged Texians and American volunteers
of the Alamo's garrison in this famous last
stand battle. 6am on March 5th 1836 A.D.
CROCKETT'S LAST SUNRISE
An American Legend...
"I have come to aid you
all that I can,
in your noble cause". With
these words,
David Crockett, having recently
arrived in
the Mexican province of Texas,
casts his
lot with the small band of volunteers,
who
were holding the former provisional
capitol
and now frontier post of San
Antonio De Bejar,
and it's adjacent mission turned
fortress,
the former San Antonio De Valero,
now simply
called, The Alamo.
The promise of free land, no
taxes, and the
chance to start life anew, brought
Crockett
and thousands like him from the
United States,
Europe and the Mexican Republic
itself to
the as yet tamed frontier of
Texas. Between
1820 and 1835, thousands of immigrants,
both
legal and illegal flocked to
Texas. However,
a combination of social, political,
and cultural
differences with the young Mexican
government
started the Province towards
civil unrest.
Then open conflict ensued when
the President
of the Mexican Republic, General
Antonio
Lopez De Santa Anna, assumed
dictatorial
powers and vowed to crush any
opposition
to his rule.
So it was, that in October of
1835, unrest
turned to civil war, then to
a move for independence
from Mexico. Following a series
of stinging
but relatively minor defeats
in the winter
of 1835, Santa Anna personally
assembled,
then marched north through the
interior,
with an army estimated at over
4 or 5 thousand,
including infantry, cavalry,
and artillery.
Defending The Alamo!
The first objective for the Army
of Operations
against Texas was the recapture
of the largest
city in the province, San Antonio
De Bejar.
It was here, on February 23,
1836, that the
tiny garrison was surprised by
Santa Anna's
forward elements, and immediately
beat a
hasty retreat into the dubious
protection
of the Alamo, located across
east of the
town and across the San Antonio
River.
Under the nominal command of
James Bowie
& William B. Travis, the
fort's under-strengthened
garrison held out for almost
two weeks as
the siege works of the Mexican
Army slowly
moved their way around the mission.
Throughout
the thirteen-day siege, couriers
were sent
out in desperate appeals for
reinforcements.
These reinforcements, with one
notable exception,
were never to come.
Having grown impatient with the
progress
of the siege, Santa Anna decided
to assault
the mission on the morning of
March 6, 1836,
the 13th day of the siege. At
approximately
5:30 am, four columns of infantry,
coming
from the north, south, east,
and west, rushed
the walls screaming "Viva
Santa Anna!
Viva La Republica!" Having
almost been
caught totally unaware, the defenders
on
the walls rallied quickly and
sent a veritable
shower of shot and shell into
the massed
columns.
Defending the earthen and log
palisade that
connected the Church with the
south wall,
David Crockett and his companions
pour well-aimed
rifle and musket fire into the
column assaulting
the southern defenses. This 100-man
force
under the command of Colonel
Juan Morales
has the mission of trying to
find a weak
spot in the Alamo's southern
defenses and
at the same time, keeping the
defenders here
from reinforcing their comrades
to the north,
from where the main effort is
taking place.
Although well armed with English
made Baker
rifles, the Cazadores (Light
Infantry) under
Colonel Morales command, are
stopped dead
in their tracks by the murderous
combination
of the forts cannon firing from
the palisade
and lunette covering the gate,
and the rifles
and muskets of the defenders
along the southern
wall.
Last Stand for Davy Crockett
It's at this time that we see
Crockett and
his companions quickly taking
stock of the
situation. Unaware that the defenders
at
the north wall are about to be
overrun, Crockett
takes time to carefully load
each shot before
selecting a target. Despite the
depictions
of Crockett dressed head to tow
in buckskins,
the former congressman is practically
attired
against the bitter cold Texas
winter. The
only piece of frontier garb he
wears is a
cap made of either fox or raccoon
skin.
As the Texan Army was that in
name only,
the rest of the defenders are
attired in
civilian clothing normal for
the 1830's in
the southern and eastern United
States. Top
hats being 'en vogue' at the
time, and many
of the Alamo's garrison being
professional
men, not the rough and tumble
frontiersmen,
as depicted in books and movies.
Behind Crockett,
along the palisade, one of the
fort's cannons
lets loose with a blast against
the massed
formations, assaulting the south
wall. Inside
the church, women and children
huddle together
nervously awaiting the outcome,
as the first
glimmer of sunrise begins to
show in the
Texas sky.
First using their slower loading,
but more
accurate hunting rifles, Crockett
and his
men keep the Mexican infantry
at bay, forcing
them to shift their attack further
south
to the fort's southwest corner.
Later as
the walls are overrun, the defenders
will
use the stores of English made
Brown Bess
muskets captured from the Mexican
Army the
previous December, against the
attackers
as they fall back to the barracks
buildings
to make a final stand.
Remember The Alamo!
By sun up, the battle is over
and all the
defenders lie dead within the
walls of the
Alamo with almost a thousand
Mexican casualties
incurred by their Army of Operations.
From
here on, the legend of the Alamo
begins to
grow and eventually overshadow
the real story
of its defense as well as the
ongoing debate
on the manner of Crockett's death.
How he
died is really immaterial. David
Crockett
and the rest of the defenders
of the Alamo
stayed and fought to the bitter
end, and
by dying, helped give life to
a new republic.
Text By Richard Crawford
DAVID CROCKETT'S LAST SUNRISE! - The Battle
of The Alamo and the liberation of Texas,
San Antonio, 1836 A.D.
American Wild West & Frontier History
Art Print, from Mark Churms, published by
Cranston Fine Arts of ScotlandCLICK HERE