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Robert Scott - After the Alamo

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After the Alamo goes beyond popular myth and folklore to explore the events and portray the heroes (and the cowards) of the Texas War for Independence. While Texans were generally unhappy with their Mexican government in 1835, most of them did not want a revolutionary war against Santa Anna. Although there had been scattered violence in the territory, it was only after a band of mostly outsiders was slaughtered in their famous defense of the Alamo that Texans even attempted to organize formal opposition. Then they wound up with two governors and four military commanders, all at odds with one another. It would take several additional tragedies--at San Patricio, Refugio, and Goliad--to finally weld the Texans into a single- minded people willing to give everything for their independence. At the center of this epic struggle was James Walker Fannin-- vain, indecisive, possibly cowardly, and simultaneously heroic. Was he a hero or a villain? This book probes this seldom- discussed Texas story in heart-wrenching detail and then leaves the decision to you

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title After the Alamo author Scott Robert publisher - photo 1

title:After the Alamo
author:Scott, Robert.
publisher:Republic of Texas Press
isbn10 | asin:1556226918
print isbn13:9781556226915
ebook isbn13:9780585227887
language:English
subjectTexas--History--Revolution, 1835-1836, Alamo (San Antonio, Tex.)--Siege, 1836.
publication date:2000
lcc:F390.S43 2000eb
ddc:976.4/03
subject:Texas--History--Revolution, 1835-1836, Alamo (San Antonio, Tex.)--Siege, 1836.
Page i
After the Alamo
Robert J. Scott

Page ii
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Scott, Robert. 1938
After the Alamo / Bob Scott.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 1-55622-691-8 (pbk.)
1. TexasHistoryRevolution, 18351836. 2. Alamo (San Antonio,
Tex.)Siege, 1836. I. Title.
F390.S43 1999
976.4'03dc21 99-24861
CIP
2000, Bob Scott
All Rights Reserved
Republic of Texas Press is an imprint of Wordware Publishing, Inc. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from Wordware Publishing, Inc.
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 1-55622-691-8
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
9907
All inquiries for volume purchases of this book should be addressed to Wordware Publishing, Inc., at 2320 Los Rios Boulevard, Plano, Texas 75074. Telephone inquiries may be made by calling:
(972) 423-0090
Page iii
Contents
Foreword
v
Chapter 1: The Opening Skirmish at Gonzales
1
Chapter 2: Rebels at Anahuac and Goliad
11
Chapter 3: The First "Battle of the Alamo"
29
Chapter 4: A Proliferation of Commanders
43
Chapter 5: Victorian Guardes and Cherokees
59
Chapter 6: Santa Anna Attacks
73
Chapter 7: An Act of Cowardice
89
Chapter 8: The Firstand SecondSlaughter of Innocents
105
Chapter 9: The Alamo Falls
125
Chapter 10: The Battle for Refugio
143
Chapter 11: Unforgivable Delay
171
Chapter 12: Surrounded!
183
Chapter 13: Surrender and Hope
197
Chapter 14: Massacre at Fort Defiance
217
Chapter 15: Escaping the Executioners
235
Chapter 16: Texas Unity at Last
255
Chapter 17: The Battle at San Jacinto
271
Epilogue
285
Bibliography
301
Index
307

Page iv
For Heather
Page v
Foreword
One of the hosts on cable television's The History Channel noted (in 1997) that, "History is not written in concrete; it is written in sand. The next generation that blows through here will rewrite it again."
Rewriting history has a good side and a bad side. The passage of time and the collection of input from everyone involved often gives us a much better perspective as to what really transpired, as well as why it transpired. Unfortunately, much of history is rewritten only in order to be "politically correct." Facts are never permitted to interfere with the author's agenda.
This book takes a new look at some lesser-known aspects of the Texas War for Independence. We have no political agenda; we won't tell you what the participants are likely thinking about unless they told us first. We hope the book adequately covers a fascinating and seldom studied facet of the revolution.
To most of us, the birth of Texas was clearly the outgrowth of the gallant defense of the Alamo. The very word "Alamo" conjures up the image of Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone (or John Wayne) and others in the heroic band of doomed defenders of that bastion in the spring of 1836. Most of us likely also believe the Alamo was the one incident that unified and solidified Texans into a cohesive and determined fighting unit that would never submit to Mexican rule, and one that ultimately triumphed over dictatorship. At least, that's the way the Alamo is normally portrayed.
A closer inspection, however, shows that the brave and doomed defense of the Alamo may not have been a catalyst for the Texas revolution after all. It did not, in fact, unite Texans against Mexico and, contrary to popular opinion, does not appear to have served as the turning point in the Texas rebellion. In fact, at the time of the struggle in San Antonio, most Texans (and most of the rest of the world) seemed to view the Alamo as a tragic but unnecessary confrontation forced on Mexico by a handful of hard-headed and rebellious outsiders who were not really a part of Texas and
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