The story of the Alamo is known around the world.
Like all legendary events, however, myths and misconceptions have
sprung up that many people now take as fact. The following is a brief
discussion of some of the inaccuracies that seem to be the most widely
accepted.
· The winter of 1836 was one of the coldest
in Texas history.
The idea has somehow developed that 1836 was one of the
coldest winters in Texas history. One fact that reinforces this notion is that
the Mexican Army encountered a freak blizzard in route to Texas that began
on the evening of February 13 and continued throughout the next day. The weather
during this storm was severe enough to kill horses, mules, men and camp followers.1 The snowstorm, however, did not extend into Texas. Two observers
in Texas in 1836, William Fairfax Gray and Colonel Juan Almonte, both kept
records of the weather in their journals. [Click
here to see their observation on the weather.] From their entries information
can be gathered that reveals the weather at the time of the battle. A cold
front arrived on the evening of February 25 that dropped the temperatures into
the 30s. Prior to that, however, it had been "shirt sleeve" weather. It remained
cold and rainy but warmed to nearly 60 degrees (F) on February 29. That night,
a second cold front swept the region. The temperature gradually warmed over
the next few days. It remained cool on March 6, but by March 8 Gray proclaimed "Fine
weather." Any Texan should recognize this as a description of typical Texas
weather.
· The Battle of the Alamo bought time
for Sam Houston to build his army.
The notion that the men of the Alamo died buying time for Sam Houston
to build an army is well-entrenched in Alamo lore, but a review of
Houston's activities shows it to be unfounded. On November 12, 1835,
the Consultation (the provisional government of Texas) appointed
Sam Houston Commanding-General of the Texas Army. His authority,
however, extended over the regular army, leaving him unable to legally
issue orders to the volunteers already in the field.
2 Houston dispatched recruiters
to raise the regular army as well as agents to acquire arms, uniforms,
and other supplies. With no troops to command, Houston received a
furlough on January 28 in order to take care of personal business.
He spent part of his leave conducting negotiations with the Cherokee
Indians.
3 With a treaty successfully
concluded, Houston rode to Washington-on-the-Brazos, where he served
as a delegate to the constitutional convention, remaining there until
March 6.
4 During his stay, the new government
reconfirmed his appointment as commanding-general of the Texas Army,
giving him control over all troops - regulars and volunteers. Houston
arrived at Gonzales on March 11 to lead a relief expedition to San
Antonio but by then the Alamo had already fallen. Thus, during the
siege Houston was not building an army but engaged in other important
business.
· The men at the Alamo died not knowing
that Texas had declared its independence.
It is true that the Alamo garrison most likely died unaware
that the delegates at the constitutional convention at Washington-on-the-Brazos
had adopted a Declaration of Independence on March 2, 1836. Nevertheless, the
Alamo garrison was in favor of independence and fully expected the
delegates to secede from Mexico. The garrison had even sent its own
delegates to the convention with instructions to vote for independence.
Travis addressed the issue of independence in a letter sent from
the Alamo on March 3, 1836:
"Let the Convention go on and make a declaration of independence,
and we will then understand, and the world will understand, what we
are fighting for. If independence is not declared, I shall lay down my
arms, and so will the men under my command." Thus, Texas' Declaration of Independence
would not have surprised them - it was what they desired and expected.5
· There were no survivors.
"Thermopylae had her messenger of defeat; the Alamo had
none."6 This famous quote conveys the
notion that none survived the Battle of the Alamo. It is true that nearly all
of the Texans under arms inside the fort were killed in the March 6, 1836,
attack. However, nearly twenty women and children, who experienced the twelve
days of siege leading to the final assault, were spared and allowed to return
to their homes. The survivors also included Joe, the slave of William B. Travis.
The best known Alamo survivor, Susanna Dickinson, was sent to Gonzales
by Santa Anna with a warning to the Texans that the same fate awaited
them if they continued their revolt.7 (For more information about
the Survivors, please see the FAQs page of this web site)
· The only Texans who rallied to the aid
of the Alamo were 32 men from Gonzales.
One question frequently asked about the Battle of the Alamo
is why did not more Texans answer Travis' poignant pleas for help. The arrival
of the Gonzales Ranging Company on the morning of March 1, 1836, is the
only documented instance of assistance.8 Much scorn has been heaped on Colonel James W. Fannin, whose
400-man battalion remained at Goliad, only 100 miles away. Fannin's
detractors ignore the fact that he also faced an advancing Mexican
column and could not leave his post unguarded. Travis' letters were
effective in bringing recruits to the field. More than 200 volunteers
had gathered at Gonzales in preparation to march to the Alamo's relief
when news of its fall reached the town.9 It was this collection of men
that formed the nucleus of Sam Houston's army that eventually defeated
Santa Anna at San Jacinto on April 21, 1836.10
· The men of the Alamo could have left
at any time because they were volunteers.
Although the majority of the Alamo's garrison was composed
of volunteers, they were volunteers in the 19th century military sense of the
word. These men had signed an oath of allegiance to the Provisional Government
of Texas, declaring
"I will serve her honestly and faithfully against all her
enemies and opposer whatsoever, and observe and obey the orders of the Governor
of Texas, the orders and decrees of the present and future authorities
and the orders of the officers appointed over me according to the rules and
regulations for the government of Texas."11 Citizen-soldiers, these men were bound to defend any post
they were assigned and were not free to leave on their own.
· William B. Travis was disliked by the
garrison.
Travis fares rather poorly in the popular media, usually
portrayed as a pompous martinet with few friends. In reality, Travis was outgoing,
gregarious and respected by his peers.12 One fact that has helped create the notion that the men
of the Alamo disliked Travis was the volunteers' refusal to take
orders from him, electing James Bowie as their leader instead.13 The election of Bowie had
more to do with the ongoing philosophical dispute between regulars
and volunteers than it did the garrison's opinion of Travis.14 The volunteers simply did
not want to take orders from a regular officer, even someone they
respected such as Lieutenant Colonel William B. Travis of the Texas
Army.
· The Battle of the Alamo would not have
taken place had the garrison followed Sam Houston's orders to blow
up the fort and leave San Antonio.
On January 17, 1836, Houston wrote Governor Henry Smith
that he had "ordered the fortifications in the town of Bexar to be demolished, and
if you should think well of it [italics added for emphasis],
I will remove all the cannon and other munitions of war to Gonzales and Copano,
blow up the Alamo, and abandon the place, as it will be impossible to keep
up the Station with volunteers,
. . . ."15
Thus, Houston requested permission to give the order to destroy the
Alamo - permission that Governor Smith did not grant. The lack of
horses and mules meant that the cannon, ammunition, and other supplies
could not have been removed even if the governor had agreed with
Houston's plan.16 On February 2, 1836, Bowie
expressed the following view to Governor Henry Smith:
"The Salvation of Texas depends in great measure in keeping
Bejar out of the hands of the enemy. It serves as the frontier picquet guard
. . . . Col. Neill & Myself have come to the solemn resolution that we
will rather die in these ditches than give it up to the enemy."17
Endnotes
1José Enrique de la Peña, With
Santa Anna in Texas (College Station: Texas A
& M University Press, 1997), 26-29; Vicente Filisola, Memoirs
for the History of the War in Texas (2 vols.; Austin: Eakin Press,
1987), 2:157-159.Back
2Henry W. Barton, "The Problem of Command in the Army of the
Republic of Texas," Southwestern Historical Quarterly (January
1959), 300.Back
3John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:176, 260-261.Back
4William Fairfax Gray, From Virginia to Texas, 1835: Diary
of Col. Wm. F. Gray (Houston: Fletcher Young Publishing
Co., 1965), 125. For Houston's activities from January
28, 1836, to March 11, 1836, see Llerena B. Friend, Sam
Houston: The Great Designer (Austin: University of
Texas Press, 1985), 66-68.Back
5John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:128, 160, 263-265,
324-325, 504-505. Béxar elected four delegates:
Lorenzo de Zavala, José Francisco Ruiz, José Antonio
Navarro, and Juan Seguin. On February 1, 1836, the Alamo
garrison elected two delegates of their own: Jesse B. Badgett
and Samuel Maverick. Maverick did not leave the Alamo until
March 2, 1836.Back
6John H. Jenkins, "Notes And Documents: The Thermopylae Quotation," Southwestern
Historical Quarterly (October 1990), 299-304. Attributed
to Edward Burleson, historians believe the quote was supplied
to him for a speech as he had little formal education and
would have most likely been unaware of this ancient battle.Back
7See http://www.thealamo.org/visitors/faq.php Were there survivors
at the Alamo?Back
8John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:475, 502, 504;
Alan Huffines, Blood of Noble Men: The Alamo Siege & Battle(Austin:
Eakin Press, 1999), 103.Back.
9John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 5:22-23.Back
10John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 5:69.Back
11John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:11, 13-14; Eugene
C. Barker, "The Texas Revolutionary Army," The Quarterly
of the Texas State Historical Association (April 1906),
227-261. For a discussion of volunteers within the American
military, see Richard B. Winders, Mr. Polk's Army: The
American Military Experience in the Mexican War (College
Station: Texas A & M Press, 1997), Chapter 5: The Volunteers.Back
12For a current and objective biography of Travis, see Willaim
C. Davis, Three Roads to the Alamo (New York: HarperCollins,
1998).Back
13John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:320, 327-328,
339.Back
14See Richard B. Winders, Mr. Polk's Army: The American
Military Experience in the Mexican War (College Station:
Texas A & M Press, 1997), Chapters 4 & 5; John
H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10 vols.;
Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 3:306-308.Back
15John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:46.Back
16John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:127, 424-425.Back
17John H. Jenkins, Papers of The Texas Revolution (10
vols.; Austin: Presidial Press, 1973), 4:236-238.Back