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<h2> "REMEMBER THE ALAMO" </h2>
<p>The muffled drum's sad roll has beat<br/>
The soldier's last tattoo;<br/>
No more on life's parade shall meet<br/>
That brave and fallen few.<br/>
On fame's eternal camping-ground<br/>
Their silent tents are spread,<br/>
And glory guards with solemn round<br/>
The bivouac of the dead.<br/>
<br/>
* * *<br/>
<br/>
The neighing troop, the flashing blade,<br/>
The bugle's stirring blast,<br/>
The charge, the dreadful cannonade,<br/>
The din and shout are past;<br/>
Nor war's wild note, nor glory's peal<br/>
Shall thrill with fierce delight<br/>
Those breasts that never more may feel<br/>
The rapture of the fight.<br/>
—Theodore O'Hara.<br/></p>
<p>"Thermopylae had its messengers of death, but the Alamo had none." These
were the words with which a United States senator referred to one of the
most resolute and effective fights ever waged by brave men against
overwhelming odds in the face of certain death.</p>
<p>Soon after the close of the second war with Great Britain, parties of
American settlers began to press forward into the rich, sparsely settled
territory of Texas, then a portion of Mexico. At first these immigrants
were well received, but the Mexicans speedily grew jealous of them, and
oppressed them in various ways. In consequence, when the settlers felt
themselves strong enough, they revolted against Mexican rule, and declared
Texas to be an independent republic. Immediately Santa Anna, the Dictator
of Mexico, gathered a large army, and invaded Texas. The slender forces of
the settlers were unable to meet his hosts. They were pressed back by the
Mexicans, and dreadful atrocities were committed by Santa Anna and his
lieutenants. In the United States there was great enthusiasm for the
struggling Texans, and many bold backwoodsmen and Indian-fighters swarmed
to their help. Among them the two most famous were Sam Houston and David
Crockett. Houston was the younger man, and had already led an
extraordinary and varied career. When a mere lad he had run away from home
and joined the Cherokees, living among them for some years; then he
returned home. He had fought under Andrew Jackson in his campaigns against
the Creeks, and had been severely wounded at the battle of the Horse-shoe
Bend. He had risen to the highest political honors in his State, becoming
governor of Tennessee; and then suddenly, in a fit of moody longing for
the life of the wilderness, he gave up his governorship, left the State,
and crossed the Mississippi, going to join his old comrades, the
Cherokees, in their new home along the waters of the Arkansas. Here he
dressed, lived, fought, hunted, and drank precisely like any Indian,
becoming one of the chiefs.</p>
<p>David Crockett was born soon after the Revolutionary War. He, too, had
taken part under Jackson in the campaigns against the Creeks, and had
afterward become a man of mark in Tennessee, and gone to Congress as a
Whig; but he had quarreled with Jackson, and been beaten for Congress, and
in his disgust he left the State and decided to join the Texans. He was
the most famous rifle-shot in all the United States, and the most
successful hunter, so that his skill was a proverb all along the border.</p>
<p>David Crockett journeyed south, by boat and horse, making his way steadily
toward the distant plains where the Texans were waging their
life-and-death fight. Texas was a wild place in those days, and the old
hunter had more than one hairbreadth escape from Indians, desperadoes, and
savage beasts, ere he got to the neighborhood of San Antonio, and joined
another adventurer, a bee-hunter, bent on the same errand as himself. The
two had been in ignorance of exactly what the situation in Texas was; but
they soon found that the Mexican army was marching toward San Antonio,
whither they were going. Near the town was an old Spanish fort, the Alamo,
in which the hundred and fifty American defenders of the place had
gathered. Santa Anna had four thousand troops with him. The Alamo was a
mere shell, utterly unable to withstand either a bombardment or a regular
assault. It was evident, therefore, that those within it would be in the
utmost jeopardy if the place were seriously assaulted, but old Crockett
and his companion never wavered. They were fearless and resolute, and
masters of woodcraft, and they managed to slip through the Mexican lines
and join the defenders within the walls. The bravest, the hardiest, the
most reckless men of the border were there; among them were Colonel
Travis, the commander of the fort, and Bowie, the inventor of the famous
bowie-knife. They were a wild and ill-disciplined band, little used to
restraint or control, but they were men of iron courage and great bodily
powers, skilled in the use of their weapons, and ready to meet with stern
and uncomplaining indifference whatever doom fate might have in store for
them.</p>
<p>Soon Santa Anna approached with his army, took possession of the town, and
besieged the fort. The defenders knew there was scarcely a chance of
rescue, and that it was hopeless to expect that one hundred and fifty men,
behind defenses so weak, could beat off four thousand trained soldiers,
well armed and provided with heavy artillery; but they had no idea of
flinching, and made a desperate defense. The days went by, and no help
came, while Santa Anna got ready his lines, and began a furious cannonade.
His gunners were unskilled, however, and he had to serve the guns from a
distance; for when they were pushed nearer, the American riflemen crept
forward under cover, and picked off the artillerymen. Old Crockett thus
killed five men at one gun. But, by degrees, the bombardment told. The
walls of the Alamo were battered and riddled; and when they had been
breached so as to afford no obstacle to the rush of his soldiers, Santa
Anna commanded that they be stormed.</p>
<p>The storm took place on March 6, 1836. The Mexican troops came on well and
steadily, breaking through the outer defenses at every point, for the
lines were too long to be manned by the few Americans. The frontiersmen
then retreated to the inner building, and a desperate hand-to-hand
conflict followed, the Mexicans thronging in, shooting the Americans with
their muskets, and thrusting at them with lance and bayonet, while the
Americans, after firing their long rifles, clubbed them, and fought
desperately, one against many; and they also used their bowie-knives and
revolvers with deadly effect. The fight reeled to and fro between the
shattered walls, each American the center of a group of foes; but, for all
their strength and their wild fighting courage, the defenders were too
few, and the struggle could have but one end. One by one the tall riflemen
succumbed, after repeated thrusts with bayonet and lance, until but three
or four were left. Colonel Travis, the commander, was among them; and so
was Bowie, who was sick and weak from a wasting disease, but who rallied
all his strength to die fighting, and who, in the final struggle, slew
several Mexicans with his revolver, and with his big knife of the kind to
which he had given his name. Then these fell too, and the last man stood
at bay. It was old Davy Crockett. Wounded in a dozen places, he faced his
foes with his back to the wall, ringed around by the bodies of the men he
had slain. So desperate was the fight he waged, that the Mexicans who
thronged round about him were beaten back for the moment, and no one dared
to run in upon him. Accordingly, while the lancers held him where he was,
for, weakened by wounds and loss of blood, he could not break through
them, the musketeers loaded their carbines and shot him down. Santa Anna
declined to give him mercy. Some say that when Crockett fell from his
wounds, he was taken alive, and was then shot by Santa Anna's order; but
his fate cannot be told with certainty, for not a single American was left
alive. At any rate, after Crockett fell the fight was over. Every one of
the hardy men who had held the Alamo lay still in death. Yet they died
well avenged, for four times their number fell at their hands in the
battle.</p>
<p>Santa Anna had but a short while in which to exult over his bloody and
hard-won victory. Already a rider from the rolling Texas plains, going
north through the Indian Territory, had told Houston that the Texans were
up and were striving for their liberty. At once in Houston's mind there
kindled a longing to return to the men of his race at the time of their
need. Mounting his horse, he rode south by night and day, and was hailed
by the Texans as a heaven-sent leader. He took command of their forces,
eleven hundred stark riflemen, and at the battle of San Jacinto, he and
his men charged the Mexican hosts with the cry of "Remember the Alamo."
Almost immediately, the Mexicans were overthrown with terrible slaughter;
Santa Anna himself was captured, and the freedom of Texas was won at a
blow.</p>
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