The Alamo

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jedstivers

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Anyone know of a site that has the story of the Alamo in a format that would be interesting for my boys to read? 8 and 10 years old. Both like to read and I think they will get more if they read it than I read something to them.
 
jedstivers":3dxlysdx said:
Anyone know of a site that has the story of the Alamo in a format that would be interesting for my boys to read? 8 and 10 years old. Both like to read and I think they will get more if they read it than I read something to them.
Jeb I couldn't give you anything you couldn't look up. I Will tell ya if you decide to take em on a weekend road trip to San Antonio to see it make time to swing through Goliad and Gonzales to. :nod:
 
Go to encyclopediaofarkansas.net it will tell about Arkansas's role in the Texas Revolution. Be a good place to start.
 
Of all the places in historical Texas, Goliad and Fannin are favorites.
The Goliad battleground is pretty much untouched from the days of the Revolution. There is a fence of course, and you can see a house not too far away, but it's not at all difficult to look across that Fannin prairie, close your eyes and smell the gunsmoke.

Jed, I've read so many in my lifetime, I wouldn't know where to start for boys 8-10 yrs old.
It will take you more than a weekend, but I 2nd Fenceman's suggestion--go see them.
If you can walk out on that Fannin battleground or the courtyard at La Bahia (Goliad) where Fannin and his men were executed and not get shivers up and down your spine, you aren't alive. It does have a beautiful chapel, that is still in weekly use, but don't let that serenity fool you. Presidio La Bahia is the most fought over piece of real estate in Texas, and in Texas history. There are lots of stories within a story at La Bahia.
1-720-52.presidio.m.jpg

alapix38.jpg
 
jedstivers said:
Anyone know of a site that has the story of the Alamo in a format that would be interesting for my boys to read? 8 and 10 years old. Both like to read and I think they will get more if they read it than I read something to them.[/quote
This book is available from amazon and is wrote children of ages that your children are "What Was the Alamo"
 
Texas History Online has some decent stories.

William T Block, Jr. historian has passed away. He had some good diary details I had read once. He has many links still available on the internet. Most of his works are centered around the southeast Texas area where he lived and that was some of the most populous area back when. Lots of work on cattle drives to New Orleans before the cattle trails went north.

Block did extensive works on David Harman and Peyton Bland. Harman rode out of the Alamo and had details that would have otherwise been lost.
 
Caustic Burno":f4d3vuq7 said:
jedstivers":f4d3vuq7 said:
Thanks guys.

Jed, Texas history is taught in 7th grade.
If you can find an old copy for sale on Barnes& Noble used to be well written
for the the target age group.

There was a history book that Humble Oil published that was in cartoon fashion. Wish I had one of them. They were all over our school but never used in teaching. Might been a local thing here as humble had a lot of production here.
 
I'm embarrassed to say I mentioned something about The Alamo to the boys Sunday on the way to church and they said what's that? I try to tell them about all of the things in history but somehow I'd never talked about that to them.
They are really just now getting to the point where they listen and retain stuff like that.
Just more prof I have to stay on my toes.
 
jedstivers":1vpxmauz said:
I'm embarrassed to say I mentioned something about The Alamo to the boys Sunday on the way to church and they said what's that? I try to tell them about all of the things in history but somehow I'd never talked about that to them.
They are really just now getting to the point where they listen and retain stuff like that.
Just more prof I have to stay on my toes.

Here is one that might interest them this the inscription on the San Jacinto monument
An inscription on the monument tells the story of the birth of Texas:
The early policies of Mexico toward her Texas colonists had been extremely liberal. Large grants of land were made to them, and no taxes or duties imposed. The relationship between the Anglo-Americans and Mexicans was cordial. But, following a series of revolutions begun in 1829, unscrupulous rulers successively seized power in Mexico. Their unjust acts and despotic decrees led to the revolution in Texas.
In June, 1832, the colonists forced the Mexican authorities at Anahuac to release Wm. B. Travis and others from unjust imprisonment. The Battle of Velasco, June 26, and the Battle of Nacogdoches, August 2, followed; in both the Texans were victorious. Stephen Fuller Austin, "Father of Texas," was arrested January 3, 1834, and held in Mexico without trial until July, 1835. The Texans formed an army, and on November 12, 1835, established a provisional government.
The first shot of the Revolution of 1835-36 was fired by the Texans at Gonzales, October 2, 1835, in resistance to a demand by Mexican soldiers for a small cannon held by the colonists. The Mexican garrison at Goliad fell October 9; the Battle of Concepcion was won by the Texans, October 28. San Antonio was captured December 10, 1835 after five days of fighting in which the indomitable Benjamin R. Milam died a hero, and the Mexican Army evacuated Texas.
Texas declared her independence at Washington-on-the-Brazos March 2. For nearly two months her armies met disaster and defeat: Dr. James Grant's men were killed on the Aguadulce March 2; William Barret Travis and his men sacrificed their lives at the Alamo, March 6; William Ward was defeated at Refugio, March 14; Amos B. King's men were executed near Refugio, March 16; and James Walker Fannin and his army were put to death near Goliad March 27, 1836.
On this field on April 21, 1836 the Army of Texas commanded by General Sam Houston, and accompanied by the Secretary of War, Thomas J. Rusk, attacked the larger invading army of Mexicans under General Santa Anna. The battle line from left to right was formed by Sidney Sherman's regiment, Edward Burleson's regiment, the artillery commanded by George W. Hockley, Henry Millard's infantry and the cavalry under Mirabeau B. Lamar. Sam Houston led the infantry charge.
With the battle cry, "Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad!" the Texans charged. The enemy taken by surprise, rallied for a few minutes then fled in disorder. The Texans had asked no quarter and gave none. The slaughter was appalling, victory complete, and Texas free! On the following day General Antonio Lopez De Santa Anna, self-styled "Napoleon of the West," received from a generous foe the mercy he had denied Travis at the Alamo and Fannin at Goliad.
Citizens of Texas and immigrant soldiers in the Army of Texas at San Jacinto were natives of Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Austria, Canada, England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Mexico, Poland, Portugal and Scotland.
Measured by its results, San Jacinto was one of the decisive battles of the world. The freedom of Texas from Mexico won here led to annexation and to the Mexican–American War, resulting in the acquisition by the United States of the states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah and parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas and Oklahoma. Almost one-third of the present area of the American Nation, nearly a million square miles of territory, changed sovereignty.
 
jedstivers":z4v0mmge said:
I'm embarrassed to say I mentioned something about The Alamo to the boys Sunday on the way to church and they said what's that? I try to tell them about all of the things in history but somehow I'd never talked about that to them.
They are really just now getting to the point where they listen and retain stuff like that.
Just more prof I have to stay on my toes.

Alamo is the Spanish word for Cotton Wood. Or Poplar trees. The Alamo was named after the cotton woods along that river.
 
Fenceman,

Good to hear your boys like to read - especially at a young age. I have read TEXAS by James Milchener, some fictional characters, some real and I thought it a great read. Tried to read Mexico by same author and just could not get into it. TEXAS was hard to put down.

Regarding good books, I saw a recommendation here for the Last Buckaroo, fiction, but another book that was hard to put down. Got it from the library. :cboy:
 

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