The Alamo
The
Alamo, originally known as Mission San Antonio de Valero, is a former
Roman Catholic mission and fortress compound, now a museum, in San Antonio,
Texas. The compound, which originally comprised a sanctuary and surrounding
buildings, was built by the Spanish Empire in the 18th century for the
education of local Native Americans after their conversion to Christianity.
In 1793, the mission was secularized and soon abandoned. Ten years later,
it became a fortress housing the Mexican Army group the Second Flying
Company of San Carlos de Parras, who likely gave the mission the name
"Alamo".
Mexican soldiers held the mission until December 1835, when General
Martin Perfecto de Cos surrendered it to the Texian Army following the
siege of Bexar. A relatively small number of Texian soldiers then occupied
the compound. Texian General Sam Houston believed the Texians did not
have the manpower to hold the fort and ordered Colonel James Bowie to
destroy it. Bowie chose to disregard those orders and instead worked
with Colonel James C. Neill to fortify the mission.
On
February 23, Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna led a large
force of Mexican soldiers into San Antonio de Bexar and promptly initiated
a siege.
The
siege ended on March 6, when the Mexican army attacked the Alamo; by
the end of the Battle of the Alamo all or almost all of the defenders
were killed. When the Mexican army retreated from Texas at the end of
the Texas Revolution, they tore down many of the Alamo walls and burned
some of the buildings.
For the next five years, the Alamo was periodically used to garrison soldiers, both Texian and Mexican, but was ultimately abandoned. In 1849, several years after Texas was annexed to the United States, the US Army began renting the facility for use as a quartermaster's depot. The US Army abandoned the mission in 1876 after nearby Fort Sam Houston was established. The Alamo chapel was sold to the state of Texas, which conducted occasional tours but made no effort to restore it. The remaining buildings were sold to a mercantile company which operated them as a wholesale grocery store.
After forming in 1892, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas (DRT)
began trying to preserve the Alamo. In 1905, Adina de Zavala and Clara
Driscoll successfully convinced the legislature to purchase the buildings
and to name the DRT permanent custodians of the site. For the next six
years, de Zavala and Driscoll quarrelled over how to best restore the
mission, culminating
in
a court case to decide which of their competing DRT chapters controlled
the Alamo. As a result of the feud, Texas governor Oscar B. Colquitt
briefly took the complex under state control and began restorations
in 1912; the site was given back to the DRT later that year. The legislature
took steps in 1988 and again in 1994 to transfer control of the Alamo
to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department but the attempt failed after
then-governor George W. Bush vowed to veto any bill removing the DRT's
authority.
Source: Wkipedia