When was the siege of bexar




















Descriptive information to help identify this map. Follow the links below to find similar items on the Portal. Label on map in lower-left corner: "Line of attack by Texans against the Mexican forces occupying.

Signed terms of capitation. On verso: "Land of Britain. West of Sussex lies Hampshire, whose county towns of Winchester was once England's capital.

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In the lower-left corner of map below, select either the pin or the box. Drop a pin or drag to create a new rectangle. Cos broke the pledge when he returned in March of to command a column in the attack on the Alamo. This ensued with the Battle of the Alamo , culminating in its defeat and massacre of its defenders on March 6, This site is dedicated to the men who fought in the Siege of Bexar and to their descendants — the Siege of Bexar Descendants.

Near what is now the Wheatley Heights Sports Complex around I found a cannonball about the size of a tennis ball. A rough estimate places the site where the cannonball was found to be roughly 4 miles from the Alamo. If there is any resource out there that could substantiate this, it would satisfy my still little boy curiosity.

Skip Mascorro. I just purchased a deed signed by Sam S Smith in in Bexar. I believe he fought in the battle there. Does anyone have any information about him and his life.

They survived the battle. When three companies with over a hundred men arrived from the United States in mid-November, Austin again planned an attack. Officers still expressed doubts, however, and it was called off. Austin then left to assume diplomatic duties in the United States. The Texas troops selected Edward Burleson as their new leader. When Erastus Deaf Smith reported approaching Mexican cavalry on November 26, Burleson ordered out troops to cut them off. Finally the Mexican troops withdrew into San Antonio.

The engagement became known as the Grass Fight because captured Mexican supply animals carried fodder for horses rather than the rumored pay for Mexican soldiers. Because of limited supplies and approaching winter, Burleson considered withdrawing to Goliad at the beginning of December. Information on Mexican defenses from Texans who were allowed to leave San Antonio led to new attack plans.

But fears that the Mexican army had learned of the assault brought a near breakup of the Texan army. When a Mexican officer surrendered with news of declining Mexican morale, Benjamin R. Milam and William Gordon Cooke gathered more than volunteers to attack the town, while Burleson and another men scouted, protected the camp and supplies, and forced Cos to keep his men divided between the town and the Alamo. James C. Neill distracted the Mexican forces with artillery fire on the Alamo before dawn on December 5, while Milam and Francis W.

Cos and his men were allowed to return to Mexico with the understanding that none would return to fight against the Texans. The retreat effectively removed the last Mexican soldiers garrisoned in Texas. Most of the volunteers returned to their homes, convinced that the war was over.

General Cos later was captured at the Battle of San Jacinto. Click on image for larger image and transcript. Letter from Stephen F. Austin to James Bowie and James Fannin.



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