This Day In Texas History - March 6
Posted: Wed Mar 06, 2019 10:21 am
1836 - The chapel of San Antonio de Valero Mission, under siege for thirteen days by the Mexican army under General Antonio Lòpez de Santa Anna, was subjected to an early morning assault. After a fierce battle, lasting for perhaps some 90 minutes, the defenses of the Alamo were overrun and all the defenders were killed. The slogan "Remember the Alamo!" subsequently became a rallying cry for the Texas Revolution, and the Alamo became a shrine to fallen Texas heroes.
{Note: More posts to follow}
1836 - James Neill Clinton arrives in Gonzales from the Alamo. He spent ninety dollars of his own money buying medicines for the Alamo garrison.
1836 - Thomas J. Rabb, soldier and member of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred, led Company F, First Regiment of the revolutionary army into Gonzales to join other troops gathering there under the command of Gen. Sam Houston.
1836 - Santa Anna wrote his secretary of war and navy, Gen. José María Tornel, "The bearer takes with him one of the flags of the enemy's battalion captured today. The inspection of it will show plainly the true intention of the treacherous colonists and of their abettors who come from parts of the United States of the North." Most historians believe that Santa Anna was referring to the Greys flag rather than the Crockett flag or the various flags based on the Mexican tricolor.
1846 - United States, Maj. Gen. Zachary Taylor's army established a military depot near the Brazos Santiago arsenal and named it Fort Polk, in honor of the president of the United States. The fort was also known as Fort Brazos Santiago(located in what is now known as Cameron County).
1866 - A resolution was introduced providing for a state east of the Trinity River to embrace thirty-eight counties and be called East Texas. A countermove proposed that Texas sell to the United States all territory lying west of a line beginning at the mouth of the Pecos River, thence up the stream to Fort Lancaster, thence to the point where the 102d parallel crosses the Red River. These resolutions did not come to a vote.
1905 - James Robert (Bob) Wills was born in Crisp in Limestone County. From the 30s to the 50s, Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys brought Western Swing to the world. His "Faded Love" and "San Antonio Rose" are still country standards.
1944 - John Cary Morgan's plane was shot down over Berlin. He spent the remaining fourteen months of World War II as a German prisoner. The Texas native, born in Vernon in 1914. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for "gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty." He continued to fly missions until he was shot down in 1944. His story was fictionalized in the novel Twelve O'Clock High! by Sy Bartlett (1948).
1954 - The Anglo-Texan Society in London held its first official affair—a barbecue. Fifteen hundred guests enjoyed the celebration and feasted on 2,800 pounds of beef generously donated by the Houston Fat Stock Show. The society met four times a year for merry Mexican food luncheons and dynamic speakers. By the mid-1960s the fun-loving glory days of the Anglo-Texan Society were over. The group disbanded in 1979.
1967 - The University of Texas official changed its name to The University of Texas at Austin. Was there any confusion?

1836 - James Neill Clinton arrives in Gonzales from the Alamo. He spent ninety dollars of his own money buying medicines for the Alamo garrison.
1836 - Thomas J. Rabb, soldier and member of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred, led Company F, First Regiment of the revolutionary army into Gonzales to join other troops gathering there under the command of Gen. Sam Houston.
1836 - Santa Anna wrote his secretary of war and navy, Gen. José María Tornel, "The bearer takes with him one of the flags of the enemy's battalion captured today. The inspection of it will show plainly the true intention of the treacherous colonists and of their abettors who come from parts of the United States of the North." Most historians believe that Santa Anna was referring to the Greys flag rather than the Crockett flag or the various flags based on the Mexican tricolor.
1846 - United States, Maj. Gen. Zachary Taylor's army established a military depot near the Brazos Santiago arsenal and named it Fort Polk, in honor of the president of the United States. The fort was also known as Fort Brazos Santiago(located in what is now known as Cameron County).
1866 - A resolution was introduced providing for a state east of the Trinity River to embrace thirty-eight counties and be called East Texas. A countermove proposed that Texas sell to the United States all territory lying west of a line beginning at the mouth of the Pecos River, thence up the stream to Fort Lancaster, thence to the point where the 102d parallel crosses the Red River. These resolutions did not come to a vote.
1905 - James Robert (Bob) Wills was born in Crisp in Limestone County. From the 30s to the 50s, Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys brought Western Swing to the world. His "Faded Love" and "San Antonio Rose" are still country standards.
1944 - John Cary Morgan's plane was shot down over Berlin. He spent the remaining fourteen months of World War II as a German prisoner. The Texas native, born in Vernon in 1914. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for "gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty." He continued to fly missions until he was shot down in 1944. His story was fictionalized in the novel Twelve O'Clock High! by Sy Bartlett (1948).

1954 - The Anglo-Texan Society in London held its first official affair—a barbecue. Fifteen hundred guests enjoyed the celebration and feasted on 2,800 pounds of beef generously donated by the Houston Fat Stock Show. The society met four times a year for merry Mexican food luncheons and dynamic speakers. By the mid-1960s the fun-loving glory days of the Anglo-Texan Society were over. The group disbanded in 1979.
1967 - The University of Texas official changed its name to The University of Texas at Austin. Was there any confusion?