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Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary American Latino Heritage |
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San Antonio de Valero Mission/The Alamo San Antonio, Texas |
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In the late 17th century, Spain sent colonists to settle in Texas to prevent the French from moving into the land west of Louisiana. As they did in other parts of Spanish America, missionaries played an important role in establishing settlements, spreading Spanish culture and Catholicism, and overseeing Spanish interests in rural Texas. Fray Antonio de Olivares led the Franciscan missionaries who founded the San Antonio de Valero Mission in 1718. After the destruction of the first mission church by a hurricane, the mission community moved to the site of The Alamo today. The Spanish began construction of the current stone mission complex in 1744. The complex included the chapel, a convent, small dwellings, storehouses, and shops. The Franciscan operation there lasted until the end of the century, when Spain closed the mission and renamed the complex Pueblo de Valera. Soon after the mission closed, a company of Spanish Calvary called the Flying Company of San Carlos de Parras arrived at Pueblo de Valera and established a fort. Likely, this group of Spaniards renamed the complex the San Antonio de Valero Mission. The soldiers were from Alamo del Parras in Coahuila, Mexico, and after arrival, gave the mission complex the name of Fort Alamo. In 1805, the army built the first European hospital in Texas at the fort. During the Mexican Revolution, the Spanish and the Mexicans fought for control of The Alamo, and the Mexican army occupied the complex between 1821 and 1835.
During this period of occupation, the newly independent Republic of Mexico invited foreign immigrants to settle in Texas, which was part of the Mexican State of Coahuila y Tejas. Most immigrants were Americans. Some immigrated legally, adopting Mexican culture and Catholicism, but others came illegally. By the end of the 1820s, after this mass immigration, Anglo American immigrants outnumbered the Mexican population. When the government in Mexico City tried to remove the illegal immigrants from Texas and regain control of the region, violence broke out between immigrants and those loyal to Mexico. After a period of mismanagement by the distant Mexican government, Texans of American and Mexican heritage organized a rebellion in October of 1835 to push out the Mexican government and form the independent Republic of Texas. The Texan rebels took The Alamo in December of 1835 and held it until their defeat in March. In January, the rebels received news that Mexican General Santa Anna was marching north with a large army, but the disorganized Texan government could not get enough reinforcements to the Texan rebels in The Alamo in time. A force of 5,000 Mexican soldiers arrived in San Antonio on February 23 to take The Alamo. Santa Anna’s siege lasted 13 days and Mexico lost 1,544 men in the fighting. By the end, all 187 Texan men garrisoned at The Alamo died defending it against Santa Anna’s attack. The only survivors were a small number of noncombatants, mostly women and children. Of the 187 who died, 13 of the men inside the Alamo were native Texans and 11 of the 13 were Tejanos, Texans of Mexican descent. Forty-one were born in Europe and the rest were from the United States. Ultimately, the Texas army, which American native Samuel Houston led, won the war and forced Santa Anna to concede Texas to the rebels. In 1845, the United States annexed the Republic of Texas, an act that helped spark the U.S.-Mexican War the following year. After the rebellion, the Republic of Texas handed The Alamo over to the Roman Catholic Church. In 1848, the Church leased the property to the U.S. government. It passed to the Confederacy and then back to the U.S. during the Civil War, and the U.S. government used it for quartermaster’s purposes until 1872. A private citizen purchased the convent from the Church in 1877, and in 1883, the State of Texas bought the chapel. In 1905, the Texas governor acquired the convent and bestowed the entire complex upon the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, who operate a museum and park at the historic site.
Located within the restored ruins of the original mission wall, the church of The Alamo is a white stone building, decorated with ornamental stonework on the front façade. The chapel appears as it did in 1849. Its solid masonry is four feet thick, 75 feet long, 62 feet wide, and 22 ½ feet high. Like many Catholic churches, the chapel is cruciform and buttressed on its sidewalls. It contains a baptistery, confessional, monks’ burial room and sacristy. Located in the heart of downtown San Antonio, The Alamo is open to the public year-round. The landscaped mission complex includes exhibits on Texas history, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, the museum shop and gardens. Alamo docents offer history talks for the public on the hour and half hour every day, except between 12:00pm and 1:00pm. The chapel contains paintings depicting people and moments related to the Alamo and historic artifacts from Texan history. Other nearby San Antonio historic attractions include San Antonio Missions National Historical Park and the Spanish Governor’s Palace.
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