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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.
Found 28 total hits in 13 results.
Texas (Texas, United States) (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Alamo, Fort,
A structure in San Antonio, Tex.; erected for a mission building in 1744; used for religious purposes till 1793, when, on account of the great strength of its walls, it was converted into a fort.
In the struggle by Texas for independence, the most sanguinary and heroic conflict of the border warfare, which merged into the Mexican War, occurred there — a conflict which for years was familiar to Americans as the Thermopylae of Texas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblonTexas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblong, and surrounded by a wall 8 or 10 feet in height by 3 feet in thickness.
A body of Texans, under the command of Col. William Barrett Davis, retired into the fort early in 1836, upon the dismantling of San Antonio by Sam Houston, and then Santa Ana, with a large force, invested the fort Feb. 23.
The Texans numbered only 140 men, while the Mexican army was 4,000 strong.
The enemy took possession of the town, then erected batteries on both sides of the river, and for twenty-four hours bombard
Alaska (Alaska, United States) (search for this): entry alamo-fort
San Antonio (Texas, United States) (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Alamo, Fort,
A structure in San Antonio, Tex.; erected for a mission building in 1744; used for religious purposes till 1793, when, on account of the great strength of its walls, it was converted into a fort.
In the struggle by Texas for independence, the most sanguinary and heroic conflict of the border warfare, which merged into the Mexican War, occurred there — a conflict which for years was familiar to Americans as the Thermopylae of Texas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblong, and surrounded by a wall 8 or 10 feet in height by 3 feet in thickness.
A body of Texans, under the command of Col. William Barrett Davis, retired into the fort early in 1836, upon the dismantling of San Antonio by Sam Houston, and then Santa Ana, with a large force, invested the fort Feb. 23.
The Texans numbered only 140 men, while the Mexican army was 4,000 strong.
The enemy took possession of the town, then erected batteries on both sides of the river, and for twenty-four hours bombard
Sam Houston (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Antonio Lopez De Santa Ana (search for this): entry alamo-fort
William Barrett Davis (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Americans (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Alamo, Fort,
A structure in San Antonio, Tex.; erected for a mission building in 1744; used for religious purposes till 1793, when, on account of the great strength of its walls, it was converted into a fort.
In the struggle by Texas for independence, the most sanguinary and heroic conflict of the border warfare, which merged into the Mexican War, occurred there — a conflict which for years was familiar to Americans as the Thermopylae of Texas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblong, and surrounded by a wall 8 or 10 feet in height by 3 feet in thickness.
A body of Texans, under the command of Col. William Barrett Davis, retired into the fort early in 1836, upon the dismantling of San Antonio by Sam Houston, and then Santa Ana, with a large force, invested the fort Feb. 23.
The Texans numbered only 140 men, while the Mexican army was 4,000 strong.
The enemy took possession of the town, then erected batteries on both sides of the river, and for twenty-four hours bombarde
David Crockett (search for this): entry alamo-fort
1744 AD (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Alamo, Fort,
A structure in San Antonio, Tex.; erected for a mission building in 1744; used for religious purposes till 1793, when, on account of the great strength of its walls, it was converted into a fort.
In the struggle by Texas for independence, the most sanguinary and heroic conflict of the border warfare, which merged into the Mexican War, occurred there — a conflict which for years was familiar to Americans as the Thermopylae of Texas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblong, and surrounded by a wall 8 or 10 feet in height by 3 feet in thickness.
A body of Texans, under the command of Col. William Barrett Davis, retired into the fort early in 1836, upon the dismantling of San Antonio by Sam Houston, and then Santa Ana, with a large force, invested the fort Feb. 23.
The Texans numbered only 140 men, while the Mexican army was 4,000 strong.
The enemy took possession of the town, then erected batteries on both sides of the river, and for twenty-four hours bombarded
1793 AD (search for this): entry alamo-fort
Alamo, Fort,
A structure in San Antonio, Tex.; erected for a mission building in 1744; used for religious purposes till 1793, when, on account of the great strength of its walls, it was converted into a fort.
In the struggle by Texas for independence, the most sanguinary and heroic conflict of the border warfare, which merged into the Mexican War, occurred there — a conflict which for years was familiar to Americans as the Thermopylae of Texas.
The fort was about an acre in extent, oblong, and surrounded by a wall 8 or 10 feet in height by 3 feet in thickness.
A body of Texans, under the command of Col. William Barrett Davis, retired into the fort early in 1836, upon the dismantling of San Antonio by Sam Houston, and then Santa Ana, with a large force, invested the fort Feb. 23.
The Texans numbered only 140 men, while the Mexican army was 4,000 strong.
The enemy took possession of the town, then erected batteries on both sides of the river, and for twenty-four hours bombarded