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Battle of the Alamo

Battle of the Alamo

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Episode Description

On March 6, 1836, the Alamo fell. In less than ninety minutes, nearly every defender inside the mission was dead. On paper, it was a decisive Mexican victory.

But history isn’t written on paper alone.

In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott walks through the brutal dawn assault on the Alamo — the collapsing walls, the hand-to-hand fighting, the deaths of Travis, Bowie, and Crockett — and then examines what really happened that morning.

Because while the Alamo fell militarily, something far more powerful rose from its ashes: a story strong enough to harden an army, unite a people, and forge the identity of Texas itself.

This is the crucible moment. The fire that hardened the steel.

Remember the Alamo — and understand why it still matters.

Show Notes

Today’s Focus:
The Fall of the Alamo – March 6, 1836

What Happened Before Dawn

  • Four columns of over 1,800 Mexican soldiers advanced on the mission.
  • Texan defenders held the walls through two assaults.
  • On the third wave, Mexican troops scaled the walls.
  • Fighting turned brutal and personal — room to room, bayonet to bayonet.


Key Figures

  • William Barrett Travis fell near the north wall.
  • James Bowie was killed in his sickbed.
  • David Crockett’s final moments remain debated.
  • Nearly every defender died; civilians were spared.


The Turning Point

  • Militarily: A Mexican victory.
  • Strategically and spiritually: A Texan awakening.
  • Heavy Mexican casualties shocked both armies.
  • News of the fall hardened Sam Houston’s forces.
  • “Remember the Alamo” became more than revenge — it became meaning.


Why It Still Matters

  • The Alamo created the rallying cry that echoed at San Jacinto.
  • Without the sacrifice, there is no hardened resolve.
  • Without the loss, there is no focused fury on April 21, 1836.
  • The Alamo is the crucible that forged Texas identity.


Texan Edge Reflection
Great movements are often born in apparent defeat.
Sometimes the stand you make today doesn’t win the moment — it builds the future.

This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

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