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You are here: Home / Archives for Siege of Bexar Participants

McGregor, John

November 12, 2014 by tcloud Leave a Comment

John McGregor, bagpiper and Alamo defender, was born in Scotland. McGregor lived in early 1836 in Nacogdoches. He took part in the Siege of Bexar and later served in the Alamo garrison as a second sergeant of Capt. William R. Carey’s artillery company. It is said that during the siege of the Alamo, he engaged in musical duels with David Crockett, McGregor playing the bagpipes and Crockett the fiddle. McGregor died in the battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836.

Handbook of Texas Online
findagrave memorial

Filed Under: Alamo Defenders, Biographies, Siege of Bexar, Siege of Bexar Participants Tagged With: Alamo, Siege of Bexar, Soldier, veteran

Martin, Albert

November 12, 2014 by tcloud Leave a Comment

Albert Martin was born 1808 in Rhode Island and died March 6, 1836 defending the Alamo. He arrived in Gonzales, Texas in 1835 and ran a general store. At the outbreak of the Texas revolution, he was one of the “Old Eighteen,” defenders of the Gonzales “Come and Take It” cannon. He served as a officer and was part of the Texas force that besieged San Antonio de Béxar in the autumn of 1835. By December 19, 1835, he was back in Gonzales recovering from a foot injury and returned to Bexar sometime before the Alamo siege. On February 23, 1836, the first day of the siege, he was sent by Lieutenant Colonel William B. Travis as an emissary to the Mexican force. He met General Antonio López de Santa Anna’s adjutant, Colonel Juan N. Almonte, who rejected Martin’s invitation to come to the Alamo and speak directly to Travis. On the following day, he left the Alamo carrying Travis’s famous letter “To the People of Texas.” He passed the message to Lancelot Smither in Gonzales, returned to the Alamo with the relief force from Gonzales, arrived on March 1, 1836 and died five days later in the battle of the Alamo.

Handbook of Texas Online
findagrave memorial by John “J-Cat” Griffith

Filed Under: Alamo Defenders, Biographies, Siege of Bexar, Siege of Bexar Participants Tagged With: Alamo, Siege of Bexar, Soldier, veteran

Marshall, William

November 12, 2014 by tcloud Leave a Comment

William Marshall was born 1808 in Tennessee and died March 6, 1836 defending the Alamo. He was a resident of Arkansas at the time of the Texas revolution and came to Texas as a member of Captain Thomas H. Breece’s company of New Orleans Greys. He took part in the Siege of Bexar, later served in the Alamo garrison as a member of Captain William Blazeby’s infantry company and died in the battle of the Alamo.

Handbook of Texas Online
findagrave memorial by John “J-Cat” Griffith

Filed Under: Alamo Defenders, Biographies, Siege of Bexar, Siege of Bexar Participants Tagged With: Alamo, Siege of Bexar, Soldier, veteran

Main, George Washington

November 12, 2014 by tcloud Leave a Comment

George Washington Main was born 1807 in Virginia. He took part in the Siege of Béxar in 1835 and was severely wounded in the battle. He remained in San Antonio de Béxar as a Second Lieutenant in Captain Robert White’s infantry company, the Béxar Guards. His wounds prevented him from playing an active role in the battle of the Alamo, in which he died.

findagrave memorial by John “J-Cat” Griffith
Handbook of Texas Online

Filed Under: Alamo Defenders, Biographies, Siege of Bexar, Siege of Bexar Participants Tagged With: Siege of Bexar, Soldier, veteran

Losoya, José Toribio

November 12, 2014 by tcloud Leave a Comment

Toribio-Losoya-800José Toribio Losoya was born 1805 in San Antonio de Bexar and he died March 6, 1836 defending the Alamo. He grew up with his family in an old Indian dwelling in the Alamo barrio near the southwest corner of the mission compound. By 1830, he was a Private in the Álamo de Parras military company, serving under Lieutenant Colonel José Francisco Ruiz. In September 1832, that company built and occupied Fort Tenoxtitlán. He was one of many Mexican soldiers who opposed Antonio López de Santa Anna’s despotic rule. By 1835 he had deserted the Mexican army to enlist as a Private in Captain Juan N. Seguín’s company of Tejanos and in December of that year he participated in the Siege of Bexar. As Santa Anna’s troops converged on San Antonio in February 1836, he entered the Alamo garrison with other Tejanos, his wife and three children. He died in the battle of the Alamo. His wife, son, and two daughters survived the siege.

Handbook of Texas Online
findagrave memorial by John “J-Cat” Griffith

Filed Under: Alamo Defenders, Biographies, Siege of Bexar, Siege of Bexar Participants Tagged With: Alamo, Siege of Bexar, Soldier, veteran

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Alamo Siege of Bexar Siege of Bexar Descendants Soldier veteran

2005 SOBD Meeting

The Siege of Bexar Descendants met for their 20th anniversary, on the 170th anniversary of the Siege of Bexar, at Alamo Hall, the Alamo, San Antonio, Texas December 9-11, 2005. THE SIEGE OF BEXAR DESCENDANTS “The Storming of San Antonio”December 5-10, 1835 HOWDY MEMBERS AND GUESTS Welcome to San Antonio and BexarTo CELEBRATEOur20th ANNIVERSARY 12/9/05 […]

Castoñon, Luis Zertuche

Luis Zertuche Castañon was born on March 18, 1820, to Jesus Castañon, a soldier stationed in Bexar, and Guadalupe Zertuche Castañon. According to 1830 census records, Luis spent his early years at San Jose Mission in San Antonio playing alongside his brother Pedro and sister Maria. Other siblings would come later. By age thirteen he […]

Austin, William Tennant

William Tennant Austin, soldier and civil servant of the Republic of Texas, was born on January 30, 1809, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, the son of Susan (Rogers) and John Punderson Austin. On December 12, 1830 Stephen F. Austin had located land on Buffalo Bayou for William, who had established a mercantile trade before the end of […]

Lewis, Martin Baty

Martin Baty Lewis (1806–1884), soldier and county official, was born in Clark County, Indiana, on January 13, 1806, the eldest son of Sally (Lemasters) and Samuel S. Lewis, who also served at the Siege of Bexar. He married Nancy Moore 1825 in Indiana and they had eleven children. He emigrated to Texas in January 1830, […]

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