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Post by neferetus on Nov 12, 2004 11:22:13 GMT -5
Legend has it how Davy Crockett and his "Tennessee Boys' defended the earth and cedar palisade that ran from the church to the Low Barrack. Here in this 'present-day' photo of the Alamo you can see the reconstructed Low Barrack foundation in the foreground. If you follow it closely toward the church, you can see the line in flagstone that indicates where the palisade actually ran at the time of the battle. That 'little pile of 'sticks' was pretty long!
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Post by Greg C. on Nov 12, 2004 15:22:06 GMT -5
cool, i wish i could visit the alamo soon. maybe next year i will.
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Post by Cole_blooded on Nov 21, 2004 21:02:36 GMT -5
nice angle on the photo there!yeah that ole Palisades was hell on earth for Crockett and crew,and that goes to say we all say yeah i know what it must have been like at the palisades!it was most likely worse than your own night mare and then some! TED........aka........coleblooded
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Post by Bromhead24 on Nov 22, 2004 9:25:30 GMT -5
I can't remember where i read it but, i read that they want to reconstruct the Low barracks to it's origional look. Since it's been over 12 years that i visited the place, i don't remember if there is any space to reconstruct the low barracks without raising a few business buildings on the SW corner.
Any more photo's of this area Nef?
Mike
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Post by neferetus on Nov 22, 2004 12:26:07 GMT -5
I can't remember where i read it but, i read that they want to reconstruct the Low barracks to it's origional look. Since it's been over 12 years that i visited the place, i don't remember if there is any space to reconstruct the low barracks without raising a few business buildings on the SW corner. Any more photo's of this area Nef? Mike Mike, before anyone could reconstruct the Low Barrack, the city would have to agree to close off Alamo street to traffic. (Or else, make it but a one way street, with autos passing through the reconstructed main gate! This photo shows the west end of the reconstructed Low Barrack foundation. The reconstruction ends at about the point in the building where the main gate would've originally cut through. Today, pedestrians who walk along that sidewalk in the foreground are oblivious to the fact that they are actually passing through the Alamo's main gate. Here's another shot of the eastern end of the Low Barrack foundation, looking toward the Long Barrack. (Note the line in the flagstone that indicates where the low wall once stood. Also, on the right, you can see where the palisade begins.)
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Post by neferetus on Jan 7, 2005 10:30:20 GMT -5
Not that there is any historical basis for it, but it is my own personal belief that Crockett may've fallen right at the point in this photograph where the palisade, Low Barrack and low wall all meet. If Crockett had been defending the palisade, the nearest structure that he, or his men had a chance to make it to would have been the 'cocina', or kitchen hut that ran north, jut off of the end of the Low Barrack. Caught out in the open and trapped though, he could very well have died outdoors there, as he probably would have wanted to, anyway. ("I don't like to be hemmed in.")
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Post by Bromhead24 on Jan 7, 2005 20:00:56 GMT -5
Of all the times i visited the site, i don't remember any of these things...
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Post by neferetus on Apr 13, 2005 14:28:41 GMT -5
For the March 6, 2005 reenactment, SALHA emplaced a 'temporary' palisade in the very same spot where Crockett may've stood, 169 years before. Speaking of Crockett here's SALHA's own 'David', dressed very much like Billy-Bob Thornton. And, like Thornton, his cap seems to have crawled away.
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Post by neferetus on Apr 18, 2005 12:08:40 GMT -5
Kenny Pruitt, wearing the more traditional attire of buckskin and coonskin cap, appeared as Davy Crockett at the March 6, 1986 Alamo reenactment on the John Wayne movie set in Alamo Village. Mike Waters, as Bowie, lies upon his cot. (That's me in the black hat, hidden behind Pruitt.) Others who have appeared at Alamo Village as Crockett include: John Wayne--- The Alamo (1960) Jeff Bearden----Alamo: The New Defenders (1999) Merrill Connolly- Alamo: The Price Of Freedom (1988) Brian Keith------- 13 Days To Glory (1987) John Schneider--- James Michener's TEXAS (1997)
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Post by Greg C. on Apr 18, 2005 16:07:22 GMT -5
great photos!
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MrLouisiana
Junior Member
Bet You Don't Know Who That Is
Posts: 146
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Post by MrLouisiana on Apr 18, 2005 17:14:38 GMT -5
*whistles*
Not bad, not bad at all.
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Post by The Mountain Man on May 9, 2005 7:17:14 GMT -5
Real good photos. I plan on going to the Alamo soon I hope.. How many Tennessean were with David at the Alamo??
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Post by Greg C. on May 9, 2005 15:55:57 GMT -5
six from what i heard
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Post by neferetus on May 16, 2005 8:54:32 GMT -5
Here's Bill Chemerka, wearing Merrill Connolly's Crockett outfit and holding 'Invisible Betsey', on the set of "Alamo, The Price Of Freedom". Bill doubled for Crocket's body in the aftermath scenes.
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Post by Greg C. on May 16, 2005 15:34:39 GMT -5
wow, he looks like a good crockett!
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Post by The Mountain Man on May 22, 2005 0:31:25 GMT -5
Did David ever go up into Kentuck???
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Post by neferetus on May 23, 2005 12:51:31 GMT -5
Did David ever go up into Kentuck??? Technically, Crockett's birthplace in Limestone, Greene County, Tennessee, was once a part of Kentucky and later annexed to Tennessee. "Born in a cabin, down in Ken-tuck- kee!"
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Post by The Mountain Man on May 23, 2005 17:33:40 GMT -5
Technically, Crockett's birthplace in Limestone, Greene County, Tennessee, was once a part of Kentucky and later annexed to Tennessee. "Born in a cabin, down in Ken-tuck- kee!" When did it get annexed to Tenn.
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Post by Greg C. on May 23, 2005 18:22:57 GMT -5
When did it get annexed to Tenn. to add to that question, was it before d.c was born?
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Post by neferetus on Aug 16, 2005 11:17:33 GMT -5
For those of you who will be in the vicinity of Morristown Tennessee tomorrow, August 17, 2005, make sure to stop on by the Crockett Tavern Museum to help celebrate Ol' Davy's 219th birthday! Built on the site of David Crockett's boyhood home, the Museum is a reconstruction of John Crockett's 1790's Tavern. Here's a link: www.korrnet.org/crockett
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