Texas Fall/Winter thread!

   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,601  
Wonder about Western and Blueriver. Haven’t seen either post in a long time.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,604  
Apparently I enjoy mine at a faster pace.:dance1:

We also stop and smell the roses ... with our beers. You just have to watch the thorns and look out for the bees.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,605  
We also stop and smell the roses ... with our beers. You just have to watch the thorns and look out for the bees.

I don’t have time for roses. When I get home from work my other half makes sure I have another full time job that starts with feeding horses, cows, donkeys, dogs, cats, and occasionally the goldfish in the water trough. But I do enjoy however many beers I want in my escapades. Just the animal feeding is usually a two beer job.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,606  
I don’t have time for roses. When I get home from work my other half makes sure I have another full time job that starts with feeding horses, cows, donkeys, dogs, cats, and occasionally the goldfish in the water trough. But I do enjoy however many beers I want in my escapades. Just the animal feeding is usually a two beer job.

Get more cows .... drink more beers!
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,608  
15 minutes tops Kyle! And that’s if we stopped for a beer.

Had a Dinner out at the Monument Inn a few weeks ago. Always good!

I was going to go check it out, but the Lynchburg ferry is down for the count right now. Kids were sad no ferry ride.

Here's a link to the San Jacinto monument's webcam.

EarthCam - San Jacinto Monument Cam
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,609  
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,610  
Warning Texas! The snakes are out. Just spotted the first one of the season. A rat snake looking for lunch.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,612  
Today marks 182 years since the Final Siege at the Alamo on March 6, 1836.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,613  
Found this on a Texas History site.




On March 6, 1836...

...the Alamo garrison fell, and the fortress that had been a mission became a shrine.

Francisco Antonio Ruiz was the Acalde (mayor) of San Antonio. He was an eyewitness to the events of that day.

Twenty-four years later, in 1860, Don Poncho (as Ruiz was known), recounted what he had seen for the Texas Almanac.

Below is his account in full.

Remember the Alamo!


PS - Don Poncho's father, Don Francisco Ruiz, signed the Texas Declaration of Independence four days before the Alamo fell.


Fall of the Alamo, and Massacre of Travis
and His Brave Associates
by Francisco Antonio Ruiz
Translated by J. A. Quintero

On the 6th of March at 3 a.m. General Santa Anna at the head of 4000 men, advanced against the Alamo. The infantry, artillery and cavalry had formed about 1000 varas from the walls of said fortress.

The Mexican army charged and were twice repulsed by the deadly fire of Travis' artillery, which resembled a constant thunder. At the third charge the Toluca battalion commenced to scale the walls and suffered severely. Out of 800 men, only 130 were left alive.

When the Mexican army had succeeded in entering the walls, I with Political Chief (Jefe Politico) Don Ramon Musquiz, and other members of the corporation, accompanied the curate Don Refugio de la Garza, who, by Santa Anna's orders had assembled during the night, at a temporary fortification erected in Potrero Street, with the object of attending the wounded.

As soon as the storming commenced, we crossed the bridge on Commerce Street with this object in view, and about 100 yards from the same a party of Mexican dragoons fired upon us and compelled us to fallback on the river to the place occupied before.

Half an hour had elapsed when Santa Anna sent one of his aides with an order for us to come before him. He directed me to call upon some of the neighbors to come with carts to carry the dead to the cemetery, and also to accompany him, as he was desirous to have Colonels Travis, Bowie and Crockett shown to him.

On the north battery of the fortress lay the lifeless body of Colonel Travis on the gun carriage shot only in the forehead.

Toward the west in a small fort opposite the city we found the body of Colonel Crockett.

Colonel Bowie was found dead in his bed in one of the rooms of the south side.

Santa Anna, after the Mexicans were taken out, ordered wood to be brought to burn the bodies of the Texans. He sent a company of dragoons with me to bring wood and dry branches from the neighboring forests.

About 3 o'clock in the afternoon of the next day they commenced laying wood and dry branches upon which a file of dead bodies were placed, more wood was piled on them and another file brought, and in this manner all were arranged in layers. Kindling wood was distributed through the pile and at 8 o'clock it was lighted.

The dead Mexicans of Santa Anna's army were taken to the graveyard, but not having sufficient room for them, I ordered some of them to be thrown in the river, which was done on the same day. Santa Anna's loss estimated at 1600 men. These were the flower of his army.

The gallantry of the few Texans who defended the Alamo were really wondered at by the Mexican army. Even the generals were astonished at their vigorous resistance, and how dearly the victory had been bought.

The generals who, under Santa Anna, participated in the storming of the Alamo were Juan Amador, Castrillion, Ramirez y Sesma, Andrade.

The men burned numbered 182. I was an eye witness, for as Alcalde of San Antonio, I was with some of the neighbors collecting the dead bodies and placing them on the funeral pyre.

(Signed) Francisco Antonio Ruiz
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,614  
My Great, Great, Great Grandfather, Gordon Jennings, was among the defenders who fell that day. Lost his brother Charles Jennings at Goliad. Gordon at age 56 was the oldest there. Gordon's daughter (my direct descendant) rode to alert settlers around the Bastrop area to the fall of the Alamo and the coming invasion of the Mexican army. This was known as the "Ride of Kate Jennings" during the Runaway Scrape.
Love Texas history.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,615  
Especially Texan: Bluebonnets

IMG_1968.JPG

On March 7, 1901, the Twenty-seventh Texas Legislature adopted the bluebonnet as the state flower. The flower's popular name derives from its resemblance to a sunbonnet. It has also been called buffalo clover, wolf flower, and, in Spanish, el conejo ("the rabbit").

On March 8, 1971, the legislation was amended to include L. texensis and "any other variety of bluebonnet not heretofore recorded." At least four other species of bluebonnet grow in Texas: L. havardii, L. concinnus, L. perennis, and L. plattensis. Contrary to various folk stories and legends claiming that the plant originated outside the state, L. texensis and L. subcarnosus are native to Texas.

In 1933 the legislature adopted a state flower song, "Bluebonnets," written by Julia D. Booth and Lora C. Crockett. Also in the 1930s the Highway Department began a landscaping and beautification program and extended the flower's range. Due largely to that agency's efforts, bluebonnets now grow along most major highways throughout the state. The flower usually blooms in late March and early April and is found mostly in limestone outcroppings from north central Texas to Mexico. Its popularity is still widespread today.

Although early explorers failed to mention the bluebonnet in their descriptions of Texas, Indian lore called the flower a gift from the Great Spirit. The bluebonnet continues to be a favorite subject for artists and photographers, and at the peak of bloom, festivals featuring the flower are held in several locations.


The Texas State Flower Song

Bluebonnets

words and music by Julia D. Booth and Lora C. Crockett

When the pastures are green in the springtime
And the birds are singing their sonnets,
You may look to the hills and the valleys
And they’re covered with lovely Bluebonnets.

Blue is the emblem of loyalty,
They’re as blue as the deep, deep sea,
Their smiling faces bring gladness,
For they bloom for you and for me.

Bluebonnets, so gorgeous and stately,
In your mantle of blue and of green,
In the spring when you’re in your full glory,
You’re the loveliest sight ever seen.

You’re beautiful when you sway in the sunshine,
You look like waves of the sea,
Ah, Texas was wise in her choice of a flow’r,
So we offer our homage to thee.

Chorus:
Bluebonnets, blue lovely Bluebonnets,
More beautiful than all the rest.
Texas chose you for her flower,
And we love you best, Bluebonnets.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,617  
Basically most all the western states owe it to the Texans for being a part of the Union. What started in Texas ended with the US fighting down to Mexico City and forcing Mexico to cede the land over, to the tune of around $11,000,000
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,618  
My Great, Great, Great Grandfather, Gordon Jennings, was among the defenders who fell that day. Lost his brother Charles Jennings at Goliad. Gordon at age 56 was the oldest there. Gordon's daughter (my direct descendant) rode to alert settlers around the Bastrop area to the fall of the Alamo and the coming invasion of the Mexican army. This was known as the "Ride of Kate Jennings" during the Runaway Scrape.
Love Texas history.

Thanks for sharing that, we’re proud of our History!
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,619  
My Great, Great, Great Grandfather, Gordon Jennings, was among the defenders who fell that day. Lost his brother Charles Jennings at Goliad. Gordon at age 56 was the oldest there. Gordon's daughter (my direct descendant) rode to alert settlers around the Bastrop area to the fall of the Alamo and the coming invasion of the Mexican army. This was known as the "Ride of Kate Jennings" during the Runaway Scrape.
Love Texas history.

Welcome aboard Fiddlearound. Do you fiddle? Been to Halletsville?

Thanks for contributing.
 
   / Texas Fall/Winter thread! #7,620  
Sorry Kyle, for taking so long to answer. Thanks for the greeting.
I've been lurking for years--enjoy reading just don't have much to say. Yes, I play the fiddle, mandolin, banjo, but mostly the guitar. I'm a frustrated Bluegrasser.
Use the fiddlearound name 'cause of the instrument and the way I waste time on the internet.
I need to update my profile. We live west of Bastrop and go to Giddings way too often to pick up online auction stuff.
Be there tomorrow, second time this week!
 

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