Crisp, James E. pulled Alamo: the last position of David Crockett and other mysteries of the Texas Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. Alamo's Book Review: The final position of David Crockett and the other mysteries of the Texas Revolution concern racial discrimination rather than history itself. The author raised some good points and provided historical documents to support his view like Jose`Enrique de la Pena's diary. But this book has many opinions that are confused with facts. Crisp did not outlines the battle of Alamo from both sides, but saw his view from the position of Mexico and the position of a German soldier. Show more
So a clear explanation of the way David Crocket's depiction misunderstood was that the battle was an Anglo-Saxon against Mexicans. Mexican Crisp also said that there are no survivors. There is no survivor of an adult white male (it is doubtful that a slave named Joe is a slave of Travis or a slave of the Santa Ana army). The explanation of women and children surviving in Alamo has never been mentioned in the Crisp book. Most of the history is from Mexico, German Herman Ehrenberg. This itself makes the reliability of this work suspicious. When Crisp did not try to promote racial discrimination in this book, he kept his view on another historian who wrote a book to preserve his position in Davie Crockett and Alamo . Another historian is Bill · groomsman who wrote the legendary death: Myth and death of the death of David Crockett. In order to certify this book in history, it is necessary to take into account the records of all Alamo documents, including survivor's records. The various documents Crisp used to defend his view had to speculate on the translation from Spanish or German to English. Crisp did a lot of research to support his view, but it was only a language difference, nothing.
"There are few historians finding such mysterious mysteries, stubbornly solving these problems, or talking about his pursuit in such a clear and elegant way. Alamo's Hamming is the best David J. Weber, author of the other award - winning Southwest books who are the author of the Mexican border, says, "Wisdom of his quest Bringing Sam Houston's death, racial discrimination, and the Texas Revolution, Dorpenia Diary, and David Crocket, which led us through an interesting and fascinating historical adventure that will bring about this complex history historical story in Texas In the widespread debate about change, Crisp knew that we had little knowledge of these familiar events and his personality and that his new To give the challenging impact to have discovered was he has shown to us. "State Historical Society Ron Tyler
Slamming · Alamo: The last position of David Crockett and other mysteries of the Texas Revolution (a new story in American history)
Crisp, James E. pulled Alamo: the last position of David Crockett and other mysteries of the Texas Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. Alamo's Book Review: The final position of David Crockett and the other mysteries of the Texas Revolution concern racial discrimination rather than history itself. The author raised some good points and provided historical documents to support his view like Jose`Enrique de la Pena's diary. But this book has many opinions that are confused with facts. Crisp did not outlines the battle of Alamo from both sides, but saw his view from the position of Mexico and the position of a German soldier. Show more