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Cannons roar, rifles crack, and bayoneted soldiers scream. It was March 6, 1836, and the Alamo was about to fall under the viscous assault of Mexican president Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. He had declared that he would take no quarter: every soldier in the Alamo was condemned to die. Among those doomed to meet their end was an American who was already quite famous: David Crockett. When he was killed at the Alamo, it caused shock waves to reverberate across the entire North American continent. However, in the chaos of Santa Anna’s final assault on the fort, record of exactly what happened to him became completely confused, and ever since then, legend and myth have confused the story even more. How Crockett died has become one of history’s great enigmas.1 But why was Crockett at the Alamo to begin with?

David Crockett had a tremendously eventful life. The early years of his life were spent in the backwoods of eastern Tennessee, where he became well known for his extraordinary ability at hunting and his masterful storytelling. From 1813 to 1815 he served as a scout in frontier militia units during the Creek War. Beginning in 1817, Crockett became involved in local politics, starting out as justice of the peace for Lawrence County, Tennessee. In 1818, he was elected to the positions of lieutenant colonel of his local militia regiment and town commissioner of Lawrenceburg. He resigned those positions in 1821 to campaign for a seat in the state legislature, which he won by a landslide. David Crockett was elected to the Tennessee legislature again in 1823. Then, in 1825, he ran for Congress. He was defeated by the incumbent, Adam Alexander. However, when he ran again in 1827, he won easily. He was reelected in 1829, but experienced ever increasing friction between himself and President Andrew Jackson. As a result, he was defeated in the election of 1831. He regained his seat by a narrow margin in 1833, but lost for good in 1835. With wounded pride and empty purse, he made a final speech to his constituents: ” I told [my constituents], moreover, of my services, pretty straight up and down…and I also told them of the manner in which I had been knocked down and dragged out, and that I did not consider it a fair fight anyhow they could fix it. I put the ingredients in the cup pretty strong I tell you, and I concluded my speech by telling them that I was done with politics for the present, and that they might all go to hell, and I would go to Texas.”2

He arrived in San Antonio in early February, 1836, greatly boosting the morale of the Texian soldiers stationed there under the command of Colonel William Travis. On February 23, a lookout in the bell tower of San Fernando Church reported that columns of Mexican troops were in sight. Travis ordered his men to fall back to the fort with whatever provisions they could carry.3

A map of the layout of the Alamo mission just before the Battle of the Alamo | 1938 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

The situation for those in the Alamo was dismal, to say the least. First of all, the Alamo had never been built to be a fortress. It completely lacked any strong points from which defenders could stave off attack. Furthermore, it was not self-sustaining. That is, there was no way that it could outlast besiegers. Also, there were only about 180 defenders to the thousands of Mexican attackers commanded by Santa Anna.4

After besieging the Alamo for twelve days, Santa Anna ordered a final assault. The battle of the Alamo was over in less than an hour. Over the course of that hour, every Texian soldier defending the Alamo was killed, including David Crockett. Due to his immense popularity, stories immediately began to spread about exactly what had happened to him. Ever since then, we have been trying to unravel the mystery.5

For nearly the past six decades, a war of words has been waged among Alamo historians as they try to figure out exactly how David Crockett died. Over the course of time, innumerable scholars have weighed in on the debate. Eventually, however, two major theories have emerged. One theory says that Crockett was killed in a heroic last stand. The other theory holds that he surrendered to Mexican soldiers when he was finally overwhelmed. According to this theory, soldiers then took him before Santa Anna who coldly ordered his immediate execution. Two historians had a particularly important impact on this debate, with each taking one of those two sides to the argument. The first, Bill Groneman, came down firmly on the side of the “died fighting” theory.6 The other, James Crisp, responded by strongly supporting the “execution” argument. Each one has voluminous evidence to back up their conclusions. In addition, each side has many other historians who support it. For example, Michael Lind7 and H. W. Brands8 lean towards the “died fighting” hypothesis while Stephen Hardin9 and Thomas Connelly10 support the “execution” theory. Of all the ideas proposed about Crockett’s death, however, the most plausible scenario is that he, one way or another, died in combat and was never captured and executed by Mexican soldiers.11

A lithograph of Mexican President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna | 1852 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

The main issue at hand is determining which sources that claim to tell the true story of David Crockett’s death are authentic and correct, if any of them actually are. Specifically, there are twelve important accounts of his death that can be analyzed. Some of them back up the “execution” side of the story, and others support the “died fighting” claim. However, historians strongly differ on the reliability of these accounts and how each account should be interpreted. That being said, most of the debate among historians is centered around one account in particular: the diary of Lieutenant Jose Enrique de la Peña.12

Lieutenant Jose de la Peña was the aide to Colonel Francisco Duque, commander of the Toluca Battalion. They arrived in San Antonio on the twelfth day of the siege to reinforce Santa Anna. After their arrival, Santa Anna held a council of war and decided to take the Alamo by assault. Colonel Duque had been so impressed by de la Peña during the long march from Mexico that, when Santa Anna gave out the attack assignments, he requested that de la Peña accompany him. De la Peña participated actively in the battle, mostly delivering critical messages between the front lines and the rear guard. He was fortunate enough to survive the battle basically completely unharmed, and did not see any more action during Sana Anna’s Texas campaign.13

He eventually published a diary of his experiences in the Texas campaign. In the diary, there is a passage concerning the death of David Crockett:

As the speech of Santa Anna very nearly proceeded an unpleasant event which, happening when the heat of the strife had already passed, was seen as contemptible murder and greatly contributed to the coldness noted. Some seven men had survived the general massacre and guided by general Castrillon, who sponsored them, were presented to Santa Anna. Among them was one of great stature, well formed and of regular features, in whose countenance there was imprinted the sentiment of adversity, but in which was noted certain resignation and nobility that commended him. He was the naturalist David Crocket [sic], very well known in North America for his strange adventures, who had come to travel over the country and had been in Bexar in the moments of surprise had locked himself up in the Alamo, fearful that this quality as a foreigner would not be respected. Santa Anna answered the intervention of Castrillon with a gesture of indignation and immediately directing the sappers, who were the troops most near to him, order them to shoot them. The chiefs and officers were irritated by this behavior and did not second the voice, hoping that the first moment of fury had passed, these men would be saved; but various officers who were around the President who perhaps had not been there in the moment of danger, were made notable by an infamous act; exceeding the soldiers in cruelty, they placed themselves before them, in order to flatter their chief, and sword in hand, they threw themselves upon these unfortunate defenseless ones, in the same way that a tiger throws itself upon its prey. They tormented them before they were made to die, and those unfortunate ones died moaning, but without humiliating themselves to their executioners. It is said that general Ramirez y Sesma had been one of them: I do not testify to this, because although I was present, I set apart this sight horrified in order not to see such a barbarous scene. Remember, companions that fierce moment, that horrified us all equally, and which shook our souls, which a short while ago had thirsted for vengeance. Do not our hearts beat quickly, filled with indignation against those who so vilely bloodied their swords. As for me, I must confess I shake only at the memory and the sound is always in my ears the pitiful and penetrating accent of the victims.14

This is by far the most important and controversial account of David Crockett’s death. While there are many other accounts, this is the one by which all the others stand or fall. Essentially, if the de la Peña diary is legitimate, then Crockett was most likely executed, and if it is not, Crockett probably died fighting.15

This all-important diary has come to us through somewhat uncertain pathways. The extensive manuscripts for the diary were acquired in the mid-1900s from unknown sources by J. Sanchez Garza, a dealer in antiquities in Mexico City. He edited them and then privately published them from his house in 1955 as La Rebelion de Texas: Manuscrito Inedito de 1836 por un Oficial de Santa Anna. However, the impact of his published version of the diary was minimal. Then, in 1975, Carmen Perry, former director of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library at the Alamo, translated the manuscripts into English. After the translation, the manuscript finally became famous and in many ways sparked the debate that is still going on today.16

This brings us back to the two important historians mentioned earlier, James Crisp and Bill Groneman. After the de la Peña diary was translated and published in English by Carmen Perry, historians accepted it as reliable without any real questioning, and used it to justify the “execution” theory of Crockett’s death. However, Bill Groneman wrote a book in 1999, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of David Crockett, that strongly challenged the accuracy of the diary. In that book, Groneman presented the theory that the diary was actually a forgery and that David Crockett most likely died fighting instead of being executed. In the process of reviewing the book for the Southwestern Historical Quarterly, James Crisp became extremely skeptical of Groneman’s views and wrote a long journal article attacking the book and reasserting the “execution” theory. This started a massive war of words between the two historians that eventually spread to include many others. The question is, who is right?17

Dawn at the Alamo by Henry Arthur McArdle (Crockett is supposedly depicted in the lower-right corner clubbing enemy soldiers with what is left of his rifle) | 1905 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

I believe that the correct answer is actually a middle ground between the two ideas. It is likely that the de la Peña diary is legitimate and not a forgery. However, the idea that David Crockett was captured and executed by Santa Anna is highly implausible.

Groneman claimed that the de la Peña diary was a forgery done by one John Laflin, a famous forger of the mid-twentieth century. I believe that he is wrong. Groneman’s strongest argument for the falsity of the diary involved a serious anachronism. According to Groneman, the Peña account was “purported to be a ‘diary’ written in 1836.”18 However, Groneman notes, the diary contains material that could not have been written until at least 1838. Groneman uses this fact to conclude that the diary must be a fraud.19

At first glance, Groneman appears correct. In a prologue to the diary consisting of a letter de la Peña wrote to a colleague on September 15, 1836, de la Peña writes, “…I was convinced that in order to be impartial, I had to take some time to verify those acts to which I was not an eyewitness and to obtain more accurate information about others, important objectives which I achieved by collecting the daybooks from the various sections that constituted the army.” De la Peña appears to be saying that he spent two or three months collecting materials to complete his final rendering of the diary. Furthermore, on the last page of the diary, he writes, “I have concluded this narrative during the most pressing moments, a few hours before resuming the march….” This conclusion appears to be signed and dated, like the prologue, September 15, 1836.20

James Crisp, upon closer investigation, found problems with these passages. First, in the prologue passage, there is a translation error. What Perry translated into “important objectives which I achieved” would be more accurately written as “important goals which I planned.” In other words, de la Peña is not writing about something he has already achieved, but something he in currently working on. So, in September, 1836, he was still working on his diary.21

The second passage, from the last page of the diary, is also problematic. It is important to understand that the de la Peña diary, in the words of Crisp, is “neither a single document nor a simple one.” What Crisp found when he delved into the actual manuscripts is that the original narrative does not contain a conclusion, date, or signature on that last page. What could have happened? When J. Sanchez Garza and Carmen Perry published their “clean” versions of the diary, they both included this extra material. Of course, they did not draw it out of thin air. It came from a small booklet that de la Peña used to keep memos to himself during his time in prison in Mexico City, because of his participation in a Federalist rebellion against the Centralist government in 1838. In that booklet can be found the exact conclusion included by Garza and Perry, minus the date and signature, which according to Crisp, was added “for good measure” by Garza and Perry.22

There is a third significant piece of evidence that supports de la Peña’s diary as authentic, which was overlooked by Groneman. It is a pamphlet written in the form of a letter that bears the date of November 6, 1839. This pamphlet was basically de la Peña trying to justify his actions and state that he was being unjustly held in prison. In that pamphlet is found the following passage, as translated by James Crisp:23

I know well that it is a hard thing in our country to tell the truth to men who have influence and power to do evil, but in writing about the Texas campaign, my principal object was to vindicate the honor, tarnished in it, of the nation and the army, because ignominy ought to weigh solely upon those who merit it…. In good time I will expose the causes which have prevented me from publishing my diary and the observations which I have almost completed, but I will do it in spite of my conviction that new sorrows are going to rain down upon me, [I will do it] because the noble goal which I have set for myself will give me the courage necessary to face all difficulties, and no consideration, however strong and personal it may be to me will cause me to retreat.24

Here, in late 1839, we see that de la Peña says he is still working on his diary. So, the anachronism has vanished. Nowhere does the original manuscript actually say that the diary was published in 1836. What is more, de la Peña writes in 1839 that he is still working on it. So, Groneman’s strongest argument for the falsity of the diary is most likely invalid.25

Now, while I believe that the de la Peña diary is legitimate, I do not believe that Crockett was actually captured and executed. How can that be? There are several reasons.

Portrait of David Crockett painted about two years before the Battle of the Alamo | 1834 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

First of all, as we have seen, de la Peña spent several years working on his diary. During that time, the idea that Crockett may have been executed had already spread far and wide. De la Peña could have easily picked up that story and included it in his diary in the name of “obtain[ing] more accurate information.” There may have been actual executions at the Alamo, but de la Peña most likely added that David Crockett was one of the executed later. This is especially likely given that de la Peña would almost certainly not have been able to identify Crockett at the Alamo.26

Second, a close inspection of the other six major accounts of Crockett’s “execution” reveal that they are not necessarily accurate, either. Bill Groneman’s analysis of each of them is quite straightforward. Five of those accounts are unreliable because there is no document for any of them that links the eyewitness directly to their respective story. Furthermore, it is unknown for each of those accounts how much “reshaping” each of the accounts went through before becoming what we have today.27 The sixth account is the diary of Colonel Jose Juan Sanchez-Navarro. The pertinent passage in his diary reads as follows:

[At the Alamo] I saw actions that I envied, of heroic valor. Some cruelties horrified me, among others the death of an old man they called “Cocran” and of a boy approximately fourteen years. The women and children were spared.28

Everyone who has ever used this as a source agrees that “Cocran” is meant to be Crockett. However, this account, in the words of Bill Groneman, “has the distinction of being used as part of the evidence proving Crockett’s execution without…actually describing any executions.” As a result, I am not happy with this account as evidence for Crockett’s execution.29

My third reason for believing that Crockett died fighting is that there are several accounts that describe him dying that way. That being said, those accounts are, like the execution accounts, of somewhat questionable reliability. Nevertheless, they do exist.30

Finally, given that there were about 180 defenders in the Alamo and only 5-7 were executed (if any were executed at all), from a simple statistical standpoint it is unlikely that David Crockett was executed.31

While there are many who believe that the de la Peña diary is genuine and that Crockett was executed, I believe that they are wrong. Although I do not believe the theories that some have put forward to the effect that the diary is a forgery, I do believe that the diary is wrong about Crockett’s death. I believe that the most likely scenario was that David Crockett died fighting in the Alamo and was not captured and executed.

However, we will never be completely certain about how Crockett died. There is simply not enough evidence to conclusively prove one story or the other. Historians agree that we will most likely never determine exactly what happened.32 In fact, the confusion and mystique that surround his death only increase his status as a cultural icon. Regardless of how he died, however, one thing is certain: David Crockett’s legend will live on.

  1. Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, 2008, s.v. “Battle of the Alamo,” by David Weber.
  2. John Abbott, David Crockett: His Life and Adventures (New York: Dodd & Mead, 1875), 295; Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2004, s.v. “David Crockett”; Randolph Campbell, Gone to Texas: A History of the Lone Star State (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 141.
  3. Stephen Hardin, Texian Iliad: A Military History of the Texas Revolution (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1994), 119,121.
  4. Stephen Hardin, Texian Iliad: A Military History of the Texas Revolution (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1994), 128; Randolph Campbell, Gone to Texas: A History of the Lone Star State (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 140,144.
  5. Stephen Hardin, Texian Iliad: A Military History of the Texas Revolution (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1994), 136; James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 64.
  6. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 177.
  7. Michael Lind, “The Death of David Crockett,” Wilson Quarterly 22, no. 1 (1998): 56-57.
  8. H. W. Brands, Lone Star Nation: How a Ragged Army of Volunteers Won the Battle for Texas Independence—and Changed America (New York: Doubleday, 2004), 377.
  9. Stephen Hardin, Texian Iliad: A Military History of the Texas Revolution (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1994), 148.
  10. Thomas Connelly, “Did David Crockett Surrender at the Alamo? A Contemporary Letter,” The Journal of Southern History 26, no. 3 (1960): 369-370.
  11. Roger Griffin, “Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution,” History: Reviews of New Books 33, no. 4 (2005): 142.
  12. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 41,75,78.
  13. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 114-120.
  14. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 73-74.
  15. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 75.
  16. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 70-72.
  17. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 66,110-111; Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 114.
  18. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 152.
  19. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 66,75.
  20. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 78.
  21. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 90.
  22. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 99-101.
  23. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 96-97.
  24. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 97.
  25. James Crisp, Sleuthing the Alamo: Davy Crockett’s Last Stand and Other Mysteries of the Texas Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 97.
  26. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 26;  H. W. Brands, Lone Star Nation: How a Ragged Army of Volunteers Won the Battle for Texas Independence—and Changed America (New York: Doubleday, 2004), 377.
  27. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 42.
  28. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 70.
  29. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 70.
  30. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 77-79.
  31. Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 177.
  32. William Davis, Three Roads to the Alamo: The Lives and Fortunes of David Crockett, James Bowie, and William Barret Travis (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1998), 738; Bill Groneman, Death of a Legend: The Myth and Mystery Surrounding the Death of Davy Crockett (Lanham, Maryland: Republic of Texas Press, 1999), 183; H. W. Brands, Lone Star Nation: How a Ragged Army of Volunteers Won the Battle for Texas Independence—and Changed America (New York: Doubleday, 2004), 377.

Kenneth Gilley

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Recent Comments

74 comments

  • Soleil Armijo

    My favorite Texas history story is that of the Alamo, and my favorite historical figures is Davy Crockett for his “you all may go to hell, but I will go to Texas’ quote. I never knew much about his background prior to being a Texas legend, therefore it was interesting to know that he was a politician in Tennessee before anything, his death is surprising because I have only heard accounts that explicitly say he died during battle heroically. It was interested to find that there was debates regarding his death.

  • Roger Borroel

    First of all, the author casts doubt on the fact that Crockett was executed, yet, with certainty, and without any facts or evidences, he’s sure that Davy died fighting…ok. And then he states that, De la Pena was ‘unharmed’ after the Alamo death struggle, and did not see any more action in the Texas campaign – WRONG on both accounts! Colonel Agustin Amat, De la Pena’s commander, stated in his battle report, that de la Pena was, ‘slightly wounded.’ De la Pena wouid go on with the Mexican forces until they reached Old Fort, about 40 miles west of San Jacinto – De la Pena was in action until he arrived at Matamoros on June 18, 1836.

  • Janie Cheverie

    This was such a well-written article. I liked the historical background that was given and that it supported the article throughout. before reading this article I didn’t know about David Crockett, but this article was very informative about what had happened. The way this article started kept me intrigued to read more making it a very engaging article. This article has left me with lots of questions and wanting to understand the situation more.

  • Amanda Gutierrez

    David Crocket is one of my favorite historical figures, so I was immersed in your story from start to finish. I remember finding him to be an interesting person while learning Texas history, and thought you did a good job shining a light on him. Although I was hoping for an exact answer by the end of the article, I really liked being left with questions as it kept me curious. Overall, this was a very well-written and intriguing article! Nice job!

  • Carlos Serna

    I did not know that the death of David Crockett was a mystery. I thought that he was simply killed in the Alamo by Mexican forces. It is new for me all these theories of his death. But I still believed that he was killed like the other soldiers in the Alamo by Mexican forces because I don’t even think that the Mexicans had the need to capture him.

  • Maya Simon

    While Crockett was indeed a skilled woodsman, his fame as a Herculean, rebellious, sharpshooting, tale-spinning and larger-than-life woodsman was at least partially a product of his efforts to package himself and win votes during his political campaigns. I really like this article you did a great job on telling the story of the Battle of the Alamo. I have so many questions about Mr. Crockett thanks to reading this article. Great job!

  • Reba Reyes

    I really enjoyed reading this article, I have always been so interested in David Crockett. The way this article was laid out kept me hooked since the beginning. I liked how this article included his background and the stuff he had gone through. I also find it very interesting how there are so many different conspiracies on how he died. It really makes you think about it.

  • Samson Pullattu

    Davy Crockett fought in at the Alamo in exchange for land if I remember correctly, so I do not think his position at the battle was of the greatest importance. His time as an authority figure had passed by then and in a completely different state as well. I find it hard to believe that General Santa Anna or anyone in his army felt that they needed to capture him. Gilley even states that the chances of him being captured was low. I believe he died fighting as well.

  • Margaret Cavazos

    The author’s presentation of evidence from both theories of how Davy Crockett died is very well-laid out. I was surprised to see there was so much evidence on both sides, I always thought there were just a bunch of theories but now I see there is evidence and possible eyewitness testimonies. I liked the inclusion of the perspective of the Mexican soldiers, and it was interesting to see that they also were bothered by the cold-hearted executions. Crockett’s death may always be a mystery, but this article did an amazing job explaining several credible theories.

  • Lloyd Drum

    Here’s my take. The Mexicans who fought at the Alamo did not know Crockett. They may well have not known he was even there until afterwards. Any man in buckskin might in retrospect have been Crockett to them because it makes a great story. Is there any evidence that any Mexican knew what Crockett looked like before the battle of the Alamo. Did Pena say that the person he says is Crockett said his name? How did Pena know it was Crockett?
    Mrs. Dickinson who was there and knew what Crockett looked like said she saw him dead. As far as I know she is the only witness who actually knew Crockett. Unless her testimony was made up I would believe what she said. Otherwise, we are just never going to know for sure.
    R.I. P. Davey.

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