कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
The Alamo Under Siege
True West
|March 2019
Gary Foreman has fought a lonely battle over the decades—and may be about to win the war.
For many baby boomers, the lasting image of the Alamo comes from the ’50s. The 1950s. Fess Parker is the title character in Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier. And the last view we have of him—Davy is on the roof of the church, out of bullets, swinging his rifle “Old Betsy” as a club, bravely (and futilely) holding off the Mexican hordes.
Ignore the fact that Davy didn’t die on the roof; there was no roof on the church (and no hump on the façade, either). Davy’s last stand was the symbol of heroism and the fight for freedom. And that church was the Alamo.
Gary Foreman was one of the boomers who saw that show. Like so many, he was enthralled by the story and the place. Little did he know, at the time, that the Alamo would take a central point in his life—that, in a figurative sense, he’d be making his own stand against ignorance and political and bureaucratical quagmires.
It really kicked in nearly 27 years after the Disney program.
A Taxicab Epiphany
“There was one precise moment in time—April 3, 1982—I was photographing the Alamo Church while standing in the street directly in front (it was open to traffic then) and I was almost plowed over by a taxi, forcing me to jump to the curb. When I got up to comprehend what happened, a voice out of nowhere told me, ‘YOU need to do this.’ Hearing that ‘voice’ changed the direction of my life.”
And the direction of the Alamo.
Foreman began serious study of the events and the place, and discovered that the historic mission was more than just the surviving church and the long barracks. The modern Alamo is just one-third of the compound from 1836.
यह कहानी True West के March 2019 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
True West से और कहानियाँ
True West
Unlike Father, Unlike Son
Ed Scarborough didn't follow in the footsteps of his famous dad.
2 mins
November - December 2025
True West
BEST DOC EVER
A FITTING TRIBUTE TO VAL KILMER
7 mins
November - December 2025
True West
Rock Around the Block with Doc
What goes around, comes around.
1 min
November - December 2025
True West
Wickenburg Booms Again
The once mining boom town then dude ranch capital, is now a team-roping capital and arts center.
3 mins
November - December 2025
True West
WYATT IN A MOVIE?
MAYBE OR MAYBE NOT
2 mins
November - December 2025
True West
Josephine “Sadie” Earp: Secrets & Lies Revealed
When Josephine “Sadie” Earp (nee Marcus) decided it was time to tell the story of her life in 1937, she had a big problem. Her early life and that of her family were far from ideal, and the way she dealt with such potential embarrassments was to simply wipe them from her story, or invent a more acceptable fictional story to compensate.
11 mins
November - December 2025
True West
Young Chefs of the West
They came to the frontier from around the world and invented dishes still served today.
2 mins
November - December 2025
True West
Cavalcade of Ask the Marshall
Lessons I have learned during more than a quarter century of \"Ask the Marshall\"
3 mins
November - December 2025
True West
There's No Business Like Show Business
Firearms from the stage, screen and expositions are a hit at auction.
2 mins
November - December 2025
True West
A War of Freedom, A War Never Won
Paul Hedren's new biography of Sitting Bull, plus three new biographies on the Earps and Doc Holliday, Jim Bridger, and the legendary boomtown of Deadwood
7 mins
November - December 2025
Translate
Change font size

