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by Robert L. Durham
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It was early March 1836; a sad
little procession moved slowly down a south Texas road. A young mother
rode a pony, holding her fifteen months old baby daughter, and a black
man walked beside her, acting as escort. Just a few days earlier, this
trio of weary travelers had witnessed the fall of the mission fortress,
the Alamo. There, the Mexican forces of General Antonio Lopez de Santa
Anna made the woman, Susannah Arabella Dickinson, a widow.
Suddenly, a man arose out of the tall prairie grass beside the road,
frightening Mrs. Dickinson. She relaxed when she recognized the familiar features
of Joe, the young black servant of Lieutenant Colonel William Barret Travis,
the commander of the Texian garrison of the Alamo.1
Thus, two African Americans, both deeply involved with the drama of the Alamo
siege and final assault, met on the road leading from the Alamo to Gonzales.
Ben, the black man escorting Susannah and her daughter, had
watched the final moments of the Alamo battle from a house in San Antonio.
He was in the town working as a cook for Gen. Santa Anna and Colonel Juan
Nepomuceno Almonte. A free person, who worked as a steward on several ships
sailing out of the east coast of the U.S., Ben met Colonel Almonte in New
York. Impressed with Ben, Col. Almonte hired him as a cook. Almonte returned
to Mexico and Ben accompanied him to Vera Cruz. When Santa Anna started
his 1836 campaign to suppress the Texas Revolution, he assigned Col. Almonte
to his staff. Almonte took Ben along.
On the evening of March 5, General Santa Anna ordered Ben to keep
coffee and other refreshments ready all night. At 11 or 12 o'clock, Santa Anna
and Almonte left, returning at 2 or 3 in the morning with other staff officers.
At 4 am, they left again; shortly afterwards, Ben heard the sounds of cannon
and musket fire. Looking from the window of the house, the flashes from the
guns illuminated the walls of the Alamo, enabling him to see the Mexican assaulting
columns. The firing ended before daylight; a little later, Santa Anna and his
staff returned. Ben remembered a staff member "remarking that the victory had
cost more than it was worth and that many such would ruin them."2
Ben had once seen David Crockett in Washington, DC. Therefore, at
daylight, the Mexicans took him to the fort to identify Crockett's body.3A
few days after the battle, Santa Anna ordered Ben to escort Susannah Dickinson
and her daughter to the Texian lines. After Ben fulfilled his mission, General
Sam Houston hired him to serve as his cook. After the battle of San Jacinto,
Ben fades from historical record.
Joe saw the assault on the Alamo from the much closer viewpoint of
a participant. Joe had arrived at the Alamo in very different circumstances
from Ben; he arrived as a slave. Twenty-three years old at the time of the battle,
his master, a Mr. Mansfield, took him to Texas before 1833. On 13 February 1834,
W. B. Travis purchased Joe for a body servant. A year later, Travis needed money
and was considering selling him. However, they were still together in early
February 1836, when Joe rode into San Antonio with Travis and the cavalry company
of Captain John Hubbard Forsyth.4
When the Mexican soldados attacked the Alamo in the early morning
hours of March 6, 1836, Joe was with Travis in the headquarters of the
fortress. When the alarm was given, they both hurried from their beds.
Grabbing his rifle, Joe followed his master as he raced to the northwest
gun platform. After shouting encouragement to his troops, Travis fired
his shotgun into the massed ranks of the Mexican troops attempting to climb
the walls. Almost immediately, he was struck in the forehead by an enemy
musket ball and fell, one of the first defenders to die. Joe then took
shelter in one of the rooms along the west wall.
Joe remained alone in his refuge, watching through a loophole,
from where he saw the Texian defensive position along the north wall collapse.
He fired several times at the Mexican troops flooding the plaza of the
Alamo. After the battle, he heard an officer of the Mexican army asking,
in English, if there were any Negroes present. Joe left his shelter, saying,
"Yes, here's one." Two soldiers immediately attacked him, one shooting
him in the side and the other striking him in the other side with a bayonet.
Luckily, the bullet wound was slight and the bayonet thrust just scratched
him. The Mexican officer was able to stop his soldados before they seriously
injured Joe.
After the battle, General Santa Anna questioned Joe and asked him
to identify the bodies of Travis, Crockett, and James Bowie. Later, in an effort
to impress him with the size of the Mexican Army, Santa Anna invited Joe to
witness a grand review.5
After being kept prisoner in San Antonio for several days, Joe escaped, meeting
Ben and the Dickinsons on the road later.
After the Revolution, Joe was turned over to John Rice Jones
as part of the settlement on Travis' estate. On 21 April 1837, Joe escaped,
along with a Mexican worker, taking two horses with them. Jones posted
an advertisement that ran in the Telegraph and Texas Register for
over three months. He offered $50.00 for the return of the two men and
horses. The public notice described Joe as being "about twenty-five years
of age, five feet ten or eleven inches high, very black and good countenance:
had on when he left... a dark mixed satinet round jacket and new-white
cotton pantaloons."
Although Joe was with Travis for only two years, later circumstances
indicate that they may have known each other earlier in Alabama, and their relationship
may have been much deeper than one would expect between a master and his slave.
After escaping from Jones, Joe did not make his way north, or south into Mexico,
to gain his freedom as one would expect. Instead, there are stories that he
made his way to Conecuh County, Alabama, the home of the Travis family. There,
he delivered the first news they received of the Alamo and the death of Travis.
It is hard to imagine the dangers an escaped slave must have faced, traveling
through four southern states and crossing the Mississippi River en route. After
fulfilling his duty to Travis, as he saw it, Joe remained in Alabama until his
death.6
Joe and Ben were not the first African Americans involved in the struggle
for the Alamo. In December of 1835, the Texian Army besieged the Mexican garrison
soldiers of General Martin Perfecto de Cos in Bexar and the Alamo. One of their
chief scouts was a free Black man, Hendrick Arnold. Arnold was the son-in-law
of the famous Deaf Smith, being married to the daughter of Smith's wife by her
first marriage.7
Another Black Texian present in December was a free man named Greenbury
B. Logan. Logan was a private in Captain John York's Company of Volunteers.
He was one of the brave Texians who accepted the challenge to "follow old Ben
Milam into San Antonio," and was a participant in the vicious street fighting
from the 5th to the 10th." 8The
Texians divided the attacking force into two divisions, with York's company
being one of the six companies under the direct command of Colonel Benjamin
Rush Milam.9 Private
Logan was severely wounded during the battle and is on the casualty report prepared
on the 17th by Samuel Stivers and Dr. Amos Pollard.10
Logan must have left Bexar some time before mid-January because he does not
appear on the muster roll which Lieutenant Colonel James C. Neill prepared at
that time. After the revolution, Logan was issued a Donation Certificate for
640 acres of land for having taken part in the battle. He was still living in
1881.11
Ironically, while G. B. Logan was still recovering from the
effects of the wound he received in the cause of Texas liberty, Don Carlos
Barret, of the committee on state and judiciary at the Council Hall in
San Felipe, submitted a formal proposal barring free blacks from emigrating
to Texas. His contention was that "the residence of such free Negroes and
mulattos among us, would prove an evil difficult to be remedied should
it once be tolerated... The infusion of dissatisfaction and disobedience
into the brain of the honest and contented slave, by vagabond free Negroes
who, denied the society of whites, from necessity or choice, associate
with persons of their own color."
For any free Negro already residing in Texas, Barret wanted it made
"lawful for any citizen of Texas to apprehend said Negro or mulatto and take
him or her before the judge or alcalde of the municipality in which he or she
may be apprehended." The state would sell the "apprehended" person at public
auction. The proceeds of the sale would be split, one third going to the person
who seized the free black and the remainder going to the state treasury.12
There is a possibility that some of the Mexican soldados fighting
against the Texians could have been African Americans. Although the authorities
tolerated slavery in their Texas province, it was outlawed in the rest of Mexico,
and some slaves escaped there. It is documented that there were Negroes in some
of the Mexican battalions, including at least one first sergeant of a company
in the Morelos Battalion.13
There is no way to know if any of the Black Mexican soldados were escaped slaves
from Texas, but it is worthy of consideration.
In addition to the above well-documented African Americans in the
struggle for the Alamo, other, more shadowy figures swirl through the historical
record. In one of Joe's accounts of the battle, he said that there were several
other Negroes in the fort and, after the fight, he saw the body of a black woman
lying between two cannons.14
Many rosters of the Alamo dead list a John, with no last name. It
is not certain who this man was, but he may have been the slave, a store clerk,
of Captain Francis L. DeSauque. DeSauque was a member of the Alamo garrison
before to the start of the siege. On 22 February, Travis sent him to deliver
dispatches and obtain supplies, leaving John behind to die a hero's death in
the Alamo.15
Some Alamo historians list a black servant of Colonel James Bowie,
a slave or freedman who is said to have survived the battle. His name is variously
given as Sam, Ham, or Ben, but there are no surviving interviews with him.16
Most modern researchers think that Sam did not exist.17
According to a document filed by the father of Alamo defender William
R. Carey, Carey's body servant was present and died at the Alamo. There were
other slave holders in the Alamo garrison and it is possible that any of them
could have had servants who were present during the siege and battle.18
Finally, there is an account of a black woman, a former slave
named Bettie, who said she was a cook for Jim Bowie. Her story is usually
dismissed as a fabrication, since it sounds like a comic burlesque, but
early Texas historian John Salmon Ford believed it. Bettie said that she
and a black man, Charlie, were in the kitchen of the Alamo during the final
battle. The Alamo kitchen was in a small room attached to the low barracks,
which is where Jim Bowie's body was found after the battle, so this lends
some credence to her tale.
Near the close of the battle, a group of Mexican soldados broke
into the kitchen. Charlie tried to hide but was discovered and dragged
out, one of the soldados trying to stab him with his bayonet. Charlie grabbed
their officer, a small man, and, holding his body in front of him, backed
into a corner. The soldado continued to try to bayonet Charlie, with Charlie
keeping the unfortunate and helpless officer between them. This macabre
dance lasted for several minutes until the officer called for a truce.
Charlie freed his human shield who, in turn, promised to safeguard Charlie's
life.
What eventually happened to Charlie is unknown, but Bettie remained
with the Mexican Army after the battle. After their defeat at the Battle of
San Jacinto, she accompanied them during their retreat back to Mexico. William
Neale, a Texan living near the mouth of the Rio Grande at that time, met her
and she related the above story. Neale hired her and she stayed with him for
a year or two. One day, Texan war ships appeared and, afraid that they might
capture her and take her back into slavery, she fled south to Monterey, where
she disappeared from history.19
Only bare fragments of information are known about the African
Americans involved in the Texas Revolution and the battle of the Alamo.
Since they lived on the fringes of white society, white chroniclers of
the time largely ignored them. All we have are a few short, superficial
accounts, little more than anecdotes, about black men and women who lacked
even last names. Throughout the entire siege, Joe stood at the right hand
of the commander of the Alamo garrison. Ben was present at many staff meetings,
of the highest level, presided over by the leader of the Mexican Army.
Sadly, nobody at the time considered asking an African American for in-depth
details of what occurred during the siege and battle. Today, Texas history
is poorer because of those prevailing attitudes of the time.