quote:
Hopefully the deterioration is not man-made.
British rockers-- either defiling the Alamo area or preserving it; no in-betweens.
quote:
Hopefully the deterioration is not man-made.
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Members of the San Jacinto Battleground Conservancy, descendants of participants in the battle of The Alamo and others participate in a dedication ceremony for a historic cannon at The Alamo shrine on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2015. The San Jacinto Battleground Conservancy hosted a dedication for the Alamo Defenders' cannon, which was bought by a family in an auction and donated in 2008 to the conservancy, which restored it and is loaning it to the Alamo. It hasn't concretely been proven, but experts believe the cannon was one of the 21 used to defend the Alamo during the historic battle of 1836. It has the exact same damage as other Alamo cannons that have been definitively linked to the battle. A press release states, "Both of the cannon's trunnions have been broken off and the fire hole is not spiked." The conservancy's Dr. Gregg Dimmick discussed the history of the cannon.
When Alamo researcher Rick Range called author and historian Gregg Dimmick claiming to have found a cannon that had been fired in the famed last stand against Mexico, Dimmick was skeptical.
"I'm a doubter," Dimmick told a crowd Saturday afternoon in front of the Alamo. "I've been shown lots of Jim Bowie's knives."
Since then, Range and Dimmick have not been able to prove definitively that the cannon was one of 21 used in the 1836 battle, but they have a lot of evidence. The cannon was dedicated Saturday in memory of John Alexander McRae, who bought it at an auction and did not live to see it returned to the Alamo, as he had wished.
Weighing close to 400 pounds, the cannon carries the Spanish royal crest and has the same damage pattern as other cannons used in the battle. It would be the ninth Alamo cannon with known whereabouts.
Local
According to a 1986 article in the Dallas Morning News, the cannon was sent from San Antonio in the 1880s to the Howard B. French family of Philadelphia as payment for a debt. A descendant of the French family told Dimmick that she had always been told the cannon was from the Alamo.
About a century later, Houston collector J.P. Bryan bought it and shipped it back to Texas. The cannon made its way to the Texas State Historical Association and was auctioned in a fundraiser to McRae, of North Texas.
McRae's daughter, Sue McRae Stover, agreed in 2008 to donate the cannon to the Alamo, saying her father had wanted it displayed there.
The San Jacinto Battleground Conservancy raised $5,000 to restore the cannon. Texas A&M University's Conservation Research Laboratory treated it for free in base solution, and many other volunteers helped bring the gun in late 2010 to the Alamo. They and Stover were honored Saturday as members of the "Alamo gun crew."
Dimmick said this could be the contested brass cannon that spawned the Battle of Gonzales, the first battle of the Texas Revolution. The Mexican military had demanded the cannon, then in the possession of rebel colonists, who replied, "There it is. Come and take it."
"If you consider how many brass cannons were in and out of the Alamo, I'd say there's maybe a 10 percent chance that this cannon is actually the come-and-take-it cannon," Dimmick said. "Ten percent's not high, but it's higher than most cannons."
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Powell said the project is attracting national and international firms and individuals, some of whom have worked on other World Heritage projects.
"We have attracted players from all over the world to play for the Spurs, and we regard the team and all its members as just like us," Powell said. "We don't think about them any differently than people that are from here. We can attract the same kind of talent locally and from all over for this project."
A draft of the master plan is expected to be finished by November.
Powell serves as chairman of the Endowment's Remember the Alamo Foundation. Ramona Bass of Fort Worth, who grew up in San Antonio, serves as vice chair. The foundation also includes James Dannenbaum and Welcome Wilson, both of Houston. The foundation members are charged with raising between $200-300 million in private funds over the next three years to augment state funding, which totals $30 million to date and is expected to grow, and an undetermined sum the City will include in its 2017 Bond, which will go before voters in May 2017.
"Ramona Bass just finished raising $250 million for the Fort Worth Zoo," Powell said. "She told me, 'If I was able to raise that much money for our zoo, imagine what I can help raise for the Alamo.'" Powell said he expected much of the private funding to come from outside San Antonio and even outside Texas.
quote:The Alamo is not about, nor has ever really been about anything other than the battle. The push to include the "other stories" just waters down the purpose of this effort. There are 4 other Missions whose sole purpose is to tell the before story. It does not need to be included here.
...a major milestone in an ambitious plan to better preserve the Alamo, redevelop the surrounding Plaza properties, and weave a more comprehensive story about the region's indigenous culture, the city's origins as a Spanish colonial outpost, and development of the Mission
quote:Trying to post this?
So, the GLO finalized the purchase a couple of weeks ago.
I ran across this 3D model created by Edward Aranda with the three recently purchased structures removed:
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The lead expert in development of a long-term Alamo master plan called the mission and battle site one of the most complex historic locales in the world, one that will require years of study and fundraising to implement a first-rate overhaul.
George Skarmeas, design director with Preservation Design Partnership of Philadelphia, said a careful, ponderous examination of the Alamo area, through documentation and archaeological work, will guide a project that could have construction starting in 2021 and a "soft opening" in 2024.
"We need to understand what is under our feet," Skarmeas told City Council members Wednesday, describing the area as "a place where two continents came together."
A "dream team" of experts will begin a "systematic archaeological study" of the area next week to pinpoint the location of exterior portions of the 1836 battle compound, as well as acequias carefully engineered, river-fed water canals that had served the compound since its 1700s mission era.
Aside from about $42 million already committed by the city and state for Alamo improvements, the endowment has said it may privately try to raise hundreds of millions more for projects identified in the plan.
The first installment in a series of "public engagement sessions" is set for 6 p.m. Aug. 2, at a location to be announced, the endowment said in a release.
Skarmeas' presentation was followed by applause during the council work session a rare reaction, Mayor Ivy Taylor noted.
quote:Huh? I guess I'm too literal, and being married to a geophysicist, that ain't right. Though to be honest, I suspect he means in a metaphorical, not geological sense.
[url=http://www.expressnews.com/news/local/article/Careful-study-digs-to-shape-Alamo-plan-8332806.php][/url] describing the area as "a place where two continents came together."
quote:European + Native Americanquote:Huh? I guess I'm too literal, and being married to a geophysicist, that ain't right. Though to be honest, I suspect he means in a metaphorical, not geological sense.
[url=http://www.expressnews.com/news/local/article/Careful-study-digs-to-shape-Alamo-plan-8332806.php][/url] describing the area as "a place where two continents came together."
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... on Aug. 2nd, 6-8 pm
quote:Because.....???????????
Hope they quietly remove the cenotaph while they're at it.
quote:Guess I'm a historical purist. To put it best, J. Frank Dobie said the 60'x40'x12' structure reminded him of a grain elevator.quote:Because.....???????????
Hope they quietly remove the cenotaph while they're at it.
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The building's recent upgrades would mean it could be converted into an Alamo and Mission museum and visitor center with far less work than most period buildings would require.
But the multi-million dollar master planning effort, a collaboration between the City of San Antonio, the Texas General Land Office (GLO), and the Alamo Endowment, is still in the early stages of development as is funding for the plan's implementation. Some funding for plaza renovations have been proposed for the 2017-2022 Municipal Bond to the tune of $22 million. The City and State have already contributed substantial amounts, $17 million and $31 million, respectively, but nothing close to what could be an upward of $300 million project, according to rough estimates.