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  1. 28 de jun. de 2016 · Travis, William Barret. Soldier. Travis was born on August 9, 1809, in Edgefield District, the son of Mark Travis and Jemima Stallworth. In 1818 the family migrated to Conecuh County, Alabama. Travis moved to nearby Claiborne while still in his teens, teaching school and studying law under Judge James Dellett.

  2. At the Alamo in San Antonio, then called Bejar, 150 Texas rebels led by William Barret Travis made their stand against Santa Anna's vastly superior Mexican army. On the second day of the siege, February 24, 1836, Travis called for reinforcements with this heroic message: I shall never surrender or retreat. Then, I call on you in the name of ...

  3. William Travis. William Barret Travis (* 9. August 1809 im Saluda County, South Carolina; † 6. März 1836 in Alamo, Republik Texas) war der texanische Kommandeur des Forts Alamo in der Schlacht von Alamo im Texanischen Unabhängigkeitskrieg von Mexiko .

  4. William Barret Travis was a lawyer and soldier who is remembered as the Texas commander at the Battle of the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas. Born in the Edgefield District of South Carolina on August 9, 1809, William’s family later moved to Alabama. After finishing his education, Travis worked as a school teacher and a lawyer.

  5. 27 de jul. de 2019 · On behalf of Sovereign Master Ray Vinson, the officers and members of Col. William Barret Travis Council No. 344 Allied Masonic Degrees, welcome! The Allied Masonic Degrees (AMD) are an invitational organization and requires membership in the Royal Arch as well as the Symbolic Lodge. Membership is limited to 27Continue Reading

  6. William Barret Travis was only 26 when he was shot to death while leading the defense of the Alamo. The young attorney had forecasted his own death at an early age. It turns out he was right. While in the Alamo, William B. Travis found himself in an impossible situation. The structure was far too vast to defend with the troops at his disposal ...

  7. 3 March 1836. O n the night of March 3, 1836, William Barrett Travis sent out the last message from the besieged Alamo with courier John W. Smith. He penetrated enemy lines with the message from Travis to the Texas Independence Convention at Washington-on-the-Brazos. It describes the situation at the Alamo in detail: