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  1. Susanna Dickinson was one of the few Texans to survive the epic Battle of the Alamo (February–March 1836), during which a small Texan force fighting for independence from Mexico held off a much larger Mexican army for nearly two weeks. Dickinson was inside the Alamo, an old mission-fort in San Antonio, Texas, during the entire battle and ...

  2. Even those that don’t like history classes love a great story, and the Joseph and Susanna Dickinson Museum documents a fascinating one! Susanna, one very tough woman, survived the Alamo with her child to be paid by Santa Anna as a messager to Sam Houston and joined Houston on the Runaway Scrape. If any of that story is not familiar to you ...

  3. 30 de jun. de 2017 · According to a plaque outside her last surviving home, Susanna Dickinson was the “toughest woman on the Texas frontier, survived the Battle of the Alamo and five husbands.”. During this key ...

  4. 27 de jul. de 2019 · The Susanna Dickinson Museum is open from 12pm-5pm, Weds.-Sun. The O. Henry Museum is closed for restoration construction until late 2022. The two historic residences showcase the life and times of their colorful Texas inhabitants and capture a scene from period Texas living. Call 512-974-3830 for more information!

  5. Bsusanna Dickson (1814 – October 7, 1883) was one of two American survivors of the 1836 Battle of the Alamo during the Texas Revolution, where her husband, Captain Almaron Dickinson, and 182 other Texan defenders were killed by the Mexican Army. The second survivor was her infant daughter. Bsusanna Dickson lived in Gonzales in Mexican Texas with her first husband, Almaron Dickinson. As the ...

  6. Susanna is born Susanna was born sometime in 1814 in Tennessee. Records show the date as January 1, but the exact date is actually unknown. May 1829: Susanna gets married At the age of fifteen, Susanna found herself getting married. She married Almaron Dickinson, and officially became Susanna Dickinson. 1835: The Texas Revolution

  7. When revolution came to Texas in 1835, Dickinson volunteered his experience with cannons, joined the fight, and was with the force that took San Antonio on December 3. Susanna joined him there after Texas volunteers looted their home. Dickinson was placed in command of artillery batteries at the fortress of the Al-