Mexican troops reclaimed the Alamo Mission near San Antonio de Béxar in 1836. Santa Anna’s cruelty inspired many Texians, both legal Texas settlers and illegal immigrants from the United States, to join the Texian Army. The Texians defeated the Mexican Army at the Battle of San Jacinto, on April 21, 1836, ending the rebellion.
About Battle of the Alamo in brief

ahead of the advancing Mexican Army. As Mexican soldiers scaled the walls, most Texian fighters withdrew into interior buildings. Between five and seven Texians may have surrendered; if so, they were quickly executed. The news sparked both a strong rush to joining the Texia army and a panic, known as “The Runaways Scrape”, in which theTexian army fled eastwards toward the US. The Mexican President Antonio López de Santa Anna began assembling a large force to restore order in Texas. In October, Texians engaged Mexican troops to restore the order. Most soldiers were raw recruits, most of whom had entered illegally and made little effort to adapt to the Mexican culture and continued to hold people in slavery when slavery had been abolished in Mexico. The new policies, and increased enforcement of immigration laws and import tariffs, incited many immigrants to revolt. The aim of the previous constitution was to create a political system that would emulate the success of theUnited States, but after a decade of political turmoil, economic stagnation, and threats and actual foreign invasion, conservatives concluded that a better path for Mexico was centralized power. The Seven Laws were a series of constitutional changes that fundamentally altered the organizational structure of Mexico. They were intended to centralize and strengthen the national government.
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This page is based on the article Battle of the Alamo published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 03, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






