The Welshmen at The Alamo

 The past is a doorway that can be opened and reveal stories which have been forgotten. One of Robert E. Howard's monologues tells of his love of hearing a good yarn. The fight at the Alamo he enjoyed listening about. I incorporated one facet into the play that told of William Irvine Lewis (1806-1836) who served as a rifleman with the volunteers who rode with Jim Bowie. Many years later, his mother was given a keepsake of his death that had been fashioned from stone taken from the ruins of the Alamo. The other story I did not use was that of Edward Edwards, who also died at The Alamo, and has a plaque commemorating his death in the church of St John the Baptist, Aberdare. He was a Major-General in the Mexican army of General De Santa's Anna 





Comments

  1. The source material for the above article was taken from 150 Famous Welsh Americans by W. Arvon Roberts.

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