This tale comes to us from Masked Ranger #8, June 1955, with art and story by heroes unknown.
Showing posts with label Alamo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alamo. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Thursday, January 5, 2023
The "RABBLE" at the ALAMO (1954)
This one is from Blazing Western #1, dated Jan. 1954. Art by Vince Fodera. Scanned for ComicBookPlus by fett.
Friday, February 24, 2017
My NEW Davy Crockett cap
Yeah, it's what the well-dressed Davy Crockett fan is wearing - the new cap of the San Antonio Missions, the Double-A farm team of the San Diego Padres. Below is my old Missions cap, as sometimes seen on the Fox series Pitch.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Remember the Alamo Neckties
Other samples of my classy necktie collection, featuring such icons of style as Clint Eastwood, 007, Mighty Mouse, King Kong and Heckle & Jeckle, can be seen HERE.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Davy's Last Stand
On this day in 1836, Colonel David Crockett met his fate at the Alamo, cementing his place in the pantheon of great American heroes. Precisely how Davy died is the subject of much debate, and will likely remain so. Here are a few of the many artiistic interpretations of his last moments. The oldest illustrations - the woodcuts - are from early issues of the original Davy Crockett Almanacks.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
"David Crockett in Congress" Wins IPPY Award!
I loved this book, and I'm not the only one.
David Crockett in Congress: The Rise and Fall of the Poor Man's Friend by James R. Boylston and Allen J. Wiener (Bright Sky Press, 2009) has received a 2010 Independent Publisher’s Book Award for Best Regional Non-Fiction. For fourteen years the Independent Publisher Book Awards have been conducted annually to honor the year's best independently published titles. The "IPPY" Awards reward those who exhibit the courage, innovation, and creativity to bring about change in the world of publishing.
David Crockett in Congress, says a press release, is the first significant new biography of the famous frontier congressman and Alamo martyr in over a half century. Crockett emerges as a savvy politician, hardball campaigner and advocate for the poor. The book is based on Crockett’s own writings and other original documents and appends all of his surviving correspondence, political circulars and key speeches.
The book has received high praise from others as well...
“James R. Boylston and Allen Wiener have done a masterful job of recovering the real David Crockett, a figure of enormous historical significance in the tumultuous and critical Jacksonian age.” — Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.
“. . . offers a fresh look at Davy Crockett's congressional years. . . The authors. . . create a fascinating portrait of ‘the real Crockett.’" Dallas Morning News
"Boylston and Wiener conclude — and ably demonstrate — that Crockett wasn't the country bumpkin many have thought him to be.” Austin Statesman
“The best thing on Crockett since William C. Davis's Three Roads to the Alamo. This book should have long life.” — Allen Barra, author of Inventing Wyatt Earp
“. . .an extraordinary book. It should be read by anyone interested in Crockett and politics during the Age of Jackson. I found a surprisingly more admirable Crockett than the one I though I already knew.” Wild West History Association Journal
“A true gem, essential for anyone interested in Crockett himself, the Jacksonian milieu, the roots of modern democratic practice.” — Daniel Feller, author, The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840
“Crockett's political life has never been subject to the close scrutiny it receives here. Boylston and Wiener show him to be a masterly campaigner and astute politician. They let Crockett speak for himself.” — Library Journal
“. . . the best book on Crockett ever written or compiled . . .” Craig Anderson, Our History Project website
“. . . destined to be a valuable resource for researchers studying David Crockett for many years to come.” — K K Searle, texas-history-page.blogspot.com
And just in case you missed it - or are in the mood to read it again - here's an encore presentation of my own review:
DAVID CROCKETT IN CONGRESS: THE MOST IMPORTANT CROCKETT BOOK IN FIFTY YEARS
When it arrived, I was shocked at the size. I’m not sure how I pictured it, but I wasn’t expecting a deluxe hardcover the size of a big city phonebook!
Then I read it, and had still another revelation. You see, folks, this ain’t no ordinary history book. It’s a landmark in Crockett literature. Bottom line? This is the most important Crockett book to appear in over fifty years. I know, because aside from a handful of juvenile biographies and storybooks, I’ve read them all.
Why is it so important? First, it provides a wealth of new scholarship regarding an vital and long overlooked period of Crockett’s life. And second, it introduces us to the real David Crockett in a way never before possible - in his own words.
Wait! you say. Didn’t Crockett write an autobiography? Yes he did, sort of. And it’s a fine read. But he had help. It’s not pure Crockett, and it’s not always as factual as historians would like.
That autobiography was published in 1834, and for the next 122 years, biographers just rehashed the same information. James Atkins Shackford changed all that in 1956, with David Crockett: The Man and the Legend, opening up acres of new territory in Crockett’s life. Most important of these was Crockett’s political career. But while Shackford’s work on that period was groundbreaking, it left me wanting more. I kept expecting someone to dig into the original sources Shackford only alluded to and give us the whole story.
That’s what James Boylston and Allen Wiener have done, and the result is far more than I’d hoped for. The back half of the book delivers all the poop from those original sources - letters, circulars, newspaper articles, and the congressional record. Much of this stuff is in Crockett’s own unvarnished words (complete with lack of punctuation), taking us closer to the real man than we’ve ever been.
The first half of the book puts that information in context, taking us step-by-step through Crockett’s career in Congress. Boylston and Wiener introduce us to all the major players, both friend and foe, and give us a firm grounding in the issues of the day, allowing us to understand what Crockett was up against, and appreciate what his actions revealed about his character.
This is not the Davy we saw on the Disney show. This is the real guy, and we get to know him warts and all. The Crockett that emerges is a different kind of hero, the one hinted at in the book’s subtitle. Whatever troubles came his way (and they were many), Crockett never lost sight of his ideals, and truly was “the Poor Man’s Friend”.
Watch James and Allen’s 40-minute presentation at the Texas Book Festival, as broadcast by C-SPAN2, HERE.
David Crockett in Congress: The Rise and Fall of the Poor Man's Friend by James R. Boylston and Allen J. Wiener (Bright Sky Press, 2009) has received a 2010 Independent Publisher’s Book Award for Best Regional Non-Fiction. For fourteen years the Independent Publisher Book Awards have been conducted annually to honor the year's best independently published titles. The "IPPY" Awards reward those who exhibit the courage, innovation, and creativity to bring about change in the world of publishing.
David Crockett in Congress, says a press release, is the first significant new biography of the famous frontier congressman and Alamo martyr in over a half century. Crockett emerges as a savvy politician, hardball campaigner and advocate for the poor. The book is based on Crockett’s own writings and other original documents and appends all of his surviving correspondence, political circulars and key speeches.
The book has received high praise from others as well...
“James R. Boylston and Allen Wiener have done a masterful job of recovering the real David Crockett, a figure of enormous historical significance in the tumultuous and critical Jacksonian age.” — Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.
“. . . offers a fresh look at Davy Crockett's congressional years. . . The authors. . . create a fascinating portrait of ‘the real Crockett.’" Dallas Morning News
"Boylston and Wiener conclude — and ably demonstrate — that Crockett wasn't the country bumpkin many have thought him to be.” Austin Statesman
“The best thing on Crockett since William C. Davis's Three Roads to the Alamo. This book should have long life.” — Allen Barra, author of Inventing Wyatt Earp
“. . .an extraordinary book. It should be read by anyone interested in Crockett and politics during the Age of Jackson. I found a surprisingly more admirable Crockett than the one I though I already knew.” Wild West History Association Journal
“A true gem, essential for anyone interested in Crockett himself, the Jacksonian milieu, the roots of modern democratic practice.” — Daniel Feller, author, The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840
“Crockett's political life has never been subject to the close scrutiny it receives here. Boylston and Wiener show him to be a masterly campaigner and astute politician. They let Crockett speak for himself.” — Library Journal
“. . . the best book on Crockett ever written or compiled . . .” Craig Anderson, Our History Project website
“. . . destined to be a valuable resource for researchers studying David Crockett for many years to come.” — K K Searle, texas-history-page.blogspot.com
Here's a look at the proud authors, Jim and Allen
And just in case you missed it - or are in the mood to read it again - here's an encore presentation of my own review:
DAVID CROCKETT IN CONGRESS: THE MOST IMPORTANT CROCKETT BOOK IN FIFTY YEARS
When this book was published, I invited co-author Allen Wiener to say a few words about it here on the Almanack (that's HERE). He made it sound like a fine book, and I was anxious to read it. So I ordered a copy.
When it arrived, I was shocked at the size. I’m not sure how I pictured it, but I wasn’t expecting a deluxe hardcover the size of a big city phonebook!
Then I read it, and had still another revelation. You see, folks, this ain’t no ordinary history book. It’s a landmark in Crockett literature. Bottom line? This is the most important Crockett book to appear in over fifty years. I know, because aside from a handful of juvenile biographies and storybooks, I’ve read them all.
Why is it so important? First, it provides a wealth of new scholarship regarding an vital and long overlooked period of Crockett’s life. And second, it introduces us to the real David Crockett in a way never before possible - in his own words.
Wait! you say. Didn’t Crockett write an autobiography? Yes he did, sort of. And it’s a fine read. But he had help. It’s not pure Crockett, and it’s not always as factual as historians would like.
That autobiography was published in 1834, and for the next 122 years, biographers just rehashed the same information. James Atkins Shackford changed all that in 1956, with David Crockett: The Man and the Legend, opening up acres of new territory in Crockett’s life. Most important of these was Crockett’s political career. But while Shackford’s work on that period was groundbreaking, it left me wanting more. I kept expecting someone to dig into the original sources Shackford only alluded to and give us the whole story.
That’s what James Boylston and Allen Wiener have done, and the result is far more than I’d hoped for. The back half of the book delivers all the poop from those original sources - letters, circulars, newspaper articles, and the congressional record. Much of this stuff is in Crockett’s own unvarnished words (complete with lack of punctuation), taking us closer to the real man than we’ve ever been.
The first half of the book puts that information in context, taking us step-by-step through Crockett’s career in Congress. Boylston and Wiener introduce us to all the major players, both friend and foe, and give us a firm grounding in the issues of the day, allowing us to understand what Crockett was up against, and appreciate what his actions revealed about his character.
This is not the Davy we saw on the Disney show. This is the real guy, and we get to know him warts and all. The Crockett that emerges is a different kind of hero, the one hinted at in the book’s subtitle. Whatever troubles came his way (and they were many), Crockett never lost sight of his ideals, and truly was “the Poor Man’s Friend”.
Watch James and Allen’s 40-minute presentation at the Texas Book Festival, as broadcast by C-SPAN2, HERE.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Alamo Pilgrimage 5: Living History part 2
Continued from yesterday, a rubbernecking stroll around the Alamo grounds.
For more Alamo Pilgrimage photos, click HERE.
This guy was with Captain Shackleford's Alabama Red Rovers. Quite possibly the Captain himself.
The Red Rovers' weapon collection, including a nice blunderbuss.
The fellow was demonstrating how to load a flintlock. He agreed with my observation that riflemen sometimes urinated down the barrel to clean it, bringing wrinkles to the noses of these two ladies.
Had to keep my distance from these folks. They wanted donations.
Throwing knives on display. These are the first I've seen that actually look like Bowies. Most throwers resemble the ones front and center. A snot-nosed kid was showing off in the background, hitting the mark every time and making it look easy. It's not.
The real Davy Crockett, and friend. Is that Georgie Russel?
Even brave Alamo defenders need a cigarette break now and then.
For more Alamo Pilgrimage photos, click HERE.
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Alamo Pilgrimage 4: Living History part 1
Over the March 6 and 7 weekend, The San Antonio Living History Association sponsored exhibits on the Alamo grounds.
Let the Special Event begin.
Author J.R. Edmonson enthralls the crowd as Jim Bowie.
Jeff Beardon as Davy. Dang, I missed his performance.
Well-dressed gent No. 1
No. 2
No. 3
An Alamo cooking demonstration. Nuts, they were not offering free samples.
More Living History tomorrow.
Earlier Alamo trip photos HERE.
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