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March 6, 1836. Five-thirty in the morning. Eighteen hundred Mexican soldiers stormed the walls of the Alamo mission in San Antonio, Texas. What transpired in the next 90 minutes was so brutal that the Mexican officers who witnessed it remained silent for decades. Many took the horrifying details to their graves. In school, you learned that the Alamo's defenders died heroically in battle. Davy Crockett, fighting with his rifle. Jim Bowie, defending himself from his sickbed. William Travis, drawing his famous line in the sand. But that's not what really happened, and the actual eyewitness accounts, records that historians quietly buried for over a century, will completely change how you see the Alamo. Before we continue be sure to like and subscribe to the channel. I've spent weeks digging through primary sources, reading Mexican officers' letters hidden away in archives, and studying survivor testimonies that didn't match the heroic narrative America wanted to believe. What I found looks nothing like what's in your history books. By the end of this video, you'll know why most Alamo defenders didn't die fighting, what Mexican soldiers actually did to those who tried to surrender, and why one Mexican officer was punished just for trying to show mercy. If you want the real history they didn't teach you in school, hit that subscribe button right now, because we're about to uncover truths that have been buried for almost two hundred years. Let's start with what really happened that final morning. For twelve days, 189 men held the Alamo against General Santa Anna's army. They knew reinforcements weren't coming. They knew they were surrounded. And by March 5th, they knew they were going to die. That evening, William Barrett Travis wrote his final letter, not the famous victory or death declaration from weeks earlier. This one was different, personal, full of resignation. He wrote to a friend. Travis understood. They all understood. But here's what your history teacher never told you. The men trapped inside had options. They could have escaped. There were multiple opportunities to slip away during the siege. Some men actually did leave. A courier named John Smith got out on March 3rd. Travis sent him with messages, but really he was giving him a chance to survive. Most stayed, not because they weren't afraid, not because they wanted to die as martyrs. They stayed because they believed someone was coming. Colonel Fannin, with his four hundred men. Sam Houston with the main army. Somebody. But no one came. On the night of March 5th, the men inside could hear the Mexican army preparing for the final assault. The sound of cannons being moved into position. Thousands of soldiers taking their places around the mission walls. Bugles practicing the degüelo. The degüelo. Let me explain what this means, because it's crucial. In Spanish, degüelo means to slit someone's throat. #thealamo #darkhistory #forgottenhistory #history