When the
Battle of the Alamo ended at approximately 6:30 a.m. on March 6, 1836, fewer than fifty of the almost 250
Texians who had occupied the
Alamo Mission in San Antonio,
Texas, were alive. The conflict, a part of the
Texas Revolution, was the first step in Mexican President
Antonio López de Santa Anna's attempt to retake the
province of Texas after an insurgent army of Texian settlers and adventurers from the United States had driven out all Mexican troops the previous year. As part of his preparations for marching on Texas, in late December 1835 Santa Anna had convinced the Mexican Congress to pass a resolution that all "foreigners landing on the coast of the Republic or invading its territory by land, armed, and with the intent of attacking our country, will be deemed pirates" and subject to immediate execution.