Paula Mitchell Marks\u27s Turn Your Eyes Toward Texas is a dual biography of Sam and Mary Maverick, Texas pioneers who were eyewitnesses to the Texas Revolution and the exciting years that followed in its immediate aftermath. Based primarily on the personal diaries and papers of the Mavericks, Marks\u27s work virtually personalizes the Revolution, beginning with Sam Maverick\u27s arrival in San Antonio prior to its 1835 siege and the March, 1836 Battle of the Alamo. Even though he was a newcomer to Texas, Maverick played an important role in the San Antonio skirmishes and was elected by the Alamo garrison to be its delegate to the Constitutional Convention, a fact that saved him from certain death there
The Texas Military Experience is primarily a compilation of papers read at a symposium sponsored by ...
T. Lindsay Baker, curator of agriculture and technology in the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
Paula Mitchell Marks\u27s Turn Your Eyes Toward Texas is a dual biography of Sam and Mary Maverick, ...
In Gone to Texas, Randolph B. Campbell has combined the best recent scholarship with thirty years of...
In Texas: A Modem History David G. McComb, professor of history at Colorado State University, wanted...
Unless they take special note of the date in the title, many readers will assume this is yet another...
Alamo Images is a catalog to accompany an exhibition of artifacts, artworks, books, broadsides, ephe...
This slim volume is a happy combination of photographs from the Texas ranching country and a breezy ...
Polly Smith showed her love for Texas through the lens of her Graflex camera. The photographs Smith ...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
This is one of those rare books that truly push the boundaries of the extant primary source material...
Review of: Texas Tears and Texas Sunshine: Voices of Frontier Women. Exley, Jo Ella Powell, ed
The Texas Book is an extensive-and exhaustive- collection of essays about the University of Texas at...
Written as a memoir for her grandchildren, Sallie Reynolds Matthews\u27s Interwoven was first printe...
The Texas Military Experience is primarily a compilation of papers read at a symposium sponsored by ...
T. Lindsay Baker, curator of agriculture and technology in the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
Paula Mitchell Marks\u27s Turn Your Eyes Toward Texas is a dual biography of Sam and Mary Maverick, ...
In Gone to Texas, Randolph B. Campbell has combined the best recent scholarship with thirty years of...
In Texas: A Modem History David G. McComb, professor of history at Colorado State University, wanted...
Unless they take special note of the date in the title, many readers will assume this is yet another...
Alamo Images is a catalog to accompany an exhibition of artifacts, artworks, books, broadsides, ephe...
This slim volume is a happy combination of photographs from the Texas ranching country and a breezy ...
Polly Smith showed her love for Texas through the lens of her Graflex camera. The photographs Smith ...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
This is one of those rare books that truly push the boundaries of the extant primary source material...
Review of: Texas Tears and Texas Sunshine: Voices of Frontier Women. Exley, Jo Ella Powell, ed
The Texas Book is an extensive-and exhaustive- collection of essays about the University of Texas at...
Written as a memoir for her grandchildren, Sallie Reynolds Matthews\u27s Interwoven was first printe...
The Texas Military Experience is primarily a compilation of papers read at a symposium sponsored by ...
T. Lindsay Baker, curator of agriculture and technology in the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...