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Why is the Alamo, where Jim Bowie made his famous last stand, under siege again?

alamo famous jim bowie Siege stand
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Why is the Alamo, where Jim Bowie made his famous last stand, under siege again?

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There’s a new battle under way for control of the Alamo — and just like the Texas legend, neither side shows any sign of surrender. For more than a century, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas — nearly 7,000 women who trace their pedigrees back to the origins of the Texas Republic — have had total control of the Alamo, the state’s most revered historic site. They maintain what’s left of the old mission, manage its historic exhibits and run the gift shop. They don’t charge admission, and the site doesn’t cost the state government a penny. Now a small group of renegade Daughters has broken away, saying the Daughters’ outmoded traditions and iron grip on the “Shrine of Texas Liberty” are holding back progress and preventing much-needed preservation work from moving ahead. They liken their declaration of independence to Texas’s own split from Mexico in 1836. “We’re still fighting for the same things,” says Erin Bowman, the 60-year-old leader of the breakaway group, called Friends of

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There’s a new battle under way for control of the Alamo — and just like the Texas legend, neither side shows any sign of surrender. For more than a century, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas — nearly 7,000 women who trace their pedigrees back to the origins of the Texas Republic — have had total control of the Alamo, the state’s most revered historic site. They maintain what’s left of the old mission, manage its historic exhibits and run the gift shop. They don’t charge admission, and the site doesn’t cost the state government a penny. Now a small group of renegade Daughters has broken away, saying the Daughters’ outmoded traditions and iron grip on the “Shrine of Texas Liberty” are holding back progress and preventing much-needed preservation work from moving ahead. They liken their declaration of independence to Texas’s own split from Mexico in 1836. “We’re still fighting for the same things,” says Erin Bowman, the 60-year-old leader of the breakaway group, called Friends of

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One faction of the Daughters of Texas believes the older group is not doing enough in terms of preserving the monument of Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett, and not doing enough to promote the place to make enough funds to restore it. Sources: Information came from the Wall Street Journal.

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There’s a new battle under way for control of the Alamo — and just like the Texas legend, neither side shows any sign of surrender. For more than a century, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas — nearly 7,000 women who trace their pedigrees back to the origins of the Texas Republic — have had total control of the Alamo, the state’s most revered historic site. They maintain what’s left of the old mission, manage its historic exhibits and run the gift shop. They don’t charge admission, and the site doesn’t cost the state government a penny. Now a small group of renegade Daughters has broken away, saying the Daughters’ outmoded traditions and iron grip on the “Shrine of Texas Liberty” are holding back progress and preventing much-needed preservation work from moving ahead. They liken their declaration of independence to Texas’s own split from Mexico in 1836. “We’re still fighting for the same things,” says Erin Bowman, the 60-year-old leader of the breakaway group, called Friends of

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There’s a new battle under way for control of the Alamo — and just like the Texas legend, neither side shows any sign of surrender. For more than a century, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas — nearly 7,000 women who trace their pedigrees back to the origins of the Texas Republic — have had total control of the Alamo, the state’s most revered historic site. They maintain what’s left of the old mission, manage its historic exhibits and run the gift shop. They don’t charge admission, and the site doesn’t cost the state government a penny. Now a small group of renegade Daughters has broken away, saying the Daughters’ outmoded traditions and iron grip on the “Shrine of Texas Liberty” are holding back progress and preventing much-needed preservation work from moving ahead. They liken their declaration of independence to Texas’s own split from Mexico in 1836. “We’re still fighting for the same things,” says Erin Bowman, the 60-year-old leader of the breakaway group, called Friends of

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