Just hours before John F. Kennedy was to deliver one
of the most important speeches of the 1960 presidential
campaign in Houston, Texas, the Massachusetts Democrat
stood in front of the Alamo. Here, before some 30,000
San Antonians, Kennedy spoke of America’s future
by reflecting on its past: “We honor the independence
of Texas today,” he stated, and then promised,
amid heightened Cold War tensions, to recommit the nation
to the advance of democracy.1 For Kennedy,
the one-time Catholic mission provided an opportunity
to defuse Protestant anxieties about the man who would
become the nation’s first Catholic President.
“At the shrine I visited today, the Alamo,”
he said to his listeners in Houston, “side by
side with Bowie and Crockett died Fuentes, and McCafferty,
and Bailey, and Badillo, and Carey, but no one knows
whether they were Catholics or not. For there was no
religious test there.”2
Thus, in two speeches over twelve hours, John Kennedy
used the Alamo’s complex history and symbolism
to shore up political support and tamp down opposition.
He was neither the first nor last to take advantage
of the famed battleground’s emotional claim, and
his handling of the memories it evoked in his varied
audiences, however deft, were not unique: the Alamo
has long been a contested space in our historical memory.
How have we and are we to remember the Alamo? That depends,
as anthropologist Holly Brear argues in Inherit
the Alamo, on who asks the question and what answer(s)
he or she desires. Certainly controversy swirls around
what is historically significant about the Alamo. For
many, its iconic stature was sealed in early March 1836,
when a small band of Texians and Tejanos fought the
much larger Mexican Army commanded by General Antonio
López de San Anna. This struggle between insurgents
seeking independence from Mexico and the Mexican state
ended on March 6, with no quarter given to the defenders.
The fatal climax has been heralded ever since. As the
Alamo’s official website asserts: “Although
the Alamo fell on the early morning hours of March 6,
1836, the death of the Alamo Defenders has come to symbolize
courage and sacrifice for the cause of Liberty.”3
But the Alamo also contains an equally important set
of meanings linked to its 1718 founding as Misión
San Antonio de Valero. The mission was established to
protect Spain’s claim to what is now south-central
Texas from the Lipan Apache and the French. Its spiritual
leaders and Indian converts were also to spread Catholicism
and boost local economic development. These same goals
were served by other missions located south along the
San Antonio River and by the civilian population of
San Antonio de Béxar, situated just west across
the river. In 1793, after seven decades of service,
the local missions were secularized and their lands
distributed to their residents. Thus forty years before
the fiery event at the Alamo, the area had already witnessed
a cultural transformation and religious liberation.
The now secularized mission evolved into a strategically
significant military redoubt and over the next thirty
years it served as a Spanish base for military operations.
Revolutionaries opposed to Spain’s imperial presence
later captured it and launched sorties from the site.
After Mexico gained its independence in 1821, the new
nation’s flag flew over the building. But in December
1835, another insurgency erupted in San Antonio: after
fierce house-to-house fighting, General Marín
Perfecto de Cós surrendered the Alamo to a revolutionary
force intent on liberating the province. Col. William
B. Travis and a ragtag collection of volunteers began
to refortify the Alamo, hoping to repel General Santa
Anna’s 4000-man Army of Operations.
It was not to be. The insurgents lost the battle, but
six weeks later their comrades-in-arms won the war.
On April 21, at San Jacinto, an army under the command
of Sam Houston defeated General Santa Anna’s troops
and captured the Mexican Commander-in-Chief and President.
When the Treaty of Velasco was signed on May 14, 1836,
Texas gained its independence. Even before that moment,
the Alamo had gained legendary status. Sam Houston’s
soldiers are said to have shouted “Remember the
Alamo!” as they swept to victory.
To these victors went the spoils: the legendary clash
at the Alamo has had a considerable impact on San Antonio’s
social structure, economic development, and spatial
design. By 1850, for instance, the once-Spanish town
had become an American city. Its population, which diminished
to less than a 1000 after 1836, rebounded to more than
3000 in 1850, and by 1860 it topped 8200, the bulk of
whom were Anglos and Germans. The Mexican population
lost its former demographic significance and economic
clout, becoming second-class citizens in an English-
and German-speaking community.
Alamo Plaza reflected this change. It was created when
the Alamo’s walls were torn down. The resulting
open space was used to ease commercial traffic. A park
was created in its center and many stores that once
surrounded Main Plaza, the Spanish-colonial hub to the
west, migrated to this new American streetscape around
the Alamo. It also became the location of the U. S.
Post Office, hotels, and saloons, while the Alamo itself
became the headquarters of the U. S. Army’s Quartermaster
Corps.
In the late nineteenth century, the memory of the 1836
struggle was used to encourage a lively tourist trade.
In popular literature, tourist guides and public discussion,
the Alamo was interpreted as a fight between Euro-American
heroism and Mexican despotism, between courageous whites
and cowardly browns. The once neglected building was
refurbished to fit this version of events, and the Alamo
achieved landmark status under the management of the
Daughters of the Republic of Texas. “The heroic,
mythic tale of the Alamo,” observed one anthropologist,
had become “a story about the birth, not merely
of Texas, but of the United States and the western frontier.”
By 1960, this master symbol of the modern West had become
so powerful that even an Irish Catholic New Englander
named Kennedy felt compelled to visit the Alamo in pursuit
of votes that would help him capture the White House.
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Footnotes:
- A transcription of Kennedy's remarks in San Antonio
can be found here:
http://www.jfklink.com/speeches/jfk/sept60/jfk120960_alamo.html
- Video footage and a transcription of Kennedy's speech
to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association can
be found here:
http://www.americanrhetoric.com
/speeches/ jfkhoustonministers.html
- Alamo website: http://www.thealamo.org/
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