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The Milam cypress
tree as viewed from the bridge near the intersection of Commerce and
Soledad.
Photo
courtesy Terry
Jeanson, May 2008 |
Included in Famous
Trees of Texas, published by the Texas Forest Service and Texas
A & M University Press, the Ben Milam Cypress can be found between
E. Commerce and East Houston Streets on the east bank of the San Antonio
River in downtown San Antonio. |
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A
native of Kentucky and a veteran of the War of 1812, Milam
came to Texas via New Orleans and was making a living by trading
with Comanche Indians along the Colorado River when he threw in
with Revolutionaries seeking independence from Spain.
Milam was imprisoned in
Mexico City but released through the efforts of the U.S. minister.
Returning to Mexico after its Independence from Spain (1824), Milam
(technically a Mexican citizen) was made a Colonel in the Mexican
Army that year.
By 1835 Milam was back
in Mexico seeking titles for those who had settled in the dual states
of Coahuila y Texas. But the timing couldn’t have been worse. Antonio
López de Santa Anna had just overthrown the new government of Mexico,
establishing a dictatorship. Milam
was captured and imprisoned in Monterrey.
He managed to escape and cross the Rio Grande in October of 1835.
By chance he encountered troops under the command of George Collinsworth,
and only then did he become aware of the Texas Revolution.
Milam (now serving as
a Private) helped in the capture of Goliad,
and then marched with the army against San
Antonio (Bexar) which was then held by Gen. Martín Perfecto
de Cos and his troops.
Milam was dismayed to
learn that many members of the Revolutionary Army had decided to
abandon the attack on San Antonio
until Spring. It was then Milam
made his plea to the troops: "Who will go with old Ben Milam into
Bexar?" Three hundred men volunteered, and the siege of Bexar
began at dawn of December the fifth.
General Cos surrendered to the Texian forces on December the ninth,
1835, but Ben Milam had
been killed two days previously – shot in the head from a Mexican
sniper concealed in the branches of this tall cypress.
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The Milam cypress
tree at river level.
Photo
courtesy Terry
Jeanson, May 2008 |
The other side
of the Milam cypress tree.
Photo
courtesy Terry
Jeanson, May 2008 |
Standing in front
of the Milam cypress, looking across the river to the area where the
Veramendi Palace once stood.
Photo
courtesy Terry
Jeanson, May 2008 |
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