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THE SPIRIT OF SACRIFICE
aka The Alamo Cenotaph

The Alamo - San Antonio, Texas

by John Troesser


Sculptor: Pompeo Coppini
Architect: Carlton Adams
Base: Rodriquez Brothers Memorials
Funded 1936 - Begun 1937 - Completed 1939
Location: South Alamo and East Crockett Streets
Alamo Plaza in San Antonio, Texas

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Alamo Cenotaph, Spirit of Sacrifice
The Spirit of Sacrifice Cenotaph
Photo Courtesy Lori Martin, July 2001
From the Greek words kenos, (empty) and taphos, (tomb) - cenotaphs are tombs or monuments erected to honor a person or persons whose remains are elsewhere or their whereabouts unknown. Quite frequently cenotaphs are erected for soldiers killed in distant places or sailors lost at sea. Texas has many such empty tombs, some of them modest tombstones in humble cemeteries. This one in San Antonio's Alamo Plaza is sometimes referred to as "The" Cenotaph.
Alamo Cenotaph, San Antonio Texas
The west side of the base showing the figures of Travis and others that appear in two photos below. Figure of woman facing north (far left with garland) symbolizes the state of Texas.
TE Photo April 2001
The base of the sculpture is 12 feet by 40 feet and it rises to a height of 60 feet. While Coppini had preferred to show the men in battle - the cenotaph had been designed by Carlton Adams before Coppini was chosen as sculptor.

Some believe that the monument is built where many of the Alamo defenders were put to death after the fall. Others believe the corpses of the dead defenders were piled here and unceremoniously burned. In actuality, the location was chosen because Alamo Plaza was the only only space available near the Alamo, and the bandstand occupied Plaza de Valero. The funeral pyres were near the Alameda.

In a newspaper article, writer J. Frank Dobie compared the piece to a grain elevator - and even Coppini agreed with Dobie that the figures looked as though they were assembling for a portrait.

(Dobie on another occasion had stated that Coppini had "littered" the state of Texas with his work, but here the two men agreed. To our knowledge, Coppini never critiqued Dobie's writing.)
Coppini bas-relief over building entrance, San Antonion Texas
Another Coppini work - a bas-relief over main entrance of a building two blocks north of Alamo square.
TE Photo April 2001
The Cenotaph was one of the largest works of famed Italian-born sculptor Pompeo Coppini whose other works include statues in Ballinger, Galveston, Gonzales, Victoria, Austin and at least four more pieces in San Antonio - including his own elaborate tombstone. Three other Coppini works can be found within walking distance of the Cenotaph - one over the doorway of the old San Antonio News Office and two huge bronze doors on the Scottish Rite building just a few blocks north of the Alamo.

The Texas Collection of Baylor University has a large file on Coppini and his "adopted" daughter - Waldine Tauch. Within the file are photos of Coppini at work on the cenotaph figures. As you can see in these photos - he went to extraordinary lengths, even working on the musculature of the figures - even before adding the clothing.
Pompeo Coppini at work - portrait
The figures on the far right of the west side. Pompeo Coppini at work.
Photo Courtesy The Texas Collection, Baylor University
Coppini cenotaph figures nude
The figures on the west side as they appeared in clay.
Photo Courtesy The Texas Collection, Baylor University
Coppini cenotaph figures  clothed
The same figures after being "clothed."
Photo Courtesy The Texas Collection, Baylor University
The south side of the main shaft has the 25-foot bas-relief figure - Spirit of Sacrifice - and the north face has a female figure representing Texas. The east and west faces have larger-than-life statues of various Alamo defenders. Bowie and Bonham on the east face and Travis and Crockett on the west face.

The marker reads:

Erected in Memory of the Heroes who sacrificed their lives at the Alamo, March 6, 1836 in the defense of Texas, "They chose never to surrender nor retreat, these brave hearts with flag still proudly waving perished in the flames of immortality that their high sacrifice might lead to the founding on this Texas."


© John Troesser

Related Topics:
The Alamo
Battle of The Alamo
San Antonio
Pompeo Coppini
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