
Davy Crockett and the Geopolitics of the Alamo
The Texans' sacrifice at the Alamo and their improbable victory at San Jacinto still define our world.

by Rod D. Martin
March 6, 2025
Today marks the 189th anniversary of the martyrdom of the heroes of the Alamo, who died to delay the dictator Santa Anna's army long enough so that Texian troops could rally and defend their homes. Singular among those heroes was Colonel and Congressman David S. Crockett, “King of the Wild Frontier.”
Born in 1786 in that part of North Carolina which was then the renegade “State of Franklin” but not yet the State of Tennessee, “Davy” Crockett was a legend even in his own time, and long before the Texas Revolution.
The son of John Crockett, one of the Overmountain Men unleashed by Joseph Martin to turn the tide of the Revolutionary War at Kings Mountain, the future legend in his teenage years repeatedly traveled on foot from eastern Tennessee to Virginia across the Appalachian mountains, developing skills and achieving feats for which he’d become so well known later. He served under General Andrew Jackson in the Creek War and in Jackson’s campaign, late in the War of 1812, to drive the British out of Florida. By the age of 32 he’d been appointed a justice of the peace, elected lieutenant colonel of the Tennessee Militia, and started several successful business enterprises.
In the Tennessee legislature and in the U.S. House during Jackson’s Presidency, he fought untiringly against Congress’s overspending and unconstitutional expansion of its powers. He also vociferously opposed Jackson’s 1830 Indian Removal Act, the only member of the Tennessee delegation to do so. For this, the voters of Tennessee sent Crockett home. Undaunted, he ran again two years later and returned to the House, resuming his previous crusades and also collaborating with Kentucky Congressman Thomas Chilton to produce his autobiography, A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett, Written by Himself.
Crockett embarked upon an extensive book tour which, combined with larger-than-life stage productions such as Lion of the West and mythologized biographies like Sketches and Eccentricities of Colonel David Crockett of West Tennessee, cemented in the national mind his legend as a pioneer and frontiersman. Everywhere he went, from New York to Little Rock, adoring fans swarmed him. More and more, he took the opportunity they afforded him to speak against the military threat and growing tyranny of Mexican dictator Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna and the need to support an American-style revolution in Texas.
By the time the voters dumped him again in August 1835, Crockett’s heart was consumed with the Texian cause. No longer seeing Washington or the pettiness of politics as worthwhile, he famously told his erstwhile constituents, “You all can go to Hell, I’m going to Texas.” And he went.
He arrived in Nacogdoches with a company of volunteers just five months later in January 1836, swearing an oath to the Provisional Government of Texas. Barely a month later he and his group were in San Antonio de Bexar, with fellow Texian heroes Jim Bowie, Antonio Menchaca and Don Erasmo Seguin, a Founding Father of the Mexican republic who helped feed and finance the Texas Revolution (Don Erasmo was also the father of Juan Seguin, a defender of the Alamo who survived to become a hero of San Jacinto and a Senator of the Republic of Texas).
Less than a month later, Crockett died defending the Alamo.
Moderns appreciate little of the importance of this. Some (outside Texas at least) see the Alamo as a minor incident at most. Many today view the Texas Revolution as an Anglo brutalization of a victimized Mexico. They ignore, willfully or otherwise, the multilingual, multi-ethnic nature of the affair, the many prominent Mexican statesmen who, loyal to the principles of their lost republic, took up arms in favor of the Revolution: men such as Erasmo Seguin and his friend Lorenzo de Zavala, the first Vice President of Texas, who was born in Yucatan and had previously served as Mexico’s Minister of Finance.
The revisionists also ignore the widespread opposition throughout Mexico to Santa Anna’s dictatorship and scrapping of the 1824 Constitution. In addition to Texas, both Yucatan and the Mexican states immediately across the Rio Grande from Texas formed republics and seceded from Mexico, albeit unsuccessfully.
But beyond the unquestionable rightness of the Texian cause, the successful Revolution served to answer the burning geopolitical question of that era, namely, would America or Mexico — and would liberty or tyranny — dominate the New World?
Santa Anna had proclaimed himself “the Napoleon of the West”: his ambitions were vastly greater than just holding a few farms on the Brazos. Had he imposed his tyranny on the Texians, he would have been liberated to threaten — and possibly conquer — New Orleans, the continent’s single most strategic point.
Had Santa Anna taken New Orleans, he would have reversed Jefferson’s achievement in securing the Louisiana Purchase and accomplished what the British in 1815 could not: the reduction of the United States to a servile position. And with all commerce in the Ohio, Missouri and Mississippi river basins bottled up at Santa Anna’s mercy, not only might America never have generated the capital, industrial strength and military might needed to become a great power, but an authoritarian Mexico might well have supplanted it, expanding throughout the West and the Caribbean Basin as well.
But for Houston’s victory at San Jacinto — but for Davy Crockett’s martyr's death at the Alamo, enabling Houston’s triumph — the American experiment might well have come to nothing. America might well have been recolonized in that era of global European expansion which saw India and China subjugated (as indeed Mexico was by France for a time, during the 1860s). And with the coming of the 20th Century, freedom might well have perished from the Earth.
History has long honored the greatness of David S. Crockett, and rightly so. He quite literally paid for our lives with his own.
A terrific history article by you, Mr. Martin. I’d never even thought of or considered any of the geopolitical implications you discussed in this article! Indeed the failure of the Texas Revolution would’ve been really bad for the United States leading us either to never have become a great power or to even become recolonized and conquered as China and India were and Mexico was for a time by France. That tyrant Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna might have captured New Orleans thereby cutting off one of America’s most crucial waterways and ports. Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase would’ve been rendered null and void and Mexico would’ve swept over Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Arkansas, and who knows what else. Continuing to build his empire he’d of expanded into South and Central America and the Caribbean subjugating his other neighbors. Americans white, black and Native, slave and free, male and female, would now be subjects of Santa Anna’s Mexican Empire and forced to Hispanize and speak Spanish. I thank God for David Crockett, Jim Bowie, William Travis, Don and Juan Seguin, Sam Houston, Jose Antonio Navarro, Stephen F. Austin, and all the brave Anglos, Tejanos and African-Americans who fought and died for Texas’s independence. I love that you made sure that the Tejano contribution to the revolution was including Rod! It was forgotten and marginalized for centuries. It’s a shame after the Revolution, Tejanos would be treated as second class citizens for for two hundreds years before finally gaining equality in the 1960s and that preserving slavery was part of the reason the Revolution was launched. Nonetheless, whatever the flaws of its heroes and the injustice that came after, the multiethnic group of patriots who fought and died in the Texas Revolution saved this country and brought an end to Santa Anna’s tyranny until the next decade. His dream of an Imperial Mexican Empire with him as its Montezuma never came to be. The Texan rebels of all races and creeds made that possible! I also salute the Mexican politicians who stayed true to their Republican principles and opposed Santa Anna’s brutal dictatorship. At the Alamo and Goliad, Santa Anna showed the kind of man he was. His army slaughtered Anglos and Tejanos alike. Including women, children, babies, and old people. Never forget, he terrorized them too! He was a Latin Saddam Hussein.
This is an outstanding contribution to what historians refer to as “counterfactual,” that is, “what if?” history. As such it reveals how differently things might have turned out if only….
In so doing it also falsifies the notion that ordinary people have no power compared to the “great impersonal forces” that are often said to control our destiny. Likewise, it demonstrates that humans do have agency in human affairs and that the future is not predestined.