Publication: Printer Mexicana, 1955, Mexico City
Second edition. 8vo. Two-tone leather, with leather corners and raised bands on the spine, titles stamped in gilt on a red leather spine label. [8], xi - L, 321 [2] pp., preamble, bibliography, illustrated, portraits, map, appendices, index. Jenkins, BTB 39: “Written by an intelligent and perceptive Mexican staff officer, this is one of the most important eye-witness records of the Texas Revolution, and especially of the Siege of the Alamo. Llerena Friend called it: ‘the detailed story by a participant observer who had military training and who also was well read, observant of the natural scene and of human character and passionately devoted to his country…” Carmen Perry, who translated and edited the first edition in English, described the book as “significant because he was an active participant, an eyewitness and a trained officer, who had advantages in observation and evaluation coupled with honest objectivity.” It was De la Pena who made the claim that Crockett and several others surrendered at the Alamo (Dan Kilgore would create a firestorm of controversy when he revealed De la Pena’s account in his monograph, How Did Davy Die?). The importance of this book is that it gives us an account of events from the Mexican perspective, the most detailed and accurate rendition of the siege and storming of the Alamo, and the best account of defeated Mexican army’s retreat from Texas. The thirty appendices, not found in Perry’s translation, were collected by De la Pena to support his own narrative. An exceptionally nice copy of cornerstone work on Texas. A fine, bright and tight copy.
Inventory Number: 53187