The result of the Mexican victory was that fallen defenders became heroes to the cause of Texan independence.
the fallen defenders became heroes to the cause of texan independece.
The Battle of the Alamo, the birth of Texas' liberty.
The Alamo was a battle fought during the Texas war of independence from Mexico (1835-1836), not during the Mexican-American War (1846-1848). It didn't mean much to the final outcome of the war, as it was almost by any accounts a massacre: 2,400 Mexican troops killed all but two of 182-260 Texans at the Alamo. The battle has been used, however, as a symbol of the Texan Independence Movement with "Remember the Alamo!" as the battle cry with most significance.
The Battle of the Alamo begain in 1836 in San Antonio.
Texas lost the Battle of the Alamo.
The Battle of the Alamo was fought at the Alamo Mission in what is now San Antonio, Texas, USA.
The Battle of the Alamo occured in the Alamo, an old church in San Antonio being used as a fort
This sounds like a trick question: the Alamo fell nearly a decade BEFORE the Mexican War. The Mexican War pitted the USA against Mexico (April/May 1846-Feb 1848); the Alamo was part of the Texas war for independence from Mexico (Alamo: Feb-March 1836). That question is sort of like asking "how did the outcome of the Battle of Verdun affect the rest of WWII?" True, but I think the question is how did the Alamo affect the outcome of the Texas Revolution and in that respect the outcome at the Alamo leaves Santa Ana overconfident and he splits his forces in front of Sam Houston leading to a defeat at San Jacinto.
Not necessarily. There were other forts in Texas besides the Alamo. [Fort Defiance, for example. ] The Alamo was one Texas fort, but not all Texas forts were the Alamo.
The battle at Goliad
Davey Crockett was present at the battle of the Alamo and was from Tennessee.
Santa Anna's forces vastly outnumbered the "Texicans" defending the Alamo. Santa Anna's Mexican Army forces won the battle.
The Battle of the Alamo ended in total defeat for the Texas defenders.