Come And Get It Cannon

Come And Get It Cannon. Texas Gonzales Cannon Come And Take It Flag Banner 3 By 5 Foot White American Flag With Brass The "Come and Take It" cannon has become a familiar symbol for Texans and non-Texans alike — it can be found throughout the state on flags, t-shirts, license plates, and more They've pretty much settled on the number 18 for the Gonzalans present, but the numbers of Mexicans varies as does the cannon's composition.

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Two days earlier, Sara Seely DeWitt and her daughter, Evaline, hastily designed and created the Old Cannon Flag, which today is known as the "Come and Take It" flag, from a wedding dress belonging to Naomi DeWitt. "So, between Ben Milam and Almaron Dickinson they decide let's just bury the cannon, we can always come back and get it

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Come and Take It Cannon Gonzales, Texas by Norman Conquest: Read four history books about the Texas Revolution and you'll have four versions of what occurred on October 2, 1835 In 1831 the Mexican government loaned the citizens of Gonzales a six-pound cannon for protection against the Indians In September of 1835, as political unrest grew, Mexican officials at San Antonio de Bexar demanded the cannon be returned.

Buy Gonzales Come and Take it Cannon Flag for sale. "Come and take it" is a long-standing expression of defiance first recorded in the ancient Greek form molon labe "come and take [them]", a laconic reply supposedly given by the Spartan King Leonidas I in response to the Persian King Xerxes I's demand for the Spartans to surrender their weapons on the eve of the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC That cannon will stay buried from 1835 until July of 1936 when we have a flood, and it will unearth it.

Gonzales Come and Take it Cannon 12 x 18 inch with grommets Flag. Two days earlier, Sara Seely DeWitt and her daughter, Evaline, hastily designed and created the Old Cannon Flag, which today is known as the "Come and Take It" flag, from a wedding dress belonging to Naomi DeWitt. Come and Take It Cannon Gonzales, Texas by Norman Conquest: Read four history books about the Texas Revolution and you'll have four versions of what occurred on October 2, 1835