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・ Alamo EMS
・ Alamo Fire
・ Alamo Gulf Coast Railroad
・ Alamo Heights High School
・ Alamo Heights Independent School District
・ Alamo Heights SA
・ Alamo Heights, Texas
・ Alamo Hotel
・ Alamo Hueco Mountains
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・ Alamo Lake, Arizona
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Alamo Mission in San Antonio
・ Alamo Mocho (Kern County)
・ Alamo Mucho Station
・ Alamo National Bank Building
・ Alamo National Forest
・ Alamo Navajo Airport
・ Alamo Navajo Indian Reservation
・ Alamo Oaks, California
・ Alamo Placita Park
・ Alamo Placita, Denver
・ Alamo Plaza Historic District
・ Alamo Plaza Hotel Courts
・ Alamo Quarry Market
・ Alamo Race Track
・ Alamo Ranchhouse


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Alamo Mission in San Antonio : ウィキペディア英語版
Alamo Mission in San Antonio

The Alamo Mission in San Antonio, commonly called the Alamo, and originally known as the Mission San Antonio de Valero, is part of the San Antonio Missions UNESCO World Heritage Site in San Antonio, Texas. Founded in the eighteenth century as a Roman Catholic mission and fortress compound, it was the site of the Battle of the Alamo in 1836. The Alamo is now a museum in the Alamo Plaza Historic District.
The compound was one of the early Spanish missions in Texas, built for the education of area Native Americans after their conversion to Christianity. In 1793, the mission was secularized and then abandoned. Ten years later, it became a fortress housing a military unit, the Second Flying Company of San Carlos de Parras, who likely gave the mission the name Alamo. During the Texas Revolution, Mexican General Martin Perfecto de Cos surrendered the fort to the Texian Army in December 1835, following the Siege of Béxar. A relatively small number of Texian soldiers then occupied the compound for several months. They were soundly defeated at the Battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836. When the Mexican army retreated from Texas several months later, they tore down many of the Alamo walls and burned some of the buildings.
For the next five years, the Alamo was periodically used to garrison soldiers, both Texian and Mexican, but was ultimately abandoned. In 1849, several years after Texas was annexed to the United States, the U.S. Army began renting the facility for use as a quartermaster's depot. The U.S. Army abandoned the mission in 1876 after nearby Fort Sam Houston was established. The Alamo chapel was sold to the state of Texas, which conducted occasional tours but made no effort to restore it. The remaining buildings were sold to a mercantile company which operated them as a wholesale grocery store.
After forming in 1892, the Daughters of the Republic of Texas (DRT) began trying to preserve the Alamo. In 1905, Adina Emilia De Zavala and Clara Driscoll successfully convinced the state legislature to purchase the remaining buildings and to name the DRT as the permanent custodian of the site. Over the next century, periodic attempts were made to transfer control of the Alamo from the DRT. In early 2015, Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush officially removed control of the Alamo to the Texas General Land Office.〔Blanchard, Bobbie. (Daughters of the Republic of Texas Sue Land Office ), ''Texas Tribune'', March 23, 2015.〕
On July 5, 2015, the Alamo, along with the four missions in the San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site.〔Associated Press. (World heritage status for The Alamo, Japan industrial sites ), ''Conroe Courier'', July 5, 2015.〕
==History==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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