How George Washington Fleeced the Nation Quotes
How George Washington Fleeced the Nation: And Other Little Secrets Airbrushed From History
by
Phil Mason265 ratings, 3.32 average rating, 26 reviews
Open Preview
How George Washington Fleeced the Nation Quotes
Showing 1-2 of 2
“Around a hundred Texans faced 3,000 Mexican Government troops. According to the account that long filled patriotic Americans’ schoolbooks, Crockett died a hero defiantly swinging the butt of his rifle, Old Betsy, at oncoming Mexicans after running out of ammunition. A Different Story Surfaces In 1975, a previously untranslated diary written by José Enrique de la Peña, senior Mexican officer at the battle, revealed that Crockett and six other survivors had actually surrendered. According to this account, they were executed shortly afterwards. The revelation did not come without controversy. Historians still dispute whether the diary is genuine, pointing to the unclear circumstances of its emergence in the mid-1950s in Mexico, just at the height of Disney’s fictionalisation of Crockett’s story across the border in the United States. Advocates cite a supporting pamphlet that was lodged in the archives of Yale University long before the Crockett fad began, which they suggest point to the diary being genuine. A crude Mexican attempt at Party pooping? Or bursting the bubble of a fabled tale? The truth may never be known, but the episode once more demonstrates Oscar Wilde’s observation of the truth being rarely pure and never simple.”
― How George Washington Fleeced the Nation: And Other Little Secrets Airbrushed From History
― How George Washington Fleeced the Nation: And Other Little Secrets Airbrushed From History
“Oscar Wilde’s observation of the truth being rarely pure and never simple.”
― How George Washington Fleeced the Nation: And Other Little Secrets Airbrushed From History
― How George Washington Fleeced the Nation: And Other Little Secrets Airbrushed From History
